Upwords Words Starting With U

4,812 words found — all lengths, starting with U

Use this list of Upwords Words Starting With U to find your next winning play. Click any word to unscramble it and see all possible words from those letters.
Starting With U Ending With U Containing U
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ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

3-Letter Words (15)

4-Letter Words (37)

UDOS (5) UGHS (8) UGLY (8) [noun] Ugliness. | [noun] An ugly person or thing. | [noun] A shade for the face, projecting from a bonnet. UKES (8) [noun] The training partner against whom tori performs a move. | [noun] (Japanese fiction) A passive or submissive male fictional character in a same-sex relationship; a bottom. | [noun] A small four-stringed guitar. ULAN (4) ULNA (4) [noun] The bone of the forearm that extends from the elbow to the wrist on the side opposite to the thumb, corresponding to the fibula of the hind limb. Also, the corresponding bone in the forelimb of any vertebrate. ULUS (4) [noun] An all-purpose knife traditionally used by Yup'ik, Inuit, and Aleut women. | [noun] Anglicized spelling of ʻulu (Hawaiian for breadfruit) | [noun] An administrative division of the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Russia, similar to райо́н in Russia proper. ULVA (7) UMBO (8) [noun] A boss, or rounded elevation, or a corresponding depression, in a palate, disk, or membrane. For example the umbo in the integument of the larvæ of echinoderms or in the tympanic membrane of the ear. | [noun] One of the lateral prominences just above the hinge of a bivalve shell. | [noun] A bump or protrusion on the top of the cap. UMPS (8) [noun] An umpire. | [verb] To act as an umpire. UNAI (4) UNAU (4) UNBE (6) UNCI (6) UNCO (6) [adjective] Strange, weird. | [adverb] Very. | [adjective] Uncoordinated. UNDE (5) UNDO (5) [noun] An operation that reverses a previous action. | [verb] To reverse the effects of an action. | [verb] To unfasten. UNDY (8) [adjective] Waving or wavy; applied to ordinaries, or division lines. UNIT (4) [noun] A particular, minute unit of mass, defined differently for different substances, but so that varying substances of the same general type have the property that one international unit of the one has the same effect on the human body as one international unit of the other. | [noun] Oneness, singularity, seen as a component of a whole number; a magnitude of one. | [noun] A standard measure of a quantity. UNTO (4) [preposition] Up to, indicating a motion towards a thing and then stopping at it. | [preposition] To, indicating an indirect object. | [conjunction] Up to the time or degree that; until. UPAS (6) [noun] (usually countable) A tree, Antiaris toxicaria, of the mulberry family, common in the forests of Java and the neighboring islands, with poisonous secretions. | [noun] A virulent poison used in Java and the adjacent islands for poisoning arrows derived from the tree. | [noun] A poison prepared from the climbing plant Strychnos tieute. UPBY (11) UPDO (7) [noun] A woman's hairdo in which most hair is kept above the neck UPON (6) [adverb] Being the target of an action. | [preposition] Physically above and in contact with. | [preposition] Physically directly supported by. URBS (6) [noun] A walled city in Ancient Rome. URDS (5) UREA (4) [noun] A water-soluble organic compound, CO(NH2)2, formed by the metabolism of proteins and excreted in the urine. | [noun] Any N-substituted derivative of urea, with the general formula (R1R2N)CO(NR3R4). URGE (5) [noun] A strong desire; an itch to do something. | [verb] To press; to push; to drive; to impel; to force onward. | [verb] To press the mind or will of; to ply with motives, arguments, persuasion, or importunity. URIC (6) [adjective] Pertaining to, contained in, or obtained from urine. URNS (4) [noun] A vase with a footed base. | [noun] A metal vessel for serving tea or coffee. | [noun] A vessel for the ashes or cremains of a deceased person. URSA (4) URUS (4) [noun] The aurochs. USED (5) [verb] To utilize or employ. | [verb] To accustom; to habituate. (Now common only in participial form. Uses the same pronunciation as the noun; see usage notes.) | [verb] (except in past tense) To habitually do; to be wont to do. (Now chiefly in past-tense forms; see used to.) USER (4) [noun] One who uses or makes use of something, a consumer/client or an express or implied licensee (free user) or a trespasser. | [noun] A person who uses drugs, especially illegal drugs. | [noun] A person who uses a computer or a computing network, especially a person who has received a user account. USES (4) [noun] The act of using. | [noun] The act of consuming alcohol or narcotics. | [noun] (followed by "of") Usefulness, benefit. UTAS (4) UVEA (7) [noun] The middle of the three concentric layers that make up the eye; it is pigmented and vascular, and comprises the choroid, the ciliary body, and the iris.

5-Letter Words (117)

UDDER (7) [noun] An organ formed of the mammary glands of female quadruped mammals, particularly ruminants such as cattle, goats, sheep and deer. | [noun] (impolite) A woman's breast. UHLAN (8) [noun] A lancer, a soldier armed with a lance in a former light cavalry unit of the Polish, Prussian/German, Austrian, and Russian armies. UKASE (9) [noun] An authoritative proclamation; an edict, especially decreed by a Russian czar or (later) emperor. | [noun] Any absolutist order or arrogant proclamation ULAMA (7) [noun] A (modern) ball game, descended from tlachtli. | [noun] The devil bird (an avian cryptid of Sri Lanka) ULANS (5) ULCER (7) [noun] An open sore of the skin, eyes or mucous membrane, often caused by an initial abrasion and generally maintained by an inflammation and/or an infection. | [noun] Peptic ulcer | [noun] Anything that festers and corrupts like an open sore; a vice in character. ULEMA (7) [noun] An educated scholar of Islamic law; a member of the ulema class ULNAD (6) ULNAE (5) [noun] The bone of the forearm that extends from the elbow to the wrist on the side opposite to the thumb, corresponding to the fibula of the hind limb. Also, the corresponding bone in the forelimb of any vertebrate. ULNAR (5) ULNAS (5) [noun] The bone of the forearm that extends from the elbow to the wrist on the side opposite to the thumb, corresponding to the fibula of the hind limb. Also, the corresponding bone in the forelimb of any vertebrate. ULPAN (7) ULTRA (5) [noun] An ultraroyalist in France. | [noun] An extremist, especially an ultranationalist. | [noun] An especially devoted football fan, typically associated with the intimidating use of extremist slogans, pyrotechnics and sometimes hooligan violence. ULVAS (8) UMBEL (9) [noun] A flat-topped or rounded flower-cluster (= inflorescence) in which the individual flower stalks arise from the same point, the youngest flowers being at the centre. UMBER (9) [noun] A brown clay, somewhat darker than ochre, which contains iron and manganese oxides. | [noun] A grayling. | [noun] A dusky brown African wading bird (Scopus umbretta) allied to the shoebill and herons; a hamerkop. UMBOS (9) [noun] A boss, or rounded elevation, or a corresponding depression, in a palate, disk, or membrane. For example the umbo in the integument of the larvæ of echinoderms or in the tympanic membrane of the ear. | [noun] One of the lateral prominences just above the hinge of a bivalve shell. | [noun] A bump or protrusion on the top of the cap. UMBRA (9) [noun] The fully shaded inner region of a shadow cast by an opaque object. | [noun] The central region of a sunspot. | [noun] A shadow. UMIAC (9) UMIAK (11) [noun] A large, open boat made of skins stretched over a wooden frame that is propelled by paddles; used by the Eskimos for transportation. UMIAQ (16) UMPED (10) [verb] To act as an umpire. UNAIS (5) UNAPT (7) [adjective] Not apt, inappropriate, unsuited. | [adjective] Unaccustomed. UNARM (7) [verb] To disarm, to remove the armour and weapons from. | [verb] To remove one's armour. UNARY (8) [noun] The unary numeral system; the bijective base-1 numeral system. | [noun] Unary coding, an entropy encoding for natural numbers. | [adjective] Consisting of or involving a single element or component. UNAUS (5) UNBAN (7) [verb] To lift a ban against. UNBAR (7) [verb] To remove an impediment that obstructs the passage of (someone or something). | [verb] To remove a prohibition. | [verb] To unlock or unbolt a door that had been locked or bolted with a bar. UNBID (8) UNBOX (14) [verb] To remove from a box. | [verb] To retrieve (a value of a primitive type) from the object in which it is boxed. UNCAP (9) [verb] To remove a cap or cover from. | [verb] To take off one's cap. UNCIA (7) UNCLE (7) [noun] The brother or brother-in-law of one’s parent. | [noun] The male cousin of one’s parent. | [noun] A companion to one's (usually unmarried) mother. UNCOS (7) UNCOY (10) UNCUS (7) UNCUT (7) [adjective] Not cut. | [adjective] (of a gemstone) Not cut or ground to the desired shape. | [adjective] (of a book) Not having the page edges trimmed. UNDEE (6) UNDER (6) [adjective] Being lower; being beneath something. | [adjective] Under anesthesia, especially general anesthesia; sedated. | [adverb] In a way lower or less than. UNDID (7) [verb] To reverse the effects of an action. | [verb] To unfasten. | [verb] To impoverish or ruin, as in reputation; to cause the downfall of. UNDUE (6) [adjective] Excessive; going beyond that what is natural or sufficient. | [adjective] That which ought not to be done; illegal; unjustified. | [adjective] (of a payment etc) Not owing or payable. UNFED (9) [noun] A mosquito that has not had a blood meal. | [adjective] Not fed. | [adjective] Unsupported. UNFIT (8) [verb] To make unfit; to render unsuitable, spoil, disqualify. | [adjective] Not fit; not having the correct requirements. | [adjective] Not fit, not having a good physical demeanor. UNFIX (15) UNGOT (6) UNHAT (8) UNHIP (10) [adjective] Not hip; uncool, unfashionable. UNIFY (11) [verb] Cause to become one; make into a unit; consolidate; merge; combine. | [verb] Become one. UNION (5) [noun] The act of uniting or joining two or more things into one. | [noun] The state of being united or joined; a state of unity or harmony. | [noun] That which is united, or made one; something formed by a combination or coalition of parts or members; a confederation; a consolidated body; a league. UNITE (5) [noun] A British gold coin worth 20 shillings, first produced during the reign of King James I, and bearing a legend indicating the king's intention of uniting the kingdoms of England and Scotland. | [verb] To bring together as one. | [verb] To come together as one. UNITS (5) [noun] A particular, minute unit of mass, defined differently for different substances, but so that varying substances of the same general type have the property that one international unit of the one has the same effect on the human body as one international unit of the other. | [noun] Oneness, singularity, seen as a component of a whole number; a magnitude of one. | [noun] A standard measure of a quantity. UNITY (8) [noun] Oneness; the state or fact of being one undivided entity. | [noun] Agreement; harmony. | [noun] A single undivided thing, seen as complete in itself. UNLAY (8) [verb] To untwist. UNLED (6) UNLET (5) [adjective] (of property) Not let (not in temporary possession in return for rent) UNLIT (5) [adjective] Not lit UNMAN (7) [verb] To castrate; to remove the manhood of. | [verb] To sap (a person) of the strength, whether physical or emotional, required to deal with a situation. | [verb] To deprive of men. UNMET (7) [adjective] Not met; unfulfilled; not achieved UNMEW (10) UNMIX (14) UNPEG (8) [verb] To remove from a peg. UNPEN (7) UNPIN (7) [verb] To unfasten by removing a pin. | [verb] To detach (an icon, application, etc.) from the place where it was previously pinned. | [verb] To get out of a pin UNRIG (6) [verb] To remove the rigging from (a vessel, etc.). | [verb] To disable. | [verb] To undress (someone). UNRIP (7) [verb] To open something by ripping/tearing. UNSAY (8) [verb] To withdraw, retract (something said). | [verb] To not have said (since this is physically impossible, usually in the subjunctive). UNSET (5) [verb] To make not set. | [adjective] Not set; not fixed or appointed. | [adjective] Not mounted or placed in a setting. UNSEW (8) UNSEX (12) [verb] To deprive of sexual attributes or characteristics. | [verb] To sterilize (deprive of the ability to procreate); to castrate. UNTIE (5) [verb] To loosen, as something interlaced or knotted; to disengage the parts of. | [verb] To free from fastening or from restraint; to let loose; to unbind. | [verb] To resolve; to unfold; to clear. UNTIL (5) [preposition] Up to the time of (something happening). | [preposition] Up to (a certain place) | [preposition] Before (a time). UNWED (9) [noun] One who is not married; a bachelor or a spinster. | [verb] To annul the marriage of. | [verb] To separate. UNWIT (8) UNWON (8) UNZIP (16) [verb] To open something using a zipper. | [verb] To come open by means of a zipper. | [verb] To decompress (a zip file). UPBOW (12) UPBYE (12) UPDOS (8) [noun] A woman's hairdo in which most hair is kept above the neck UPDRY (11) UPEND (8) [verb] To end up; to set on end. | [verb] To tip or turn over. | [verb] To destroy, invalidate, overthrow, or defeat. UPLIT (7) UPPED (10) [verb] To increase or raise. | [verb] To promote. | [verb] (usually in combination with another verb) To act suddenly. UPPER (9) [noun] A stimulant, such as amphetamine, that increases energy and decreases appetite. | [noun] The upper portion of something | [noun] Someone with higher social standing UPSET (7) [noun] Disturbance or disruption. | [noun] An unexpected victory of a competitor or candidate that was not favored to win. | [noun] (automobile insurance) An overturn. URAEI (5) [noun] A representation of the sacred asp, symbolising supreme power in ancient Egypt. URARE (5) URARI (5) URASE (5) URATE (5) [noun] Any salt of uric acid. URBAN (7) [adjective] Related to the (or any) city. | [adjective] Characteristic of city life. | [adjective] Relating to contemporary African American culture. URBIA (7) UREAL (5) UREAS (5) UREDO (6) UREIC (7) URGED (7) [verb] To press; to push; to drive; to impel; to force onward. | [verb] To press the mind or will of; to ply with motives, arguments, persuasion, or importunity. | [verb] To provoke; to exasperate. URGER (6) [noun] One who urges. URGES (6) [noun] A strong desire; an itch to do something. | [verb] To press; to push; to drive; to impel; to force onward. | [verb] To press the mind or will of; to ply with motives, arguments, persuasion, or importunity. URIAL (5) [noun] A bearded reddish sheep, subspecies of Ovis orientalis (including Ovis orientalis vignei), previously classified as Ovis vignei, being endemic to southern Asia and believed to be a wild ancestor of domestic sheep. URINE (5) [noun] Liquid waste consisting of water, salts and urea, which is made in the kidneys, stored in the bladder, then released through the urethra. | [verb] To urinate. URSAE (5) USAGE (6) [noun] The manner or the amount of using; use. | [noun] Habit or accepted practice. | [noun] The ways and contexts in which spoken and written words are used, determined by a lexicographer's intuition or from corpus analysis. USERS (5) [noun] One who uses or makes use of something, a consumer/client or an express or implied licensee (free user) or a trespasser. | [noun] A person who uses drugs, especially illegal drugs. | [noun] A person who uses a computer or a computing network, especially a person who has received a user account. USHER (8) [noun] A person, in a church, cinema etc., who escorts people to their seats. | [noun] A male escort at a wedding. | [noun] A doorkeeper in a courtroom. USING (6) [verb] To utilize or employ. | [verb] To accustom; to habituate. (Now common only in participial form. Uses the same pronunciation as the noun; see usage notes.) | [verb] (except in past tense) To habitually do; to be wont to do. (Now chiefly in past-tense forms; see used to.) USNEA (5) USQUE (14) USUAL (5) [noun] The typical state of something, or something that is typical. | [noun] A specific good or service (e.g. a drink) that someone typically orders. | [adjective] Most commonly occurring; typical. USURP (7) [verb] To seize power from another, usually by illegitimate means. | [verb] To use and assume the coat of arms of another person. | [verb] To take the place rightfully belonging to someone or something else. USURY (8) [noun] An exorbitant rate of interest, in excess of any legal rates or at least immorally. | [noun] The practice of lending money at such rates. | [noun] The practice of lending money at interest. UTERI (5) [noun] The womb, an organ of the female reproductive system in which the young are conceived and develop until birth. UTILE (5) [noun] A theoretical unit of measure of utility, for indicating a supposed quantity of satisfaction derived from an economic transaction. | [adjective] Useful. UTTER (5) [adjective] Outer; furthest out, most remote. | [adjective] Outward. | [adjective] Absolute, unconditional, total, complete. | [verb] To produce (speech or other sounds) with one's voice. UVEAL (8) UVEAS (8) [noun] The middle of the three concentric layers that make up the eye; it is pigmented and vascular, and comprises the choroid, the ciliary body, and the iris. UVULA (8) [noun] The fleshy appendage that hangs from the back of the palate, that closes the nasopharynx during swallowing. | [noun] The slight elevation in the mucous membrane immediately behind the internal urethral orifice of the urinary bladder, caused by the middle lobe of the prostate. | [noun] An object so suspended inside a bell that it may hit the bell and cause it to ring; a clapper.

6-Letter Words (348)

