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7-letter words containing f, e, n

  • frednet — /fred'net/ Used to refer to some random and uncommon protocol encountered on a network. "We're implementing bridging in our router to solve the frednet problem."
  • freegan — a person who buys as little as possible and makes use of recycled or discarded goods and materials, in an effort to reduce waste and limit environmental impact.
  • freeing — Present participle of free.
  • freeman — a person who is free; a person who enjoys personal, civil, or political liberty.
  • freemen — Plural form of freeman.
  • freenet — Community-based bulletin board system with e-mail, information services, interactive communications, and conferencing. Freenets are funded and operated by individuals and volunteers - in one sense, like public television. They are part of the National Public Telecomputing Network (NPTN), an organisation based in Cleveland, Ohio, devoted to making computer telecommunication and networking services as freely available as public libraries.
  • freleng — (Isadore) Friz, 1906?–95, U.S. animator.
  • fremontJohn Charles, 1813–90, U.S. general and explorer: first Republican presidential candidate, 1856.
  • frenate — having a frenum or frenulum.
  • frenchy — Informal. a native or inhabitant of France or a person of French descent.
  • freneauPhilip, 1752–1832, U.S. poet and editor.
  • frenemy — Informal. a person or group that is friendly toward another because the relationship brings benefits, but harbors feelings of resentment or rivalry: Clearly, turning the competition into frenemies is good for your business.
  • freshen — to make fresh; refresh, revive, or renew: We need a good rain to freshen the flowers.
  • fresnelAugustin Jean, 1788–1827, French physicist.
  • fretman — A guitar player, especially one who plays acoustic guitar.
  • fretmen — Plural form of fretman.
  • fricken — (slang) alternative spelling of fricking.
  • friedan — Betty (Naomi Goldstein) [gohld-steen] /ˈgoʊld stin/ (Show IPA), 1921–2006, U.S. women's-rights leader and writer.
  • friends — Plural form of friend.
  • friendy — Friendly.
  • frindle — (rare, humorous) A pen.
  • fringed — a decorative border of thread, cord, or the like, usually hanging loosely from a raveled edge or separate strip.
  • fringer — A person who makes fringes for garments.
  • fringes — a decorative border of thread, cord, or the like, usually hanging loosely from a raveled edge or separate strip.
  • frizzen — An L-shaped piece of steel hinged at the rear used in flintlock firearms, positioned over the flash pan so to enclose a small priming charge of black powder next to the flash hole that is drilled through the barrel, such that when fired the flint scraps it so as to create a spark.
  • frogmen — Plural form of frogman.
  • fronded — an often large, finely divided leaf, especially as applied to the ferns and certain palms.
  • fronted — Simple past tense and past participle of front.
  • fronter — the foremost part or surface of anything.
  • frontes — frons
  • frounce — A form of trichomoniasis affecting hawks, resulting in a sore with a cheesy secretion in the mouth or throat.
  • frowned — to contract the brow, as in displeasure or deep thought; scowl.
  • frowner — One who frowns.
  • frowney — (chat)   (Or "frowney face") See emoticon.
  • fuegian — of or belonging to Tierra del Fuego or its indigenous Indians.
  • fueling — Present participle of fuel.
  • fuentesCarlos, 1928–2012, Mexican writer and diplomat.
  • fulgent — shining brightly; dazzling; resplendent: fulgent patterns of sunlight.
  • fulmine — fulminate
  • fulness — fullness.
  • funders — Plural form of funder.
  • fundies — Plural form of fundie.
  • funebre — funereal or mournful
  • funeral — the ceremonies for a dead person prior to burial or cremation; obsequies.
  • funfest — a party or other gathering for fun and entertainment.
  • fungate — To become like a fungus.
  • fungoes — Plural form of fungo.
  • funicle — the stalk of an ovule or seed.
  • funless — Lacking fun.
  • funnels — a cone-shaped utensil with a tube at the apex for conducting liquid or other substance through a small opening, as into a bottle, jug, or the like.
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