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7-letter words starting with n

  • newbies — Plural form of newbie.
  • newbold — a male given name.
  • newboltSir Henry John, 1862–1938, English poet, novelist, naval historian, and critic.
  • newborn — recently or only just born.
  • newburg — (of seafood) cooked with a cream sauce containing sherry: lobster Newburg.
  • newbury — a market town in West Berkshire unitary authority, S England: scene of a Parliamentarian victory (1643) and a Royalist victory (1644) during the Civil War; telecommunications, racecourse. Pop: 32 675 (2001)
  • newcast — (transitive) To recast; form or mould anew.
  • newcombSimon, 1835–1909, U.S. astronomer.
  • newcome — Just arrived; lately come.
  • newgate — a prison in London, England: torn down 1902.
  • newline — (computing) The character or character sequence that indicates the end of a line of text and transition to the next line; or, a control code or escape sequence used in a programming language to denote this character.
  • newling — One who is new (to something); a newcomer; a novice; a newbie.
  • newmade — Newly made.
  • newness — of recent origin, production, purchase, etc.; having but lately come or been brought into being: a new book.
  • newport — a seaport in Gwent, in SE Wales, near the Severn estuary.
  • newsboy — a person, typically a boy, who sells or delivers newspapers.
  • newsies — Plural form of newsy.
  • newsman — a person employed to gather news, as for a newspaper, magazine, or radio or television news bureau; reporter.
  • newsmen — Plural form of newsman.
  • newtons — Plural form of newton.
  • newtown — a town in SW Connecticut.
  • newwave — A graphical user interface and object-oriented environment from Hewlett-Packard, based on Windows and available on Unix workstations.
  • newyacc — A parser generator by Jack Callahan <[email protected]>. Version 1.0.
  • next to — immediately following in time, order, importance, etc.: the next day; the next person in line.
  • nextgen — Alternative form of next-gen.
  • nexuses — Plural form of nexus.
  • ngarara — a lizard
  • niagara — a river on the boundary between W New York and Ontario, Canada, flowing from Lake Erie into Lake Ontario. 34 miles (55 km) long.
  • nibbana — nirvana (def 1).
  • nibbled — Simple past tense and past participle of nibble.
  • nibbler — a person or thing that nibbles.
  • nibbles — Plural form of nibble.
  • niblick — a club with an iron head, the face of which has the greatest slope of all the irons, for hitting the ball with maximum loft.
  • nibling — A nephew or niece, especially in the plural or as a gender-neutral term.
  • nicaean — Nicene.
  • niceish — quite nice, fairly nice
  • nicetasSaint (Ignatius Theophorus) a.d. c40–107? bishop of Antioch and Apostolic Father.
  • niching — an ornamental recess in a wall or the like, usually semicircular in plan and arched, as for a statue or other decorative object.
  • nichole — a female given name.
  • nicholsJohn, born 1940, U.S. novelist.
  • nickels — Plural form of nickel.
  • nickers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of nicker.
  • nicking — a small notch, groove, chip, or the like, cut into or existing in something.
  • nickles — Plural form of nickle.
  • nicoise — in the style of Nice, France.
  • nicol i — 1. Small subset of PL/I by (Massachusetts) Computer Assoc, ca. 1965. Version: NICOL II (1967). Sammet 1969, p.542. 2. ICL, 1968. [same as 1?]
  • nicolai — (Carl) Otto (Ehrenfried) [kahrl awt-oh ey-ruh n-freet] /kɑrl ˈɔt oʊ ˈeɪ rənˌfrit/ (Show IPA), 1810–49, German composer.
  • nicolas — a masculine name
  • nicolayJohn George, 1832–1901, U.S. biographer.
  • nicoletJean [zhahn] /ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1598–1642, French explorer in America.
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