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8-letter words containing n, u, t, r

  • flaunter — to parade or display oneself conspicuously, defiantly, or boldly.
  • fluenter — spoken or written with ease: fluent French.
  • flurting — Present participle of flurt.
  • fortuned — Simple past tense and past participle of fortune.
  • fortunes — Plural form of fortune.
  • fourteen — a cardinal number, ten plus four.
  • frequent — happening or occurring at short intervals: to make frequent trips to Tokyo.
  • front up — to pay (money) at the beginning of a business arrangement
  • fruiting — any product of plant growth useful to humans or animals.
  • fruition — attainment of anything desired; realization; accomplishment: After years of hard work she finally brought her idea to full fruition.
  • frumenty — a dish of hulled wheat boiled in milk and seasoned with sugar, cinnamon, and raisins.
  • functors — Plural form of functor.
  • funkster — a performer or fan of funk music
  • funsters — Plural form of funster.
  • furmenty — frumenty
  • futanari — (anime, manga, uncountable) A genre of Japanese anime or manga featuring hermaphrodite characters, generally with female bodies plus a penis.
  • geniture — birth; generation.
  • goncourt — Edmond Louis Antoine Huot de [ed-mawn lwee ahn-twan y-oh duh] /ɛdˈmɔ̃ lwi ɑ̃ˈtwan üˈoʊ də/ (Show IPA), 1822–96, and his brother Jules Alfred Huot de [zhyl al-fred] /ʒyl alˈfrɛd/ (Show IPA) 1830–70, French art critics, novelists, and historians: collaborators until the death of Jules.
  • gourmont — Remy de [ruh-mee duh] /rəˈmi də/ (Show IPA), 1858–1915, French critic and novelist.
  • grouting — Grout, especially when hardened.
  • grunting — to utter the deep, guttural sound characteristic of a hog.
  • gruntled — Pleased, satisfied, and contented.
  • gruntles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gruntle.
  • guaranty — a warrant, pledge, or formal assurance given as security that another's debt or obligation will be fulfilled.
  • guardant — (of an animal) depicted full-faced but with the body seen from the side: a lion guardant.
  • hauriant — (of a fish) represented as erect, with the head upward: a dolphin hauriant.
  • hereunto — to this matter, document, subject, etc.; regarding this point: attached hereto; agreeable hereto.
  • hornpout — horned pout.
  • hortulan — (obsolete) Belonging to a garden.
  • hundreth — Eye dialect of hundredth.
  • huntress — a woman who hunts.
  • hurtling — to rush violently; move with great speed: The car hurtled down the highway.
  • in a rut — stuck in routine
  • in trust — reliance on the integrity, strength, ability, surety, etc., of a person or thing; confidence.
  • in truth — honestly, to tell the truth
  • in utero — surgery performed on a fetus while it is in the womb.
  • inartful — Awkwardly expressed but not necessarily untrue; impolitic; ill-phrased; inexpedient; clumsy.
  • inaurate — gilded or gleaming as if gilded
  • inductor — Also called inductance. Electricity. a coil used to introduce inductance into an electric circuit.
  • indurate — to make hard; harden, as rock, tissue, etc.: Cold indurates the soil.
  • industry — the aggregate of manufacturing or technically productive enterprises in a particular field, often named after its principal product: the automobile industry; the steel industry.
  • inputter — One who, or that which, inputs.
  • instruct — to furnish with knowledge, especially by a systematic method; teach; train; educate.
  • insulter — to treat or speak to insolently or with contemptuous rudeness; affront.
  • insurant — a person who takes out an insurance policy.
  • intercur — (obsolete, intransitive) To intervene; to come or occur in the meantime.
  • intercut — to cut from one type of shot to another, as from a long shot to a closeup.
  • intortus — (of a cirrus cloud) having very irregular filaments that often look entangled.
  • intrigue — to arouse the curiosity or interest of by unusual, new, or otherwise fascinating or compelling qualities; appeal strongly to; captivate: The plan intrigues me, but I wonder if it will work.
  • intruded — Simple past tense and past participle of intrude.
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