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10-letter words containing ul

  • bull's-eye — The bull's-eye is the small circular area at the centre of a target.
  • bull-nosed — having a rounded end
  • bullbucker — a foreman who supervises fallers and buckers.
  • bulldogged — one of an English breed of medium-sized, short-haired, muscular dogs with prominent, undershot jaws, usually having a white and tan or brindled coat, raised originally for bullbaiting.
  • bulldogger — a person who brings an animal, esp a steer, to the ground by twisting its head from the horns
  • bullethead — a head considered similar in shape to a bullet, as that of a person with a high, domelike forehead and cranium and short hair.
  • bulletined — a brief account or statement, as of news or events, issued for the information of the public.
  • bulletwood — the wood of a tropical American sapotaceous tree, Manilkara bidentata, widely used for construction due to its durability and toughness
  • bullheaded — blindly stubborn; headstrong
  • bullionism — a person who advocates a system in which currency is directly convertible to gold or silver.
  • bullionist — a purveyor of bullion
  • bullroarer — a wooden slat attached to a thong that makes a roaring sound when the thong is whirled: used esp by native Australians in religious rites
  • bully beef — tinned corned beef
  • bully tree — any of several tropical American trees of the sapodilla family that yield balata
  • by default — If something happens by default, it happens only because something else which might have prevented it or changed it has not happened.
  • calculable — Calculable amounts or consequences can be calculated.
  • calculated — If something is calculated to have a particular effect, it is specially done or arranged in order to have that effect.
  • calculates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of calculate.
  • calculator — A calculator is a small electronic device that you use for making mathematical calculations.
  • calendulas — Plural form of calendula.
  • calmodulin — a protein found in most living cells; it regulates many enzymic processes that are dependent on calcium
  • calyculate — having a calycule
  • campanular — shaped like a bell
  • canaliculi — a small canal or tubular passage, as in bone.
  • candaulism — A practice or in which a man exposes his female partner, or images of her, to other people for their pleasure.
  • candy pull — a social gathering at which taffy or molasses candy is made.
  • cannulated — Simple past tense and past participle of cannulate.
  • capitulant — a person who capitulates
  • capitulary — any of the collections of ordinances promulgated by the Frankish kings (8th–10th centuries ad)
  • capitulate — If you capitulate, you stop resisting and do what someone else wants you to do.
  • capsulated — Enclosed in a capsule.
  • capsulised — Simple past tense and past participle of capsulise.
  • capsulized — Simple past tense and past participle of capsulize.
  • capsulizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of capsulize.
  • cargo cult — a religious movement of the SW Pacific, characterized by expectation of the return of spirits in ships or aircraft carrying goods that will provide for the needs of the followers
  • caruncular — Of, relating to, or like, a caruncle.
  • catapulted — an ancient military engine for hurling stones, arrows, etc.
  • catapultic — of or resembling a catapult
  • catenulate — (of certain spores) formed in a row or chain
  • caterwauls — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of caterwaul.
  • caulescent — having a stem clearly visible above the ground
  • cauliflory — the production of flowers on the trunk, branches, etc, of a woody plant, as opposed to the ends of the twigs
  • cellulated — of, relating to, resembling, or composed of very small cells
  • cellulitis — inflammation of any of the tissues of the body, characterized by fever, pain, swelling, and redness of the affected area
  • cellulosic — of or made from cellulose
  • chain rule — a theorem that may be used in the differentiation of the function of a function. It states that du/dx = (du/dy)(dy/dx), where y is a function of x and u a function of y
  • chartulary — cartulary
  • cheerfully — full of cheer; in good spirits: a cheerful person.
  • chock-full — Something that is chock-full is completely full.
  • choke-full — chock-full.
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