9-letter words containing t, e, l, u, o, s
- osculated — Simple past tense and past participle of osculate.
- osculates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of osculate.
- outersole — outsole.
- outfields — Plural form of outfield.
- outhustle — (US, sports) To do a better job of hustling than (the other team).
- outlasted — to endure or last longer than: The pyramids outlasted the civilization that built them.
- outliners — Plural form of outliner.
- outlustre — (poetic, transitive) To surpass in brightness or lustre; to outshine.
- outmuscle — to get the better of or dominate by virtue of superior strength or force.
- outsailed — Simple past tense and past participle of outsail.
- outsleeps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outsleep.
- outvalues — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outvalue.
- overlusty — too lusty
- plenteous — plentiful; copious; abundant: a plenteous supply of food.
- popliteus — a thin, flat, triangular muscle in back of the knee, the action of which assists in bending the knee and in rotating the leg toward the body.
- postulate — to ask, demand, or claim.
- pulpstone — a calcified mass in a dental cavity
- reconsult — to consult (someone or something) again
- rostellum — Biology. any small, beaklike process.
- scopulate — broom-shaped; brushlike.
- shell out — a hard outer covering of an animal, as the hard case of a mollusk, or either half of the case of a bivalve mollusk.
- shoutline — a line of text in an advertisement made prominent to catch attention
- sleep out — live-out.
- sleep-out — live-out.
- smell out — dog: detect by sniffing
- solutizer — any admixture to a substance for promoting or increasing its solubility or that of one or more of its components.
- solutrean — Archaeology. of or designating an Upper Paleolithic European culture c18,000–16,000 b.c., characterized by the making of stone projectile points and low-relief stone sculptures.
- soul mate — a person with whom one has a strong affinity, shared values and tastes, and often a romantic bond: I married my soul mate; you don't get much luckier than that.
- soustelle — Jacques [zhahk] /ʒɑk/ (Show IPA), 1912–90, French anthropologist and government official.
- southerly — a wind that blows from the south.
- southwell — Saint Robert. ?1561–95, English poet and Roman Catholic martyr, who was imprisoned, tortured, and executed for his Jesuit activities. His best-known poem is 'The Burning Babe'
- spell out — to name, write, or otherwise give the letters, in order, of (a word, syllable, etc.): Did I spell your name right?
- sporulate — to produce spores.
- spoutless — having no spout
- sulfonate — an ester or salt derived from a sulfonic acid.
- tediously — marked by monotony or tedium; long and tiresome: tedious tasks; a tedious journey.
- telegonus — a son of Odysseus and Circe who unknowingly killed his father and eventually married Penelope.
- teleosaur — a type of crocodile from the Jurassic period
- tellurous — containing tetravalent tellurium.
- tenuously — thin or slender in form, as a thread.
- tollhouse — a house or booth at a tollgate, occupied by a tollkeeper.
- toolhouse — toolshed.
- touchless — to put the hand, finger, etc., on or into contact with (something) to feel it: He touched the iron cautiously.
- tremulous — (of persons, the body, etc.) characterized by trembling, as from fear, nervousness, or weakness.
- troutless — (of a river, stream, lake or other body of water) without or empty of trout
- unhostile — not hostile
- upholster — to provide (chairs, sofas, etc.) with coverings, cushions, stuffing, springs, etc.
- youthless — the condition of being young.