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12-letter words containing l, o, u, i, e

  • unecological — the branch of biology dealing with the relations and interactions between organisms and their environment, including other organisms.
  • uneconomical — avoiding waste or extravagance; thrifty: an economical meal; an economical use of interior space.
  • unforgivable — to grant pardon for or remission of (an offense, debt, etc.); absolve.
  • unformalized — not formalized
  • unformidable — causing fear, apprehension, or dread: a formidable opponent.
  • unfossilized — not fossilized
  • unglamorized — not glamorized
  • unheroically — in an unheroic manner
  • unhospitable — not hospitable
  • unifoliolate — compound in structure yet having only one leaflet, as the orange.
  • unillusioned — having or manifesting no illusions; free from illusions: to be unillusioned about one's chances for success.
  • unimolecular — of or involving only one molecular entity
  • uninoculated — to implant (a disease agent or antigen) in a person, animal, or plant to produce a disease for study or to stimulate disease resistance.
  • unipotential — Electricity, Electronics. having uniform electric potential throughout, as a hot cathode (unipotential cathode) indirectly heated by a separate heater circuit so that there is no lateral change of voltage across the cathode due to resistance to a heating current.
  • unlikelihood — the state of being unlikely; improbability.
  • unlovingness — an unloving quality or character
  • unmethodical — characterized by lack of method or disorderliness
  • unmodifiable — incapable of being modified
  • unnegotiable — capable of being negotiated: a negotiable salary demand.
  • unnormalized — to make normal.
  • unnoticeable — attracting notice or attention; capable of being noticed: a noticeable lack of interest.
  • unnoticeably — attracting notice or attention; capable of being noticed: a noticeable lack of interest.
  • unobtainable — to come into possession of; get, acquire, or procure, as through an effort or by a request: to obtain permission; to obtain a better income.
  • unpavilioned — not provided with a pavilion
  • unpoetically — in an unpoetic manner
  • unpolishable — incapable of being made smooth or shiny
  • unpoliteness — the quality or state of being impolite
  • unproclaimed — to announce or declare in an official or formal manner: to proclaim war.
  • unprofitable — being without profit; not showing or turning a profit: a series of unprofitable ventures.
  • unreciprocal — given or felt by each toward the other; mutual: reciprocal respect.
  • unreconciled — to cause (a person) to accept or be resigned to something not desired: He was reconciled to his fate.
  • unrhetorical — not rhetorical; literal; plainspoken
  • unsailorlike — not befitting a sailor
  • unsocialized — to make social; make fit for life in companionship with others.
  • unsolidified — to unite firmly or consolidate.
  • urinogenital — genitourinary.
  • urobilinogen — a colourless substance produced by bacterial degradation of the bile pigment bilirubin in the intestine and which produces urobilin when oxidized
  • utility pole — one of a series of large, upright poles used to support telephone wires, electric cables, or the like.
  • varicoloured — having many colours; variegated; motley
  • variocoupler — a transformer having coils with a self-impedance that is essentially constant but a mutual impedance that can be varied by moving one coil with respect to the other.
  • vasoligature — vasoligation.
  • vesiculation — characterized by or covered with vesicles.
  • viruliferous — carrying a virus
  • vocabularied — having a vocabulary as specified
  • vociferously — crying out noisily; clamorous.
  • volunteerism — voluntarism (def 2).
  • white liquor — (in making wood pulp for paper) the chemicals used to digest the wood, basically sodium hydroxide and sodium hyposulfite.
  • wilton house — a mansion in Wilton in Wiltshire: built for the 1st Earl of Pembroke in the 16th century; rebuilt after a fire in 1647 by Inigo Jones and John Webb; altered in the 19th century by James Wyatt; landscaped grounds include a famous Palladian bridge
  • zebulon pikeJames Albert, 1913–69, U.S. Protestant Episcopal clergyman, lawyer, and author.
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