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6-letter words containing un

  • buntal — straw obtained from leaves of the talipot palm
  • bunter — a batter who deliberately bunts the ball
  • bunton — one of a number of struts reinforcing the walls of a shaft and dividing it into vertical compartments.
  • bunuel — Luis (lwis). 1900–83, Spanish film director. He collaborated with Salvador Dali on the first surrealist films, Un Chien andalou (1929) and L'Age d'or (1930). His later films include Viridiana (1961), Belle de jour (1966), and The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972)
  • bunyan — John. 1628–88, English preacher and writer, noted particularly for his allegory The Pilgrim's Progress (1678)
  • bunyip — a legendary monster said to inhabit swamps and lagoons of the Australian interior
  • butung — an island of Indonesia, southeast of Sulawesi: hilly and forested. Chief town: Baubau. Area: 4555 sq km (1759 sq miles)
  • cancun — a coastal resort in SE Mexico on the Yucatán Peninsula. Pop: 457 000 (2004 est)
  • chaunk — (cooking) A garnish made by frying mustard seed, asafoetida, and other whole spices in oil or ghee to release the flavours. Added to soups, curries, etc., at the end of cooking.
  • chaunt — chant
  • chunks — Plural form of chunk.
  • chunky — A chunky person is broad and heavy.
  • chunni — A long scarf worn by South Asian women.
  • clunch — hardened clay
  • clunge — (UK, vulgar, slang, mostly, internet) vagina.
  • clunks — Plural form of clunk.
  • clunky — If you describe something as clunky, you mean that it is solid, heavy, and rather awkward.
  • cohune — a tropical American feather palm, Attalea (or Orbignya) cohune, whose large oily nuts yield an oil similar to coconut oil
  • comune — The smallest civil administrative unit in Italy.
  • coruna — a seaport in NW Spain.
  • counts — Plural form of count.
  • county — A county is a region of Britain, Ireland, or the USA which has its own local government.
  • crunch — If you crunch something hard, such as a sweet, you crush it noisily between your teeth.
  • cunard — Sir Samuel (1787–1865). Canadian shipping magnate, founder of the Cunard line
  • cunaxa — the site near the lower Euphrates where Artaxerxes II defeated Cyrus the Younger in 401 bc
  • cuneal — wedge-shaped; cuneiform
  • cunene — a river in W central Angola, flowing S and W to the Atlantic Ocean. 750 miles (1207 km) long.
  • cuneus — a small wedge-shaped area of the cerebral cortex
  • cunner — a fish (Crenilabrus melops) of the wrasse family found in British coastal areas
  • dauncy — donsie.
  • dauner — an amble or walk
  • daunts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of daunt.
  • daunus — father of Euippe, second wife of Diomedes.
  • debunk — If you debunk a widely held belief, you show that it is false. If you debunk something that is widely admired, you show that it is not as good as people think it is.
  • defund — to remove the funds from (a person, organization, or scheme)
  • degunk — (informal, transitive) To remove gunk from.
  • detune — to change the pitch of (a stringed instrument), whether for musical or maintenance purposes
  • drunke — Obsolete spelling of drunk.
  • drunks — Plural form of drunk.
  • dunant — Jean Henri [French zhahn ahn-ree] /French ʒɑ̃ ɑ̃ˈri/ (Show IPA), 1828–1910, Swiss banker and philanthropist: founder of the Red Cross; Nobel Peace Prize 1901.
  • dunbarPaul Laurence, 1872–1906, U.S. poet.
  • duncan — died 1040, king of Scotland 1030–40: murdered by Macbeth.
  • dunces — Plural form of dunce.
  • dundas — a town in SE Ontario, in S Canada, near Hamilton.
  • dundee — a seaport in E Scotland, on the Firth of Tay: administrative center of the Tayside.
  • dunder — the thick lees from boiled sugar-cane juice used in the distillation of rum.
  • dunged — Simple past tense and past participle of dung.
  • dunger — an old decrepit car
  • dunhamKatherine, 1910?–2006, U.S. dancer and choreographer.
  • dunite — a coarse-grained igneous rock composed almost entirely of olivine.
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