6-letter words containing un
- funnel — a cone-shaped utensil with a tube at the apex for conducting liquid or other substance through a small opening, as into a bottle, jug, or the like.
- funner — something that provides mirth or amusement: A picnic would be fun.
- fushun — a city in E Liaoning province, in NE China.
- gerund — (in certain languages, as Latin) a form regularly derived from a verb and functioning as a noun, having in Latin all case forms but the nominative, as Latin dicendī gen., dicendō, dat., abl., etc., “saying.”. See also gerundive (def 1).
- glunch — a frown
- gounod — Charles François [chahrlz fran-swah;; French sharl frahn-swa] /tʃɑrlz frænˈswɑ;; French ʃarl frɑ̃ˈswa/ (Show IPA), 1818–93, French composer.
- graunt — Archaic spelling of grant.
- ground — the act of grinding.
- grundy — Mrs. a narrow-minded, conventional person who is extremely critical of any breach of propriety.
- grunge — dirt; filth; rubbish.
- grungy — ugly, run-down, or dilapidated: a grungy, abandoned mill town.
- grunth — the sacred scripture of the Sikhs, original text compiled 1604.
- grunts — Plural form of grunt.
- grunty — Making grunting sounds.
- gudrun — (in the Volsunga Saga) the daughter of the king of the Nibelungs.
- gundog — Alternative spelling of gun dog.
- gungey — Alternative spelling of gungy.
- gungho — Alternative spelling of gung ho.
- gunite — a mixture of cement, sand or crushed slag, and water, sprayed over reinforcement as a lightweight concrete construction.
- gunman — a person armed with or expert in the use of a gun, especially one ready to use a gun unlawfully.
- gunmen — Plural form of gunman.
- gunnar — Scandinavian Legend. the husband of Brynhild: corresponds to Gunther in the Nibelungenlied.
- gunned — a weapon consisting of a metal tube, with mechanical attachments, from which projectiles are shot by the force of an explosive; a piece of ordnance.
- gunnel — the upper edge of the side or bulwark of a vessel.
- gunner — a person who operates a gun or cannon.
- gunsel — a criminal armed with a gun.
- gunshy — Being afraid to use a gun.
- gunter — Edmund, 1581–1626, English mathematician and astronomer: inventor of various measuring instruments and scales.
- guntur — a city in E Andhra Pradesh, in SE India.
- gunyah — an aboriginal hut or shelter.
- gunzip — (tool, compression) The decompression utility corresponding to gzip. In operating systems with links, gunzip is just a link to gzip and its function can be invoked by passing a "-d" flag to gzip.
- gurjun — any of several S or SE Asian dipterocarpaceous trees of the genus Dipterocarpus that yield a resin
- hamsun — Knut [knoot] /knut/ (Show IPA), 1859–1952, Norwegian novelist: Nobel Prize 1920.
- haunch — the hip.
- haunts — to visit habitually or appear to frequently as a spirit or ghost: to haunt a house; to haunt a person.
- hounds — Nautical. either of a pair of fore-and-aft members at the lower end of the head of a mast, for supporting the trestletrees, that support an upper mast at its heel. Compare cheek (def 12).
- hunged — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of hang.
- hunger — a compelling need or desire for food.
- hungry — having a desire, craving, or need for food; feeling hunger.
- hungus — (jargon) /huhng'g*s/ (Perhaps related to slang "humongous") Large, unwieldy, usually unmanageable. E.g. "TCP is a hungus piece of code."
- hunker — to squat on one's heels (often followed by down).
- hunkey — (US, pejorative) A Hungarian (or, more generally, eastern European) labourer.
- hunkie — a contemptuous term used to refer to a person of Hungarian or Slavic descent, especially an unskilled or semiskilled worker.
- hunted — to chase or search for (game or other wild animals) for the purpose of catching or killing.
- huntee — One who is hunted.
- hunter — John, 1728–93, Scottish surgeon, physiologist, and biologist.
- immune — protected from a disease or the like, as by inoculation.
- impune — Unpunished.
- in fun — If you do something in fun, you do it as a joke or for amusement, without intending to cause any harm.
- induna — an official functionary of a king or chief in South African Bantu societies.