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7-letter words containing n, i

  • dotting — a small, roundish mark made with or as if with a pen.
  • doucine — a type of moulding of the cornice
  • dourine — an infectious disease of horses, affecting the genitals and hind legs, caused by a protozoan parasite, Trypanosoma equiperdum.
  • dousing — Present participle of douse.
  • douting — Present participle of dout.
  • dowding — Baron Hugh Caswall Tremenheere, nicknamed Stuffy. 1882–1970, British air chief marshal. As commander in chief of Fighter Command (1936–40), he contributed greatly to the British victory in the Battle of Britain (1940)
  • downier — Comparative form of downy.
  • downing — a downward movement; descent.
  • downmix — (transitive) To mix (a number of distinct audio channels) to produce a lower number of channels.
  • dowsing — to plunge or be plunged into a liquid.
  • doxepin — a tricyclic antidepressant, C 19 H 21 NO, used primarily to treat depression or anxiety.
  • drag in — cat: bring indoors
  • drained — to withdraw or draw off (a liquid) gradually; remove slowly or by degrees, as by filtration: to drain oil from a crankcase.
  • drainer — to withdraw or draw off (a liquid) gradually; remove slowly or by degrees, as by filtration: to drain oil from a crankcase.
  • draping — to cover or hang with cloth or other fabric, especially in graceful folds; adorn with drapery.
  • draw in — to cause to move in a particular direction by or as if by a pulling force; pull; drag (often followed by along, away, in, out, or off).
  • drawing — an act of drawing.
  • draying — a low, strong cart without fixed sides, for carrying heavy loads.
  • driness — Archaic form of dryness.
  • drinked — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of drink.
  • drinker — a person who drinks.
  • driving — noting or pertaining to a part of a machine or vehicle used for its propulsion.
  • droning — to make a dull, continued, low, monotonous sound; hum; buzz.
  • dronish — Like a drone, slow, sluggish.
  • drop in — Informal.. Also, dropper-in. a person who or thing that pays an unexpected or uninvited visit: a feeder for squirrels, raccoons, and other drop-ins.
  • drop-in — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
  • droving — Present participle of drove.
  • drumlin — a long, narrow or oval, smoothly rounded hill of unstratified glacial drift.
  • dubbing — the new sounds added to a film or tape.
  • dubnium — a superheavy, synthetic, radioactive element with a very short half-life. Symbol: Db; atomic number: 105.
  • ducking — to stoop or bend suddenly; bob.
  • duckpin — Bowling. a short pin of relatively large diameter, used in a game resembling tenpins, and bowled at with small balls.
  • ducting — any tube, canal, pipe, or conduit by which a fluid, air, or other substance is conducted or conveyed.
  • duction — (obsolete) guidance.
  • dueling — Present participle of duel.
  • dueting — Present participle of duet.
  • duffing — to give a deliberately deceptive appearance to; misrepresent; fake.
  • dulcian — an organ-stop consisting of pipes made of reeds
  • dulling — not sharp; blunt: a dull knife.
  • dumbing — Present participle of dumb.
  • dumpbin — a free-standing unit in a bookshop in which the books of a particular publisher are displayed
  • dumping — to drop or let fall in a mass; fling down or drop heavily or suddenly: Dump the topsoil here.
  • dunciad — a poem (1728–42) by Pope, satirizing various contemporary writers.
  • dunedin — a seaport on SE South Island, in New Zealand.
  • dunging — excrement, especially of animals; manure.
  • dunitic — Of or relating to dunite.
  • dunking — any flavorful sauce, dip, gravy, etc., into which portions of food are dipped before eating.
  • dunkirk — French Dunkerque [dœn-kerk] /dœ̃ˈkɛrk/ (Show IPA). a seaport in N France: site of the evacuation of a British expeditionary force of over 330,000 men under German fire May 29–June 4, 1940.
  • dunlins — Plural form of dunlin.
  • dunnies — Plural form of dunny.
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