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10-letter words containing g, u, r

  • string out — a slender cord or thick thread used for binding or tying; line.
  • struggling — to contend with an adversary or opposing force.
  • strung out — severely debilitated from alcohol or drugs.
  • strung-out — severely debilitated from alcohol or drugs.
  • sturbridge — a town in central Massachusetts: reconstruction of early American village.
  • subangular — fairly angular
  • subaverage — a quantity, rating, or the like that represents or approximates an arithmetic mean: Her golf average is in the 90s. My average in science has gone from B to C this semester.
  • subjugator — to bring under complete control or subjection; conquer; master.
  • submanager — a secondary or assistant manager
  • subprogram — procedure (def 4b).
  • subterfuge — an artifice or expedient used to evade a rule, escape a consequence, hide something, etc.
  • suffragist — an advocate of the grant or extension of political suffrage, especially to women.
  • sugar beet — various cultivars of a beet, Beta vulgaris, of the amaranth family, having a white root, cultivated for the sugar it yields.
  • sugar bird — any of various honeycreepers that feed on nectar.
  • sugar bowl — a small bowl, usually having a cover, for serving granulated sugar or sugar cubes.
  • sugar bush — an evergreen shrub, Rhus ovata, of the cashew family, native to the desert regions of the southwestern U.S., having light yellow flowers in short, dense spikes and hairy, dark-red fruit.
  • sugar camp — a grove of sugar maples.
  • sugar cane — a tall grass, Saccharum officinarum, of tropical and warm regions, having a stout, jointed stalk, and constituting the chief source of sugar.
  • sugar corn — sweet corn.
  • sugar cube — small block of sugar
  • sugar loaf — resembling a sugar-loaf.
  • sugar lump — cube of sugar for coffee or tea
  • sugar palm — gomuti (def 1).
  • sugar pine — a tall pine, Pinus lambertiana, of California, Oregon, etc., having cones 20 inches (51 cm) long.
  • sugar soap — an alkaline compound used for cleaning or stripping paint
  • sugar tree — a sugar maple.
  • sugar-coat — to cover with sugar: to sugarcoat a pill.
  • sugar-free — containing no sugar: a sugar-free cola.
  • sugar-loaf — resembling a sugar-loaf.
  • sugar-plum — a small sweetmeat made of sugar with various flavoring and coloring ingredients; a bonbon.
  • sugarallie — liquorice
  • sugarberry — a hackberry, Celtis laevigata, of the southern U.S.
  • sugarhouse — a shed or other building where maple syrup or maple sugar is made.
  • sulfa drug — any of a group of drugs closely related in chemical structure to sulfanilamide, having a bacteriostatic rather than a bacteriocidal effect: used in the treatment of various wounds, burns, and infections.
  • sulzbergerArthur Hays, 1891–1968, U.S. newspaper publisher.
  • sumerology — the study of the history, language, and culture of the Sumerians.
  • sunlounger — a reclining chair used when sunbathing
  • superagent — an expert or highly effective agent, esp of a sports player or actor
  • superbeing — the fact of existing; existence (as opposed to nonexistence).
  • supercargo — a merchant-ship officer who is in charge of the cargo and the commercial concerns of the voyage.
  • supergiant — Astronomy. supergiant star.
  • supergrade — a high-level rank, Grade 16, 17, or 18, in the federal civil service.
  • supergrass — criminal informant
  • supergroup — any collection or assemblage of persons or things; cluster; aggregation: a group of protesters; a remarkable group of paintings.
  • superlarge — extremely large
  • superlight — extremely light
  • supertight — extremely tight
  • supporting — to bear or hold up (a load, mass, structure, part, etc.); serve as a foundation for.
  • supragenic — beyond the limits or above the level of genes.
  • sure thing — something that is or is supposed to be a certain success, as a bet or a business venture: He thinks that real estate is a sure thing.
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