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6-letter words containing u, d, c

  • cursed — If you are cursed with something, you are very unlucky in having it.
  • curved — A curved object has the shape of a curve or has a smoothly bending surface.
  • cusped — having a cusp or cusps; cusplike.
  • cuspid — a tooth having one point; canine tooth
  • cussed — obstinate
  • cutted — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of cut.
  • cydnus — a river in SE Asia Minor, in Cilicia.
  • dachau — a town in S Germany, in Bavaria: site of a Nazi concentration camp. Pop: 39 474 (2003 est)
  • dauncy — donsie.
  • decius — (Gaius Messius Quintus Trajanus Decius) a.d. c201–251, emperor of Rome 249–251.
  • decury — (in ancient Rome) a body of ten men
  • deduce — If you deduce something or deduce that something is true, you reach that conclusion because of other things that you know to be true.
  • deduct — When you deduct an amount from a total, you subtract it from the total.
  • deuced — damned; confounded
  • deucer — Cards. a card having two pips; a two, or two-spot.
  • deuces — Plural form of deuce.
  • dictum — A dictum is a formal statement made by someone who has authority.
  • discus — a circular disk more than 7 inches (18 cm) in diameter and 2.2 pounds (1 kg) in weight, usually wooden with a metal rim and thicker in the center than at the edge, for throwing for distance in athletic competition.
  • doucer — sedate; modest; quiet.
  • doucet — (obsolete except in dialects) A sweetened dish.
  • douche — a jet or current of water, sometimes with a dissolved medicating or cleansing agent, applied to a body part, organ, or cavity for medicinal or hygienic purposes.
  • douchy — (pejorative) Like a douche bag.
  • dracut — a city in NE Massachusetts.
  • dubcekAlexander, 1921–92, Czechoslovakian political leader: first secretary of the Communist Party 1968–69.
  • ducats — Plural form of ducat.
  • ducked — to stoop or bend suddenly; bob.
  • ducker — a person or thing that ducks.
  • duckie — ducky1 .
  • ductal — (anatomy) Of, relating to, or originating in a duct.
  • ducted — Simple past tense and past participle of duct.
  • ductor — the roller that conveys ink in a press from the ink reservoir to the distributor.
  • ductus — A duct.
  • dulcet — pleasant to the ear; melodious: the dulcet tones of the cello.
  • duncan — died 1040, king of Scotland 1030–40: murdered by Macbeth.
  • dunces — Plural form of dunce.
  • duparc — Henri (ɑ̃ri), full name Marie Eugène Henri Fouques Duparc. 1848–1933, French composer of songs noted for their sad brooding quality
  • dutchy — Archaic spelling of duchy.
  • educed — Simple past tense and past participle of educe.
  • educes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of educe.
  • escudo — The basic monetary unit of Portugal (until the introduction of the euro) and Cape Verde, equal to 100 centavos.
  • euclid — (language)   (Named after the Greek geometer, fl ca 300 BC.) A Pascal descendant for development of verifiable system software. No goto, no side effects, no global assignments, no functional arguments, no nested procedures, no floats, no enumeration types. Pointers are treated as indices of special arrays called collections. To prevent aliasing, Euclid forbids any overlap in the list of actual parameters of a procedure. Each procedure gives an imports list, and the compiler determines the identifiers that are implicitly imported. Iterators. Ottawa Euclid is a variant.
  • facund — (archaic) eloquent, articulate.
  • fecund — producing or capable of producing offspring, fruit, vegetation, etc., in abundance; prolific; fruitful: fecund parents; fecund farmland.
  • fucked — to have sexual intercourse with.
  • fucoid — resembling or related to seaweeds of the genus Fucus.
  • fundic — the base of an organ, or the part opposite to or remote from an aperture.
  • gnu dc — GNU Desktop Calculator. An interpreter for a subset of the standard Unix DC that handles all its operations, except the (undocumented) array operations. Integration with GNU BC is being attempted. Version 0.2.
  • gweduc — geoduck.
  • heiduc — one of a class of mercenary soldiers in 16th-century Hungary.
  • induce — to lead or move by persuasion or influence, as to some action or state of mind: to induce a person to buy a raffle ticket.
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