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7-letter words containing r, u, c, t

  • crudest — in a raw or unprepared state; unrefined or natural: crude sugar.
  • crudity — the condition or quality of being crude
  • cruelty — Cruelty is behaviour that deliberately causes pain or distress to people or animals.
  • crufted — cruft
  • crumpet — Crumpets are round, flat pieces of a substance like bread or batter with small holes in them. You toast them and eat them with butter.
  • crustal — of or relating to the earth's crust
  • crusted — If something is crusted with a substance, it is covered with a hard or thick layer of that substance.
  • crutzenPaul, born 1933, Dutch meteorologist and chemist: Nobel Prize 1995.
  • cry out — If you cry out, you call out loudly because you are frightened, unhappy, or in pain.
  • culprit — When you are talking about a crime or something wrong that has been done, you can refer to the person who did it as the culprit.
  • culters — Plural form of culter.
  • culture — Culture consists of activities such as the arts and philosophy, which are considered to be important for the development of civilization and of people's minds.
  • culvert — A culvert is a water pipe or sewer that crosses under a road or railway.
  • cuprate — (inorganic chemistry) Any of several non-stoichiometric compounds, of general formula XYCumOn, many of which are superconductors.
  • cuprite — a red secondary mineral consisting of cuprous oxide in cubic crystalline form: a source of copper. Formula: Cu2O
  • curated — Chiefly British. a member of the clergy employed to assist a rector or vicar.
  • curates — Plural form of curate.
  • curator — A curator is someone who is in charge of the objects or works of art in a museum or art gallery.
  • curette — a surgical instrument for removing dead tissue, growths, etc, from the walls of certain body cavities
  • currant — Currants are small dried black grapes, used especially in cakes.
  • current — A current is a steady and continuous flowing movement of some of the water in a river, lake, or sea.
  • curtail — If you curtail something, you reduce or limit it.
  • curtain — Curtains are large pieces of material which you hang from the top of a window.
  • curtals — Plural form of curtal.
  • curtana — the unpointed sword carried before an English sovereign at a coronation as an emblem of mercy
  • curtate — shortened
  • curtesy — the tenure that a widower holds over the property of his deceased wife
  • curtiss — Glenn Hammond1878-1930; U.S. aviator & pioneer in aircraft construction
  • curtiusErnst [ernst] /ɛrnst/ (Show IPA), 1814–96, German archaeologist and historian.
  • curtsey — A small bow, generally performed by a woman or a girl, where she crosses one calf of her leg behind the other and briefly bends her knees and lowers her body in deference.
  • curvate — curved in form
  • curvets — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of curvet.
  • curvity — the state of being curved or bent
  • custard — Custard is a sweet yellow sauce made from milk and eggs or from milk and a powder. It is eaten with fruit and puddings.
  • custrel — a servant or attendant to a knight or man-at-arms
  • cutlers — Plural form of cutler.
  • cutlery — Cutlery consists of the knives, forks, and spoons that you eat your food with.
  • cutover — an area cleared of timber
  • cutters — Plural form of cutter.
  • cuttier — cut short; short; stubby.
  • cutware — tools used in cutting, as knives or blades.
  • cutwork — openwork embroidery in which the pattern is cut away from the background
  • cutworm — the caterpillar of various noctuid moths, esp those of the genus Argrotis, which is a pest of young crop plants in North America
  • daturic — relating to the plants that belong to the genus Datura
  • decatur — Stephen. 1779–1820, US naval officer, noted for his raid on Tripoli harbour (1804) and his role in the War of 1812
  • ecotour — A vacation tour or package that showcases ecology (wildlife, etc.) or is ecologically friendly.
  • educrat — An education administrator.
  • eductor — ejector (def 3).
  • encrust — Cover (something) with a hard surface layer.
  • eructed — Simple past tense and past participle of eruct.
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