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

  • avouchment — The act of avouching.
  • avunculate — the custom in some societies of assigning rights and duties to a maternal uncle concerning his sister's son
  • balaustine — of or relating to the pomegranate.
  • balbutient — stuttering, stammering
  • bankrupted — Law. a person who upon his or her own petition or that of his or her creditors is adjudged insolvent by a court and whose property is administered for and divided among his or her creditors under a bankruptcy law.
  • banqueters — Plural form of banqueter.
  • banqueting — A banqueting hall or room is a large room where banquets are held.
  • banquettes — Plural form of banquette.
  • bantu beer — a malted drink made from partly fermented and germinated millet
  • battenburg — an oblong sponge cake divided longitudinally into four square sections, two coloured pink and two yellow, with an outer coating of marzipan
  • baumgarten — Alexander Gottlieb. 1714–62, German philosopher, noted for his pioneering work on aesthetics, a term that he originated
  • beat up on — If someone beats up on a person or beats on them, they hit or kick the person many times.
  • beating-up — a physical assault
  • beautician — A beautician is a person whose job is giving people beauty treatments such as doing their nails, treating their skin, and putting on their make-up.
  • beetlebung — sour gum.
  • bemusement — Bemusement is the feeling that you have when you are puzzled or confused by something.
  • benedictus — a short canticle beginning Benedictus qui venit in nomine Domini in Latin and Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord in English
  • benumbment — the act of benumbing
  • betancourt — Rómulo [rom-yuh-loh;; Spanish raw-moo-law] /ˈrɒm yəˌloʊ;; Spanish ˈrɔ muˌlɔ/ (Show IPA), 1908–81, Venezuelan journalist and political leader: president of Venezuela 1945–48 and 1959–64.
  • biannulate — having two bands, esp of colour
  • bicornuate — Botany, Zoology. having two horns or hornlike parts.
  • binucleate — having two nuclei
  • biquintile — the aspect of planets when they are at an angle of 144° to one another
  • bismuthine — an unstable hydride of bismuth, BiH 3 , analogous to arsine and stibine.
  • bituminize — to treat with or convert into bitumen
  • bladdernut — any temperate shrub or small tree of the genus Staphylea, esp S. pinnata of S Europe, that has bladder-like seed pods: family Staphyleaceae
  • blanquette — a French stew made of meat, usually veal, and white sauce
  • blue giant — any of the large, bright stars having surface temperatures of about 20,000 K and diameters that are often ten times that of the sun.
  • blue point — a Siamese cat having a light-colored body and darker, bluish-gray points.
  • blue stain — a bluish discoloration of sapwood caused by growth of fungi
  • bluebonnet — a broad, flat cap of blue woolen cloth, formerly worn in Scotland
  • bluetongue — an Australian lizard, Tiliqua scincoides, having a cobalt-blue tongue
  • bonkbuster — a novel characterized by graphic descriptions of the heroine's frequent sexual encounters
  • bonne nuit — good night
  • bournonite — a sulfide of lead, antimony, and copper, PbCuSbS 3 , occurring in gray to black crystals or granular masses.
  • brazen out — If you have done something wrong and you brazen it out, you behave confidently in order not to appear ashamed, even though you probably do feel ashamed.
  • brunetiere — Ferdinand [fer-dee-nahn] /fɛr diˈnɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1849–1906, French literary critic.
  • bufotenine — a tryptamine alkaloid with hallucinogenic properties, found in the skin of some species of toad and in some mushrooms and tropical shrubs
  • bug-hunter — a person who is interested in insects
  • buitenzorg — former Dutch name of Bogor.
  • bulletined — a brief account or statement, as of news or events, issued for the information of the public.
  • bunionette — a bunionlike enlargement of the joint of the little toe, usually caused by pressure from tight shoes.
  • bunt order — a dominance hierarchy seen in herds of cattle, established and maintained by bunting.
  • buonaparte — Bonaparte1
  • burned-out — consumed; rendered unserviceable or ineffectual by maximum use: a burned-out tube.
  • burnettize — to preserve (timber) with a solution of zinc chloride
  • burnt lime — calcium oxide; quicklime
  • burnt-lime — Also called burnt lime, calcium oxide, caustic lime, calx, quicklime. a white or grayish-white, odorless, lumpy, very slightly water-soluble solid, CaO, that when combined with water forms calcium hydroxide (slaked lime) obtained from calcium carbonate, limestone, or oyster shells: used chiefly in mortars, plasters, and cements, in bleaching powder, and in the manufacture of steel, paper, glass, and various chemicals of calcium.
  • bustamante — Anastasio [ah-nahs-tah-syaw] /ˌɑ nɑsˈtɑ syɔ/ (Show IPA), 1780–1853, Mexican military and political leader: president 1830–32, 1837–41.
  • butane gas — a colourless flammable gaseous alkane that exists in two isomeric forms, both of which occur in natural gas. The stable isomer, n-butane, is used mainly in the manufacture of rubber and fuels (such as Calor Gas). Formula: C4H10
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