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9-letter words containing s, u, m, e, r, t

  • must-read — a piece of literature or writing considered important or classic; writing that should or must be read.
  • mustanger — a person who engages in mustanging.
  • muster in — to assemble (troops, a ship's crew, etc.), as for battle, display, inspection, orders, or discharge.
  • mustering — Present participle of muster.
  • mutineers — A person, esp. a soldier or sailor, who rebels or refuses to obey the orders of a person in authority.
  • mysterium — (chemistry, alchemy, now historical) Any of various unknown elements thought to make up existing forms of matter, or a substance seen as an elemental or pure form of something else.
  • neuromast — a group of innervated sensory cells occurring along the lateral line of fishes and aquatic amphibians.
  • numerates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of numerate.
  • outermost — farthest out; remotest from the interior or center: the outermost limits.
  • outmaster — to surpass
  • outscream — to scream louder than
  • outstream — a body of water flowing in a channel or watercourse, as a river, rivulet, or brook. Synonyms: rill, run, streamlet, runnel.
  • prescutum — the anterior dorsal sclerite of a thoracic segment of an insect.
  • presummit — of the period prior to a summit
  • rostellum — Biology. any small, beaklike process.
  • rousement — a stirring up of religious excitement
  • rudiments — When you learn the rudiments of something, you learn the simplest or most essential things about it.
  • runesmith — a student, writer, transcriber, or decipherer of runes.
  • rust mite — any of various mites that cause brown or reddish patches on leaves and fruit.
  • sarmentum — a slender running stem; runner.
  • satu-mare — a city in NW Romania.
  • schmutter — cloth or clothing
  • semitruck — tractor-trailer.
  • separatum — a reprint of an article separately from the magazine, journal, or book in which it was originally published; an offprint
  • septarium — a concretionary nodule or mass, usually of calcium carbonate or of argillaceous carbonate of iron, traversed within by a network of cracks filled with calcite and other minerals.
  • set scrum — the act or method of restarting play after an infringement, called by the referee, when the two opposing packs of forwards group together with heads down and arms interlocked and push to gain ground while the scrum half throws the ball in and the hookers attempt to scoop it out to their own team
  • shamateur — a sportsperson who is officially an amateur but accepts payment
  • stem rust — any of several fungal diseases of plants affecting the stems, especially a disease of wheat and other grasses characterized by pustules of red and then black spores.
  • stem turn — a turn in which a skier stems one ski in the direction to be turned and brings the other ski around so that both skis are parallel.
  • stud mare — a female horse kept for breeding
  • submarket — an open place or a covered building where buyers and sellers convene for the sale of goods; a marketplace: a farmers' market.
  • submitter — to give over or yield to the power or authority of another (often used reflexively).
  • summerset — to perform a somersault.
  • summiteer — a participant in a summit meeting.
  • superatom — a cluster of atoms behaving in certain ways like a single atom
  • supermart — a large self-service store selling food and household supplies
  • supermoto — a form of motorcycle racing in which powerful motorbikes are raced over a circuit that is part tarmac and part dirt
  • supertram — a tram with greater capacity and speed than conventional trams
  • surmaster — the deputy headmaster of St Paul's School in London
  • surmullet — a goatfish, especially one of the European species used for food.
  • transhume — to move cattle to suitable grazing grounds according to the season
  • transmute — change into another form
  • tremorous — involuntary shaking of the body or limbs, as from disease, fear, weakness, or excitement; a fit of trembling.
  • tremulous — (of persons, the body, etc.) characterized by trembling, as from fear, nervousness, or weakness.
  • trimerous — Botany. (of flowers) having members in each whorl in groups of three.
  • ulsterman — a native or inhabitant of Ulster.
  • undermost — being the furthest under; lowest
  • unmortise — to unfasten or separate (something mortised).
  • uppermost — highest in place, order, rank, power, etc.: the uppermost peaks of the mountain; the uppermost class of society.
  • uttermost — most remote or outermost; farthest: the uttermost stars.
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