7-letter words that end in t
- agaynst — Obsolete spelling of against.
- agelast — a person who never laughs
- agonist — any muscle that is opposed in action by another muscle
- aheight — at a significant height
- ailment — An ailment is an illness, especially one that is not very serious.
- air out — a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and minute amounts of other gases that surrounds the earth and forms its atmosphere.
- airboat — a light, flat-bottomed boat driven by a propeller revolving in the air
- aircast — a pneumatic brace used to support an injured body part
- airiest — Superlative form of airy.
- airlift — An airlift is an operation to move people, troops, or goods by air, especially in a war or when land routes are closed.
- airport — An airport is a place where aircraft land and take off, which has buildings and facilities for passengers.
- airpost — the system of delivering mail by air; airmail
- airshot — aircheck
- airsoft — A modern combat sport in which participants eliminate their opponents by hitting them with spherical non-metallic pellets launched from a compressed-air gun.
- akvavit — aquavit
- alamort — exhausted, half-dead
- alicant — a wine produced near or in Alicante in Spain
- aliment — something that nourishes or sustains the body or mind
- aliquot — of, signifying, or relating to an exact divisor of a quantity or number
- alkanet — a European boraginaceous plant, Alkanna tinctoria, the roots of which yield a red dye
- all but — All but a particular person or thing means everyone or everything except that person or thing.
- all out — not at one's home or place of employment; absent: I stopped by to visit you last night, but you were out.
- all set — prepared; ready
- all wet — wrong; mistaken
- all-out — You use all-out to describe actions that are carried out in a very energetic and determined way, using all the resources available.
- alliant — (obsolete, rare) An ally; a confederate.
- allport — Gordon W(illard) 1897–1967, U.S. psychologist and educator.
- almight — (obsolete) almighty.
- alongst — along
- alright — all right
- alt bit — meta bit
- altoist — a person who plays the alto saxophone
- ambient — The ambient temperature is the temperature of the air above the ground in a particular place.
- amherst — Jeffrey, 1st Baron Amherst. 1717–97, British general who defeated the French in Canada (1758–60): governor general of British North America (1761–63)
- amongst — Amongst means the same as among.
- amorant — loving, romantic
- amorist — a lover or a writer about love
- amplest — fully sufficient or more than adequate for the purpose or needs; plentiful; enough: an ample supply of water; ample time to finish.
- analyst — An analyst is a person whose job is to analyse a subject and give opinions about it.
- anapest — a metrical foot consisting, in Greek and Latin verse, of two short syllables followed by a long one, or, as in English, of two unaccented syllables followed by an accented one
- ancient — Ancient means very old, or having existed for a long time.
- anglist — Anglicist.
- animist — A believer in animism.
- annicut — a dam in India constructed in order to supply waterways leading from it
- annoint — (nonstandard) alternative spelling of anoint.
- annulet — a moulding in the form of a ring, as at the top of a column adjoining the capital
- anteact — A preceding act.
- antiart — art, as dada, based on total rejection of established artistic practices and aesthetic values in favor of those that are arbitrary, shocking, and meaningless.
- antidot — (physics) A small, circular region of opposite charge or magnetization, especially one that is part of a semiconductor device.
- antient — Obsolete spelling of ancient.