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9-letter words containing s, u, e

  • custodies — Plural form of custody.
  • customers — A person or organization that buys goods or services from a store or business.
  • customise — to modify or build according to individual or personal specifications or preference: to customize an automobile.
  • customize — If you customize something, you change its appearance or features to suit your tastes or needs.
  • cut loose — to free or become freed from restraint, custody, anchorage, etc
  • cut stone — a stone or stonework dressed to a relatively fine finish with tools other than hammers.
  • cutaneous — of, relating to, or affecting the skin
  • cutlasses — Plural form of cutlass.
  • cutleries — cutting instruments collectively, especially knives for cutting food.
  • cutpurses — Plural form of cutpurse.
  • cutwaters — Plural form of cutwater.
  • cybersoul — The supposed equivalent of a soul in cyberspace.
  • cynosures — Plural form of cynosure.
  • d-glucose — a sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , having several optically different forms, the common dextrorotatory form (dextroglucose, or -glucose) occurring in many fruits, animal tissues and fluids, etc., and having a sweetness about one half that of ordinary sugar, and the rare levorotatory form (levoglucose, or -glucose) not naturally occurring.
  • dacquoise — a cake with nut meringue layers and buttercream
  • dalhousie — 9th Earl of, title of George Ramsay. 1770–1838, British general; governor of the British colonies in Canada (1819–28)
  • daliesque — of, pertaining to, resembling, or characteristic of the surrealist art of Salvador Dali: giant advertising posters depicting Daliesque distortions of everyday objects.
  • dangerous — If something is dangerous, it is able or likely to hurt or harm you.
  • dantesque — in the style of Dante; characterized by impressive elevation of style with deep solemnity or somberness of feeling.
  • daughters — Plural form of daughter.
  • dauntless — A dauntless person is brave and confident and not easily frightened.
  • day nurse — a nurse who is on duty during the daytime
  • deadhouse — a mortuary
  • dean rusk — (David) Dean, 1909–94, U.S. statesman: secretary of state 1961–69.
  • debauches — to corrupt by sensuality, intemperance, etc.; seduce.
  • debouches — to march out from a narrow or confined place into open country, as a body of troops: The platoon debouched from the defile into the plain.
  • debuggers — Plural form of debugger.
  • debunkers — Plural form of debunker.
  • debutants — Plural form of debutant.
  • deciduous — A deciduous tree or bush is one that loses its leaves in the autumn every year.
  • deckhouse — a houselike cabin on the deck of a ship
  • declivous — having a declining slope or gradient
  • decouples — Separate, disengage, or dissociate (something) from something else.
  • decourous — Misspelling of decorous.
  • decubitis — (medical) Inflammations cause by a reclined position of the body; it often refers to the complications of bed-ridden patients such as bed sores.
  • decubitus — the posture adopted when lying down
  • decurions — Plural form of decurion.
  • decursion — a military exercise performed by men bearing arms
  • decus cpp — An almost-ANSI C preprocessor by Martin Minow. It is shipped with X11R5 (contrib/util/cpp) because some systems don't have a working cpp. It runs on VMS (Vax C, Decus C), RSX-11M, RSTS/E, P/OS, RT11, A/UX and Apollo Domain/IX 9.6 and is highly portable.
  • decussate — to cross or cause to cross in the form of the letter X; intersect
  • defocused — Simple past tense and past participle of defocus.
  • degaussed — Simple past tense and past participle of degauss.
  • degausser — a device that degausses
  • degausses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of degauss.
  • degustate — to taste or savor carefully or appreciatively.
  • degusting — Present participle of degust.
  • deiparous — giving birth to a god
  • delicious — very enjoyable; delightful
  • delirious — Someone who is delirious is unable to think or speak in a sensible and reasonable way, usually because they are very ill and have a fever.
  • deliriums — Plural form of delirium.
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