7-letter words containing f, e, n, a
- farnese — Alessandro [ah-les-sahn-draw] /ˌɑ lɛsˈsɑn drɔ/ (Show IPA), Duke of Parma, 1545–92, Italian general, statesman, and diplomat.
- farness — The state of being far off, or the degree to which something is far; distance, span; remoteness.
- fascine — a long bundle of sticks bound together, used in building earthworks and batteries and in strengthening ramparts.
- fastens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fasten.
- fat hen — a common plant, Chenopodium album, with small green flowers and whitish scales on the stem and leaves: family Chenopodiaceae (chenopods)
- fatness — the state or condition of being fat; obesity; corpulence.
- fattens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fatten.
- faunlet — A young sexually attractive boy.
- fazenda — An estate or large farm in Portugal, Brazil, and other Portuguese-speaking countries.
- fealing — Present participle of feal.
- fearing — Present participle of fear.
- feating — Present participle of feat.
- feazing — Often, feazings. an unraveled portion at the end of a rope.
- feminal — Of or pertaining to women, femininity or feminism.
- fenagle — to trick, swindle, or cheat (a person) (often followed by out of): He finagled the backers out of a fortune.
- fenians — a legendary band of Irish warriors noted for their heroic exploits, attributed to the 2nd and 3rd centuries ad
- fenland — a low area of marshy ground.
- fergana — a city in E Uzbekistan, SE of Tashkent.
- feynman — Richard Phillips, 1918–1988, U.S. physicist: Nobel Prize 1965.
- fiancee — a woman engaged to be married.
- fiances — Plural form of fiance.
- finable — subject to a fine; punishable by a fine.
- finagle — to trick, swindle, or cheat (a person) (often followed by out of): He finagled the backers out of a fortune.
- finales — Plural form of finale.
- finance — the management of revenues; the conduct or transaction of money matters generally, especially those affecting the public, as in the fields of banking and investment.
- fireman — a person employed to extinguish or prevent fires; firefighter.
- firepan — a metal grate for holding hot coals.
- flagmen — Plural form of flagman.
- flaneur — idler; dawdler; loafer.
- flanged — Having one or more flanges.
- flanger — An electronic device that alters a sound signal by introducing a cyclically varying phase shift into one of two identical copies of the signal and recombining them, used especially in popular music to alter the sound of an instrument.
- flanges — Plural form of flange.
- flanked — the side of an animal or a person between the ribs and hip.
- flanken — a strip of meat from the front end of the short ribs of beef.
- flanker — a person or thing that flanks.
- flannel — a soft, slightly napped fabric of wool or wool and another fiber, used for trousers, jackets, shirts, etc.
- flannen — made of flannel
- flanner — Janet (Genêt) 1892–1978, U.S. journalist: long based in Paris.
- flatten — to make flat.
- flavine — Chemistry. acriflavine hydrochloride.
- flavone — a colorless, crystalline, water-insoluble compound, C 15 H 10 O 2 , the parent substance of a group of naturally occurring derivatives some of which have been used as yellow dyes.
- flybane — A kind of catchfly of the genus Silene.
- fonseca — Gulf of, a bay of the Pacific Ocean in W Central America, bordered by El Salvador on the W, Honduras on the NE, and Nicaragua on the S. About 700 sq. mi. (1800 sq. km).
- fontane — Theodor (ˈteodoːr). 1819–98, German novelist and journalist; his novels include Vor dem Sturm (1878) and Effi Briest (1898)
- foramen — an opening, orifice, or short passage, as in a bone or in the integument of the ovule of a plant.
- foreman — a person in charge of a particular department, group of workers, etc., as in a factory or the like.
- foreran — Simple past form of forerun.
- fraenum — frenum.
- frances — Anatole [a-na-tawl] /a naˈtɔl/ (Show IPA), (Jacques Anatole Thibault) 1844–1924, French novelist and essayist: Nobel Prize 1921.
- francie — a female given name, form of Frances.