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10-letter words containing a, n, c, r, e

  • unaccurate — free from error or defect; consistent with a standard, rule, or model; precise; exact.
  • unacquired — to come into possession or ownership of; get as one's own: to acquire property.
  • unanchored — any of various devices dropped by a chain, cable, or rope to the bottom of a body of water for preventing or restricting the motion of a vessel or other floating object, typically having broad, hooklike arms that bury themselves in the bottom to provide a firm hold.
  • unbranched — a division or subdivision of the stem or axis of a tree, shrub, or other plant.
  • unbreached — the act or a result of breaking; break or rupture.
  • unbroached — Machinery. an elongated, tapered, serrated cutting tool for shaping and enlarging holes.
  • uncaptured — to take by force or stratagem; take prisoner; seize: The police captured the burglar.
  • uncarpeted — having no carpet
  • uncerebral — not cerebral or intellectual; not involving much deep thinking
  • unclerical — not clerical; not characteristic of or appropriate for a member of the clergy
  • uncompared — to examine (two or more objects, ideas, people, etc.) in order to note similarities and differences: to compare two pieces of cloth; to compare the governments of two nations.
  • uncreative — having the quality or power of creating.
  • uncurbable — unable to be restrained
  • undeclared — publicly avowed or professed; self-confessed: a declared liberal.
  • underactor — a secondary actor or agent
  • underclass — a social stratum consisting of impoverished persons with very low social status.
  • underreact — to react with less than the expected or appropriate emotion.
  • unfactored — one of the elements contributing to a particular result or situation: Poverty is only one of the factors in crime.
  • unforecast — to predict (a future condition or occurrence); calculate in advance: to forecast a heavy snowfall; to forecast lower interest rates.
  • ungraceful — lacking charm or elegance; awkward.
  • unicameral — consisting of a single chamber, as a legislative assembly.
  • unicentral — (of growth or development) in, from, or around one central point
  • uninuclear — (of a cell) having one nucleus
  • unmetrical — not having, using, or relating to poetic metre
  • unreactive — tending to react.
  • unrecalled — not recalled or remembered; forgotten
  • unredacted — to put into suitable literary form; revise; edit.
  • unscramble — to bring out of a scrambled condition; reduce to order or intelligibility.
  • unsearched — not sought after
  • unsurfaced — the outer face, outside, or exterior boundary of a thing; outermost or uppermost layer or area.
  • unveracity — lack of veracity or truthfulness; the quality or condition of tending to speak what is false
  • utterances — the utmost extremity, especially death.
  • vacationer — a period of suspension of work, study, or other activity, usually used for rest, recreation, or travel; recess or holiday: Schoolchildren are on vacation now.
  • vagrancies — the conduct of a vagrant.
  • vernacular — (of language) native or indigenous (opposed to literary or learned).
  • vicariance — the geographical separation and isolation of a subpopulation, resulting in the original population's differentiation as a new variety or species.
  • vociferant — vociferating; noisy.
  • vulcanizer — to treat (rubber) with sulfur and heat, thereby imparting strength, greater elasticity, durability, etc.
  • wagner act — National Labor Relations Act.
  • warrandice — (legal) A form of warranty, in Scots law, in which a person conveying property was held liable for any outstanding claims on the property.
  • water-inch — the quantity of water (approx. 500 cubic feet) discharged in 24 hours through a circular opening of one inch diameter leading from a reservoir in which the water is constantly only high enough to cover the orifice.
  • xenocrates — 396–314 b.c, Greek philosopher.
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