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13-letter words containing you

  • as you please — You can use as you please in expressions such as bold as you please or casually as you please or charming as you please in order to emphasize what you are saying.
  • bite your lip — If you bite your lip, you try very hard not to show the anger or distress that you are feeling.
  • brigham young — Andrew (Jackson, Jr.) born 1932, U.S. clergyman, civil-rights leader, politician, and diplomat: mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, 1981–89.
  • bully for you — well done! bravo!
  • by yourselves — if you are by yourselves, or all by yourselves, you are alone
  • by-your-leave — a request for permission (esp in the phrase without so much as a by-your-leave)
  • fare-you-well — a state of perfection: The meal was done to a fare-thee-well.
  • he's your man — he's the person needed (for a particular task, role, job, etc)
  • how-do-you-do — a greeting; salutation: She smiled and gave him a how-do-you-do fit for a king.
  • i told you so — If someone disagrees with you or refuses to do what you suggest and you are eventually proved to be right, you can say 'I told you so'.
  • i'll show you — You can say 'I'll show you' to threaten or warn someone that you are going to make them admit that they are wrong.
  • if i were you — You say 'if I were you' to someone when you are giving them advice.
  • if you ask me — You can say 'if you ask me' to emphasize that you are stating your personal opinion.
  • if you please — expressing mild outrage
  • isle of youthIsle of, an island in the Caribbean, a special municipality in S Cuba. 1182 sq. mi. (3060 sq. km).
  • kim young sam — born 1927, president of South Korea 1993–98.
  • not your type — If you say that someone is not your type, you mean that they are not the sort of person who you usually find attractive.
  • off with you! — go away! depart!
  • old and young — people of all ages
  • on your guard — If you are on your guard or on guard, you are being very careful because you think a situation might become difficult or dangerous.
  • on your marks — On your marks in British English, or on your mark in American English, is a command given to runners at the beginning of a race in order to get them into the correct position to start.
  • on your terms — If you do something on your terms, you do it under conditions that you decide because you are in a position of power.
  • pay as you go — the act of paying or being paid; payment.
  • pay-as-you-go — the principle or practice of paying for goods and services at the time of purchase, rather than relying on credit.
  • right you are — If someone says 'right you are', they are agreeing to do something in a very willing and happy way.
  • roll-your-own — a cigarette that one has rolled oneself.
  • see you later — an expression of farewell
  • tell you what — You say 'Tell you what' to introduce a suggestion or offer.
  • there you are — an expression used when handing a person something requested or desired
  • wend your way — If you wend your way in a particular direction, you walk, especially slowly, casually, or carefully, in that direction.
  • what have you — the true nature or identity of something, or the sum of its characteristics: a lecture on the whats and hows of crop rotation.
  • what you will — whatever you like
  • what's yours? — what would you like to drink?
  • you can't win — an expression of resignation after an unsuccessful attempt to overcome difficulties
  • you don't say — You can use 'You don't say' to express surprise at what someone has told you. People often use this expression to indicate that in fact they are not surprised.
  • you know what — a thing or person that the speaker cannot or does not want to specify
  • young ireland — a movement or party of Irish patriots in the 1840s who split with Daniel O'Connell because they favoured a more violent policy than that which he promoted
  • young-looking — having the appearance of youth
  • your nineties — the ages between 90–99
  • yourdon, inc. — (company)   The company founded in 1974 by Edward Yourdon to provide educational, publishing, and consulting services in state-of-the-art software engineering technology. Over the next 12 years, the company grew to a staff of over 150 people, with offices throughout North America and Europe. As CEO of the company, Yourdon oversaw an operation that trained over 250,000 people around the world; the company was sold in 1986 and eventually became part of CGI, the French software company that is now part of IBM. The publishing division, Yourdon Press (now part of Prentice Hall), has produced over 150 technical computer books on a wide range of software engineering topics; many of these "classics" are used as standard university computer science textbooks.
  • youth culture — the activities and behaviour associated with young people
  • youth custody — (in Britain) a sentence of from four to eighteen months' detention passed on a person aged 15 to 21
  • youtube, inc. — (web, video)   An on-line video file sharing web site, founded on 2005-02-14 by Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim. Anyone can upload video clips to the site and these can then be viewed by others. In 2007, many such sites exist but YouTube is the best known. YouTube is funded by Sequoia Capital. In November 2006, YouTube was bought by Google Inc.. YouTube has partnership deals with content providers such as CBS, BBC, Universal Music Group, Sony Music Group, Warner Music Group, NBA, The Sundance Channel and many more.

On this page, we collect all 13-letter words with YOU. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 13-letter word that contains YOU to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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