10-letter words containing a, b, u, s, e
- slate blue — a moderate to dark grayish blue.
- slate-blue — of a dark greyish-blue colour
- somnambule — a person who sleepwalks
- soubresaut — a jump performed with the legs held together and the body erect but slightly curved to the side.
- spuleblade — the shoulder blade
- squabasher — a person who squabashes someone or something
- squashable — easily squashed; soft
- squeezable — easily squeezed, compressed, or the like.
- stale bull — a dealer or speculator who holds unsold commodities after a rise in market prices but who cannot trade because there are no buyers at the new levels and because his financial commitments prevent him from making further purchases
- statutable — (of an offense) recognized by statute; legally punishable.
- stimulable — to rouse to action or effort, as by encouragement or pressure; spur on; incite: to stimulate his interest in mathematics.
- studebaker — Clement, 1831–1901, U.S. wagon maker and pioneer automobile designer.
- sub-clause — Grammar. a syntactic construction containing a subject and predicate and forming part of a sentence or constituting a whole simple sentence.
- sub-leader — a person or thing that leads.
- sub-reason — a basis or cause, as for some belief, action, fact, event, etc.: the reason for declaring war.
- subacetate — a basic salt of acetic acid.
- subacutely — in a subacute manner
- subaqueous — existing or situated under water; underwater.
- subarcuate — fairly arched
- subarticle — an article that forms part of a larger or main article
- subaudible — capable of being heard; loud enough to be heard; actually heard.
- subaverage — a quantity, rating, or the like that represents or approximates an arithmetic mean: Her golf average is in the 90s. My average in science has gone from B to C this semester.
- subcabinet — a group of advisers ranking below the cabinet level, chosen by a chief executive usually from members of the various executive departments.
- subcaliber — noting or pertaining to ammunition of smaller caliber than the gun in which it is used.
- subcalibre — (of a projectile) having a calibre less than that of the firearm from which it is discharged and therefore either fitted with a disc or fired through a tube inserted into the barrel
- subcarbide — a carbide containing less than the normal proportion of carbon.
- subcarrier — a carrier wave used to modify or modulate another carrier wave.
- subcentral — near or almost to the center.
- subchapter — a subdivision especially of a body of laws.
- subcharter — to rent a chartered vehicle
- subchelate — having a claw with one pincer longer than the other
- subclavate — somewhat club-shaped.
- subcordate — almost heart-shaped
- subdeanery — the position or office of a subdean
- subdecanal — of or relating to a subdean or subdeanery
- subdialect — a division of a larger dialect
- subheading — a subordinate division of a title or heading.
- subhepatic — of or relating to the liver.
- sublattice — a set of elements of a lattice, in which each subset of two elements has a least upper bound and a greatest lower bound contained in the given set.
- sublimable — Psychology. to divert the energy of (a sexual or other biological impulse) from its immediate goal to one of a more acceptable social, moral, or aesthetic nature or use.
- submanager — a secondary or assistant manager
- submariner — a member of the crew of a submarine.
- submarines — a vessel that can be submerged and navigated under water, usually built for warfare and armed with torpedoes or guided missiles.
- submediant — the sixth tone of a diatonic scale, being midway between the subdominant and the upper tonic.
- submontane — under or beneath a mountain or mountains.
- subnascent — growing underneath
- subnitrate — a basic salt of nitric acid.
- subnuclear — pertaining to particles within or smaller than an atomic nucleus.
- suboceanic — occurring or existing below the floor of the ocean: suboceanic oil.
- subpleural — situated under the pleura.