8-letter words containing g, u, r, e
- umpirage — the office or authority of an umpire.
- unagreed — arranged or set by common consent: They met at the agreed time.
- unargued — undisputed; not subject to argument or discussion: an unargued right.
- uncharge — to acquit.
- underage — lacking the required age, especially that of legal maturity.
- underdog — a person who is expected to lose in a contest or conflict.
- undergod — a subordinate god
- unerring — not erring; not going astray or missing the mark: The captain set an unerring course for home.
- unforged — genuine
- unfringe — an outer edge; margin; periphery: on the fringe of the art world.
- ungarbed — undressed; unclad
- ungerman — of or relating to Germany, its inhabitants, or their language.
- ungraced — deprived of something
- ungraded — a degree or step in a scale, as of rank, advancement, quality, value, or intensity: the best grade of paper.
- ungrazed — (of pasture, etc) not grazed
- ungreedy — excessively or inordinately desirous of wealth, profit, etc.; avaricious: the greedy owners of the company.
- unmerged — to cause to combine or coalesce; unite.
- unpurged — not purged of impurities
- unringed — not having or wearing a ring
- unrouged — any of various red cosmetics for coloring the cheeks or lips.
- unurgent — compelling or requiring immediate action or attention; imperative; pressing: an urgent matter.
- upcharge — an additional charge: How much is the upcharge for white sidewall tires?
- upgather — to gather up or together: to upgather information.
- upstager — someone who upstages
- urgently — compelling or requiring immediate action or attention; imperative; pressing: an urgent matter.
- urostege — an underside plate on a serpent's tail
- uttering — the crime of knowingly tendering or showing a forged instrument or counterfeit coin to another with intent to defraud.
- uxbridge — a town in SE England, part of the Greater London borough of Hillingdon since 1965; chiefly residential; seat of Brunel University (1966)
- vargueno — a fall-front desk of the 16th, 17th, and early 18th centuries, having the form of a chest upon a small table.
- voyageur — (in Canada) a person who is an expert woodsman, boatman, and guide in remote regions, especially one employed by fur companies to transport supplies to and from their distant stations.
- youngers — Plural form of younger.