13-letter words containing g, e, n, d, r, u
- ruggedization — the act or process of making something rugged
- run sb ragged — If someone runs you ragged, they make you do so much that you become exhausted.
- running order — The running order of the items in a broadcast, concert, or show is the order in which the items will come.
- sharp-tongued — characterized by or given to harshness, bitterness, or sarcasm in speech.
- sigmund freud — Anna, 1895–1982, British psychoanalyst, born in Austria (daughter of Sigmund Freud).
- signed number — Mathematics. a number preceded by a plus sign (+) to indicate a positive quantity or by a minus sign (−) to indicate a negative quantity.
- spot reducing — the usually futile effort to exercise one part of the body, as the thighs, in hopes of reducing the amount of fat stored in that area.
- squanderingly — in a squandering manner
- student grant — a grant of money awarded to somebody to fund their studying at a university or college
- sunken garden — a formal garden set below the main level of the ground surrounding it.
- teeing ground — tee2 (def 1a).
- to the ground — completely; absolutely
- uncategorized — to arrange in categories or classes; classify.
- unconsidering — not reflective or thoughtful
- under the gun — a weapon consisting of a metal tube, with mechanical attachments, from which projectiles are shot by the force of an explosive; a piece of ordnance.
- 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-packing — the act or work of a person or thing that packs.
- underbudgeted — furnished with an insufficient budget; not having sufficient funds made available.
- 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.
- underclothing — clothing worn next to the skin under outer clothes.
- underclubbing — the action of hitting with a club resulting in insufficient distance
- underdrainage — drainage of agricultural lands and removal of excess water and of alkali by drains buried beneath the surface.
- undergraduate — a student in a university or college who has not received a first, especially a bachelor's, degree.
- undergrounder — a member of an underground group
- 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.
- underpinnings — a system of supports beneath a wall or the like.
- underspending — the process or fact of spending less than one can afford or is allocated
- 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.
- understocking — to provide an insufficient quantity, as of merchandise, supplies, or livestock.
- understrength — having insufficient organizational strength; lacking in personnel: an understrength army.
- underwhelming — to fail to interest or astonish: After all the ballyhoo, most critics were underwhelmed by the movie.
- underwritings — acts or instances of underwriting
- undeservingly — in an undeserving manner
- undiscouraged — to deprive of courage, hope, or confidence; dishearten; dispirit.
- unexaggerated — not exaggerated or overblown
- unimpregnated — not saturated, soaked or infused (with something)
- uninaugurated — not having been placed in office formally and ceremonially
- unneighboured — having no neighbour or neighbours
- unplagiarized — to take and use by plagiarism.
- unscavengered — lacking the qualities of having been scavenged
- well-grounded — based on good reasons; well-founded: His opposition to the scheme is well-grounded.
- wild geranium — geranium (def 2).
- young ireland — a movement or party of Irish patriots in the 1840s who split with Daniel O'Connell because they favoured a more violent policy than that which he promoted