UBIETY (11) [noun] The state of existing in a specific point in space, thereness. | [noun] Omnipresence; ubiquity. UBIQUE (17) UDDERS (8) [noun] An organ formed of the mammary glands of female quadruped mammals, particularly ruminants such as cattle, goats, sheep and deer. | [noun] (impolite) A woman's breast. UGLIER (7) [adjective] Displeasing to the eye; not aesthetically pleasing. | [adjective] Displeasing to the ear or some other sense. | [adjective] Offensive to one's sensibilities or morality. UGLIES (7) UGLIFY (13) UGLILY (10) UGSOME (9) UHLANS (9) [noun] A lancer, a soldier armed with a lance in a former light cavalry unit of the Polish, Prussian/German, Austrian, and Russian armies. UKASES (10) [noun] An authoritative proclamation; an edict, especially decreed by a Russian czar or (later) emperor. | [noun] Any absolutist order or arrogant proclamation ULAMAS (8) ULCERS (8) [noun] An open sore of the skin, eyes or mucous membrane, often caused by an initial abrasion and generally maintained by an inflammation and/or an infection. | [noun] Peptic ulcer | [noun] Anything that festers and corrupts like an open sore; a vice in character. ULEMAS (8) ULLAGE (7) [noun] In a wine bottle, the empty space between the cork and the top of the wine. | [noun] In a cask or barrel, the empty space, occupied by air, that is created by not completely filling the cask or barrel, or through spillage. | [noun] The topping-up of such a barrel with fresh wine. ULSTER (6) [noun] (clothing, men's attire) A long, loose overcoat made of wool or other rough material, often called a greatcoat, which sometimes features an attached shoulder cape covering the back and sleeves, and which can sometimes be buttoned in front. ULTIMA (8) ULTIMO (8) [adjective] On the last day (of a specified month). | [adverb] Of last month. ULTRAS (6) [noun] An ultraroyalist in France. | [noun] An extremist, especially an ultranationalist. | [noun] An especially devoted football fan, typically associated with the intimidating use of extremist slogans, pyrotechnics and sometimes hooligan violence. UMBELS (10) [noun] A flat-topped or rounded flower-cluster (= inflorescence) in which the individual flower stalks arise from the same point, the youngest flowers being at the centre. UMBERS (10) [noun] A brown clay, somewhat darker than ochre, which contains iron and manganese oxides. | [noun] A grayling. | [noun] A dusky brown African wading bird (Scopus umbretta) allied to the shoebill and herons; a hamerkop. UMBLES (10) [noun] Animal entrails, especially of a deer. UMBRAE (10) [noun] The fully shaded inner region of a shadow cast by an opaque object. | [noun] The central region of a sunspot. | [noun] A shadow. UMBRAL (10) UMBRAS (10) [noun] The fully shaded inner region of a shadow cast by an opaque object. | [noun] The central region of a sunspot. | [noun] A shadow. UMIACK (14) UMIACS (10) UMIAKS (12) [noun] A large, open boat made of skins stretched over a wooden frame that is propelled by paddles; used by the Eskimos for transportation. UMIAQS (17) UMLAUT (8) [noun] An assimilatory process whereby a vowel is pronounced more like a following vocoid that is separated by one or more consonants. | [noun] The umlaut process (as above) that occurred historically in Germanic languages whereby back vowels became front vowels when followed by syllable containing a front vocoid (e.g. Germanic lūsiz > Old English lȳs(i) > Modern English lice). | [noun] A vowel so assimilated. UMPING (11) [verb] To act as an umpire. UMPIRE (10) [noun] The official who presides over a tennis game sat on a high chair. | [noun] One of the two white-coated officials who preside over a cricket match. | [noun] One of usually 4 officials who preside over a baseball game. UNABLE (8) [adjective] Not able; lacking a certain ability. | [verb] To render unable; disable UNAGED (8) UNAKIN (10) UNARMS (8) [verb] To disarm, to remove the armour and weapons from. | [verb] To remove one's armour. UNAWED (10) [adjective] Not awed; not afraid, impressed or in awe. UNBANS (8) [verb] To lift a ban against. UNBARS (8) [verb] To remove an impediment that obstructs the passage of (someone or something). | [verb] To remove a prohibition. | [verb] To unlock or unbolt a door that had been locked or bolted with a bar. UNBEAR (8) UNBELT (8) [verb] To remove a belt | [verb] To relax, unwind UNBEND (9) [verb] To remove a bend so as to make, or allow to become, straight | [verb] To release (a load) from a strain or from exertion; to set at ease for a time; to relax. | [verb] To unfasten sails from the spars or stays to which are attached for use. UNBENT (8) [verb] To remove a bend so as to make, or allow to become, straight | [verb] To release (a load) from a strain or from exertion; to set at ease for a time; to relax. | [verb] To unfasten sails from the spars or stays to which are attached for use. UNBIND (9) [verb] To take bindings off. | [verb] To set free from a debt, contract or promise. | [verb] To disable some kind of connection in software, such as a key binding. UNBOLT (8) [verb] To unlock by undoing the bolts of. UNBORN (8) [noun] A single unborn offspring at any stage of gestation. | [noun] Unborn offspring collectively. | [adjective] Not yet born; yet to come; future. UNBRED (9) UNBUSY (11) UNCAGE (9) [verb] To take out of or release from a cage. | [verb] (by extension) To unleash; to remove from restraints. UNCAKE (12) UNCAPS (10) [verb] To remove a cap or cover from. | [verb] To take off one's cap. UNCASE (8) [verb] To take out of a case or covering; to uncover. | [verb] To strip; to flay. | [verb] To display, or spread to view, as a flag, or the colors of a military body. UNCHIC (13) UNCIAE (8) UNCIAL (8) [adjective] Of or relating to an ounce, or an inch, especially to letters printed an inch high. | [noun] A style of writing using uncial letters. | [noun] A letter in this style. UNCINI (8) UNCLAD (9) [adjective] Without clothing or other covering. UNCLES (8) [noun] The brother or brother-in-law of one’s parent. | [noun] The male cousin of one’s parent. | [noun] A companion to one's (usually unmarried) mother. UNCLIP (10) [verb] To release something by removing a clip. UNCLOG (9) [verb] To remove a blockage from. | [verb] To have a blockage removed. UNCOCK (14) UNCOIL (8) [verb] To unwind or untwist (something). | [verb] To unwind or untwist oneself. UNCOOL (8) [adjective] Not in accord with the current fashion, standards or mores of a particular group; not cool UNCORK (12) [verb] To open (a bottle or other container sealed with a cork or stopper) by removing the cork or stopper from. | [verb] To release. UNCUFF (14) UNCURB (10) UNCURL (8) [verb] To straighten out from being curled up. UNCUTE (8) UNDEAD (8) [noun] (horror fiction) A creature that is undead; that is, dead but still animate. | [noun] (horror fiction) Those creatures which are undead; that is, dead yet still animate. | [adjective] Pertaining to a corpse, though having qualities of life. UNDIES (7) [verb] To come back to life after having died. | [verb] To become undead. | [noun] Underwear, underpants UNDINE (7) [noun] A female water-sprite or nymph. | [noun] The elemental being of water. | [noun] A small flask used to apply lotions to the eye. UNDOCK (13) [verb] To remove (a ship) from a dock. | [verb] To remove from a docking station. | [verb] To drag (a user interface element, such as a toolbar) away from its fixed position so that it floats freely. UNDOER (7) UNDOES (7) [verb] To reverse the effects of an action. | [verb] To unfasten. | [verb] To impoverish or ruin, as in reputation; to cause the downfall of. UNDONE (7) [adjective] Not done. | [verb] To reverse the effects of an action. | [verb] To unfasten. UNDRAW (10) UNDREW (10) UNDULY (10) [adverb] Undeservedly; in a way that is not warranted. UNDYED (11) [verb] To remove dye from. | [adjective] Not dyed; in its natural colour UNEASE (6) [noun] Trouble; misery; a feeling of disquiet or concern. | [verb] To make uneasy or uncomfortable UNEASY (9) [adjective] Not easy; difficult. | [adjective] Restless; disturbed by pain, anxiety | [adjective] Not easy in manner; constrained UNEVEN (9) [verb] To make uneven. | [adjective] Not even | [adjective] Not level or smooth UNFAIR (9) [verb] To make ugly | [adjective] Not beautiful; uncomely; unattractive | [adjective] Sorrowful; sad UNFELT (9) [adjective] Not felt or experienced; without feeling or sensing. | [adjective] Insincere. UNFITS (9) [verb] To make unfit; to render unsuitable, spoil, disqualify. UNFIXT (16) UNFOLD (10) [noun] In functional programming, a kind of higher-order function that is the opposite of a fold. | [verb] To undo a folding. | [verb] To turn out; to happen; to develop. UNFOND (10) UNFREE (9) [adjective] Not free; especially of a tenant who was bound to a manor. UNFURL (9) [verb] To unroll or release something that had been rolled up, typically a sail or a flag. | [verb] To roll out or debut anything. | [verb] To open up by unrolling. UNGIRD (8) [verb] To loosen the girdle or band of. | [verb] To unbind or unload. UNGIRT (7) UNGLUE (7) UNGUAL (7) [noun] A modified toe bone, typically ending in a hoof or claw. | [adjective] Pertaining to or resembling a creature's nail, claw or hoof; unguinal. UNGUES (7) [noun] The nail, claw, talon, or hoof of a finger, toe, or other appendage. | [noun] One of the terminal hooks on the foot of an insect. | [noun] The slender base of a petal in some flowers; a claw; an ungula. UNGUIS (7) [noun] The nail, claw, talon, or hoof of a finger, toe, or other appendage. | [noun] One of the terminal hooks on the foot of an insect. | [noun] The slender base of a petal in some flowers; a claw; an ungula. UNGULA (7) UNHAIR (9) UNHAND (10) [verb] To release from the hand; to let go. UNHANG (10) [verb] Hypothetically, to undo the execution of (a person) by hanging. | [verb] To take down something (such as a picture) from a hanging position UNHATS (9) UNHELM (11) UNHEWN (12) UNHOLY (12) [adjective] Not holy; (by extension) evil, impure, or otherwise perverted. | [adjective] Dreadful, terrible, or otherwise atrocious. UNHOOD (10) [verb] To remove the hood from. UNHOOK (13) [verb] To remove from a hook. | [verb] To unfasten by means of hooks. | [verb] To unfasten the bra of (its wearer). UNHUNG (10) [adjective] (of a person) Not (yet) executed by hanging; unhanged. | [adjective] (of a painting) Not selected for exhibition. | [adjective] (of game) Cooked without being hung to mature. UNHURT (9) [adjective] Not hurt; unharmed or unscathed UNHUSK (13) [verb] To remove the husk of. UNIFIC (11) UNIONS (6) [noun] The act of uniting or joining two or more things into one. | [noun] The state of being united or joined; a state of unity or harmony. | [noun] That which is united, or made one; something formed by a combination or coalition of parts or members; a confederation; a consolidated body; a league. UNIPOD (9) [noun] Monopod UNIQUE (15) [noun] A thing without a like; something unequalled or unparallelled. | [adjective] Being the only one of its kind; unequaled, unparalleled or unmatched. | [adjective] Of a feature, such that only one holder has it. UNISEX (13) [adjective] Designed to be suitable for any sex or gender. | [adjective] Not distinguished on the basis of sex or gender. UNISON (6) [noun] (acoustics) Identical pitch between two notes or sounds; the simultaneous playing of notes of identical pitch (or separated by one or more octaves). | [noun] (acoustics) A sound or note having the same pitch as another, especially when used as the base note for an interval; a unison string. | [noun] The state of being in harmony or agreement; harmonious agreement or togetherness, synchronisation. UNITED (7) [verb] To bring together as one. | [verb] To come together as one. | [adjective] Joined into a single entity. UNITER (6) UNITES (6) [verb] To bring together as one. | [verb] To come together as one. UNJUST (13) [adjective] Not fair, just or right. UNKEND (11) UNKENT (10) UNKEPT (12) [adjective] Not kept (especially of promises). UNKIND (11) [adjective] Lacking kindness, sympathy, benevolence, gratitude, or similar; cruel, harsh or unjust; ungrateful. | [adjective] Not kind; contrary to nature or type; unnatural. | [adjective] Having no race or kindred; childless. UNKINK (14) [verb] To remove the kinks from. UNKNIT (10) [verb] To unravel. | [verb] To undo knitted stitches by reversing the knitting motion. UNKNOT (10) [noun] In knot theory, a loop that is not knotted. | [verb] To unfasten (a knot). UNLACE (8) [verb] To remove the knot from laces; to undo laces. | [verb] To loosen the clothing of (a person). | [verb] To remove (film) from a projector. UNLADE (7) [verb] To unload. | [verb] To disburden; take the burden from; relieve. | [verb] To discharge the cargo from. UNLAID (7) [adjective] Not laid, not placed | [adjective] Not laid by exorcism | [adjective] (of a person) not having had sexual intercourse UNLASH (9) [verb] To unfasten. UNLAYS (9) [verb] To untwist. UNLEAD (7) UNLESS (6) [conjunction] Except on a specified condition; if not. | [conjunction] If not; used with counterfactual conditionals. | [conjunction] Except if; used with hypothetical conditionals. UNLIKE (10) [noun] Something that is not like something else; something different. | [adjective] Not like; dissimilar (to); having no resemblance. | [adjective] Unequal. | [noun] The act of withdrawing one's like from a post on social media. UNLINK (10) [noun] (knot theory) A link that is equivalent (under ambient isotopy) to finitely many disjoint circles in the plane. | [verb] To decouple; to remove a link from, or separate the links of. | [verb] To delete (a file). UNLIVE (9) UNLOAD (7) [verb] To remove the load or cargo from (a vehicle, etc.). | [verb] To remove (the load or cargo) from a vehicle, etc. | [verb] To deposit one's load or cargo. UNLOCK (12) [noun] The act of unlocking something. | [verb] To undo or open a lock or something locked by, for example, turning a key, or selecting a combination. | [verb] To obtain access to something. UNMADE (9) [adjective] Not (yet) made | [adjective] Existing without having been made | [verb] To destroy or take apart; to cause (a made article) to lose its nature. UNMAKE (12) [verb] To destroy or take apart; to cause (a made article) to lose its nature. UNMANS (8) [verb] To castrate; to remove the manhood of. | [verb] To sap (a person) of the strength, whether physical or emotional, required to deal with a situation. | [verb] To deprive of men. UNMASK (12) [verb] To remove a mask from someone. | [verb] To expose, or reveal the true character of someone. | [verb] To remove one's mask. UNMEET (8) UNMESH (11) UNMEWS (11) UNMIXT (15) UNMOLD (9) UNMOOR (8) [verb] To unfix or unsecure (a moored boat). | [verb] To weigh anchor. UNMOWN (11) [adjective] Not mown; unmowed. UNNAIL (6) [verb] To remove the nails from. UNOPEN (8) UNPACK (14) [verb] To remove from a package or container, particularly with respect to items that had previously been arranged closely and securely in a pack. | [verb] To empty containers that had been packed. | [verb] To analyze a concept or a text. UNPAID (9) [adjective] Not paid for. | [adjective] Of work: done without agreed payment, usually voluntarily. UNPEGS (9) [verb] To remove from a peg. UNPENS (8) UNPENT (8) UNPICK (14) [verb] To undo sewing stitches. | [verb] To undo knitting in order to reuse the wool. | [verb] To unravel or untangle the threads of a rope etc. UNPILE (8) UNPINS (8) [verb] To unfasten by removing a pin. | [verb] To detach (an icon, application, etc.) from the place where it was previously pinned. | [verb] To get out of a pin UNPLUG (9) [verb] To disconnect from a supply, especially an electrical socket. | [verb] To stop using electronic devices, especially for relaxation or to reduce stress. | [verb] To remove a blockage from (especially a water pipe or drain). UNPURE (8) UNREAD (7) [verb] To undo the process of reading. | [verb] To flag (a previously read e-mail or similar message) as not having been read. | [adjective] Not having been read. UNREAL (6) [adjective] Fake; not real | [adjective] Very impressive; amazing; unbelievable; incredible; larger or more fantastic than typical of real life. UNREEL (6) [verb] To remove or uncoil from a reel. UNRENT (6) UNREST (6) [noun] A state of trouble, confusion and turbulence, especially in a political context; a time of riots, demonstrations and protests. UNRIGS (7) [verb] To remove the rigging from (a vessel, etc.). | [verb] To disable. | [verb] To undress (someone). UNRIPE (8) [adjective] Not ripe. | [adjective] Developing too early; premature. UNRIPS (8) [verb] To open something by ripping/tearing. UNROBE (8) [verb] To disrobe, to undress. UNROLL (6) [verb] To straighten something that has been rolled, twisted or curled. | [verb] To emerge, be revealed or become apparent; to unfold. | [verb] To replace (a loop in a program) with a repetitive sequence of the individual instructions that the loop would carry out, sometimes used as an optimization. UNROOF (9) [verb] To remove a roof from, e.g. a building. UNROOT (6) [verb] To tear up by the roots; to uproot. UNROVE (9) UNRULY (9) [adjective] Wild; uncontrolled. UNSAFE (9) [adjective] Not safe (various senses); dangerous. UNSAID (7) [adjective] Unspoken. | [verb] To withdraw, retract (something said). | [verb] To not have said (since this is physically impossible, usually in the subjunctive). UNSAWN (9) UNSAYS (9) [verb] To withdraw, retract (something said). | [verb] To not have said (since this is physically impossible, usually in the subjunctive). UNSEAL (6) [verb] To break the seal of (something) in order to open it. | [verb] To open by having a seal broken. UNSEAM (8) UNSEAT (6) [verb] To throw from one's seat; to deprive of a seat. | [verb] To deprive of the right to sit in a legislative body, as for fraud in election, or simply by defeating them in an election. UNSEEN (6) [adjective] Not seen or discovered; invisible. | [adjective] Unskilled; inexperienced. | [adjective] Not hitherto noticed; unobserved. | [verb] To undo the act of seeing something; to erase the memory of having seen something, or otherwise reverse the effect of having seen something. UNSELL (6) UNSENT (6) [adjective] Not yet sent or transmitted. UNSETS (6) [verb] To make not set. UNSEWN (9) [adjective] Not sewn. UNSEWS (9) UNSEXY (16) [adjective] Not sexy. | [adjective] (of research etc) Perceived as not having wide contemporary interest; plodding. UNSHED (10) [adjective] That has not been shed. UNSHIP (11) [verb] To unload cargo from a ship or other vessel | [verb] To remove an oar or mast from its normal position | [verb] To throw from a horse; to unseat UNSHOD (10) [adjective] Not shod; without shoes. | [adjective] Of a vehicle, not fitted with tyres on the wheels. | [verb] To remove a shoe (especially a horseshoe) from. UNSHUT (9) UNSNAP (8) [verb] To unfasten (something held by snaps). UNSOLD (7) [adjective] Not sold UNSOWN (9) [adjective] Not sown. UNSPUN (8) UNSTEP (8) [verb] To remove (the mast) from a sailing vessel. UNSTOP (8) [verb] To remove a stoppage; to clear a blockage. | [verb] To unplug or uncork a container. | [verb] To draw out the stops of (an organ). UNSUNG (7) [adjective] Which has not been lauded or appreciated. | [adjective] Not sung. UNSUNK (10) UNSURE (6) [adjective] Uncertain | [adjective] Unstable or precarious UNTACK (12) [verb] To unfasten (something tacked). | [verb] To remove the tack from. UNTAME (8) UNTIDY (10) [verb] To make untidy, to make a mess | [adjective] Sloppy. | [adjective] Disorganized. UNTIED (7) [adjective] Not tied; undone | [verb] To loosen, as something interlaced or knotted; to disengage the parts of. | [verb] To free from fastening or from restraint; to let loose; to unbind. UNTIES (6) [verb] To loosen, as something interlaced or knotted; to disengage the parts of. | [verb] To free from fastening or from restraint; to let loose; to unbind. | [verb] To resolve; to unfold; to clear. UNTOLD (7) [adjective] Not told; not related; not revealed; secret. | [adjective] Not numbered or counted. | [adjective] Not able to be counted, measured, told, expressed in words, or described; extremely large in scale, number, quantity, suffering, damage, etc.; uncountable, unmeasurable, immeasurable, indescribable, inexpressible. UNTORN (6) UNTRIM (8) UNTROD (7) UNTRUE (6) [adjective] False; not true. | [adjective] Not faithful or loyal. UNTUCK (12) [verb] To remove something from a relatively hidden location or position where it is tucked. UNTUNE (6) UNUSED (7) [adjective] Not used. | [adjective] Not accustomed (to), unfamiliar with. UNVEIL (9) [verb] To remove a veil from; to uncover; to reveal something hidden. | [verb] To remove a veil; to reveal oneself. UNVEXT (16) UNWARY (12) [adjective] Lacking caution as a result of naïveté or inexperience | [adjective] Unprepared; not watchful UNWELL (9) [adjective] Not in good health; not feeling well; somewhat ill | [adjective] Specifically, ill from menstruation; affected with, or having, catamenial; menstruant. UNWEPT (11) [adjective] Not wept. | [adjective] Unmourned. UNWIND (10) [noun] Any mechanism or operation that unwinds something. | [verb] To separate (something that is wound up) | [verb] To disentangle UNWISE (9) [adjective] Not wise; lacking wisdom UNWISH (12) UNWITS (9) UNWORN (9) [adjective] Not having been worn, as clothing. | [adjective] Not worn away or eroded. UNWOVE (12) UNWRAP (11) [verb] To open or undo, as what is wrapped or folded. | [verb] To become unwrapped. | [verb] To remove word wrap from. UNYOKE (13) [verb] To release something from a yoke or harness. | [verb] To disconnect, unlink. | [verb] To liberate, deliver from oppression. UNZIPS (17) [verb] To open something using a zipper. | [verb] To come open by means of a zipper. | [verb] To decompress (a zip file). UPASES (8) [noun] (usually countable) A tree, Antiaris toxicaria, of the mulberry family, common in the forests of Java and the neighboring islands, with poisonous secretions. | [noun] A virulent poison used in Java and the adjacent islands for poisoning arrows derived from the tree. | [noun] A poison prepared from the climbing plant Strychnos tieute. UPBEAR (10) UPBEAT (10) [noun] An unaccented beat at the start of a musical phrase. | [adjective] Having a fast pace, tempo, or beat. | [adjective] Having a positive, lively, or perky tone, attitude, etc. UPBIND (11) UPBOIL (10) UPBORE (10) UPBOWS (13) UPCAST (10) [noun] A cast; a throw. | [noun] The ventilating shaft of a mine out of which the air passes after having circulated through the mine. | [noun] A current of air passed along such a shaft. UPCOIL (10) UPCURL (10) UPDART (9) UPDATE (9) [noun] An advisement providing more up-to-date information than currently known. | [noun] A change in information, a modification of existing or known data. | [noun] An additional piece of information. An addition to existing information. UPDIVE (12) UPDOVE (12) UPENDS (9) [verb] To end up; to set on end. | [verb] To tip or turn over. | [verb] To destroy, invalidate, overthrow, or defeat. UPFLOW (14) UPFOLD (12) [noun] An anticline. | [verb] To fold up. | [verb] To create a raised fold. UPGAZE (18) UPGIRD (10) UPGIRT (9) UPGREW (12) UPGROW (12) UPHEAP (13) UPHELD (12) [verb] To hold up; to lift on high; to elevate. | [verb] To keep erect; to support; to sustain; to keep from falling | [verb] To support by approval or encouragement, to confirm (something which has been questioned) UPHILL (11) [noun] An uphill route. | [adjective] Located up a slope or on a hill. | [adjective] Going up a slope or a hill. UPHOLD (12) [verb] To hold up; to lift on high; to elevate. | [verb] To keep erect; to support; to sustain; to keep from falling | [verb] To support by approval or encouragement, to confirm (something which has been questioned) UPHOVE (14) UPHROE (11) UPKEEP (14) [noun] Maintenance; the act or effort of keeping something in good and working condition. | [verb] To maintain (something) or keep it in good repair. UPLAND (9) [noun] The area in the interior of a country with a generally higher elevation; often hilly, but not generally mountainous (compare highlands). | [noun] The country, as against the town. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or situated in the uplands. UPLEAP (10) UPLIFT (11) [noun] The act or result of being uplifted. | [noun] A tectonic upheaval, especially one that takes place in the process of mountain building. | [noun] A brassiere that raises the breasts. UPLINK (12) [noun] The portion of a communications link used for the transmission of signals from an Earth terminal to a satellite or to an airborne platform. An uplink is the converse of a downlink. An uplink or downlink is distinguished from reverse link or forward link. | [noun] (by analogy, less formally) The communication path from a mobile device to a base station, a consumer to the network backbone, a client device to a server etc. | [noun] Data transmission from a data station to the headend. UPLOAD (9) [noun] Such a file transfer. | [verb] To transfer data to a computer on a network, especially to a server on the Internet. UPMOST (10) [adjective] Uppermost. UPPERS (10) [noun] A stimulant, such as amphetamine, that increases energy and decreases appetite. | [noun] The upper portion of something | [noun] Someone with higher social standing UPPILE (10) UPPING (11) [verb] To increase or raise. | [verb] To promote. | [verb] (usually in combination with another verb) To act suddenly. UPPISH (13) [adjective] (since circa 1678) Having plenty of money. | [adjective] Proud; arrogant; assuming | [adjective] (of a shot) In which the ball is hit into the air, with the chance of being caught. UPPITY (13) [adjective] Presumptuous, above oneself, self-important; arrogant, snobbish, haughty. | [adjective] Exceeding one's station or position, assuming prerogatives to which one is not entitled. UPPROP (12) UPRATE (8) [noun] An increase in a rating | [verb] To give something a higher rating UPREAR (8) [verb] To raise something up; to rise up; to erect UPRISE (8) [noun] The act of rising; appearance above the horizon; rising. | [verb] To rise; to get up; to appear from below the horizon. | [verb] To have an upward direction or inclination UPROAR (8) [noun] Tumultuous, noisy excitement. | [noun] Loud confused noise, especially when coming from several sources. | [noun] A loud protest, controversy, outrage UPROOT (8) [verb] To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to extirpate. | [verb] (by extension) To remove from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly. | [verb] To destroy utterly; to eradicate, exterminate. UPROSE (8) [verb] To rise; to get up; to appear from below the horizon. | [verb] To have an upward direction or inclination | [verb] To rebel or revolt; to take part in an uprising. UPRUSH (11) [noun] An upwards rush. | [verb] To rush upward. UPSEND (9) UPSENT (8) UPSETS (8) [noun] Disturbance or disruption. | [noun] An unexpected victory of a competitor or candidate that was not favored to win. | [noun] (automobile insurance) An overturn. UPSHOT (11) [noun] A concise summary. | [noun] The final result, or outcome of something. UPSIDE (9) [noun] The highest or uppermost side or portion of something | [noun] A favourable aspect of something that also has an unfavourable aspect | [noun] An upward tendency, especially in a financial market etc UPSOAR (8) UPSTEP (10) UPSTIR (8) UPTAKE (12) [noun] Understanding; comprehension. | [noun] Absorption, especially of food or nutrient by an organism. | [noun] The act of lifting or taking up. UPTEAR (8) UPTICK (14) [noun] A small increase or upward change in something that has been steady or declining. | [noun] A stock market transaction or quote at a price above a preceding one. UPTILT (8) UPTIME (10) [noun] The period of time a computer has functioned since last requiring a reboot. UPTORE (8) UPTORN (8) UPTOSS (8) UPTOWN (11) [noun] The residential part of a city, away from the commercial center | [adjective] In the upper part of a town. | [adjective] (by extension) Of or relating to an affluent area or population. UPTURN (8) [noun] An upward turn or trend, especially in business activity or profit | [verb] To turn (something) up or over UPWAFT (14) UPWARD (12) [noun] The upper part; the top. | [adjective] Directed toward a higher place. | [adverb] In a direction from lower to higher; toward a higher place; in a course toward the source or origin UPWELL (11) UPWIND (12) [adjective] Exposed to the wind | [adverb] In the direction from which the wind is blowing | [verb] To wind upwards. URACIL (8) [noun] One of the bases of RNA, pairing with adenine. URAEUS (6) [noun] A representation of the sacred asp, symbolising supreme power in ancient Egypt. URANIA (6) URANIC (8) URANYL (9) [noun] The divalent radical UO22+, conveniently regarded as a residue of many uranium compounds. URARES (6) URARIS (6) URASES (6) URATES (6) [noun] Any salt of uric acid. URATIC (8) URBANE (8) [adjective] (of a man) Courteous, polite, refined, and suave. URBIAS (8) URCHIN (11) [noun] A mischievous child. | [noun] A street urchin, a child who lives, or spends most of their time, in the streets. | [noun] A sea urchin. UREASE (6) UREDIA (7) UREDOS (7) UREIDE (7) [noun] Any compound, of general formula R-CO-NH-CO-NH2 or R-CO-NH-CO-NH-CO-R', formally derived by the acylation of urea UREMIA (8) [noun] Blood poisoning resulting from the retention of waste products usually excreted as urine. UREMIC (10) URETER (6) [noun] Either of the two long, narrow ducts that carry urine from the kidneys to the urinary bladder. URETIC (8) URGENT (7) [adjective] Requiring immediate attention. URGERS (7) [noun] One who urges. URGING (8) [verb] To press; to push; to drive; to impel; to force onward. | [verb] To press the mind or will of; to ply with motives, arguments, persuasion, or importunity. | [verb] To provoke; to exasperate. URIALS (6) URINAL (6) [noun] A device or fixture used for urination, particularly: | [noun] Any oblong glass vessel shaped like the old alchemist's urinal. | [noun] A room or structure used for urination: a latrine; an outhouse; a lavatory. URINES (6) UROPOD (9) [noun] Either of the two posterior abdominal appendages of the lobster, shrimp and some other crustaceans | [noun] The hind part of polarized leukocytes, mostly involved in cell-to-cell interaction, cell activation and apoptosis URSINE (6) [noun] A bear. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of bears. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the bear subfamily Ursinae. URTEXT (13) [noun] A primitive, seminal, or prototypical example of an artistic genre or the basis of an ideological movement. | [noun] The original version of a piece of music or text, as created by the composer or writer. URUSES (6) [noun] The aurochs. USABLE (8) [adjective] Capable of being used. | [adjective] Easy to use; exhibiting good usability. | [adjective] Homosexual USABLY (11) USAGES (7) [noun] The manner or the amount of using; use. | [noun] Habit or accepted practice. | [noun] The ways and contexts in which spoken and written words are used, determined by a lexicographer's intuition or from corpus analysis. USANCE (8) [noun] The length of time permitted for the payment of a bill of exchange. | [noun] Use. | [noun] Customary or habitual usage. USEFUL (9) [adjective] Having a practical or beneficial use. USHERS (9) [noun] A person, in a church, cinema etc., who escorts people to their seats. | [noun] A male escort at a wedding. | [noun] A doorkeeper in a courtroom. USNEAS (6) USQUES (15) USUALS (6) USURER (6) [noun] A person who loans money to others and charges interest, particularly at an illegal, exorbitant, or unfair rate. | [noun] Specifically, a male usurer. USURPS (8) [verb] To seize power from another, usually by illegitimate means. | [verb] To use and assume the coat of arms of another person. | [verb] To take the place rightfully belonging to someone or something else. UTERUS (6) [noun] The womb, an organ of the female reproductive system in which the young are conceived and develop until birth. UTMOST (8) [noun] Maximum; greatest possible amount or quantity. | [adjective] Situated at the most distant limit; farthest. | [adjective] The most extreme; ultimate; greatest. UTOPIA (8) [noun] A world in which everything and everyone works in perfect harmony. UTTERS (6) [verb] To produce (speech or other sounds) with one's voice. | [verb] To reveal or express (an idea, thought, desire, etc.) with speech. | [verb] To produce (a noise) (of an inanimate object). UVEOUS (9) UVULAE (9) [noun] The fleshy appendage that hangs from the back of the palate, that closes the nasopharynx during swallowing. | [noun] The slight elevation in the mucous membrane immediately behind the internal urethral orifice of the urinary bladder, caused by the middle lobe of the prostate. | [noun] An object so suspended inside a bell that it may hit the bell and cause it to ring; a clapper. UVULAR (9) [noun] A sound articulated with the uvula. | [adjective] Of or relating to the uvula. | [adjective] Of a sound, articulated with the uvula. UVULAS (9) [noun] The fleshy appendage that hangs from the back of the palate, that closes the nasopharynx during swallowing. | [noun] The slight elevation in the mucous membrane immediately behind the internal urethral orifice of the urinary bladder, caused by the middle lobe of the prostate. | [noun] An object so suspended inside a bell that it may hit the bell and cause it to ring; a clapper.

