7-letter words containing n, i, s, a
- linares — a city in S Spain.
- lindsay — Howard, 1889–1968, U.S. playwright, producer, and actor.
- lingams — Plural form of lingam.
- linsang — any of several civetlike carnivores of the genera Prionodon, of the East Indies, and Poiana, of Africa, having retractile claws and a long tail: some East Indies linsangs are endangered.
- madison — a state in the N central United States: a part of the Midwest. 56,154 sq. mi. (145,440 sq. km). Capital: Madison. Abbreviation: WI (for use with zip code), Wis., Wisc.
- maidans — Plural form of maidan.
- maidens — Plural form of maiden.
- makings — the act of a person or thing that makes: The making of a violin requires great skill.
- maligns — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of malign.
- malines — French name of Mechlin.
- malison — a curse.
- malkins — Plural form of malkin.
- mandirs — Plural form of mandir.
- maniacs — Plural form of maniac.
- mannies — Plural form of manny.
- mannish — being typical or suggestive of a man rather than a woman: mannish clothing styles for women; a mannish voice.
- manship — The characteristic of being a man; maleness; masculinity; manliness; manhood.
- mansion — a very large, impressive, or stately residence.
- mantids — Plural form of mantid.
- manwise — in the manner of a human being: The dog stood on his hind legs and walked manwise.
- margins — Plural form of margin.
- marinas — Plural form of marina.
- marines — of or relating to the sea; existing in or produced by the sea: marine vegetation.
- marinus — died a.d. 946, pope 942–946.
- marlins — Plural form of marlin.
- martins — Archer John Porter [ahr-cher] /ˈɑr tʃər/ (Show IPA), 1910–2002, English biochemist: Nobel Prize in chemistry 1952.
- mashing — Present participle of mash.
- masking — a covering for all or part of the face, worn to conceal one's identity.
- masonic — Of or pertaining to stonemasons or masonry.
- mass in — to fill or block in (the areas of unified colour, shade, etc) in a painting or drawing
- massine — Léonide [ley-aw-need] /leɪ ɔˈnid/ (Show IPA), 1896–1979, U.S. ballet dancer and choreographer, born in Russia.
- massing — a body of coherent matter, usually of indefinite shape and often of considerable size: a mass of dough.
- masting — Nautical. a spar or structure rising above the hull and upper portions of a ship or boat to hold sails, spars, rigging, booms, signals, etc., at some point on the fore-and-aft line, as a foremast or mainmast. any of a number of individual spars composing such a structure, as a topmast supported on trestletrees at the head of a lower mast. any of various portions of a single spar that are beside particular sails, as a top-gallant mast and royal mast formed as a single spar.
- matings — Plural form of mating, gerund of 'mate'.
- mattins — matin (def 1).
- mawkins — Plural form of mawkin.
- meanies — Plural form of meany.
- medians — Plural form of median.
- medinas — Plural form of medina.
- menials — Plural form of menial.
- messina — a seaport in NE Sicily.
- minbars — Plural form of minbar.
- mishnah — the collection of oral laws compiled about a.d. 200 by Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi and forming the basic part of the Talmud.
- misname — to name incorrectly or wrongly; miscall.
- misplan — (transitive) To plan badly or incorrectly.
- moissan — Henri [ahn-ree] /ɑ̃ˈri/ (Show IPA), 1852–1907, French chemist: Nobel prize 1906.
- monesia — a preparation extracted from the bark of a South American tree, Pradosia lactescens, and used chiefly as an astringent and as an expectorant.
- naggish — tending to nag; somewhat nagging.
- naiades — Plural form of naiad.
- nailers — Plural form of nailer.