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7-letter words that end in i

  • onigiri — A rice ball.
  • origami — the traditional Japanese art or technique of folding paper into a variety of decorative or representational forms, as of animals or flowers.
  • osman i — 1259–1326, Turkish sultan; founder of the Ottoman Empire
  • osmanli — an Ottoman.
  • otto ii — a.d. 955–983, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 973–983 (son of Otto I).
  • ouakari — Alternative form of uakari.
  • oubangi — French name of Ubangi.
  • oustiti — a device for opening a locked door from the outside
  • pachisi — a board game, originated in ancient India, in which four players advance four pieces each along a route on a cross-shaped board toward a center square by throws of cowrie shells or dice.
  • padroni — a master; boss.
  • pahlavi — the Indo-European, Iranian language of the Zoroastrian literature of the 3rd to the 10th centuries.
  • pandani — a tropical, palm-like tree of Tasmania, Richea pandanifolia: family Ericaceae
  • panjabi — a native or inhabitant of the Punjab.
  • pannini — Giovanni (Paolo) [jaw-vahn-nee pah-aw-law] /dʒɔˈvɑn ni ˈpɑ ɔ lɔ/ (Show IPA), 1692?–1765, Italian painter.
  • parisiiMatthew, Matthew of Paris.
  • parodoi — (in ancient Greek drama) an ode sung by the chorus at their entrance, usually beginning the play and preceding the proagōn in comedy or the alteration of epeisodia and stasima in tragedy.
  • parvati — the wife of Shiva and the benevolent form of the Mother Goddess.
  • paul ii — (Pietro Barbo) 1417–71, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1464–71.
  • paul vi — (Giovanni Batista Montini) 1897–1978, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1963–78.
  • pe-tsai — Chinese cabbage.
  • peccavi — a confession of guilt or sin.
  • pedro i — (Dom Pedro) 1798–1834, king of Portugal (1826, as Pedro IV) and first emperor of Brazil 1822–31.
  • pehlevi — the Pahlavi language.
  • pelasgi — the pre-Hellenic peoples who inhabited Greece and the islands and coasts of the Aegean Sea before the arrival of the Bronze Age Greeks
  • peronei — any of several muscles on the outer side of the leg, the action of which assists in extending the foot and in turning it outward.
  • peruzzi — Baldassare Tommaso [bahl-dahs-sah-re tawm-mah-zaw] /ˌbɑl dɑsˈsɑ rɛ tɔmˈmɑ zɔ/ (Show IPA), 1481–1536, Italian architect and painter.
  • peter i — ("the Great") 1672–1725, czar of Russia 1682–1725.
  • petscii — (character)   /pet'skee/ PET ASCII. The variation (many would say perversion) of the ASCII character set used by the Commodore Business Machines' PET series of personal computers and the later Commodore 64, Commodore 16, and Commodore 128 computers. The PETSCII set used left-arrow and up-arrow (as in old-style ASCII) instead of underscore and caret, placed the unshifted alphabet at positions 65--90, put the shifted alphabet at positions 193--218, and added graphic characters.
  • picinni — Piccinni, Niccolò.
  • pierogi — a small dough envelope filled with mashed potato, meat, cheese, or vegetables, crimped to seal the edge and then boiled or fried, typically served with sour cream or onions.
  • pignoli — pine nut (def 1).
  • pindari — in India in the past, someone belonging to one of many irregular groups of raiding horsemen
  • pintubi — an Aboriginal people of the southern border area of Western Australia and the Northern Territory
  • pitesti — a city in S central Romania, on the Argeş River.
  • pius ii — (Enea Silvio de Piccolomini) 1405–64, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1458–64.
  • pius vi — (Giovanni Angelo or Giannangelo, Braschi) 1717–99, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1775–99.
  • pius xi — (Achille Ratti) 1857–1939, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1922–39.
  • platini — Michel. born 1955, French footballer, manager, and administrator; scored 41 goals in 72 games for France (1976–87); European Footballer of the Year (1983–85); president of UEFA (2007–2015)
  • platypi — a small, aquatic, egg-laying monotreme, Ornithorhynchus anatinus, of Australia and Tasmania, having webbed feet, a tail like that of a beaver, a sensitive bill resembling that of a duck, and, in adult males, venom-injecting spurs on the ankles of the hind limbs, used primarily for fighting with other males during the breeding season.
  • ploesti — a city in S Romania: center of a rich oil-producing region.
  • pompeii — an ancient city in SW Italy, on the Bay of Naples: it was buried along with Herculaneum by an eruption of nearby Mount Vesuvius in a.d. 79; much of the city has been excavated.
  • porangi — crazy; mad
  • portici — a city in S Italy, on the Bay of Naples.
  • powhiri — a Māori ceremony of welcome, esp to a marae
  • print i — An early system on IBM 705.
  • pryderi — the son of Pwyll and Rhiannon who was stolen by Gwawl shortly after his birth and was restored to his parents a few years later.
  • puccini — Giacomo [jah-kaw-maw] /ˈdʒɑ kɔ mɔ/ (Show IPA), 1858–1924, Italian operatic composer.
  • pulaski — a double-edged hand tool having an ax blade on one side and a pickax or wide chisel on the opposite side, used especially in clearing land and removing tree stumps.
  • punjabi — a native or inhabitant of the Punjab.
  • qaddafi — Muammar (Muhammad) al- or el- [moo-ah-mahr,, al,, el] /muˈɑ mɑr,, æl,, ɛl/ (Show IPA), 1942–2011, Libyan army colonel and political leader: chief of state 1969–2011.
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