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7-letter words containing d, e, n, r

  • red ant — any of various reddish ants, especially the Pharaoh ant.
  • red ink — a financial deficit; business loss.
  • red man — a contemptuous term used to refer to a North American Indian.
  • red ned — any cheap red wine
  • red run — a run of some difficulty, suitable for intermediate skiers
  • redbone — an American hound having a red coat, used in hunting raccoons, bears, cougars, and wildcats.
  • redding — a city in N California.
  • redline — to treat by redlining (an area or neighborhood).
  • redmondJohn Edward, 1856–1918, Irish political leader.
  • redneck — an uneducated white farm laborer, especially from the South.
  • redness — the quality or state of being red.
  • redoing — to do again; repeat.
  • redound — to have a good or bad effect or result, as to the advantage or disadvantage of a person or thing.
  • redrawn — to cause to move in a particular direction by or as if by a pulling force; pull; drag (often followed by along, away, in, out, or off).
  • redskin — a contemptuous term used to refer to a North American Indian.
  • redwing — a European thrush, Turdus iliacus, having chestnut-red flank and axillary feathers.
  • redying — a coloring material or matter.
  • reeding — the straight stalk of any of various tall grasses, especially of the genera Phragmites and Arundo, growing in marshy places.
  • reedman — a musician who plays a reed instrument.
  • refined — having or showing well-bred feeling, taste, etc.: refined people.
  • refound — to come upon by chance; meet with: He found a nickel in the street.
  • regrind — to wear, smooth, or sharpen by abrasion or friction; whet: to grind a lens.
  • reigned — the period during which a sovereign occupies the throne.
  • reindex — (in a nonfiction book, monograph, etc.) a more or less detailed alphabetical listing of names, places, and topics along with the numbers of the pages on which they are mentioned or discussed, usually included in or constituting the back matter.
  • renamed — a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing, a body or class, or any object of thought is designated, called, or known.
  • rendell — Ruth (Barbara), Baroness. 1930–2015, British crime writer: author of detective novels, such as Wolf to the Slaughter (1967), and psychological thrillers, such as The Lake of Darkness (1980) and (under the name Barbara Vine) A Fatal Inversion (1987) and The Chimney Sweeper's Boy (1998)
  • rending — to separate into parts with force or violence: The storm rent the ship to pieces.
  • renewed — to begin or take up again, as an acquaintance, a conversation, etc.; resume.
  • rescind — to abrogate; annul; revoke; repeal.
  • resound — to echo or ring with sound, as a place.
  • respond — to reply or answer in words: to respond briefly to a question.
  • rewiden — to widen again
  • rewound — an act or instance of rewinding.
  • reynard — a name given to the fox, originally in the medieval beast epic Reynard the Fox.
  • reynaudPaul [pawl] /pɔl/ (Show IPA), 1878–1966, French statesman: premier 1940.
  • reynold — a male given name, form of Reginald.
  • rhdnase — dornase alfa.
  • rodents — belonging or pertaining to the gnawing or nibbling mammals of the order Rodentia, including the mice, squirrels, beavers, etc.
  • rondeau — Prosody. a short poem of fixed form, consisting of 13 or 10 lines on two rhymes and having the opening words or phrase used in two places as an unrhymed refrain.
  • rondure — a circle or sphere.
  • rounded — having a flat, circular surface, as a disk.
  • roundel — something round or circular.
  • rounder — any round shape, as a circle, ring or sphere.
  • rundale — (formerly) the name given, esp in Ireland and earlier in Scotland, to the system of land tenure in which each land-holder had several strips of land that were not contiguous
  • rundled — rounded
  • rundlet — an old British measure of capacity, about 15 imperial gallons (68 liters).
  • ryeland — one of an English breed of white-faced sheep, yielding wool of high quality.
  • sardine — the pilchard, Sardina pilchardus, often preserved in oil and used for food.
  • scorned — open or unqualified contempt; disdain: His face and attitude showed the scorn he felt.
  • sirened — Classical Mythology. one of several sea nymphs, part woman and part bird, who lure mariners to destruction by their seductive singing.
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