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

  • podargus — a bird of South East Asia and Australia
  • podetium — (in certain lichens) a stalk bearing an apothecium.
  • polluted — made unclean or impure; contaminated; tainted: swimming in polluted waters.
  • polydrug — being or pertaining to several drug used simultaneously, especially narcotics or addictive drugs: a center for dealing with polydrug abuse.
  • pompidouGeorges Jean Raymond [zhawrzh zhahn rey-mawn] /ʒɔrʒ ʒɑ̃ reɪˈmɔ̃/ (Show IPA), 1911–74, French political leader: prime minister 1962–68; president 1969–74.
  • postdrug — following the administration of a drug
  • postlude — a concluding piece or movement.
  • potbound — (of a plant) having the roots so densely grown as to fill the container and require repotting.
  • pound on — bang on
  • poundage — confinement within an enclosure or within certain limits.
  • pounding — Archaic. to shut up in or as in a pound; impound; imprison.
  • preludio — a musical prelude
  • premould — to mould in advance
  • produced — to bring into existence; give rise to; cause: to produce steam.
  • producer — a person who produces.
  • profound — penetrating or entering deeply into subjects of thought or knowledge; having deep insight or understanding: a profound thinker.
  • propound — to put forward or offer for consideration, acceptance, or adoption; set forth; propose: to propound a theory.
  • protrude — to project.
  • proud of — highly pleased with or exulting in
  • proudest — feeling pleasure or satisfaction over something regarded as highly honorable or creditable to oneself (often followed by of, an infinitive, or a clause).
  • proudful — proud; full of pride.
  • proudhon — Pierre Joseph [pyer zhaw-zef] /pyɛr ʒɔˈzɛf/ (Show IPA), 1809–65, French socialist and writer.
  • proudish — rather proud
  • prud'honPierre Paul [pyer pawl] /pyɛr pɔl/ (Show IPA), (Pierre Prudon) 1758–1823, French painter.
  • pub food — food served in a pub
  • pudovkin — Vsevolod Ilarionovich [fsye-vuh-luh t ee-luh-ryi-aw-nuh-vyich] /ˈfsyɛ və lət i lə ryɪˈɔ nə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1893–1953, Russian motion-picture director.
  • pulldown — a mechanism that intermittently advances the film through the film gate of a camera or projector.
  • pulpwood — spruce or other soft wood suitable for making paper.
  • pumphood — a cover for the upper wheel of a chain pump
  • pundonor — a point of honour
  • puppydom — the state of being a puppy
  • purposed — the reason for which something exists or is done, made, used, etc.
  • puruloid — resembling pus.
  • pushdown — a list in which the last item added is at the top
  • put down — a throw or cast, especially one made with a forward motion of the hand when raised close to the shoulder.
  • put-down — a landing of an aircraft.
  • recouped — to get back the equivalent of: to recoup one's losses by a lucky investment.
  • round up — having a flat, circular surface, as a disk.
  • sauropod — any herbivorous dinosaur of the suborder Sauropoda, from the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, having a small head, long neck and tail, and five-toed limbs: the largest known land animal.
  • soapsuds — suds made with water and soap.
  • solpugid — sun spider.
  • subdepot — a depot within a larger depot
  • sundrops — any of various plants of the genus Oenothera, of the evening primrose family, having flowers that bloom during the day.
  • supposed — assumed as true, regardless of fact; hypothetical: a supposed case.
  • touchpad — a computer input device for controlling the pointer on a display screen by sliding the finger along a touch-sensitive surface: used chiefly in laptop computers.
  • unlopped — (of a branch, tree, plant, shoot, etc) not chopped off
  • unopened — not closed or barred at the time, as a doorway by a door, a window by a sash, or a gateway by a gate: to leave the windows open at night.
  • unplowed — an agricultural implement used for cutting, lifting, turning over, and partly pulverizing soil.
  • unpoised — not poised; unbalanced
  • unpolled — not registered, cast, or counted at the polls: the unpolled vote.
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