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6-letter words containing c, e, u

  • saucer — a small, round, shallow dish to hold a cup.
  • scouse — a baked dish or stew made usually with meat and hardtack.
  • scruze — to squeeze
  • scunge — to borrow
  • scurve — a curve shaped like an S .
  • scutes — a dermal bony plate, as on an armadillo, or a large horny plate, as on a turtle.
  • secund — arranged on one side only; unilateral.
  • secure — free from or not exposed to danger or harm; safe.
  • seduce — to lead astray, as from duty, rectitude, or the like; corrupt.
  • sheuch — a furrow, ditch, or trench.
  • sluice — an artificial channel for conducting water, often fitted with a gate (sluice gate) at the upper end for regulating the flow.
  • source — any thing or place from which something comes, arises, or is obtained; origin: Which foods are sources of calcium?
  • spruce — any evergreen, coniferous tree of the genus Picea, of the pine family, having short, angular, needle-shaped leaves attached singly around twigs and bearing hanging cones with persistent scales.
  • sucher — of the kind, character, degree, extent, etc., of that or those indicated or implied: Such a man is dangerous.
  • sucken — a piece of land from which the crops must be ground at a specific mill
  • sucker — a person or thing that sucks.
  • suckle — to nurse at the breast or udder.
  • teacup — a cup in which tea is served, usually of small or moderate size.
  • tectum — a rooflike structure.
  • temuco — a city in S Chile.
  • teucer — a Cretan leader, who founded Troy
  • touche — fencing: hit
  • tuckerRichard, 1915–75, U.S. operatic tenor.
  • tucket — a trumpet fanfare.
  • tureck — Rosalyn [roz-uh-lin] /ˈrɒz ə lɪn/ (Show IPA), 1914–2003, U.S. pianist.
  • tusche — a greaselike liquid used in lithography as a medium receptive to lithographic ink, and in etching and silkscreen as a resist.
  • u-code — Universal Pascal Code. Intermediate language, a generalisation of P-code for easier optimisation. Developed originally for the Los Alamos Cray-1 and the Lawrence Livermore S-1. A refined version currently used by MIPS compilers is descended from one at Stanford U. "Machine Independent Pascal Code Optimisation", D.R. Perkins et al, SIGPLAN Notices 14(8): 201-201 (1979). "A Transporter's Guide to the Stanford U-Code Compiler System", P. Nye et al, TR CSL Stanford U, June 1983. (See HPcode).
  • uckers — a board game similar to ludo, played by people in the navy
  • uncage — to set free from or as if from a cage; free from confinement or restraint.
  • uncake — to remove compacted matter from (something)
  • uncape — to remove the cape from
  • uncase — to remove from a case; remove the case from.
  • unciae — a bronze coin of ancient Rome, the 12th part of an as.
  • unclew — to unfurl (a sail) from the yardarm
  • uncope — to uncover
  • uncute — not cute
  • undeck — to remove decorations from
  • unesco — an agency of the United Nations charged with instituting and administering programs for cooperative, coordinated action by member states in education, science, and the arts.
  • unicef — United Nations Children's Fund: an agency, created by the United Nations General Assembly in 1946, concerned with improving the health and nutrition of children and mothers throughout the world; Nobel Peace Prize 1965.
  • unlace — to loosen or undo the lacing or laces of (a pair of shoes, a corset, etc.).
  • upcome — the outcome or result
  • uremic — pertaining to uremia.
  • uretic — of, relating to, or occurring in the urine.
  • usance — Commerce. a length of time, exclusive of days of grace and varying in different places, allowed by custom or usage for the payment of foreign bills of exchange.
  • vaunce — to advance
  • vocule — a faint noise made when articulating certain sounds
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