7-Letter Words (532)

UFOLOGY (14) [noun] The study of UFOs. UGLIEST (8) [adjective] Displeasing to the eye; not aesthetically pleasing. | [adjective] Displeasing to the ear or some other sense. | [adjective] Offensive to one's sensibilities or morality. UKELELE (11) [noun] A small four-stringed guitar. UKULELE (11) [noun] A small four-stringed guitar. ULCERED (10) ULEXITE (14) [noun] A white mineral with triclinic crystals, NaCaB5O9·8H2O. ULLAGED (9) ULLAGES (8) ULPANIM (11) ULSTERS (7) [noun] (clothing, men's attire) A long, loose overcoat made of wool or other rough material, often called a greatcoat, which sometimes features an attached shoulder cape covering the back and sleeves, and which can sometimes be buttoned in front. ULTIMAS (9) ULULANT (7) ULULATE (7) [verb] To howl loudly or prolongedly in lamentation or joy | [verb] To produce a rapid and prolonged series of sharp noises with one's voice. UMBELED (12) UMBERED (12) UMBONAL (11) UMBONES (11) [noun] A boss, or rounded elevation, or a corresponding depression, in a palate, disk, or membrane. For example the umbo in the integument of the larvæ of echinoderms or in the tympanic membrane of the ear. | [noun] One of the lateral prominences just above the hinge of a bivalve shell. | [noun] A bump or protrusion on the top of the cap. UMBONIC (13) UMBRAGE (12) [noun] A feeling of anger or annoyance caused by something offensive. | [noun] A feeling of doubt. | [noun] Leaves that provide shade, as the foliage of trees. UMIACKS (15) UMLAUTS (9) [noun] An assimilatory process whereby a vowel is pronounced more like a following vocoid that is separated by one or more consonants. | [noun] The umlaut process (as above) that occurred historically in Germanic languages whereby back vowels became front vowels when followed by syllable containing a front vocoid (e.g. Germanic lūsiz > Old English lȳs(i) > Modern English lice). | [noun] A vowel so assimilated. UMPIRED (12) [verb] To act as an umpire in a game. | [verb] To decide as an umpire. UMPIRES (11) [noun] The official who presides over a tennis game sat on a high chair. | [noun] One of the two white-coated officials who preside over a cricket match. | [noun] One of usually 4 officials who preside over a baseball game. UMPTEEN (11) UNACTED (10) UNADULT (8) UNAGILE (8) UNAGING (9) UNAIDED (9) [adjective] Without the help, aid or assistance of someone or something. UNAIMED (10) UNAIRED (8) [adjective] Not aired. UNAKITE (11) UNALIKE (11) [adjective] Of an unlike kind; different UNAPTLY (12) UNARMED (10) [adjective] Defenceless and lacking weapons or armour. | [adjective] Not carrying arms. | [adjective] Not having thorns or claws etc. UNASKED (12) [adjective] Not asked about. UNAWARE (10) [adjective] Not aware or informed; lacking knowledge. | [adjective] Not noticing; paying no heed; thoughtless; inattentive. UNBAKED (14) [adjective] Not baked or cooked. UNBASED (10) UNBATED (10) UNBEARS (9) UNBELTS (9) [verb] To remove a belt | [verb] To relax, unwind UNBENDS (10) [verb] To remove a bend so as to make, or allow to become, straight | [verb] To release (a load) from a strain or from exertion; to set at ease for a time; to relax. | [verb] To unfasten sails from the spars or stays to which are attached for use. UNBINDS (10) [verb] To take bindings off. | [verb] To set free from a debt, contract or promise. | [verb] To disable some kind of connection in software, such as a key binding. UNBLEST (9) [adjective] Not blessed. UNBLOCK (15) [verb] To remove or clear a block or obstruction from. | [verb] To free or make available. | [verb] In whist, to throw away a high card so as not to interrupt one's partner's long suit. UNBOLTS (9) [verb] To unlock by undoing the bolts of. UNBONED (10) UNBOSOM (11) [verb] To tell someone about (one's troubles), and thus obtain relief. | [verb] To free (oneself) of the burden of one's troubles by telling of them. | [verb] To confess a misdeed. UNBOUND (10) [verb] To take bindings off. | [verb] To set free from a debt, contract or promise. | [verb] To disable some kind of connection in software, such as a key binding. UNBOWED (13) [adjective] Not bowed; erect or upright. | [adjective] Not subdued or deterred. UNBOXED (17) [verb] To remove from a box. | [verb] To retrieve (a value of a primitive type) from the object in which it is boxed. UNBOXES (16) [verb] To remove from a box. | [verb] To retrieve (a value of a primitive type) from the object in which it is boxed. UNBRACE (11) [verb] To undo, unfasten; to relax, loosen. UNBRAID (10) [verb] To disentangle the strands of a braid UNBRAKE (13) UNBROKE (13) UNBUILD (10) [verb] To dismantle or deconstruct (something previously built). UNBUILT (9) [adjective] Not built UNBULKY (16) UNBURNT (9) [adjective] Not burnt or burned. UNCAGED (11) [verb] To take out of or release from a cage. | [verb] (by extension) To unleash; to remove from restraints. | [adjective] Not caged; not kept in a cage. UNCAGES (10) [verb] To take out of or release from a cage. | [verb] (by extension) To unleash; to remove from restraints. UNCAKED (14) UNCAKES (13) UNCANNY (12) [noun] (Freud) Something that is simultaneously familiar and strange, typically leading to feelings of discomfort; translation of Freud's usage of the German "unheimlich" (literally "unsecret"). | [adjective] Strange, and mysteriously unsettling (as if supernatural); weird. | [adjective] Careless. UNCASED (10) [adjective] Not cased; without a casing. UNCASES (9) [verb] To take out of a case or covering; to uncover. | [verb] To strip; to flay. | [verb] To display, or spread to view, as a flag, or the colors of a military body. UNCHAIN (12) [verb] To remove chains from; to free; to liberate. UNCHARY (15) UNCHOKE (16) UNCIALS (9) [noun] A style of writing using uncial letters. | [noun] A letter in this style. | [noun] A manuscript in this style. UNCINAL (9) UNCINUS (9) UNCIVIL (12) [adjective] Not civilized | [adjective] Not civil; discourteous; impolite UNCLAMP (13) [verb] To remove a clamp from. UNCLASP (11) [verb] To release the clasp from something | [verb] To become unfastened | [verb] To separate from being clasped UNCLEAN (9) [adjective] Dirty, soiled or foul. | [adjective] Not moral or chaste. | [adjective] Ritually or ceremonially impure or unfit. UNCLEAR (9) [adjective] Ambiguous; liable to more than one interpretation. | [adjective] Not clearly or explicitly defined. | [adjective] Not easy to see or read; indecipherable or unreadable. UNCLIPS (11) [verb] To release something by removing a clip. UNCLOAK (13) [verb] To remove a cloak or cover from; to deprive of a cloak or cover; to unmask; to reveal. | [verb] To remove one's cloak. | [verb] To become visible again by turning off a cloaking device. UNCLOGS (10) [verb] To remove a blockage from. | [verb] To have a blockage removed. UNCLOSE (9) [verb] To open; to unclench. UNCLOUD (10) UNCOCKS (15) UNCODED (11) UNCOILS (9) [verb] To unwind or untwist (something). | [verb] To unwind or untwist oneself. UNCOMIC (13) UNCORKS (13) [verb] To open (a bottle or other container sealed with a cork or stopper) by removing the cork or stopper from. | [verb] To release. UNCOUTH (12) [adjective] Unfamiliar, strange, foreign. | [adjective] Clumsy, awkward. | [adjective] Unrefined, crude. UNCOVER (12) [verb] To remove a cover from. | [verb] To reveal the identity of. | [verb] To show openly; to disclose; to reveal. UNCRATE (9) [verb] To remove from a crate. UNCRAZY (21) UNCROSS (9) [verb] To move something, especially one's arms or legs, from a crossed position. | [verb] To undo the crossing or traversal of. UNCROWN (12) [verb] To deprive of the monarchy or other authority or status. | [verb] To remove a crown from (often figuratively). UNCTION (9) [noun] A salve or ointment. | [noun] A religious or ceremonial anointing. | [noun] A balm or something that soothes. UNCUFFS (15) UNCURBS (11) UNCURED (10) [adjective] Not cured. UNCURLS (9) [verb] To straighten out from being curled up. UNDATED (9) [adjective] Not marked with a date. | [adjective] Of a style that will not go out of fashion; a classic. | [adjective] Rising and falling in waves toward the margin, as a leaf; waved. UNDERDO (9) UNDERGO (9) [verb] To go or move under or beneath. | [verb] To experience; to pass through a phase. | [verb] To suffer or endure; bear with. UNDINES (8) [noun] A female water-sprite or nymph. | [noun] The elemental being of water. | [noun] A small flask used to apply lotions to the eye. UNDOCKS (14) [verb] To remove (a ship) from a dock. | [verb] To remove from a docking station. | [verb] To drag (a user interface element, such as a toolbar) away from its fixed position so that it floats freely. UNDOERS (8) UNDOING (9) [noun] The act of loosening or unfastening | [noun] Ruin; defeat, that which causes defeat or ruin. | [noun] Annulment; reversal | [verb] To reverse the effects of an action. UNDRAPE (10) UNDRAWN (11) [adjective] Not drawn (in various senses). UNDRAWS (11) UNDRESS (8) [noun] Partial or informal dress for women, as worn in the home rather than in public. | [noun] Informal clothing for men, as opposed to formal or ceremonial wear. | [noun] Now more specifically, a state of having few or no clothes on. UNDREST (8) UNDRIED (9) [adjective] Not dried. UNDRUNK (12) [adjective] (Of a drink) Not having been drunk. UNDULAR (8) UNDYING (12) [verb] To come back to life after having died. | [verb] To become undead. | [adjective] Permanent; never-ending; infinite UNEAGER (8) UNEARTH (10) [verb] To drive or draw from the earth. | [verb] To uncover or find; to bring out from concealment | [verb] To dig up. UNEASES (7) UNEATEN (7) [adjective] Not eaten UNENDED (9) UNEQUAL (16) [noun] One who is not an equal. | [adjective] Not the same. | [adjective] Out of balance. UNFADED (12) UNFAITH (13) UNFAKED (15) UNFANCY (15) UNFAZED (20) [adjective] Not frightened or hesitant; undaunted; not put off. | [adjective] Undamaged UNFENCE (12) UNFIRED (11) [adjective] Not fired UNFITLY (13) UNFIXED (18) [verb] To unfasten from a fixing. | [adjective] Not fixated or fixed; moving or changing freely | [adjective] (of a problem) Not fixed; not corrected. UNFIXES (17) UNFOLDS (11) [verb] To undo a folding. | [verb] To turn out; to happen; to develop. | [verb] To reveal. UNFOUND (11) UNFREED (11) UNFREES (10) UNFROCK (16) [verb] To remove from the clergy; to revoke the clergical status of. UNFROZE (19) [verb] To defrost something. | [verb] To thaw. | [verb] To resume movement. UNFUNNY (13) [adjective] Not funny, especially when attempting to be. UNFURLS (10) [verb] To unroll or release something that had been rolled up, typically a sail or a flag. | [verb] To roll out or debut anything. | [verb] To open up by unrolling. UNFUSED (11) [adjective] Not fused; distinct | [adjective] Lacking a fuse | [verb] To separate after a fusion; to make no longer fused. UNFUSSY (13) [adjective] Not fussy. UNGIRDS (9) [verb] To loosen the girdle or band of. | [verb] To unbind or unload. UNGLOVE (11) UNGLUED (9) [verb] To separate that which was held by glue | [verb] To cease to adhere to or follow attentively | [adjective] Not secured with glue. UNGLUES (8) UNGODLY (12) [adjective] Of a person: lacking reverence for God; of an action: not in accordance with God's will or religious teachings. | [adjective] Immoral, sinful, or wicked. | [adjective] Extreme; unreasonable. | [adverb] In an impious, irreverent, or ungodly manner; ungodlily. UNGUARD (9) [verb] To deprive of a guard; to leave unprotected. UNGUENT (8) [noun] Any cream containing medicinal ingredients applied to the skin for therapeutic purposes. UNGULAE (8) UNGULAR (8) UNHAIRS (10) UNHANDS (11) [verb] To release from the hand; to let go. UNHANDY (14) [adjective] Of a person, or movement: not handy, inept, clumsy, not dexterous. | [adjective] Awkward; not convenient. UNHANGS (11) [verb] To take down something (such as a picture) from a hanging position | [verb] Hypothetically, to undo the execution of (a person) by hanging. UNHAPPY (17) [noun] An individual who is not happy. | [adjective] Not happy; sad. | [adjective] Not satisfied; unsatisfied. UNHASTY (13) UNHEARD (11) [adjective] Not heard. | [adjective] Not listened to. | [adjective] Not known to fame; not illustrious or celebrated; obscure. | [verb] To reverse the process of hearing, so that (a sound, etc.) was never heard. UNHELMS (12) UNHINGE (11) [verb] To remove the leaf of a door or a window from its supporting hinges. | [verb] To mentally disturb. UNHIRED (11) UNHITCH (15) [verb] To disconnect; to detach; to undo that which is hitched. UNHOODS (11) [verb] To remove the hood from. UNHOOKS (14) [verb] To remove from a hook. | [verb] To unfasten by means of hooks. | [verb] To unfasten the bra of (its wearer). UNHOPED (13) [adjective] Not hoped for; unexpected. UNHORSE (10) [verb] To forcibly remove from a horse. | [verb] (by extension) To disrupt or unseat; to remove from a position. UNHOUSE (10) UNHUMAN (12) [adjective] Not resembling or having the qualities of a human being. UNHUSKS (14) [verb] To remove the husk of. UNICORN (9) [noun] A mythical beast resembling a horse or deer with a single, straight, spiraled horn projecting from its forehead. | [noun] In various Bible translations, used to render the Latin unicornis or rhinoceros (representing Hebrew רְאֵם): a reem or wild ox. | [noun] Any large beetle having a horn-like prominence on the head or prothorax, especially the Hercules beetle, Dynastes tityus. UNIDEAL (8) [adjective] Not ideal. UNIFACE (12) [noun] A prehistoric stone tool that has been flaked on one surface only. UNIFIED (11) [adjective] United into a whole | [adjective] That operates as a single entity | [adjective] (of a school district) that serves all grade levels between kindergarten and twelfth grade. UNIFIER (10) UNIFIES (10) [verb] Cause to become one; make into a unit; consolidate; merge; combine. | [verb] Become one. UNIFORM (12) [noun] A distinctive outfit that serves to identify members of a group. | [noun] Phonetic equivalent for the letter U in the ICAO spelling alphabet, informally known as the NATO phonetic alphabet. | [noun] A uniformed police officer (as opposed to a detective). UNIPODS (10) [noun] Monopod UNIQUER (16) UNIQUES (16) [noun] A thing without a like; something unequalled or unparallelled. UNISONS (7) [noun] (acoustics) Identical pitch between two notes or sounds; the simultaneous playing of notes of identical pitch (or separated by one or more octaves). | [noun] (acoustics) A sound or note having the same pitch as another, especially when used as the base note for an interval; a unison string. | [noun] The state of being in harmony or agreement; harmonious agreement or togetherness, synchronisation. UNITAGE (8) UNITARD (8) [noun] A skin-tight garment covering the torso and the legs, sometimes the arms and feet. UNITARY (10) [noun] A unitary council. | [noun] A unitary matrix or operator. | [adjective] Having the quality of oneness. UNITERS (7) UNITIES (7) [noun] Oneness; the state or fact of being one undivided entity. | [noun] Agreement; harmony. | [noun] A single undivided thing, seen as complete in itself. UNITING (8) [verb] To bring together as one. | [verb] To come together as one. | [noun] The act by which things are united; the formation of a union. UNITIVE (10) UNITIZE (16) [verb] To manage as a unit | [verb] To convert, package, or organize into one or more units UNJADED (16) UNJOINT (14) [verb] To dislocate. | [verb] To disjoint. UNKEMPT (15) [adjective] (of hair) Uncombed; dishevelled. | [adjective] (by extension) Disorderly; untidy; messy; not kept up. | [adjective] Rough; unpolished UNKINKS (15) [verb] To remove the kinks from. UNKNITS (11) [verb] To unravel. | [verb] To undo knitted stitches by reversing the knitting motion. UNKNOTS (11) [noun] In knot theory, a loop that is not knotted. UNKNOWN (14) [verb] To undo the process of knowing, to lose knowledge of something. | [noun] A variable (usually x, y or z) whose value is to be found. | [noun] Any thing, place, or situation about which nothing is known; an unknown fact or piece of information. UNLACED (10) [verb] To remove the knot from laces; to undo laces. | [verb] To loosen the clothing of (a person). | [verb] To remove (film) from a projector. UNLACES (9) [verb] To remove the knot from laces; to undo laces. | [verb] To loosen the clothing of (a person). | [verb] To remove (film) from a projector. UNLADED (9) [verb] To unload. | [verb] To disburden; take the burden from; relieve. | [verb] To discharge the cargo from. UNLADEN (8) [verb] To unload. | [verb] To disburden; take the burden from; relieve. | [verb] To discharge the cargo from. UNLADES (8) [verb] To unload. | [verb] To disburden; take the burden from; relieve. | [verb] To discharge the cargo from. UNLATCH (12) [verb] Remove from a latch UNLEADS (8) UNLEARN (7) [verb] To discard the knowledge of. | [verb] To break a habit. UNLEASH (10) [verb] To free from a leash, or as from a leash. | [verb] To let go; to release. | [verb] To precipitate; to bring about. UNLEVEL (10) UNLINED (8) [adjective] Without lining; without liner. | [adjective] Unmarked by lines, especially of the skin. UNLINKS (11) [verb] To decouple; to remove a link from, or separate the links of. | [verb] To delete (a file). UNLIVED (11) [adjective] That has not been lived. | [adjective] Bereft or deprived of life. UNLIVES (10) UNLOADS (8) [verb] To remove the load or cargo from (a vehicle, etc.). | [verb] To remove (the load or cargo) from a vehicle, etc. | [verb] To deposit one's load or cargo. UNLOBED (10) UNLOCKS (13) [noun] The act of unlocking something. | [verb] To undo or open a lock or something locked by, for example, turning a key, or selecting a combination. | [verb] To obtain access to something. UNLOOSE (7) [verb] To free (someone or something) from a constraint. | [verb] To undo or loosen something that fastens, holds, entangles, or interlocks. UNLOVED (11) [verb] To lose one's love (for someone or something). | [adjective] Not loved. UNLUCKY (16) [adjective] Unfortunate, marked by misfortune. | [adjective] Inauspicious. | [adjective] Having ill luck. UNMACHO (14) UNMAKER (13) UNMAKES (13) [verb] To destroy or take apart; to cause (a made article) to lose its nature. UNMANLY (12) [adjective] (of a person) Showing characteristics that are not manly, such as being immature, effeminate or cowardly, which might be construed as an indicator of weakness or of baseness of character. