8-letter words containing a, r, n
- external — Belonging to or forming the outer surface or structure of something.
- externat — a day school
- extranet — An intranet that can be partially accessed by authorized outside users, enabling businesses to exchange information over the Internet securely.
- faburden — an early system of musical harmonization
- fairborn — a city in W Ohio, near Dayton.
- fairings — Plural form of fairing.
- fairmont — a city in W West Virginia.
- fairness — the state, condition, or quality of being fair, or free from bias or injustice; evenhandedness: I have to admit, in all fairness, that she would only be paid for part of the work.
- falconer — a person who hunts with falcons or follows the sport of hawking.
- falconry — the sport of hunting with falcons, hawks, eagles, etc.; hawking.
- fan roof — a vaulted roof having fan tracery.
- fan worm — feather-duster worm.
- fan-girl — Sometimes, fangurl. an obsessive female fan, especially of comic books, science fiction, video games, music, or electronic devices: a web forum for Star Wars fangirls.
- fanciers — Plural form of fancier.
- fanfares — Plural form of fanfare.
- fanfaron — a braggart.
- far gone — departed; left.
- far-gone — remote.
- farinose — yielding farina.
- farmhand — a person who works on a farm, especially a hired worker; hired hand.
- farmland — land under cultivation or capable of being cultivated: to protect valuable farmland from erosion.
- farnesol — a colorless, unsaturated, liquid alcohol, C 15 H 26 O, having a slight floral odor, extracted from the flowers of the acacia, cassia oil, or the like: used in perfumery.
- farnesyl — (biochemistry) The univalent radical derived from farnesol.
- farthing — a former bronze coin of Great Britain, equal to one-fourth of a British penny: withdrawn in 1961.
- fastener — any of various devices for fastening.
- fattener — One who fattens.
- faulkner — William, 1897–1962, U.S. novelist and short-story writer. Nobel Prize 1949.
- favoring — something done or granted out of goodwill, rather than from justice or for remuneration; a kind act: to ask a favor.
- fear not — You say 'fear not' or 'never fear' to someone when you are telling them not to worry or be frightened.
- fenestra — Anatomy, Zoology. a small opening or perforation, as in a bone, especially between the middle and inner ear.
- fern bar — a stylish bar or tavern conspicuously decorated with ferns and other greenery.
- fernally — a seedless plant that is not a true fern
- ferndale — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit.
- fernshaw — a thicket of ferns
- ferryman — a person who owns or operates a ferry.
- fibranne — viscose rayon made from spun yarn.
- figurant — a ballet dancer who does not perform solo.
- filander — a former name for the pademelon, a small wallaby of the genus Thylogale
- finagler — to trick, swindle, or cheat (a person) (often followed by out of): He finagled the backers out of a fortune.
- financer — (finance) An entity that provides financing.
- fine art — a visual art considered to have been created primarily for aesthetic purposes and judged for its beauty and meaningfulness, specifically, painting, sculpture, drawing, watercolor, graphics, and architecture.
- finedraw — (transitive) To sew up so finely that the seam is not visible; to renter.
- finestra — an aperture, especially a ventilator in the wall of a tomb.
- finnmark — the markka of Finland.
- fire ant — any of several omnivorous ants, as the migrant Solenopsis geminata originating in tropical and subtropical South America, having a sting that produces a burning sensation.
- fireband — A band or bond forged by fire.
- firefang — combustion taking place in compost due to the heat produced by decomposition
- flagrant — shockingly noticeable or evident; obvious; glaring: a flagrant error.
- flancard — a piece of armour covering a horse's flank
- flanders — a medieval country in W Europe, extending along the North Sea from the Strait of Dover to the Scheldt River: the corresponding modern regions include the provinces of East Flanders and West Flanders in W Belgium, and the adjacent parts of N France and SW Netherlands.