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7-letter words containing u, n, d

  • dry run — a rehearsal or practice exercise.
  • du mont — Allen Balcom. 1901–65, US inventor and electronics manufacturer. He developed the cathode-ray tube used in television sets and oscilloscopes
  • du pont — É(leuthère) I(rénée)1771-1834; Am. industrialist, born in France
  • dubawnt — a river in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, Canada, flowing NE to Baker Lake. 580 miles (933 km) long.
  • dubbing — the new sounds added to a film or tape.
  • dubnium — a superheavy, synthetic, radioactive element with a very short half-life. Symbol: Db; atomic number: 105.
  • ducking — to stoop or bend suddenly; bob.
  • duckpin — Bowling. a short pin of relatively large diameter, used in a game resembling tenpins, and bowled at with small balls.
  • ducting — any tube, canal, pipe, or conduit by which a fluid, air, or other substance is conducted or conveyed.
  • duction — (obsolete) guidance.
  • dudgeon — a kind of wood used especially for the handles of knives, daggers, etc.
  • dueling — Present participle of duel.
  • dueness — Quality of being due; debt; what is due or becoming.
  • duennas — Plural form of duenna.
  • dueting — Present participle of duet.
  • duffing — to give a deliberately deceptive appearance to; misrepresent; fake.
  • dugento — duecento.
  • dugongs — Plural form of dugong.
  • dulcian — an organ-stop consisting of pipes made of reeds
  • dulling — not sharp; blunt: a dull knife.
  • dulness — Obsolete spelling of dullness.
  • dumbing — Present participle of dumb.
  • dump on — to drop or let fall in a mass; fling down or drop heavily or suddenly: Dump the topsoil here.
  • dumpbin — a free-standing unit in a bookshop in which the books of a particular publisher are displayed
  • dumping — to drop or let fall in a mass; fling down or drop heavily or suddenly: Dump the topsoil here.
  • dun fly — a dun-colored artificial fly that resembles the larval stage of certain real flies.
  • dunarea — Romanian name of the Dvina.
  • duncery — the characteristic behaviour or the state of being a dunce or a dullard
  • dunciad — a poem (1728–42) by Pope, satirizing various contemporary writers.
  • dundalk — a town in central Maryland, near Baltimore.
  • dunedin — a seaport on SE South Island, in New Zealand.
  • dungeon — Zork
  • dunging — excrement, especially of animals; manure.
  • dunitic — Of or relating to dunite.
  • dunkers — any flavorful sauce, dip, gravy, etc., into which portions of food are dipped before eating.
  • dunking — any flavorful sauce, dip, gravy, etc., into which portions of food are dipped before eating.
  • dunkirk — French Dunkerque [dœn-kerk] /dœ̃ˈkɛrk/ (Show IPA). a seaport in N France: site of the evacuation of a British expeditionary force of over 330,000 men under German fire May 29–June 4, 1940.
  • dunlins — Plural form of dunlin.
  • dunmoreJohn Murray, 4th Earl of, 1732–1809, Scottish colonial governor in America.
  • dunnage — baggage or personal effects.
  • dunnart — Any species of the genus Sminthopsis of small carnivorous marsupials that resemble mice or shrews.
  • dunness — The quality of being dun in colour.
  • dunnies — Plural form of dunny.
  • dunning — to make repeated and insistent demands upon, especially for the payment of a debt.
  • dunnish — rather dull or greyish-brown in colour
  • dunnite — an ammonium picrate explosive used as a bursting charge for armor-piercing projectiles and in high-explosive shells; explosive D.
  • dunnock — hedge sparrow.
  • dunsany — Edward John Moreton Drax Plunkett [mawr-tn draks pluhng-ket,, -kit,, mohr-] /ˈmɔr tn dræks ˈplʌŋ kɛt,, -kɪt,, ˈmoʊr-/ (Show IPA), 18th Baron ("Lord Dunsany") 1878–1957, Irish dramatist, poet, and essayist.
  • dunstanSaint, a.d. c925–988, English statesman: archbishop of Canterbury 961–978.
  • dunting — a hard blow or hit, especially one that makes a dull sound; thump.
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