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12-letter words containing g, u, n, d

  • uninstigated — to cause by incitement; foment: to instigate a quarrel.
  • unintegrated — combining or coordinating separate elements so as to provide a harmonious, interrelated whole: an integrated plot; an integrated course of study.
  • unjudgmental — involving the use or exercise of judgment.
  • unnegotiated — to deal or bargain with another or others, as in the preparation of a treaty or contract or in preliminaries to a business deal.
  • unoriginated — not originated
  • unoxygenated — not enriched with oxygen
  • unpretending — unpretentious; genuine
  • unprivileged — belonging to a class that enjoys special privileges; favored: the privileged few.
  • unprogrammed — a plan of action to accomplish a specified end: a school lunch program.
  • unrecognized — to identify as something or someone previously seen, known, etc.: He had changed so much that one could scarcely recognize him.
  • unregimented — not regimented, organized, or ordered
  • unregistered — recorded, as in a register or book; enrolled.
  • unresponding — to reply or answer in words: to respond briefly to a question.
  • unsegregated — not segregated, especially not subject to racial division; integrated: an unsegregated community.
  • unstockinged — not wearing or covered by stockings
  • unvariegated — varied; diversified; diverse.
  • unyieldingly — unable to bend or be penetrated under pressure; hard: trees so unyielding that they broke in the harsh north winds.
  • up and doing — busy; active
  • urban legend — a modern story of obscure origin and with little or no supporting evidence that spreads spontaneously in varying forms and often has elements of humor, moralizing, or horror: Are there alligators living in the New York City sewer system, or is that just an urban legend?
  • waste ground — an empty piece of land
  • wet puddling — puddling on a hearth rich in iron oxide so that carbon monoxide is generated, giving the iron the appearance of boiling.
  • white-ground — pertaining to or designating a style of vase painting developed in Greece from the 6th to the 4th centuries b.c., characterized chiefly by a white background of slip onto which were painted polychromatic figures.
  • wind-sucking — cribbing (def 1).
  • winding drum — a rotating drum usually grooved to nest a wire rope which is wound onto it as part of the mechanism of a hoist
  • wood turning — the forming of wood articles upon a lathe.
  • younger edda — either of two old Icelandic literary works, one a collection of poems on mythical and religious subjects (or) erroneously attributed to Saemund Sigfusson (c1055–1133), the other a collection of ancient Scandinavian myths and legends, rules and theories of versification, poems, etc. (or) compiled and written in part by Snorri Sturluson (1179–1241).
  • younger hand — (in piquet and similar card games) the dealer
  • younghusband — Sir Francis Edward. 1863–1942, British explorer, mainly of N India and Tibet. He used military force to compel the Dalai Lama to sign (1904) a trade agreement with Britain
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