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to something not human. | [adjective] (of a behaviour or action) Cowardly, base. UNMASKS (13) [verb] To remove a mask from someone. | [verb] To expose, or reveal the true character of someone. | [verb] To remove one's mask. UNMATED (10) UNMEANT (9) [adjective] Not meant UNMERRY (12) UNMEWED (13) UNMINED (10) UNMITER (9) UNMITRE (9) UNMIXED (17) [adjective] Pure, not mixed or combined. UNMIXES (16) UNMOLDS (10) UNMOORS (9) [verb] To unfix or unsecure (a moored boat). | [verb] To weigh anchor. UNMORAL (9) [adjective] Not applicable for moral consideration. | [adjective] Not moral. UNMOVED (13) [adjective] Not physically moved. | [adjective] Not affected emotionally, or not showing emotion. | [adjective] Not sympathetic; uncaring. UNNAILS (7) [verb] To remove the nails from. UNNAMED (10) [adjective] Not having a name. UNNERVE (10) [verb] To deprive of nerve, force, or strength; to weaken; to enfeeble. | [verb] To make somebody nervous, upset, alarm, shake the resolve of. UNNOISY (10) UNNOTED (8) [adjective] That has not been noted. UNOILED (8) [adjective] Not having been oiled. | [verb] To remove the oil from. UNOWNED (11) [adjective] Not owned; not having an owner. | [adjective] Not avowed or acknowledged as one's own property or one's own work. UNPACKS (15) [verb] To remove from a package or container, particularly with respect to items that had previously been arranged closely and securely in a pack. | [verb] To empty containers that had been packed. | [verb] To analyze a concept or a text. UNPAGED (11) [adjective] Without page numbers. | [adjective] (of memory) Not subject to paging. UNPAVED (13) [adjective] (of a road or path) Not having a hard, impervious surface; not paved UNPICKS (15) [verb] To undo sewing stitches. | [verb] To undo knitting in order to reuse the wool. | [verb] To unravel or untangle the threads of a rope etc. UNPILED (10) UNPILES (9) UNPLAIT (9) [verb] To undo or untwist plaited hair; to unbraid UNPLUGS (10) [verb] To disconnect from a supply, especially an electrical socket. | [verb] To stop using electronic devices, especially for relaxation or to reduce stress. | [verb] To remove a blockage from (especially a water pipe or drain). UNPOSED (10) [adjective] Not posed; without deliberate posing UNQUIET (16) [verb] To disturb, disquiet. | [adjective] Uneasy and restless; unable to settle. | [adjective] Causing unease or restlessness. UNQUOTE (16) [verb] To convert (a quoted expression) back to its original form. | [interjection] Used in speech to indicate the end of a quotation. UNRAKED (12) UNRATED (8) [verb] To remove the rating from something. | [adjective] Not rated; having no rating UNRAVEL (10) [verb] To separate the threads (of); disentangle. | [verb] (of threads, etc.) To become separated; (of something woven, knitted, etc.) to come apart. | [verb] To clear from complication or difficulty; to unfold; to solve. UNRAZED (17) UNREADY (11) [adjective] Not ready. UNREELS (7) [verb] To remove or uncoil from a reel. UNREEVE (10) [verb] To withdraw or take out, as for example a rope from a block. UNRESTS (7) UNRIMED (10) UNRIPER (9) UNRISEN (7) [adjective] Not risen. UNROBED (10) [verb] To disrobe, to undress. | [adjective] Not robed. UNROBES (9) [verb] To disrobe, to undress. UNROLLS (7) [verb] To straighten something that has been rolled, twisted or curled. | [verb] To emerge, be revealed or become apparent; to unfold. | [verb] To replace (a loop in a program) with a repetitive sequence of the individual instructions that the loop would carry out, sometimes used as an optimization. UNROOFS (10) [verb] To remove a roof from, e.g. a building. UNROOTS (7) [verb] To tear up by the roots; to uproot. UNROPED (10) [adjective] Not attached to a rope | [verb] To remove from a rope UNROUGH (11) UNROUND (8) UNROVEN (10) UNRULED (8) [adjective] Plain, not ruled with lines. | [adjective] Not ruled; not governed; not controlled or influenced. UNSATED (8) UNSAVED (11) [verb] To undo an act of saving; to erase. | [adjective] Not saved; unredeemed. | [adjective] Not saved (stored in a file). UNSAWED (11) UNSCREW (12) [verb] To loosen a screw or thing by turning it. UNSEALS (7) [verb] To break the seal of (something) in order to open it. | [verb] To open by having a seal broken. UNSEAMS (9) UNSEATS (7) [verb] To throw from one's seat; to deprive of a seat. | [verb] To deprive of the right to sit in a legislative body, as for fraud in election, or simply by defeating them in an election. UNSELLS (7) UNSEWED (11) UNSEXED (15) [adjective] Not separated by sex. | [verb] To deprive of sexual attributes or characteristics. | [verb] To sterilize (deprive of the ability to procreate); to castrate. UNSEXES (14) [verb] To deprive of sexual attributes or characteristics. | [verb] To sterilize (deprive of the ability to procreate); to castrate. UNSHARP (12) [verb] To sharpen (an image) by creating a blurred ("unsharp") negative as a mask, and then combining that mask with the original. | [adjective] Not sharp; out of focus. UNSHELL (10) UNSHIFT (13) UNSHIPS (12) [verb] To unload cargo from a ship or other vessel | [verb] To remove an oar or mast from its normal position | [verb] To throw from a horse; to unseat UNSHORN (10) [adjective] Not shorn. UNSHOWY (16) [adjective] Not showy; plain or unassuming UNSIGHT (11) UNSIZED (17) [adjective] Not sized UNSLING (8) [verb] To take something from a hanging or slung position. UNSLUNG (8) [verb] To take something from a hanging or slung position. | [adjective] That has not been slung. UNSMART (9) UNSNAPS (9) [verb] To unfasten (something held by snaps). UNSNARL (7) [verb] To remove or undo a snarl or tangle. UNSOBER (9) UNSOLID (8) UNSONCY (12) UNSONSY (10) UNSOUND (8) [adjective] Not sound, particularly: UNSOWED (11) UNSPEAK (13) UNSPENT (9) [adjective] Not spent. UNSPILT (9) [adjective] Not spilt UNSPLIT (9) UNSPOKE (13) UNSTACK (13) UNSTATE (7) UNSTEEL (7) UNSTEPS (9) [verb] To remove (the mast) from a sailing vessel. UNSTICK (13) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To free from the condition of being stuck. UNSTOPS (9) [verb] To remove a stoppage; to clear a blockage. | [verb] To unplug or uncork a container. | [verb] To draw out the stops of (an organ). UNSTRAP (9) [verb] To loosen or remove the straps from (something). UNSTUCK (13) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To free from the condition of being stuck. UNSTUNG (8) UNSWEAR (10) UNSWEPT (12) [adjective] Not swept UNSWORE (10) UNSWORN (10) [adjective] Not sworn UNTACKS (13) [verb] To unfasten (something tacked). | [verb] To remove the tack from. UNTAKEN (11) [adjective] Not taken. UNTAMED (10) [adjective] Wild, uncontrolled, especially of animals not domesticated or trained to human contact. UNTAXED (15) [adjective] Not subject to being taxed. | [adjective] Not having had the required taxes paid on it. | [adjective] Not tired or strained, working well within capacity. UNTEACH (12) [verb] To cause someone to unlearn; to make someone forget something they have been taught. | [verb] To cause something previously learned to be forgotten. UNTHINK (14) UNTIRED (8) UNTREAD (8) UNTRIED (8) [adjective] Not yet tried or tested; unknown. | [adjective] Not put on trial; not taken before a legal court. UNTRIMS (9) UNTRUER (7) UNTRULY (10) UNTRUSS (7) [noun] An untrusser or public whipper | [verb] To free from a truss; to untie or unfasten UNTRUTH (10) [noun] A lie or falsehood. | [noun] The condition of being false; truthlessness. UNTUCKS (13) [verb] To remove something from a relatively hidden location or position where it is tucked. UNTUNED (8) [adjective] The state of not having been tuned. | [adjective] Of or relating to a musical instrument that does not produce specific pitches, e.g. many drums and cymbals. UNTUNES (7) UNTWINE (10) [verb] To untwist the strands of (something entwined). | [verb] To free (one thing that is entwined with another), disentangle, extricate. | [verb] To become untwisted or disentangled. UNTWIST (10) [noun] A twist in the opposite direction. | [verb] To remove a twist from. | [verb] To become untwisted. UNTYING (11) [verb] To loosen, as something interlaced or knotted; to disengage the parts of. | [verb] To free from fastening or from restraint; to let loose; to unbind. | [verb] To resolve; to unfold; to clear. UNURGED (9) UNUSUAL (7) [noun] Something that is unusual; an anomaly. | [adjective] Not usual, out of the ordinary UNVEILS (10) [verb] To remove a veil from; to uncover; to reveal something hidden. | [verb] To remove a veil; to reveal oneself. UNVEXED (18) UNVOCAL (12) UNVOICE (12) UNWAXED (18) [adjective] Not waxed. UNWEARY (13) [verb] To refresh (a person) after weariness. | [adjective] Not weary. UNWEAVE (13) UNWHITE (13) UNWINDS (11) [noun] Any mechanism or operation that unwinds something. | [verb] To separate (something that is wound up) | [verb] To disentangle UNWISER (10) UNWOOED (11) UNWOUND (11) [verb] To separate (something that is wound up) | [verb] To disentangle | [verb] To relax; to chill out; to rest and relieve of stress UNWOVEN (13) [verb] To undo something woven. | [adjective] Not woven. UNWRAPS (12) [verb] To open or undo, as what is wrapped or folded. | [verb] To become unwrapped. | [verb] To remove word wrap from. UNWRUNG (11) UNYOKED (15) [verb] To release something from a yoke or harness. | [verb] To disconnect, unlink. | [verb] To liberate, deliver from oppression. UNYOKES (14) [verb] To release something from a yoke or harness. | [verb] To disconnect, unlink. | [verb] To liberate, deliver from oppression. UNYOUNG (11) UNZONED (17) UPBEARS (11) UPBEATS (11) [noun] An unaccented beat at the start of a musical phrase. UPBINDS (12) UPBOILS (11) UPBORNE (11) UPBOUND (12) UPBRAID (12) [noun] The act of reproaching; scorn; disdain. | [verb] To criticize severely. | [verb] (followed by with or for, and formerly of before the object) To charge with something wrong or disgraceful; to reproach UPBUILD (12) [verb] To build up (literally). | [verb] To build up; to develop (figuratively). UPBUILT (11) [verb] To build up (literally). | [verb] To build up; to develop (figuratively). UPCASTS (11) [noun] A cast; a throw. | [noun] The ventilating shaft of a mine out of which the air passes after having circulated through the mine. | [noun] A current of air passed along such a shaft. UPCHUCK (20) [noun] Vomit. | [verb] To vomit. UPCLIMB (15) UPCOAST (11) [adjective] Upstream in the direction of coastal currents. UPCOILS (11) UPCURLS (11) UPCURVE (14) UPDARTS (10) UPDATED (11) [verb] To bring (a thing) up to date. | [verb] To bring (a person) up to date: to inform (a person) about recent developments. UPDATER (10) UPDATES (10) [noun] An advisement providing more up-to-date information than currently known. | [noun] A change in information, a modification of existing or known data. | [noun] An additional piece of information. An addition to existing information. UPDIVED (14) UPDIVES (13) UPDRAFT (13) [noun] An upward current of air, especially a strong one UPDRIED (11) UPDRIES (10) UPENDED (11) [verb] To end up; to set on end. | [verb] To tip or turn over. | [verb] To destroy, invalidate, overthrow, or defeat. UPFIELD (13) [adjective] Away from the defending team's end of the playing field | [adjective] Describing an NMR resonance at a lower frequency to that of a reference signal | [adverb] Away from the defending team's end of the playing field UPFLING (13) UPFLOWS (15) UPFLUNG (13) [adjective] Flung or thrown up. UPFOLDS (13) [noun] An anticline. | [verb] To fold up. | [verb] To create a raised fold. UPFRONT (12) [noun] A meeting of network executives with the press and major advertisers, signaling the start of advertising sales for a new season | [verb] To bring to the fore; to place up front for consideration | [adjective] Honest, frank and straightforward. UPGAZED (20) UPGAZES (19) UPGIRDS (11) UPGOING (11) UPGRADE (11) [noun] An upward grade or slope. | [noun] An improved component or replacement item, usually applied to technology | [noun] An improvement UPGROWN (13) UPGROWS (13) UPHEAPS (14) UPHEAVE (15) [verb] To heave or lift up; raise up or aloft. | [verb] To lift or thrust something upward forcefully, or be similarly lifted or thrust upward. | [verb] To be lifted up; rise. UPHILLS (12) [noun] An uphill route. UPHOARD (13) UPHOLDS (13) [verb] To hold up; to lift on high; to elevate. | [verb] To keep erect; to support; to sustain; to keep from falling | [verb] To support by approval or encouragement, to confirm (something which has been questioned) UPHROES (12) UPKEEPS (15) UPLANDS (10) [noun] The area in the interior of a country with a generally higher elevation; often hilly, but not generally mountainous (compare highlands). | [noun] The country, as against the town. UPLEAPS (11) UPLEAPT (11) UPLIFTS (12) [noun] The act or result of being uplifted. | [noun] A tectonic upheaval, especially one that takes place in the process of mountain building. | [noun] A brassiere that raises the breasts. UPLIGHT (13) [noun] A recessed light fixture that directs the light in an upward direction. | [verb] To illuminate from below. UPLINKS (13) [noun] The portion of a communications link used for the transmission of signals from an Earth terminal to a satellite or to an airborne platform. An uplink is the converse of a downlink. An uplink or downlink is distinguished from reverse link or forward link. | [noun] (by analogy, less formally) The communication path from a mobile device to a base station, a consumer to the network backbone, a client device to a server etc. | [noun] Data transmission from a data station to the headend. UPLOADS (10) [noun] Such a file transfer. | [verb] To transfer data to a computer on a network, especially to a server on the Internet. UPPILED (12) UPPILES (11) UPPINGS (12) UPPROPS (13) UPRAISE (9) [verb] To raise something up; to elevate. | [verb] To move something upright; to erect. UPRATED (10) [verb] To give something a higher rating | [adjective] That has been given a higher rating | [adjective] Upgraded UPRATES (9) [noun] An increase in a rating | [verb] To give something a higher rating UPREACH (14) UPREARS (9) [verb] To raise something up; to rise up; to erect UPRIGHT (13) [noun] Any vertical part of a structure, especially one of the goal posts in sports. | [noun] A word clued by the successive initial, middle, or final letters of the cross-lights in a double acrostic or triple acrostic. | [noun] An upright piano. UPRISEN (9) [verb] To rise; to get up; to appear from below the horizon. | [verb] To have an upward direction or inclination | [verb] To rebel or revolt; to take part in an uprising. UPRISER (9) UPRISES (9) [verb] To rise; to get up; to appear from below the horizon. | [verb] To have an upward direction or inclination | [verb] To rebel or revolt; to take part in an uprising. UPRIVER (12) [adjective] Towards the source of a river. | [adverb] Towards the source of a river. | [adverb] Against the current. UPROARS (9) [noun] Tumultuous, noisy excitement. | [noun] Loud confused noise, especially when coming from several sources. | [noun] A loud protest, controversy, outrage UPROOTS (9) [verb] To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to extirpate. | [verb] (by extension) To remove from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly. | [verb] To destroy utterly; to eradicate, exterminate. UPROUSE (9) UPSCALE (11) [verb] To increase in size, to scale up. | [adjective] Marked by wealth or quality; high-class; upmarket. UPSENDS (10) UPSHIFT (15) [noun] A shift to a higher gear | [noun] A shift to a higher level, such as of frequency, growth, economic level, etc. | [verb] To shift to a higher gear UPSHOOT (12) UPSHOTS (12) [noun] A concise summary. | [noun] The final result, or outcome of something. UPSIDES (10) [noun] The highest or uppermost side or portion of something | [noun] A favourable aspect of something that also has an unfavourable aspect | [noun] An upward tendency, especially in a financial market etc UPSILON (9) [noun] The twentieth letter of Classical and Modern Greek; the twenty-second letter of Old and Ancient Greek. | [noun] (particle physics) An upsilon meson, or bottomonium. UPSOARS (9) UPSTAGE (10) [noun] The part of a stage that is farthest from the audience or camera. | [verb] To draw attention away from others, especially on-stage. | [verb] To force other actors to face away from the audience by staying upstage. UPSTAIR (9) [adjective] Upstairs UPSTAND (10) [noun] A section of a roof covering or flashing which turns up against a vertical surface. | [verb] To stand up; arise; be erect; rise. UPSTARE (9) UPSTART (9) [noun] One who has suddenly gained wealth, power, or other prominence, but either has not received social acceptance or has become arrogant or presumptuous. | [noun] The meadow saffron. | [verb] To rise suddenly, to spring UPSTATE (9) [noun] The northern section of a state. | [adjective] Of the northern section of a state. | [adverb] To the northern section of a state. UPSTEPS (11) UPSTIRS (9) UPSTOOD (10) UPSURGE (10) [noun] A sudden strong rise or flow. | [verb] To surge up, or to become stronger or greater UPSWEEP (14) UPSWELL (12) [noun] A rising swell. | [verb] To swell upward. UPSWEPT (14) [adjective] Curved or swept upwards UPSWING (13) [noun] An upward swing | [noun] (by extension) an upward trend or an increase in activity | [verb] To swing upward. UPSWUNG (13) UPTAKES (13) [noun] Understanding; comprehension. | [noun] Absorption, especially of food or nutrient by an organism. | [noun] The act of lifting or taking up. UPTEARS (9) UPTHREW (15) UPTHROW (15) [noun] A fault in which a mass of material has been thrown up from below. | [verb] To throw or cast upwards. | [verb] To throw up (a mass of material) from below, causing a fault. UPTICKS (15) [noun] A small increase or upward change in something that has been steady or declining. | [noun] A stock market transaction or quote at a price above a preceding one. UPTIGHT (13) [noun] An uptight person. | [adjective] Excessively concerned with rules and order, always serious. | [adjective] Emotionally repressed; nervous and tense. UPTILTS (9) UPTIMES (11) UPTOWNS (12) [noun] The residential part of a city, away from the commercial center UPTREND (10) [noun] An upward trend, or an upturn. | [verb] To undergo an upward trend. UPTURNS (9) [noun] An upward turn or trend, especially in business activity or profit | [verb] To turn (something) up or over UPWAFTS (15) UPWARDS (13) [adverb] Towards a higher place; towards what is above. | [adverb] To a higher figure or amount. | [adverb] Towards something which is higher in order, larger, superior etc. UPWELLS (12) UPWINDS (13) URACILS (9) URAEMIA (9) [noun] Blood poisoning resulting from the retention of waste products usually excreted as urine. URAEMIC (11) URALITE (7) URANIAS (7) URANIDE (8) URANISM (9) URANITE (7) URANIUM (9) [noun] The element with atomic number 92 and symbol U: a radioactive silvery-grey metal in the actinide series. URANOUS (7) URANYLS (10) URBANER (9) URCHINS (12) [noun] A mischievous child. | [noun] A street urchin, a child who lives, or spends most of their time, in the streets. | [noun] A sea urchin. UREASES (7) UREDIAL (8) UREDIUM (10) UREIDES (8) [noun] Any compound, of general formula R-CO-NH-CO-NH2 or R-CO-NH-CO-NH-CO-R', formally derived by the acylation of urea UREMIAS (9) URETERS (7) [noun] Either of the two long, narrow ducts that carry urine from the kidneys to the urinary bladder. URETHAN (10) URETHRA (10) [noun] The tube through which urine exits the body and, in penises, through which semen is ejaculated. URGENCY (13) [noun] The quality or condition of being urgent | [noun] Insistence, pressure URIDINE (8) [noun] A nucleoside formed from uracil and ribose. URINALS (7) [noun] A device or fixture used for urination, particularly: | [noun] Any oblong glass vessel shaped like the old alchemist's urinal. | [noun] A room or structure used for urination: a latrine; an outhouse; a lavatory. URINARY (10) [noun] A urinary device or fixture: a urinal. | [adjective] Pertaining to urine, its production, function, or excretion. | [adjective] Of or relating to the organs involved in the formation and excretion of urine. URINATE (7) [verb] (urology) To pass urine from the body. URINOSE (7) URINOUS (7) URNLIKE (11) URODELE (8) [noun] Any caudate amphibian UROLITH (10) UROLOGY (11) [noun] The surgical specialty of medicine that treats disorders of the urinary tract and the urogenital system. UROPODS (10) [noun] Either of the two posterior abdominal appendages of the lobster, shrimp and some other crustaceans | [noun] The hind part of polarized leukocytes, mostly involved in cell-to-cell interaction, cell activation and apoptosis URTEXTS (14) [noun] A primitive, seminal, or prototypical example of an artistic genre or the basis of an ideological movement. | [noun] The original version of a piece of music or text, as created by the composer or writer. USANCES (9) USAUNCE (9) USEABLE (9) [adjective] Capable of being used. | [adjective] Easy to use; exhibiting good usability. | [adjective] Homosexual USEABLY (12) USELESS (7) [adjective] Without use or possibility to be used. | [adjective] Unhelpful, not useful; pointless (of an action). | [adjective] (of a person) Good-for-nothing; not dependable. USHERED (11) [verb] To guide people to their seats. | [verb] To accompany or escort (someone). | [verb] To precede; to act as a forerunner or herald. USUALLY (10) [adverb] Most of the time; less than always, but more than occasionally. | [adverb] Under normal conditions. USURERS (7) [noun] A person who loans money to others and charges interest, particularly at an illegal, exorbitant, or unfair rate. | [noun] Specifically, a male usurer. USURIES (7) USURPED (10) [verb] To seize power from another, usually by illegitimate means. | [verb] To use and assume the coat of arms of another person. | [verb] To take the place rightfully belonging to someone or something else. USURPER (9) [noun] One who usurps. UTENSIL (7) [noun] An instrument or device for domestic use, especially in the kitchen. | [noun] A useful small tool, implement, or vessel. UTERINE (7) [noun] A uterine sibling. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the uterus. | [adjective] Born of the same mother but of a different father. UTILISE (7) [verb] To make use of; to use. | [verb] To make useful; to find a practical use for. | [verb] To make best use of; to use to its fullest extent, potential, or ability. UTILITY (10) [noun] The state or condition of being useful; usefulness. | [noun] Something that is useful. | [noun] The ability of a commodity to satisfy needs or wants; the satisfaction experienced by the consumer of that commodity. UTILIZE (16) [verb] To make use of; to use. | [verb] To make useful; to find a practical use for. | [verb] To make best use of; to use to its fullest extent, potential, or ability. UTMOSTS (9) UTOPIAN (9) [noun] Someone who supports or heralds the establishment of a utopia. | [adjective] Ideal but often impractical; visionary. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to or resembling a utopia. UTOPIAS (9) [noun] A world in which everything and everyone works in perfect harmony. UTOPISM (11) UTOPIST (9) UTRICLE (9) [noun] One of two otolith organs located in the vertebrate inner ear (the other being the saccule). | [noun] The prostatic utricle (a small indentation found in the male prostate). | [noun] A dry fruit similar to an achene, found in the beet and dock plants. UTTERED (8) [verb] To produce (speech or other sounds) with one's voice. | [verb] To reveal or express (an idea, thought, desire, etc.) with speech. | [verb] To produce (a noise) (of an inanimate object). UTTERER (7) UTTERLY (10) [adverb] Completely, entirely, to the fullest extent UVEITIC (12) UVEITIS (10) [noun] Inflammation of the uvea UVULARS (10) [noun] A sound articulated with the uvula. UXORIAL (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a wife, or her genes or relatives. | [adjective] Devoted to one's wife; uxorious.

