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7-letter words containing n, u, t

  • cuneate — wedge-shaped: cuneate leaves are attached at the narrow end
  • cunette — a small trench dug in the main ditch of a fortification, acting as both a drain and an obstacle to attackers
  • currant — Currants are small dried black grapes, used especially in cakes.
  • current — A current is a steady and continuous flowing movement of some of the water in a river, lake, or sea.
  • curtain — Curtains are large pieces of material which you hang from the top of a window.
  • curtana — the unpointed sword carried before an English sovereign at a coronation as an emblem of mercy
  • cutbank — the outer, steeper bank of a bend or meander in a river or stream
  • cutdown — a decrease or reduction in the number, size, or incidence of anything
  • cutline — a caption accompanying an illustration
  • cutting — A cutting is a piece of writing which has been cut from a newspaper or magazine.
  • daunted — intimidated
  • daunter — One who daunts.
  • dauting — to caress.
  • defunct — If something is defunct, it no longer exists or has stopped functioning or operating.
  • demount — to remove (a motor, gun, etc) from its mounting or setting
  • denture — a partial or full set of artificial teeth
  • detenue — female prisoner
  • detinue — an action brought by a plaintiff to recover goods wrongfully detained
  • detuned — Simple past tense and past participle of detune.
  • diluent — serving to dilute; diluting.
  • distune — to cause (an instrument) to be out of tune
  • disturn — (obsolete) To turn aside.
  • donatus — early-4th-century bishop of Casae Nigrae in northern Africa: leader of a heretical Christian group. Compare Donatist.
  • douting — Present participle of dout.
  • 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
  • dubawnt — a river in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, Canada, flowing NE to Baker Lake. 580 miles (933 km) long.
  • ducting — any tube, canal, pipe, or conduit by which a fluid, air, or other substance is conducted or conveyed.
  • duction — (obsolete) guidance.
  • dueting — Present participle of duet.
  • dugento — duecento.
  • dunitic — Of or relating to dunite.
  • dunnart — Any species of the genus Sminthopsis of small carnivorous marsupials that resemble mice or shrews.
  • dunnite — an ammonium picrate explosive used as a bursting charge for armor-piercing projectiles and in high-explosive shells; explosive D.
  • dunstanSaint, a.d. c925–988, English statesman: archbishop of Canterbury 961–978.
  • dunting — a hard blow or hit, especially one that makes a dull sound; thump.
  • duotone — of two tones or colors.
  • duranteJames Francis ("Jimmy") 1893–1980, U.S. comedian.
  • durantyWalter, 1884–1957, English journalist and author in the U.S.
  • dustbin — an ashcan; garbage can.
  • dusting — earth or other matter in fine, dry particles.
  • dustman — a person employed to remove or cart away garbage, refuse, ashes, etc.; garbage collector.
  • dustmen — Plural form of dustman.
  • dustpan — a short-handled shovellike utensil into which dust is swept for removal.
  • duvetyn — a napped fabric, in a twilled or plain weave, of cotton, wool, silk, or rayon.
  • eluants — Plural form of eluant.
  • eluting — Present participle of elute.
  • elution — (analytical chemistry) The process of removing materials that are absorbed with a solvent.
  • encrust — Cover (something) with a hard surface layer.
  • engluts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of englut.
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