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7-letter words containing y, e, n, a

  • cyanate — any salt or ester of cyanic acid, containing the ion –OCN or the group –OCN
  • cyanide — Cyanide is a highly poisonous substance.
  • cyanine — a blue dye used to extend the sensitivity of photographic emulsions to colours other than blue and ultraviolet
  • cyanite — kyanite
  • cyanize — to turn into cyanide
  • darnley — Lord. title of Henry Stuart (or Stewart). 1545–67, Scottish nobleman; second husband of Mary, Queen of Scots and father of James I of England. After murdering his wife's secretary, Rizzio (1566), he was himself assassinated (1567)
  • day one — If something happens from day one of a process, it happens right from the beginning. If it happens on day one, it happens right at the beginning.
  • deanery — the office or residence of dean
  • dearnly — in a solitary or unseen manner
  • delaneyShelagh [shee-luh] /ˈʃi lə/ (Show IPA), 1939–2011, English playwright.
  • dentary — a bone in the lower jaw of non-mammalian vertebrates, which holds the teeth
  • dyspnea — difficult or labored breathing.
  • elysian — of or relating to Elysium
  • encraty — the control of one's desires and actions
  • endplay — A way of playing the last few tricks that forces an opponent to make a disadvantageous lead.
  • endways — With its end facing upward, forward, or toward the viewer.
  • enfancy — Obsolete form of infancy.
  • errancy — The state of being in error; fallibility.
  • eyebank — a place in which corneas are stored for use in corneal grafts
  • feynmanRichard Phillips, 1918–1988, U.S. physicist: Nobel Prize 1965.
  • flybane — A kind of catchfly of the genus Silene.
  • gaffney — a city in N South Carolina.
  • gayness — homosexuality.
  • germany — a republic in central Europe: after World War II divided into four zones, British, French, U.S., and Soviet, and in 1949 into East Germany and West Germany; East and West Germany were reunited in 1990. 137,852 sq. mi. (357,039 sq. km). Capital: Berlin.
  • gynecia — gynoecium.
  • hackney — Also called hackney coach. a carriage or coach for hire; cab.
  • haemony — a plant with paranormal qualities referred to by Milton
  • halseny — A prediction; a prediction of evil.
  • henyard — A yard or similar area where hens run free.
  • heymans — Corneille [kawr-ne-yuh] /kɔrˈnɛ yə/ (Show IPA), 1892–1968, Belgian physiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1938.
  • hyaenas — Plural form of hyaena.
  • hyaline — Also, hyalin, H04/H0454500 hahy-uh-lin, ˈhaɪ ə lɪn. Biochemistry. a horny substance found in hydatid cysts, closely resembling chitin. a structureless, transparent substance found in cartilage, the eye, etc., resulting from the pathological degeneration of tissue.
  • hymenal — Of, or pertaining to, the hymen.
  • hypeman — Alternative spelling of hype man.
  • inanely — lacking sense, significance, or ideas; silly: inane questions.
  • inlayed — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of inlay.
  • inlayer — One who inlays.
  • janeway — Elizabeth (Hall) 1913–2005, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • joyance — joyous feeling; gladness.
  • joycean — of, relating to, or characteristic of James Joyce or his work.
  • kapteyn — Jacobus Cornelis [yah-koh-bys kawr-ney-lis] /yɑˈkoʊ büs kɔrˈneɪ lɪs/ (Show IPA), 1851–1922, Dutch astronomer.
  • kearney — a city in S Nebraska, on the Platte.
  • knavery — action or practice characteristic of a knave.
  • kutenay — a member of a North American Indian people of British Columbia, Montana, and Idaho.
  • kyanite — a mineral, aluminum silicate, Al 2 SiO 5 , occurring in blue or greenish bladed triclinic crystals, used as a refractory.
  • kyanize — to treat (wood) against decay with a solution of mercuric chloride.
  • laneway — (Canada) A narrow roadway; a lane.
  • langleyEdmund of, York, 1st Duke of.
  • larceny — the wrongful taking and carrying away of the personal goods of another from his or her possession with intent to convert them to the taker's own use.
  • latency — the state of being latent.
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