10-letter words containing t, a, r, u, b
- obduration — the process of becoming or the state of being obdurate, intractable and indifferent
- obfuscator — Agent noun of obfuscate; one who obfuscates.
- obituaries — Plural form of obituary.
- obituarist — a notice of the death of a person, often with a biographical sketch, as in a newspaper.
- objuration — (rare) A firm binding by oath.
- objurgated — Simple past tense and past participle of objurgate.
- objurgates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of objurgate.
- obscurants — Plural form of obscurant.
- obtruncate — to slice or chop off the head or top part of
- obturation — to stop up; close.
- obturators — Plural form of obturator.
- orbiculate — orbicular; rounded.
- outbargain — to surpass in bargaining
- outbraving — Present participle of outbrave.
- outbreathe — to breathe out
- overbrutal — excessively brutal
- paintbrush — a brush for applying paint, as one used in painting houses or one used in painting pictures.
- pasturable — capable of providing pasture, as land.
- patibulary — of or relating to a gallows or an execution
- permutable — to alter; change.
- perturbant — a thing that causes perturbance
- picturable — a visual representation of a person, object, or scene, as a painting, drawing, photograph, etc.: I carry a picture of my grandchild in my wallet.
- radio tube — a vacuum tube used in a radio receiving set.
- rebuttable — to refute by evidence or argument.
- requitable — to make repayment or return for (service, benefits, etc.).
- retabulate — to put or arrange in a tabular, systematic, or condensed form; formulate tabularly.
- returnable — that may be returned: returnable merchandise.
- rightabout — the position assumed by turning about to the right so as to face in the opposite direction.
- roundabout — circuitous or indirect, as a road, journey, method, statement or person.
- roundtable — a number of persons gathered together for conference, discussion of some subject, etc., and often seated at a round table.
- rouseabout — an unskilled labourer in a shearing shed
- roustabout — a wharf laborer or deck hand, as on the Mississippi River.
- rubricated — (in ancient manuscripts, early printed books, etc.) having titles, catchwords, etc., distinctively colored.
- rubythroat — a ruby-throated hummingbird
- run a bath — to turn on the taps to fill a bath with water for bathing oneself
- saintsbury — George Edward Bateman [beyt-muh n] /ˈbeɪt mən/ (Show IPA), 1845–1933, English literary critic and historian.
- soubresaut — a jump performed with the legs held together and the body erect but slightly curved to the side.
- status bar — a row at the bottom of a window that displays information about the window, as the status of a web page load or details of an open document.
- strabismus — a disorder of vision due to a deviation from normal orientation of one or both eyes so that both cannot be directed at the same object at the same time; squint; crossed eyes.
- strasbourg — a department in NE France. 1848 sq. mi. (4785 sq. km). Capital: Strasbourg.
- strassburg — a city in NE France, on the Rhine: the chief French inland port; under German rule (1870–1918); university (1567); seat of the Council of Europe and of the European Parliament. Pop: 264 115 (1999)
- studebaker — Clement, 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
- subcrustal — situated or occurring below the crust of the earth.
- subintrant — having attacks or fits one after the other