8-Letter Words (825)

UBIETIES (10) UBIQUITY (22) [noun] The state or quality of being, or appearing to be, everywhere at once; actual or perceived omnipresence. | [noun] Anything that is ubiquitous within a specified area. UDOMETER (11) UDOMETRY (14) UGLIFIED (13) UGLIFIER (12) UGLIFIES (12) UGLINESS (9) [noun] The condition of being ugly | [noun] An unsightly or frightful object UINTAITE (8) UKELELES (12) [noun] A small four-stringed guitar. UKULELES (12) [noun] A small four-stringed guitar. ULCERATE (10) [verb] To cause an ulcer to develop. | [verb] To become ulcerous. | [adjective] (of a pollen grain) Having an ulcus, a rounded pore-like aperture, at one or both poles. ULCERING (11) ULCEROUS (10) [adjective] Of or relating to an ulcer | [adjective] Having an ulcer ULEXITES (15) ULTERIOR (8) [adjective] Situated beyond, or on the farther side. | [adjective] Beyond what is obvious or evident. | [adjective] Being intentionally concealed so as to deceive. ULTIMACY (15) ULTIMATA (10) [noun] A final statement of terms or conditions made by one party to another, especially one that expresses a threat of reprisal or war. ULTIMATE (10) [noun] The most basic or fundamental of a set of things | [noun] The final or most distant point; the conclusion | [noun] The greatest extremity; the maximum ULTRADRY (12) ULTRAHIP (13) ULTRAHOT (11) ULTRAISM (10) [noun] Radicalism or political extremism. | [noun] A Spanish poetic movement opposed to modernism. ULTRAIST (8) [noun] One who pushes a principle or measure to extremes ULTRALOW (11) ULTRARED (9) ULULATED (9) [verb] To howl loudly or prolongedly in lamentation or joy | [verb] To produce a rapid and prolonged series of sharp noises with one's voice. ULULATES (8) [verb] To howl loudly or prolongedly in lamentation or joy | [verb] To produce a rapid and prolonged series of sharp noises with one's voice. UMANGITE (11) UMBELLAR (12) UMBELLED (13) UMBELLET (12) UMBERING (13) UMBILICI (14) [noun] Navel | [noun] Hilum | [noun] A depression or opening in the center of the base of many spiral shells. UMBONATE (12) [adjective] (of a mushroom etc) Having an umbo UMBRAGES (13) UMBRELLA (12) [noun] Cloth-covered frame used for protection against rain or sun. | [noun] Generally, anything that provides protection. | [noun] Something that covers a wide range of concepts, purposes, groups, etc. UMBRETTE (12) UMLAUTED (11) [verb] To place an umlaut over (a vowel). | [verb] To modify (a word) so that an umlaut is required in it. | [adjective] Modified by the addition of an umlaut. UMPIRAGE (13) UMPIRING (13) [verb] To act as an umpire in a game. | [verb] To decide as an umpire. UMTEENTH (13) UNABATED (11) [adjective] Continuing at full strength or intensity UNABUSED (11) UNAFRAID (12) [adjective] Not afraid. UNAGEING (10) UNAKITES (12) UNALLIED (9) [adjective] Not allied. UNAMUSED (11) [adjective] Not amused; thus often offended or put off. UNANCHOR (13) UNANELED (9) [adjective] In the Christian faith, not having taken the sacred unction before dying UNARGUED (10) UNARMING (11) [verb] To disarm, to remove the armour and weapons from. | [verb] To remove one's armour. UNARTFUL (11) UNATONED (9) [adjective] Not atoned for. UNAVOWED (15) [adjective] Not avowed. UNAWAKED (16) UNAWARES (11) [adverb] Unexpectedly or by surprise. | [adverb] Inadvertently. | [adverb] Without plan or forethought. UNBACKED (17) [adjective] Having no back. | [adjective] Not supported or backed up (by someone or something). | [adjective] Having no (or few) backers. UNBANNED (11) [verb] To lift a ban against. UNBARBED (13) UNBARRED (11) [verb] To remove an impediment that obstructs the passage of (someone or something). | [verb] To remove a prohibition. | [verb] To unlock or unbolt a door that had been locked or bolted with a bar. UNBATHED (14) UNBEARED (11) UNBEATEN (10) [adjective] Not having been thrashed or beaten | [adjective] Not defeated | [adjective] Untrodden UNBELIEF (13) [noun] An absence (or rejection) of belief, especially religious belief UNBELTED (11) [adjective] Not belted | [adjective] Without a belt UNBENDED (12) UNBENIGN (11) UNBIASED (11) [adjective] Impartial or without bias or prejudice. UNBIDDEN (12) [adjective] Not invited, requested or asked for UNBILLED (11) UNBITTED (11) UNBITTEN (10) UNBITTER (10) UNBLAMED (13) UNBLOCKS (16) [verb] To remove or clear a block or obstruction from. | [verb] To free or make available. | [verb] In whist, to throw away a high card so as not to interrupt one's partner's long suit. UNBLOODY (14) UNBODIED (12) UNBOLTED (11) [verb] To unlock by undoing the bolts of. | [adjective] Not fastened with a bolt. | [adjective] Not sifted. UNBONNET (10) [verb] To remove a bonnet from. | [verb] To take off one's bonnet. UNBOSOMS (12) [verb] To tell someone about (one's troubles), and thus obtain relief. | [verb] To free (oneself) of the burden of one's troubles by telling of them. | [verb] To confess a misdeed. UNBOUGHT (14) UNBOUNCY (15) UNBOXING (18) [verb] To remove from a box. | [verb] To retrieve (a value of a primitive type) from the object in which it is boxed. | [noun] The removal of something from its box; an unpacking. UNBRACED (13) [verb] To undo, unfasten; to relax, loosen. | [adjective] Not braced UNBRACES (12) [verb] To undo, unfasten; to relax, loosen. UNBRAIDS (11) [verb] To disentangle the strands of a braid UNBRAKED (15) UNBRAKES (14) UNBREECH (15) UNBRIDLE (11) [verb] To remove the bridle, and other tack, from (a horse or other animal). | [verb] To remove restraint from. UNBRIGHT (14) UNBROKEN (14) [adjective] Whole, not divided into parts. | [adjective] Of a horse, not tamed. | [adjective] Continuous, without interruption. | [verb] To do the inverse of breaking: to mend, restore, heal or fix. UNBUCKLE (16) [verb] To unfasten (the buckle of (a belt, shoe, etc)) UNBUILDS (11) [verb] To dismantle or deconstruct (something previously built). UNBUNDLE (11) [verb] To separate parts which have been bundled together. | [verb] To break down a product or service into a number of separate elements that can be charged for individually. UNBURDEN (11) [verb] To free from burden, or relieve from trouble. UNBURIED (11) [adjective] Not having been buried. | [verb] To dig up, to remove from the ground. UNBURNED (11) [adjective] Not burned. UNBUSTED (11) UNBUTTON (10) [verb] To open (something) by undoing its buttons. | [verb] To come open by having its buttons unfastened. UNCAGING (12) [verb] To take out of or release from a cage. | [verb] (by extension) To unleash; to remove from restraints. UNCAKING (15) UNCALLED (11) [adjective] Not called. UNCANDID (12) [adjective] Not candid; duplicitous, concealing or secretive. UNCAPPED (15) [adjective] Not capped (in various senses). | [adjective] Not having made an appearance in an international sports match. | [verb] To remove a cap or cover from. UNCARING (11) [noun] Lack or absence of caring | [adjective] Characterized by a lack of care; not caring. UNCASHED (14) [adjective] Not presented for payment; unredeemed. UNCASING (11) [verb] To take out of a case or covering; to uncover. | [verb] To strip; to flay. | [verb] To display, or spread to view, as a flag, or the colors of a military body. UNCASKED (15) UNCATCHY (18) UNCAUGHT (14) [adjective] Not caught. UNCAUSED (11) UNCHAINS (13) [verb] To remove chains from; to free; to liberate. UNCHANCY (18) [adjective] Unfortunate, unlucky. | [adjective] Dangerous, unsafe. UNCHARGE (14) UNCHASTE (13) [adjective] Not chaste; not continent UNCHEWED (17) UNCHICLY (18) UNCHOKED (18) UNCHOKES (17) UNCHOSEN (13) [adjective] Not chosen. UNCHURCH (18) [verb] To expel from membership of a congregation or church; to excommunicate. UNCIALLY (13) UNCIFORM (15) [noun] The hamate bone. | [adjective] Of the shape of a hook; hook-shaped. UNCINATE (10) [adjective] Hooked at the end. | [adjective] Hooked in form; possessing a hook. UNCLAMPS (14) [verb] To remove a clamp from. UNCLASPS (12) [verb] To release the clasp from something | [verb] To become unfastened | [verb] To separate from being clasped UNCLENCH (15) [verb] To open (something that was clenched). | [verb] To relax, especially one's muscles. UNCLINCH (15) UNCLOAKS (14) [verb] To remove a cloak or cover from; to deprive of a cloak or cover; to unmask; to reveal. | [verb] To remove one's cloak. | [verb] To become visible again by turning off a cloaking device. UNCLOSED (11) [verb] To open; to unclench. | [adjective] Not closed; left open. UNCLOSES (10) [verb] To open; to unclench. UNCLOTHE (13) [verb] To strip of clothes or covering; to make naked. UNCLOUDS (11) UNCLOYED (14) UNCOATED (11) [verb] (of the capsid shell) to dissociate from the viral core in the host cell cytoplasm | [verb] To remove the viral capsid of a virus, leading to the release of the viral genomic nucleic acid. | [adjective] Not coated UNCOCKED (17) UNCOFFIN (16) UNCOILED (11) [verb] To unwind or untwist (something). | [verb] To unwind or untwist oneself. | [adjective] Not (or no longer) coiled UNCOINED (11) UNCOMBED (15) [verb] To reverse the effect of combing; to muss. | [verb] To remove a backcomb from. | [verb] To comb out; to disentangle. UNCOMELY (15) [adjective] Not comely. | [adverb] In an uncomely way; inappropriately, unappealingly. UNCOMMON (14) [adjective] Rare; not readily found; unusual. | [adjective] Remarkable; exceptional. | [adverb] Exceedingly, exceptionally. UNCOOKED (15) [verb] To undo the act of cooking | [verb] To repair a file (specifically an MP3 audio file) that has been damaged ("cooked") by being converted through a text format and having line breaks applied to it. | [adjective] Raw and not cooked, especially of something that should be, or is sometimes cooked UNCOOLED (11) UNCORKED (15) [verb] To open (a bottle or other container sealed with a cork or stopper) by removing the cork or stopper from. | [verb] To release. | [adjective] Not corked; Allowing liquid to flow freely. UNCOUPLE (12) [verb] To disconnect or detach one thing from another. | [verb] To come loose. | [verb] To loose, as dogs, from their couples. UNCOVERS (13) [verb] To remove a cover from. | [verb] To reveal the identity of. | [verb] To show openly; to disclose; to reveal. UNCRATED (11) [adjective] Not contained in a crate. | [verb] To remove from a crate. UNCRATES (10) [verb] To remove from a crate. UNCREATE (10) [verb] To kill; to destroy; to deprive of existence; to annihilate. | [verb] To undo the act of creating. UNCROWNS (13) [verb] To deprive of the monarchy or other authority or status. | [verb] To remove a crown from (often figuratively). UNCTIONS (10) [noun] A salve or ointment. | [noun] A religious or ceremonial anointing. | [noun] A balm or something that soothes. UNCTUOUS (10) [adjective] (of a liquid or substance) Oily or greasy. | [adjective] (of a wine, coffee, sauce, gravy etc.) Rich, lush, intense, with layers of concentrated, soft, velvety flavor. | [adjective] (by extension, of a person) Profusely polite, especially unpleasantly so and insincerely earnest. UNCUFFED (17) UNCURBED (13) [adjective] Unlimited; unrestricted. UNCURLED (11) [verb] To straighten out from being curled up. UNCURSED (11) UNDAMPED (14) UNDARING (10) UNDECKED (16) UNDENIED (10) [adjective] Not denied UNDERACT (11) [verb] To act in an understated manner or with little expressiveness UNDERAGE (10) [adjective] Below the legal age for some activity, such as drinking or having sex. | [adjective] Not yet a legal adult; still a minor. | [noun] A deficit or shortfall in funds, inventory, or capacity. UNDERARM (11) [noun] The armpit. | [noun] Old-fashioned and now outlawed style of bowling in which the arm is not swung over the shoulder. | [verb] To supply with insufficient weaponry. UNDERATE (9) UNDERBID (12) [noun] A bid that is lower than another. | [verb] To bid too low. | [verb] To bid lower than another. UNDERBUD (12) UNDERBUY (14) UNDERCUT (11) [noun] A cut made in the lower part of something; the material so removed. | [noun] The notch cut in a tree to direct its fall when being felled. | [noun] The underside of a sirloin of beef; the fillet. UNDERDID (11) UNDERDOG (11) [noun] A competitor thought unlikely to win. | [noun] Somebody at a disadvantage. | [noun] A high swing wherein the person pushing the swing runs beneath the swing while the person being pushed is at the forward limit of the arc. UNDEREAT (9) UNDERFED (13) [adjective] Inadequately fed. | [verb] To feed inadequately or insufficiently UNDERFUR (12) [noun] The thick, soft undercoat of some mammals, especially those that spend time in the water UNDERGOD (11) UNDERJAW (19) UNDERLAP (11) UNDERLAY (12) [verb] To lay (something) underneath something else; to put under. | [verb] To provide a support for something; to raise or support by something laid under. | [verb] To put a tap on (a shoe). | [noun] A layer (of earth, etc.) that lies under another; substratum. UNDERLET (9) [verb] To let below the value. | [verb] To let or lease at second hand; to sublet. UNDERLIE (9) [verb] To lie in a position directly beneath. | [verb] To lie under or beneath. | [verb] To serve as a basis of; form the foundation of. UNDERLIP (11) [noun] The lower lip. UNDERLIT (9) [adjective] Illuminated from beneath | [adjective] Poorly, or insufficiently illuminated UNDERPAY (14) [verb] To pay (someone) less than the value of their work; to pay (someone) insufficiently. | [verb] To pay less than is due for (something). UNDERPIN (11) [verb] To support from below with props or masonry. | [verb] To give support to; to corroborate. UNDERRAN (9) UNDERRUN (9) UNDERSEA (9) [adjective] Existing, relating to, or made for use beneath the sea. UNDERSET (9) [noun] Undercurrent (of water) | [verb] To set under or beneath. | [verb] To prop or support. UNDERTAX (16) UNDERTOW (12) [noun] A short-range flow of water returning seaward from the waves breaking on the shore. | [noun] (by extension) A feeling that runs contrary to one's normal one. | [verb] To pull or tow under; drag beneath; pull down. UNDERWAY (15) [noun] A road, track, path, or street for going under another way or obstacle. | [noun] An underground passage, tunnel. | [noun] A voyage, especially underwater. UNDEVOUT (12) UNDIMMED (14) [adjective] Not dimmed. UNDOABLE (11) [noun] Something that cannot be done; an impossible or impractical task. | [adjective] Not doable; impossible to do. | [adjective] Possible to undo; reversible. UNDOCILE (11) UNDOCKED (16) [verb] To remove (a ship) from a dock. | [verb] To remove from a docking station. | [verb] To drag (a user interface element, such as a toolbar) away from its fixed position so that it floats freely. UNDOINGS (10) UNDOTTED (10) UNDOUBLE (11) UNDRAPED (12) [adjective] Not draped. UNDRAPES (11) UNDREAMT (11) [adjective] Not dreamed; not dreamt. UNDUBBED (14) UNDULANT (9) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a wave; wavelike UNDULATE (9) [verb] To cause to move in a wavelike motion. | [verb] To cause to resemble a wave | [verb] To move in wavelike motions. UNDULLED (10) UNEARNED (9) [adjective] Not earned. UNEARTHS (11) [verb] To drive or draw from the earth. | [verb] To uncover or find; to bring out from concealment | [verb] To dig up. UNEASIER (8) [adjective] Not easy; difficult. | [adjective] Restless; disturbed by pain, anxiety | [adjective] Not easy in manner; constrained UNEASILY (11) [adverb] In an uneasy manner. UNEDIBLE (11) UNEDITED (10) [adjective] Not having been altered from the original version; not edited. UNENDING (10) [adjective] Not ending; having no end. UNENVIED (12) [adjective] Not envied. UNEQUALS (17) [noun] One who is not an equal. UNERASED (9) UNEROTIC (10) UNERRING (9) [adjective] Consistently accurate; not missing a target. UNEVADED (13) UNEVENER (11) UNEVENLY (14) [adverb] In an uneven or haphazard manner. | [adverb] In an unequal manner. UNEXOTIC (17) UNEXPERT (17) UNFADING (13) [adjective] Not fading; not losing its color or intensity, or being forgotten. UNFAIRER (11) [adjective] Not beautiful; uncomely; unattractive | [adjective] Sorrowful; sad | [adjective] Unseemly; disgraceful UNFAIRLY (14) [adverb] In a manner that is unfair. UNFAITHS (14) UNFALLEN (11) UNFAMOUS (13) UNFASTEN (11) [verb] To detach from any connecting agency or link; to disconnect. | [verb] To come unloosed or untied. UNFEARED (12) UNFENCED (14) [adjective] Not enclosed by a fence or other boundary; free to roam over a wider area. | [adjective] Without protection; defenseless. UNFENCES (13) UNFETTER (11) [verb] To release from fetters; to unchain; to let loose; to free. UNFILIAL (11) [adjective] Not befitting or proper for a son. UNFILLED (12) [adjective] Not filled, especially occupational positions. | [verb] To empty. UNFILMED (14) UNFISHED (15) UNFITTED (12) [adjective] Not suited, not fit (for something). | [adjective] (of a garment) Not customized, tailored or cut to fit. | [adjective] Of trains, or wagons in the train, not having a through brake pipe, or brakes on the wagons that can be operated from the locomotive (the wagons did have handbrakes however). | [verb] To make unfit; to render unsuitable, spoil, disqualify. UNFIXING (19) UNFLASHY (17) [adjective] Not flashy. UNFLEXED (19) UNFOILED (12) UNFOLDED (13) [verb] To undo a folding. | [verb] To turn out; to happen; to develop. | [verb] To reveal. UNFOLDER (12) UNFORCED (14) [adjective] Not forced. UNFORGED (13) UNFORGOT (12) UNFORKED (16) UNFORMED (14) [adjective] Not formed or made. | [adjective] Not having a definite form; shapeless; amorphous. | [adjective] Not well developed. UNFOUGHT (15) UNFRAMED (14) [adjective] Not framed; not having a frame. UNFREEZE (20) [verb] To defrost something. | [verb] To thaw. | [verb] To resume movement. UNFROCKS (17) [verb] To remove from the clergy; to revoke the clergical status of. UNFROZEN (20) [verb] To defrost something. | [verb] To thaw. | [verb] To resume movement. UNFUNDED (13) [adjective] Not funded; having received no funding. UNFURLED (12) [verb] To unroll or release something that had been rolled up, typically a sail or a flag. | [verb] To roll out or debut anything. | [verb] To open up by unrolling. UNGAINLY (12) [noun] An ungainly person or thing. | [adjective] Clumsy; lacking grace. | [adjective] Difficult to move or to manage; unwieldy. | [adverb] In an ungainly or unbecoming manner; improperly; undeservedly, unduly; unsuitably. UNGALLED (10) UNGENIAL (9) [adjective] Not genial. UNGENTLE (9) [adjective] Showing a lack of gentleness, kindness or compassion. | [adjective] Not acting according to accepted ethics or standards of behaviour. UNGENTLY (12) UNGIFTED (13) [adjective] Not gifted; lacking special talent. | [adjective] Not having received a gift. UNGIRDED (11) [verb] To loosen the girdle or band of. | [verb] To unbind or unload. UNGLAZED (19) [adjective] Not glazed. UNGLOVED (13) [adjective] Not wearing a glove; barehanded. UNGLOVES (12) UNGLUING (10) UNGOTTEN (9) UNGOWNED (13) UNGRACED (12) UNGRADED (11) [adjective] Not graded; having no grade. UNGREEDY (13) UNGROUND (10) [verb] To remove a connection to ground potential. | [verb] To free from the punishment of being grounded (restricted to home). | [adjective] Not having been ground; unpulverized. UNGUARDS (10) [verb] To deprive of a guard; to leave unprotected. UNGUENTA (9) UNGUENTS (9) [noun] Any cream containing medicinal ingredients applied to the skin for therapeutic purposes. UNGUIDED (11) [adjective] Not guided; without a guide. UNGULATE (9) [noun] An