7-letter words containing on
- fremont — John Charles, 1813–90, U.S. general and explorer: first Republican presidential candidate, 1856.
- frisson — a sudden, passing sensation of excitement; a shudder of emotion; thrill: The movie offers the viewer the occasional frisson of seeing a character in mortal danger.
- fronded — an often large, finely divided leaf, especially as applied to the ferns and certain palms.
- frontad — toward the front.
- frontal — of, in, or at the front: a frontal view; frontal attack.
- fronted — Simple past tense and past participle of front.
- fronter — the foremost part or surface of anything.
- frontes — frons
- frontis — the front wall of a cancha or jai alai court. Compare rebote (def 1).
- fronto- — of the frontal bone or region and
- fronton — a building in which jai alai is played, containing the cancha or court and sometimes having facilities for betting.
- full on — intense or intensive
- full-on — Full-on is used to describe things or activities that have all the characteristics of their type, or are done in the strongest or most extreme way possible.
- funston — Frederick, 1865–1917, U.S. general.
- furlong — a unit of distance, equal to 220 yards (201 meters) or ⅛ mile (0.2 km). Abbreviation: fur.
- fursona — (fandom) An animal character used to represent oneself online or in furry role-playing.
- fushion — the quality of being strong or spirited
- fusions — Plural form of fusion.
- gabions — Plural form of gabion.
- gadroon — Architecture. an elaborately carved or indented convex molding.
- gain on — catch up with
- galleon — a large sailing vessel of the 15th to the 17th centuries used as a fighting or merchant ship, square-rigged on the foremast and mainmast and generally lateen-rigged on one or two after masts.
- gallons — Plural form of gallon.
- galloon — a braid or trimming of worsted, silk or rayon tinsel, gold or silver, etc., usually having scalloping along both edges.
- game on — If you say game on, you mean that you are ready for something challenging to begin.
- gammons — Plural form of gammon.
- garcons — Plural form of garcon.
- garonne — a river in SW France, flowing NW from the Pyrenees to the Gironde River. 350 miles (565 km) long.
- gascony — a former province in SW France.
- geelong — a seaport in SE Australia, SW of Melbourne.
- geogony — the science of the earth's formation
- gibbons — any small, slender, long-armed arboreal anthropoid ape of the genus Hylobates, of the East Indies and southern Asia: all gibbon species are reduced in number and some are very rare.
- gigaton — one billion tons. Abbreviation: GT.
- gillion — (rare) A thousand million, proposed as an alternative to the (now little used) British 'milliard' and the (ambiguous, in the UK) US 'billion'.
- gironde — an estuary in SW France, formed by the junction of the Garonne and Dordogne rivers. 45 miles (72 km) long.
- gironny — divided into segments from the fesse point
- gladdon — Alt form gladen in the sense of sword grass.
- gleason — Jackie (Herbert John Gleason"The Great One") 1916–87, U.S. comedian and actor.
- glonoin — nitroglycerin
- gluonic — (physics) Of, pertaining to, or mediated by gluons.
- glutony — Misspelling of gluttony.
- glutton — the wolverine, Gulo gulo, of Europe.
- glycone — (carbohydrate) The sugar residue of a glycoside.
- gnomons — Plural form of gnomon.
- go long — If an investor goes long on a stock, they bet that it will go up in price by purchasing it now and selling it later.
- gobonee — compony.
- godroon — gadroon.
- godsons — Plural form of godson.
- godzone — one's home country
- goldoni — Carlo [kahr-loh;; Italian kahr-law] /ˈkɑr loʊ;; Italian ˈkɑr lɔ/ (Show IPA), 1707–93, Italian dramatist.