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12-letter words containing d, a, g, u, e

  • sugar-coated — Sugar-coated food is covered with a sweet substance made of sugar.
  • supercharged — equipped with a supercharger.
  • thought-read — to read someone's mind or psychically know what someone's thoughts are
  • tongue-blade — a broad, thin piece of wood used by doctors to hold down the patient's tongue during an examination of the mouth and throat.
  • turbocharged — with additional power from turbine
  • unaffrighted — to frighten.
  • unaggregated — formed by the conjunction or collection of particulars into a whole mass or sum; total; combined: the aggregate amount of indebtedness.
  • unbridgeable — a structure spanning and providing passage over a river, chasm, road, or the like.
  • uncatalogued — not added to or detailed in a catalogue
  • unchallenged — a euphemism for disabled (usually preceded by an adverb): physically challenged.
  • uncoagulated — Obsolete. coagulated.
  • 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.”.
  • under-manage — to bring about or succeed in accomplishing, sometimes despite difficulty or hardship: She managed to see the governor. How does she manage it on such a small income?
  • underbearing — unassuming
  • undercoating — a coat or jacket worn under another.
  • underdrawing — the act of sketching a subject before painting it on the same surface
  • undergarment — an article of underwear.
  • underlapping — to extend partly under.
  • undermanning — the condition of not having enough employees to function properly
  • undermeaning — what is intended to be, or actually is, expressed or indicated; signification; import: the three meanings of a word.
  • undersealing — the process of applying a coating of underseal to a motor vehicle
  • understating — to state or represent less strongly or strikingly than the facts would bear out; set forth in restrained, moderate, or weak terms: The casualty lists understate the extent of the disaster.
  • undertakings — the act of a person who undertakes any task or responsibility.
  • undervaluing — to value below the real worth; put too low a value on.
  • undesignated — to mark or point out; indicate; show; specify.
  • undespairing — not despairing; not giving in to despair
  • undischarged — gun: not let off
  • unendangered — not endangered
  • unexpurgated — to amend by removing words, passages, etc., deemed offensive or objectionable: Most children read an expurgated version of Grimms' fairy tales.
  • unfadingness — the quality or state of being unfading
  • unfragmented — existing or functioning as though broken into separate parts; disorganized; disunified: a fragmented personality; a fragmented society.
  • ungalvanized — to stimulate by or as if by a galvanic current.
  • ungerminated — to begin to grow or develop.
  • unglamorized — not glamorized
  • unguaranteed — a promise or assurance, especially one in writing, that something is of specified quality, content, benefit, etc., or that it will perform satisfactorily for a given length of time: a money-back guarantee.
  • unguiculated — clawed, clawlike
  • uninstigated — to cause by incitement; foment: to instigate a quarrel.
  • unintegrated — combining or coordinating separate elements so as to provide a harmonious, interrelated whole: an integrated plot; an integrated course of study.
  • unjudgmental — involving the use or exercise of judgment.
  • unnegotiated — to deal or bargain with another or others, as in the preparation of a treaty or contract or in preliminaries to a business deal.
  • unoriginated — not originated
  • unoxygenated — not enriched with oxygen
  • unprogrammed — a plan of action to accomplish a specified end: a school lunch program.
  • unsegregated — not segregated, especially not subject to racial division; integrated: an unsegregated community.
  • unvariegated — varied; diversified; diverse.
  • urban legend — a modern story of obscure origin and with little or no supporting evidence that spreads spontaneously in varying forms and often has elements of humor, moralizing, or horror: Are there alligators living in the New York City sewer system, or is that just an urban legend?
  • waste ground — an empty piece of land
  • water-budget — (formerly) a leather bag suspended at each end of a pole or yoke and used for carrying water.
  • well-guarded — cautious; careful; prudent: to be guarded in one's speech.
  • younger edda — either of two old Icelandic literary works, one a collection of poems on mythical and religious subjects (or) erroneously attributed to Saemund Sigfusson (c1055–1133), the other a collection of ancient Scandinavian myths and legends, rules and theories of versification, poems, etc. (or) compiled and written in part by Snorri Sturluson (1179–1241).
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