7-letter words containing on
- doggone — to damn: Doggone your silly advice!
- donable — available free from government surpluses: Needy people in the program were eligible for donable foods such as beans and peas.
- donated — Simple past tense and past participle of donate.
- donates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of donate.
- donator — to present as a gift, grant, or contribution; make a donation of, as to a fund or cause: to donate used clothes to the Salvation Army.
- donatus — early-4th-century bishop of Casae Nigrae in northern Africa: leader of a heretical Christian group. Compare Donatist.
- donbass — an industrial region in E Ukraine in the plain of the Rivers Donets and lower Dnieper: the site of a major coalfield
- done in — past participle of do1 .
- donegal — a county in the N Republic of Ireland. 1865 sq. mi. (4830 sq. km). County seat: Lifford.
- donetsk — a city in E Ukraine, in the Donets Basin.
- dongles — Plural form of dongle.
- dongola — a former province in the N Sudan, now part of Northern Province.
- donjons — Plural form of donjon.
- donkeys — Plural form of donkey.
- donnard — stunned; dazed.
- donnerd — stupid
- donnert — stunned
- donning — to put on or dress in: to don one's clothes.
- donnish — resembling or characteristic of a university don; bookish; pedantic.
- donnism — loftiness; self-importance
- donours — Plural form of donour.
- donovan — William Joseph ("Wild Bill") 1883–1959, U.S. lawyer and military officer: organizer and director of the OSS 1942–45.
- donship — the state or position of being a don
- dontcha — Eye dialect of don't you.
- donting — contraction of do not.
- dormont — a city in SW Pennsylvania.
- down on — from higher to lower; in descending direction or order; toward, into, or in a lower position: to come down the ladder.
- dracone — A large bag used to transport a petroleum product (especially unprocessed crude oil) by sea.
- drag on — to draw with force, effort, or difficulty; pull heavily or slowly along; haul; trail: They dragged the carpet out of the house.
- dragons — Plural form of dragon.
- dragoon — (especially formerly) a European cavalryman of a heavily armed troop.
- draw on — to cause to move in a particular direction by or as if by a pulling force; pull; drag (often followed by along, away, in, out, or off).
- drayton — Michael, 1563–1631, English poet.
- dromond — a large, fast-sailing ship of the Middle Ages.
- drongos — Plural form of drongo.
- droning — to make a dull, continued, low, monotonous sound; hum; buzz.
- dronish — Like a drone, slow, sluggish.
- 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
- duction — (obsolete) guidance.
- dudgeon — a kind of wood used especially for the handles of knives, daggers, etc.
- dugongs — Plural form of dugong.
- dump on — to drop or let fall in a mass; fling down or drop heavily or suddenly: Dump the topsoil here.
- dungeon — Zork
- duotone — of two tones or colors.
- dupioni — a cocoon formed jointly by two silkworms.
- durions — Plural form of durion.
- dzongka — the official language of Bhutan: a dialect of Tibetan
- earbone — (anatomy) Any bone in the ear.
- ebonics — Black English.