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10-letter words containing u, t, f

  • flexuosity — the quality or condition of being flexuous.
  • flocculant — a chemical for producing flocculation of suspended particles, as to improve the plasticity of clay for ceramic purposes.
  • flocculate — to form into flocculent masses.
  • flocculent — like a clump or tuft of wool.
  • flour mite — any of several mites that infest flour and other stored organic materials and may be a serious pest; some may cause itching in persons handling infected material
  • flour moth — larva of butterfly that feeds on grain
  • fluctuated — to change continually; shift back and forth; vary irregularly: The price of gold fluctuated wildly last month.
  • fluctuates — to change continually; shift back and forth; vary irregularly: The price of gold fluctuated wildly last month.
  • fluentness — The quality of being fluent.
  • fluffy toy — a child's toy made of soft materials
  • fluoborate — a salt of fluoboric acid.
  • fluocerite — (mineral) A cerium fluoride mineral found in Sweden.
  • fluoridate — to introduce a fluoride into: to fluoridate drinking water.
  • fluorinate — to treat or combine with fluorine.
  • fluorotype — an early form of photograph produced on paper treated with sodium fluoride
  • fluoxetine — A synthetic compound that inhibits the uptake of serotonin in the brain and is taken to treat depression.
  • flush girt — a girt running parallel to joists and at the same level.
  • flush left — a fresh growth, as of shoots and leaves.
  • flustering — Agitated, confusing.
  • flustrated — flustered; agitated.
  • flutemouth — any of several fish with a tubular snout
  • fluttering — Rapid back-and-forth waving or oscillation.
  • fluvialist — a person who explains geological or geographical phenomena by the action of streams
  • fluviatile — pertaining or peculiar to rivers; found in or near rivers.
  • fluxionist — a person who uses mathematical fluxions
  • fluxuating — Misspelling of fluctuating.
  • fly button — a button on the fly of a pair of trousers
  • foederatus — A confederate. One of the tribes bound by treaty, who were neither Roman colonies nor had they been granted Roman citizenship but were expected to provide a contingent of fighting men when trouble arose.
  • follow out — to come after in sequence, order of time, etc.: The speech follows the dinner.
  • fonticulus — a fontanelle of the cranium
  • food court — a space, as in a shopping mall, with a concentration of fast-food stalls and usually a common eating area.
  • food truck — a truck or van from which food is sold, as to people on the street.
  • foodstuffs — a substance used or capable of being used as nutriment.
  • foot fault — a fault consisting in the failure of the server to keep both feet behind the base line until the ball is hit or to keep at least one foot on the ground while hitting the ball.
  • foot-pound — a foot-pound-second unit of work or energy, equal to the work done by a force of one pound when its point of application moves through a distance of one foot in the direction of the force. Abbreviation: ft-lb.
  • footguards — foot soldiers with ceremonial duties
  • forecourts — Plural form of forecourt.
  • forfeiture — an act of forfeiting.
  • forgetfull — Archaic form of forgetful.
  • form tutor — teacher assigned to a class
  • formulated — Simple past tense and past participle of formulate.
  • formulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of formulate.
  • formulator — to express in precise form; state definitely or systematically: He finds it extremely difficult to formulate his new theory.
  • fortuities — Plural form of fortuity.
  • fortuitism — the doctrine that evolutionary adaptations are the result of chance
  • fortuitous — happening or produced by chance; accidental: a fortuitous encounter.
  • forty-four — a cardinal number, 40 plus 4.
  • foudroyant — striking as with lightning; sudden and overwhelming in effect; stunning; dazzling.
  • foundation — the basis or groundwork of anything: the moral foundation of both society and religion.
  • four-a-cat — four old cat.
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