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6-letter words containing u, n, c

  • coruna — a seaport in NW Spain.
  • cougan — a rowdy person, esp one who drinks large quantities of alcohol
  • counts — Plural form of count.
  • county — A county is a region of Britain, Ireland, or the USA which has its own local government.
  • coupon — a ticket issued to facilitate rationing
  • cousin — Your cousin is the child of your uncle or aunt.
  • couzin — a friend
  • crinum — any plant of the mostly tropical amaryllidaceous genus Crinum, having straplike leaves and clusters of lily-like flowers
  • cronus — a Titan, son of Uranus (sky) and Gaea (earth), who ruled the world until his son Zeus dethroned him
  • cronut — A pastry which combines characteristics of a croissant and a doughnut.
  • cruden — Alexander. 1701–70, Scottish bookseller and compiler of a well-known biblical concordance (1737)
  • crumen — the suborbital gland in sheep, deer, or antelopes
  • crunch — If you crunch something hard, such as a sweet, you crush it noisily between your teeth.
  • cruzan — a native or inhabitant of St. Croix.
  • cuando — a river in central Angola, flowing SE to the Zambezi River. 457 miles (731 km) long.
  • cuanza — a river in central Angola, flowing NW and W to the Atlantic Ocean. 500 miles (805 km) long.
  • cubane — a rare octahedral hydrocarbon formed by eight CH groups, each of which is situated at the corner of a cube. Formula: C8H8
  • cubing — a solid bounded by six equal squares, the angle between any two adjacent faces being a right angle.
  • cucina — style of cooking; cuisine
  • cudden — a coalfish
  • cue in — to add (dialogue, music, etc.) at a particular point in a script
  • cueing — Present participle of cue.
  • cuenca — a city in SW Ecuador: university (1868). Pop: 311 000 (2005 est)
  • cuffin — a man; chap
  • culion — an island of the Philippines, in the W part of the group, N of Palawan. 150 sq. mi. (389 sq. km).
  • cullen — William Douglas, Baron. born 1935, Scottish judge who conducted public inquiries into the Piper Alpha disaster (1990), the Dunblane school shootings (1996), and the Ladbroke Grove rail disaster (1999); led the tribunal which turned down the appeal (2002) of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi against his conviction for the 1988 Lockerbie bombing
  • cullin — (protein) Any of a family of proteins that have a role in protein degradation and ubiquitinylation.
  • culmen — the summit
  • cumana — a city in NE Venezuela: founded in 1523; the oldest European settlement in South America. Pop: 271 000 (2005 est)
  • cumene — a colorless and toxic liquid, C 9 H 12 , soluble in alcohol: used as a solvent and in the production of phenol and acetone.
  • cummin — Alternative spelling of cumin.
  • cunard — Sir Samuel (1787–1865). Canadian shipping magnate, founder of the Cunard line
  • cunaxa — the site near the lower Euphrates where Artaxerxes II defeated Cyrus the Younger in 401 bc
  • cuneal — wedge-shaped; cuneiform
  • cunene — a river in W central Angola, flowing S and W to the Atlantic Ocean. 750 miles (1207 km) long.
  • cuneus — a small wedge-shaped area of the cerebral cortex
  • cunner — a fish (Crenilabrus melops) of the wrasse family found in British coastal areas
  • cupman — a drinking companion
  • curing — the process of preserving food
  • curnow — (Thomas) Allen (Monro). 1911–2001, New Zealand poet and anthologist
  • curran — a currant
  • curtin — John Joseph. 1885–1945, Australian statesman; prime minister of Australia (1941–45)
  • curzon — Sir Clifford. 1907–82, English pianist
  • cut in — If you cut in on someone, you interrupt them when they are speaking.
  • cut-in — Movies. a still, as of a scene or an object, inserted in a film and interrupting the action or continuity: We will insert a cut-in of the letter as she reads it.
  • cutins — Plural form of cutin.
  • cydnus — a river in SE Asia Minor, in Cilicia.
  • cygnus — a constellation in the N hemisphere lying between Pegasus and Draco in the Milky Way. The constellation contains the Cygnus Loop supernova remnant, the intense radio galaxy Cygnus A, and the intense galactic X-ray source Cygnus X–1, which is probably a black hole
  • dauncy — donsie.
  • duncan — died 1040, king of Scotland 1030–40: murdered by Macbeth.
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