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9-letter words containing f, o, t, n

  • forcement — (obsolete) The act of forcing; compulsion.
  • foreanent — opposite to
  • forefront — the foremost part or place.
  • forenight — (Scotland) The evening, between twilight and bedtime.
  • forepoint — to predetermine or indicate in advance
  • forespent — forspent.
  • forestine — relating to forests
  • foresting — a large tract of land covered with trees and underbrush; woodland.
  • forethink — to have prescience of
  • foretoken — a sign of a future event; omen; forewarning.
  • forgotten — a past participle of forget.
  • formating — Misspelling of formatting.
  • formation — the act or process of forming or the state of being formed: the formation of ice.
  • formicant — (medicine,obsolete) Of the pulse: weak and rapid.
  • fornicate — to commit fornication.
  • fort knox — (William) Frank(lin) 1874–1944, U.S. publisher and government official.
  • fortition — Phonetics. a phonological process that strengthens consonant articulation at the beginnings of syllables, causing devoicing or the formation of stops.
  • fortnight — the space of fourteen nights and days; two weeks.
  • fortran d — A data-parallel Fortran developed by Ken Kennedy at Rice University. E-mail: Theresa Chapman <[email protected]>.
  • fortran i — An early version of Fortran designed by John Backus at IBM for the IBM 704. The design was begun in 1954 and a compiler released in April 1957.
  • fortran m — Parallel extensions to Fortran with processes and channels by Ian Foster <[email protected]>.
  • fortran v — Preliminary work on adding character handling to Fortran by IBM ca. 1962. This name as never really used.
  • fortunate — having good fortune; receiving good from uncertain or unexpected sources; lucky: a fortunate young actor who got the lead in the play.
  • fortuning — Present participle of fortune.
  • fortunize — to make happy or fortunate
  • forty-one — a cardinal number, 40 plus 1.
  • foscarnet — a drug used to treat herpes viruses
  • fostering — Encourage or promote the development of (something, typically something regarded as good).
  • found art — art comprised of found objects.
  • fountains — Plural form of fountain.
  • fourteens — Plural form of fourteen.
  • fractions — Mathematics. a number usually expressed in the form a/b. a ratio of algebraic quantities similarly expressed.
  • frankfort — a state in the E central United States. 40,395 sq. mi. (104,625 sq. km). Capital: Frankfort. Abbreviation: KY (for use with zip code), Ken., Ky.
  • freestone — a fruit having a stone to which the flesh does not cling, as certain peaches and plums.
  • frenotomy — The surgical cutting of the frenum.
  • frication — an audible, constrained rush of air accompanying and characteristic of fricatives.
  • frictions — Plural form of friction.
  • frigatoon — a Venetian sailing ship with a square stern
  • frivolent — (nonstandard) frivolous, trifling, silly.
  • fromentin — Eugene [œ-zhen] /œˈʒɛn/ (Show IPA), 1820–76, French painter, critic, and author.
  • front end — 1. An intermediary computer that does set-up and filtering for another (usually more powerful but less friendly) machine (a "back end"). 2. Software that provides an interface to another program "behind" it, which may not be as user-friendly. Probably from analogy with hardware front-ends that interfaced with mainframes.
  • front man — a performer, as a singer, who leads a musical group.
  • front row — the forwards at the front of a scrum
  • front-end — relating to foremost part
  • frontager — an owner of property or land which immediately faces a beach or street
  • frontages — Plural form of frontage.
  • frontalis — A muscle of the head, sometimes considered to be part of the occipitofrontalis muscle.
  • frontally — In a frontal manner.
  • frontenac — Comte de (kɔ̃t də). title of Louis de Buade. 1620–98, governor of New France (1672–82; 1689–98)
  • frontenis — a Latin American game, resembling squash, played with rackets and a hard rubber ball on a three-walled court similar to a jai alai court.
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