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9-letter words containing s, h, e, u

  • scatheful — causing harm or injury
  • schedular — a plan of procedure, usually written, for a proposed objective, especially with reference to the sequence of and time allotted for each item or operation necessary to its completion: The schedule allows three weeks for this stage.
  • scheduled — a plan of procedure, usually written, for a proposed objective, especially with reference to the sequence of and time allotted for each item or operation necessary to its completion: The schedule allows three weeks for this stage.
  • scheduler — scheduling
  • schmutter — cloth or clothing
  • schnauzer — one of a German breed of sturdy medium-sized dogs having a tight, wiry, pepper-and-salt or pure black coat, bristly eyebrows and beardlike whiskers, and a docked tail, used originally as a ratter and a guard dog and later used in police work.
  • schulbergBudd [buhd] /bʌd/ (Show IPA), 1914–2009, U.S. novelist, short-story writer, and scenarist.
  • scouthery — scorching
  • scrunched — to crunch, crush, or crumple.
  • scrunchie — an elastic band covered with gathered fabric, used to fasten the hair, as in a ponytail.
  • scuncheon — sconcheon.
  • scutcheon — escutcheon.
  • sepulcher — a tomb, grave, or burial place.
  • sepulchre — to place in a sepulcher; bury.
  • serpukhov — a city in the W Russian Federation in Europe, S of Moscow.
  • shake out — If you shake out a cloth or a piece of clothing, you hold it by one of its edges and move it up and down one or more times, in order to open it out, make it flat, or remove dust.
  • shamateur — a sportsperson who is officially an amateur but accepts payment
  • share out — distribute fairly
  • sheep-run — a large property for raising sheep
  • shelburneWilliam Petty Fitzmaurice, 2nd Earl of, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne, William Petty Fizmaurice Lansdowne.
  • shell out — a hard outer covering of an animal, as the hard case of a mollusk, or either half of the case of a bivalve mollusk.
  • shithouse — a privy; outhouse.
  • shoebrush — a brush used in polishing shoes.
  • shogunate — the office or rule of a shogun.
  • shore bug — any of various small, predaceous hemipterous insects of the family Saldidae, some of which are burrowers, commonly occurring along grassy shores of ponds, streams, brackish lakes, and seacoasts.
  • should've — Should've is the usual spoken form of 'should have', especially when 'have' is an auxiliary verb.
  • shoutline — a line of text in an advertisement made prominent to catch attention
  • shovelful — the amount held by a shovel.
  • showerful — abundant
  • shrubbery — a planting of shrubs: He hit the croquet ball into the shrubbery.
  • shrubless — devoid of shrubs
  • shuddered — to tremble with a sudden convulsive movement, as from horror, fear, or cold.
  • shulamite — an epithet meaning “princess,” applied to the bride in the Song of Solomon 6:13.
  • shunpiker — a driver who takes a side road to avoid paying a turnpike toll
  • shuttered — a solid or louvered movable cover for a window.
  • siphuncle — (in a nautilus) the connecting tube that passes from the end of the body through all of the septa to the innermost chamber.
  • skean dhu — a small knife tucked into or worn against the top of a stocking in the full dress of Highland Scottish males.
  • skean-dhu — a small knife tucked into or worn against the top of a stocking in the full dress of Highland Scottish males.
  • skene dhu — skean dhu.
  • slaughterFrank, 1908–2001, U.S. novelist and physician.
  • sleuthing — a detective. Synonyms: investigator, private investigator; private eye, gumshoe, shamus.
  • smokebush — a plant, Cotinus coggygria, with purple leaves and small flowers that turn grey-white before they fall
  • sod house — a house built of strips of sod, laid like brickwork, and used especially by settlers on the Great Plains, when timber was scarce.
  • sous chef — the second in command in a kitchen; the person ranking next after the head chef.
  • sous-chef — the second in command in a kitchen; the person ranking next after the head chef.
  • southeast — the point or direction midway between south and east. Abbreviation: SE.
  • southerly — a wind that blows from the south.
  • southgate — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit.
  • southwell — Saint Robert. ?1561–95, English poet and Roman Catholic martyr, who was imprisoned, tortured, and executed for his Jesuit activities. His best-known poem is 'The Burning Babe'
  • southwest — the point or direction midway between south and west. Abbreviation: SW.
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