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11-letter words containing g, a, u, l

  • undergaoler — jail.
  • unfaltering — to hesitate or waver in action, purpose, intent, etc.; give way: Her courage did not falter at the prospect of hardship.
  • unfatigable — susceptible to fatigue.
  • unforgeable — to form by heating and hammering; beat into shape.
  • ungallantly — in an ungallant manner
  • unglaciated — to cover with ice or glaciers.
  • unglamorous — full of glamour; charmingly or fascinatingly attractive, especially in a mysterious or magical way.
  • ungraspable — to seize and hold by or as if by clasping with the fingers or arms.
  • unguardable — to keep safe from harm or danger; protect; watch over: to guard the ruler.
  • unguessable — to arrive at or commit oneself to an opinion about (something) without having sufficient evidence to support the opinion fully: to guess a person's weight.
  • unguiculate — bearing or resembling a nail or claw.
  • unguligrade — (of horses, etc) walking on hooves
  • unignorable — to refrain from noticing or recognizing: to ignore insulting remarks.
  • unignorably — to refrain from noticing or recognizing: to ignore insulting remarks.
  • unjudgeable — a public officer authorized to hear and decide cases in a court of law; a magistrate charged with the administration of justice.
  • unlabouring — not labouring
  • unleveraged — the action of a lever, a rigid bar that pivots about one point and that is used to move an object at a second point by a force applied at a third.
  • unlitigated — to make the subject of a lawsuit; contest at law.
  • unmitigable — to lessen in force or intensity, as wrath, grief, harshness, or pain; moderate.
  • unmitigably — in an unmitigable manner
  • unnavigable — deep and wide enough to provide passage to ships: a navigable channel.
  • unobligated — to bind or oblige morally or legally: to obligate oneself to purchase a building.
  • unravelling — to separate or disentangle the threads of (a woven or knitted fabric, a rope, etc.).
  • unrecalling — not undone or unacted
  • unregulated — to control or direct by a rule, principle, method, etc.: to regulate household expenses.
  • unrevealing — to make known; disclose; divulge: to reveal a secret.
  • unrightable — in accordance with what is good, proper, or just: right conduct.
  • unstartling — not startling
  • unvaryingly — in a never changing manner
  • unvulgarize — to make unvulgar; to raise from the level of the common and ordinary; to refine; to elevate
  • unwedgeable — unable to be split or divided by wedges
  • upgradeable — an incline going up in the direction of movement.
  • utgard-loki — a Jotun appearing in the story of Thor's voyage to Utgard: at first disguised under another name (Skrymir)
  • vapouringly — in a boastful manner
  • victuallage — supplies or food; victuals
  • victuallingvictuals, food supplies; provisions.
  • vo language — a type of language that has direct objects following the verb and that tends to have typological traits such as prepositions, prefixes, noun modifiers following nouns, adverbs following verbs, and auxiliary verbs preceding the main verb.
  • vulcanology — volcanology.
  • vulgarities — the state or quality of being vulgar: the vulgarity of his remark.
  • wagon vault — barrel vault.
  • walking bus — a group of schoolchildren walking together along an agreed route to and from school, accompanied by adults, with children joining and leaving the group at prearranged points
  • walkthrough — an act or instance of walking or going on foot.
  • wallaceburg — a town in SE Ontario, in S Canada.
  • wander plug — an electrical plug on the end of a flexible wire, for insertion into any of a number of sockets
  • well argued — to present reasons for or against a thing: He argued in favor of capital punishment.
  • well-argued — to present reasons for or against a thing: He argued in favor of capital punishment.
  • well-taught — simple past tense and past participle of teach.
  • wheel gauge — the distance between two wheels on the same axle of a vehicle
  • xylophagous — Feeding on wood. (of insects etc.).
  • young adult — a teenager (used especially by publishers and librarians).
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