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

  • injury benefit — money paid to someone who has sustained an injury
  • innumerability — The state of being innumerable.
  • inquisiturient — keen to act as an inquisitor
  • insightfulness — The state or condition of being insightful.
  • instrumentally — By means of an instrument or agency; as means to an end.
  • insubordinates — not submitting to authority; disobedient: an insubordinate soldier.
  • insufficiently — not sufficient; lacking in what is necessary or required: an insufficient answer.
  • insular celtic — a partly geographical, partly genetic grouping of Celtic languages that consists of those spoken in the British Isles in ancient times and those descended from them.
  • insuperability — The quality or state of being insuperable; insuperableness.
  • insurmountable — incapable of being surmounted, passed over, or overcome; insuperable: an insurmountable obstacle.
  • insurrectional — Pertaining to insurrection.
  • insusceptively — in an insusceptive manner
  • integral curve — a curve that is a geometric representation of a functional solution to a given differential equation.
  • intellectually — appealing to or engaging the intellect: intellectual pursuits.
  • inter-european — of or relating to Europe or its inhabitants.
  • interarticular — of or relating to the joints.
  • interbehaviour — interaction between multiple individuals
  • intercommunion — mutual communion, association, or relations.
  • intercommunity — common ownership, use, participation, etc.
  • interdiffusion — mutual diffusion of fluids
  • interest group — a group of people drawn or acting together in support of a common interest or to voice a common concern: Political interest groups seek to influence legislation.
  • interinfluence — to influence reciprocally or mutually
  • interinsurance — reciprocal insurance.
  • interlanguages — Plural form of interlanguage.
  • interlingually — in an interlingual manner
  • interlocutions — Plural form of interlocution.
  • interlocutress — A female interlocutor.Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., 1989.
  • intermenstrual — Between menstrual periods.
  • intermolecular — existing or occurring between molecules.
  • intermunicipal — of or relating to a town or city or its local government: municipal elections.
  • internal audit — an audit conducted by company accountants on a regular basis (distinguished from independent audit).
  • internucleonic — internuclear
  • interpunctuate — to insert punctuation marks in (a written text)
  • interpupillary — between the pupils of the eyes: interpupillary distance.
  • interreligious — existing or communicating between different religions.
  • interrupt list — [MS-DOS] The list of all known software interrupt calls (both documented and undocumented) for IBM PCs and compatibles, maintained and made available for free redistribution by Ralf Brown <[email protected]>. As of late 1992, it had grown to approximately two megabytes in length.
  • intersexuality — Having the physical features of both sexes.
  • interstructure — mode of building, construction, or organization; arrangement of parts, elements, or constituents: a pyramidal structure.
  • intertextually — In an intertextual way.
  • intertriginous — (medicine) Of or relating to intertrigo.
  • intestinal flu — influenza with abdominal symptoms, as diarrhea or vomiting.
  • intracutaneous — within the skin.
  • intramedullary — located within the spinal cord, the medulla oblongata, or bone marrow
  • intramercurial — within Mercury's orbit
  • intramolecular — existing or occurring within a molecule.
  • intransmutable — incapable of being transmuted into another substance
  • intussuscepted — Received into some other thing or part, like a sword into a sheath.
  • involute teeth — (in gears) teeth having a profile that is the involute of a circle.
  • irresoluteness — The state of being irresolute.
  • jesuits' resin — an oleoresin obtained from several tropical, chiefly South American trees belonging to the genus Copaifera, of the legume family, used chiefly in varnishes and lacquers, for removing old oil varnish from or for brightening oil paintings, and formerly in medicine in the treatment of certain mucous-membrane conditions.
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