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9-letter words containing g, e, n, i, u

  • pugginess — stumpiness
  • pummeling — to beat or thrash with or as if with the fists.
  • puttering — to busy or occupy oneself in a leisurely, casual, or ineffective manner: to putter in the garden.
  • quavering — to shake tremulously; quiver or tremble: He stood there quavering with fear.
  • quenching — to slake, satisfy, or allay (thirst, desires, passion, etc.).
  • quivering — the act or state of quivering; a tremble or tremor.
  • rebutting — to refute by evidence or argument.
  • recurring — occurring or appearing again.
  • recutting — to penetrate with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument or object: He cut his finger.
  • reducting — to reduce.
  • repulsing — to drive back; repel: to repulse an assailant.
  • requiring — to have need of; need: He requires medical care.
  • requiting — to make repayment or return for (service, benefits, etc.).
  • requoting — to repeat (a passage, phrase, etc.) from a book, speech, or the like, as by way of authority, illustration, etc.
  • rerouting — a course, way, or road for passage or travel: What's the shortest route to Boston?
  • rerunning — to run again.
  • resulting — to spring, arise, or proceed as a consequence of actions, circumstances, premises, etc.; be the outcome.
  • ring true — sound or seem genuine
  • rubbering — Also called India rubber, natural rubber, gum, gum elastic, caoutchouc. a highly elastic solid substance, light cream or dark amber in color, polymerized by the drying and coagulation of the latex or milky juice of rubber trees and plants, especially Hevea and Ficus species.
  • scungille — the meat of a mollusc or conch, eaten as a delicacy
  • secluding — to place in or withdraw into solitude; remove from social contact and activity, etc.
  • seigneury — the domain of a seigneur.
  • signature — a person's name, or a mark representing it, as signed personally or by deputy, as in subscribing a letter or other document.
  • signeurie — seniority
  • sleuthing — a detective. Synonyms: investigator, private investigator; private eye, gumshoe, shamus.
  • subregion — a division or subdivision of a region, especially a division of a zoogeographical region.
  • suffering — the state of a person or thing that suffers.
  • summering — the season between spring and autumn, in the Northern Hemisphere from the summer solstice to the autumnal equinox, and in the Southern Hemisphere from the winter solstice to the vernal equinox.
  • surcingle — a belt or girth that passes around the belly of a horse and over the blanket, pack, saddle, etc., and is buckled on the horse's back.
  • surveying — the science or scientific method of making surveys of land.
  • teniafuge — an agent or medicine for expelling tapeworms from the body.
  • thuringer — a mildly seasoned cervelat, either fresh or smoked.
  • timenoguy — a taut rope on a ship used to prevent the tangling of lines and riggings
  • tinguaite — an igneous rock containing feldspar, nepheline and aegirine
  • traguline — like or characteristic of a tragule
  • tungstite — a yellow or yellowish-green mineral, tungsten trioxide, WO 3 , usually occurring in a pulverulent form.
  • tunneling — Physics. a quantum-mechanical process by which a particle can pass through a potential energy barrier that is higher than the energy of the particle: first postulated to explain the escape of alpha particles from atomic nuclei.
  • unaligned — to arrange in a straight line; adjust according to a line.
  • unbearing — the manner in which one conducts or carries oneself, including posture and gestures: a man of dignified bearing.
  • unbeguile — to undeceive; to reveal the truth to someone formerly deceived
  • unbending — not bending or curving; inflexible; rigid.
  • unbigoted — utterly intolerant of any creed, belief, or opinion that differs from one's own.
  • unbridged — a structure spanning and providing passage over a river, chasm, road, or the like.
  • unceasing — not ceasing or stopping; continuous: an unceasing flow of criticism.
  • undelight — the absence of delight
  • undergird — to strengthen; secure, as by passing a rope or chain under and around: to undergird a top-heavy load.
  • underking — a ruler subordinate to a king
  • underling — a subordinate, especially one of slight importance.
  • undersign — to sign one's name under or at the end of (a letter or document); affix one's signature to.
  • underwing — one of the hind wings of an insect.
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