ungulate animal; a hooved mammal. | [adjective] Having hooves. | [adjective] Shaped like a hoof. UNHAILED (12) UNHAIRED (12) UNHALLOW (14) UNHALVED (15) UNHANDED (13) [verb] To release from the hand; to let go. UNHANGED (13) UNHARMED (14) [adjective] Which has not suffered harm; which has not been injured or damaged UNHATTED (12) UNHEALED (12) [adjective] Not healed. | [verb] To uncover, to reveal. UNHEATED (12) [adjective] Not heated UNHEDGED (14) [adjective] Without a hedge. | [adjective] Not hedged; not offset or counterbalanced. UNHEEDED (13) [adjective] Not heeded; not listened to; ignored | [adjective] (of advice) not followed. UNHELMED (14) UNHELPED (14) UNHEROIC (13) [adjective] Not heroic UNHINGED (13) [verb] To remove the leaf of a door or a window from its supporting hinges. | [verb] To mentally disturb. | [adjective] (usually humorous) Mentally ill or unstable. | [adjective] Not furnished with a hinge. UNHINGES (12) [verb] To remove the leaf of a door or a window from its supporting hinges. | [verb] To mentally disturb. UNHOLIER (11) [adjective] Not holy; (by extension) evil, impure, or otherwise perverted. | [adjective] Dreadful, terrible, or otherwise atrocious. UNHOLILY (14) UNHOODED (13) [verb] To remove the hood from. | [adjective] Not having or wearing a hood. UNHOOKED (16) [verb] To remove from a hook. | [verb] To unfasten by means of hooks. | [verb] To unfasten the bra of (its wearer). UNHORSED (12) [verb] To forcibly remove from a horse. | [verb] (by extension) To disrupt or unseat; to remove from a position. UNHORSES (11) [verb] To forcibly remove from a horse. | [verb] (by extension) To disrupt or unseat; to remove from a position. UNHOUSED (12) [verb] To displace one from one's housing or shelter. | [verb] To take a house away from. | [adjective] Driven from one's home UNHOUSES (11) UNHUSKED (16) [verb] To remove the husk of. | [adjective] Without a husk. | [adjective] Having the husk on; still on the husk. UNIALGAL (9) UNIAXIAL (15) [adjective] Having a single axis; monoaxial | [adjective] Having a single stem, with no branches, that terminates in a flower UNICOLOR (10) [adjective] Of one color; monochromatic. UNICORNS (10) [noun] A mythical beast resembling a horse or deer with a single, straight, spiraled horn projecting from its forehead. | [noun] In various Bible translations, used to render the Latin unicornis or rhinoceros (representing Hebrew רְאֵם): a reem or wild ox. | [noun] Any large beetle having a horn-like prominence on the head or prothorax, especially the Hercules beetle, Dynastes tityus. UNICYCLE (15) [noun] A type of cycle that has only one wheel and is powered by pedals; it is most often used by acrobats. | [verb] To travel or move around by unicycle. UNIDEAED (10) UNIFACES (13) UNIFIERS (11) UNIFILAR (11) UNIFORMS (13) [noun] A distinctive outfit that serves to identify members of a group. | [noun] Phonetic equivalent for the letter U in the ICAO spelling alphabet, informally known as the NATO phonetic alphabet. | [noun] A uniformed police officer (as opposed to a detective). UNIFYING (15) [verb] Cause to become one; make into a unit; consolidate; merge; combine. | [verb] Become one. | [noun] Unification UNILOBED (11) UNIMBUED (13) UNIONISE (8) [verb] To organize workers into a union. UNIONISM (10) [noun] The support of advocacy of a union, especially of a trade union | [noun] (often capitalised) Support for the North (the Union) during the American Civil War | [noun] (often capitalised) Support for the continuance of the United Kingdom (especially with respect to Northern Ireland) UNIONIST (8) [noun] An advocate or supporter of unionism | [noun] A trade unionist | [adjective] (sometimes capitalised) Of or pertaining to unionism UNIONIZE (17) [verb] To organize workers into a union. UNIPOLAR (10) [adjective] Having a single pole. | [adjective] Not both depressive and manic; not bipolar. | [adjective] Of or relating to an international system in which one state wields most of the cultural, economic, and political influence. UNIQUELY (20) [adverb] In a unique manner. UNIQUEST (17) UNIRONED (9) [adjective] Not ironed. UNISEXES (15) UNISONAL (8) UNISSUED (9) [adjective] That has not been issued UNITAGES (9) UNITARDS (9) [noun] A skin-tight garment covering the torso and the legs, sometimes the arms and feet. UNITEDLY (12) UNITIZED (18) [verb] To manage as a unit | [verb] To convert, package, or organize into one or more units UNITIZER (17) UNITIZES (17) [verb] To manage as a unit | [verb] To convert, package, or organize into one or more units UNITRUST (8) UNIVALVE (14) [noun] A univalve mollusk or its shell. | [adjective] Having one valve; typically used to refer to mollusks, notably slugs and snails. | [adjective] Consisting of a single valve or piece, used to refer to a shell. UNIVERSE (11) [proper noun] Our universe, the sum of everything that exists in the cosmos, including time and space itself. | [noun] The sum of everything that exists in the cosmos, including time and space itself. | [noun] An entity similar to our universe; one component of a larger entity known as the multiverse. UNIVOCAL (13) [noun] A word having only one meaning. | [noun] A document containing instances of only one vowel. | [adjective] Having only one possible meaning. UNJOINED (16) [verb] To separate or detach (things that were joined). | [verb] To cease to be a member of; to leave. | [adjective] Not joined UNJOINTS (15) [verb] To dislocate. | [verb] To disjoint. UNJOYFUL (21) UNJUDGED (18) UNJUSTLY (18) [adverb] In an unjust manner. UNKENNED (13) UNKENNEL (12) UNKINDER (13) [adjective] Lacking kindness, sympathy, benevolence, gratitude, or similar; cruel, harsh or unjust; ungrateful. | [adjective] Not kind; contrary to nature or type; unnatural. | [adjective] Having no race or kindred; childless. UNKINDLY (16) UNKINGLY (16) UNKINKED (17) [verb] To remove the kinks from. | [adjective] Not kinked. UNKISSED (13) UNKNOWNS (15) [noun] A variable (usually x, y or z) whose value is to be found. | [noun] Any thing, place, or situation about which nothing is known; an unknown fact or piece of information. | [noun] A person of no identity; a nonentity UNKOSHER (15) UNLACING (11) [verb] To remove the knot from laces; to undo laces. | [verb] To loosen the clothing of (a person). | [verb] To remove (film) from a projector. UNLADING (10) [verb] To unload. | [verb] To disburden; take the burden from; relieve. | [verb] To discharge the cargo from. UNLASHED (12) [verb] To unfasten. | [adjective] Without eyelashes. UNLASHES (11) [verb] To unfasten. UNLAWFUL (14) [adjective] Prohibited; not permitted by law (either civil or criminal law; see illegal). UNLAYING (12) [verb] To untwist. UNLEADED (10) [verb] To take away the leaden seals from (the bales of transit goods). | [verb] To take out the leads from (printed matter that has been set up). | [noun] An unleaded fuel. UNLEARNS (8) [verb] To discard the knowledge of. | [verb] To break a habit. UNLEARNT (8) [verb] To discard the knowledge of. | [verb] To break a habit. | [adjective] Innate, inherent or inborn. UNLEASED (9) UNLETHAL (11) UNLETTED (9) UNLEVELS (11) UNLEVIED (12) UNLICKED (15) UNLIKELY (15) [noun] Something or somebody considered unlikely. | [adjective] Not likely; improbable; not to be reasonably expected. | [adjective] Not holding out a prospect of success; likely to fail; unpromising. UNLIMBER (12) [verb] To deploy an artillery piece for firing (ie, to detach it from its limber). | [verb] (by extension) To clumsily put into employ a large weapon or object. | [verb] To unsling something, as a backpack, carried on the body with a strap; to bring something carried into the hands for use. UNLINKED (13) [verb] To decouple; to remove a link from, or separate the links of. | [verb] To delete (a file). | [adjective] Not linked, physically or figuratively. UNLISTED (9) [verb] To undo the process of listing; to remove something from a list. | [adjective] Not included in a list. UNLIVELY (14) UNLIVING (12) [adjective] Not living; unalive, dead, inanimate. UNLOADED (10) [verb] To remove the load or cargo from (a vehicle, etc.). | [verb] To remove (the load or cargo) from a vehicle, etc. | [verb] To deposit one's load or cargo. | [adjective] Not loaded. UNLOADER (9) UNLOCKED (15) [verb] To undo or open a lock or something locked by, for example, turning a key, or selecting a combination. | [verb] To obtain access to something. | [verb] To disclose or reveal previously unknown knowledge. UNLOOSED (9) [verb] To free (someone or something) from a constraint. | [verb] To undo or loosen something that fastens, holds, entangles, or interlocks. UNLOOSEN (8) [verb] To unloose; to loosen. UNLOOSES (8) [verb] To free (someone or something) from a constraint. | [verb] To undo or loosen something that fastens, holds, entangles, or interlocks. UNLOVELY (14) [adjective] Unattractive, ugly UNLOVING (12) [verb] To lose one's love (for someone or something). | [adjective] Not loving. UNMAKERS (14) UNMAKING (15) [verb] To destroy or take apart; to cause (a made article) to lose its nature. | [noun] The act by which something is unmade. UNMANFUL (13) UNMANNED (11) [verb] To castrate; to remove the manhood of. | [verb] To sap (a person) of the strength, whether physical or emotional, required to deal with a situation. | [verb] To deprive of men. UNMAPPED (15) [adjective] Not mapped. UNMARKED (15) [adjective] Not bearing identification. | [adjective] Free from blemishes. | [adjective] Not noticed. UNMARRED (11) [adjective] Undamaged; not marred. UNMASKED (15) [verb] To remove a mask from someone. | [verb] To expose, or reveal the true character of someone. | [verb] To remove one's mask. UNMASKER (14) UNMATTED (11) UNMEETLY (13) UNMELLOW (13) UNMELTED (11) [adjective] Not melted; in a solid state. UNMENDED (12) UNMESHED (14) UNMESHES (13) UNMEWING (14) UNMILLED (11) [adjective] Not milled. UNMINGLE (11) UNMITERS (10) UNMITRED (11) UNMITRES (10) UNMIXING (18) UNMODISH (14) UNMOLDED (12) UNMOLTEN (10) UNMOORED (11) [adjective] Not moored. | [adjective] Mentally immature, unstable, or lacking in emotional connections. | [verb] To unfix or unsecure (a moored boat). UNMOVING (14) [adjective] Not moving; still; static. | [adjective] Not emotionally moving or rousing; failing to inspire the emotions. UNMUFFLE (16) UNMUZZLE (28) [verb] Remove a muzzle from UNNAILED (9) [verb] To remove the nails from. UNNEEDED (10) [adjective] Not needed. UNNERVED (12) [verb] To deprive of nerve, force, or strength; to weaken; to enfeeble. | [verb] To make somebody nervous, upset, alarm, shake the resolve of. | [adjective] Deprived of courage, strength, confidence, self-control, etc UNNERVES (11) [verb] To deprive of nerve, force, or strength; to weaken; to enfeeble. | [verb] To make somebody nervous, upset, alarm, shake the resolve of. UNOPENED (11) [adjective] Not yet opened; still closed UNORNATE (8) UNPACKED (17) [verb] To remove from a package or container, particularly with respect to items that had previously been arranged closely and securely in a pack. | [verb] To empty containers that had been packed. | [verb] To analyze a concept or a text. UNPACKER (16) UNPAIRED (11) [verb] To go from a paired to a non-paired state; to disassociate. | [adjective] Not forming one of a pair UNPARTED (11) UNPAYING (14) UNPEELED (11) [verb] To remove the peel from something; to peel. | [verb] To unwind something. | [adjective] Not peeled. UNPEGGED (13) [verb] To remove from a peg. | [adjective] Not pegged. UNPENNED (11) UNPEOPLE (12) [verb] To deprive of inhabitants; to depopulate. | [noun] A human who has been stripped of rights, identity or humanity. UNPERSON (10) [noun] A human who has been stripped of rights, identity or humanity. | [verb] To strip (a human being) of rights, identity or humanity. UNPICKED (17) [verb] To undo sewing stitches. | [verb] To undo knitting in order to reuse the wool. | [verb] To unravel or untangle the threads of a rope etc. UNPILING (11) UNPINNED (11) [verb] To unfasten by removing a pin. | [verb] To detach (an icon, application, etc.) from the place where it was previously pinned. | [verb] To get out of a pin UNPITIED (11) [adjective] Not pitied. UNPLACED (13) [adjective] Not assigned a place. | [adjective] Not among the first three horses to finish a race. UNPLAITS (10) [verb] To undo or untwist plaited hair; to unbraid UNPLAYED (14) [adjective] Not played. UNPLIANT (10) UNPLOWED (14) [adjective] (of a field or land) Unturned with a plough, and thus retaining its original vegetation (usually grass). | [adjective] Unexplored or unknown. UNPOETIC (12) [adjective] Not poetic UNPOISED (11) UNPOLITE (10) UNPOLLED (11) [adjective] Not polled (included in a vote). UNPOSTED (11) UNPOTTED (11) UNPRETTY (13) UNPRICED (13) [adjective] Not having a price set or shown; not priced. | [adjective] Valuable beyond price; priceless. UNPRIMED (13) [adjective] Not primed UNPRIZED (20) UNPROBED (13) UNPROVED (14) [adjective] Not proved. UNPROVEN (13) [adjective] Not proved. UNPRUNED (11) [adjective] Not having been pruned. UNPUCKER (16) UNPURGED (12) UNPUZZLE (28) UNQUIETS (17) UNQUOTED (18) [adjective] Not quoted on the stock exchange. | [adjective] Not enclosed in quotation marks. | [adjective] Not having been quoted; whose words have not been repeated by others. UNQUOTES (17) [verb] To convert (a quoted expression) back to its original form. UNRAISED (9) UNRANKED (13) [adjective] Not ranked. UNRAVELS (11) [verb] To separate the threads (of); disentangle. | [verb] (of threads, etc.) To become separated; (of something woven, knitted, etc.) to come apart. | [verb] To clear from complication or difficulty; to unfold; to solve. UNREALLY (11) UNREASON (8) [noun] Lack of reason or rationality; unreasonableness; irrationality. | [noun] Nonsense; folly; absurdity. | [verb] To prove to be unreasonable; disprove by argument. UNREELED (9) [verb] To remove or uncoil from a reel. UNREELER (8) UNREEVED (12) UNREEVES (11) [verb] To withdraw or take out, as for example a rope from a block. UNRENTED (9) UNREPAID (11) UNREPAIR (10) UNRESTED (9) [adjective] Not rested UNRHYMED (17) [adjective] Having no rhyme. | [verb] To remove the rhyme or expected rhyme from. UNRIDDLE (10) [verb] To figure out the answer to (a riddle). | [verb] (by extension) To solve (a perplexing problem). UNRIFLED (12) UNRIGGED (11) [adjective] Not rigged; not having the rigging up. UNRINSED (9) UNRIPELY (13) UNRIPEST (10) UNRIPPED (13) [verb] To open something by ripping/tearing. | [adjective] Not ripped. UNROBING (11) [verb] To disrobe, to undress. UNROLLED (9) [verb] To straighten something that has been rolled, twisted or curled. | [verb] To emerge, be revealed or become apparent; to unfold. | [verb] To replace (a loop in a program) with a repetitive sequence of the individual instructions that the loop would carry out, sometimes used as an optimization. UNROOFED (12) [verb] To remove a roof from, e.g. a building. | [adjective] Not roofed, not having a roof. UNROOTED (9) [verb] To tear up by the roots; to uproot. | [adjective] Not rooted | [adjective] Uprooted UNROUNDS (9) UNRULIER (8) [adjective] Wild; uncontrolled. UNRUSHED (12) [adjective] Not rushed UNRUSTED (9) UNSADDLE (10) [verb] To remove a saddle. | [verb] To throw (a rider) from the saddle. UNSAFELY (14) UNSAFETY (14) UNSALTED (9) [adjective] To which salt has not been added. | [adjective] Without a cryptographic salt. UNSAVORY (14) [adjective] Not savory; without flavor. | [adjective] Of bad taste; distasteful. | [adjective] Making an activity undesirable. UNSAYING (12) [verb] To withdraw, retract (something said). | [verb] To not have said (since this is physically impossible, usually in the subjunctive). UNSCALED (11) [adjective] That has not been scaled (climbed). UNSCREWS (13) [verb] To loosen a screw or thing by turning it. UNSEALED (9) [verb] To break the seal of (something) in order to open it. | [verb] To open by having a seal broken. | [adjective] Not having been sealed. UNSEAMED (11) UNSEARED (9) UNSEATED (9) [verb] To throw from one's seat; to deprive of a seat. | [verb] To deprive of the right to sit in a legislative body, as for fraud in election, or simply by defeating them in an election. | [adjective] Not seated. UNSEEDED (10) [adjective] Not seeded (in any sense). | [adjective] Not being a seed, not being in a seed position. UNSEEING (9) [adjective] Blind | [adjective] Not aware of what is visible. UNSEEMLY (13) [adjective] Inconsistent with established standards of good form or taste. | [adverb] In an unseemly manner. UNSEIZED (18) UNSERVED (12) [adjective] Not served. | [adjective] Yet to be served (prison sentence) UNSETTLE (8) [verb] To make upset or uncomfortable | [verb] To bring into disorder or disarray UNSEWING (12) UNSEXING (16) [verb] To deprive of sexual attributes or characteristics. | [verb] To sterilize (deprive of the ability to procreate); to castrate. UNSEXUAL (15) UNSHADED (13) [adjective] Not shaded; lacking shade or a shade UNSHAKEN (15) [verb] To retract; to unfold. | [adjective] Not shaken. UNSHAMED (14) UNSHAPED (14) [adjective] Having no distinct shape; formless or amorphous UNSHAPEN (13) UNSHARED (12) [adjective] Not shared; exclusive. UNSHAVED (15) [adjective] Not shaved. UNSHAVEN (14) [adjective] Not having shaved; not shaven; untrimmed. | [adjective] Unkempt UNSHELLS (11) UNSHIFTS (14) UNSHRUNK (15) UNSICKER (14) UNSIFTED (12) UNSIGHTS (12) UNSIGNED (10) [noun] A numeric value or variable that has no sign and can only be positive. | [adjective] Not accepting negative numbers; having only a positive absolute value. | [adjective] Lacking a signature, unendorsed. UNSILENT (8) UNSINFUL (11) UNSLAKED (13) UNSLICED (11) [adjective] Not sliced. UNSLINGS (9) [verb] To take something from a hanging or slung position. UNSMOKED (15) [adjective] (of food) not preserved by treatment with smoke and thus retaining more of the original flavour, for example: unsmoked bacon or salmon. | [adjective] Of a cigarette, cigar or pipe not lit, not burnt. UNSNARLS (8) [verb] To remove or undo a snarl or tangle. UNSOAKED (13) UNSOCIAL (10) [adjective] Not social. | [adjective] Not seeking or showing the desire for the company of others; inhospitable. UNSOILED (9) [adjective] Uncontaminated, undirtied, pure, clean, immaculate. UNSOLDER (9) [verb] To reverse the process of soldering, such as by breaking the joint and removing the solder UNSOLVED (12) [adjective] Not yet solved. UNSONSIE (8) UNSORTED (9) [adjective] Not in any particular order or sequence. | [adjective] Mixed, jumbled, not separated by property into categories. | [adjective] Ill-chosen, inconvenient, unsuitable UNSOUGHT (12) [adjective] Not sought. UNSOURED (9) [adjective] Not soured UNSPEAKS (14) UNSPHERE (13) UNSPOILT (10) [adjective] Not spoilt, decayed or corrupted. UNSPOKEN (14) [verb] To retract what one has spoken, to unsay. | [adjective] (sometimes postpositive) Not spoken; not said. | [adjective] (sometimes postpositive) Not formally articulated or stated; implicit or understood. UNSPRUNG (11) [adjective] Not sprung. UNSTABLE (10) [verb] To release (an animal) from a stable. | [adjective] Having a strong tendency to change. | [adjective] Fluctuating; not constant. UNSTABLY (13) UNSTACKS (14) UNSTATED (9) [adjective] Not explicitly stated; unspoken. UNSTATES (8) UNSTAYED (12) [adjective] Not stayed or held back. | [adjective] Not wearing