13-letter words containing r, u, m, s, e
- supreme being — God.
- supreme court — the highest court of the U.S.
- surge chamber — a chamber for absorbing surge from a liquid or gas.
- sutter's mill — the location in California, NE of Sacramento, near which gold was discovered in 1848, precipitating the gold rush of 1849.
- sweet sorghum — sorgo.
- take measures — act, do sth practical
- temerariously — in an audacious manner
- tetradynamous — having four long and two short stamens, as a cruciferous flower.
- thesaurus.com — a popular free online dictionary of synonyms and antonyms: Thesaurus.com.
- time exposure — a long exposure in which the shutter is opened and closed by hand or by a mechanism other than the automatic mechanism of the shutter.
- transmutative — the act or process of transmuting.
- tremulousness — (of persons, the body, etc.) characterized by trembling, as from fear, nervousness, or weakness.
- trumpet blast — the sound of a single note made by a trumpet
- tumorigenesis — the production or development of tumors.
- ugly customer — a hostile or dangerous person.
- ultra-leftism — the beliefs of extremely left-wing political parties or groups
- ultra-realism — interest in or concern for the actual or real, as distinguished from the abstract, speculative, etc.
- umbelliferous — bearing an umbel or umbels.
- umbrella step — (in the game of giant steps) a step executed by extending one foot forward and whirling on the heel.
- unceremonious — discourteously abrupt; hasty; rude: He made an unceremonious departure in the middle of my speech.
- uncircumcised — not circumcised.
- uncircumspect — watchful and discreet; cautious; prudent: circumspect behavior.
- uncompromised — unable to function optimally, especially with regard to immune response, owing to underlying disease, harmful environmental exposure, or the side effects of a course of treatment.
- under-measure — a unit or standard of measurement: weights and measures.
- underclassman — a freshman or sophomore in a secondary school or college.
- underemphasis — inadequate emphasis.
- underestimate — to estimate at too low a value, rate, or the like.
- undistempered — not diseased; free from illness
- unembarrassed — to cause confusion and shame to; make uncomfortably self-conscious; disconcert; abash: His bad table manners embarrassed her.
- unicameralism — consisting of a single chamber, as a legislative assembly.
- unilateralism — the advocacy or pursuit of a unilateral policy, especially in disarmament.
- unimpressible — not capable of being or willing to be impressed
- unmeritorious — deserving praise, reward, esteem, etc.; praiseworthy: to receive a gift for meritorious service.
- unministerial — not befitting a minister, esp relating to a head of a government department
- unpermissible — that can be permitted; allowable: a permissible amount of sentimentality under the circumstances; Such behavior is not permissible!
- unrecompensed — to repay; remunerate; reward, as for service, aid, etc.
- unreminiscent — not reminiscent; not tending to remind one of something or someone
- unremorseless — lacking all remorse or regret
- unsmotherable — unquenchable
- unsymmetrical — characterized by or exhibiting symmetry; well-proportioned, as a body or whole; regular in form or arrangement of corresponding parts.
- unsymmetrized — not made symmetrical; not symmetrized
- untransformed — not transformed; not having been transformed
- untransmitted — to send or forward, as to a recipient or destination; dispatch; convey.
- upperclassman — a junior or senior in a secondary school or college.
- ventriloquism — the art or practice of speaking, with little or no lip movement, in such a manner that the voice does not appear to come from the speaker but from another source, as from a wooden dummy.
- venturesomely — in a venturesome manner
- vernacularism — a vernacular word or expression.
- vivisectorium — the location where vivisection takes place
- water opossum — yapok.
- well-measured — ascertained or apportioned by measure: The race was over the course of a measured mile.