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

  • subtility — subtlety.
  • subtilize — to elevate in character; sublimate.
  • subtitled — with dialogue on screen
  • subtitles — a written translation superimposed on a film or television programme that has foreign dialogue
  • suctorial — adapted for sucking or suction, as an organ; functioning as a sucker for imbibing or adhering.
  • sulcation — having long, narrow grooves or channels, as plant stems, or being furrowed or cleft, as hoofs.
  • sulfation — Chemistry. a salt or ester of sulfuric acid.
  • sulfatize — to convert into a sulfate, as by the roasting of ores.
  • sulphatic — sulphuric, of or pertaining to a sulphate
  • suppliant — a person who supplicates; petitioner.
  • supplicat — a petition (to a university) for a degree
  • surtitles — supertitle.
  • sutcliffe — Herbert. 1894–1978, English cricketer, who played for Yorkshire; scorer of 149 centuries and 1000 runs in a season 24 times
  • talmudist — a person versed in the Talmud.
  • tarpaulin — a protective covering of canvas or other material waterproofed with tar, paint, or wax.
  • tchambuli — a member of an indigenous people of Papua New Guinea.
  • tediously — marked by monotony or tedium; long and tiresome: tedious tasks; a tedious journey.
  • tellurian — of or characteristic of the earth or its inhabitants; terrestrial.
  • telluride — a binary compound of tellurium with an electropositive element or group.
  • tellurion — an apparatus for showing the manner in which the diurnal rotation and annual revolution of the earth and the obliquity of its axis produce the alternation of day and night and the changes of the seasons.
  • tellurite — Chemistry. a salt of tellurous acid, as sodium tellurite, Na 2 TeO 3 .
  • tellurium — a rare, lustrous, brittle, crystalline, silver-white element resembling sulfur in its properties, and usually occurring in nature combined with gold, silver, or other metals of high atomic weight: used in the manufacture of alloys and as a coloring agent in glass and ceramics. Symbol: Te; atomic weight: 127.60; atomic number: 52; specific gravity: 6.24.
  • tellurize — to mix or cause to combine with tellurium.
  • thalamium — thalamus (def 3).
  • thallious — having a surplus of thallium
  • thirstful — having or full of thirst; thirsty
  • thumbling — an extremely small person; a dwarf
  • thumbnail — the nail of the thumb.
  • toluidide — a chemical deriving from toluene
  • toluidine — any of three isomeric amines having the formula C 7 H 9 N, derived from toluene: used in the dye and drug industries.
  • torulosis — cryptococcosis.
  • touchline — any of the outer lines bordering the playing field.
  • traguline — like or characteristic of a tragule
  • trial run — a preliminary performance or test of something, as of the operation of a ship or the effectiveness of a play.
  • trialogue — a discussion or conversation in which three persons or groups participate.
  • triannual — done, occurring, issued, etc., three times a year.
  • tribulate — to trouble or oppress
  • tricolour — Also, tricolored; especially British, tricoloured. having three colors.
  • trifolium — any leguminous plant of the temperate genus Trifolium, having leaves divided into three leaflets and dense heads of small white, yellow, red, or purple flowers: includes the clovers and trefoils
  • triumphal — of, pertaining to, celebrating, or commemorating a triumph or victory: a triumphal banquet; a triumphal ode.
  • trochilus — scotia.
  • troubling — to disturb the mental calm and contentment of; worry; distress; agitate.
  • trouville — a seaport in NW France, on the English Channel: resort.
  • truckline — a transportation line utilizing trucks.
  • true bill — a bill of indictment endorsed by a grand jury as being sufficiently supported by evidence to justify a hearing of the case.
  • true-life — similar to everyday life; realistic: true-life episodes.
  • truthlike — resembling the truth
  • tubicolar — living in a self-constructed tube
  • tuggingly — with tugs or in a way that tugs
  • tuileries — a former royal palace in Paris: begun by Catherine de Médicis in 1564; burned by supporters of the Commune in 1871. The gardens that formed part of the palace grounds remain as a public park (Tuileries Gardens)
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