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9-letter words containing e, g, u

  • change-up — a temporary shift or variation in a normal routine or regular pattern of activity: Reading a mystery novel has been a real change of pace for me.
  • changeful — often changing; inconstant; variable
  • changeups — Plural form of changeup.
  • charge up — to impose or ask as a price or fee: That store charges $25 for leather gloves.
  • chargeful — onerous; expensive
  • chargeous — (obsolete) burdensome.
  • cherbourg — a port in NW France, on the English Channel. Pop: 25 370 (1999)
  • cheruping — Present participle of cherup.
  • chirurgie — (archaic) surgery.
  • ciguatera — food poisoning caused by a ciguatoxin in seafood
  • cingulate — Anatomy, Zoology. a belt, zone, or girdlelike part.
  • coagulase — any enzyme that causes coagulation of blood
  • coagulate — When a liquid coagulates, it becomes very thick.
  • coccygeus — (anatomy) A muscle of the pelvic wall, that in combination with the levator ani forms the pelvic diaphragm.
  • colleague — Your colleagues are the people you work with, especially in a professional job.
  • collegium — (in the former Soviet Union) a board in charge of a department
  • collogues — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of collogue.
  • configure — If you configure a piece of computer equipment, you set it up so that it is ready for use.
  • congruent — If one thing is congruent with another thing, they are similar or fit together well.
  • conjugate — When pupils or teachers conjugate a verb, they give its different forms in a particular order.
  • consulage — a duty paid by merchants for a consul's protection of their goods while abroad
  • corrugate — to fold or be folded into alternate furrows and ridges
  • courgette — Courgettes are long thin vegetables with dark green skin.
  • courrèges — André (ɑ̃dre). 1923–2016, French couturier: helped to launch unisex fashion in the mid-1960s
  • cousinage — a kinship or relationship
  • crataegus — (botany) Any plant of the genus Crataegus, the hawthorns.
  • cream jug — a small jug for serving cream
  • cudgeling — a short, thick stick used as a weapon; club.
  • cudgelled — a short, thick stick used as a weapon; club.
  • cultigens — Plural form of cultigen.
  • culturgen — One of the propagating mutating cultural units that form the subject of memetics.
  • cumbering — Present participle of cumber.
  • curettage — the process of using a curette
  • curetting — to scrape with a curette.
  • curtilage — the enclosed area of land adjacent to a dwelling house
  • curveting — Present participle of curvet.
  • d-glucose — a sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , having several optically different forms, the common dextrorotatory form (dextroglucose, or -glucose) occurring in many fruits, animal tissues and fluids, etc., and having a sweetness about one half that of ordinary sugar, and the rare levorotatory form (levoglucose, or -glucose) not naturally occurring.
  • dangerous — If something is dangerous, it is able or likely to hurt or harm you.
  • daughters — Plural form of daughter.
  • de gaulle — Charles (André Joseph Marie) (ʃarl). 1890–1970, French general and statesman. During World War II, he refused to accept Pétain's armistice with Germany and founded the Free French movement in England (1940). He was head of the provisional governments (1944–46) and, as first president of the Fifth Republic (1959–69), he restored political and economic stability to France
  • debuggers — Plural form of debugger.
  • debugging — the process of locating and removing faults in computer programs
  • debulking — Present participle of debulk.
  • debunking — to expose or excoriate (a claim, assertion, sentiment, etc.) as being pretentious, false, or exaggerated: to debunk advertising slogans.
  • deburring — Present participle of deburr.
  • decalogue — Ten Commandments
  • decoupage — the art or process of decorating a surface with shapes or illustrations cut from paper, card, etc
  • decupling — Present participle of decuple.
  • deducting — Present participle of deduct.
  • defueling — combustible matter used to maintain fire, as coal, wood, oil, or gas, in order to create heat or power.
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