0%

12-letter words containing s, l, e, u, t

  • unhesitantly — hesitating; undecided, doubtful, or disinclined.
  • unhospitable — not hospitable
  • unhysterical — not showing or suggesting any hysteria; controlled; sensible; calm;
  • unidealistic — of or relating to idealism or idealists.
  • uninvestable — that can be invested.
  • uniseriately — in a uniseriate manner
  • unisexuality — of or relating to one sex only.
  • unit's place — unit (def 8).
  • universalist — a person characterized by universalism, as in knowledge, interests, or activities.
  • universality — the character or state of being universal; existence or prevalence everywhere.
  • unlistenable — that cannot be listened to agreeably or comfortably.
  • unmistakable — not mistakable; clear; obvious.
  • unnilseptium — bohrium.
  • unpleasantry — an unpleasant word, action, comment, etc.: comments filled with unpleasantries.
  • unpoliteness — the quality or state of being impolite
  • unresistible — not able to be resisted or opposed
  • unrespectful — full of, characterized by, or showing politeness or deference: a respectful reply.
  • unrestorable — to bring back into existence, use, or the like; reestablish: to restore order.
  • unsculptured — not resembling a sculpture
  • unsequential — characterized by regular sequence of parts.
  • unsettleable — to appoint, fix, or resolve definitely and conclusively; agree upon (as time, price, or conditions).
  • unsettlement — an act or an instance of unsettling.
  • unsettlingly — in an unsettling or worrying manner
  • unspectacled — lacking spectacles
  • unsplittable — to divide or separate from end to end or into layers: to split a log in two.
  • unstabilized — to make or hold stable, firm, or steadfast.
  • unstanchable — unstoppable
  • unstatutable — conflicting with a statute or statutes
  • unsterilized — not sterilized; that has not been made sterile
  • unstimulated — to rouse to action or effort, as by encouragement or pressure; spur on; incite: to stimulate his interest in mathematics.
  • unstipulated — to make an express demand or arrangement as a condition of agreement (often followed by for).
  • unsublimated — Psychology. to divert the energy of (a sexual or other biological impulse) from its immediate goal to one of a more acceptable social, moral, or aesthetic nature or use.
  • untimeliness — not timely; not occurring at a suitable time or season; ill-timed or inopportune: An untimely downpour stopped the game.
  • untranslated — to turn from one language into another or from a foreign language into one's own: to translate Spanish.
  • value system — moral code, ethos
  • vasoligature — vasoligation.
  • vaudevillist — a person who writes for vaudeville
  • vesicularity — the quality or state of being vesicular
  • vesiculation — characterized by or covered with vesicles.
  • vestibulitis — a painful inflammation of the entrance to the vagina
  • volunteerism — voluntarism (def 2).
  • wastefulness — given to or characterized by useless consumption or expenditure: wasteful methods; a wasteful way of life.
  • watchfulness — vigilant or alert; closely observant: The sentry remained watchful throughout the night.
  • water locust — a spiny tree, Gleditsia aquatica, of the legume family, native to the southeastern coastal U.S., having pinnate leaves, greenish-yellow, bell-shaped flowers, and long-stalked, thin pods.
  • water supply — the supply of purified water available to a community.
  • watercolours — Plural form of watercolour.
  • well-studied — marked by or suggestive of conscious effort; not spontaneous or natural; affected: studied simplicity.
  • west suffolk — a former administrative division of Suffolk, in E England.
  • white squall — a whirlwind at sea or a violent disturbance of small radius not accompanied by clouds but indicated merely by whitecaps and turbulent water.
  • wilton house — a mansion in Wilton in Wiltshire: built for the 1st Earl of Pembroke in the 16th century; rebuilt after a fire in 1647 by Inigo Jones and John Webb; altered in the 19th century by James Wyatt; landscaped grounds include a famous Palladian bridge
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?