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10-letter words containing u, t, i, s

  • sanguinity — cheerfully optimistic, hopeful, or confident: a sanguine disposition; sanguine expectations.
  • sanitarium — an institution for the preservation or recovery of health, especially for convalescence; health resort.
  • sanitorium — a facility for housing patients with long-term illnesses
  • saturation — the act or process of saturating.
  • saturnalia — (sometimes used with a plural verb) the festival of Saturn, celebrated in December in ancient Rome as a time of unrestrained merrymaking.
  • sauntering — to walk with a leisurely gait; stroll: sauntering through the woods.
  • saussurite — a mineral aggregate of albite, zoisite, and other calcium aluminum silicates, formed by alteration of plagioclase feldspars in igneous rocks.
  • scaturient — gushing; overflowing.
  • schtupping — to have sexual intercourse with.
  • sclerotium — a vegetative, resting food-storage body in certain higher fungi, composed of a compact mass of hardened mycelia.
  • scriptural — (sometimes initial capital letter) of, relating to, or in accordance with sacred writings, especially the Scriptures.
  • scrub suit — a loose-fitting, usually two-piece garment, often of green cotton, worn by surgeons and assisting personnel in an operating room.
  • scrutineer — an official examiner, especially of votes in an election.
  • scrutinise — to examine in detail with careful or critical attention.
  • scrutinize — to examine in detail with careful or critical attention.
  • scrutinous — strict, thorough
  • scurrility — a scurrilous quality or condition.
  • sea squirt — any tunicate, especially a sessile ascidian, so called from its habit of contracting its body and ejecting streams of water when disturbed.
  • secularist — secular spirit or tendency, especially a system of political or social philosophy that rejects all forms of religious faith and worship.
  • secularity — secular views or beliefs; secularism.
  • securities — freedom from danger, risk, etc.; safety.
  • securitize — to reduce the risk of (a loan) by the use of such securities as eurobonds
  • self-unity — the state of being one; oneness.
  • semi-bantu — a group of languages of W Africa, mainly SE Nigeria and Cameroon, that were not traditionally classed as Bantu but that show certain essential Bantu characteristics. They are now classed with Bantu in the Benue-Congo branch of the Niger-Congo family
  • semilucent — partially translucent
  • seminudity — partial nudity; the state of being partly nude
  • sensualist — a person given to the indulgence of the senses or appetites.
  • sensuality — sensual nature: the sensuality of Keats's poetry.
  • septennium — a period or cycle of seven years
  • septuagint — the oldest Greek version of the Old Testament, traditionally said to have been translated by 70 or 72 Jewish scholars at the request of Ptolemy II: most scholars believe that only the Pentateuch was completed in the early part of the 3rd century b.c. and that the remaining books were translated in the next two centuries.
  • sequential — characterized by regular sequence of parts.
  • serge suit — a suit made of serge, a twill-weave woollen or worsted fabric
  • serotinous — late in occurring, developing, or flowering.
  • sestertium — a money of account of ancient Rome, equal to 1000 sesterces.
  • sestertius — sesterce.
  • setiferous — having setae or bristles.
  • setigerous — having setae or bristles.
  • setting-up — the establishment or creation of something
  • setup file — a file needed to set up or install a computer program
  • shell suit — A shell suit is a casual suit which is made of thin nylon.
  • shikibuton — futon.
  • shoutingly — by way of shouting
  • shuttering — a solid or louvered movable cover for a window.
  • sieve tube — a vertical series of sieve cells in the phloem, specialized for the conduction of food materials.
  • sighthound — gazehound.
  • silhouette — a two-dimensional representation of the outline of an object, as a cutout or configurational drawing, uniformly filled in with black, especially a black-paper, miniature cutout of the outlines of a person's face in profile.
  • similitude — likeness; resemblance: a similitude of habits.
  • simulation — imitation or enactment, as of something anticipated or in testing.
  • simulative — to create a simulation, likeness, or model of (a situation, system, or the like): to simulate crisis conditions.
  • simulatory — to create a simulation, likeness, or model of (a situation, system, or the like): to simulate crisis conditions.
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