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10-letter words containing s, a, n, d, e, r

  • squanderer — to spend or use (money, time, etc.) extravagantly or wastefully (often followed by away).
  • stand over — (of a person) to be in an upright position on the feet.
  • stare down — to gaze fixedly and intently, especially with the eyes wide open.
  • staudinger — Hermann [her-mahn] /ˈhɛr mɑn/ (Show IPA), 1881–1965, German chemist: Nobel prize 1953.
  • stepdancer — a person who engages in stepdancing
  • sternboard — a backward motion of a boat
  • sternwards — towards the stern; astern
  • stewarding — a person who manages another's property or financial affairs; one who administers anything as the agent of another or others.
  • strainedly — in a strained manner
  • straitened — to put into difficulties, especially financial ones: His obligations had straitened him.
  • strandline — a mark left by the high tide or a line of seaweed and other debris washed onto the beach by the tide
  • subdeanery — the position or office of a subdean
  • subtrahend — a number that is subtracted from another.
  • sunderance — to separate; part; divide; sever.
  • sunderland — a seaport in Tyne and Wear, in NE England.
  • super band — the band of frequencies between 216 and 600 megahertz, used for cable television channels and Citizens Band.
  • sutherlandEarl Wilbur, Jr. 1915–74, U.S. biochemist: Nobel Prize in medicine 1971.
  • sword bean — a twining vine, Canavalia gladiata, of the legume family, found in the tropics of the Eastern Hemisphere, having large, showy, pealike flowers and reddish-brown seeds.
  • sword cane — a cane or walking stick having a hollow shaft that serves as a sheath for a sword or dagger.
  • tawdriness — (of finery, trappings, etc.) gaudy; showy and cheap.
  • the strand — a street in W central London, parallel to the Thames: famous for its hotels and theatres
  • tradescant — John. 1570–1638, English botanist and gardener to Charles I. He introduced many plants from overseas into Britain
  • transcoder — a technology, such as a software package, used to transfer data from one format to another
  • transducer — a device that receives a signal in the form of one type of energy and converts it to a signal in another form: A microphone is a transducer that converts acoustic energy into electrical impulses.
  • transected — to cut across; dissect transversely.
  • transfixed — to make or hold motionless with amazement, awe, terror, etc.
  • transpired — to occur; happen; take place.
  • transudate — the act or process of transuding.
  • turn heads — to be so beautiful, unusual, or impressive as to attract a lot of attention
  • ultradense — having the component parts closely compacted together; crowded or compact: a dense forest; dense population.
  • unabsorbed — not absorbed or taken in
  • unanswered — a spoken or written reply or response to a question, request, letter, etc.: He sent an answer to my letter promptly.
  • unapprised — not informed or apprised of something
  • unarrested — to seize (a person) by legal authority or warrant; take into custody: The police arrested the burglar.
  • unasserted — resting on a statement or claim unsupported by evidence or proof; alleged: The asserted value of the property was twice the amount anyone offered.
  • unassorted — consisting of different or various kinds; miscellaneous: assorted flavors; assorted sizes.
  • under arms — ready for armed combat
  • under sail — If you cross the sea under sail, you cross it in a ship that has sails rather than an engine.
  • under seal — If a document is under seal, it is in a sealed envelope and cannot be looked at, for example because it is private.
  • underclass — a social stratum consisting of impoverished persons with very low social status.
  • underlease — a sublet
  • underpants — drawers or shorts worn under outer clothing, usually next to the skin.
  • understand — to perceive the meaning of; grasp the idea of; comprehend: to understand Spanish; I didn't understand your question.
  • understate — to state or represent less strongly or strikingly than the facts would bear out; set forth in restrained, moderate, or weak terms: The casualty lists understate the extent of the disaster.
  • underwaist — a blouse worn under another.
  • unharassed — to disturb persistently; torment, as with troubles or cares; bother continually; pester; persecute.
  • unmastered — a person with the ability or power to use, control, or dispose of something: a master of six languages; to be master of one's fate.
  • unmeasured — of undetermined or indefinitely great extent or amount; unlimited; measureless: the unmeasured heavens.
  • unparadise — to deprive of or expel from paradise
  • unpastured — not used as pasture
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