9-letter words containing c, l, e, r, u
- revictual — to victual or provide with food again
- richelieu — Armand Jean du Plessis [ar-mahn zhahn dy ple-see] /arˈmɑ̃ ʒɑ̃ dü plɛˈsi/ (Show IPA), Duc de, 1585–1642, French cardinal and statesman.
- ridiculed — speech or action intended to cause contemptuous laughter at a person or thing; derision.
- ridicules — speech or action intended to cause contemptuous laughter at a person or thing; derision.
- rounceval — a variety of large pea
- rubicelle — a variety of the mineral spinel that is orange or yellow in colour
- run close — to compete closely with; present a serious challenge to
- saluretic — of or relating to a substance that promotes renal excretion of sodium and chloride ions.
- schedular — a plan of procedure, usually written, for a proposed objective, especially with reference to the sequence of and time allotted for each item or operation necessary to its completion: The schedule allows three weeks for this stage.
- scheduler — scheduling
- schulberg — Budd [buhd] /bʌd/ (Show IPA), 1914–2009, U.S. novelist, short-story writer, and scenarist.
- scoundrel — an unprincipled, dishonorable person; villain.
- scrutable — capable of being understood by careful study or investigation.
- scuddaler — a leader of festivities
- sculpture — the art of carving, modeling, welding, or otherwise producing figurative or abstract works of art in three dimensions, as in relief, intaglio, or in the round.
- secularly — of or relating to worldly things or to things that are not regarded as religious, spiritual, or sacred; temporal: secular interests.
- securable — free from or not exposed to danger or harm; safe.
- sepulcher — a tomb, grave, or burial place.
- sepulchre — to place in a sepulcher; bury.
- side curl — earlock.
- simulacre — simulacrum.
- sourceful — any thing or place from which something comes, arises, or is obtained; origin: Which foods are sources of calcium?
- sterculia — any of various tropical trees of the genus Sterculia, of which some species are grown as ornamentals and some are the source of commercially valuable wood.
- subcellar — a cellar below the main cellar.
- sucralose — a white, crystalline powder, C 12 H 19 Cl 3 O 8 , produced synthetically from sucrose, about 600 times as sweet as sucrose but having no calories.
- supercell — a highly organized thunderstorm that can last for several hours, capable of producing both updrafts and downdrafts exceeding 100 miles per hour, large hailstones, tornadoes, and flash flooding (often used attributively): a supercell in Kansas City; supercell storms.
- superclub — a large or important club or society
- supercoil — superhelix.
- supercold — extremely cold
- supercool — to cool (a liquid) below its freezing point without producing solidification or crystallization; undercool.
- surcingle — a belt or girth that passes around the belly of a horse and over the blanket, pack, saddle, etc., and is buckled on the horse's back.
- surculose — producing suckers.
- trabecula — Anatomy, Botany. a structural part resembling a small beam or crossbar.
- trauchled — to fatigue; tire; wear out.
- truceless — having no truce
- truckable — (of a barge, tug, etc) capable or suitable for being conveyed in or on a truck
- truckline — a transportation line utilizing trucks.
- truculent — fierce; cruel; savagely brutal.
- tubercled — having or affected by tubercles
- tubercula — a tubercle.
- turcopole — during the Crusades, a type of lightly armed and low-ranking soldier belonging to the Order of St John of Jerusalem, used mainly as mounted archers and scouts
- ulcerated — to form an ulcer; become ulcerous: His skin ulcerated after exposure to radioactive material.
- uncareful — not careful; not caring or vigilant; careless
- uncharnel — to remove from a charnel; exhume
- uncleared — left untidy
- unclogger — to free of an obstruction or impediment: to unclog a drain; to unclog rush-hour traffic.
- unclutter — to remove clutter from; tidy
- uncoupler — an agent responsible for the uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation
- uncrumple — to eliminate crumples from
- unculture — the lack or absence of culture: Much modern fiction is a product of unculture.