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9-letter words containing o, n, e, u

  • bowhunter — a person who hunts with a bow
  • buhrstone — a hard tough rock containing silica, fossils, and cavities, formerly used as a grindstone
  • bull nose — a disease of pigs resulting in deformity of the nose, caused by infection with the bacterium Bordatella bronchiseptica
  • bung-hole — a hole in a cask through which it is filled.
  • bunkhouse — (in the US and Canada) a building containing the sleeping quarters of workers on a ranch
  • burdenous — burdensome
  • burgeoned — to grow or develop quickly; flourish: The town burgeoned into a city. He burgeoned into a fine actor.
  • burrstone — buhrstone
  • buteonine — of or relating to hawks
  • cancerous — Cancerous cells or growths are cells or growths that are the result of cancer.
  • cankerous — having cankers
  • casebound — bound in hard covers.
  • cautioned — alertness and prudence in a hazardous situation; care; wariness: Landslides ahead—proceed with caution.
  • cautioner — A person who cautions.
  • cavernous — A cavernous room or building is very large inside, and so it reminds you of a cave.
  • ceanothus — any shrub of the North American rhamnaceous genus Ceanothus: grown for their ornamental, often blue, flower clusters
  • centurion — A centurion was an officer in the Roman army.
  • chondrule — one of the small spherical masses of mainly silicate minerals present in chondrites
  • cinderous — a partially or mostly burned piece of coal, wood, etc.
  • cinereous — of a greyish colour
  • clean out — If you clean out something such as a cupboard, room, or container, you take everything out of it and clean the inside of it thoroughly.
  • close-run — If you describe something such as a race or contest as a close-run thing, you mean that it was only won by a very small amount.
  • clubwomen — Plural form of clubwoman.
  • coadunate — united; joined together
  • cocounsel — to counsel jointly
  • coenamour — to enamour jointly
  • coenesque — reminiscent of the work US film-makers Joel and Ethan Coen (born 1954 and 1957 respectively), featuring bizarre and involved plots, use of irony and black humour, and allusions to film classics
  • coenobium — a monastery or convent
  • cofounded — to establish (an organization) with another or others.
  • cofounder — a joint founder
  • coinsurer — A coinsurer is a person or company whose policy covers the same risk as that of another person or company, and shares the loss.
  • coinsures — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of coinsure.
  • cointreau — a colourless liqueur with orange flavouring
  • colubrine — of or resembling a snake
  • columbine — any plant of the ranunculaceous genus Aquilegia, having purple, blue, yellow, or red flowers with five spurred petals
  • come upon — If you come upon someone or something, you meet them or find them by chance.
  • comminute — to break (a bone) into several small fragments
  • communise — (British spelling) alternative spelling of communize.
  • communize — to make (property) public; nationalize
  • concensus — Misspelling of consensus.
  • concentus — a concent
  • conceptus — any of various products of conception, including the embryo, fetus, and surrounding tissue
  • concluded — to bring to an end; finish; terminate: to conclude a speech with a quotation from the Bible.
  • concluder — A person who, or thing which concludes (in any sense).
  • concludes — to bring to an end; finish; terminate: to conclude a speech with a quotation from the Bible.
  • concourse — A concourse is a wide hall in a public building, for example a hotel, airport, or station.
  • concubine — In former times, a concubine was a woman who lived with and had a sexual relationship with a man of higher social rank without being married to him.
  • concurred — to accord in opinion; agree: Do you concur with his statement?
  • concussed — If someone is concussed, they lose consciousness or feel sick or confused because they have been hit hard on the head.
  • concusses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of concuss.
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