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7-letter words containing o, r, n

  • unroyal — inappropriate for royalty
  • unshorn — not shorn or cut
  • unsober — not sober
  • unvisor — to remove a visor from
  • unworth — a lack of value; unworthiness
  • upborne — to bear up; raise aloft; sustain or support.
  • upfront — of or relating to the front.
  • uranous — containing trivalent uranium.
  • urge on — encourage, incite
  • urinous — of, pertaining to, resembling, or having the odor or qualities of urine.
  • urmston — a town in NW England, in Trafford unitary authority, Greater Manchester. Pop: 40 964 (2001)
  • venator — a hunter
  • vendors — a person or agency that sells.
  • venomer — something which secretes venom
  • ventro- — abdomen, belly
  • vermont — a state of the NE United States: a part of New England. 9609 sq. mi. (24,885 sq. km). Capital: Montpelier. Abbreviation: VT (for use with zip code), Vt.
  • version — a particular account of some matter, as from one person or source, contrasted with some other account: two different versions of the accident.
  • virgoan — a person born under the sign of Virgo.
  • virions — the infectious form of a virus as it exists outside the host cell, consisting of a nucleic acid core, a protein coat, and, in some species, an external envelope.
  • wagoner — a person who drives a wagon.
  • waitron — a person of either sex who waits on tables; waiter or waitress.
  • warison — a bugle call to assault.
  • wartorn — Alternative form of war-torn.
  • warworn — worn down by war
  • warzone — (during wartime) a combat area in which the rights of neutrals are suspended, as such an area on the high seas, where ships flying a neutral flag are subject to attack.
  • wayworn — worn or wearied by travel: She was wayworn after the long trip.
  • wear on — become annoying to
  • weirton — a city in N West Virginia, on the Ohio River.
  • whartonEdith, 1862–1937, U.S. novelist.
  • whereon — Archaic. on what?
  • whoring — a person who engages in promiscuous sex for money; prostitute.
  • windore — a window
  • windrow — a row or line of hay raked together to dry before being raked into heaps.
  • windsor — (since 1917) a member of the present British royal family. Compare Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (def 1).
  • wonders — Desire or be curious to know something.
  • wondred — causing wonder; amazing
  • wonkery — The quality or activities associated with being a wonk.
  • wording — a unit of language, consisting of one or more spoken sounds or their written representation, that functions as a principal carrier of meaning. Words are composed of one or more morphemes and are either the smallest units susceptible of independent use or consist of two or three such units combined under certain linking conditions, as with the loss of primary accent that distinguishes black·bird· from black· bird·. Words are usually separated by spaces in writing, and are distinguished phonologically, as by accent, in many languages.
  • wordnet — (artificial intelligence, linguistics) A semantically structured lexical database.
  • work in — exertion or effort directed to produce or accomplish something; labor; toil.
  • work on — exertion or effort directed to produce or accomplish something; labor; toil.
  • workend — a weekend where more time is spent doing housework than on relaxing or leisure pursuits
  • working — exertion or effort directed to produce or accomplish something; labor; toil.
  • workman — a man employed or skilled in some form of manual, mechanical, or industrial work.
  • workmen — Plural form of workman.
  • worming — Zoology. any of numerous long, slender, soft-bodied, legless, bilaterally symmetrical invertebrates, including the flatworms, roundworms, acanthocephalans, nemerteans, gordiaceans, and annelids.
  • worsens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of worsen.
  • worthen — (ambitransitive) To give worth to; value; make or become worth or worthy; appraise.
  • wounder — One who wounds.
  • wronged — not in accordance with what is morally right or good: a wrong deed.
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