8-letter words containing o, u, t, e, r
- dextrous — dexterous
- doubters — Plural form of doubter.
- educator — a person or thing that educates, especially a teacher, principal, or other person involved in planning or directing education.
- emulator — A person or thing that emulates.
- en route — on the way
- equators — Plural form of equator.
- eruption — An act or instance of erupting.
- eurocrat — European Union official
- euromart — European Economic Community
- euronext — a European stock exchange formed by the amalgamation of the Paris, Brussels, and Amsterdam bourses
- euronote — a form of euro-commercial paper consisting of short-term negotiable bearer notes
- eurostar — a high speed train that connects London and Kent in the UK with Paris and Lille in France and Brussels in Belgium by crossing the English Channel through the Channel Tunnel
- eurostat — an organization within the European Union that collects and collates statistical information relating to member states
- eutrophy — (medicine) healthy nutrition.
- eutropic — of, relating to or characterized by eutropy
- executor — A person or institution appointed by a testator to carry out the terms of their will.
- fluorite — a common mineral, calcium fluoride, CaF 2 , occurring in green, blue, purple, yellow, or colorless crystals, usually in cubes: the principal source of fluorine, used also as a flux in metallurgy and for ornament.
- footrule — rigid measure, one foot in length
- foreguts — Plural form of foregut.
- fortuned — Simple past tense and past participle of fortune.
- fortunes — Plural form of fortune.
- fourteen — a cardinal number, ten plus four.
- freakout — A frightening or disorientating experience, especially one that results from the use of a hallucinogenic drug.
- frotteur — a person who practices frottage.
- fructose — Chemistry, Pharmacology. a yellowish to white, crystalline, water-soluble, levorotatory ketose sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , sweeter than sucrose, occurring in invert sugar, honey, and a great many fruits: used in foodstuffs and in medicine chiefly in solution as an intravenous nutrient.
- fumewort — Any of various plants of the subfamily Fumarioideae or family Fumariaceae.
- gourmets — Plural form of gourmet.
- grouplet — a small group
- hear out — listen to the end
- hereunto — to this matter, document, subject, etc.; regarding this point: attached hereto; agreeable hereto.
- hire out — to engage the services of (a person or persons) for wages or other payment: to hire a clerk.
- in utero — surgery performed on a fetus while it is in the womb.
- j'ouvert — the eve of Mardi gras; the Monday morning on which the festivities begin
- jerk out — to utter sharply and abruptly
- jointure — an estate or property settled on a woman in consideration of marriage, to be owned by her after her husband's death.
- jousters — Plural form of jouster.
- kabouter — (Dutch mythology) A tiny folkloric man who traditionally wears a pointy red hat, lives in harmony with nature and resides in mushrooms, similar to a gnome, leprechaun or a smurf.
- kurtoses — Plural form of kurtosis.
- misroute — Divert or direct to the wrong place or by the wrong route.
- moisture — condensed or diffused liquid, especially water: moisture in the air.
- montreux — a town and resort in W Switzerland, in Vaud canton on Lake Geneva; annual television festival. Pop: 22 454 (2000)
- moultrie — William, 1730–1805, U.S. general.
- mouterer — a miller who receives payment for grinding corn
- mouthier — Comparative form of mouthy.
- neurotic — pertaining to the nerves or to nerve disease; neural: no longer in technical use.
- neutrino — any of the massless or nearly massless electrically neutral leptons. There is a distinct kind of neutrino associated with each of the massive leptons.
- neutrois — noting or relating to a person of neutral gender who also lacks a specific gender identity.
- neutrons — Plural form of neutron.
- nocturne — a piece appropriate to the night or evening.
- 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.