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10-letter words containing g, u, n, s, i

  • outlasting — Present participle of outlast.
  • outraising — Present participle of outraise.
  • outsailing — Present participle of outsail.
  • outscoring — Present participle of outscore.
  • outselling — Present participle of outsell.
  • outsetting — the act of public proclamation
  • outshining — Present participle of outshine.
  • outsinging — Present participle of outsing.
  • outstaring — Present participle of outstare.
  • outswinger — a ball that when bowled veers from leg side to off side.
  • perigynous — situated around the pistil on the edge of a cuplike receptacle, as stamens or petals.
  • pleasuring — the state or feeling of being pleased.
  • pound sign — a symbol (£) for “pound” or “pounds” as a monetary unit of the United Kingdom.
  • pressuring — the exertion of force upon a surface by an object, fluid, etc., in contact with it: the pressure of earth against a wall.
  • pro-busing — favoring or advocating legislation that requires the busing of students to schools outside their neighborhoods, especially as a means of achieving socioeconomic or racial diversity among students in a public school.
  • publishing — the activities or business of a publisher, especially of books or periodicals: He plans to go into publishing after college.
  • pugnacious — inclined to quarrel or fight readily; quarrelsome; belligerent; combative.
  • purchasing — buying
  • pursuingly — in a pursuing manner
  • quantising — Present participle of quantise.
  • reassuring — to restore to assurance or confidence: His praise reassured me.
  • requesting — the act of asking for something to be given or done, especially as a favor or courtesy; solicitation or petition: At his request, they left.
  • resecuring — free from or not exposed to danger or harm; safe.
  • resounding — making an echoing sound: a resounding thud.
  • resourcing — the provision of resources
  • ring shout — a group dance of West African origin introduced into parts of the southern U.S. by black revivalists, performed by shuffling counterclockwise in a circle while answering shouts of a preacher with corresponding shouts, and held to be, in its vigorous antiphonal patterns, a source in the development of jazz.
  • ring-shout — a group dance of West African origin introduced into parts of the southern U.S. by black revivalists, performed by shuffling counterclockwise in a circle while answering shouts of a preacher with corresponding shouts, and held to be, in its vigorous antiphonal patterns, a source in the development of jazz.
  • rough spin — hard or unfair treatment
  • rubiginose — rust-coloured or rusty
  • rubiginous — rusty; rust-colored; brownish-red.
  • russetting — a boot or a piece of russet clothing
  • salmagundi — a mixed dish consisting usually of cubed poultry or fish, chopped meat, anchovies, eggs, onions, oil, etc., often served as a salad.
  • san miguel — a city in E El Salvador.
  • sanguinary — full of or characterized by bloodshed; bloody: a sanguinary struggle.
  • sanguinely — cheerfully optimistic, hopeful, or confident: a sanguine disposition; sanguine expectations.
  • sanguinity — cheerfully optimistic, hopeful, or confident: a sanguine disposition; sanguine expectations.
  • sauntering — to walk with a leisurely gait; stroll: sauntering through the woods.
  • scheduling — a plan of procedure, usually written, for a proposed objective, especially with reference to the sequence of and time allotted for each item or operation necessary to its completion: The schedule allows three weeks for this stage.
  • schtupping — to have sexual intercourse with.
  • sdeignfull — disdainful
  • seducingly — in a seducing manner
  • septuagint — the oldest Greek version of the Old Testament, traditionally said to have been translated by 70 or 72 Jewish scholars at the request of Ptolemy II: most scholars believe that only the Pentateuch was completed in the early part of the 3rd century b.c. and that the remaining books were translated in the next two centuries.
  • sequencing — the following of one thing after another; succession.
  • setting-up — the establishment or creation of something
  • shin guard — a protective covering, usually of leather or plastic and often padded, for the shins and sometimes the knees, worn chiefly by catchers in baseball and goalkeepers in ice hockey.
  • shoutingly — by way of shouting
  • shuddering — trembling or quivering with fear, dread, cold, etc.
  • shuttering — a solid or louvered movable cover for a window.
  • sighthound — gazehound.
  • single out — only one in number; one only; unique; sole: a single example.
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