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9-letter words containing rs

  • undershot — having the front teeth of the lower jaw projecting in front of the upper teeth, as a bulldog.
  • underside — an under or lower side.
  • undersign — to sign one's name under or at the end of (a letter or document); affix one's signature to.
  • undersize — undersized.
  • undersoil — subsoil.
  • undersold — to sell more cheaply than.
  • undersong — an accompanying secondary melody
  • underspin — backspin.
  • undiverse — of a different kind, form, character, etc.; unlike: a wide range of diverse opinions.
  • universal — of, relating to, or characteristic of all or the whole: universal experience.
  • unpursued — not followed or pursued
  • ursprache — a hypothetically reconstructed parent language, as Proto-Germanic, the ancestor of the Germanic languages.
  • ushership — the position or office of an usher
  • varsovian — a native or inhabitant of Warsaw.
  • versatile — capable of or adapted for turning easily from one to another of various tasks, fields of endeavor, etc.: a versatile writer.
  • versifier — to relate, describe, or treat (something) in verse.
  • versiform — changing in form
  • version 7 — (operating system)   (V7) The unsupported release of Unix ancestral to all current commercial versions. Brian Kernighan announced the release of V7 in summer 1979, at the Unix User's Group meeting in Toronto. Before the release of the POSIX/SVID standards, V7's features were often treated as a Unix portability baseline. Some old-timers impatient with commercialisation and kernel bloat still maintain that V7 was the Last True Unix. See BSD, USG Unix, System V.
  • wagoneers — Plural form of wagoneer.
  • wakeovers — Plural form of wakeover.
  • walkovers — Plural form of walkover.
  • wall bars — a series of horizontal bars attached to a wall and used in gymnastics
  • wallopers — Plural form of walloper.
  • wanderers — Mechanics. the drift of a gyroscope or a similar device.
  • war horse — a horse used in war; charger.
  • war-horse — a horse used in war; charger.
  • warhorses — Plural form of warhorse.
  • warreners — Plural form of warrener.
  • watershed — Chiefly British. the ridge or crest line dividing two drainage areas; water parting; divide.
  • waterside — the margin, bank, or shore of a river, lake, ocean, etc.
  • waterskin — The skin of a goat used as a container for water.
  • wattersonHenry ("Marse Henry") 1840–1921, U.S. journalist and political leader.
  • wayfarers — Plural form of wayfarer.
  • wee hours — the first few hours after midnight
  • wet nurse — woman hired to breast-feeds another's child
  • wet-nurse — to act as a wet nurse to (an infant).
  • whistlers — Plural form of whistler.
  • whiteners — Plural form of whitener.
  • wigmakers — Plural form of wigmaker.
  • wingovers — Plural form of wingover.
  • winterset — a drama in verse (1935) by Maxwell Anderson.
  • wonderers — to think or speculate curiously: to wonder about the origin of the solar system.
  • woodhorse — a frame for holding wood for sawing; a sawhorse
  • workhorse — a horse used for plowing, hauling, and other heavy labor, as distinguished from a riding horse, racehorse, etc.
  • worse off — poorer
  • worseness — the state or condition of being worse
  • worsening — Present participle of worsen.
  • worshiped — reverent honor and homage paid to God or a sacred personage, or to any object regarded as sacred.
  • worshiper — reverent honor and homage paid to God or a sacred personage, or to any object regarded as sacred.
  • wranglers — Plural form of wrangler.
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