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10-letter words containing t, a, r, e, s, u

  • secularity — secular views or beliefs; secularism.
  • securocrat — a military or police officer who has the power to influence government policy
  • sepultural — the act of placing in a sepulcher or tomb; burial.
  • sequestral — a fragment of bone that has become necrotic as a result of disease or injury and has separated from the normal bone structure.
  • set square — a thin flat piece of plastic, metal, etc, in the shape of a right-angled triangle, used in technical drawing
  • shear stud — a stud that transfers shear stress between metal and concrete in composite structural members in which the stud is welded to the metal component
  • slaughtery — a slaughterhouse
  • smarten up — improve appearance
  • somersault — an acrobatic movement, either forward or backward, in which the body rolls end over end, making a complete revolution.
  • soubresaut — a jump performed with the legs held together and the body erect but slightly curved to the side.
  • souterrain — a subterranean passage or structure; grotto.
  • speculator — a person who is engaged in commercial or financial speculation.
  • spermaduct — a spermatic passage found in male animals
  • spermatium — Botany. the nonmotile male gamete of a red alga.
  • spread out — extend, splay
  • square set — a set having 12 timbers joined to form eight 90° solid angles.
  • square tin — a medium-sized loaf having a crusty top, baked in a tin with a square base
  • square-cut — cut so as to be rectangular, straight, or level
  • squaretail — any of several fishes of the genus Tetragonurus, inhabiting deep waters of tropical and temperate seas, having a squarish tail and an armor of tough, bony scales.
  • squaretoed — having a broad, square toe, as a shoe.
  • star route — former name for highway contract route.
  • starfucker — a person who seeks to have sexual relations with celebrities; groupie
  • staudinger — Hermann [her-mahn] /ˈhɛr mɑn/ (Show IPA), 1881–1965, German chemist: Nobel prize 1953.
  • staurolite — a mineral, basic iron aluminum silicate, Fe 2 Al 2 O 7 (SiO 4) 4 (OH), occurring in brown to black prismatic crystals, which are often twinned in the form of a cross.
  • stridulate — to produce a shrill, grating sound, as a cricket does, by rubbing together certain parts of the body; shrill.
  • studebakerClement, 1831–1901, U.S. wagon maker and pioneer automobile designer.
  • subarcuate — fairly arched
  • subarticle — an article that forms part of a larger or main article
  • subcentral — near or almost to the center.
  • subchapter — a subdivision especially of a body of laws.
  • subcharter — to rent a chartered vehicle
  • subcordate — almost heart-shaped
  • subnitrate — a basic salt of nitric acid.
  • subprimate — a primitive variety of primate
  • subquarter — one of the quarterings of a grand quarter.
  • substellar — having a mass smaller than the mass needed by stars for nuclear fusion
  • substernal — of or relating to the sternum.
  • subterrain — a cave or subterranean room.
  • subterrane — a cave or subterranean room.
  • subtrahend — a number that is subtracted from another.
  • subvariety — a minor or subordinate variety
  • sucralfate — a sugar-aluminum complex, C 1 2 H 5 4 Al 1 6 O 7 5 S 8 , used for the treatment of duodenal ulcer.
  • sugar beet — various cultivars of a beet, Beta vulgaris, of the amaranth family, having a white root, cultivated for the sugar it yields.
  • sugar tree — a sugar maple.
  • sulphurate — to combine or treat with sulphur or a sulphur compound
  • superacute — sharp or severe in effect; intense: acute sorrow; an acute pain.
  • superagent — an expert or highly effective agent, esp of a sports player or actor
  • superaltar — a consecrated portable stone slab for use on an unconsecrated altar
  • superation — the action or process of superating, overcoming or surpassing
  • superexalt — to exalt further; to exalt or raise above others or above a previous position
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