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6-letter words containing u, l, e

  • touzle — to disorder or dishevel: The wind tousled our hair.
  • tubule — a small tube; a minute tubular structure.
  • tugela — a river in E South Africa, rising in the Drakensberg where it forms the Tugela Falls, 856 m (2810 ft) high (highest waterfall in Africa), before flowing east to the Indian Ocean: scene of battles during the Zulu War (1879) and the Boer War (1899–1902). Length: about 500 km (312 miles)
  • tuille — a tasset.
  • tulare — a city in central California.
  • tulear — a city on SW Madagascar.
  • tulles — a city in and the capital of Corrèze, in S central France.
  • tumble — to fall helplessly down, end over end, as by losing one's footing, support, or equilibrium; plunge headlong: to tumble down the stairs.
  • tunnel — an underground passage.
  • tupelo — any of several trees of the genus Nyssa, having ovate leaves, clusters of minute flowers, and purple, berrylike fruit, especially N. aquatica, of swampy regions of the eastern, southern, and midwestern U.S.
  • turtle — any reptile of the order Testudines, comprising aquatic and terrestrial species having the trunk enclosed in a shell consisting of a dorsal carapace and a ventral plastron.
  • tussle — to struggle or fight roughly or vigorously; wrestle; scuffle.
  • uglier — very unattractive or unpleasant to look at; offensive to the sense of beauty; displeasing in appearance.
  • ullage — the amount by which the contents fall short of filling a container, as a cask or bottle.
  • ulnare — any of the eight small bones of the carpus
  • ulster — a former province in Ireland, now comprising Northern Ireland and a part of the Republic of Ireland.
  • umbles — numbles
  • umwelt — the environmental factors, collectively, that are capable of affecting the behaviour of an animal or individual
  • unable — lacking the necessary power, competence, etc., to accomplish some specified act: He was unable to swim.
  • unbale — to remove from a bale or tightly bound package
  • unbelt — to remove the belt from.
  • unclew — to unfurl (a sail) from the yardarm
  • unfelt — not felt
  • unglue — to separate or detach by or as if by overcoming an adhesive agent: to unglue a sticker from a wall.
  • unheal — poor health
  • unheld — simple past tense and a past participle of hold1 .
  • unhelm — to remove the helmet of (oneself or another)
  • unlace — to loosen or undo the lacing or laces of (a pair of shoes, a corset, etc.).
  • unlade — to take the lading, load, or cargo from; unload.
  • unlead — Printing. to remove the leads between (lines of type).
  • unleal — disloyal; treacherous; unfaithful
  • unless — except; but; save: Nothing will come of it, unless disaster.
  • unlike — different, dissimilar, or unequal; not alike: They contributed unlike sums to charity.
  • unlime — to remove the lime from (something, for example animal hides during the preparation process)
  • unline — to remove the lining from (a garment, curtain, etc)
  • unlive — to undo or reverse (past life, experiences, etc.): to unlive his crimes by making retribution.
  • unlove — to stop loving (someone or something)
  • unpile — to disentangle or remove from a piled condition: to unpile boxes.
  • unreal — not real or actual.
  • unreel — to unwind from or as if from a reel: to unreel some wire; to unreel a tangled skein.
  • unrule — a lack of authority
  • unseal — to break or remove the seal of; open, as something sealed or firmly closed: to unseal a letter; to unseal a tomb.
  • unseel — to undo the seeling of; to unsew
  • unself — a lack of self
  • unsell — to dissuade from a belief in the desirability, value, wisdom, or truth of something: He tried to unsell the public on its faith in rearmament.
  • untile — to strip tiles from
  • unveil — to remove a veil or other covering from; display; reveal: The woman unveiled herself.
  • unweal — sadness or sorrow
  • unwell — not well; ailing; ill.
  • upheld — simple past tense and past participle of uphold.
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