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6-letter words containing d, r, u

  • rudolf — 1218–91, king of Germany and emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1273–91: founder of the Hapsburg dynasty.
  • ruffed — displaying or wearing a ruff.
  • rugged — having a roughly broken, rocky, hilly, or jagged surface: rugged ground.
  • ruinedruins, the remains of a building, city, etc., that has been destroyed or that is in disrepair or a state of decay: We visited the ruins of ancient Greece.
  • rundle — a rung of a ladder.
  • runted — stunted
  • rushed — to move, act, or progress with speed, impetuosity, or violence.
  • rusted — Also called iron rust. the red or orange coating that forms on the surface of iron when exposed to air and moisture, consisting chiefly of ferric hydroxide and ferric oxide formed by oxidation.
  • rutted — the periodically recurring sexual excitement of the deer, goat, sheep, etc.
  • sardou — Victorien [veek-taw-ryen] /vik tɔˈryɛ̃/ (Show IPA), 1831–1908, French dramatist.
  • shroud — a cloth or sheet in which a corpse is wrapped for burial.
  • shudra — a Hindu of the lowest caste, that of the workers.
  • siddur — a Jewish prayer book designed for use chiefly on days other than festivals and holy days; a daily prayer book.
  • sigurd — the son of Sigmund and Hjordis and the husband of Gudrun. He kills the dragon Fafnir, acquires the treasure of Andvari, wins Brynhild for Gunnar, and is finally killed at the behest of Brynhild, whom he had once promised to marry: corresponds to Siegfried of the Nibelungenlied.
  • soured — having an acid taste, resembling that of vinegar, lemon juice, etc.; tart.
  • stroud — a coarse woolen cloth, blanket, or garment formerly used by the British in bartering with the North American Indians.
  • strudl — STRUctured Design Language. Dynamic and finite-element analysis, steel and concrete structures. Subsystem of ICES. ["ICES STRUDL-II Engineering User's Manual", R68-91, CE Dept MIT (Nov 1968) Sammet 1969, p.613].
  • sturdy — strongly built; stalwart; robust: sturdy young athletes.
  • sudder — the Indian supreme court
  • sudser — a soap opera.
  • sunder — to separate; part; divide; sever.
  • sundry — various or diverse: sundry persons.
  • surbed — to lay (a stone) on edge, esp with reference to grain
  • surged — a strong, wavelike, forward movement, rush, or sweep: the onward surge of an angry mob.
  • toured — a traveling around from place to place.
  • trudge — to walk, especially laboriously or wearily: to trudge up a long flight of steps.
  • tudorsAntony, 1909–87, English choreographer and dancer.
  • tundra — one of the vast, nearly level, treeless plains of the arctic regions of Europe, Asia, and North America.
  • turbid — not clear or transparent because of stirred-up sediment or the like; clouded; opaque; obscured: the turbid waters near the waterfall.
  • turgid — swollen; distended; tumid.
  • turned — to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
  • udmurt — a member of a Uralic people living in the Udmurt Autonomous Republic and adjacent areas of the Kama River basin.
  • unbred — not taught or trained.
  • uncord — to release (a bow, etc) from cords
  • undear — regarded without affection or favour; disesteemed
  • under- — Under- is used to form words that express the idea that there is not enough of something. For example if people are underfed, they are not getting enough food.
  • undern — a simple meal
  • undraw — to draw open or aside: to undraw a curtain.
  • ungird — to loosen or remove a girdle or belt from.
  • unlord — to remove (someone) from the position or status of a lord
  • unread — not read, as a letter or newspaper.
  • unrude — refined
  • untrod — not trod; not traversed: the untrod wastes of Antarctica.
  • upcard — Stud Poker. a card properly dealt face up. Compare hole card.
  • updart — to dart upwards
  • updrag — to drag up or upwards
  • updraw — to draw up
  • upgird — to support or hold up
  • upward — toward a higher place or position: The birds flew upward.
  • uredia — uredinium.
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