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8-letter words containing e, n, r, o

  • onlooker — spectator; observer; witness.
  • onrushes — Plural form of onrush.
  • onscreen — As seen on a screen (as of television, film, or computer) rather than in real life.
  • onsetter — a person who attacks
  • onstream — Being produced.
  • open bar — a bar at a reception that serves drinks whose cost has been borne by the host, an admission charge, a sponsor, etc.: Before the banquet there will be an open bar from 5 to 7 p.m.
  • open-air — existing in, taking place in, or characteristic of the open air; outdoor: The orchestra gave three open-air concerts last summer.
  • openwork — any kind of work, especially ornamental, as of embroidery, lace, metal, stone, or wood, having a latticelike nature or showing openings through its substance.
  • operands — Plural form of operand.
  • operants — Plural form of operant.
  • oppugner — Someone who oppugns; an opponent.
  • orangelo — A citrus fruit that is a cross between an orange and a grapefruit.
  • orangery — a warm place, as a greenhouse, in which orange trees are cultivated in cool climates.
  • orchanet — Alternative form of alkanet.
  • ordained — to invest with ministerial or sacerdotal functions; confer holy orders upon.
  • ordainee — a person who has been recently ordained as a new member of the clergy.
  • ordainer — A person (usually a clergyman) who ordains.
  • ordering — an authoritative direction or instruction; command; mandate.
  • ordinate — Mathematics. (in plane Cartesian coordinates) the y-coordinate of a point: its distance from the x-axis measured parallel to the y-axis.
  • ordnance — cannon or artillery.
  • orenburg — a city in the SW Russian Federation in Asia, on the Ural River.
  • oreodont — any of various extinct North American artiodactyls of the families Merycoidodontidae or Agriochoeridae, widespread from the late Eocene through early Miocene epochs.
  • organdie — a fine, thin cotton fabric usually having a durable crisp finish, white, dyed, or printed: used for blouses, dresses, curtains, trimmings, etc.
  • organise — to form as or into a whole consisting of interdependent or coordinated parts, especially for united action: to organize a committee.
  • organize — to form as or into a whole consisting of interdependent or coordinated parts, especially for united action: to organize a committee.
  • oriental — (usually initial capital letter) of, relating to, or characteristic of the Orient, or East; Eastern.
  • orientedthe Orient, the countries of Asia, especially East Asia. (formerly) the countries to the E of the Mediterranean.
  • orienterthe Orient, the countries of Asia, especially East Asia. (formerly) the countries to the E of the Mediterranean.
  • ornament — an accessory, article, or detail used to beautify the appearance of something to which it is added or of which it is a part: architectural ornaments.
  • ornately — elaborately or sumptuously adorned, often excessively or showily so: They bought an ornate Louis XIV sofa.
  • ornerier — ugly and unpleasant in disposition or temper: No one can get along with my ornery cousin.
  • ornithes — birds considered collectively
  • orogenic — (geology) Concerned with orogeny; pertaining to the creation of mountains.
  • orphaned — a child who has lost both parents through death, or, less commonly, one parent.
  • orpiment — a mineral, arsenic trisulfide, As 2 S 3 , found usually in soft, yellow, foliated masses, used as a pigment.
  • othering — (chiefly philosophy) The process of perceiving or portraying someone or something as fundamentally different or alien.
  • outlearn — to exceed in learning
  • outliner — A computer application that produces a hierarchically arranged outline of the logical structure of a text document.
  • outpreen — to exceed in preening
  • outrance — the utmost extremity.
  • outrange — to have a longer or greater range than.
  • outreign — to reign for longer than
  • outsnore — to outdo in snoring
  • ovenbird — an American warbler, Seiurus aurocapillus, that builds an oven-shaped nest of leaves, twigs, etc., on the forest floor.
  • ovenware — heat-resistant dishes of glass, pottery, etc., for baking and serving food; bakeware.
  • overbank — to have the balance staff oscillate so greatly that the fork of the lever fails to engage, rendering the escapement inoperative.
  • overbind — To bind or restrict to an excessive extent.
  • overborn — to bear over or down by weight or force: With his superior strength he easily overbore his opponent in the fight.
  • overburn — to copy (information, music, etc) onto a CD over previously recorded data
  • overdone — past participle of overdo.
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