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6-letter words containing s, u, p, e

  • sew up — to join or attach by stitches.
  • sex up — either the male or female division of a species, especially as differentiated with reference to the reproductive functions.
  • souper — a person dispensing soup in the name of charity
  • souple — silk from which only a portion of the sericin has been removed.
  • spouse — either member of a married pair in relation to the other; one's husband or wife.
  • spruce — any evergreen, coniferous tree of the genus Picea, of the pine family, having short, angular, needle-shaped leaves attached singly around twigs and bearing hanging cones with persistent scales.
  • spukie — Chiefly Boston. a hero sandwich.
  • spurge — any of numerous plants of the genus Euphorbia, having a milky juice and flowers with no petals or sepals.
  • spurne — to spur
  • super- — Super- is used to form adjectives which indicate that something is at a higher level than something else.
  • superb — admirably fine or excellent; extremely good: a superb performance.
  • superl — superlative
  • supine — lying on the back, face or front upward.
  • suplex — a wrestling hold in which a wrestler grasps his opponent round the waist from behind and carries him backwards
  • supper — the evening meal, often the principal meal of the day.
  • supple — bending readily without breaking or becoming deformed; pliant; flexible: a supple bough.
  • uaupes — a river in S central Colombia, where it rises and is called the (Vaupes) flowing in NW Brazil E and SE to the Rio Negro River. 500 miles (805 km) long.
  • ujpest — a suburb of Budapest, in N Hungary.
  • unsped — unachieved
  • unstep — to lift from its step, as a mast.
  • uprest — an uprising
  • uprise — to rise up; get up, as from a lying or sitting posture.
  • uprose — simple past tense of uprise.
  • upsend — to send or cast upwards
  • upside — the upper side or part.
  • upsize — to increase the operating costs of (a company) by increasing the number of people it employs
  • upstep — the phenomenon of one tone becoming higher than another in certain words of tonal languages
  • use up — to employ for some purpose; put into service; make use of: to use a knife.
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