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9-letter words containing d, e, n, u, c

  • indurance — Obsolete form of endurance.
  • interduce — (construction) An intertie.
  • introduce — to present (a person) to another so as to make acquainted.
  • jaundiced — affected with or colored by or as if by jaundice: jaundiced skin.
  • jaundices — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of jaundice.
  • klendusic — resistant to disease
  • languedoc — a former province in S France. Capital: Toulouse.
  • lucidness — the quality of being easily understood, completely intelligible, or comprehensible: She makes her argument with pointed logic and exemplary lucidity.
  • manducate — to chew; masticate; eat.
  • manicured — a cosmetic treatment of the hands and fingernails, including trimming and polishing of the nails and removing cuticles.
  • muckender — (obsolete) A handkerchief.
  • muscadine — a grape, Vitis rotundifolia, of the southern U.S., having dull purple, thick-skinned musky fruit and being the origin of many grape varieties.
  • neckmould — (architecture) A small convex moulding surrounding a column at the junction of the shaft and capital.
  • nicodemus — a Pharisee and member of the Sanhedrin who became a secret follower of Jesus. John 3:1–21; 7:50–52; 19:39.
  • nucleated — having a nucleus.
  • nucleoids — Plural form of nucleoid.
  • poundcake — a rich, sweet cake made originally with approximately a pound each of butter, sugar, and flour.
  • quickened — Simple past tense and past participle of quicken.
  • reconduct — personal behavior; way of acting; bearing or deportment.
  • recounted — to relate or narrate; tell in detail; give the facts or particulars of.
  • red count — a count of the red cells in a person's blood.
  • reductant — a reducing agent which as it is oxidized is capable of bringing about the reduction of another substance
  • reducting — to reduce.
  • reduction — the act of reducing or the state of being reduced.
  • renounced — to give up or put aside voluntarily: to renounce worldly pleasures.
  • scoundrel — an unprincipled, dishonorable person; villain.
  • scrunched — to crunch, crush, or crumple.
  • scundered — embarrassed
  • scunnered — an irrational dislike; loathing: She took a scunner to him.
  • secluding — to place in or withdraw into solitude; remove from social contact and activity, etc.
  • secundine — the inner integument of an ovule.
  • seduction — an act or instance of seducing, especially sexually.
  • squinched — to contort (the features) or squint.
  • subdeacon — a member of the clerical order next below that of deacon.
  • succedent — following or succeeding; subsequent.
  • sun dance — a religious ceremony associated with the sun, practiced by North American Indians of the Plains, consisting of dancing attended with various symbolic rites and commonly including self-torture.
  • sun-cured — cured or preserved by exposure to the rays of the sun, as meat, fish, fruit, tobacco, etc.
  • transduce — to convert (energy) from one form into another.
  • truncated — truncated.
  • turducken — a deboned turkey that is stuffed with a deboned duck that is stuffed with a deboned chicken.
  • unaccrued — to happen or result as a natural growth, addition, etc.
  • unaccused — not charged with wrongdoing
  • unamerced — not amerced or punished
  • unblocked — to obstruct (someone or something) by placing obstacles in the way (sometimes followed by up): to block one's exit; to block up a passage.
  • unbricked — a block of clay hardened by drying in the sun or burning in a kiln, and used for building, paving, etc.: traditionally, in the U.S., a rectangle 2.25 × 3.75 × 8 inches (5.7 × 9.5 × 20.3 cm), red, brown, or yellow in color.
  • uncandled — (of a room, place, object, or time period) not illuminated by candlelight
  • uncatered — to provide food, service, etc., as for a party or wedding: to cater for a banquet.
  • unchained — to fasten or secure with a chain: to chain a dog to a post.
  • unchanged — to make the form, nature, content, future course, etc., of (something) different from what it is or from what it would be if left alone: to change one's name; to change one's opinion; to change the course of history.
  • unchanted — a short, simple melody, especially one characterized by single notes to which an indefinite number of syllables are intoned, used in singing psalms, canticles, etc., in church services.
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