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10-letter words containing r, o, u, e

  • quercitron — an oak, Quercus velutina, of eastern North America, the inner bark of which yields a yellow dye.
  • quernstone — Either of a pair of stones used for grinding material by hand.
  • questioner — a sentence in an interrogative form, addressed to someone in order to get information in reply.
  • quincewort — Squinancywort.
  • quinestrol — a synthetic estrogen, C 2 5 H 3 2 O 2 , used in oral contraceptives.
  • qwertyuiop — Filler text.
  • racecourse — racetrack.
  • racked out — a framework of bars, wires, or pegs on which articles are arranged or deposited: a clothes rack; a luggage rack.
  • raconteurs — Plural form of raconteur.
  • raconteuse — a woman who is skilled in relating stories and anecdotes interestingly.
  • radiculose — having small roots or rhizoids
  • radio tube — a vacuum tube used in a radio receiving set.
  • radiopaque — opaque to radiation; visible in x-ray photographs and under fluoroscopy (opposed to radiotransparent).
  • raisonneur — a character in a play, novel, or the like who voices the central theme, philosophy, or point of view of the work.
  • ramboesque — looking or behaving like, or characteristic of, Rambo, a fictional film character noted for his mindless brutality
  • rampageous — violent; unruly; boisterous.
  • rapporteur — a person responsible for compiling reports and presenting them, as to a governing body.
  • ravenously — extremely hungry; famished; voracious: feeling ravenous after a hard day's work.
  • re-adjourn — to suspend the meeting of (a club, legislature, committee, etc.) to a future time, another place, or indefinitely: to adjourn the court.
  • re-arousal — arousal for a second or further time
  • re-soluble — able to be redissolved.
  • reaccustom — to familiarize by custom or use; habituate: to accustom oneself to cold weather.
  • read up on — If you read up on a subject, you read a lot about it so that you become informed about it.
  • reannounce — to make known publicly or officially; proclaim; give notice of: to announce a special sale.
  • rebellious — defying or resisting some established authority, government, or tradition; insubordinate; inclined to rebel.
  • recidivous — repeated or habitual relapse, as into crime.
  • recomputed — to determine by calculation; reckon; calculate: to compute the period of Jupiter's revolution.
  • reconquest — the act or state of conquering or the state of being conquered; vanquishment.
  • recontinue — to continue (an action, process or condition, etc) again after an interruption or pause
  • recounting — to relate or narrate; tell in detail; give the facts or particulars of.
  • recoupable — to get back the equivalent of: to recoup one's losses by a lucky investment.
  • recoupment — to get back the equivalent of: to recoup one's losses by a lucky investment.
  • recusation — the act of recusing a judge
  • red grouse — a grouse, Lagopus lagopus scoticus, of the British Isles, a subspecies of willow ptarmigan lacking white winter plumage.
  • red liquor — mordant rouge.
  • rediscount — to discount again.
  • redocument — a written or printed paper furnishing information or evidence, as a passport, deed, bill of sale, or bill of lading; a legal or official paper.
  • refutation — an act of refuting a statement, charge, etc.; disproof.
  • regrouping — to form into a new or restructured group or grouping.
  • regulation — a law, rule, or other order prescribed by authority, especially to regulate conduct.
  • regulatory — to control or direct by a rule, principle, method, etc.: to regulate household expenses.
  • rejoiceful — to be glad; take delight (often followed by in): to rejoice in another's happiness.
  • rejoindure — the act of joining again; a reunion
  • remodulate — to regulate by or adjust to a certain measure or proportion; soften; tone down.
  • remorseful — full of remorse.
  • rencounter — a hostile meeting; battle.
  • rendezvous — an agreement between two or more persons to meet at a certain time and place.
  • reoccuring — to happen; take place; come to pass: When did the accident occur?
  • reoccurred — to happen; take place; come to pass: When did the accident occur?
  • repopulate — to inhabit; live in; be the inhabitants of.
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