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10-letter words containing c, r, u, n, h

  • hurricanes — Plural form of hurricane.
  • hyaluronic — Of or pertaining to hyaluronic acid or its derivatives.
  • keypuncher — A keypunch.
  • kremenchug — a city in central Ukraine, on the Dnieper River.
  • kremenchuk — a city in central Ukraine, on the Dnieper River.
  • leprechaun — a dwarf or sprite.
  • lug wrench — a wrench for loosening or tightening lug nuts.
  • lunch hour — pause from work to eat midday meal
  • lunchbreak — A period of rest from work for the purpose of eating lunch.
  • lunchrooms — Plural form of lunchroom.
  • manchurian — a historic region in NE China: ancestral home of the Manchu. About 413,000 sq. mi. (1,070,000 sq. km).
  • michurinsk — a city in the W Russian Federation in Europe, S of Ryazan.
  • milk churn — a container used to transport milk from farms
  • nudibranch — a shell-less, marine snail of the suborder Nudibranchia, having external, often branched respiratory appendages on the back and sides.
  • overlaunch — (in shipbuilding) to overlap planks
  • pre-launch — preparatory to launch, as of a spacecraft.
  • punch card — punched card
  • punchboard — a small board containing holes filled with slips of paper printed with concealed numbers that are punched out by a player in an attempt to win a prize.
  • purchasing — buying
  • quickthorn — hawthorn, esp when planted as a hedge
  • rock hound — a geologist.
  • rock-hound — a geologist.
  • round arch — an arch formed in a continuous curve, especially in a semicircle.
  • schongauer — Martin [mahr-tn;; German mahr-teen] /ˈmɑr tn;; German ˈmɑr tin/ (Show IPA), c1430–91, German engraver and painter.
  • school run — The school run is the journey that parents make each day when they take their children to school and bring them home from school.
  • scrunch up — If you scrunch something up, you squeeze it or bend it so that it is no longer in its natural shape and is often crushed.
  • scruncheon — (in Newfoundland) a small crisp piece of fried pork fat
  • scunthorpe — a town in E England, in North Lincolnshire unitary authority, Lincolnshire: developed rapidly after the discovery of local iron ore in the late 19th century; iron and steel industries have declined. Pop: 72 660 (2001)
  • sea urchin — any echinoderm of the class Echinoidea, having a somewhat globular or discoid form, and a shell composed of many calcareous plates covered with projecting spines.
  • sub-branch — a further branch or division of something within an already established branch or division
  • subphrenic — underneath the diaphragm
  • the crunch — the critical moment or situation
  • thruppence — threepence.
  • trichinous — pertaining to or of the nature of trichinosis.
  • turnbroach — (formerly) a servant whose job was to turn the spit on which meat, poultry, etc, was roasting
  • ubermensch — superman (def 2).
  • unactorish — not resembling or characteristic of actors or acting
  • 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.
  • uncheerful — (of a person) not cheerful; miserable; gloomy
  • unchristen — unchristian
  • unchurched — not being a member of a church; not attending any church.
  • unchurchly — not ecclesiastical; uncharacteristic of the church
  • underpitch — of or relating to a type of groin-vaulted ceiling construction
  • unenriched — to supply with riches, wealth, abundant or valuable possessions, etc.: Commerce enriches a nation.
  • unharmonic — pertaining to harmony, as distinguished from melody and rhythm.
  • unhistoric — not famous or important in history
  • unrhythmic — lacking rhythm; having an irregular beat
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