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7-letter words containing e, u, n

  • onerous — burdensome, oppressive, or troublesome; causing hardship: onerous duties.
  • open up — not closed or barred at the time, as a doorway by a door, a window by a sash, or a gateway by a gate: to leave the windows open at night.
  • opulent — characterized by or exhibiting opulence: an opulent suite.
  • Öresund — strait between Sweden and the Danish island of Zealand: c. 80 mi (129 km) long
  • oughten — (colloquial, or, dialectical) ought not, oughtn't.
  • outdent — A hanging paragraph.
  • outdone — to surpass in execution or performance: The cook outdid himself last night.
  • outearn — to earn more than
  • outline — the line by which a figure or object is defined or bounded; contour.
  • outname — to be more notorious than
  • outness — (philosophy) The collective of things that are distinct from the observer.
  • outseen — Past participle of outsee.
  • outwent — simple past tense of outgo.
  • overrun — to rove over (a country, region, etc.); invade; ravage: a time when looting hordes had overrun the province.
  • paenula — a long, circular cloak, sleeveless and often hooded, worn by the poorer classes in ancient Rome.
  • pandure — bandore.
  • panurge — (in Rabelais' Pantagruel) a rascal, the companion of Pantagruel.
  • parvenu — a person who has recently or suddenly acquired wealth, importance, position, or the like, but has not yet developed the conventionally appropriate manners, dress, surroundings, etc.
  • pauline — a female given name.
  • peanuts — the pod or the enclosed edible seed of the plant, Arachis hypogaea, of the legume family: the pod is forced underground in growing, where it ripens.
  • pendule — a manoeuvre by which a climber on a rope from above swings in a pendulum-like series of movements to reach another line of ascent
  • penguin — any of several flightless, aquatic birds of the family Spheniscidae, of the Southern Hemisphere, having webbed feet and wings reduced to flippers.
  • pent-up — confined; restrained; not vented or expressed; curbed: pent-up emotions; pent-up rage.
  • 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.
  • penuche — Also, panocha. Northern, North Midland, and Western U.S. a fudgelike candy made of brown sugar, butter, and milk, usually with nuts.
  • 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.
  • pleuron — the lateral plate or plates of a thoracic segment of an insect.
  • plumpen — to make or become plump
  • plunder — to rob of goods or valuables by open force, as in war, hostile raids, brigandage, etc.: to plunder a town.
  • plunged — to cast or thrust forcibly or suddenly into something, as a liquid, a penetrable substance, a place, etc.; immerse; submerge: to plunge a dagger into one's heart.
  • plunger — Machinery. a pistonlike reciprocating part moving within the cylinder of a pump or hydraulic device.
  • plunker — a person or thing that plunks.
  • plunket — Saint Oliver. 1629–81, Irish Roman Catholic churchman and martyr; wrongly executed as a supposed conspirator in the Popish Plot (1678). Feast day: July 11
  • pneumo- — of or related to a lung or the lungs; respiratory
  • ponceau — a vivid red to reddish-orange color.
  • posaune — an organ reed with a tone resembling a trombone
  • poulenc — Francis [frahn-sees] /frɑ̃ˈsis/ (Show IPA), 1899–1963, French composer and pianist.
  • pouncet — box with a perforated top used for perfume
  • pounded — Archaic. to shut up in or as in a pound; impound; imprison.
  • pounder — a person or thing having or associated with a weight or value of a pound or a specified number of pounds (often used in combination): He caught only one fish, but it was an eight-pounder.
  • poutine — a dish of chipped potatoes topped with curd cheese and a tomato-based sauce
  • prefund — a supply of money or pecuniary resources, as for some purpose: a fund for his education; a retirement fund.
  • premune — having immunity to a disease as a result of latent infection
  • proneur — a flatterer
  • pronuke — pronuclear1 .
  • prudent — wise or judicious in practical affairs; sagacious; discreet or circumspect; sober.
  • pudency — modesty; bashfulness; shamefacedness.
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