0%

7-letter words containing a, n, s, t

  • lasting — continuing or enduring a long time; permanent; durable: a lasting friendship.
  • latinos — Plural form of latino.
  • latinus — the father of Lavinia and king of Latium at the time of the arrival of Aeneas.
  • leanest — Superlative form of lean.
  • levants — Plural form of levant.
  • lunates — Plural form of lunate.
  • magnets — Plural form of magnet.
  • mahants — Plural form of mahant.
  • mansart — Jules Hardouin [zhyl ar-dwan] /ʒül arˈdwɛ̃/ (Show IPA), (Jules Hardouin) 1646–1708, French architect: chief architectural director for Louis XIV.
  • mantels — Plural form of mantel.
  • mantids — Plural form of mantid.
  • mantles — Plural form of mantle.
  • mantras — Plural form of mantra.
  • mantuas — Plural form of mantua.
  • marstonJohn, c1575–1634, English dramatist and satirical poet.
  • martens — Plural form of marten.
  • martins — Archer John Porter [ahr-cher] /ˈɑr tʃər/ (Show IPA), 1910–2002, English biochemist: Nobel Prize in chemistry 1952.
  • masting — Nautical. a spar or structure rising above the hull and upper portions of a ship or boat to hold sails, spars, rigging, booms, signals, etc., at some point on the fore-and-aft line, as a foremast or mainmast. any of a number of individual spars composing such a structure, as a topmast supported on trestletrees at the head of a lower mast. any of various portions of a single spar that are beside particular sails, as a top-gallant mast and royal mast formed as a single spar.
  • matings — Plural form of mating, gerund of 'mate'.
  • matrons — Plural form of matron.
  • mattins — matin (def 1).
  • meanest — occupying a middle position or an intermediate place, as in kind, quality, degree, or time: a mean speed; a mean course; the mean annual rainfall.
  • mustang — a small, hardy horse of the American plains, descended from Spanish stock.
  • mutants — Plural form of mutant.
  • nailset — a punch for driving the head of a nail below or flush with the surrounding surface
  • naivest — having or showing unaffected simplicity of nature or absence of artificiality; unsophisticated; ingenuous.
  • naivist — in a naive style, esp in art
  • namaste — a conventional Hindu expression on meeting or parting, used by the speaker usually while holding the palms together vertically in front of the bosom.
  • narcist — inordinate fascination with oneself; excessive self-love; vanity. Synonyms: self-centeredness, smugness, egocentrism.
  • nas/uwt — National Association of Schoolmasters/Union of Women Teachers
  • nascent — beginning to exist or develop: That nascent republic is holding its first election this month.
  • nasmyth — James. 1808–90, British engineer; inventor of the steam hammer (1839)
  • nastase — Ilie (ˈiːliː). born 1946, Romanian tennis player: winner of the US Open (1972) and the French Open (1973)
  • nastier — physically filthy; disgustingly unclean: a nasty pigsty of a room.
  • nasties — Plural form of nasty.
  • nastily — physically filthy; disgustingly unclean: a nasty pigsty of a room.
  • nastran — NAsa STRess ANalysis program. A program for solving large stress analysis problems.
  • natasha — a female given name, Russian form of Natalie.
  • nathans — a prophet during the reigns of David and Solomon. II Sam. 12; I Kings 1:34.
  • nations — Plural form of nation.
  • natives — Plural form of native.
  • natsopa — National Society of Operative Printers, Graphical and Media Personnel
  • natsume — Soseki [saw-se-kee] /ˈsɔ sɛˌki/ (Show IPA), (Kinnosuke Natsume) 1867–1916, Japanese novelist.
  • natters — Plural form of natter.
  • natures — Plural form of nature.
  • nearest — close; to a point or place not far away: Come near so I won't have to shout.
  • neatest — in a pleasingly orderly and clean condition: a neat room.
  • negates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of negate.
  • netmask — (networking)   A 32-bit bit mask which shows how an Internet address is to be divided into network, subnet and host parts. The netmask has ones in the bit positions in the 32-bit address which are to be used for the network and subnet parts, and zeros for the host part. The mask should contain at least the standard network portion (as determined by the address's class), and the subnet field should be contiguous with the network portion. If a `+' (plus sign) is given for the netmask value, then the network number is looked up in the NIS netmasks.byaddr map (or in the /etc/netmasks) file if not running the NIS service.
  • netstat — (networking)   (Or "rstat") A Unix command to give statistics about the network including socket status, interfaces that have been auto-configured, memory statistics, routing tables.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?