6-letter words containing o, e, u
- couter — a piece of armour designed to protect the elbow
- croupe — That part of an animal that corresponds to the human buttocks.
- crouse — lively, confident, or saucy
- croute — a small round of toasted bread on which a savoury mixture is served
- crusoe — Robinson, Robinson Crusoe.
- defoul — corruption; defilement
- degout — to cover (something) with gouts or drops of something
- detour — If you make a detour on a journey, you go by a route which is not the shortest way, because you want to avoid something such as a traffic jam, or because there is something you want to do on the way.
- deuto- — deutero-
- deuton — deuteron.
- devour — If a person or animal devours something, they eat it quickly and eagerly.
- devout — A devout person has deep religious beliefs.
- dobule — (archaic) A fish, the European dace.
- douane — a custom house; customs.
- double — twice as large, heavy, strong, etc.; twofold in size, amount, number, extent, etc.: a double portion; a new house double the size of the old one.
- doucer — sedate; modest; quiet.
- doucet — (obsolete except in dialects) A sweetened dish.
- douche — a jet or current of water, sometimes with a dissolved medicating or cleansing agent, applied to a body part, organ, or cavity for medicinal or hygienic purposes.
- doused — Simple past tense and past participle of douse.
- douser — a person or thing that douses.
- douses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of douse.
- douted — Simple past tense and past participle of dout.
- douter — an implement for snuffing out candles, consisting either of a scissorlike device with two broad flat blades or of a cone at the end of a handle.
- drogue — a bucket or canvas bag used as a sea anchor.
- due to — owed at present; having reached the date for payment: This bill is due.
- duello — the practice or art of dueling.
- dumose — filled with bushes
- econut — an environmentalist
- elutor — a vessel used for elution
- enduro — A long-distance race, especially for motor vehicles, motorcycles, or bicycles, typically over rough terrain, designed to test endurance.
- enough — As much or as many as required.
- ensoul — Endow with a soul.
- erbout — Eye dialect of about.
- escudo — The basic monetary unit of Portugal (until the introduction of the euro) and Cape Verde, equal to 100 centavos.
- euboea — an island in the W Aegean Sea: the largest island after Crete of the Greek archipelago; linked with the mainland by a bridge across the Euripus channel. Capital: Chalcis. Pop: 198 130 (2001). Area: 3908 sq km (1509 sq miles)
- eudora — Electronic mail software for communicating over TCP/IP from Macintosh, Microsoft Windows, Windows NT, and IBM OS/2 computers. Both commercial and free versions are produced by QUALCOMM, Inc.
- eulogy — A speech or piece of writing that praises someone or something highly, typically someone who has just died.
- eunoia — (rhetoric) Goodwill towards an audience, either perceived or real; the perception that the speaker has the audience's interest at heart.
- eunoto — (Kenya) A Masai ceremony in which a warrior passes into senior warriorhood.
- euonym — (rare) A name well suited to a person, place or thing so named.
- euouae — (music) A type of cadence in medieval music.
- euphon — a glass harmonica
- euroky — the ability of an organism to live under variable conditions
- europa — a Phoenician princess who had three children by Zeus in Crete, where he had taken her after assuming the guise of a white bull. Their offspring were Rhadamanthus, Minos, and Sarpedon
- europe — geography: European continent
- évolué — (in the former African colonies of Belgium and France) an African person educated according to European principles
- exodus — A mass departure of people, esp. emigrants.
- ferous — Wild; savage.
- flouse — to splash or make a splash
- foetus — fetus.