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9-letter words containing n, a, f

  • fauxmance — a fake romance between two celebrities in order to gain press coverage
  • fava bean — a plant, Vicia faba, native to the Old World, bearing large pods containing edible seeds.
  • favorance — a liking or preference: My family always had a favorance for farming.
  • favouring — Present participle of favour.
  • fawn lily — any of several lilies of the genus Erythronium, of western North America, as E. californicum, having mottled leaves and cream-white flowers.
  • fawningly — In a feigning manner; falsely.
  • featuring — a prominent or conspicuous part or characteristic: Tall buildings were a new feature on the skyline.
  • fecundate — to make prolific or fruitful.
  • feedgrain — any cereal grain used as a feed for livestock, poultry, or other animals.
  • feiseanna — Plural form of feis.
  • fellaheen — a native peasant or laborer in Egypt, Syria, etc.
  • fellating — Present participle of fellate.
  • fellation — oral stimulation of the penis, especially to orgasm.
  • fellowman — another member of the human race, especially a kindred human being: Don't deny full recognition to your fellowmen.
  • fenagling — to trick, swindle, or cheat (a person) (often followed by out of): He finagled the backers out of a fortune.
  • fenestral — (archaeology) A casement or window sash closed with cloth or paper instead of glass.
  • ferdinand — 1784–1833, king of Spain 1808, 1814–33.
  • fermanagh — a county in SW Northern Ireland. 653 sq. mi. (1691 sq. km). County seat: Enniskillen.
  • fernandel — real name Fernand Joseph Désiré Contandin. 1903–71, French comic film actor
  • fernandezJuan [hwahn,, wahn;; Spanish hwahn] /ʰwɑn,, wɑn;; Spanish ʰwɑn/ (Show IPA), 1536?–1602? Spanish navigator: explorer in South America and the Pacific.
  • fernbrake — a thicket or dense growth of ferns.
  • festinant — (medicine) Exhibiting festination; having shortened stride and quickened gait.
  • festinate — hurried.
  • feuillant — a member of a club formed in 1791 by Lafayette advocating a limited constitutional monarchy: forced to disband in 1792 as the revolution became more violent and antimonarchical
  • fibonacci — Leonardo (leoˈnardo), also called Leonardo of Pisa. ?1170–?1250, Italian mathematician: popularized the decimal system in Europe
  • fictional — invented as part of a work of fiction: Sherlock Holmes is a fictional detective.
  • fieldsman — a fielder in cricket.
  • figurante — a ballerina who does not perform solo.
  • figurants — Plural form of figurant.
  • filaggrin — a protein found in skin cells
  • filaments — Plural form of filament.
  • file band — an endless steel band to which straight lengths of steel files are attached, used on a band mill or band saw.
  • file name — an arrangement of characters that enables a computer system to permit the user to have access to a particular file
  • filenames — Plural form of filename.
  • filiation — the fact of being the child of a certain parent.
  • filigrain — filigree.
  • fin whale — finback.
  • finagling — to trick, swindle, or cheat (a person) (often followed by out of): He finagled the backers out of a fortune.
  • final cut — the final edited version of a film, approved by the director and producer.
  • finalised — to put into final form; complete all the details of.
  • finalises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of finalise.
  • finalists — Plural form of finalist.
  • finalized — to put into final form; complete all the details of.
  • finalizer — (computing) In some programming languages, a function that runs when an object is garbage collected, similar to a destructor.
  • finalizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of finalize.
  • financial — pertaining to monetary receipts and expenditures; pertaining or relating to money matters; pecuniary: financial operations.
  • financier — a person skilled or engaged in managing large financial operations, whether public or corporate.
  • financing — 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.
  • fine arts — a visual art considered to have been created primarily for aesthetic purposes and judged for its beauty and meaningfulness, specifically, painting, sculpture, drawing, watercolor, graphics, and architecture.
  • fine gael — one of the major political parties in the Republic of Ireland, formed in 1933
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