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7-letter words containing e, u, n, i

  • nuttier — Comparative form of nutty.
  • outline — the line by which a figure or object is defined or bounded; contour.
  • pauline — a female given name.
  • penguin — any of several flightless, aquatic birds of the family Spheniscidae, of the Southern Hemisphere, having webbed feet and wings reduced to flippers.
  • pentium — (processor)   Intel's superscalar successor to the 486. It has two 32-bit 486-type integer pipelines with dependency checking. It can execute a maximum of two instructions per cycle. It does pipelined floating-point and performs branch prediction. It has 16 kilobytes of on-chip cache, a 64-bit memory interface, 8 32-bit general-purpose registers and 8 80-bit floating-point registers. It is built from 3.1 million transistors on a 262.4 mm^2 die with ~2.3 million transistors in the core logic. Its clock rate is 66MHz, heat dissipation is 16W, integer performance is 64.5 SPECint92, floating-point performance 56.9 SPECfp92. It is called "Pentium" because it is the fifth in the 80x86 line. It would have been called the 80586 had a US court not ruled that you can't trademark a number. The successors are the Pentium Pro and Pentium II. The following Pentium variants all belong to "x86 Family 6", as reported by "Microsoft Windows" when identifying the CPU: Model Name 1 Pentium Pro 2 ? 3 Pentium II 4 ? 5, 6 Celeron or Pentium II 7 Pentium III 8 Celeron uPGA2 or Mobile Pentium III A floating-point division bug was discovered in October 1994.
  • petunia — flowering plant
  • phineus — a brother of Cepheus who was not brave enough to rescue his betrothed Andromeda from a sea monster and who was eventually turned to stone.
  • pinetum — an arboretum of pines and coniferous trees.
  • pinnule — Zoology. a part or organ resembling a barb of a feather, a fin, or the like. a finlet.
  • poutine — a dish of chipped potatoes topped with curd cheese and a tomato-based sauce
  • purline — a longitudinal member in a roof frame, usually for supporting common rafters or the like between the plate and the ridge.
  • queenie — a female given name.
  • quentin — a male or female given name: from a Latin word meaning “fifth.”.
  • questin — (organic compound) The substituted anthraquinone 3-methyl, 1,6-dihydroxy, 8-methoxy 9,10-anthraquinone found in some species of Rubiaceae.
  • queuing — a braid of hair worn hanging down behind.
  • quicken — to make more rapid; accelerate; hasten: She quickened her pace.
  • quieten — to become quiet (often followed by down).
  • quinate — arranged in groups of five.
  • quinces — Plural form of quince.
  • quinche — to move, to wince
  • quincke — Angioedema.
  • quinela — a type of bet, especially on horse races, in which the bettor, in order to win, must select the first- and second-place finishers without specifying their order of finishing.
  • quinine — a white, bitter, slightly water-soluble alkaloid, C 2 0 H 2 4 N 2 O 2 , having needlelike crystals, obtained from cinchona bark: used in medicine chiefly in the treatment of resistant forms of malaria.
  • quinnet — Alternative form of quinnat.
  • quinone — a yellow, crystalline, cyclic unsaturated diketone, C 6 H 4 O 2 , formed by oxidizing aniline or hydroquinone: used chiefly in photography and in tanning leather.
  • quintet — any set or group of five persons or things.
  • reincur — to incur again
  • repunit — any positive integer that consists entirely of the digit 1 repeated, for example, 11, 111, 1111
  • retinue — a body of retainers in attendance upon an important personage; suite.
  • reunify — bring together again
  • reunion — an island in the Indian Ocean, E of Madagascar: an overseas department of France. 970 sq. mi. (2512 sq. km). Capital: St. Denis.
  • reunite — bring together again
  • rhenium — a rare metallic element of the manganese subgroup: used, because of its high melting point, in platinum-rhenium thermocouples. Symbol: Re; atomic number: 75; atomic weight: 186.2.
  • rinceau — an ornamental foliate or floral motif.
  • routine — subroutine
  • ruinate — to ruin.
  • rule in — If you say that you are not ruling in a particular course of action, you mean that you have not definitely decided to take that action.
  • senussi — a member of a zealous and aggressive Muslim sect of North Africa and Arabia, founded in 1837 by Sidi Mohammed ibn Ali al Senussi (?1787–1859)
  • silenus — a forest spirit, sometimes referred to as the oldest of the satyrs and the foster father, teacher, and companion of Dionysus: often represented as a bearded old man.
  • sinuate — bent in and out; winding; sinuous.
  • sinuose — sinuous
  • sirenumMare, Mare Sirenum.
  • soutine — Chaim [khahy-im,, khahy-im] /xaɪˈɪm,, ˈxaɪ ɪm/ (Show IPA), 1894–1943, Lithuanian painter in France.
  • spinule — a small spine.
  • spunkie — a will-o'-the-wisp.
  • suberin — a waxlike, fatty substance, occurring in cork cell walls and in or between other cells, that on alkaline hydrolysis yields chiefly suberic acid.
  • subline — a secondary headline
  • sueding — kid or other leather finished with a soft, napped surface, on the flesh side or on the outer side after removal of a thin outer layer.
  • suevian — a member of an ancient Germanic people of uncertain origin, mentioned in the writings of Caesar and Tacitus.
  • sunlike — (often initial capital letter) the star that is the central body of the solar system, around which the planets revolve and from which they receive light and heat: its mean distance from the earth is about 93 million miles (150 million km), its diameter about 864,000 miles (1.4 million km), and its mass about 330,000 times that of the earth; its period of surface rotation is about 26 days at its equator but longer at higher latitudes.
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