10-letter words containing u, n, a, l
- neuroblast — an immature nerve cell.
- neuroglial — Of or pertaining to the glial cells or neuroglia.
- neurolemma — (neurology) the outermost nucleated cytoplasmic layer of Schwann cells that surrounds the axon of the neuron.
- neuroplasm — the cytoplasm of a nerve cell.
- neutralino — (physics) Any of several hypothetical particles, predicted by supersymmetry, related to neutrinos.
- neutralise — to make neutral; cause to undergo neutralization.
- neutralism — the policy or advocacy of maintaining strict neutrality in foreign affairs.
- neutralist — a person who advocates or adheres to a policy of strict neutrality in foreign affairs.
- neutrality — the state of being neutral.
- neutralize — to make neutral; cause to undergo neutralization.
- new labour — a rebranding of the British Labour Party and its policies undertaken by Tony Blair and his supporters in the run-up to the 1997 general election in Great Britain and maintained during the Labour Party's period of government under Blair's premiership. Never an official title, it denotes the more right-wing/social democratic trend in Labour thinking and policy intended to make the party electable after its electoral catastrophes of the 1980s
- news value — newsworthiness; value in terms of its interest to consumers of published or broadcast news
- nidulation — nest-building, nidification
- nodulation — The presence of nodules.
- non-causal — of, constituting, or implying a cause.
- non-league — amateur or semi-professional
- non-manual — done, operated, worked, etc., by the hand or hands rather than by an electrical or electronic device: a manual gearshift.
- non-neural — of or relating to a nerve or the nervous system.
- non-visual — of or relating to seeing or sight: a visual image.
- nonaccrual — (finance) Not of or relating to accrual.
- noncrucial — Not crucial.
- nondualism — The belief that dualism or dichotomy are illusory phenomena; that things such as mind and body may remain distinct while not actually being separate.
- nondualist — One who rejects dualism.
- nonduality — Lack of duality.
- nondurable — not resistant to wear, decay, etc.; not sturdy: nondurable fabrics.
- nonfactual — of or relating to facts; concerning facts: factual accuracy.
- nonfaculty — a position that is not part of an academic faculty
- nonharmful — Not harmful.
- nonmusical — not belonging to or relating to music
- nonnatural — Not involving or manifesting natural means or processes.
- nonnuclear — not utilizing nuclear power, nuclear weapons, etc.: to fight a nonnuclear war.
- nonsecular — of or relating to worldly things or to things that are not regarded as religious, spiritual, or sacred; temporal: secular interests.
- nonsensual — Not sensual.
- nontextual — of or relating to a text: textual errors.
- novaculite — a very hard sedimentary rock, similar to chert, composed essentially of microcrystalline quartz.
- nuclearism — a political philosophy maintaining that nuclear weapons are the best means of assuring peace and of attaining political goals.
- nuclearize — to equip with nuclear weapons; give nuclear capability to: a fear that armed forces on both sides would become nuclearized.
- nucleating — Present participle of nucleate.
- nucleation — having a nucleus.
- nucleobase — (biochemistry) The base of a nucleic acid, such as thymine, uracil, adenine, cytosine and guanine.
- nucleolate — containing a nucleolus or nucleoli.
- nuku'alofa — the capital of Tonga, a port on the N coast of Tongatapu Island. Pop: 36 000 (2005 est)
- null-space — the set of elements of a vector space that a given linear transformation maps to zero.
- nulliparae — Plural form of nullipara.
- nulliparas — Plural form of nullipara.
- numberable — a numeral or group of numerals.
- nummulated — relating to an expectorated combination of saliva and mucus in a circular, shallow form
- nuptiality — The frequency or incidence of marriage within a population.
- nutational — Related to nutation.
- nuyts land — early name of a region on the southern coast in S Australia, discovered by the Dutch in 1626–27.