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7-letter words containing n, t

  • blintze — a thin pancake folded or rolled around a filling, as of cheese or fruit, and fried or baked.
  • blunted — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • blunter — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • bluntly — having an obtuse, thick, or dull edge or point; rounded; not sharp: a blunt pencil.
  • boating — Boating is travelling on a lake or river in a small boat for pleasure.
  • boatman — A boatman is a man who is paid by people to take them across an area of water in a small boat, or a man who hires boats out to them for a short time.
  • bolt-on — Bolt-on buys are purchases of other companies that a company makes in order to add them to its existing business.
  • bon mot — A bon mot is a clever, witty remark.
  • bon ton — sophisticated manners or breeding
  • boneset — any of various North American plants of the genus Eupatorium, esp E. perfoliatum, which has flat clusters of small white flowers: family Asteraceae (composites)
  • boniato — a variety of sweet potato grown in the Caribbean
  • booting — bootstrap
  • bornite — a mineral consisting of a sulphide of copper and iron that tarnishes to purple or dark red. It occurs in copper deposits. Formula: Cu5FeS4
  • botanic — Botanic means the same as botanical.
  • bothnia — Gulf ofarm of the Baltic Sea, between Finland & Sweden
  • botonee — (of a cross) having arms terminating in the form of a trefoil: cross botonée.
  • bottine — a light boot for women or children; half-boot
  • botulin — a potent toxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum in imperfectly preserved food, etc, causing botulism
  • boulton — Matthew. 1728–1809, British engineer and manufacturer, who financed Watt's steam engine and applied it to various industrial purposes
  • bow net — a clam-shaped net for trapping hawks, set open and baited with a pigeon, and closed upon the hawk by means of a trigger sprung from a blind.
  • bowbent — bent, shaped like a bow
  • bowknot — a decorative knot usually having two loops and two loose ends; bow
  • brabant — a former duchy of W Europe: divided when Belgium became independent (1830), the south forming the Belgian provinces of Antwerp and Brabant and the north forming the province of North Brabant in the Netherlands
  • brantle — a French dance
  • brenton — Howard. born 1942, British dramatist, author of such controversial plays as The Churchill Play (1974), The Romans in Britain (1980), (with David Hare) Pravda (1985), and several topical satires with Tariq Ali
  • brintonDaniel Garrison, 1837–99, U.S. physician, archaeologist, and anthropologist.
  • britain — Great Britain.
  • britten — (Edward) Benjamin, Baron Britten. 1913–76, English composer, pianist, and conductor. His works include the operas Peter Grimes (1945) and Billy Budd (1951), the choral works Hymn to St Cecilia (1942) and A War Requiem (1962), and numerous orchestral pieces
  • brittonNathaniel Lord, 1859–1934, U.S. botanist.
  • bruting — the primary step in diamond cutting in which the girdle is shaped, often with another diamond
  • brython — a Celt who speaks a Brythonic language
  • bundist — a member of a bund
  • bungest — out of order; broken; unusable.
  • bunting — Bunting consists of rows of small coloured flags that are used to decorate streets and buildings on special occasions.
  • buoyant — If you are in a buoyant mood, you feel cheerful and behave in a lively way.
  • burnett — Frances Hodgson (ˈhɒdʒsən). 1849–1924, US novelist, born in England; author of Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886) and The Secret Garden (1911)
  • burnout — If someone suffers burnout, they exhaust themselves at an early stage in their life or career because they have achieved too much too quickly.
  • burthen — burden1
  • bust on — Informal. to burst. to go bankrupt. to collapse from the strain of making a supreme effort: She was determined to make straight A's or bust.
  • butanol — a colourless substance existing in four isomeric forms. The three liquid isomers are used as solvents for resins, lacquers, etc, and in the manufacture of organic compounds. Formula: C4H9OH
  • butlins — one of the two best-known traditional holiday camps in Britain
  • butt in — If you say that someone is butting in, you are criticizing the fact that they are joining in a conversation or activity without being asked to.
  • butting — a push or blow with the head or horns.
  • buttons — a page boy
  • buttony — like a button.
  • butyrin — a colourless liquid ester or oil found in butter. It is formed from butyric acid and glycerine
  • cabinet — A cabinet is a cupboard used for storing things such as medicine or alcoholic drinks or for displaying decorative things in.
  • caetano — Marcello (marˈselu). 1906–80, prime minister of Portugal from 1968 until he was replaced by an army coup in 1974
  • caftans — Plural form of caftan.
  • cainite — a member of a Gnostic sect that exalted Cain and regarded the God of the Old Testament as responsible for evil.
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