7-letter words containing t, e, n
- kärnten — Carinthia
- kastner — Erich [ey-rikh] /ˈeɪ rɪx/ (Show IPA), 1899–1974, German writer.
- katrine — Loch, a lake in central Scotland. 8 miles (13 km) long.
- keating — Paul. born 1944, Australian Labor politician; prime minister of Australia (1991–96)
- keenest — finely sharpened, as an edge; so shaped as to cut or pierce substances readily: a keen razor.
- keepnet — (nautical) A net strung on wire hoops and sealed at one end, suspended in water by anglers to keep alive the fish they have caught.
- kenitra — a port in NW Morocco, NE of Rabat.
- kenneth — a male given name: from an Irish word meaning “handsome.”.
- kennett — a town in SE Missouri.
- kenotic — the doctrine that Christ relinquished His divine attributes so as to experience human suffering.
- kentish — of or relating to Kent or its people.
- kentuck — Kentucky.
- keratin — a scleroprotein or albuminoid substance, found in the dead outer skin layer, and in horn, hair, feathers, hoofs, nails, claws, bills, etc.
- kernite — a mineral, hydrated sodium borate, Na 2 B 4 O 7 ⋅4H 2 O, occurring in transparent colorless crystals: the principal source of boron compounds in the U.S.
- ketones — Plural form of ketone.
- ketonic — any of a class of organic compounds containing a carbonyl group, CO, attached to two alkyl groups, as CH 3 COCH 3 or CH 3 COC 2 H 5 .
- keynote — Music. the note or tone on which a key or system of tones is founded; the tonic.
- khanate — the area governed by a khan.
- khojent — a town in Tajikistan on the Syr Darya River: one of the oldest towns in central Asia; textile industries. Pop: 146 000 (2005 est)
- kindest — of a good or benevolent nature or disposition, as a person: a kind and loving person.
- kinetic — pertaining to motion.
- kinetin — a synthetic cytokinin, C 10 H 9 ON 5 , that retards senescence in plants.
- kineto- — moving, motion
- kinglet — a king ruling over a small country or territory.
- kirsten — a female given name, Scandinavian form of Christine.
- kitchen — a room or place equipped for cooking.
- kitenge — An African garment similar to the sarong, often worn by women wrapped around the chest or waist or as a headscarf or sling to carry a baby.
- kitsune — (mythology) a Japanese fox spirit, normally female, said to have powers such as shape-shifting, and whose power is symbolized by increase in number of tails.
- kittens — Plural form of kitten.
- kitteny — of or like a kitten
- knesset — the unicameral parliament of Israel.
- knitted — made by knitting, as a cloth article: a knitted bedspread.
- knitter — to make (a garment, fabric, etc.) by interlocking loops of one or more yarns either by hand with knitting needles or by machine.
- knittle — (UK, dialect) A string that draws together a purse or bag.
- knotted — having knots; knotty.
- knotter — a person or thing that ties knots.
- knouted — Simple past tense and past participle of knout.
- knowest — (archaic) second-person singular form of 'know'.
- knoweth — Archaic third-person singular form of know.
- kristen — a feminine name: dim. Kris; var. Kristin
- kunzite — a transparent lilac-colored variety of spodumene, used as a gem.
- kutenai — a river flowing from SW Canada through NW Montana and N Idaho, swinging back into Canada to the Columbia River. 400 miles (645 km) long.
- kutenay — a member of a North American Indian people of British Columbia, Montana, and Idaho.
- kuznets — Simon (Smith) 1901–85, U.S. economist, born in Russia: Nobel Prize 1971.
- kyanite — a mineral, aluminum silicate, Al 2 SiO 5 , occurring in blue or greenish bladed triclinic crystals, used as a refractory.
- la tene — Archaeology. designating the period or culture of the late Iron Age typified by the structural remains, swords, tools, utensils, etc., found at La Tène. Compare Hallstattan.
- lactone — any of a group of internal esters derived from hydroxy acids.
- lambent — running or moving lightly over a surface: lambent tongues of flame.
- laments — to feel or express sorrow or regret for: to lament his absence.
- lanated — Alternative form of lanate.