7-letter words containing d, s, n
- sunward — Also, sunwards. toward the sun.
- suspend — to hang by attachment to something above: to suspend a chandelier from the ceiling.
- swidden — a plot of land cleared for farming by burning away vegetation.
- swindle — to cheat (a person, business, etc.) out of money or other assets.
- swindon — a town and unitary authority in Wiltshire, in S England.
- swinged — to singe.
- swounds — swoon.
- symonds — John Addington [ad-ing-tuh n] /ˈæd ɪŋ tən/ (Show IPA), 1840–93, English poet, essayist, and critic.
- synched — synchronization: The picture and the soundtrack were out of sync.
- synodal — an assembly of ecclesiastics or other church delegates, convoked pursuant to the law of the church, for the discussion and decision of ecclesiastical affairs; ecclesiastical council.
- synodic — Astronomy. pertaining to a conjunction, or to two successive conjunctions of the same bodies.
- tendons — Anatomy. a cord or band of dense, tough, inelastic, white, fibrous tissue, serving to connect a muscle with a bone or part; sinew.
- tenedos — an island in the Aegean, near the entrance to the Dardanelles, belonging to Turkey.
- tidings — news, information, or intelligence: sad tidings.
- tundish — (in a vacuum induction furnace) a trough through which molten metal flows under vacuum to a mold chamber.
- unasked — not asked: an unasked question.
- unbased — the bottom support of anything; that on which a thing stands or rests: a metal base for the table.
- undress — to take the clothes off (a person); disrobe.
- undrest — to take the clothes off (a person); disrobe.
- unfused — not fused
- unposed — not posed; not done for effect; natural or candid: her unposed manner; an unposed photograph.
- unsated — unsatisfied
- unsaved — to rescue from danger or possible harm, injury, or loss: to save someone from drowning.
- unsexed — deprived of sexual attributes
- unsized — having size as specified (often used in combination): middle-sized.
- unsolid — having three dimensions (length, breadth, and thickness), as a geometrical body or figure.
- unsound — not sound; unhealthy, diseased, or disordered, as the body or mind.
- unspied — unnoticed
- unstaid — unrestrained
- unsured — not assured
- uplands — an area of high or relatively high ground
- upstand — to rise to one's feet; stand up
- usedn't — used not
- vandals — (initial capital letter) a member of a Germanic people who in the 5th century a.d. ravaged Gaul and Spain, settled in Africa, and in a.d. 455 sacked Rome.
- venders — vendor.
- vendors — a person or agency that sells.
- wanders — Plural form of wander.
- wardens — Plural form of warden.
- weasand — throat.
- wendish — of or relating to the Wends or their language; Sorbian.
- windaus — Adolf [ah-dawlf] /ˈɑ dɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1876–1959, German chemist: Nobel prize 1928.
- winders — Plural form of winder.
- windies — Plural form of windy.
- windows — an opening in the wall of a building, the side of a vehicle, etc., for the admission of air or light, or both, commonly fitted with a frame in which are set movable sashes containing panes of glass.
- windsor — (since 1917) a member of the present British royal family. Compare Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (def 1).
- windups — Plural form of windup.
- wisened — Simple past tense and past participle of wisen.
- wonders — Desire or be curious to know something.
- woodson — Carter Godwin, 1875–1950, U.S. historian and publisher: pioneer in modern black studies.
- zanders — Plural form of zander.