7-letter words containing a, r, n
- nomarch — the governor of a nome or a nomarchy.
- non-art — antiart.
- nonamer — An oligomer having nine subunits.
- nonfarm — a tract of land, usually with a house, barn, silo, etc., on which crops and often livestock are raised for livelihood.
- nonoral — uttered by the mouth; spoken: oral testimony.
- nonpark — Not of or pertaining to a park.
- nordica — Lillian (Lillian Norton) 1859–1914, U.S. soprano.
- noriega — Manuel Antonio, born 1934, military leader of Panama 1983–89: captured by U.S. forces and sentenced to prison for drug trafficking 1992.
- norland — northland.
- normale — A normal espresso drink, neither ristretto (shorter) nor lungo (longer).
- normals — Plural form of normal.
- normans — Plural form of norman.
- norstad — Lauris [lawr-is,, lohr-] /ˈlɔr ɪs,, ˈloʊr-/ (Show IPA), 1907–1988, U.S. Air Force general: Supreme Allied Commander of NATO 1956–63.
- nortena — a lively, polkalike folk music chiefly of southern Texas and northern Mexico, usually with Spanish lyrics and played on accordion and 12-string guitar, sometimes with fiddle and saxophone.
- norwalk — a city in SW California.
- norward — Archaic form of northward.
- notaire — (in France) a public official authorized by the state to attest and certify certain legal documents, oversee property transactions, etc
- nothura — Any member of the genus Nothura of birds in the tinamou family.
- np-hard — (complexity) A set or property of computational search problems. A problem is NP-hard if solving it in polynomial time would make it possible to solve all problems in class NP in polynomial time. Some NP-hard problems are also in NP (these are called "NP-complete"), some are not. If you could reduce an NP problem to an NP-hard problem and then solve it in polynomial time, you could solve all NP problems. See also computational complexity.
- nuclear — pertaining to or involving atomic weapons: nuclear war.
- nullary — (programming) A description of an operator or function which takes no arguments, e.g. a function that returns the current time. "Nullary" is part of the unary, binary, ternary sequence, and is more common than its synonym niladic.
- numeral — a word, letter, symbol, or figure, etc., expressing a number; number: the Roman numerals.
- nummary — of or relating to coins or money.
- nuraghe — any of the large, tower-shaped, prehistoric stone structures found in Sardinia and dating from the second millennium b.c. to the Roman conquest.
- nutfarm — (informal) An insane asylum.
- nym war — a dispute about the right to publish material on the internet under a fictitious name
- nyungar — an Australian Aboriginal language spoken over a large area of southwest Western Australia, including Perth and Albany.
- oarsman — a person who rows a boat, especially a racing boat; rower.
- oarsmen — a person who rows a boat, especially a racing boat; rower.
- ocarina — a simple musical wind instrument shaped somewhat like an elongated egg with a mouthpiece and finger holes.
- odorant — an odorous substance or product.
- on-ramp — an entrance lane for traffic from a street to a turnpike or freeway.
- onagers — Plural form of onager.
- onboard — provided, occurring, etc., on a vehicle: among the ship's many onboard services.
- onsager — Lars, 1903–76, U.S. chemist, born in Norway: Nobel prize 1968.
- ontario — a province in S Canada, bordering on the Great Lakes. 412,582 sq. mi. (1,068,585 sq. km). Capital: Toronto.
- onwards — toward a point ahead or in front; forward, as in space or time.
- operand — a quantity upon which a mathematical operation is performed.
- operant — operating; producing effects.
- oranges — a member of a European princely family ruling in the United Kingdom from 1688 to 1694 and in the Netherlands since 1815.
- orangey — resembling or suggesting an orange, as in taste, appearance, or color: decorated with orangy-pink flowers.
- oranian — Ibero-Maurusian.
- orantes — orant.
- orarian — a person who lives on the coast
- orarion — a stole worn by deacons.
- orating — Present participle of orate.
- oration — a formal public speech, especially one delivered on a special occasion, as on an anniversary, at a funeral, or at academic exercises.
- orcagna — Andrea (anˈdrɛːa), original name Andrea di Cione. ?1308–68, Florentine painter, sculptor, and architect
- ordains — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ordain.
- ordinal — of or relating to an order, as of animals or plants.