stays. | [adjective] Without stays. UNSTEADY (12) [verb] To render unsteady, removing balance. | [adjective] Not held firmly in position, physically unstable. | [adjective] Lacking regularity or uniformity. UNSTEELS (8) UNSTICKS (14) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To free from the condition of being stuck. UNSTITCH (13) [verb] To take out stitches from. | [verb] To unravel or disunite; to cause to come apart. UNSTONED (9) UNSTRAPS (10) [verb] To loosen or remove the straps from (something). UNSTRESS (8) UNSTRING (9) [verb] To remove the string or strings from. | [verb] To shake the nerves of; to cause anxiety or panic in. | [verb] To defuse or relax. UNSTRUNG (9) [verb] To remove the string or strings from. | [verb] To shake the nerves of; to cause anxiety or panic in. | [verb] To defuse or relax. UNSTUFFY (17) [adjective] Not stuffy; straightforward UNSUBTLE (10) [adjective] Not subtle; obvious UNSUBTLY (13) UNSUITED (9) [adjective] Not suited to a specific purpose. | [adjective] Not compatible; mismatched. | [adjective] Not wearing a suit. UNSURELY (11) UNSWATHE (14) [verb] To remove a swathe from. UNSWAYED (15) [adjective] Without being swayed, unconvinced, not having changed opinion. UNSWEARS (11) UNTACKED (15) [verb] To unfasten (something tacked). | [verb] To remove the tack from. UNTAGGED (11) [adjective] Not tagged; lacking a tag. UNTANGLE (9) [verb] To remove tangles or knots from. | [verb] (by extension) To remove confusion or mystery from. UNTANNED (9) [adjective] Not tanned UNTAPPED (13) [adjective] Not tapped; not drawn on in terms of resources. UNTASTED (9) [adjective] Not tasted. UNTAUGHT (12) [adjective] Not taught; uneducated. | [adjective] Not taught; not conveyed by means of instruction. UNTENDED (10) [adjective] Not tended UNTENTED (9) UNTESTED (9) [adjective] Not previously tested. UNTETHER (11) [verb] To undo by removing a tether. UNTHAWED (15) [verb] To thaw out, to unfreeze; to become soft (of something which had been frozen). | [adjective] Which has not been thawed: still frozen. UNTHINKS (15) UNTHREAD (12) [verb] To draw or remove a thread from. | [verb] To loosen the connections of. | [verb] To make one's way through. UNTHRONE (11) [verb] To dethrone. UNTIDIED (10) UNTIDIER (9) [adjective] Sloppy. | [adjective] Disorganized. UNTIDIES (9) UNTIDILY (12) UNTILLED (9) [adjective] Of land, having not been tilled. UNTILTED (9) UNTIMELY (13) [adjective] At an inopportune time | [adjective] Early; premature | [adverb] Prematurely UNTINGED (10) [adjective] Not tinged; untouched, unpolluted. UNTIPPED (13) UNTIRING (9) [adjective] Not able to be tired; inexhaustible. | [adjective] Unfailing; resolute. UNTITLED (9) [adjective] Having no title. UNTOWARD (12) [adjective] Unfavourable, adverse, or disadvantageous. | [adjective] Unruly, troublesome; not easily guided. | [adjective] Unseemly, improper. UNTRACED (11) [adjective] Not having been traced. UNTREADS (9) UNTRENDY (12) [adjective] Not trendy; unfashionable, square. UNTRUEST (8) UNTRUSTY (11) UNTRUTHS (11) [noun] A lie or falsehood. | [noun] The condition of being false; truthlessness. UNTUCKED (15) [verb] To remove something from a relatively hidden location or position where it is tucked. | [adjective] (of clothing) Not tucked in UNTUFTED (12) UNTUNING (9) UNTURNED (9) [adjective] Not turned. UNTWINED (12) [verb] To untwist the strands of (something entwined). | [verb] To free (one thing that is entwined with another), disentangle, extricate. | [verb] To become untwisted or disentangled. UNTWINES (11) [verb] To untwist the strands of (something entwined). | [verb] To free (one thing that is entwined with another), disentangle, extricate. | [verb] To become untwisted or disentangled. UNTWISTS (11) [verb] To remove a twist from. | [verb] To become untwisted. UNUNITED (9) UNUSABLE (10) [adjective] Not usable. UNVALUED (12) [adjective] Not having been valued or appraised. | [adjective] Not considered to be of worth; deemed valueless. | [adjective] Having inestimable value; invaluable. UNVARIED (12) [adjective] Not varied; monotonous or homogeneous; samely UNVEILED (12) [verb] To remove a veil from; to uncover; to reveal something hidden. | [verb] To remove a veil; to reveal oneself. | [adjective] Not wearing, or not covered by, a veil. UNVEINED (12) UNVERSED (12) [adjective] Inexperienced, untrained. | [adjective] Not expressed in verse, unversified. UNVIABLE (13) [adjective] Unable to sustain its own life UNVOICED (14) [adjective] Not spoken or expressed. | [adjective] Spoken without vibration of the vocal chords. | [adjective] (of a signal) That does not contain voice. UNVOICES (13) UNWALLED (12) [adjective] Not walled, without walls. UNWANING (12) UNWANTED (12) [noun] One who or that which is not wanted; an undesirable. | [adjective] Not wanted; unwelcome. UNWARIER (11) UNWARILY (14) UNWARMED (14) [adjective] Not warmed UNWARNED (12) [adjective] Not warned UNWARPED (14) UNWASHED (15) [adjective] Not having been washed. | [adjective] Vulgar, plebeian, lowbrow. UNWASTED (12) UNWEANED (12) [adjective] (especially of an animal) Not yet weaned; still being suckled. | [adjective] Naive, wet behind the ears, green, inexperienced. UNWEAVES (14) UNWEDDED (14) [adjective] Not wedded. | [adjective] Not united together; poorly matched or discordant. UNWEEDED (13) [verb] To remove weeds from; to weed. | [adjective] Not weeded UNWEIGHT (15) [verb] To temporarily remove the body's weight from a ski when making a turn. | [verb] To remove a statistical weighting from. UNWELDED (13) UNWETTED (12) [adjective] Not wetted UNWIELDY (15) [adjective] Lacking strength; weak. | [adjective] Ungraceful in movement. | [adjective] Difficult to carry, handle, manage or operate because of its size, weight, shape or complexity. UNWIFELY (17) UNWILLED (12) UNWINDER (12) UNWISDOM (14) [noun] Lack of wisdom; unwise conduct or action UNWISELY (14) [adverb] In an unwise manner; foolishly. UNWISEST (11) UNWISHED (15) [verb] To wish not to be; to destroy by wishing. | [adjective] Unwished-for UNWISHES (14) UNWITTED (12) UNWONTED (12) [adjective] Not customary or habitual; unusual; infrequent; strange. | [adjective] Unused (to); unaccustomed (to) something. UNWOODED (13) [adjective] Not wooded. UNWORKED (16) [adjective] Yet to be altered, carved, milled, worked, or otherwise changed from its natural or crude state. | [adjective] Describing an unaltered material found associated with human tool-making or other cultural activity. UNWORTHY (17) [noun] An inadequate person. | [adjective] Not worthy; lacking value or merit; worthless. UNYEANED (12) UNYOKING (16) [verb] To release something from a yoke or harness. | [verb] To disconnect, unlink. | [verb] To liberate, deliver from oppression. UNZIPPED (22) [verb] To open something using a zipper. | [verb] To come open by means of a zipper. | [verb] To decompress (a zip file). UPBEARER (12) UPBOILED (13) UPBRAIDS (13) [verb] To criticize severely. | [verb] (followed by with or for, and formerly of before the object) To charge with something wrong or disgraceful; to reproach | [verb] To treat with contempt. UPBUILDS (13) [verb] To build up (literally). | [verb] To build up; to develop (figuratively). UPCHUCKS (21) [verb] To vomit. UPCLIMBS (16) UPCOILED (13) UPCOMING (15) [noun] The act of coming up. | [noun] Comeuppance; deserts | [adjective] Happening or appearing in the relatively near future. UPCURLED (13) UPCURVED (16) UPCURVES (15) UPDARTED (12) UPDATERS (11) UPDATING (12) [verb] To bring (a thing) up to date. | [verb] To bring (a person) up to date: to inform (a person) about recent developments. | [noun] The act by which something is updated. UPDIVING (15) UPDRAFTS (14) [noun] An upward current of air, especially a strong one UPDRYING (15) UPENDING (12) [verb] To end up; to set on end. | [verb] To tip or turn over. | [verb] To destroy, invalidate, overthrow, or defeat. UPFLINGS (14) UPFLOWED (17) UPFOLDED (15) UPGATHER (14) UPGAZING (21) UPGIRDED (13) UPGRADED (13) [verb] To improve, usually applied to technology, generally by complete replacement of one or more components | [verb] To replace with something better. | [verb] To improve the equipment or furnishings of or services rendered to UPGRADES (12) [noun] An upward grade or slope. | [noun] An improved component or replacement item, usually applied to technology | [noun] An improvement UPGROWTH (17) [noun] The process or result of growing up; progress; development. UPHEAPED (16) UPHEAVAL (16) [noun] Change, from one state to another | [noun] The process of being heaved upward, especially the raising of part of the earth's crust. | [noun] A sudden violent upset, disruption or convulsion. UPHEAVED (17) [verb] To heave or lift up; raise up or aloft. | [verb] To lift or thrust something upward forcefully, or be similarly lifted or thrust upward. | [verb] To be lifted up; rise. UPHEAVER (16) UPHEAVES (16) [verb] To heave or lift up; raise up or aloft. | [verb] To lift or thrust something upward forcefully, or be similarly lifted or thrust upward. | [verb] To be lifted up; rise. UPHOARDS (14) UPHOLDER (14) UPLANDER (11) UPLEAPED (13) UPLIFTED (14) [verb] To raise something or someone to a higher physical, social, moral, intellectual, spiritual or emotional level. | [verb] (of a penalty) To aggravate; to increase. | [verb] (travel) To be accepted for carriage on a flight. UPLIFTER (13) UPLIGHTS (14) [noun] A recessed light fixture that directs the light in an upward direction. UPLOADED (12) [verb] To transfer data to a computer on a network, especially to a server on the Internet. | [adjective] Having been uploaded; having been digitally sent from one's computer to someone else's. UPMARKET (16) [verb] To make or become upmarket. | [adjective] Designed for customers with a high income. | [adverb] Towards the more expensive end of the market. UPPERCUT (14) [noun] A swinging blow aimed upwards at the opponent's chin. | [noun] A cut shot that sends the ball over the wicket-keeper's head. | [verb] To strike with an uppercut UPPILING (13) UPPISHLY (18) UPRAISED (11) [verb] To raise something up; to elevate. | [verb] To move something upright; to erect. | [adjective] Lifted, raised, held high. UPRAISER (10) UPRAISES (10) [verb] To raise something up; to elevate. | [verb] To move something upright; to erect. UPRATING (11) [verb] To give something a higher rating | [noun] The assignment of a higher rating. | [noun] An upgrade. UPREARED (11) [verb] To raise something up; to rise up; to erect UPRIGHTS (14) [noun] Any vertical part of a structure, especially one of the goal posts in sports. | [noun] A word clued by the successive initial, middle, or final letters of the cross-lights in a double acrostic or triple acrostic. | [noun] An upright piano. UPRISERS (10) UPRISING (11) [verb] To rise; to get up; to appear from below the horizon. | [verb] To have an upward direction or inclination | [verb] To rebel or revolt; to take part in an uprising. UPRIVERS (13) UPROOTAL (10) UPROOTED (11) [verb] To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to extirpate. | [verb] (by extension) To remove from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly. | [verb] To destroy utterly; to eradicate, exterminate. UPROOTER (10) UPROUSED (11) UPROUSES (10) UPRUSHED (14) UPRUSHES (13) [noun] An upwards rush. UPSCALED (13) [verb] To increase in size, to scale up. | [adjective] That has been scaled up. UPSCALES (12) [verb] To increase in size, to scale up. UPSETTER (10) UPSHIFTS (16) [noun] A shift to a higher gear | [noun] A shift to a higher level, such as of frequency, growth, economic level, etc. | [verb] To shift to a higher gear UPSHOOTS (13) UPSILONS (10) [noun] The twentieth letter of Classical and Modern Greek; the twenty-second letter of Old and Ancient Greek. | [noun] (particle physics) An upsilon meson, or bottomonium. UPSOARED (11) UPSPRANG (13) UPSPRING (13) UPSPRUNG (13) UPSTAGED (12) [verb] To draw attention away from others, especially on-stage. | [verb] To force other actors to face away from the audience by staying upstage. | [verb] To treat snobbishly. UPSTAGES (11) [verb] To draw attention away from others, especially on-stage. | [verb] To force other actors to face away from the audience by staying upstage. | [verb] To treat snobbishly. UPSTAIRS (10) [noun] An upper storey. | [adjective] Located on a higher floor or level of a building. | [adjective] Pertaining to a pitched ball that is high, and usually outside the strike zone. UPSTANDS (11) [noun] A section of a roof covering or flashing which turns up against a vertical surface. | [verb] To stand up; arise; be erect; rise. UPSTARED (11) UPSTARES (10) UPSTARTS (10) [verb] To rise suddenly, to spring UPSTATER (10) UPSTATES (10) UPSTREAM (12) [noun] Part of the river towards the upstream direction. | [noun] (open-source software) The original developers or maintainers of software. | [verb] To stream upward. UPSTROKE (14) [noun] The upward stroke of a pen, brush, piston, etc. UPSURGED (12) UPSURGES (11) [noun] A sudden strong rise or flow. | [verb] To surge up, or to become stronger or greater UPSWEEPS (15) UPSWELLS (13) [noun] A rising swell. | [verb] To swell upward. UPSWINGS (14) [noun] An upward swing | [noun] (by extension) an upward trend or an increase in activity UPTHROWN (16) [verb] To throw or cast upwards. | [verb] To throw up (a mass of material) from below, causing a fault. | [verb] (of a mass of material) To be thrown up from below, causing a fault. UPTHROWS (16) [verb] To throw or cast upwards. | [verb] To throw up (a mass of material) from below, causing a fault. | [verb] (of a mass of material) To be thrown up from below, causing a fault. UPTHRUST (13) [noun] An upward thrust. | [noun] Buoyancy. | [noun] An upward movement of part of the Earth's crust. UPTILTED (11) UPTOSSED (11) UPTOSSES (10) UPTOWNER (13) UPTRENDS (11) [noun] An upward trend, or an upturn. UPTURNED (11) [adjective] Turned over; inverted; capsized | [adjective] (of a nose etc.) turned up at the end | [adjective] Looking upwards, turned upwards UPWAFTED (17) UPWARDLY (17) [adverb] In an upward manner. | [adverb] Towards a higher level, position or status. UPWELLED (14) URAEMIAS (10) URAEUSES (8) URALITES (8) URALITIC (10) URANIDES (9) URANISMS (10) URANITES (8) URANITIC (10) URANIUMS (10) URANYLIC (13) URBANELY (13) URBANEST (10) URBANISE (10) [verb] To make something more urban in character. | [verb] To take up an urban way of life. URBANISM (12) [noun] The study of cities, their geographic, economic, political, social and cultural environment. | [noun] The culture or way of life of people who live in cities. | [noun] Urbanization. URBANIST (10) [noun] A person who studies cities and their growth. | [noun] An urban planner. URBANITE (10) [noun] Someone who lives in a city or similar urban area. | [noun] One of a demographic class of young, socially-conscious, urban professionals. | [noun] Rock-like recycled building material from man-made sources. URBANITY (13) [noun] Behaviour that is polished, refined, courteous. | [noun] What is characteristically urban in an area; urbanness. URBANIZE (19) [verb] To make something more urban in character. | [verb] To take up an urban way of life. UREDINIA (9) URETERAL (8) URETERIC (10) URETHANE (11) [noun] A white crystalline organic compound, ethyl-carbamate, NH2COOC2H5, used in the synthesis of other organic compounds. | [noun] Any compound of having this general structure. | [noun] Polyurethane. URETHANS (11) URETHRAE (11) [noun] The tube through which urine exits the body and, in penises, through which semen is ejaculated. URETHRAL (11) URETHRAS (11) [noun] The tube through which urine exits the body and, in penises, through which semen is ejaculated. URGENTLY (12) [adverb] With great haste, with a sense of urgency, because it is very important. | [adverb] Continuously. With insistence. URGINGLY (13) URIDINES (9) URINATED (9) [verb] (urology) To pass urine from the body. URINATES (8) [verb] (urology) To pass urine from the body. URINEMIA (10) URINEMIC (12) UROCHORD (14) URODELES (9) [noun] Any caudate amphibian UROLITHS (11) UROLOGIC (11) UROPODAL (11) UROPYGIA (14) UROSCOPY (15) [noun] The diagnostic examination of urine UROSTYLE (11) [noun] A styliform process forming the posterior extremity of the vertebral column in some fishes and amphibians. URSIFORM (13) URTICANT (10) URTICATE (10) [verb] To have or produce a stinging sensation, as of nettles or urticating hair. | [adjective] Marked by the presence of wheals. URUSHIOL (11) [noun] An oil found in plants of the family Anacardiaceae, causing an allergic skin rash on contact; consists of a variable mixture of several related organic compounds. USAUNCES (10) USEFULLY (14) [adverb] In a useful manner; in a way that achieves something USHERING (12) [verb] To guide people to their seats. | [verb] To accompany or escort (someone). | [verb] To precede; to act as a forerunner or herald. USQUABAE (19) USQUEBAE (19) USTULATE (8) USUFRUCT (13) [noun] The legal right to use and derive profit or benefit from property that belongs to another person, as long as the property is not damaged. | [verb] To use and derive profit or benefit from property that belongs to another person. USURIOUS (8) [adjective] Of or pertaining to usury. | [adjective] Exorbitant. USURPERS (10) [noun] One who usurps. USURPING (11) [verb] To seize power from another, usually by illegitimate means. | [verb] To use and assume the coat of arms of another person. | [verb] To take the place rightfully belonging to someone or something else. UTENSILS (8) [noun] An instrument or device for domestic use, especially in the kitchen. | [noun] A useful small tool, implement, or vessel. UTERUSES (8) [noun] The womb, an organ of the female reproductive system in which the young are conceived and develop until birth. UTILIDOR (9) UTILISED (9) [verb] To make use of; to use. | [verb] To make useful; to find a practical use for. | [verb] To make best use of; to use to its fullest extent, potential, or ability. UTILISER (8) UTILISES (8) [verb] To make use of; to use. | [verb] To make useful; to find a practical use for. | [verb] To make best use of; to use to its fullest extent, potential, or ability. UTILIZED (18) [verb] To make use of; to use. | [verb] To make useful; to find a practical use for. | [verb] To make best use of; to use to its fullest extent, potential, or ability. UTILIZER (17) UTILIZES (17) [verb] To make use of; to use. | [verb] To make useful; to find a practical use for. | [verb] To make best use of; to use to its fullest extent, potential, or ability. UTOPIANS (10) [noun] Someone who supports or heralds the establishment of a utopia. UTOPISMS (12) UTOPISTS (10) UTRICLES (10) [noun] One of two otolith organs located in the vertebrate inner ear (the other being the saccule). | [noun] The prostatic utricle (a small indentation found in the male prostate). | [noun] A dry fruit similar to an achene, found in the beet and dock plants. UTRICULI (10) [noun] A little sac or bag; a utricle; especially, a part of the membranous labyrinth of the ear. UTTERERS (8) UTTERING (9) [verb] To produce (speech or other sounds) with one's voice. | [verb] To reveal or express (an idea, thought, desire, etc.) with speech. | [verb] To produce (a noise) (of an inanimate object). UVULARLY (14) UVULITIS (11) UXORIOUS (15) [adjective] Very devoted and possibly submissive to one's wife.

