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12-letter words containing d, e, h, r

  • unaffrighted — to frighten.
  • unapproached — not approached; not able to be approached or neared
  • unauthorized — lacking permission; unsanctioned: unauthorized access.
  • unbesmirched — to soil; tarnish; discolor.
  • unchaperoned — not chaperoned; not accompanied by a chaperone
  • uncharnelled — removed from a charnel; exhumed
  • unchristened — not christened
  • unchronicled — not chronicled or recorded
  • undeciphered — to make out the meaning of (poor or partially obliterated writing, etc.): to decipher a hastily scribbled note.
  • under threat — If a person or thing is under threat, there is a danger that something unpleasant might be done to them, or that they might cease to exist.
  • underachieve — to perform, especially academically, below the potential indicated by tests of one's mental ability or aptitude.
  • underclothes — clothes worn under outer clothes.
  • undernourish — to deprive of or fail to provide with nutrients essential for health and growth
  • undersheriff — a sheriff's deputy, especially one on whom the sheriff's duties devolve when the office is vacant.
  • undershirted — wearing an undershirt
  • underwhelmed — to fail to interest or astonish: After all the ballyhoo, most critics were underwhelmed by the movie.
  • underwrought — to do less work on than is necessary or required: to underwork an idea.
  • undischarged — gun: not let off
  • unencroached — to advance beyond proper, established, or usual limits; make gradual inroads: A dictatorship of the majority is encroaching on the rights of the individual.
  • unenthralled — not enthralled or charmed; uncaptivated
  • unentrenched — to place in a position of strength; establish firmly or solidly: safely entrenched behind undeniable facts.
  • unfranchised — a privilege of a public nature conferred on an individual, group, or company by a government: a franchise to operate a bus system.
  • unfrightened — not frightened
  • unharmonized — to bring into harmony, accord, or agreement: to harmonize one's views with the new situation.
  • unhydrolysed — not having undergone hydrolysis
  • unmarshalled — a military officer of the highest rank, as in the French and some other armies. Compare field marshal.
  • unprohibited — to forbid (an action, activity, etc.) by authority or law: Smoking is prohibited here.
  • unreproached — not reproached, criticized, or scolded
  • unsepulchred — not sepulchred
  • unthreatened — not threatened; free from threats or danger
  • unwished-for — undesired; unwelcome: an unwished-for occurrence.
  • unworshipped — not worshipped; not admired or revered
  • van der rohe — Ludwig Mies [luhd-wig meez,, mees] /ˈlʌd wɪg miz,, mis/ (Show IPA), Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig.
  • videographer — a person who makes films with a video camera.
  • vortex depth — The vortex depth is the depth below an impeller at which its influence can still be seen in a mixed fluid.
  • walker hound — an American foxhound having a black, tan, and white, or, sometimes, a tan and white coat.
  • warm-hearted — having or showing sympathy, affection, kindness, cordiality, etc.: a warm-hearted welcome.
  • washer-dryer — a washing machine and a clothes dryer combined in one unit.
  • watchstander — (US) A person who is on watch on a ship.
  • water shield — Also called water target. an aquatic plant, Brasenia schreberi, of the water lily family, having purple flowers, floating, elliptic leaves, and a jellylike coating on the underwater stems and roots.
  • water-harden — to quench (steel) in water.
  • weak-hearted — without courage or fortitude; fainthearted.
  • weather deck — (on a ship) the uppermost continuous deck exposed to the weather.
  • weather tide — a tide moving against the direction of the wind.
  • weatherboard — an early type of board used as a siding for a building.
  • weatherbound — (often nautical) Delayed or prevented by bad weather from doing something, such as travelling.
  • weighbridges — Plural form of weighbridge.
  • well-humored — a comic, absurd, or incongruous quality causing amusement: the humor of a situation.
  • wethersfield — a town in central Connecticut.
  • white-ground — pertaining to or designating a style of vase painting developed in Greece from the 6th to the 4th centuries b.c., characterized chiefly by a white background of slip onto which were painted polychromatic figures.
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