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6-letter words containing s, u, e

  • creuse — a department of central France, in Limousin region. Capital: Guéret. Pop: 122 713 (2003 est). Area: 5606 sq km (2186 sq miles)
  • crouse — lively, confident, or saucy
  • cruces — crux
  • crudes — Plural form of crude.
  • cruels — Glandular scrofulous swellings in the neck.
  • cruets — Plural form of cruet.
  • cruise — A cruise is a holiday during which you travel on a ship or boat and visit a number of places.
  • cruses — an earthen pot, bottle, etc., for liquids.
  • cruset — a goldsmith's crucible
  • crusoeRobinson, Robinson Crusoe.
  • cruxes — Plural form of crux.
  • cubebs — Plural form of cubeb.
  • cueist — a person skilled in cue sports; a snooker, billiards, or pool player
  • cuesta — a long low ridge with a steep scarp slope and a gentle back slope, formed by the differential erosion of strata of differing hardness
  • cuevas — José Luis [hoh-zey lwees;; Spanish haw-se lwees] /hoʊˈzeɪ lwis;; Spanish hɔˈsɛ lwis/ (Show IPA), born 1934, Mexican painter, graphic artist, and illustrator.
  • cuisse — a piece of armour for the thigh
  • cuneus — a small wedge-shaped area of the cerebral cortex
  • cupels — Plural form of cupel.
  • curers — Plural form of curer.
  • curies — Plural form of curie.
  • cursed — If you are cursed with something, you are very unlucky in having it.
  • curser — the expression of a wish that misfortune, evil, doom, etc., befall a person, group, etc.
  • curses — an expression of disappointment or dismay
  • curves — Plural form of curve.
  • cusecs — Plural form of cusec.
  • cusped — having a cusp or cusps; cusplike.
  • cusper — A person considered to have been born on a cusp between significant generations.
  • cussed — obstinate
  • cusser — One who uses cusses.
  • cusses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cuss.
  • custer — George Armstrong. 1839–76, US cavalry general: Civil War hero, killed fighting the Sioux at Little Bighorn, Montana
  • cutest — attractive, especially in a dainty way; pleasingly pretty: a cute child; a cute little apartment.
  • cutesy — If you describe someone or something as cutesy, you dislike them because you think they are unpleasantly pretty and sentimental.
  • cuties — Informal. a charmingly attractive or cute person, especially a girl or a young woman (often used as a form of address): Hi, cutie.
  • daubes — Plural form of daube.
  • debugs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of debug.
  • debuts — Plural form of debut.
  • decius — (Gaius Messius Quintus Trajanus Decius) a.d. c201–251, emperor of Rome 249–251.
  • defuse — If you defuse a dangerous or tense situation, you calm it.
  • degust — to taste, esp with care or relish; savour
  • dehusk — (transitive) To remove the husk from.
  • delius — Frederick. 1862–1934, English composer, who drew inspiration from folk tunes and the sounds of nature. His works include the opera A Village Romeo and Juliet (1901), A Mass of Life (1905), and the orchestral variations Brigg Fair (1907)
  • demurs — Plural form of demur.
  • derust — Also called iron rust. the red or orange coating that forms on the surface of iron when exposed to air and moisture, consisting chiefly of ferric hydroxide and ferric oxide formed by oxidation.
  • dessau — an industrial city in E Germany, in Saxony-Anhalt: capital of Anhalt state from 1340 to 1918. Pop: 78 380 (2003 est)
  • deuces — Plural form of deuce.
  • diseur — a male professional entertainer who performs monologues.
  • disuse — discontinuance of use or practice: Traditional customs are falling into disuse.
  • doused — Simple past tense and past participle of douse.
  • douser — a person or thing that douses.
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