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10-letter words containing n, e, u, t

  • outgeneral — to outdo or surpass in generalship.
  • outjetting — projecting
  • outlanders — Plural form of outlander.
  • outleaping — Present participle of outleap.
  • outnumbers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outnumber.
  • outpatient — a patient who receives treatment at a hospital, as in an emergency room or clinic, but is not hospitalized.
  • outpointed — Simple past tense and past participle of outpoint.
  • outrebound — to exceed in rebounding
  • outredding — the act of redeeming land or goods
  • outselling — Present participle of outsell.
  • outsetting — the act of public proclamation
  • outside in — another term for inside out
  • outsweeten — to be sweeter or make things sweeter than
  • outswinger — a ball that when bowled veers from leg side to off side.
  • overstrung — overly tense or sensitive; strained; on edge: Their nerves were badly overstrung.
  • overturned — to destroy the power of; overthrow; defeat; vanquish.
  • overturner — a person who overturns
  • pandurated — fiddle-shaped
  • paniculate — arranged in panicles.
  • pantagruel — (in Rabelais' Pantagruel) the huge son of Gargantua, represented as dealing with serious matters in a spirit of broad and somewhat cynical good humor.
  • pantsuited — wearing a pantsuit
  • parturient — bearing or about to bear young; travailing.
  • peanut oil — a yellow to greenish oil expressed or extracted from peanuts, used in cookery, as a vehicle for medicines, and in the manufacture of margarine and soap.
  • pellet gun — a gun that fires imitation bullets, esp such a gun used as a toy
  • pentaquark — a subatomic particle consisting of four quarks and one antiquark
  • pentaquine — a synthetic antimalarial drug, C18H27N3O, used chiefly in the form of its phosphate
  • pentateuch — the first five books of the Old Testament: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.
  • pentelicus — Latin name of Pendelikon.
  • pentium ii — (processor)   Intel Corporation's successor to the Pentium Pro. The Pentium II can execute all the instructions of all the earlier members of the Intel 80x86 processor family. There are four versions targetted at different user markets. The Celeron is the simplest and cheapest. The standard Pentium II is aimed at mainstream home and business users. The Pentium II Xeon is intended for higher performance business servers. There is also a mobile version of the Pentium II for use in portable computers. All versions of the Pentium II are packaged on a special daughterboard that plugs into a card-edge processor slot on the motherboard. The daughterboard is enclosed within a rectangular black box called a Single Edge Contact (SEC) cartridge. The budget Celeron may be sold as a card only without the box. Consumer line Pentium II's require a 242-pin slot called Slot 1. The Xeon uses a 330-pin slot called Slot 2. Intel refers to Slot 1 and Slot 2 as SEC-242 and SEC-330 in some of their technical documentation. The daughterboard has mounting points for the Pentium II CPU itself plus various support chips and cache memory chips. All components on the daughterboard are normally permanently soldered in place. Previous generation Socket 7 motherboards cannot normally be upgraded to accept the Pentium II, so it is necessary to install a new motherboard. All Pentium II processors have Multimedia Extensions (MMX) and integrated Level One and Level Two cache controllers. Additional features include Dynamic Execution and Dual Independent Bus Architecture, with separate 64 bit system and cache busses. Pentium II is a superscalar CPU having about 7.5 million transistors. The first Pentium II's produced were code named Klamath. They were manufactured using a 0.35 micron process and supported clock rates of 233, 266, 300 and 333 MHz at a bus speed of 66 MHz. Second generation Pentium II's, code named Deschutes, are made with a 0.25 micron process and support rates of 350, 400 and 450 MHz at a bus speed of 100 MHz.
  • per centum — percent (def 1).
  • percurrent — extending through the entire length, as a midrib through a leaf.
  • percussant — (of an animal's tail on a heraldic shield) bent round to the animal's side
  • percutient — anything that strikes against something else
  • perdu-montMont [mawn] /mɔ̃/ (Show IPA). French name of Monte Perdido.
  • peritoneum — the serous membrane lining the abdominal cavity and investing its viscera.
  • perturbant — a thing that causes perturbance
  • perturbing — to disturb or disquiet greatly in mind; agitate.
  • piano duet — a musical composition for two pianists playing two pianos or together at one piano.
  • pinguitude — fatness
  • plateauing — a land area having a relatively level surface considerably raised above adjoining land on at least one side, and often cut by deep canyons.
  • plentitude — abundance or fullness
  • pleurodont — fused or attached to the inner edge of the jaw, as a tooth.
  • pleustonic — a buoyant mat of weeds, algae, and associated organisms that floats on or near the surface of a lake, river, or other body of fresh water.
  • plummeting — Also called plumb bob. a piece of lead or some other weight attached to a line, used for determining perpendicularity, for sounding, etc.; the bob of a plumb line.
  • pneumatics — a pneumatic tire.
  • polytunnel — a large tunnel made of polythene and used as a greenhouse
  • portentous — of the nature of a portent; momentous.
  • postulance — the period or state of being a postulant, especially in a religious order.
  • pound note — paper money: one pound sterling
  • precaution — a measure taken in advance to avert possible evil or to secure good results.
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