8-letter words containing r, i, t, u
- outprice — To sell at a lower price than (another seller).
- outprize — to prize more highly than or beyond the proper value of
- outraise — To raise more of something than someone else; often used specifically in reference to fundraising.
- outreign — to reign for longer than
- outrider — a mounted attendant riding before or beside a carriage.
- outrides — Plural form of outride.
- outright — complete or total: an outright loss.
- outrival — a person who is competing for the same object or goal as another, or who tries to equal or outdo another; competitor.
- outsider — a person not belonging to a particular group, set, party, etc.: Society often regards the artist as an outsider.
- outskirt — Often, outskirts. the outlying district or region, as of a city, metropolitan area, or the like: to live on the outskirts of town; a sparsely populated outskirt.
- outstrip — to outdo; surpass; excel.
- outtrick — to outdo in trickery
- outwhirl — to surpass at whirling
- outwrite — to write more or better than.
- painture — the art or act of painting
- per unit — Per unit is a way of expressing the value of a quantity in terms of a reference or base quantity.
- philtrum — Anatomy. the vertical groove on the surface of the upper lip, below the septum of the nose.
- pictural — a picture
- 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.
- pratique — license or permission to use a port, given to a ship after quarantine or on showing a clean bill of health.
- preaudit — an examination of vouchers, contracts, etc., in order to substantiate a transaction or a series of transactions before they are paid for and recorded.
- prebuilt — to construct (especially something complex) by assembling and joining parts or materials: to build a house.
- preunite — to unite in advance
- printout — output produced by a printer, generally on continuous sheets of paper.
- prurient — having, inclined to have, or characterized by lascivious or lustful thoughts, desires, etc.
- pruritic — itching.
- pruritus — itching.
- puirtith — poverty
- pulitzer — Joseph, 1847–1911, U.S. journalist and publisher, born in Hungary.
- pulpiter — a preacher
- pulpitry — the art of delivering sermons
- punditry — the opinions or methods of pundits.
- puristic — strict observance of or insistence on purity in language, style, etc.
- puritans — a member of a group of Protestants that arose in the 16th century within the Church of England, demanding the simplification of doctrine and worship, and greater strictness in religious discipline: during part of the 17th century the Puritans became a powerful political party.
- purities — the condition or quality of being pure; freedom from anything that debases, contaminates, pollutes, etc.: the purity of drinking water.
- purtiest — pretty.
- quartier — a city district
- quartile — Statistics. (in a frequency distribution) one of the values of a variable that divides the distribution of the variable into four groups having equal frequencies. Compare first quartile, median, third quartile.
- quartine — (botany, archaic) A supposed fourth integument of an ovule, counting from the outside.
- quatrain — a stanza or poem of four lines, usually with alternate rhymes.
- queerity — queerness or peculiarity
- querists — Plural form of querist.
- quiktran — Fortran-like, interactive with debugging facilities. Sammet 1969, p.226.
- quilters — Plural form of quilter.
- quintero — Álvarez Quintero.
- quipster — a person who frequently makes quips.
- quirites — the citizens of ancient Rome
- quirting — Present participle of quirt.
- quitrent — rent paid by a freeholder or copyholder in lieu of services that might otherwise have been required.