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9-letter words containing n, e, r, u, d, a

  • unadorned — to decorate or add beauty to, as by ornaments: garlands of flowers adorning their hair.
  • unalarmed — a sudden fear or distressing suspense caused by an awareness of danger; apprehension; fright.
  • unalerted — not alerted
  • unaltered — not altered, changed, or modified: We approved the unaltered designs.
  • unamerced — not amerced or punished
  • unaroused — to stir to action or strong response; excite: to arouse a crowd; to arouse suspicion.
  • unarrayed — not arrayed or arranged in order
  • unarrived — to come to a certain point in the course of travel; reach one's destination: He finally arrived in Rome.
  • unassured — guaranteed; sure; certain; secure: an assured income.
  • unattired — not clothed or adorned
  • unaverted — to turn away or aside: to avert one's eyes.
  • unawarded — not awarded; not yet awarded to someone
  • unbearded — (of a person) having no beard
  • unboarded — a piece of wood sawed thin, and of considerable length and breadth compared with the thickness.
  • unbraided — to separate (anything braided, as hair) into the several strands.
  • unbranded — not branded or marked to show ownership: an unbranded calf.
  • uncatered — to provide food, service, etc., as for a party or wedding: to cater for a banquet.
  • uncharged — not charged, especially with electricity; electrically neutral: an uncharged battery; an uncharged particle.
  • uncharmed — marked by good fortune or privilege: a charmed life.
  • uncharred — not charred; free from charring
  • uncharted — not shown or located on a map; unexplored; unknown, as a place or region: the uncharted depths of space.
  • uncleared — left untidy
  • uncracked — broken: a container full of cracked ice.
  • uncreated — not yet created; not existing
  • under age — Someone who is under age is not legally old enough to do something, for example to buy an alcoholic drink.
  • under par — unwell
  • under way — If an activity is under way, it has already started. If an activity gets under way, it starts.
  • underages — shortage; deficiency in amount.
  • underbake — to bake insufficiently
  • underbear — to tolerate or endure
  • undercard — an event or group of events preceding and supporting a featured event: the undercard of tonight's boxing match.
  • undercast — Mining. a crossing of two passages, as airways, dug at the same level so that one descends to pass beneath the other without any opening into it. Compare overcast (def 9).
  • underclad — not wearing enough clothes
  • underclay — a grey or whitish clay rock containing fossilized plant roots and occurring beneath coal seams. When used as a refractory, it is known as fireclay
  • undercoat — a coat or jacket worn under another.
  • underdraw — to line the underside of (a structure, as a floor) with plasterwork, boarding, or the like.
  • undergrad — an undergraduate.
  • underhair — a growth of short hair lying beneath a longer growth; undercoat.
  • underhand — not open and aboveboard; secret and crafty or dishonorable: an underhand deal with the chief of police.
  • underheat — to heat insufficiently
  • underlaid — placed or laid underneath, as a foundation or substratum.
  • underlain — to lie under or beneath; be situated under.
  • underleaf — (in liverworts) any of the leaves forming a row on the underside of the stem: usually smaller than the two rows of lateral leaves and sometimes absent
  • underload — anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • undername — a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing, a body or class, or any object of thought is designated, called, or known.
  • underpaid — to pay less than is deserved or usual.
  • underpart — the lower part or side: The underpart of the plane's fuselage scraped the treetops.
  • underpass — a passage running underneath, especially a passage for pedestrians or vehicles, or both, crossing under a railroad, road, etc.
  • underplay — to act (a part) sketchily.
  • underrate — to rate or evaluate too low; underestimate.
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