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

  • omental — a fold of the peritoneum connecting the stomach and the abdominal viscera forming a protective and supportive covering.
  • ominate — (obsolete) To presage; to foreshow; to foretoken.
  • omnitab — Statistical analysis and desk calculator. Version: OMNITAB II.
  • ottoman — of or relating to the Ottoman Empire.
  • outname — to be more notorious than
  • 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.
  • payment — something that is paid; an amount paid; compensation; recompense.
  • peatman — a person who sells peat
  • peteman — peterman.
  • phantom — an apparition or specter.
  • 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.
  • putamen — Botany. a hard or stony endocarp, as a peach stone.
  • puttnam — David, Baron. born 1941, British film producer. Films include Chariots of Fire (1981), The Killing Fields (1984), Memphis Belle (1990), and My Life So Far (1999)
  • quantum — time slice
  • ragment — a statute, roll, or list
  • raiment — clothing; apparel; attire.
  • ramenta — a scraping, shaving, or particle.
  • rampant — violent in action or spirit; raging; furious: a rampant leopard.
  • 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.
  • remanet — a remainder or something left over
  • remnant — a remaining, usually small part, quantity, number, or the like.
  • romaunt — a romantic tale or poem; romance.
  • samnite — an ancient country in central Italy.
  • sanctum — a sacred or holy place.
  • santims — a former coin of Latvia, the 100th part of a lat.
  • sarment — a thin stem or runner that forms a new plant
  • smarten — to make more trim or spruce; improve in appearance (usually followed by up): Try to smarten up your outfit.
  • smeatonJohn, 1724–92, English engineer.
  • smetana — Bedřich [Czech be-drzhikh] /Czech ˈbɛ drʒɪx/ (Show IPA), 1824–84, Czech composer.
  • stamina — a plural of stamen.
  • stamnos — a storage jar having an oval body tapering at the base and two horizontal handles set on the shoulder.
  • stannum — tin.
  • stayman — a variety of apple grown chiefly in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.
  • syntagm — an element that enters into a syntagmatic relationship.
  • tamarin — any South American marmoset of the genera Saguinus and Leontopithecus (Leontideus), having silky fur and a nonprehensile tail: several species are threatened or endangered.
  • tammany — pertaining to, involving, or characteristic of the membership or methods of Tammany Hall.
  • tamping — to force in or down by repeated, rather light, strokes: He tamped the tobacco in his pipe.
  • tampion — a plug or stopper placed in the muzzle of a piece of ordnance when not in use, to keep out dampness and dust.
  • tangram — a Chinese puzzle consisting of a square cut into five triangles, a square, and a rhomboid, which can be combined so as to form a great variety of other figures.
  • tannaim — one of a group of Jewish scholars, active in Palestine during the 1st and 2nd centuries a.d., whose teachings are found chiefly in the Mishnah.
  • tantrum — a violent demonstration of rage or frustration; a sudden burst of ill temper.
  • tapeman — a person who holds and positions a tape in taking measurements.
  • tapsman — a barman
  • taximan — a taxi driver.
  • teaming — a number of persons forming one of the sides in a game or contest: a football team.
  • telamon — atlas (def 5).
  • teleman — a noncommissioned officer in the US navy, usually charged with communications duties
  • the man — the person having power or authority over one; esp., as orig. used by U.S. blacks, a white man
  • thiamin — a white, crystalline, water-soluble compound of the vitamin-B complex, containing a thiazole and a pyrimidine group, C 12 H 17 ClN 4 OS, essential for normal functioning of the nervous system, a deficiency of which results chiefly in beriberi and other nerve disorders: occurring in many natural sources, as green peas, liver, and especially the seed coats of cereal grains, the commercial product of which is chiefly synthesized in the form of its chloride (thiamine chloride or thiamine hydrochloride) for therapeutic administration, or in nitrate form (thiamine mononitrate) for enriching flour mixes.
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