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7-letter words containing n, o

  • dormont — a city in SW Pennsylvania.
  • dornick — a small stone that is easy to throw.
  • doryman — a person who uses a dory, especially a person who engages in fishing, lobstering, etc.
  • dossing — a place to sleep, especially in a cheap lodging house.
  • 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)
  • dowlandJohn, 1563–1626, English lutenist and composer.
  • dowlney — light, soft, and fluffy
  • down on — from higher to lower; in descending direction or order; toward, into, or in a lower position: to come down the ladder.
  • down to — the responsibility or fault of
  • downcry — to denigrate or disparage
  • downers — Plural form of downer.
  • 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.
  • downset — (mathematics) An ideal (in set theory).
  • 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.
  • doyenne — a woman who is the senior member, as in age or rank, of a group, class, profession, etc.
  • dozened — to stun.
  • dozenth — twelfth.
  • dracone — A large bag used to transport a petroleum product (especially unprocessed crude oil) by sea.
  • drag on — to draw with force, effort, or difficulty; pull heavily or slowly along; haul; trail: They dragged the carpet out of the house.
  • dragons — Plural form of dragon.
  • dragoon — (especially formerly) a European cavalryman of a heavily armed troop.
  • draw on — 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).
  • draytonMichael, 1563–1631, English poet.
  • drogman — Alternative form of dragoman.
  • dromond — a large, fast-sailing ship of the Middle Ages.
  • drongos — Plural form of drongo.
  • 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.
  • drowned — Die through submersion in and inhalation of water.
  • drowner — Someone who is drowning.
  • du mont — Allen Balcom. 1901–65, US inventor and electronics manufacturer. He developed the cathode-ray tube used in television sets and oscilloscopes
  • du pont — É(leuthère) I(rénée)1771-1834; Am. industrialist, born in France
  • duction — (obsolete) guidance.
  • dudgeon — a kind of wood used especially for the handles of knives, daggers, etc.
  • dugento — duecento.
  • dugongs — Plural form of dugong.
  • dump on — to drop or let fall in a mass; fling down or drop heavily or suddenly: Dump the topsoil here.
  • dungeon — Zork
  • dunmoreJohn Murray, 4th Earl of, 1732–1809, Scottish colonial governor in America.
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