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

  • flounders — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flounder.
  • foundered — (of a ship, boat, etc.) to fill with water and sink.
  • foundress — a woman who establishes something, as an institution or religious order; founder.
  • foundries — Plural form of foundry.
  • friendful — Full of friendlihood; friendly.
  • fundraise — to collect by fund-raising: The charity needs to fund-raise more than a million dollars.
  • furnished — to supply (a house, room, etc.) with necessary furniture, carpets, appliances, etc.
  • gardenful — An amount sufficient to fill a garden.
  • gerundial — (in certain languages, as Latin) a form regularly derived from a verb and functioning as a noun, having in Latin all case forms but the nominative, as Latin dicendī gen., dicendō, dat., abl., etc., “saying.”. See also gerundive (def 1).
  • gerundive — (in Latin) a verbal adjective similar to the gerund in form and noting the obligation, necessity, or worthiness of the action to be done, as legendus in Liber legendus est, “The book is worth reading.”. See also gerund (def 1).
  • get round — cajole
  • goldurned — goldarn.
  • gorehound — an enthusiast of gory horror films
  • grand feu — a firing of ceramics at a high temperature.
  • grandeurs — the quality or state of being impressive or awesome: the grandeur of the Rocky Mountains.
  • grewhound — a greyhound
  • greyhound — one of a breed of tall, slender, short-haired dogs, noted for its keen sight and swiftness.
  • groundage — a tax levied on ships that anchor in a port.
  • grounders — Plural form of grounder.
  • groundsel — groundsill.
  • grunewald — Mathias [mah-tee-ahs] /mɑˈti ɑs/ (Show IPA), (Mathias Neithardt-Gothardt) c1470–1528, German painter and architect.
  • guanadrel — a substance, C 20 H 40 N 6 O 8 S, used as an antihypertensive.
  • guardsmen — Plural form of guardsman.
  • gunpowder — an explosive mixture, as of potassium nitrate, sulfur, and charcoal, used in shells and cartridges, in fireworks, for blasting, etc.
  • harangued — a scolding or a long or intense verbal attack; diatribe.
  • harden up — to tighten the sheets of a sailing vessel so as to prevent luffing
  • hereunder — under or below this; subsequent to this.
  • hired gun — a person hired to kill someone, as a gunfighter or professional killer.
  • hirudinea — the class comprising the leeches.
  • hirundine — of, relating to, or resembling the swallow.
  • horehound — an Old World plant, Marrubium vulgare, of the mint family, having downy leaves and small, whitish flowers, and containing a bitter, medicinal juice that is used as an expectorant, vermifuge, and laxative.
  • humdinger — a person, thing, action, or statement of remarkable excellence or effect.
  • hundredal — Of or pertaining to a hundred (administrative unit).
  • hundreder — An inhabitant or freeholder of a hundred (administrative subdivision).
  • hundredth — next after the ninety-ninth; being the ordinal number for 100.
  • husbander — A person who husbands resources.
  • impounder — One who impounds.
  • imprudent — not prudent; lacking discretion; incautious; rash.
  • in sunder — into pieces; apart
  • incrusted — Alternative spelling of encrusted.
  • indeavour — Archaic form of endeavour.
  • indecorum — indecorous behavior or character.
  • indenture — a deed or agreement executed in two or more copies with edges correspondingly indented as a means of identification.
  • indurable — Archaic form of endurable.
  • indurance — Obsolete form of endurance.
  • indurated — to make hard; harden, as rock, tissue, etc.: Cold indurates the soil.
  • inerudite — Not erudite; unlearned; ignorant.
  • interduce — (construction) An intertie.
  • interlude — an intervening episode, period, space, etc.
  • intrigued — to arouse the curiosity or interest of by unusual, new, or otherwise fascinating or compelling qualities; appeal strongly to; captivate: The plan intrigues me, but I wonder if it will work.
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