9-letter words containing e, m, u, n
- tumescent — swelling; slightly tumid.
- tunesmith — a person who composes popular music or songs.
- turmaline — tourmaline.
- tynemouth — a seaport in Tyne and Wear, in NE England, at the mouth of the Tyne River.
- ulsterman — a native or inhabitant of Ulster.
- umpteenth — of an indefinitely large number in succession: He was the umpteenth person to arrive.
- un-humble — not proud or arrogant; modest: to be humble although successful.
- un-mature — complete in natural growth or development, as plant and animal forms: a mature rose bush.
- un-milled — simple past tense and past participle of mill1 .
- unadmired — to regard with wonder, pleasure, or approval.
- unalarmed — a sudden fear or distressing suspense caused by an awareness of danger; apprehension; fright.
- unamassed — not amassed or gathered
- unamended — to alter, modify, rephrase, or add to or subtract from (a motion, bill, constitution, etc.) by formal procedure: Congress may amend the proposed tax bill.
- unamerced — not amerced or punished
- unamiable — having or showing pleasant, good-natured personal qualities; affable: an amiable disposition.
- unashamed — not ashamed; not restrained by embarrassment or consciousness of moral guilt: a liar unashamed even after public disgrace.
- unassumed — adopted in order to deceive; fictitious; pretended; feigned: an assumed name; an assumed air of humility.
- unawesome — not awesome
- unbemused — not bemused or puzzled
- uncharmed — marked by good fortune or privilege: a charmed life.
- unclaimed — to demand by or as by virtue of a right; demand as a right or as due: to claim an estate by inheritance.
- unclamped — to fasten with or fix in a clamp.
- uncle sam — a personification of the government or people of the U.S.: represented as a tall, lean man with white chin whiskers, wearing a blue tailcoat, red-and-white-striped trousers, and a top hat with a band of stars.
- uncle tom — a black person, especially a man, considered by other black people to be subservient to or to curry favor with white people.
- unclimbed — not having been climbed
- uncombine — to break apart; separate; disunite
- uncrumple — to eliminate crumples from
- undamaged — injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness: The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
- undecimal — related to the number 11
- undemised — death or decease.
- underbrim — the part of a hat found under the brim
- undermine — to injure or destroy by insidious activity or imperceptible stages, sometimes tending toward a sudden dramatic effect.
- undermost — being the furthest under; lowest
- undername — a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing, a body or class, or any object of thought is designated, called, or known.
- undertime — the time spent by an employee at work in non-work-related activities like socializing, surfing the internet, making personal telephone calls, etc
- undreamed — a succession of images, thoughts, or emotions passing through the mind during sleep.
- unemotive — characterized by or pertaining to emotion: the emotive and rational capacities of humankind.
- unemptied — not emptied
- unextreme — not extreme
- unfreedom — the state of being free or at liberty rather than in confinement or under physical restraint: He won his freedom after a retrial.
- unfreeman — a person who is not a freeman
- ungermane — not appropriate to the topic being considered
- ungroomed — not groomed; untidy
- unguentum — (in prescriptions) ointment.
- unhumbled — not humbled
- uniformed — identical or consistent, as from example to example, place to place, or moment to moment: uniform spelling; a uniform building code.
- unillumed — not illuminated
- unimpeded — to retard in movement or progress by means of obstacles or hindrances; obstruct; hinder.
- unimplied — involved, indicated, or suggested without being directly or explicitly stated; tacitly understood: an implied rebuke; an implied compliment.
- unimposed — to lay on or set as something to be borne, endured, obeyed, fulfilled, paid, etc.: to impose taxes.