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10-letter words containing i, t, o, u

  • fulminator — One who fulminates, or criticizes intensely.
  • fumatorium — an airtight structure in which plants are fumigated to destroy fungi or insects.
  • fumigation — to expose to smoke or fumes, as in disinfecting or exterminating roaches, ants, etc.
  • fumigators — Plural form of fumigator.
  • fumigatory — having the ability to fumigate; relating to fumigation
  • fumitories — Plural form of fumitory.
  • functional — of or relating to a function or functions: functional difficulties in the administration.
  • functioned — Simple past tense and past participle of function.
  • funeration — (obsolete) the act of burying with funeral rites.
  • fungitoxic — toxic to fungi.
  • gelatinous — having the nature of or resembling jelly, especially in consistency; jellylike.
  • girl scout — (sometimes initial capital letters) a member of an organization of girls (Girl Scouts) founded in the U.S. in 1912 by Juliette Low that seeks to develop certain skills, as well as health, citizenship, and character.
  • glauconite — a greenish micaceous mineral consisting essentially of a hydrous silicate of potassium, aluminum, and iron and occurring in greensand, clays, etc.
  • globulites — Plural form of globulite.
  • gluttoning — Present participle of glutton.
  • gluttonise — Alternative form of gluttonize.
  • gluttonize — to eat like a glutton.
  • go quietly — If someone does not go quietly, they do not leave a particular job or a place without complaining or resisting.
  • go without — be deprived of, not have
  • goloptious — voluptuous
  • graduation — an act of graduating; the state of being graduated.
  • gratuitous — given, done, bestowed, or obtained without charge or payment; free; voluntary.
  • grouchiest — Superlative form of grouchy.
  • groundbait — chum2 (def 1).
  • groupthink — the practice of approaching problems or issues as matters that are best dealt with by consensus of a group rather than by individuals acting independently; conformity.
  • guideposts — Plural form of guidepost.
  • guillemots — Plural form of guillemot.
  • guillotine — a device for beheading a person by means of a heavy blade that is dropped between two posts serving as guides: widely used during the French Revolution.
  • gun-toting — carrying a gun, especially a pistol.
  • haustorium — a projection from the hypha of a fungus into the organic matter from which it absorbs nutrients.
  • high court — Supreme Court.
  • high-count — (of a woven fabric) having a relatively high number of warp and filling threads per square inch.
  • hippolytus — Also, Hippolytos [hi-pol-i-tuh s, -tos] /hɪˈpɒl ɪ təs, -ˌtɒs/ (Show IPA). Classical Mythology. the son of Theseus who was falsely accused by his stepmother, Phaedra, of raping her after he had rejected her advances and who was killed by Poseidon in response to the plea of Theseus.
  • hippotamus — Obsolete spelling and common present-day misspelling of hippopotamus.
  • hirtellous — minutely hirsute.
  • home-built — built at home
  • hotel-dieu — a hospital.
  • hothousing — Present participle of hothouse.
  • housatonic — a river flowing S from NW Massachusetts through SW Connecticut to Long Island Sound near Stratford, Connecticut. 148 miles (240 km) long.
  • houselight — One of the lights in an auditorium.
  • housetrain — To teach a house pet to urinate and defecate outside or in a designated location in the home.
  • houstonian — a native or resident of Houston, Texas.
  • houstonias — Plural form of houstonia.
  • humiliator — to cause (a person) a painful loss of pride, self-respect, or dignity; mortify.
  • humoralist — a person who believes in humoralism
  • humoristic — a person who is skillful in the use of humor, as in writing, talking, or acting.
  • huntiegowk — a fool's errand or a person sent on an April fool's errand
  • huntingdon — a former county in E England, now part of Cambridgeshire.
  • huntingtonCollis Potter, 1821–1900, U.S. railroad developer.
  • hutchinson — Anne Marbury [mahr-buh-ree] /ˈmɑr bə ri/ (Show IPA), 1591–1643, American religious liberal, born in England: banished from Massachusetts 1637.
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