7-letter words containing n, o, r, t
- cornets — Plural form of cornet.
- cornett — a musical instrument consisting of a straight or curved tube of wood or ivory having finger holes like a recorder and a cup-shaped mouthpiece like a trumpet
- cornist — a person who plays the horn
- cornute — having or resembling cornua; hornlike
- cornuto — a cuckold
- coronet — A coronet is a small crown.
- cortina — the weblike part of certain mushrooms, which hangs from the edge of the pileus and consists of silky fibrils
- cortona — a town in central Italy, in Tuscany: Roman and Etruscan remains, 15th-century cathedral. Pop: 22 048 (2001)
- costner — Kevin. born 1955, US film actor: his films include Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1990), Dances with Wolves (1990; also directed), JFK (1991), Waterworld (1995), Open Range (2003), and the TV mini-series Hatfields & McCoys (2012)
- cothurn — A buskin anciently worn by tragic actors on the stage.
- counter — In a place such as a shop or café, a counter is a long narrow table or flat surface at which customers are served.
- country — A country is one of the political units which the world is divided into, covering a particular area of land.
- courant — a courante
- cratons — Plural form of craton.
- creston — a ridge on a hill that curves downwards at the ends
- cretons — a spread of shredded pork cooked with onions in pork fat
- crontab — (computing, Unix) A table of commands to be executed periodically.
- crotone — a town in S Italy, on the coast of Calabria: founded in about 700 bc by the Achaeans; chemical works and zinc-smelting. Pop: 60 010 (2001)
- crotons — Plural form of croton.
- crottin — a type of French goat cheese.
- crouton — Croutons are small pieces of toasted or fried bread that are added to soup just before you eat it.
- crownet — a coronet.
- crypton — a hypothetical particle important in string theory and explanations of dark matter
- diatron — an electrical circuit that uses diodes
- dinitro — (organic chemistry) Two nitro groups in a chemical compound.
- donator — to present as a gift, grant, or contribution; make a donation of, as to a fund or cause: to donate used clothes to the Salvation Army.
- donnert — stunned
- dormant — lying asleep or as if asleep; inactive, as in sleep; torpid: The lecturer's sudden shout woke the dormant audience.
- dormont — a city in SW Pennsylvania.
- drayton — Michael, 1563–1631, English poet.
- effront — (obsolete) To give assurance to.
- elytron — Each of the two wing cases of a beetle.
- enactor — One who enacts.
- enroute — Misspelling of en route.
- entero- — indicating an intestine
- enteron — The gut, the whole intestine (alimentary) canal.
- entrold — surrounded
- entropy — A thermodynamic quantity representing the unavailability of a system's thermal energy for conversion into mechanical work, often interpreted as the degree of disorder or randomness in the system.
- estrone — An estrogen similar to but less potent than estradiol.
- euronet — (company) An IAP from Amsterdam, The Netherlands operating since 1994-08-01 and owned by France Telecom since 1998-11-06. E-mail: <[email protected]>. Telephone: +31 (020) 535 5555. Fax: +31 (020) 535 5400. Address: Herengracht 208-214, 1016 BS Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
- fanwort — any aquatic plant belonging to the genus Cabomba, of the water lily family, having very small flowers and submerged and floating leaves.
- forints — Plural form of forint.
- formant — Music. the range and number of partials present in a tone of a specific instrument, representing its timbre.
- forment — Misspelling of foment.
- fortran — a high-level programming language used mainly for solving problems in science and engineering.
- fortuna — the ancient Roman goddess of fortune, identified with the Greek goddess Tyche.
- fortune — position in life as determined by wealth: to make one's fortune.
- forwent — simple past tense of forgo.
- fracton — A collective quantized vibration on a substrate with a fractal structure; the fractal analogue of a phonon.
- fremont — John Charles, 1813–90, U.S. general and explorer: first Republican presidential candidate, 1856.