6-letter words containing o, u, n
- county — A county is a region of Britain, Ireland, or the USA which has its own local government.
- coupon — a ticket issued to facilitate rationing
- cousin — Your cousin is the child of your uncle or aunt.
- couzin — a friend
- cronus — a Titan, son of Uranus (sky) and Gaea (earth), who ruled the world until his son Zeus dethroned him
- cronut — A pastry which combines characteristics of a croissant and a doughnut.
- cuando — a river in central Angola, flowing SE to the Zambezi River. 457 miles (731 km) long.
- culion — an island of the Philippines, in the W part of the group, N of Palawan. 150 sq. mi. (389 sq. km).
- curnow — (Thomas) Allen (Monro). 1911–2001, New Zealand poet and anthologist
- curzon — Sir Clifford. 1907–82, English pianist
- deuton — deuteron.
- diuron — a white crystalline substance, C 9 H 10 Cl 2 N 2 O, used as a weed-killer.
- dobuan — Dobu.
- domnus — Donus.
- donour — Obsolete form of donor.
- donuts — Plural form of donut.
- douane — a custom house; customs.
- dugong — an herbivorous, aquatic mammal, Dugong dugon, of the Red Sea and Indian Ocean, having a barrel-shaped body, flipperlike forelimbs, no hind limbs, and a triangular tail: widespread but rare.
- dumont — a city in NE New Jersey.
- dunlop — John Boyd, 1840–1921, Scottish inventor of the pneumatic tire.
- dunois — Jean [zhahn] /ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), Comte de ("Bastard of Orleans") 1403?–68, French military leader: relieved by Joan of Arc and her troops when besieged at Orleans.
- dunoon — a town and resort in W Scotland, in Argyll and Bute, on the Firth of Clyde. Pop: 8251 (2001)
- dupion — a cocoon formed jointly by two silkworms.
- dupont — Eleuthère Irénée [e-lœ-ter ee-rey-ney] /ɛ lœˈtɛr i reɪˈneɪ/ (Show IPA), 1771–1834, U.S. industrialist, born in France.
- durion — Alternative form of durian.
- dutton — Clarence Edward. 1841–1912, American geologist who first developed the theory of isostasy
- econut — an environmentalist
- 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.
- 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.
- euphon — a glass harmonica
- fanout — (computing, electronics) The degree to which something fans out, or splits into separate sections.
- fondue — a saucelike dish of Swiss origin made with melted cheese and seasonings together with dry white wine, usually flavored with kirsch: served as a hot dip for pieces of bread.
- fondus — fondue (def 4).
- founde — Obsolete spelling of found; Simple past tense and past participle of find.
- founds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of found.
- founts — font2 .
- fulton — Robert, 1765–1815, U.S. engineer and inventor: builder of the first profitable steamboat.
- funlog — Functional programming plus unification. "Lazy" in the sense that expressions are reduced only if they are not unifiable.
- fusion — the act or process of fusing; the state of being fused.
- futons — Plural form of futon.
- gluino — (physics) The superpartner of the gluon.
- gluons — Plural form of gluon.
- gonium — the germ cell during the phase marked by mitosis.
- goujon — flathead catfish.
- gounod — Charles François [chahrlz fran-swah;; French sharl frahn-swa] /tʃɑrlz frænˈswɑ;; French ʃarl frɑ̃ˈswa/ (Show IPA), 1818–93, French composer.
- ground — the act of grinding.