7-letter words containing c, a, r, n
- dacryon — the point of junction of the maxillary, lacrimal, and frontal bones.
- dancers — Plural form of dancer.
- dinaric — of or relating to the Alpine region of the Balkan Peninsula, from Slovenia to N Albania and extending across W Coatia, and most of Bosnia and Herzegovna, and Montenegro.
- dracone — A large bag used to transport a petroleum product (especially unprocessed crude oil) by sea.
- durance — incarceration or imprisonment (often used in the phrase durance vile).
- enactor — One who enacts.
- encharm — to enchant; bewitch
- encraty — the control of one's desires and actions
- endarch — (of a xylem strand) having the first-formed xylem internal to that formed later
- engrace — to give grace to
- errancy — The state of being in error; fallibility.
- fancier — a person having a liking for or interest in something; enthusiast: a fancier of sports cars.
- farcing — (cookery, archaic) stuffing; forcemeat.
- fracton — A collective quantized vibration on a substrate with a fractal structure; the fractal analogue of a phonon.
- frances — Anatole [a-na-tawl] /a naˈtɔl/ (Show IPA), (Jacques Anatole Thibault) 1844–1924, French novelist and essayist: Nobel Prize 1921.
- francia — José Gaspar Rodríguez de [haw-se gahs-pahr raw-th ree-ges th e] /hɔˈsɛ gɑsˈpɑr rɔˈðri gɛs ðɛ/ (Show IPA), ("El Supremo") 1766–1840, Paraguayan political leader: dictator 1814–40.
- francie — a female given name, form of Frances.
- francis — Francis I (def 2).
- franco- — Franco- occurs in words connected with France and the French language. For example, a Francophile is someone who likes France and French culture.
- frantic — desperate or wild with excitement, passion, fear, pain, etc.; frenzied.
- fructan — a type of polymer of fructose, present in certain fruits
- furnace — a structure or apparatus in which heat may be generated, as for heating houses, smelting ores, or producing steam.
- garcons — Plural form of garcon.
- glancer — One who glances.
- gracing — Present participle of grace.
- graunch — Make a crunching or grinding noise.
- grecian — Greek (especially with reference to ancient Greece).
- handcar — a small railroad car or platform on four wheels propelled by a mechanism worked by hand, used on some railroads for inspecting tracks and transporting workers.
- harnack — Adolf von [ah-dawlf fuh n] /ˈɑ dɔlf fən/ (Show IPA), 1851–1930, German Protestant theologian, born in Estonia.
- icarian — of or like Icarus.
- icetran — An extension of Fortran IV and a component of ICES.
- in care — made the legal responsibility of a local authority by order of a court
- infarct — a localized area of tissue, as in the heart or kidney, that is dying or dead, having been deprived of its blood supply because of an obstruction by embolism or thrombosis.
- infract — to break, violate, or infringe (a law, commitment, etc.).
- interac — a system of electronic bank payments or withdrawals
- iracund — prone to anger; irascible.
- knacker — a person who buys animal carcasses or slaughters useless livestock for a knackery or rendering works.
- koranic — Alternative spelling of Qur'anic.
- kranach — Lucas ("the Elder") 1472–1553, German painter and graphic artist.
- kronach — Lucas ("the Elder") 1472–1553, German painter and graphic artist.
- lacunar — Architecture. a coffered vault, ceiling, or soffit. coffer (def 4).
- lancers — a cavalry soldier armed with a lance.
- lancier — Synonym of lancer.
- larceny — the wrongful taking and carrying away of the personal goods of another from his or her possession with intent to convert them to the taker's own use.
- larchen — Of or pertaining to the larch tree.
- linacre — Thomas, 1460?–1521, English humanist, translator, scholar, and physician.
- locarno — a town in S Switzerland, on Lake Maggiore: Locarno Pact 1925.
- locrian — either of two districts in the central part of ancient Greece.
- lucarne — a dormer window.
- macaron — a round, colored cookie consisting of a ganache or buttercream filling between two halves made from beaten egg whites mixed with sugar and ground almonds.