7-letter words containing e, i, n
- brained — having a particular type of brain (used in combination): small-brained dinosaurs.
- brewing — a quantity of a beverage brewed at one time
- bricken — made of bricks
- brinded — brindled.
- brindle — a brindled animal
- bringer — A bringer of something is someone who brings or provides it.
- brisken — to make or become more lively or brisk
- britten — (Edward) Benjamin, Baron Britten. 1913–76, English composer, pianist, and conductor. His works include the operas Peter Grimes (1945) and Billy Budd (1951), the choral works Hymn to St Cecilia (1942) and A War Requiem (1962), and numerous orchestral pieces
- bromine — a pungent dark red volatile liquid element of the halogen series that occurs in natural brine and is used in the production of chemicals, esp ethylene dibromide. Symbol: Br; atomic no: 35; atomic wt: 79.904; valency: 1, 3, 5, or 7; relative density 3.12; density (gas): 7.59 kg/m3; melting pt: –7.2°C; boiling pt: 58.78°C
- brownie — Brownies are small flat biscuits or cakes. They are usually chocolate flavoured and have nuts in them.
- brucine — bitter poisonous alkaloid resembling strychnine and obtained from the tree Strychnos nuxvomica: used mainly in the denaturation of alcohol. Formula: C23H26N2O4
- bundies — a time clock.
- bunnies — Informal. a rabbit, especially a small or young one.
- by-line — a line under the title of a newspaper or magazine article giving the author's name
- byliner — a person who writes articles with bylines
- byrnies — a coat of mail; hauberk.
- byssine — made from fine flax
- cabined — a small house or cottage, usually of simple design and construction: He was born in a cabin built of rough logs.
- cabinet — A cabinet is a cupboard used for storing things such as medicine or alcoholic drinks or for displaying decorative things in.
- cacaine — (archaic, chemistry) The essential principle of cacao, now called theobromine.
- caelian — the southeasternmost of the Seven Hills of Rome
- caffein — a white, crystalline, bitter alkaloid, C 8 H 10 N 4 O 2 , usually derived from coffee or tea: used in medicine chiefly as a nervous system stimulant.
- cainite — a member of a Gnostic sect that exalted Cain and regarded the God of the Old Testament as responsible for evil.
- cairene — a person born or living in Cairo, Egypt
- cairned — marked by a cairn
- calcine — to heat (a substance) so that it is oxidized, reduced, or loses water
- candice — a female given name.
- candide — a philosophical novel (1759) by Voltaire.
- candied — Food such as candied fruit has been covered with sugar or has been cooked in sugar syrup.
- candies — Plural form of candy.
- cane it — to do something with great power, force, or speed or consume something such as alcohol in large quantities
- canetti — Elias. 1905–94, British novelist and writer, born in Bulgaria, who usually wrote in German. His works include the novel Auto da Fé (1935). Nobel prize for literature 1981
- canines — of or like a dog; relating to or characteristic of dogs: canine loyalty.
- cannier — careful; cautious; prudent: a canny reply.
- cantine — Alternative form of canteen.
- capelin — a small marine food fish, Mallotus villosus, occurring in northern and Arctic seas: family Osmeridae (smelts)
- caprine — of or resembling a goat
- carbine — A carbine is a light automatic rifle.
- carline — a Eurasian thistle-like plant, Carlina vulgaris, having spiny leaves and flower heads surrounded by raylike whitish bracts: family Asteraceae (composites)
- carmine — Carmine is a deep bright-red colour.
- carnies — Plural form of carny.
- cauline — relating to or growing from a plant stem
- cave in — If something such as a roof or a ceiling caves in, it collapses inwards.
- cave-in — a collapse, as of anything hollow: the worst cave-in in the history of mining.
- ceasing — to stop; discontinue: Not all medieval beliefs have ceased to exist.
- cedrine — of or relating to the cedar tree or its wood
- ceiling — A ceiling is the horizontal surface that forms the top part or roof inside a room.
- celling — the production and formation of cells
- cellini — Benvenuto (benveˈnuːto). 1500–71, Italian sculptor, goldsmith, and engraver, noted also for his autobiography
- centile — (not in technical use) a percentile.