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7-letter words containing o, n, a, t

  • outearn — to earn more than
  • outfawn — (rare) To exceed in fawning.
  • outgain — to gain more than
  • outgnaw — to exceed in gnawing
  • outland — Usually, outlands. the outlying districts or remote regions of a country; provinces: a name unknown in the outlands.
  • outname — to be more notorious than
  • outplan — a scheme or method of acting, doing, proceeding, making, etc., developed in advance: battle plans.
  • outrang — simple past tense of outring.
  • outrank — to have a higher rank than: A major outranks a captain in the army.
  • outsang — simple past tense of outsing.
  • outspan — to unyoke or unhitch, as oxen from a wagon.
  • ovation — an enthusiastic public reception of a person, marked especially by loud and prolonged applause.
  • oxidant — a chemical agent that oxidizes.
  • ozonate — to add ozone to
  • paction — an agreement or bargain
  • pan out — a broad, shallow container of metal, usually having sides flaring outward toward the top, used in various forms for frying, baking, washing, etc.
  • pantone — (graphics)   A set of standard colours for printing, each of which is specified by a single number. You can buy a Pantone swatch book containing samples of each colour. Some computer graphics software allows colours to be specified as Pantone numbers. Even though a computer monitor can only show an approximation to some of the colours, the software can output a colour separation for each different Pantone colour, enabling a print shop to exactly reproduce the original desired colour.
  • pantoum — a Malay verse form consisting of an indefinite number of quatrains with the second and fourth lines of each quatrain repeated as the first and third lines of the following one.
  • paoting — a city in central Hebei province, in NE China.
  • patonce — (of a cross) having limbs which broaden from the centre and are floriated at the end
  • patroon — a person who held an estate in land with certain manorial privileges granted under the old Dutch governments of New York and New Jersey.
  • phaeton — any of various light, four-wheeled carriages, with or without a top, having one or two seats facing forward, used in the 19th century.
  • phantom — an apparition or specter.
  • phonate — to articulate speech sounds, esp to cause the vocal cords to vibrate in the execution of a voiced speech sound
  • pintado — cero (def 1).
  • pintano — sergeant major (def 3).
  • platoon — a military unit consisting of two or more squads or sections and a headquarters.
  • pointal — a pavement of tile mosaic forming an abstract design.
  • polenta — (especially in Italian cooking) a thick mush of cornmeal.
  • pontage — a tax paid for the maintenance of a bridge
  • pontiac — c1720–69, North American Indian, chief of the Ottawa tribe: commander during the Pontiac War 1763–64.
  • pontian — pope a.d. 230–235.
  • portman — a group of citizens of a town responsible for administering the affairs of that town
  • postman — a postal employee who carries and delivers mail; mail carrier.
  • potenza — a city in Basilicata, in S Italy.
  • pronate — to turn into a prone position; to rotate (the hand or forearm) so that the surface of the palm is downward or toward the back; to turn (the sole of the foot) outward so that the inner edge of the foot bears the weight when standing.
  • protean — readily assuming different forms or characters; extremely variable.
  • provant — supplied with provisions
  • rainout — a contest, performance, or the like, that has been rained out.
  • ramtron — (company)   The company which holds the patents for FRAM and licenses the technology to other companies. The licensees are currently (Feb 1997) Hitachi, Rohm, Samsung, SGS-Thomson and Toshiba, none of who offer FRAM products of their own yet.
  • rantoul — a city in E Illinois.
  • rations — a fixed allowance of provisions or food, especially for soldiers or sailors or for civilians during a shortage: a daily ration of meat and bread.
  • rattoon — a sprout or shoot from the root of a plant, especially a sugarcane, after it has been cropped.
  • raytown — a city in W Missouri, near Kansas City.
  • reboant — resounding or reverberating loudly.
  • romaunt — a romantic tale or poem; romance.
  • rostand — Edmond [ed-mawn] /ɛdˈmɔ̃/ (Show IPA), 1868–1918, French dramatist and poet.
  • rotunda — a round building, especially one with a dome.
  • rousant — rising
  • sabaton — a foot defense of mail or of a number of lames with solid toe and heel pieces.
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