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7-letter words containing p, e, n, t

  • netplay — (video games) Multiplayer gameplay over a network.
  • neupest — German name of Ujpest.
  • newport — a seaport in Gwent, in SE Wales, near the Severn estuary.
  • nonpoet — One who is not a poet.
  • notepad — a pad of blank pages for writing notes.
  • np time — nondeterministic polynomial time
  • nymphet — a young nymph.
  • open to — glad or willing to receive, discuss, etc.
  • openest — (archaic) Second-person singular present simple form of 'open'.
  • openeth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of open.
  • operant — operating; producing effects.
  • opulent — characterized by or exhibiting opulence: an opulent suite.
  • pageant — an elaborate public spectacle illustrative of the history of a place, institution, or the like, often given in dramatic form or as a procession of colorful floats.
  • painted — reproduced or represented in paint: a painted image.
  • painter — cougar.
  • pandectpandects, a complete body or code of laws.
  • paneity — the state of being bread, esp Eucharistic bread
  • pantest — of or relating to pants: pant cuffs.
  • panther — the cougar or puma, Felis concolor.
  • panties — panties.
  • pantile — a roofing tile straight in its length but curved in its width to overlap the next tile.
  • pantine — a pasteboard puppet that was fashionable in the 1700s
  • pantler — a pantry servant
  • 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.
  • parenty — a large, brown and yellow monitor lizard, Varanus giganteus, native to arid and semiarid regions of Australia.
  • partner — a person who shares or is associated with another in some action or endeavor; sharer; associate.
  • pastern — the part of the foot of a horse, cow, etc., between the fetlock and the hoof.
  • patchenKenneth, 1911–72, U.S. poet and novelist.
  • patency — the state of being patent.
  • patient — a person who is under medical care or treatment.
  • patined — patina.
  • patness — the characteristic of being pat; appropriateness; aptness
  • patonce — (of a cross) having limbs which broaden from the centre and are floriated at the end
  • pattens — any of various kinds of footwear, as a wooden shoe, a shoe with a wooden sole, a chopine, etc., to protect the feet from mud or wetness.
  • pattern — a distinctive style, model, or form: a new pattern of army helmet.
  • payment — something that is paid; an amount paid; compensation; recompense.
  • peanuts — the pod or the enclosed edible seed of the plant, Arachis hypogaea, of the legume family: the pod is forced underground in growing, where it ripens.
  • peasant — a member of a class of persons, as in Europe, Asia, and Latin America, who are small farmers or farm laborers of low social rank.
  • peatman — a person who sells peat
  • peccant — sinning; guilty of a moral offense.
  • peloton — an ornamental glass made in Bohemia in the late 19th century, usually having a striated overlay of glass filaments in a different color.
  • pelting — paltry; petty; mean.
  • penalty — a punishment imposed or incurred for a violation of law or rule.
  • penates — the household gods of the ancient Romans
  • pendant — a hanging ornament, as an earring or the main piece suspended from a necklace.
  • pendent — hanging or suspended: a pendent lamp.
  • pennant — a long, tapering flag or burgee of distinctive form and special significance, borne on naval or other vessels and used in signaling or for identification.
  • pennate — winged; feathered.
  • penrith — a market town in NW England, in Cumbria. Pop: 14 471 (2001)
  • penster — a writer, esp of trivial things
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