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9-letter words containing t, i, e, u

  • quicksets — Plural form of quickset.
  • quickstep — (formerly) a lively step used in marching.
  • quicktime — (graphics, standard, file format, product)   Apple Computer's software for playing audio and video. The QuickTime application is a free media player. QuickTime Pro is a paid-for version with editing ability. QuickTime's native format for audio and video is .mov but it can handle many others.
  • quiescent — being at rest; quiet; still; inactive or motionless: a quiescent mind.
  • quiet sun — the sun at the minimum of solar activity, occurring every 11 years.
  • quietened — Simple past tense and past participle of quieten.
  • quietener — a thing which quiets or sedates
  • quietness — making no noise or sound, especially no disturbing sound: quiet neighbors.
  • quietsome — still, calm, quiet
  • quintette — Alternative spelling of quintet A composition for five voices or instruments; also, the set of five persons who sing or play five-part music.
  • quintiles — Plural form of quintile.
  • quintuple — fivefold; consisting of five parts.
  • quipsters — Plural form of quipster.
  • quirkiest — Superlative form of quirky.
  • quit-rent — rent paid by a freeholder or copyholder in lieu of services that might otherwise have been required.
  • quitrents — Plural form of quitrent.
  • quittance — recompense or requital.
  • quivertip — A flexible tip to a fishing rod that bends when a fish takes the bait.
  • quodlibet — a subtle or elaborate argument or point of debate, usually on a theological or scholastic subject.
  • quotative — (linguistics) Form of the complementizer related to the verb say, found in many languages of West Africa and South Asia.
  • quotients — Plural form of quotient.
  • rapturize — to go into ecstasies or raptures
  • rebutting — to refute by evidence or argument.
  • recaution — alertness and prudence in a hazardous situation; care; wariness: Landslides ahead—proceed with caution.
  • recruital — an act of recruiting
  • recruiter — a newly enlisted or drafted member of the armed forces.
  • rectitude — rightness of principle or conduct; moral virtue: the rectitude of her motives.
  • recutting — to penetrate with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument or object: He cut his finger.
  • reducting — to reduce.
  • reduction — the act of reducing or the state of being reduced.
  • reductive — of or relating to reduction; serving to reduce or abridge: an urgent need for reductive measures.
  • refudiate — to reject as untrue or refuse to acknowledge.
  • rehnquist — William H(ubbs) [huhbz] /hʌbz/ (Show IPA), 1924–2005, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1972–86; chief justice 1986–2005.
  • rejustify — to show (an act, claim, statement, etc.) to be just or right: The end does not always justify the means.
  • remixture — a thing that has been mixed again
  • reptilium — a building for the public exhibition of reptiles.
  • repudiate — to reject as having no authority or binding force: to repudiate a claim.
  • requisite — required or necessary for a particular purpose, position, etc.; indispensable: the requisite skills of an engineer.
  • requiting — to make repayment or return for (service, benefits, etc.).
  • requoting — to repeat (a passage, phrase, etc.) from a book, speech, or the like, as by way of authority, illustration, etc.
  • rerouting — a course, way, or road for passage or travel: What's the shortest route to Boston?
  • resituate — to put in or on a particular site or place; locate.
  • restitute — to make restitution.
  • resulting — to spring, arise, or proceed as a consequence of actions, circumstances, premises, etc.; be the outcome.
  • retiarius — a gladiator equipped with a net for casting over his opponent.
  • reticular — having the form of a net; netlike.
  • reticulum — any fine network, esp one in the body composed of cells, fibres, etc
  • retinular — of or relating to the retinula
  • retribute — to give back (a payment, reward, punishment, etc) or to give in return for something
  • retrusion — the act of moving a tooth backward.
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