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6-letter words containing u, n, d, e

  • refund — to fund anew.
  • retund — to weaken, dull or blunt
  • ruinedruins, the remains of a building, city, etc., that has been destroyed or that is in disrepair or a state of decay: We visited the ruins of ancient Greece.
  • rundle — a rung of a ladder.
  • runted — stunted
  • secund — arranged on one side only; unilateral.
  • sendup — a mocking parody, esp. when done with seeming gravity; takeoff; spoof
  • snudge — to be miserly or stingy
  • sudden — happening, coming, made, or done quickly, without warning, or unexpectedly: a sudden attack.
  • sunbed — Chiefly British. tanning bed.
  • sundae — ice cream served with syrup poured over it, and often other toppings, as whipped cream, chopped nuts, or fruit.
  • sunder — to separate; part; divide; sever.
  • sundew — any of several small, carnivorous bog plants of the genus Drosera, having sticky hairs that trap insects.
  • sunned — (often initial capital letter) the star that is the central body of the solar system, around which the planets revolve and from which they receive light and heat: its mean distance from the earth is about 93 million miles (150 million km), its diameter about 864,000 miles (1.4 million km), and its mass about 330,000 times that of the earth; its period of surface rotation is about 26 days at its equator but longer at higher latitudes.
  • tunned — a large cask for holding liquids, especially wine, ale, or beer.
  • turned — to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
  • u-bend — pipe
  • unaged — having lived or existed long; of advanced age; old: an aged man; an aged tree.
  • unawed — not awed or daunted
  • unaxed — (esp of trees) not axed or chopped
  • unbend — to straighten from a bent form or position.
  • unbred — not taught or trained.
  • undate — to remove a date from
  • undead — no longer alive but animated by a supernatural force, as a vampire or zombie.
  • undeaf — to restore hearing to
  • undear — regarded without affection or favour; disesteemed
  • undeck — to remove decorations from
  • undeep — extending far down from the top or surface: a deep well; a deep valley.
  • under- — Under- is used to form words that express the idea that there is not enough of something. For example if people are underfed, they are not getting enough food.
  • undern — a simple meal
  • undies — underwear
  • undine — any of a group of female water spirits described by Paracelsus.
  • undoes — to reverse the doing of; cause to be as if never done: Murder once done can never be undone.
  • undone — brought to destruction or ruin.
  • undset — Sigrid [sig-rid;; Norwegian si-gri] /ˈsɪg rɪd;; Norwegian ˈsɪ grɪ/ (Show IPA), 1882–1949, Norwegian novelist: Nobel prize 1928.
  • undyed — not dyed, tinted, or coloured; having natural colour
  • unedge — to take the edge off; blunt
  • uneyed — unseen
  • unfeed — unpaid
  • unhead — to cut off someone's head
  • unheld — simple past tense and a past participle of hold1 .
  • uniped — a person or thing with one foot or leg
  • united — made into or caused to act as a single entity: a united front.
  • unlade — to take the lading, load, or cargo from; unload.
  • unlead — Printing. to remove the leads between (lines of type).
  • unmade — not made.
  • unread — not read, as a letter or newspaper.
  • unrude — refined
  • unshed — not spilled or caused to flow
  • unsped — unachieved
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