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7-letter words containing n, a, d, r

  • bodhran — shallow one-sided drum popular in Irish and Scottish folk music
  • bonnard — Pierre (pjɛr). 1867–1947, French painter and lithographer, noted for the effects of light and colour in his landscapes and sunlit interiors
  • bradman — Sir Don(ald George). 1908–2001, Australian cricketer; in 52 test matches (1928–48) he scored 6,996 runs at an average of 99.94, by far the game's highest
  • bragdonClaude, 1866–1946, U.S. architect, stage designer, and author.
  • brained — having a particular type of brain (used in combination): small-brained dinosaurs.
  • brand x — (in advertising) a competing brand or product not referred to by name but implied to be of inferior quality.
  • branded — A branded product is one which is made by a well-known manufacturer and has the manufacturer's label on it.
  • brander — to apply furring to (a surface).
  • brandes — Georg Morris (giˈɔʀˈmɔʀis) ; gē^ōrˈ m^ōˈrēs) (born Georg Morris Cohen) 1842-1927; Dan. literary critic
  • brandon — a masculine name
  • brigand — A brigand is someone who attacks people and robs them, especially in mountains or forests.
  • broaden — When something broadens, it becomes wider.
  • cadrans — an instrument which measures the angles of gems and is used during the cutting process
  • cairned — marked by a cairn
  • caldron — a large kettle or boiler
  • canards — Plural form of canard.
  • candiru — a tiny parasitic freshwater catfish of the Amazon region
  • candler — a long, usually slender piece of tallow or wax with an embedded wick that is burned to give light.
  • candour — Candour is the quality of speaking honestly and openly about things.
  • cantred — a district comprising a hundred villages
  • carding — the process of preparing the fibres of cotton, wool, etc, for spinning
  • cardoon — a thistle-like S European plant, Cynara cardunculus, closely related to the artichoke, with spiny leaves, purple flowers, and a leafstalk that may be blanched and eaten: family Asteraceae (composites)
  • cernuda — Luis (lwiʃ). 1902–63, Spanish poet. His major work is the autobiographical Reality and Desire (1936–64)
  • chardin — Jean-Baptiste Siméon (ʒɑ̃batist simeɔ̃). 1699–1779, French still-life and genre painter, noted for his subtle use of scumbled colour
  • cranked — Machinery. any of several types of arms or levers for imparting rotary or oscillatory motion to a rotating shaft, one end of the crank being fixed to the shaft and the other end receiving reciprocating motion from a hand, connecting rod, etc.
  • dacryon — the point of junction of the maxillary, lacrimal, and frontal bones.
  • danbury — city in SW Conn., near Bridgeport: pop. 75,000
  • dancers — Plural form of dancer.
  • danders — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dander.
  • dandier — Comparative form of dandy.
  • dangers — Plural form of danger.
  • dangler — to hang loosely, especially with a jerking or swaying motion: The rope dangled in the breeze.
  • danmark — Denmark
  • danseur — a male ballet dancer
  • danvers — a town in NE Massachusetts, near Boston.
  • daren't — Daren't is the usual spoken form of 'dare not'.
  • darings — Plural form of daring.
  • darkens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of darken.
  • darknet — a covert communication network on the internet
  • darlene — a female given name: from the Old English word meaning “darling.”.
  • darling — You call someone darling if you love them or like them very much.
  • darn it — You can say darn it to show that you are very annoyed about something.
  • darnestgive a darn. damn (def 14).
  • darning — a mending with interlaced stitches
  • 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)
  • darrain — clear of guilt
  • darrayn — clear of guilt
  • darshan — the meeting of a devotee of Hinduism with a holy person or guru
  • darting — a small, slender missile that is pointed at one end and usually feathered at the other and is propelled by hand, as in the game of darts, or by a blowgun when used as a weapon.
  • daunder — a walk or amble
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