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7-letter words containing n, t, e, r

  • ingrate — an ungrateful person.
  • inherit — to take or receive (property, a right, a title, etc.) by succession or will, as an heir: to inherit the family business.
  • inkster — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit.
  • inserts — Plural form of insert.
  • instore — an establishment where merchandise is sold, usually on a retail basis.
  • int rev — Internal Revenue
  • intaker — One who or that which takes or draws in.
  • integer — Mathematics. one of the positive or negative numbers 1, 2, 3, etc., or zero. Compare whole number.
  • interac — a system of electronic bank payments or withdrawals
  • intered — Alternative spelling of interred.
  • interim — an intervening time; interval; meantime: School doesn't start till September, but he's taking a Spanish class in the interim.
  • interj. — interjection
  • interne — intern2 .
  • interns — Plural form of intern.
  • intoner — to utter with a particular tone or voice modulation.
  • intreat — (dated) entreat.
  • intrude — to thrust or bring in without invitation, permission, or welcome.
  • intruse — (botany) Pushed or projecting inward.
  • inverts — Plural form of invert.
  • inviter — to request the presence or participation of in a kindly, courteous, or complimentary way, especially to request to come or go to some place, gathering, entertainment, etc., or to do something: to invite friends to dinner.
  • iterant — characterized by repetition; repeating.
  • iternet — (spelling)   It's spelled "Internet".
  • jaunter — Someone who jaunts.
  • jointer — the place at which two things, or separate parts of one thing, are joined or united, either rigidly or in such a way as to permit motion; juncture.
  • kärnten — Carinthia
  • kastner — Erich [ey-rikh] /ˈeɪ rɪx/ (Show IPA), 1899–1974, German writer.
  • katrineLoch, a lake in central Scotland. 8 miles (13 km) long.
  • kenitra — a port in NW Morocco, NE of Rabat.
  • keratin — a scleroprotein or albuminoid substance, found in the dead outer skin layer, and in horn, hair, feathers, hoofs, nails, claws, bills, etc.
  • kernite — a mineral, hydrated sodium borate, Na 2 B 4 O 7 ⋅4H 2 O, occurring in transparent colorless crystals: the principal source of boron compounds in the U.S.
  • kirsten — a female given name, Scandinavian form of Christine.
  • knitter — to make (a garment, fabric, etc.) by interlocking loops of one or more yarns either by hand with knitting needles or by machine.
  • knotter — a person or thing that ties knots.
  • kristen — a feminine name: dim. Kris; var. Kristin
  • lantern — a transparent or translucent, usually portable, case for enclosing a light and protecting it from the wind, rain, etc.
  • lateran — the church of St. John Lateran, the cathedral church of the city of Rome; the church of the pope as bishop of Rome.
  • latrine — a toilet or something used as a toilet, as a trench in the earth in a camp, or bivouac area.
  • lectern — a reading desk in a church on which the Bible rests and from which the lessons are read during the church service.
  • lecturn — Misspelling of lectern.
  • lenotre — André [ahn-drey] /ɑ̃ˈdreɪ/ (Show IPA), 1613–1700, French architect and landscape designer.
  • linters — the short fibres stripped from ginned cotton seeds
  • lorentz — Hendrik Antoon [hen-drik ahn-tohn] /ˈhɛn drɪk ˈɑn toʊn/ (Show IPA), 1853–1928, Dutch physicist: Nobel Prize 1902.
  • lorient — a seaport in NW France, on the Bay of Biscay.
  • luthern — a dormer window.
  • manrent — (historical) A contract, usually military and between Scottish clans, in which a weaker man or clan pledged to serve, in return for protection, a stronger lord or clan.
  • margent — margin.
  • martens — Plural form of marten.
  • martnet — an arrangement of lines formerly used for gathering up a leech of a sail.
  • meitner — Lise [lee-zuh] /ˈli zə/ (Show IPA), 1878–1968, Austrian nuclear physicist.
  • mentors — Plural form of mentor.
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