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7-letter words containing l, u, n

  • bulling — the male of a bovine animal, especially of the genus Bos, with sexual organs intact and capable of reproduction.
  • bullion — Bullion is gold or silver, usually in the form of bars.
  • bullpen — In baseball, a bullpen is an area alongside the playing field, where pitchers can practice or warm up.
  • bundled — (of hardware or software) sold together, as a package, rather than separately.
  • bungled — to do clumsily and awkwardly; botch: He bungled the job.
  • bungler — A bungler is a person who often fails to do things properly because they make mistakes or are clumsy.
  • bunuelo — a thin, round, fried pastry, often dusted with cinnamon sugar.
  • burnley — an industrial town in NW England, in E Lancashire. Pop: 73 021 (2001)
  • butanol — a colourless substance existing in four isomeric forms. The three liquid isomers are used as solvents for resins, lacquers, etc, and in the manufacture of organic compounds. Formula: C4H9OH
  • butlins — one of the two best-known traditional holiday camps in Britain
  • calhoun — John Caldwell1782-1850; U.S. statesman: vice president (1825-32)
  • calluna — a low-growing evergreen Eurasian ericaceous shrub, Calluna vulgaris
  • calumny — Calumny or a calumny is an untrue statement made about someone in order to reduce other people's respect and admiration for them.
  • cannula — a narrow tube for insertion into a bodily cavity, as for draining off fluid, introducing medication, etc
  • canular — shaped like a cannula; tubular.
  • cauline — relating to or growing from a plant stem
  • censual — an official enumeration of the population, with details as to age, sex, occupation, etc.
  • chillun — (Southern US, AAVE) Plural form of chile (child).
  • chilung — a port in N Taiwan: fishing and industrial centre. Pop: 406 000 (2005 est)
  • chunnel — a rail tunnel beneath the English Channel, linking England and France, opened in 1994
  • cleanup — A cleanup is the removing of dirt, pollution, crime, or corruption from somewhere.
  • cliburnVan [van] /væn/ (Show IPA), (Harvey Lavan Cliburn, Jr) 1934–2013, U.S. pianist.
  • clubman — a man who is an enthusiastic member of a club or clubs
  • clubmen — Plural form of clubman.
  • clue in — anything that serves to guide or direct in the solution of a problem, mystery, etc.
  • clueing — Present participle of clue.
  • cluniac — of or relating to a reformed Benedictine order founded at the French town of Cluny in 910
  • clunked — Simple past tense and past participle of clunk.
  • clunker — If you describe a machine, especially a car, as a clunker, you mean that it is very old and almost falling apart.
  • clurman — Harold (Edgar) 1901–80, U.S. theatrical director, author, and critic.
  • coilgun — Any of various devices that use electromagnets to accelerate a magnetic projectile via non contact means.
  • colonus — (in ancient Rome) a farmer
  • columns — Plural form of column.
  • conflux — confluence
  • consuls — Plural form of consul.
  • consult — If you consult an expert or someone senior to you or consult with them, you ask them for their opinion and advice about what you should do or their permission to do something.
  • cornual — a horn, especially a bony part that resembles a horn.
  • couldnt — (informal, nonstandard) Alternative form of couldn't.
  • council — A council is a group of people who are elected to govern a local area such as a city or, in Britain, a county.
  • counsel — Counsel is advice.
  • courlan — limpkin
  • crunkle — (UK, obsolete, dialectal) To crumple.
  • culling — the reduction of the size of an animal population
  • cullion — a despicable person
  • cullman — a city in N Alabama.
  • culming — a stem or stalk, especially the jointed and usually hollow stem of grasses.
  • curling — a game played on ice, esp in Scotland and Canada, in which heavy stones with handles (curling stones) are slid towards a target (tee)
  • cutline — a caption accompanying an illustration
  • cynwulf — Cynewulf.
  • dernful — sorrowful, mournful, gloomy
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