10-letter words containing c, u, t, e, n
- undecadent — not decadent
- undeducted — to take away, as from a sum or amount: Once you deduct your expenses, there is nothing left.
- underactor — a secondary actor or agent
- undercount — to count less than the full number or amount of: The mayor claimed the census had undercounted the city's population.
- undercrest — to support with a crest
- undercroft — a vault or chamber under the ground, especially in a church.
- underpitch — of or relating to a type of groin-vaulted ceiling construction
- underreact — to react with less than the expected or appropriate emotion.
- understock — to provide an insufficient quantity, as of merchandise, supplies, or livestock.
- undertrick — a trick that a declarer failed to win in relation to the number of tricks necessary to make the contract.
- undetected — to discover or catch (a person) in the performance of some act: to detect someone cheating.
- undirected — not directed; not guided: He wasted his time on undirected activity.
- undoctored — not doctored or altered; genuine
- undomestic — not domestic; not skilled in domestic tasks or housework
- uneducated — not educated.
- uneffected — something that is produced by an agency or cause; result; consequence: Exposure to the sun had the effect of toughening his skin.
- unemphatic — uttered, or to be uttered, with emphasis; strongly expressive.
- unenticing — to lead on by exciting hope or desire; allure; inveigle: They were enticed westward by dreams of gold.
- unescorted — a group of persons, or a single person, accompanying another or others for protection, guidance, or courtesy: An escort of sailors accompanied the queen.
- unesthetic — unaesthetic.
- unexacting — not exacting; relaxed rather than sternly precise
- unexciting — producing excitement; stirring; thrilling: an exciting account of his trip to Tibet.
- unexecuted — to carry out; accomplish: to execute a plan or order.
- unexpected — not expected; unforeseen; surprising: an unexpected pleasure; an unexpected development.
- unfactored — one of the elements contributing to a particular result or situation: Poverty is only one of the factors in crime.
- unforecast — to predict (a future condition or occurrence); calculate in advance: to forecast a heavy snowfall; to forecast lower interest rates.
- unicentral — (of growth or development) in, from, or around one central point
- unicostate — having only one costa, rib, or ridge.
- unimpacted — tightly or immovably wedged in.
- unindicted — (of a grand jury) to bring a formal accusation against, as a means of bringing to trial: The grand jury indicted him for murder.
- uninfected — to affect or contaminate (a person, organ, wound, etc.) with disease-producing germs.
- unit price — rate1 (def 3).
- unmetrical — not having, using, or relating to poetic metre
- unneurotic — not neurotic
- unpathetic — causing or evoking pity, sympathetic sadness, sorrow, etc.; pitiful; pitiable: a pathetic letter; a pathetic sight.
- unpedantic — not pedantic; informal
- unphonetic — not phonetic
- unreactive — tending to react.
- unredacted — to put into suitable literary form; revise; edit.
- unrejected — to refuse to have, take, recognize, etc.: to reject the offer of a better job.
- unreticent — disposed to be silent or not to speak freely; reserved.
- unsceptred — divested of a sceptre
- unscripted — not scripted; lacking a script: an unscripted idea for a movie.
- unselected — not selected
- unstanched — unsatisfied
- unstitched — one complete movement of a threaded needle through a fabric or material such as to leave behind it a single loop or portion of thread, as in sewing, embroidery, or the surgical closing of wounds.
- unswitched — a slender, flexible shoot, rod, etc., used especially in whipping or disciplining.
- unthematic — of or relating to a theme.
- unticketed — a slip, usually of paper or cardboard, serving as evidence that the holder has paid a fare or admission or is entitled to some service, right, or the like: a railroad ticket; a theater ticket.
- untochered — (of a woman) undowered; not provided with a tocher