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6-letter words containing p, u, i

  • stupid — lacking ordinary quickness and keenness of mind; dull.
  • sumpit — in Malaysia, a long wooden blowpipe, from which poison-tipped or barbed darts are blown, used primarily for hunting
  • supine — lying on the back, face or front upward.
  • tie up — that with which anything is tied.
  • tie-up — a temporary stoppage or slowing of business, traffic, telephone service, etc., as due to a strike, storm, or accident.
  • tip up — overturn, cause to topple
  • tip-up — designed to tilt
  • tipuna — an ancestor
  • tittup — an exaggerated prancing, bouncing movement or manner of moving.
  • turnip — the thick, fleshy, edible root of either of two plants of the mustard family, the white-fleshed Brassica rapa rapifera or the yellow-fleshed rutabaga.
  • turpinBen, 1874–1940, U.S. silent-film comedian.
  • ulpian — (Domitius Ulpianus) died a.d. 288? Roman jurist.
  • umpire — a person selected to rule on the plays in a game.
  • unclip — to become unclipped
  • uniped — a person or thing with one foot or leg
  • unipod — something that is formed with a single leg or foot, as a one-legged support for a camera.
  • unisap — An early system on UNIVAC I or II.
  • unpaid — a simple past tense and past participle of pay1 .
  • unpick — to take out the stitches of (sewing, knitting, etc.).
  • unpile — to disentangle or remove from a piled condition: to unpile boxes.
  • unripe — not ripe; immature; not fully developed: unripe fruit.
  • unship — to put or take off from a ship, as persons or goods.
  • upbind — to bind up
  • upboil — to boil up
  • upcoil — to make into a coil
  • updikeJohn, 1932–2009, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • updive — to leap or spring upwards
  • upfill — to fill up
  • upgird — to support or hold up
  • uphill — up or as if up the slope of a hill or other incline; upward: The soldiers marched uphill. Water does not run uphill without assistance.
  • upknit — to reconcile or bring to agreement
  • uplift — to lift up; raise; elevate.
  • uplink — a transmission path for transmitting data or other signals from an earth station to a communications satellite or an airborne platform.
  • uppile — to pile up
  • upping — to, toward, or in a more elevated position: to climb up to the top of a ladder.
  • uppish — arrogant; condescending; uppity.
  • uppity — affecting an attitude of inflated self-esteem; haughty; snobbish.
  • uprise — to rise up; get up, as from a lying or sitting posture.
  • upside — the upper side or part.
  • upsize — to increase the operating costs of (a company) by increasing the number of people it employs
  • upspin — a sudden, upward, spiraling movement, trend, etc.: another upspin in construction costs.
  • upstir — a commotion or disturbance
  • uptick — a rise or improvement in business activity, in mood, etc.
  • uptilt — to tilt up.
  • uptime — the time during which a machine or piece of equipment, as a computer, is operating or can be operated.
  • upwind — toward or against the wind or the direction from which it is blowing: The hunters stalked upwind.
  • utopia — an imaginary island described in Sir Thomas More's Utopia (1516) as enjoying perfection in law, politics, etc.
  • wickup — An onomatopoeic representation of the chirp of certain species of flickers.
  • wikiup — (in Nevada, Arizona, etc.) an American Indian hut made of brushwood or covered with mats.
  • windup — the conclusion of any action, activity, etc.; the end or close.
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