12-letter words containing a, u, n, c
- uncognizable — capable of being perceived or known.
- uncollegiate — of or relating to a college: collegiate life.
- uncommercial — not engaged in or involved with commerce or trade.
- uncomparable — capable of being compared; having features in common with something else to permit or suggest comparison: He considered the Roman and British empires to be comparable.
- uncompassion — a feeling of deep sympathy and sorrow for another who is stricken by misfortune, accompanied by a strong desire to alleviate the suffering.
- uncomplacent — pleased, especially with oneself or one's merits, advantages, situation, etc., often without awareness of some potential danger or defect; self-satisfied: The voters are too complacent to change the government.
- uncomplicate — to make complex, intricate, involved, or difficult: His recovery from the operation was complicated by an allergic reaction.
- uncomposable — not fit for composition
- uncomputable — to determine by calculation; reckon; calculate: to compute the period of Jupiter's revolution.
- unconcealing — not concealing or hiding anything; revealing
- unconfinable — not able to be bound
- unconfutable — to prove to be false, invalid, or defective; disprove: to confute an argument.
- unconjugated — Grammar. to inflect (a verb). to recite or display all or some subsets of the inflected forms of (a verb), in a fixed order: One conjugates the present tense of the verb “be” as “I am, you are, he is, we are, you are, they are.”.
- unconsecrate — profane or base
- unconsolable — to alleviate or lessen the grief, sorrow, or disappointment of; give solace or comfort: Only his children could console him when his wife died.
- unconstraint — lack of constraint: Their home has a feeling of unconstraint and warm hospitableness.
- uncontracted — drawn together; reduced in compass or size; made smaller; shrunken.
- unconversant — familiar by use or study (usually followed by with): conversant with Spanish history.
- uncorrelated — to place in or bring into mutual or reciprocal relation; establish in orderly connection: to correlate expenses and income.
- uncourageous — possessing or characterized by courage; brave: a courageous speech against the dictator.
- uncovenanted — not agreed to or promised by covenant.
- uncreativity — the state or quality of being creative.
- uncreditable — of ignoble character
- uncritically — not inclined or able to judge, especially by the application of comparative standards: an uncritical reader.
- uncultivable — capable of being cultivated.
- uncultivated — prepared and used for raising crops; tilled: cultivated land.
- undelectable — delightful; highly pleasing; enjoyable: a delectable witticism.
- undemocratic — pertaining to or of the nature of democracy or a democracy.
- under canvas — If you are living and sleeping under canvas, you are living and sleeping in a tent.
- underachieve — to perform, especially academically, below the potential indicated by tests of one's mental ability or aptitude.
- undercoating — a coat or jacket worn under another.
- undereducate — to educate too little or poorly.
- undersurface — underside; bottom surface.
- undertenancy — the tenancy held by an undertenant; a sublease
- undesecrated — to divest of sacred or hallowed character or office.
- undetectable — to discover or catch (a person) in the performance of some act: to detect someone cheating.
- undiplomatic — of, relating to, or engaged in diplomacy: diplomatic officials.
- undischarged — gun: not let off
- undiscordant — not discordant; not disagreeing or disagreeable
- undispatched — not dispatched; not delivered or sent out
- undistracted — not distracted; concentrating
- unduplicated — a copy exactly like an original.
- unecological — the branch of biology dealing with the relations and interactions between organisms and their environment, including other organisms.
- uneconomical — avoiding waste or extravagance; thrifty: an economical meal; an economical use of interior space.
- unencroached — to advance beyond proper, established, or usual limits; make gradual inroads: A dictatorship of the majority is encroaching on the rights of the individual.
- unethicality — lacking moral principles; unwilling to adhere to proper rules of conduct.
- unexceptable — to exclude; leave out: present company excepted.
- unexecutable — to carry out; accomplish: to execute a plan or order.
- unexpectable — to look forward to; regard as likely to happen; anticipate the occurrence or the coming of: I expect to read it. I expect him later. She expects that they will come.
- unfabricated — to make by art or skill and labor; construct: The finest craftspeople fabricated this clock.