7-letter words containing n, t
- janitor — a person employed in an apartment house, office building, school, etc., to clean the public areas, remove garbage, and do minor repairs; caretaker.
- jantily — Alternative form of jauntily.
- jaunted — Simple past tense and past participle of jaunt.
- jaunter — Someone who jaunts.
- jennets — Plural form of jennet.
- jessant — shooting up, as a plant.
- jesting — a joke or witty remark; witticism.
- jet gun — a small, pressurized device that injects a drug at sufficient velocity to penetrate the skin, used especially for immunizations.
- jetting — a stream of a liquid, gas, or small solid particles forcefully shooting forth from a nozzle, orifice, etc.
- jilting — to reject or cast aside (a lover or sweetheart), especially abruptly or unfeelingly.
- jinglet — the clapper of a sleigh-bell
- jitneys — Plural form of jitney.
- jointed — shared by or common to two or more: a joint obligation.
- 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.
- jointly — together; in combination or partnership; in common: My brother and I own the farm jointly.
- jolting — to jar, shake, or cause to move by or as if by a sudden rough thrust; shake up roughly: The bus jolted its passengers as it went down the rocky road.
- jotting — the least part of something; a little bit: I don't care a jot.
- juanita — a female given name.
- junkets — Plural form of junket.
- just on — Just on is used in mentioning an almost exact number or amount.
- justina — a feminine name: dim. Tina; var. Justine
- justine — a female given name: derived from Justin.
- justing — joust.
- jutland — a peninsula comprising the continental portion of Denmark: naval battle between the British and German fleets was fought west of this peninsula 1916. 11,441 sq. mi. (29,630 sq. km).
- jutting — to extend beyond the main body or line; project; protrude (often followed by out): The narrow strip of land juts out into the bay.
- kainite — a mineral, hydrous sulfate of magnesium and potassium chloride, occurring in granular crystalline masses, a source of potassium salts.
- kantele — a Finnish stringed instrument, similar to a zither
- kantian — of, relating to, or resembling the philosophy of Kant.
- kapteyn — Jacobus Cornelis [yah-koh-bys kawr-ney-lis] /yɑˈkoʊ büs kɔrˈneɪ lɪs/ (Show IPA), 1851–1922, Dutch astronomer.
- kärnten — Carinthia
- karting — An open-wheeled motorsport that uses small vehicles called karts or go-karts.
- kastner — Erich [ey-rikh] /ˈeɪ rɪx/ (Show IPA), 1899–1974, German writer.
- katanga — former name of Shaba.
- katcina — kachina.
- kathryn — a feminine name
- katniss — (archaic) Sagittaria sagittifolia, a herbaceous perennial flowering plant that grows in water.
- katrina — a female given name, form of Katherine.
- katrine — Loch, a lake in central Scotland. 8 miles (13 km) long.
- katsina — Alternative form of kachina.
- keating — Paul. born 1944, Australian Labor politician; prime minister of Australia (1991–96)
- keenest — finely sharpened, as an edge; so shaped as to cut or pierce substances readily: a keen razor.
- keepnet — (nautical) A net strung on wire hoops and sealed at one end, suspended in water by anglers to keep alive the fish they have caught.
- kenitra — a port in NW Morocco, NE of Rabat.
- kenneth — a male given name: from an Irish word meaning “handsome.”.
- kennett — a town in SE Missouri.
- kenotic — the doctrine that Christ relinquished His divine attributes so as to experience human suffering.
- kentish — of or relating to Kent or its people.
- kentuck — Kentucky.
- 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.