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8-letter words containing o, d, e, u

  • hide out — British. a place of concealment for hunting or observing wildlife; hunting blind.
  • hide-out — a hiding place, as for gangsters
  • hideouts — Plural form of hideout.
  • holed up — If you are holed up somewhere, you are hiding or staying there, usually so that other people cannot find or disturb you.
  • honoured — to hold in honor or high respect; revere: to honor one's parents.
  • hounders — one of any of several breeds of dogs trained to pursue game either by sight or by scent, especially one with a long face and large drooping ears.
  • humoured — Simple past tense and past participle of humour.
  • icebound — held fast or hemmed in by ice; frozen in: an icebound ship.
  • idoneous — appropriate; fit; suitable; apt.
  • indevour — Obsolete spelling of endeavour.
  • indevout — not devout; lacking religious devotion; irreligious
  • innuendo — an indirect intimation about a person or thing, especially of a disparaging or a derogatory nature.
  • j'adoube — an expression of an intention to touch a piece in order to adjust its placement rather than to make a move
  • jaloused — Simple past tense and past participle of jalouse.
  • juvenoid — A juvenile hormone analogue.
  • laboured — productive activity, especially for the sake of economic gain.
  • lemuroid — lemurlike; of the lemur kind.
  • liquored — Simple past tense and past participle of liquor.
  • lodicule — one of the specialized scales at the base of the ovary of certain grass flowers.
  • loudened — Simple past tense and past participle of louden.
  • loudness — (of sound) strongly audible; having exceptional volume or intensity: loud talking; loud thunder; loud whispers.
  • louvered — any of a series of narrow openings framed at their longer edges with slanting, overlapping fins or slats, adjustable for admitting light and air while shutting out rain.
  • loved-up — a profoundly tender, passionate affection for another person.
  • madhouse — a hospital for the confinement and treatment of mentally disturbed persons.
  • manucode — any of various birds of paradise of the New Guinea region, having dark, metallic plumage.
  • medusoid — a saucer-shaped or dome-shaped, free-swimming jellyfish or hydra.
  • modulate — to regulate by or adjust to a certain measure or proportion; soften; tone down.
  • mon dieu — my God
  • moulders — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of moulder.
  • mouldier — Comparative form of mouldy.
  • mud hose — A mud hose is a flexible tube which connects the mud tank to the swivel for forcing mud down the hole inside the drill string.
  • mudstone — a clayey rock with the texture and composition of shale but little or no lamination.
  • newfound — newly found or discovered: newfound friends.
  • nodulose — (biology) having nodules.
  • nordunet — (networking, body)   (Nordic Universities Network?) A collaboration between the national research networks in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden. It provides international access for these countries.
  • nucleoid — the central region in a prokaryotic cell, as a bacterium, that contains the chromosomes and that has no surrounding membrane.
  • obdurate — unmoved by persuasion, pity, or tender feelings; stubborn; unyielding.
  • obliqued — neither perpendicular nor parallel to a given line or surface; slanting; sloping.
  • obscured — (of meaning) not clear or plain; ambiguous, vague, or uncertain: an obscure sentence in the contract.
  • obtruded — Simple past tense and past participle of obtrude.
  • obtruder — One who obtrudes.
  • obtrudes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of obtrude.
  • obtunded — to blunt; dull; deaden.
  • occluded — Simple past tense and past participle of occlude.
  • occluder — (medicine) an implement designed to temporarily block light to one eye.
  • occludes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of occlude.
  • occulted — of or relating to magic, astrology, or any system claiming use or knowledge of secret or supernatural powers or agencies.
  • occupied — to take or fill up (space, time, etc.): I occupied my evenings reading novels.
  • occurred — to happen; take place; come to pass: When did the accident occur?
  • odysseus — king of Ithaca; son of Laertes; one of the heroes of the Iliad and protagonist of the Odyssey: shrewdest of the Greek leaders in the Trojan War.
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