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7-letter words that end in t

  • burnett — Frances Hodgson (ˈhɒdʒsən). 1849–1924, US novelist, born in England; author of Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886) and The Secret Garden (1911)
  • burnout — If someone suffers burnout, they exhaust themselves at an early stage in their life or career because they have achieved too much too quickly.
  • bush it — to camp out in the bush
  • bushtit — any small grey active North American songbird of the genus Psaltriparus, such as P. minimus (common bushtit): family Paridae (titmice)
  • busiest — actively and attentively engaged in work or a pastime: busy with her work.
  • buy out — If you buy someone out, you buy their share of something such as a company or piece of property that you previously owned together.
  • buy-out — to acquire the possession of, or the right to, by paying or promising to pay an equivalent, especially in money; purchase.
  • buycott — a type of protest aimed at a company or country with dubious ethical standards in which consumers buy the products of another company or country
  • buzzcut — a very short haircut
  • by-plot — subplot.
  • bycoket — a type of high-crowned hat
  • cabaret — Cabaret is live entertainment consisting of dancing, singing, or comedy acts that are performed in the evening in restaurants or nightclubs.
  • cabinet — A cabinet is a cupboard used for storing things such as medicine or alcoholic drinks or for displaying decorative things in.
  • cacolet — a seat or bed fitted to a mule for carrying the sick or wounded
  • cajeput — cajuput
  • cajuput — a small myrtaceous tree or shrub, Melaleuca leucadendron, native to the East Indies and Australia, with whitish flowers and leaves
  • calicut — seaport in SW India, on the Arabian Sea: pop. 420,000
  • callant — a youth; lad
  • callest — Archaic second-person singular form of call.
  • callout — (communication) Outward bound telephone calls.
  • calmant — a calmative
  • calmest — without rough motion; still or nearly still: a calm sea.
  • calumet — a long-stemmed ceremonial pipe, smoked by North American Indians as a token of peace, at sacrifices, etc.
  • calvert — Sir George, 1st Baron Baltimore. ?1580–1632, English statesman; founder of the colony of Maryland
  • cambelt — Part of an internal combustion engine that synchronizes the rotation of the crankshaft and the camshaft(s) so that the engine's valves open and close at the proper times during each cylinder's intake and exhaust strokes.
  • cambist — a dealer or expert in foreign exchange
  • camelot — (in Arthurian legend) the English town where King Arthur's palace and court were situated
  • campest — something that provides sophisticated, knowing amusement, as by virtue of its being artlessly mannered or stylized, self-consciously artificial and extravagant, or teasingly ingenuous and sentimental.
  • campout — a camping trip
  • can but — can only
  • candent — glowing with heat
  • candiot — of or relating to Candia (Iráklion) or Crete; Cretan
  • cane it — to do something with great power, force, or speed or consume something such as alcohol in large quantities
  • cantlet — a piece, fragment, or cantle
  • capelet — a small cape that covers the shoulders and is worn predominantly by women
  • capulet — the family name of Juliet in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
  • carlist — (in Spain) a supporter of Don Carlos or his descendants as the rightful kings of Spain
  • carport — A carport is a shelter for cars which is attached to a house and consists of a flat roof supported on pillars.
  • cassatt — Mary. 1845–1926, US impressionist painter, who lived in France
  • castest — Sociology. an endogamous and hereditary social group limited to persons of the same rank, occupation, economic position, etc., and having mores distinguishing it from other such groups. any rigid system of social distinctions.
  • casuist — a person, esp a theologian, who attempts to resolve moral dilemmas by the application of general rules and the careful distinction of special cases
  • catboat — a sailing vessel with a single mast, set well forward and often unstayed, and a large sail, usually rigged with a gaff
  • cathect — to invest mental or emotional energy in
  • catmint — a Eurasian plant, Nepeta cataria, having spikes of purple-spotted white flowers and scented leaves of which cats are fond: family Lamiaeae (labiates)
  • catsuit — A catsuit is a piece of women's clothing that is made in one piece and fits tightly over the body and legs.
  • causist — a person who supports or defends a cause, especially a social cause.
  • cellist — A cellist is someone who plays the cello.
  • cessant — (obsolete) inactive; dormant.
  • cesspit — A cesspit is a hole or tank in the ground into which waste water and sewage flow.
  • chaplet — an ornamental wreath of flowers, beads, etc, worn on the head
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