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7-letter words containing n, t, e

  • metonym — a word used in metonymy.
  • metopon — An opiate analogue, a methylated derivative of hydromorphone used as an analgesic.
  • minaret — a lofty, often slender, tower or turret attached to a mosque, surrounded by or furnished with one or more balconies, from which the muezzin calls the people to prayer.
  • mindest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of mind.
  • mindset — an attitude, disposition, or mood.
  • minette — a syenitic lamprophyre composed chiefly of orthoclase and biotite.
  • mingent — Discharging urine.
  • miniate — to illuminate (a manuscript) in red; rubricate.
  • minivet — any of several small, long-tailed Asian cuckoo-shrikes of the genus Pericrocotus, having in the male black and red and in the female black and orange plumage.
  • minster — a church actually or originally connected with a monastic establishment.
  • mintage — the act or process of minting.
  • minters — Plural form of minter.
  • minuets — Plural form of minuet.
  • minuted — the sixtieth part (1/60) of an hour; sixty seconds.
  • minuter — the sixtieth part (1/60) of an hour; sixty seconds.
  • minutes — the sixtieth part (1/60) of an hour; sixty seconds.
  • missent — to send or forward, especially mail, to a wrong place or person.
  • mistend — to care for or tend wrongly or improperly
  • mistune — to fail to tune correctly
  • mitogen — any substance or agent that stimulates mitotic cell division.
  • mittens — Plural form of mitten.
  • mittent — (obsolete) Sending forth; emitting.
  • moisten — Wet slightly.
  • molinet — a stirrer for mixing chocolate into the contents of a chocolate pot
  • momenta — force or speed of movement; impetus, as of a physical object or course of events: The car gained momentum going downhill. Her career lost momentum after two unsuccessful films.
  • momento — memento.
  • moments — Plural form of moment.
  • moniter — (spelling)   It's spelled "monitor".
  • monojet — A single jet.
  • monster — a legendary animal combining features of animal and human form or having the forms of various animals in combination, as a centaur, griffin, or sphinx.
  • monstre — Obsolete form of monster.
  • montage — the technique of combining in a single composition pictorial elements from various sources, as parts of different photographs or fragments of printing, either to give the illusion that the elements belonged together originally or to allow each element to retain its separate identity as a means of adding interest or meaning to the composition. Compare collage (def 1).
  • montale — Eugenio [e-oo-je-nyaw] /ˌɛ uˈdʒɛ nyɔ/ (Show IPA), 1896–1981, Italian poet: Nobel prize 1975.
  • montane — pertaining to, growing in, or inhabiting mountainous regions.
  • montera — A traditional Iberian hat associated with bullfighters.
  • montero — a Spanish hunter's cap, round in shape and having an earflap.
  • monteuxPierre [pyer] /pyɛr/ (Show IPA), 1875–1964, U.S. symphony orchestra conductor born in France.
  • monture — a mounting or a means for supporting or fixing something in place
  • moonlet — a small natural or artificial satellite, as one of a number of natural satellites thought to be embedded in the ring system of Saturn.
  • moonset — the setting of the moon below the horizon.
  • mordent — a melodic embellishment consisting of a rapid alternation of a principal tone with the tone a half or a whole step below it, called single or short when the auxiliary tone occurs once and double or long when this occurs twice or more.
  • moulten — (of a bird) having shed old feathers
  • mounted — Riding an animal, typically a horse, especially for military or other duty.
  • mounter — One who mounts.
  • mountie — Alternative form of Mountie.
  • mugient — (obsolete) lowing; bellowing.
  • mumsnet — a website, based in the UK, set up to provide advice and support about family and parenting issues
  • munites — to fortify.
  • munjeet — The plant Rubia cordifolia, or Indian madder; the dye extracted from the plant.
  • munster — a city in NW Germany: treaty of Westphalia 1648.
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