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11-letter words containing u, n, i, t, e

  • revaluating — to make a new or revised valuation of; revalue.
  • revaluation — to make a new or revised valuation of; revalue.
  • rinthereout — a vagrant or homeless person
  • rip current — undertow (def 1).
  • roentgenium — a superheavy, synthetic radioactive element with a very short half-life. Symbol: Rg; atomic number: 111.
  • routineness — a customary or regular course of procedure.
  • rubefacient — causing redness of the skin, as a medicinal application.
  • rubefaction — the act or process of making red, especially with a rubefacient.
  • rudimentary — pertaining to rudiments or first principles; elementary: a rudimentary knowledge of geometry.
  • samuel ting — Samuel C(hao) C(hung) [chou choo ng] /tʃaʊ tʃʊŋ/ (Show IPA), born 1936, U.S. physicist: Nobel prize 1976.
  • sanctuarize — to give sanctuary to
  • schweinfurt — a city in N Bavaria, in S central Germany, on the Main River.
  • scrutinised — to examine in detail with careful or critical attention.
  • scrutinized — to examine in detail with careful or critical attention.
  • scrutinizer — to examine in detail with careful or critical attention.
  • sealed unit — a hard disk that is permanently sealed to prevent damage to the read/write head
  • second unit — an additional crew on a film production, usually used at a second location for filming crowd scenes, exteriors, and other shots that do not require the principal actors.
  • secure unit — A secure unit is a building or part of a building where dangerous prisoners or violent psychiatric patients are kept.
  • seminatural — partly natural and partly cultivated
  • sempiternum — a type of durable woollen fabric popular in the 17th century
  • senectitude — the last stage of life; old age.
  • sententious — abounding in pithy aphorisms or maxims: a sententious book.
  • septenarius — a verse consisting of seven feet, usually printed in two lines: used especially in Latin poems.
  • serrulation — serrulate condition or form.
  • sertularian — a type of hydroid that forms stiff, feathery colonies in which the cups holding the zooids are sessile.
  • shine up to — to give forth or glow with light; shed or cast light.
  • shower unit — fitted shower
  • singulative — a grammatical form or construction that expresses a singular entity or indicates that an individual is singled out from a group, especially as opposed to a collective noun, as snowflake as opposed to snow.
  • southernism — a pronunciation, expression, or behavioral trait characteristic of the U.S. South.
  • southernize — to make or become southern
  • speculating — to engage in thought or reflection; meditate (often followed by on, upon, or a clause).
  • speculation — the contemplation or consideration of some subject: to engage in speculation on humanity's ultimate destiny.
  • spitzenburg — any of several red or yellow varieties of apple that ripen in the autumn.
  • squattiness — the condition or quality of being squat
  • squint-eyed — affected with or characterized by strabismus.
  • st. quentin — a city in N France, on the Somme: retaken from the Germans 1918.
  • stentorious — stentorian.
  • stone fruit — a fruit with a stone or hard endocarp, as a peach or plum; drupe.
  • stramineous — of or resembling straw.
  • strenuosity — characterized by vigorous exertion, as action, efforts, life, etc.: a strenuous afternoon of hunting.
  • strike fund — an amount of money reserved by a union to make payments to striking works should a strike occur
  • strikebound — closed by a strike: a strikebound factory.
  • studentship — the state or condition of being a student.
  • stunt flier — someone who performs stunts in an aeroplane, such as special turns, etc, in the air
  • subindicate — to indirectly indicate or hint
  • subinfluent — an organism that has a lesser effect than an influent on the ecological processes within a community.
  • subinterval — an interval that is a subset of a given interval.
  • subitaneous — sudden
  • subjunctive — (in English and certain other languages) noting or pertaining to a mood or mode of the verb that may be used for subjective, doubtful, hypothetical, or grammatically subordinate statements or questions, as the mood of be in if this be treason. Compare imperative (def 3), indicative (def 2).
  • subminister — to supply
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