10-letter words containing a, d, u, l
- murderball — A team sport resembling dodgeball in which players are eliminated (\"murdered\") by being struck with the ball.
- muscadelle — a sweet wine made from muscat grapes.
- musclehead — a muscular man, esp. one who is involved in bodybuilding, weight lifting, etc.
- mutual aid — the cooperative as opposed to the competitive factors operating in the development of society.
- mutualised — Simple past tense and past participle of mutualise.
- mutualized — Simple past tense and past participle of mutualize.
- nautiloids — Plural form of nautiloid.
- nidulation — nest-building, nidification
- nodulation — The presence of nodules.
- nondualism — The belief that dualism or dichotomy are illusory phenomena; that things such as mind and body may remain distinct while not actually being separate.
- nondualist — One who rejects dualism.
- nonduality — Lack of duality.
- nondurable — not resistant to wear, decay, etc.; not sturdy: nondurable fabrics.
- nummulated — relating to an expectorated combination of saliva and mucus in a circular, shallow form
- nuyts land — early name of a region on the southern coast in S Australia, discovered by the Dutch in 1626–27.
- obdurately — In an obdurate manner; stubbornly, intractably or inflexibly.
- odalisques — Plural form of odalisque.
- on a cloud — a visible collection of particles of water or ice suspended in the air, usually at an elevation above the earth's surface.
- outclassed — to surpass in excellence or quality, especially by a wide margin; be superior: He far outclasses the other runners in the race.
- outdatedly — in an outdated manner
- outdazzles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outdazzle.
- outflanked — Simple past tense and past participle of outflank.
- outlanders — Plural form of outlander.
- outlandish — freakishly or grotesquely strange or odd, as appearance, dress, objects, ideas, or practices; bizarre: outlandish clothes; outlandish questions.
- outrivaled — Simple past tense and past participle of outrival.
- pediculate — of or related to the Pediculati, a group of teleost fishes, characterized by the elongated base of their pectoral fins, simulating an arm or peduncle.
- pedipalpus — the second paired appendage in Arachnida
- peduncular — Botany. a flower stalk, supporting either a cluster or a solitary flower. the stalk bearing the fruiting body in fungi.
- perdurable — very durable; permanent; imperishable.
- plasmodium — Biology. an ameboid, multinucleate mass or sheet of cytoplasm characteristic of some stages of organisms, as of myxomycetes or slime molds.
- plastidule — a small particle of protoplasm
- plauditory — approving or laudatory
- play cupid — If you say that someone is playing cupid, you mean that they are trying to bring two people together to start a romantic relationship.
- played out — a dramatic composition or piece; drama.
- playground — an area used for outdoor play or recreation, especially by children, and often containing recreational equipment such as slides and swings.
- ploughhead — the draught iron of a plough
- ploughland — land that is ploughed for growing crops
- plunderage — act of plundering; pillage.
- praeludium — a prelude, now predominantly in a musical context
- procedural — procedural language
- prudential — of, pertaining to, characterized by, or resulting from prudence.
- pseudoalum — any of a class of alums in which the usual monovalent metal of a true alum is replaced by a bivalent metal
- pseudosalt — a compound whose formula is that of a salt, but that does not ionize in solution
- pull media — (messaging) A model of media distribution were the bits of content have to be requested by the user, e.g. normal use of HTTP on the web. Opposite: "push media".
- quadrangle — a plane figure having four angles and four sides, as a square.
- quadrantal — a quarter of a circle; an arc of 90°.
- quadrifoil — Alternative form of quadrifoliate.
- quadriller — a person who dances quadrilles
- quadrilles — Plural form of quadrille.
- quadrilogy — (nonstandard) A tetralogy.