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7-letter words containing m, o, u, n

  • mousing — a wrapping of several turns of small stuff around the shank end of a hook.
  • mowburn — the natural process of heating and fermenting that takes place when hay or corn is piled up when it is damp or green
  • muldoonRobert David, 1921–92, New Zealand political leader: prime minister 1975–84.
  • mullion — a vertical member, as of stone or wood, between the lights of a window, the panels in wainscoting, or the like.
  • munnion — a mullion or muntin.
  • muonium — an electron and a positively charged muon bound together by electrical attraction in the same manner as the electron and proton in a hydrogen atom.
  • murgeon — a grimace; a wry face.
  • muscone — an oily, very slightly water-soluble, large cyclic ketone containing a 15-membered ring, C 1 6 H 3 0 O, obtained from musk: used in the perfume industry.
  • musimon — Alternative form of mouflon.
  • muskone — an oily, very slightly water-soluble, large cyclic ketone containing a 15-membered ring, C 1 6 H 3 0 O, obtained from musk: used in the perfume industry.
  • muttony — Like mutton; having a flavour of mutton.
  • nelumbo — lotus (def 3).
  • neuroma — a tumor formed of nerve tissue.
  • nimious — great, extravagant, considerable
  • niobium — a steel-gray metallic element resembling tantalum in its chemical properties; becomes a superconductor below 9 K; used chiefly in alloy steels. Symbol: Nb; atomic number: 41; atomic weight: 92.906; specific gravity: 8.4 at 20°C.
  • no jump — a jump that does not qualify in sports such as the long jump
  • noricum — an ancient Roman province in central Europe, roughly corresponding to the part of Austria south of the Danube.
  • noseeum — (colloquial) a biting midge, a small flying insect that harasses people out of doors, particularly in warm weather after sunset.
  • nostrum — our sea, especially the Mediterranean to the ancient Romans.
  • notaeum — the back (upper surface) of an animal, esp of a bird
  • noumena — the object, itself inaccessible to experience, to which a phenomenon is referred for the basis or cause of its sense content.
  • omentum — a fold of the peritoneum connecting the stomach and the abdominal viscera forming a protective and supportive covering.
  • ominous — portending evil or harm; foreboding; threatening; inauspicious: an ominous bank of dark clouds.
  • omnibus — bus1 (def 1).
  • onymous — Having a name.
  • organum — an organon.
  • osmunda — any fern of the genus Osmunda, especially the royal fern.
  • outname — to be more notorious than
  • pantoum — a Malay verse form consisting of an indefinite number of quatrains with the second and fourth lines of each quatrain repeated as the first and third lines of the following one.
  • pneumo- — of or related to a lung or the lungs; respiratory
  • quondam — former; onetime: his quondam partner.
  • remount — a fresh horse or supply of fresh horses.
  • romanus — died a.d. 897, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 897.
  • romaunt — a romantic tale or poem; romance.
  • rouming — the division of common pasture into individual portions
  • solanum — any tree, shrub, or herbaceous plant of the mainly tropical solanaceous genus Solanum: includes the potato, aubergine, and certain nightshades
  • spumone — an Italian style of ice cream of a very fine and smooth texture, usually containing layers of various colors and flavors and chopped fruit or nuts.
  • spumoni — an Italian style of ice cream of a very fine and smooth texture, usually containing layers of various colors and flavors and chopped fruit or nuts.
  • summons — an authoritative command, message, or signal by which one is summoned.
  • sunroom — a room designed to admit a large amount of sunlight; sun parlor or sun porch.
  • tinamou — any of several birds of the family Tinamidae, of South and Central America, related to the ratite birds but superficially resembling the gallinaceous birds.
  • umbonal — having the shape or appearance of an umbo; bosslike: an umbonal structure.
  • unamuno — Miguel de [mee-gel de] /miˈgɛl dɛ/ (Show IPA), 1864–1936, Spanish philosopher, poet, novelist, and essayist.
  • unbosom — to disclose (a confidence, secret, etc.).
  • uncomfy — not comfortable
  • uncomic — not comic, comical, or funny; serious
  • uniform — identical or consistent, as from example to example, place to place, or moment to moment: uniform spelling; a uniform building code.
  • unmacho — not macho
  • unmoral — neither moral nor immoral; amoral; nonmoral: Nature is unmoral.
  • unmould — to take (a jelly, etc) out of a mould
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