9-letter words containing u, n, c, a
- uncandour — lack of candour
- uncannily — having or seeming to have a supernatural or inexplicable basis; beyond the ordinary or normal; extraordinary: uncanny accuracy; an uncanny knack of foreseeing trouble.
- uncapable — incapable.
- uncareful — not careful; not caring or vigilant; careless
- uncatered — to provide food, service, etc., as for a party or wedding: to cater for a banquet.
- unceasing — not ceasing or stopping; continuous: an unceasing flow of criticism.
- uncertain — not definitely ascertainable or fixed, as in time of occurrence, number, dimensions, or quality.
- unchained — to fasten or secure with a chain: to chain a dog to a post.
- unchanged — to make the form, nature, content, future course, etc., of (something) different from what it is or from what it would be if left alone: to change one's name; to change one's opinion; to change the course of history.
- unchanted — a short, simple melody, especially one characterized by single notes to which an indefinite number of syllables are intoned, used in singing psalms, canticles, etc., in church services.
- uncharged — not charged, especially with electricity; electrically neutral: an uncharged battery; an uncharged particle.
- uncharity — lack of charity; uncharitable thought or behaviour; unkindness
- uncharmed — marked by good fortune or privilege: a charmed life.
- uncharnel — to remove from a charnel; exhume
- uncharred — not charred; free from charring
- uncharted — not shown or located on a map; unexplored; unknown, as a place or region: the uncharted depths of space.
- unclaimed — to demand by or as by virtue of a right; demand as a right or as due: to claim an estate by inheritance.
- unclamped — to fasten with or fix in a clamp.
- unclarity — clearness or lucidity as to perception or understanding; freedom from indistinctness or ambiguity.
- unclassed — a number of persons or things regarded as forming a group by reason of common attributes, characteristics, qualities, or traits; kind; sort: a class of objects used in daily living.
- uncle sam — a personification of the government or people of the U.S.: represented as a tall, lean man with white chin whiskers, wearing a blue tailcoat, red-and-white-striped trousers, and a top hat with a band of stars.
- uncleaned — not cleaned; that has not been cleaned
- uncleanly — in an unclean manner.
- uncleared — left untidy
- uncoating — a process whereby the genome of a virus is exposed in order for the virus to replicate
- uncongeal — to make liquid
- uncordial — unfriendly
- uncracked — broken: a container full of cracked ice.
- uncreated — not yet created; not existing
- uncurable — capable of being cured.
- uncurtain — to reveal
- uncynical — not cynical
- undecagon — a polygon having 11 angles and 11 sides.
- undecayed — not rotten or decayed
- undecimal — related to the number 11
- undefaced — not defaced; intact
- undercard — an event or group of events preceding and supporting a featured event: the undercard of tonight's boxing match.
- undercast — Mining. a crossing of two passages, as airways, dug at the same level so that one descends to pass beneath the other without any opening into it. Compare overcast (def 9).
- underclad — not wearing enough clothes
- underclay — a grey or whitish clay rock containing fossilized plant roots and occurring beneath coal seams. When used as a refractory, it is known as fireclay
- undercoat — a coat or jacket worn under another.
- undulance — undulating; wavelike in motion or pattern: an undulant edge.
- undynamic — pertaining to or characterized by energy or effective action; vigorously active or forceful; energetic: the dynamic president of the firm.
- uneffaced — to wipe out; do away with; expunge: to efface one's unhappy memories.
- unenacted — to make into an act or statute: Congress has enacted a new tax law.
- unescaped — to slip or get away, as from confinement or restraint; gain or regain liberty: to escape from jail. Synonyms: flee, abscond, decamp.
- unethical — lacking moral principles; unwilling to adhere to proper rules of conduct.
- unfactual — of or relating to facts; concerning facts: factual accuracy.
- unfancied — unreal; imaginary: to be upset by fancied grievances.
- unhatched — (of an egg) not having broken to release the fully developed young