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6-letter words containing u, n, t, r

  • strunt — the fleshy part or stump of a tail, especially of a horse's tail.
  • tanbur — tambura.
  • tenure — the holding or possessing of anything: the tenure of an office.
  • triune — three in one; constituting a trinity in unity, as the Godhead.
  • truant — a student who stays away from school without permission.
  • truing — being in accordance with the actual state or conditions; conforming to reality or fact; not false: a true story.
  • trumanElizabeth Virginia Wallace ("Bess") 1885–1982, U.S. First Lady 1945–53 (wife of Harry S Truman).
  • trunks — the main stem of a tree, as distinct from the branches and roots.
  • tundra — one of the vast, nearly level, treeless plains of the arctic regions of Europe, Asia, and North America.
  • tunker — Dunker.
  • turban — a man's headdress worn chiefly by Muslims in southern Asia, consisting of a long cloth of silk, linen, cotton, etc., wound either about a cap or directly around the head.
  • tureen — a large, deep, covered dish for serving soup, stew, or other foods.
  • turfen — made of turf or covered with turf
  • turing — Alan Mathison [math-uh-suh n] /ˈmæθ ə sən/ (Show IPA), 1912–54, English mathematician, logician, and pioneer in computer theory.
  • turion — a small shoot, as of asparagus or certain aquatic plants, from which a new plant can develop.
  • turned — to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
  • turnerFrederick Jackson, 1861–1932, U.S. historian.
  • turnip — the thick, fleshy, edible root of either of two plants of the mustard family, the white-fleshed Brassica rapa rapifera or the yellow-fleshed rutabaga.
  • turnon — something that arouses one's interest or excitement.
  • turnup — something that is turned up or that turns up.
  • turpinBen, 1874–1940, U.S. silent-film comedian.
  • tyburn — a former place of public execution in London, England.
  • u-turn — a U -shaped turn made by a vehicle so as to head in the opposite direction from its original course.
  • uncart — to remove from a cart
  • ungirt — having a girdle loosened or removed.
  • unhurt — to cause bodily injury to; injure: He was badly hurt in the accident.
  • uniter — to join, combine, or incorporate so as to form a single whole or unit.
  • unrent — not rent; not torn, disturbed, pained, or the like: unrent garments; unrent silence; unrent feelings.
  • unrest — lack of rest; a restless, troubled, or uneasy state; disquiet: the unrest within himself.
  • unroot — to uproot.
  • unrust — Also called iron rust. the red or orange coating that forms on the surface of iron when exposed to air and moisture, consisting chiefly of ferric hydroxide and ferric oxide formed by oxidation.
  • unsort — a particular kind, species, variety, class, or group, distinguished by a common character or nature: to develop a new sort of painting; nice people, of course, but not really our sort.
  • untorn — past participle of tear2 .
  • untrim — in poor condition; unfit; unsound
  • untrod — not trod; not traversed: the untrod wastes of Antarctica.
  • untrue — not true, as to a person or a cause, to fact, or to a standard.
  • unturf — to remove turf from
  • unturn — to turn (something) in a reverse direction, to turn or twist (something) in the opposite direction
  • uptorn — past participle of uptear.
  • upturn — to turn up or over: The farmer upturned clumps of sod with his spade.
  • urgent — compelling or requiring immediate action or attention; imperative; pressing: an urgent matter.
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