9-letter words containing u, n, e, s
- resentful — full of or marked by resentment.
- resounded — to echo or ring with sound, as a place.
- responsum — the reply of a noted rabbi or Jewish scholar as rendered in the Responsa.
- resultant — that results; following as a result or consequence.
- resulting — to spring, arise, or proceed as a consequence of actions, circumstances, premises, etc.; be the outcome.
- resurgent — rising or tending to rise again; reviving; renascent.
- resuspend — to hang by attachment to something above: to suspend a chandelier from the ceiling.
- retrusion — the act of moving a tooth backward.
- revenuers — an agent of the U.S. Treasury Department, especially one whose responsibility is to enforce laws against illegal distilling or bootlegging of alcoholic liquor.
- revulsion — a strong feeling of repugnance, distaste, or dislike: Cruelty fills me with revulsion.
- roughness — having a coarse or uneven surface, as from projections, irregularities, or breaks; not smooth: rough, red hands; a rough road.
- roundness — having a flat, circular surface, as a disk.
- rousement — a stirring up of religious excitement
- rubensian — Peter Paul [pee-ter pawl;; Flemish pey-tuh r poul] /ˈpi tər pɔl;; Flemish ˈpeɪ tər paʊl/ (Show IPA), 1577–1640, Flemish painter.
- rubescent — becoming red; blushing.
- ruddiness — of or having a fresh, healthy red color: a ruddy complexion.
- rudiments — When you learn the rudiments of something, you learn the simplest or most essential things about it.
- rufescent — somewhat reddish; tinged with red; rufous.
- rumminess — the state or condition of being rummy
- run close — to compete closely with; present a serious challenge to
- rundstedt — Karl Rudolf Gerd von [kahrl roo-dawlf gerd fuh n] /kɑrl ˈru dɔlf gɛrd fən/ (Show IPA), 1875–1953, German field marshal.
- runesmith — a student, writer, transcriber, or decipherer of runes.
- runniness — the state of being runny
- ruralness — of, relating to, or characteristic of the country, country life, or country people; rustic: rural tranquillity.
- sagapenum — a resin formerly used as a drug
- saliaunce — an onslaught
- samuelson — Paul A(nthony) 1915–2009, U.S. economist: Nobel prize 1970.
- sand dune — hill of sand created by wind
- saphenous — of, relating to, or situated near the saphenous vein.
- sarmentum — a slender running stem; runner.
- saturnine — sluggish in temperament; gloomy; taciturn.
- sauciness — impertinent; insolent: a saucy remark; a saucy child.
- sauntered — to walk with a leisurely gait; stroll: sauntering through the woods.
- sauté pan — a pan used for sautéing food
- sauternes — a semisweet white wine of California, commonly sold as a jug wine.
- say uncle — a brother of one's father or mother.
- schnauzer — one of a German breed of sturdy medium-sized dogs having a tight, wiry, pepper-and-salt or pure black coat, bristly eyebrows and beardlike whiskers, and a docked tail, used originally as a ratter and a guard dog and later used in police work.
- scoundrel — an unprincipled, dishonorable person; villain.
- screw nut — a nut threaded to receive a screw.
- scrounger — to borrow (a small amount or item) with no intention of repaying or returning it: to scrounge a cigarette.
- scrunched — to crunch, crush, or crumple.
- scrunchie — an elastic band covered with gathered fabric, used to fasten the hair, as in a ponytail.
- scuncheon — sconcheon.
- scundered — embarrassed
- scungille — the meat of a mollusc or conch, eaten as a delicacy
- scunnered — an irrational dislike; loathing: She took a scunner to him.
- scutcheon — escutcheon.
- secluding — to place in or withdraw into solitude; remove from social contact and activity, etc.
- seclusion — an act of secluding: the seclusion of unruly students.
- secundine — the inner integument of an ovule.