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7-letter words containing no

  • chelmno — a Nazi concentration camp in central Poland.
  • chicano — A chicano is an American citizen, whose family originally came from Mexico.
  • chignon — A chignon is a knot of hair worn at the back of a woman's head.
  • chinois — A cone-shaped sieve with a closely woven mesh for straining sauces.
  • chinone — quinone.
  • chinook — a warm dry southwesterly wind blowing down the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains
  • chrono- — indicating time
  • chronon — a unit of time equal to the time that a photon would take to traverse the diameter of an electron: about 10–24 seconds
  • chronos — chronometer.
  • cinzano — an Italian vermouth
  • clarino — of or relating to a high passage for the trumpet in 18th-century music
  • clinoid — (anatomy) Like a bed.
  • cnossus — Knossos
  • connors — Jimmy. born 1952, US tennis player: Wimbledon champion 1974 and 1982; US champion 1974, 1976, 1978, 1982, and 1983
  • connote — If a word or name connotes something, it makes you think of a particular idea or quality.
  • cotonou — the chief port and official capital of Benin, on the Bight of Benin. Pop: 891 000 (2005 est)
  • crannog — an ancient Celtic lake or bog dwelling dating from the late Bronze Age to the 16th century ad, often fortified and used as a refuge
  • crinoid — any primitive echinoderm of the class Crinoidea, having delicate feathery arms radiating from a central disc. The group includes the free-swimming feather stars, the sessile sea lilies, and many stemmed fossil forms
  • crinose — hairy
  • crunode — a point at which two branches of a curve intersect, each branch having a distinct tangent; node
  • ctenoid — toothed like a comb, as the scales of perches
  • de novo — from the beginning; anew
  • decanol — a colorless liquid, C 10 H 22 O, insoluble in water and soluble in alcohol: used as a plasticizer, detergent, and in perfumes and flavorings.
  • demono- — demon
  • denoted — to be a mark or sign of; indicate: A fever often denotes an infection.
  • denotes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of denote.
  • desnood — to remove the snood of (a turkey poult) to reduce the risk of cannibalism
  • dianoia — perception and experience regarded as lower modes of knowledge
  • dipnoan — belonging or pertaining to the order Dipnoi, comprising the lungfishes.
  • disegno — drawing or design: a term used during the 16th and 17th centuries to designate the formal discipline required for the representation of the ideal form of an object in the visual arts, especially as expressed in the linear structure of a work of art.
  • dominos — Alternative spelling of dominoes.
  • donours — Plural form of donour.
  • donovanWilliam Joseph ("Wild Bill") 1883–1959, U.S. lawyer and military officer: organizer and director of the OSS 1942–45.
  • dunnock — hedge sparrow.
  • echino- — indicating spiny or prickly
  • economy — thrifty management; frugality in the expenditure or consumption of money, materials, etc.
  • el niño — a warming of the eastern tropical Pacific occurring every few years, which alters the weather pattern of the tropics
  • eleanor — a feminine name: dim. Ella, Nell, Nora; var. Leonora
  • endnote — A note printed at the end of a book or section of a book.
  • ennoble — Give (someone) a noble rank or title.
  • enoding — Present participle of enode.
  • enolase — (enzyme) A metalloenzyme responsible for the catalysis of phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate during glycolysis.
  • enolate — (chemistry) any metal salt of the enol form of a tautomeric aldehyde or ketone.
  • enology — The study of wines.
  • enomoty — a division of the Spartan army in ancient Greece
  • enounce — To say or pronounce; to enunciate.
  • envenom — Put poison on or into; make poisonous.
  • equinox — The time or date (twice each year) at which the sun crosses the celestial equator, when day and night are of equal length (about September 22 and March 20).
  • español — a Spanish person
  • ethanol — (organic compound) A simple aliphatic alcohol formally derived from ethane by replacing one hydrogen atom with a hydroxyl group: CH3-CH2-OH.
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