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13-letter words containing d, u, a

  • under pain of — physical suffering or distress, as due to injury, illness, etc.
  • under-manager — a person who has control or direction of an institution, business, etc., or of a part, division, or phase of it.
  • under-meaning — what is intended to be, or actually is, expressed or indicated; signification; import: the three meanings of a word.
  • under-measure — a unit or standard of measurement: weights and measures.
  • under-packing — the act or work of a person or thing that packs.
  • under-planned — a scheme or method of acting, doing, proceeding, making, etc., developed in advance: battle plans.
  • underachiever — a student who performs less well in school than would be expected on the basis of abilities indicated by intelligence and aptitude tests, etc.
  • underactivity — insufficient activity
  • undercarriage — the supporting framework underneath a vehicle, as an automobile or trailer; the structure to which the wheels, tracks, or the like are attached or fitted.
  • underclassman — a freshman or sophomore in a secondary school or college.
  • underdrainage — drainage of agricultural lands and removal of excess water and of alkali by drains buried beneath the surface.
  • undereducated — not educated to a sufficient or required standard
  • underemphasis — inadequate emphasis.
  • underestimate — to estimate at too low a value, rate, or the like.
  • underfinanced — Underfinanced means the same as underfunded.
  • undergraduate — a student in a university or college who has not received a first, especially a bachelor's, degree.
  • underinflated — lacking sufficient air pressure
  • undermodulate — to reproduce (a sound or signal) at below the optimal output level in a recording or broadcasting system, causing it to be distorted.
  • underpainting — the first coat of paint, especially the initial painting on a canvas in which the major areas, tones, colors, and forms are indicated in mass.
  • underprepared — inadequately prepared
  • underreaction — to react with less than the expected or appropriate emotion.
  • understaffing — the condition of being understaffed or of lacking a number of employees
  • understanding — mental process of a person who comprehends; comprehension; personal interpretation: My understanding of the word does not agree with yours.
  • understatedly — in an understated manner
  • understrapper — an underling.
  • undescendable — unable to be descended or walked upon
  • undescribable — to tell or depict in written or spoken words; give an account of: He described the accident very carefully.
  • undeterminate — not definite or determined; indeterminate
  • undeviatingly — to turn aside, as from a route, way, course, etc.
  • undiagnosable — unable to be diagnosed
  • undialectical — not dialectical; not resolving views; dogmatic
  • undirectional — of, relating to, or indicating direction in space.
  • undiscernable — capable of being discerned; distinguishable.
  • undiscouraged — to deprive of courage, hope, or confidence; dishearten; dispirit.
  • undiscussable — to consider or examine by argument, comment, etc.; talk over or write about, especially to explore solutions; debate: to discuss the proposed law on taxes.
  • undisguisable — to change the appearance or guise of so as to conceal identity or mislead, as by means of deceptive garb: The king was disguised as a peasant.
  • undissociated — not dissociated, especially into ions or into simpler molecules.
  • undistracting — not distracting; not showy or ostentatious
  • undoctrinaire — a person who does not subscribe to a particular doctrine or theory; a free thinker
  • undomesticate — to make wild
  • undulationist — a subscriber to the theory that light is transmitted as waves
  • unemancipated — not constrained or restricted by custom, tradition, superstition, etc.: a modern, emancipated woman.
  • unembarrassed — to cause confusion and shame to; make uncomfortably self-conscious; disconcert; abash: His bad table manners embarrassed her.
  • unencompassed — to form a circle about; encircle; surround: He built a moat to encompass the castle.
  • unentertained — not entertained or amused
  • unestablished — not established.
  • unexaggerated — not exaggerated or overblown
  • unfacilitated — to make easier or less difficult; help forward (an action, a process, etc.): Careful planning facilitates any kind of work.
  • unfenestrated — having windows; windowed; characterized by windows.
  • unideological — not having, belonging to, or relating to any particular ideology or belief system
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