10-letter words containing g, u, s
- unaspiring — lacking ambition or aspiration
- unassigned — to give or allocate; allot: to assign rooms at a hotel.
- unassuaged — to make milder or less severe; relieve; ease; mitigate: to assuage one's grief; to assuage one's pain.
- unassuming — modest; unpretentious.
- unassuring — to declare earnestly to; inform or tell positively; state with confidence to: She assured us that everything would turn out all right.
- unbesought — not besought or entreated
- unbiassing — the act or process of making unbiased
- unblushing — showing no shame or remorse; shameless: an unblushing confession.
- unbosoming — to disclose (a confidence, secret, etc.).
- undersight — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
- underslung — suspended from an upper support, as the chassis of a vehicle from the axles.
- undesigned — not planned beforehand; unpremeditated; unintentional.
- undigested — to convert (food) in the alimentary canal into absorbable form for assimilation into the system.
- unexisting — to have actual being; be: The world exists, whether you like it or not.
- ungainsaid — without contradiction
- ungenerous — stingy; niggardly; miserly: an ungenerous portion; an ungenerous employer.
- ungracious — discourteous; ill-mannered: ungracious behavior.
- unimposing — not imposing; unimpressive: an unimposing spectacle; a man of unimposing stature.
- unpleasing — not pleasing
- unreposing — not relaxing, restful, or tranquil
- unresigned — submissive or acquiescent.
- unsalvaged — the act of saving a ship or its cargo from perils of the seas.
- unseeingly — the act of a person who sees.
- unsettling — to alter from a settled state; cause to be no longer firmly fixed or established; render unstable; disturb: Violence unsettled the government.
- unshifting — to move from one place, position, direction, etc., to another.
- unshingled — not shingled
- unshocking — causing intense surprise, disgust, horror, etc.
- unshutting — not shutting
- unsleeping — the absence of sleep
- unslipping — secure; not slipping
- unsnagging — not snagging
- unsoothing — that soothes: a soothing voice.
- unsparring — direct or forceful
- unsporting — engaging in, disposed to, or interested in open-air or athletic sports: a rugged, sporting man.
- unstacking — a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers.
- unstinting — to be frugal; get along on a scanty allowance: Don't stint on the food. They stinted for years in order to save money.
- unstooping — (of head, shoulders, posture, or a person) not stooping or bending
- unstriking — attractive; impressive: a scene of striking beauty.
- unswerving — to turn aside abruptly in movement or direction; deviate suddenly from the straight or direct course.
- untrusting — inclined to trust; confiding; trustful: a trusting child.
- up against — to, toward, or in a more elevated position: to climb up to the top of a ladder.
- upflashing — flashing or flaring up
- upgrowings — instances of growing upwards
- upheapings — acts or instances of heaping up
- uprootings — acts of uprooting
- upstanding — upright; honorable; straightforward.
- upstepping — the fitting of wheels or tyres with a larger diameter
- upstirring — disturbing; causing commotion
- upsurgence — an upsurge, increase, or rise
- uptightest — most uptight