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8-letter words containing s, t, o, u

  • thousand — a cardinal number, 10 times 100.
  • thrombus — a fibrinous clot that forms in and obstructs a blood vessel, or that forms in one of the chambers of the heart.
  • thurston — a male given name: from a Scandinavian word meaning “Thor's stone.”.
  • thutmose — flourished c1475 b.c, Egyptian ruler: conqueror of the Middle East.
  • timorous — full of fear; fearful: The noise made them timorous.
  • titanous — containing trivalent titanium.
  • tithonus — the son of Laomedon of Troy who was loved by the goddess Eos. She asked that he be made immortal but forgot to ask that he be made eternally young. When he aged, she turned him into a grasshopper
  • titmouse — any of numerous, widely distributed, small songbirds of the family Paridae, especially of the genus Parus, having soft, thick plumage and a short, stout, conical bill.
  • toadrush — an annual rush growing in damp lowlands
  • topelius — Zakarias [sah-kah-ree-ahs] /ˌsɑ kɑˈri ɑs/ (Show IPA), 1818–98, Finnish poet and novelist.
  • tortious — of the nature of or pertaining to a tort.
  • tortuous — full of twists, turns, or bends; twisting, winding, or crooked: a tortuous path.
  • torulose — (of something cylindrical) alternately swollen and pinched along its length
  • toughest — strong and durable; not easily broken or cut.
  • toughies — a tough person, especially one who is belligerent.
  • toughish — somewhat tough.
  • toujours — always; continually; forever
  • toulouse — a former province in S France. Capital: Toulouse.
  • tourista — traveler's diarrhea, especially as experienced by some visitors to Latin America.
  • touristy — pertaining to or characteristic of tourists: a touristy attitude.
  • tournois — (of coins) minted in Tours, France: livre tournois.
  • toutatis — a Celtic god worshipped in ancient Gaul and Britain
  • troubles — your troubles are the things that you are worried about
  • trousers — a leg of a pair of trousers.
  • trust to — If you trust to luck or instinct, you hope that it will enable you to achieve what you are trying to do, because you have nothing else to help you.
  • ts'ao yu — (Wan Chia-pao) Cao Yu.
  • tubenose — tubesnout.
  • tuberose — a bulbous plant, Polianthes tuberosa, of the agave family, cultivated for its spike of fragrant, creamy-white, lily-like flowers.
  • tuberous — characterized by the presence of rounded or wartlike prominences or tubers.
  • tubulose — belonging or relating to a group of corals (Tubulosa) with tubular outer coverings
  • tubulous — containing or consisting of tubes.
  • tumorous — a swollen part; swelling; protuberance.
  • tumulose — having mounds; full of mounds; tumular.
  • tumulous — having mounds; full of mounds; tumular.
  • turmoils — a state of great commotion, confusion, or disturbance; tumult; agitation; disquiet: mental turmoil caused by difficult decisions.
  • turnsole — any of several plants regarded as turning with the movement of the sun.
  • tussocky — abounding in tussocks.
  • tutoress — a woman who is a tutor.
  • tutorism — the office or duties of a tutor
  • typhoeus — the son of Gaea and Tartarus who had a hundred dragon heads, which spurted fire, and a bellowing many-tongued voice. He created the whirlwinds and fought with Zeus before the god hurled him beneath Mount Etna
  • uncostly — costing much; expensive; high in price: a costly emerald bracelet; costly medical care.
  • unctuous — characterized by excessive piousness or moralistic fervor, especially in an affected manner; excessively smooth, suave, or smug.
  • unionist — a person whose activities or beliefs are characterized by unionism.
  • unposted — not sent by post
  • unsmooth — coarse or unrefined
  • unsocket — to remove from a socket
  • unsorted — a particular kind, species, variety, class, or group, distinguished by a common character or nature: to develop a new sort of painting; nice people, of course, but not really our sort.
  • unsought — simple past tense and past participle of seek.
  • unspoilt — a simple past tense and past participle of spoil.
  • unstolen — past participle of steal.
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