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6-letter words containing g, u, r

  • rugose — having wrinkles; wrinkled; ridged.
  • rugrat — crawling infant, young child
  • rugula — arugula.
  • ruling — a principle or regulation governing conduct, action, procedure, arrangement, etc.: the rules of chess.
  • sargus — a sea fish from the family Sparidae, more commonly known as the white seabream
  • sauger — a freshwater, North American pikeperch, Stizostedion canadense.
  • segura — Francisco [frahn-sees-kaw] /frɑnˈsis kɔ/ (Show IPA), (Pancho Segura"Segoo") born 1921, Ecuadorian tennis player.
  • sigurd — the son of Sigmund and Hjordis and the husband of Gudrun. He kills the dragon Fafnir, acquires the treasure of Andvari, wins Brynhild for Gunnar, and is finally killed at the behest of Brynhild, whom he had once promised to marry: corresponds to Siegfried of the Nibelungenlied.
  • sprung — a simple past tense and past participle of spring.
  • spurge — any of numerous plants of the genus Euphorbia, having a milky juice and flowers with no petals or sepals.
  • strung — simple past tense and past participle of string.
  • sugars — a sweet, crystalline substance, C 1 2 H 2 2 O 1 1 , obtained chiefly from the juice of the sugarcane and the sugar beet, and present in sorghum, maple sap, etc.: used extensively as an ingredient and flavoring of certain foods and as a fermenting agent in the manufacture of certain alcoholic beverages; sucrose. Compare beet sugar, cane sugar.
  • sugary — of, containing, or resembling sugar.
  • surged — a strong, wavelike, forward movement, rush, or sweep: the onward surge of an angry mob.
  • surgut — a city in the autonomous region of Khantia-Mansia, in central Russia, on the Ob River.
  • targum — a translation or paraphrase in Aramaic of a book or division of the Old Testament.
  • tergum — the dorsal surface of a body segment of an arthropod.
  • tragus — a fleshy prominence at the front of the external opening of the ear.
  • trough — a long, narrow, open receptacle, usually boxlike in shape, used chiefly to hold water or food for animals.
  • trudge — to walk, especially laboriously or wearily: to trudge up a long flight of steps.
  • truing — being in accordance with the actual state or conditions; conforming to reality or fact; not false: a true story.
  • tuareg — a Berber or Hamitic-speaking member of the Muslim nomads of the Sahara.
  • tugger — to pull at with force, vigor, or effort.
  • tughra — the official emblem of a Turkish Sultan
  • tugrik — an aluminum-bronze or cupronickel coin and monetary unit of the Mongolian People's Republic, equal to 100 mongo.
  • turgid — swollen; distended; tumid.
  • turgor — Plant Physiology. the normal distention or rigidity of plant cells, resulting from the pressure exerted by the cell contents on the cell walls.
  • turgot — Anne Robert Jacques [an raw-ber zhahk] /ˈan rɔˈbɛr ˈʒɑk/ (Show IPA), 1727–81, French statesman, financier, and economist.
  • turing — Alan Mathison [math-uh-suh n] /ˈmæθ ə sən/ (Show IPA), 1912–54, English mathematician, logician, and pioneer in computer theory.
  • ugarit — an ancient city in Syria, N of Latakia, on the site of modern Ras Shamra: destroyed by an earthquake early in the 13th century b.c.; excavations have yielded tablets written in cuneiform and hieroglyphic script that reveal important information on Canaanite mythology.
  • uglier — very unattractive or unpleasant to look at; offensive to the sense of beauty; displeasing in appearance.
  • ugrian — denoting or pertaining to an ethnological group including the Magyars and related peoples of western Siberia.
  • uighur — a member of a Turkish people dominant in Mongolia and eastern Turkestan from the 8th to 12th centuries a.d., and now living mainly in western China.
  • ungear — to disengage (harnesses, gears, etc)
  • ungird — to loosen or remove a girdle or belt from.
  • ungirt — having a girdle loosened or removed.
  • updrag — to drag up or upwards
  • upgird — to support or hold up
  • upgrow — to become more adult
  • urgent — compelling or requiring immediate action or attention; imperative; pressing: an urgent matter.
  • urging — to push or force along; impel with force or vigor: to urge the cause along.
  • usager — a person who has the use of something in trust for someone else
  • utgard — a home of the Jotuns, outside Midgard and Asgard: probably synonymous with Jotunheim.
  • vaguer — not clearly or explicitly stated or expressed: vague promises.
  • vigour — active strength or force.
  • voguer — someone who strikes imitation poses of fashion models
  • vulgar — characterized by ignorance of or lack of good breeding or taste: vulgar ostentation.
  • yogurt — a prepared food having the consistency of custard, made from milk curdled by the action of cultures, sometimes sweetened or flavored.
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