8-letter words containing r, e, c, u, t
- educator — a person or thing that educates, especially a teacher, principal, or other person involved in planning or directing education.
- electrum — A natural or artificial alloy of gold with at least 20 percent silver, used for jewelry, especially in ancient times.
- enacture — an enactment
- enuretic — Pertaining to, or afflicted by, enuresis; tending to wet the bed.
- eructate — To burp; to belch.
- eructing — Present participle of eruct.
- etruscan — a member of an ancient people of central Italy whose civilization influenced the Romans, who had suppressed them by about 200 bc
- eucritic — relating to eucrite
- eurocrat — European Union official
- eutropic — of, relating to or characterized by eutropy
- executer — Alternative form of executor.
- executor — A person or institution appointed by a testator to carry out the terms of their will.
- executry — the office or activities of an executor; an executorship
- factures — Plural form of facture.
- fracture — the breaking of a bone, cartilage, or the like, or the resulting condition. Compare comminuted fracture, complete fracture, compound fracture, greenstick fracture, simple fracture.
- fructive — fruitful
- 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.
- fulcrate — having or supported by fulcra
- furcated — Forked or branched.
- grutches — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of grutch.
- hatchure — Alternative form of hachure.
- huckster — a retailer of small articles, especially a peddler of fruits and vegetables; hawker.
- intercur — (obsolete, intransitive) To intervene; to come or occur in the meantime.
- intercut — to cut from one type of shot to another, as from a long shot to a closeup.
- juncture — a point of time, especially one made critical or important by a concurrence of circumstances: At this juncture, we must decide whether to stay or to walk out.
- justicer — a judge or magistrate.
- lectured — a speech read or delivered before an audience or class, especially for instruction or to set forth some subject: a lecture on Picasso's paintings.
- lecturer — a person who lectures.
- lectures — Plural form of lecture.
- lincture — A linctus; medicine taken by licking with the tongue.
- lucretia — Also, Lucrece [loo-krees] /luˈkris/ (Show IPA). Roman Legend. a Roman woman whose suicide led to the expulsion of the Tarquins and the establishment of the Roman republic.
- muricate — covered with short, sharp points.
- neuritic — inflammation of a nerve.
- neurotic — pertaining to the nerves or to nerve disease; neural: no longer in technical use.
- nocturne — a piece appropriate to the night or evening.
- occulter — Any object, natural or man-made, that blocks the light of an object from an observer, typically used in reference to astronomical events.
- outcaper — to exceed in capering
- outcrier — One who cries out or proclaims; a herald or crier.
- outcries — Plural form of outcry.
- outcurse — to exceed in cursing
- outcurve — Baseball. a ball pitched so that it curves away from the batter. the course of such a ball.
- outprice — To sell at a lower price than (another seller).
- outraced — Simple past tense and past participle of outrace.
- outrance — the utmost extremity.
- outreach — to reach beyond; exceed: The demand has outreached our supply.
- outscore — the record of points or strokes made by the competitors in a game or match.
- peracute — (of diseases, chiefly in animals) very severe; very acute
- pictures — a visual representation of a person, object, or scene, as a painting, drawing, photograph, etc.: I carry a picture of my grandchild in my wallet.
- piecrust — the crust or shell of a pie.
- plectrum — a small piece of plastic, metal, ivory, etc., for plucking the strings of a guitar, lyre, mandolin, etc.