7-letter words containing o, r, n
- tournai — a city in W Belgium, on the Scheldt River.
- tourney — a tournament.
- trabzon — official name of Trebizond.
- tragion — a point in the depth of the notch just above the tragus of the ear.
- transom — a crosspiece separating a door or the like from a window or fanlight above it.
- treason — the offense of acting to overthrow one's government or to harm or kill its sovereign.
- trenton — a state in the E United States, on the Atlantic coast. 7836 sq. mi. (20,295 sq. km). Capital: Trenton. Abbreviation: NJ (for use with zip code), N.J.
- trevino — Lee ("Super Mex") born 1939, U.S. golfer.
- tricorn — having three horns or hornlike projections; three-cornered.
- trigone — Also, trigonum. Anatomy. a triangular part or area. the area on the floor of the urinary bladder between the opening of the urethra in front and the two ureters at the sides.
- triones — the seven principal stars of the constellation Ursa Major
- tritone — an interval consisting of three whole tones; an augmented fourth.
- trocken — (of wine, esp German wine) dry
- trodden — a past participle of tread.
- troezen — (in ancient geography) a town in E Peloponnesus near the coast of the Saronic Gulf, regarded in mythology as the birthplace of Theseus.
- troking — truck2 (defs 4–7).
- troland — a unit of light intensity, used to measure the amount of light reaching the retina in the eye
- tromino — a shape made from three squares, each joined to the next along one full side
- tropine — a white, crystalline, hygroscopic, water-soluble, poisonous alkaloid, C 8 H 15 NO, obtained chiefly by the hydrolysis of atropine or hyoscyamine.
- trounce — to beat severely; thrash.
- turn on — to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
- turn to — to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
- turn-on — to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
- turnoff — a small road that branches off from a larger one, especially a ramp or exit leading off a major highway: He took the wrong turnoff and it took him some 15 minutes to get back on the turnpike.
- turnout — the gathering of persons who come to an exhibition, party, spectacle, or the like: They had a large turnout at the meeting.
- tyronic — a beginner in learning anything; novice.
- unborne — not carried
- unbroke — unbroken.
- uncover — to lay bare; disclose; reveal.
- uncross — to change from a crossed position, as the legs.
- uncrown — to deprive or divest of a crown.
- underdo — to do (something) inadequately
- undergo — to be subjected to; experience; pass through: to undergo surgery.
- unfrock — to deprive (a monk, priest, minister, etc.) of ecclesiastical rank, authority, and function; depose.
- unfrost — a degree or state of coldness sufficient to cause the freezing of water.
- unfroze — simple past tense of unfreeze.
- ungored — not gored or bloodied
- ungrown — not fully developed
- unhoard — to bring (treasure etc) out of a hoard
- unhorse — to cause to fall from a horse, as in battle; dislodge from the saddle: Sir Gawain unhorsed the strange knight.
- unibrow — a pair of eyebrows that appear to be connected because of some extra hair growing in the space between them: He had very bushy eyebrows, almost a unibrow.
- unicorn — a mythical creature resembling a horse, with a single horn in the center of its forehead: often symbolic of chastity or purity.
- uniform — identical or consistent, as from example to example, place to place, or moment to moment: uniform spelling; a uniform building code.
- unmoral — neither moral nor immoral; amoral; nonmoral: Nature is unmoral.
- unorder — to cancel an order; countermand
- unproud — feeling pleasure or satisfaction over something regarded as highly honorable or creditable to oneself (often followed by of, an infinitive, or a clause).
- unroost — to remove from a perch
- unrough — smooth or clean-shaven
- unround — to articulate (an ordinarily rounded vowel) without rounding the lips; delabialize.
- unroven — a past participle of unreeve.