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9-letter words containing a, r, u, n

  • in a fury — very angry
  • in favour — If you are in favour of something, you support it and think that it is a good thing.
  • inaugural — of or relating to an inauguration: Harding's inaugural address.
  • incourage — Archaic form of encourage.
  • incubator — an apparatus in which eggs are hatched artificially.
  • incurable — not curable; that cannot be cured, remedied, or corrected: an incurable disease.
  • incurably — not curable; that cannot be cured, remedied, or corrected: an incurable disease.
  • incurtain — (obsolete) To curtain.
  • incurvate — curved, especially inward.
  • indeavour — Archaic form of endeavour.
  • indraught — an inward flow or current, as of air or water.
  • indurable — Archaic form of endurable.
  • indurance — Obsolete form of endurance.
  • indurated — to make hard; harden, as rock, tissue, etc.: Cold indurates the soil.
  • infuriate — to make furious; enrage.
  • infusoria — Irregular plural form of infusorium.
  • inquorate — (of an assembly) unable to proceed effectively because not enough members are present to make up a quorum.
  • insularly — of or relating to an island or islands: insular possessions.
  • insulator — Electricity. a material of such low conductivity that the flow of current through it is negligible. insulating material, often glass or porcelain, in a unit form designed so as to support a charged conductor and electrically isolate it.
  • insurable — capable of being or proper to be insured, as against loss or harm.
  • insurance — the act, system, or business of providing financial protection for property, life, health, etc, against specified contingencies, such as death, loss, or damage, and involving payment of regular premiums in return for a policy guaranteeing such protection
  • internaut — A user of the Internet, especially a habitual or skilled one.
  • intraclub — Within a club.
  • intraural — Alternate form of intra-aural.
  • inumbrate — (obsolete) To shade; to darken.
  • iroquoian — a family of North American Indian languages that includes Cherokee, Seneca, Mohawk, and Oneida.
  • irukandji — a tiny but highly venomous Australian jellyfish
  • isandrous — having the stamens similar to each other and equal in number to the petals.
  • januariusSaint, a.d. 272?–305? Italian ecclesiastic and martyr: patron saint of Naples.
  • jargonaut — Someone who uses jargon excessively.
  • junctural — of or relating to phonological juncture.
  • juniorate — a two-year course of study for a Jesuit novice in preparation for the course in philosophy.
  • junkyards — Plural form of junkyard.
  • jurywoman — a female juror.
  • jusserand — Jean (Adrien Antoine) Jules [zhahn a-dree-ahn ahn-twan zhyl] /ʒɑ̃ a driˈɑ̃ ɑnˈtwan ʒül/ (Show IPA), 1855–1932, French diplomat, historian, and essayist.
  • jutlander — a peninsula comprising the continental portion of Denmark: naval battle between the British and German fleets was fought west of this peninsula 1916. 11,441 sq. mi. (29,630 sq. km).
  • keansburg — a town in E New Jersey.
  • ketonuria — the presence of ketone bodies in the urine.
  • kurdistan — a mountain and plateau region in SE Turkey, NW Iran, and N Iraq: inhabited largely by Kurds. 74,000 sq. mi. (191,660 sq. km).
  • kurrajong — an Australian bottle tree, Brachychiton populneus, having showy yellowish-white, bell-shaped flowers, grown as an ornamental.
  • la coruna — a seaport in NW Spain.
  • labouring — (British, Canada) present participle of labour.
  • laburnums — any of several small trees belonging to the genus Laburnum, of the legume family, having elongated clusters of pendulous yellow flowers, especially L. alpinum, the Scotch laburnum.
  • landsturm — a general draft of people in time of war.
  • langrenus — a walled plain in the fourth quadrant of the face of the moon: about 85 miles (135 km) in diameter.
  • larcenous — of, resembling, or characteristic of larceny.
  • larruping — very; exceedingly: That was a larruping good meal.
  • lauenburg — a region in Schleswig-Holstein, in NW Germany: duchy under German rulers 1260–1689; later part of Prussia.
  • launchers — Plural form of launcher.
  • laundered — Simple past tense and past participle of launder.
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