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9-letter words containing u, n, d, e, r

  • reconduct — personal behavior; way of acting; bearing or deportment.
  • recounted — to relate or narrate; tell in detail; give the facts or particulars of.
  • red angus — one of a subpopulation of Aberdeen Angus beef cattle having a reddish coat.
  • red count — a count of the red cells in a person's blood.
  • reddendum — a legal clause specifying what shall be given in return for the granting of a lease
  • reductant — a reducing agent which as it is oxidized is capable of bringing about the reduction of another substance
  • reducting — to reduce.
  • reduction — the act of reducing or the state of being reduced.
  • redundant — characterized by verbosity or unnecessary repetition in expressing ideas; prolix: a redundant style.
  • refounder — a person who refounds
  • reguerdon — a reward
  • reinjured — to do or cause harm of any kind to; damage; hurt; impair: to injure one's hand.
  • relaunder — to launder again
  • remindful — reviving memory of something; reminiscent.
  • renounced — to give up or put aside voluntarily: to renounce worldly pleasures.
  • resounded — to echo or ring with sound, as a place.
  • resuspend — to hang by attachment to something above: to suspend a chandelier from the ceiling.
  • rotundate — rounded
  • roughened — made rough
  • round-eye — a term used by Asians to refer to a white person of European origin.
  • roundelay — a song in which a phrase, line, or the like, is continually repeated.
  • roundhead — a member or adherent of the Parliamentarians or Puritan party during the civil wars of the 17th century (so called in derision by the Cavaliers because they wore their hair cut short).
  • roundheel — an eagerly immoral woman
  • roundness — having a flat, circular surface, as a disk.
  • ruddiness — of or having a fresh, healthy red color: a ruddy complexion.
  • ruddleman — a person who deals in ruddle.
  • rudiments — When you learn the rudiments of something, you learn the simplest or most essential things about it.
  • rundstedt — Karl Rudolf Gerd von [kahrl roo-dawlf gerd fuh n] /kɑrl ˈru dɔlf gɛrd fən/ (Show IPA), 1875–1953, German field marshal.
  • runnymede — a meadow on the S bank of the Thames, W of London, England: reputed site of the granting of the Magna Charta by King John, 1215.
  • sauntered — to walk with a leisurely gait; stroll: sauntering through the woods.
  • scoundrel — an unprincipled, dishonorable person; villain.
  • scrunched — to crunch, crush, or crumple.
  • scundered — embarrassed
  • scunnered — an irrational dislike; loathing: She took a scunner to him.
  • semiround — having one surface that is round and another that is flat.
  • sideburns — If a man has sideburns, he has a strip of hair growing down the side of each cheek.
  • sit under — to be seated on the right of (the player)
  • splendour — brilliant or gorgeous appearance, coloring, etc.; magnificence: the splendor of the palace.
  • squadrone — a former Scottish political party, active in the last parliament of Scotland before the Act of Union, in the early 18th century
  • studentry — students collectively
  • subwarden — an assistant to a warden, a deputy or subordinate warden
  • sudermann — Hermann [her-mahn] /ˈhɛr mɑn/ (Show IPA), 1857–1928, German dramatist and novelist.
  • sun-cured — cured or preserved by exposure to the rays of the sun, as meat, fish, fruit, tobacco, etc.
  • sun-dried — dried in the sun, as bricks or raisins.
  • sunburned — burned by sun's heat
  • sundowner — Chiefly British. an alcoholic drink taken after completing the day's work, usually at sundown.
  • superfund — a large fund set up to finance an expensive program or project.
  • supermind — an exceptional mind
  • surreined — (of horse) ridden too much
  • surrender — to yield (something) to the possession or power of another; deliver up possession of on demand or under duress: to surrender the fort to the enemy; to surrender the stolen goods to the police.
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