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7-letter words containing a, d, l, n

  • dongola — a former province in the N Sudan, now part of Northern Province.
  • dowlandJohn, 1563–1626, English lutenist and composer.
  • dryland — Often, drylands. a tract of land having dry, often sandy soil, as on the floor of a valley: Acres of the drylands have been reclaimed by irrigation.
  • dulcian — an organ-stop consisting of pipes made of reeds
  • dundalk — a town in central Maryland, near Baltimore.
  • edelmanGerald Maurice, 1929–2014, U.S. biochemist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1972.
  • edental — Edentate.
  • ellwand — a stick for measuring lengths
  • enabled — Give (someone or something) the authority or means to do something.
  • endlang — (provincial, Northern England) Lengthways; along.
  • endleaf — an endpaper (usually blank) in a book
  • endplay — A way of playing the last few tricks that forces an opponent to make a disadvantageous lead.
  • england — country
  • enlaced — Simple past tense and past participle of enlace.
  • fanfold — a pad or tablet of invoices, bills, blank sheets, etc., interleaved with carbon paper for making a copy or copies of the writing or typing on the uppermost leaf.
  • fangled — Simple past tense and past participle of fangle.
  • fenland — a low area of marshy ground.
  • findlay — a city in NW Ohio.
  • finland — Finnish Suomi. a republic in N Europe: formerly a province of the Russian Empire. 130,119 sq. mi. (337,010 sq. km). Capital: Helsinki.
  • flanged — Having one or more flanges.
  • flanked — the side of an animal or a person between the ribs and hip.
  • flyhand — a person who collects and stacks printed matter from a printing press
  • gadling — Roving vagabond; one who roams.
  • gandalf — A software development environment from Carnegie Mellon University.
  • garland — Hamlin [ham-lin] /ˈhæm lɪn/ (Show IPA), 1860–1940, U.S. novelist, short-story writer, and poet.
  • gladden — to make glad.
  • gladdon — Alt form gladen in the sense of sword grass.
  • glanced — Simple past tense and past participle of glance.
  • glandes — (rare) Plural form of glans.
  • gleaned — to gather slowly and laboriously, bit by bit.
  • gliadin — a prolamin derived from the gluten of grain, as wheat or rye, used chiefly as a nutrient in high-protein diets.
  • gnarled — (of trees) full of or covered with gnarls; bent; twisted.
  • goldang — Goddamned.
  • goldarn — goddamn (used as a euphemism in expressions of anger, disgust, surprise, etc.).
  • goldman — Edwin Franko [frang-koh] /ˈfræŋ koʊ/ (Show IPA), 1878–1956, U.S. composer and bandmaster.
  • gonadal — a sex gland in which gametes are produced; an ovary or testis.
  • gondola — a long, narrow, flat-bottomed boat having a tall, ornamental stem and stern and sometimes a small cabin for passengers, rowed or poled by a single person who stands at the stern, facing forward: used especially on the canals of Venice, Italy.
  • gotland — an island in the Baltic, forming a province of Sweden. 1212 sq. mi. (3140 sq. km). Capital: Visby.
  • grandly — impressive in size, appearance, or general effect: grand mountain scenery.
  • haldane — John Burdon Sanderson [bur-dn san-der-suh n] /ˈbɜr dn ˈsæn dər sən/ (Show IPA), 1892–1964, English biochemist, geneticist, and writer.
  • handful — the quantity or amount that the hand can hold: a handful of coins.
  • handily — skillfully; dexterously; expertly: to manage a boat handily.
  • handled — fitted with or having a handle or handles, especially of a specified kind (often used in combination): a handled pot; a long-handled knife.
  • handler — a person or thing that handles.
  • handles — a part of a thing made specifically to be grasped or held by the hand.
  • handsel — a gift or token for good luck or as an expression of good wishes, as at the beginning of the new year or when entering upon a new situation or enterprise.
  • hayland — Grassland whose grass is cut for hay.
  • helmand — a river in S Asia, flowing SW from E Afghanistan to a lake in E Iran. 650 miles (1045 km) long.
  • hieland — characteristic of Highlanders, esp alluding to their supposed gullibility or foolishness in towns or cities
  • hollandJohn Philip, 1840–1914, Irish inventor in the U.S.
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