9-Letter Words (723)

UDOMETERS (12) UFOLOGIES (13) UFOLOGIST (13) UGLIFIERS (13) UGLIFYING (17) UINTAHITE (12) UINTAITES (9) ULCERATED (12) [adjective] Affected with ulcers ULCERATES (11) [verb] To cause an ulcer to develop. | [verb] To become ulcerous. ULTIMATED (12) ULTIMATES (11) [noun] The most basic or fundamental of a set of things | [noun] The final or most distant point; the conclusion | [noun] The greatest extremity; the maximum ULTIMATUM (13) [noun] A final statement of terms or conditions made by one party to another, especially one that expresses a threat of reprisal or war. ULTRACHIC (16) ULTRACOLD (12) [adjective] Of a temperature close to absolute zero, especially one at which quantum-mechanical properties are observed. | [adjective] Extremely cold. ULTRACOOL (11) ULTRAFAST (12) [adjective] Very fast, or of very short duration; especially concerning events that take place in femtosecond or picosecond timescales. ULTRAFINE (12) [adjective] (of particles) Very fine ULTRAHEAT (12) ULTRAHIGH (16) ULTRAISMS (11) ULTRAISTS (9) [noun] One who pushes a principle or measure to extremes ULTRALEFT (12) ULTRAPURE (11) ULTRARARE (9) ULTRAREDS (10) ULTRARICH (14) ULTRASAFE (12) ULTRASLOW (12) ULTRASOFT (12) ULTRATHIN (12) [adjective] Extremely thin; of utmost thinness ULTRAWIDE (13) ULULATING (10) [verb] To howl loudly or prolongedly in lamentation or joy | [verb] To produce a rapid and prolonged series of sharp noises with one's voice. ULULATION (9) UMANGITES (12) UMBELLATE (13) UMBELLETS (13) UMBILICAL (15) [noun] A cord connecting an astronaut to a spacecraft, or a craft to ground control prior to launch, etc. | [adjective] Of, or relating to, the navel (umbilicus) or the umbilical cord. | [adjective] Such that the curvatures of normal sections are all equal to each other. UMBILICUS (15) [noun] Navel | [noun] Hilum | [noun] A depression or opening in the center of the base of many spiral shells. UMBRELLAS (13) [noun] Cloth-covered frame used for protection against rain or sun. | [noun] Generally, anything that provides protection. | [noun] Something that covers a wide range of concepts, purposes, groups, etc. UMBRETTES (13) UMLAUTING (12) [verb] To place an umlaut over (a vowel). | [verb] To modify (a word) so that an umlaut is required in it. UMPIRAGES (14) UMPTEENTH (16) [adjective] (often slightly derogatory) Occurring in a relatively large but unspecified position in a sequence. UNABASHED (15) [adjective] Not disconcerted or embarrassed. | [adjective] Of actions, emotions, facts, etc.: that are not concealed or disguised, or not eliciting shame. UNABRADED (13) UNACTABLE (13) UNADAPTED (13) [adjective] Not adapted UNADMIRED (13) UNADORNED (11) [verb] To add a feature or embellishment that makes something uglier; uglify. | [verb] To remove the adornments from. | [adjective] Having no additional decoration or embellishment; plain and simple UNADVISED (14) UNALIGNED (11) [adjective] Not aligned UNALLOYED (13) [adjective] (of metal) Not alloyed; not in mixture with other metals; pure. | [adjective] Complete and unreserved; pure; unadulterated; not restricted, modified, or qualified by reservations. UNALTERED (10) [adjective] Remaining in its initial state; not changed. UNAMENDED (13) [adjective] Without amendments. UNAMIABLE (13) [adjective] Not amiable; not likable. UNAMUSING (12) UNANCHORS (14) UNANIMITY (14) [noun] The condition of agreement by all parties, the state of being unanimous. UNANIMOUS (11) [adjective] Based on unanimity, assent or agreement. | [adjective] Sharing the same views or opinions, and being in harmony or accord. UNAPTNESS (11) UNARMORED (12) UNASHAMED (15) [adjective] Feeling or showing no shame, embarrassment or remorse UNATTUNED (10) UNAUDITED (11) [adjective] Not audited. UNAVERAGE (13) UNAWARDED (14) UNAWARELY (15) UNAWESOME (14) UNBALANCE (13) [verb] To cause to be out of balance. UNBANDAGE (13) UNBANNING (12) [verb] To lift a ban against. | [noun] The removal of a ban. UNBARRING (12) [verb] To remove an impediment that obstructs the passage of (someone or something). | [verb] To remove a prohibition. | [verb] To unlock or unbolt a door that had been locked or bolted with a bar. UNBEARING (12) UNBEKNOWN (18) [adjective] Not beknown. UNBELIEFS (14) UNBELOVED (15) [adjective] Not beloved; unloved. UNBELTING (12) [verb] To remove a belt | [verb] To relax, unwind UNBEMUSED (14) UNBENDING (13) [adjective] Inflexible and not yielding | [adjective] Very reserved, aloof and asocial | [verb] To remove a bend so as to make, or allow to become, straight UNBINDING (13) [verb] To take bindings off. | [verb] To set free from a debt, contract or promise. | [verb] To disable some kind of connection in software, such as a key binding. UNBLENDED (13) [adjective] In a pure state; not mixed with other substances. UNBLESSED (12) [verb] To deprive of blessings; to make wretched. | [verb] (Perl) To convert (a previously blessed object) back to a simple reference. | [adjective] Not blessed. UNBLINDED (13) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To free from blindness. | [verb] To remove the secrecy from (a bid). | [verb] To convert (a blind signature) back to the unblinded state (as opposed to the blinded state). UNBLOCKED (18) [adjective] Not blocked | [verb] To remove or clear a block or obstruction from. | [verb] To free or make available. UNBLOODED (13) UNBOLTING (12) [verb] To unlock by undoing the bolts of. UNBONNETS (11) [verb] To remove a bonnet from. | [verb] To take off one's bonnet. UNBOOKISH (18) [adjective] Not bookish. UNBOSOMED (14) [verb] To tell someone about (one's troubles), and thus obtain relief. | [verb] To free (oneself) of the burden of one's troubles by telling of them. | [verb] To confess a misdeed. UNBOUNDED (13) [adjective] Having no boundaries or limits. UNBRACING (14) [verb] To undo, unfasten; to relax, loosen. UNBRAIDED (13) [adjective] Not braided UNBRAKING (16) UNBRANDED (13) [adjective] Not branded; lacking a brand | [adjective] Not associated with a brand name UNBRIDGED (14) UNBRIDLED (13) [verb] To remove the bridle, and other tack, from (a horse or other animal). | [verb] To remove restraint from. | [adjective] Not fitted with a bridle. UNBRIDLES (12) [verb] To remove the bridle, and other tack, from (a horse or other animal). | [verb] To remove restraint from. UNBRIEFED (15) UNBRUISED (12) [adjective] Not bruised UNBRUSHED (15) [verb] To undo the result of brushing. | [adjective] Not brushed UNBUCKLED (18) [verb] To unfasten (the buckle of (a belt, shoe, etc)) | [adjective] Not buckled. UNBUCKLES (17) [verb] To unfasten (the buckle of (a belt, shoe, etc)) UNBUDGING (14) UNBUNDLED (13) [verb] To separate parts which have been bundled together. | [verb] To break down a product or service into a number of separate elements that can be charged for individually. UNBUNDLES (12) [verb] To separate parts which have been bundled together. | [verb] To break down a product or service into a number of separate elements that can be charged for individually. UNBURDENS (12) [verb] To free from burden, or relieve from trouble. UNBUTTONS (11) [verb] To open (something) by undoing its buttons. | [verb] To come open by having its buttons unfastened. UNCANNIER (11) [adjective] Strange, and mysteriously unsettling (as if supernatural); weird. | [adjective] Careless. UNCANNILY (14) [adverb] In an uncanny manner. UNCAPPING (16) [verb] To remove a cap or cover from. | [verb] To take off one's cap. UNCEASING (12) [adjective] Continuous; continuing indefinitely without stopping UNCERTAIN (11) [noun] (with "the") Something uncertain. | [adjective] Not certain; unsure. | [adjective] Not known for certain; questionable. UNCHAINED (15) [verb] To remove chains from; to free; to liberate. | [adjective] Free from chains or fetters; unencumbered. UNCHANGED (16) [verb] To revert or reverse a change | [verb] To not change; be unchanging; remain constant | [adjective] Not changed or altered; remaining in an original state. UNCHARGED (16) [adjective] Not carrying an overall electric charge; neutral. | [adjective] Not charged with a criminal act. | [adjective] Not charged for; given away for free. UNCHARGES (15) UNCHARTED (15) [adjective] Not surveyed or mapped UNCHECKED (21) [adjective] Unrestrained, not held back. | [adjective] Not examined for accuracy, efficiency, etc. | [adjective] Of a check box: not checked (ticked or enabled). | [verb] To remove a checkmark. UNCHOKING (19) UNCIFORMS (16) UNCIVILLY (17) UNCLAIMED (14) [adjective] Not claimed. UNCLAMPED (16) [adjective] Not clamped. | [verb] To remove a clamp from. UNCLARITY (14) UNCLASPED (14) [adjective] Not clasped UNCLEANED (12) UNCLEANER (11) UNCLEANLY (14) [adjective] Dirty, unhygienic, not clean. | [adjective] Not pure in a moral or religious sense. | [adverb] Not in a clean way; in an unclean way UNCLEARER (11) UNCLICHED (17) UNCLIPPED (16) [adjective] Not clipped. | [adjective] Uncircumcised | [verb] To release something by removing a clip. UNCLOAKED (16) [verb] To remove a cloak or cover from; to deprive of a cloak or cover; to unmask; to reveal. | [verb] To remove one's cloak. | [verb] To become visible again by turning off a cloaking device. UNCLOGGED (14) [verb] To remove a blockage from. | [verb] To have a blockage removed. | [adjective] Not clogged; without a blockage or obstruction. UNCLOSING (12) [verb] To open; to unclench. UNCLOTHED (15) [verb] To strip of clothes or covering; to make naked. | [adjective] Not wearing clothes; nude or naked; with the clothes removed; stripped. UNCLOTHES (14) [verb] To strip of clothes or covering; to make naked. UNCLOUDED (13) [adjective] Not cloudy; clear. UNCLOYING (15) UNCLUTTER (11) UNCOATING (12) UNCOCKING (18) UNCOERCED (14) UNCOFFINS (17) UNCOILING (12) [verb] To unwind or untwist (something). | [verb] To unwind or untwist oneself. | [noun] The act of something being uncoiled. UNCOLORED (12) [adjective] Not treated with a dye or other colour. UNCONCERN (13) [noun] Indifference or lack of concern. UNCONFUSE (14) UNCORKING (16) [verb] To open (a bottle or other container sealed with a cork or stopper) by removing the cork or stopper from. | [verb] To release. UNCORRUPT (13) UNCOUNTED (12) [adjective] Not counted. UNCOUPLED (14) [adjective] Not coupled to something; disconnected; detached. | [verb] To disconnect or detach one thing from another. | [verb] To come loose. UNCOUPLER (13) UNCOUPLES (13) [verb] To disconnect or detach one thing from another. | [verb] To come loose. | [verb] To loose, as dogs, from their couples. UNCOUTHLY (17) UNCOVERED (15) [verb] To remove a cover from. | [verb] To reveal the identity of. | [verb] To show openly; to disclose; to reveal. | [adjective] Not covered or protected from the weather, etc. UNCRACKED (18) UNCRATING (12) [verb] To remove from a crate. UNCREATED (12) [verb] To kill; to destroy; to deprive of existence; to annihilate. | [verb] To undo the act of creating. | [adjective] Not having been created, thus not existing. UNCREATES (11) [verb] To kill; to destroy; to deprive of existence; to annihilate. | [verb] To undo the act of creating. UNCROPPED (16) [adjective] Not having been cropped or cut. | [adjective] (of land) Not used to grow crops. UNCROSSED (12) [verb] To move something, especially one's arms or legs, from a crossed position. | [verb] To undo the crossing or traversal of. | [adjective] Not crossed (in various senses). UNCROSSES (11) [verb] To move something, especially one's arms or legs, from a crossed position. | [verb] To undo the crossing or traversal of. UNCROWDED (16) [adjective] Not crowded UNCROWNED (15) [adjective] Not (yet) crowned. | [adjective] Deprived of the monarchy. UNCRUMPLE (15) [verb] To return something that has been crumpled closer to its original state. | [verb] Having been crumpled, to return closer to its original state. UNCUFFING (18) UNCURBING (14) UNCURIOUS (11) UNCURLING (12) [verb] To straighten out from being curled up. UNCURRENT (11) UNCYNICAL (16) UNDAMAGED (14) [adjective] Not damaged, harmed or injured UNDAUNTED (11) [adjective] Showing courage and resolution. | [adjective] Not shaken, discouraged or disheartened. UNDECEIVE (15) [verb] To free from misconception, deception or error. UNDECIDED (14) [verb] To reverse or recant (a previous decision). | [noun] A voter etc. who has not yet come to a decision. | [adjective] Open and not yet settled or determined. UNDEFILED (14) [adjective] Free from stain, blemish, evil or corruption; immaculate; uncorrupted. UNDEFINED (14) [adjective] Lacking a definition or value. | [adjective] That does not have a meaning and is thus not assigned an interpretation. UNDELUDED (12) UNDERACTS (12) [verb] To act in an understated manner or with little expressiveness UNDERAGES (11) UNDERARMS (12) [noun] The armpit. | [noun] Old-fashioned and now outlawed style of bowling in which the arm is not swung over the shoulder. UNDERBIDS (13) [verb] To bid too low. | [verb] To bid lower than another. | [verb] To bid less than the full value of a hand of cards. UNDERBODY (16) [noun] The underparts of a bird or animal. | [noun] The underside of a vehicle. UNDERBOSS (12) [noun] An assistant to the boss of a crime family UNDERBRED (13) [adjective] Of inferior breeding or upbringing; vulgar, lacking in manners or finesse. | [adjective] (of animals) Not purebred; of an inferior strain. | [verb] To breed insufficiently. UNDERBRIM (14) UNDERBUDS (13) UNDERBUYS (15) UNDERCARD (13) [noun] A list of minor or supporting contests printed on the same bill as the main event (primarily fighting or racing, such as the main fight at a boxing match or wrestling, horse or car racing, etc.), occurring before or after the main event. | [noun] The events so listed. | [noun] A card lower than another given card or pair. UNDERCOAT (12) [noun] A layer of short hairs underneath the longer ones of an animal's fur | [noun] A coat of paint or other material applied onto a surface before that of a topcoat; a coloured primer | [noun] A coat for wearing indoors, under an overcoat. UNDERCOOL (12) [verb] To cool insufficiently | [verb] To supercool UNDERCUTS (12) [noun] A cut made in the lower part of something; the material so removed. | [noun] The notch cut in a tree to direct its fall when being felled. | [noun] The underside of a sirloin of beef; the fillet. UNDERDOES (11) UNDERDOGS (12) [noun] A competitor thought unlikely to win. | [noun] Somebody at a disadvantage. | [noun] A high swing wherein the person pushing the swing runs beneath the swing while the person being pushed is at the forward limit of the arc. UNDERDONE (11) [adjective] Insufficiently cooked; undercooked UNDEREATS (10) UNDERFEED (14) [verb] To feed inadequately or insufficiently UNDERFOOT (13) [noun] A storage compartment that sits below the deck of a boat. | [verb] To provide a footing beneath; to shore up or underpin. | [verb] To assign a column summary that is less than the sum of all the entries in that column. UNDERFUND (14) [verb] To provide insufficient funds (for). UNDERFURS (13) UNDERGIRD (12) [verb] To strengthen, secure, or reinforce by passing a rope, cable, or chain around the underside of an object. | [verb] To give fundamental support; provide with a sound or secure basis; provide supportive evidence for. | [verb] To lend moral support to. UNDERGIRT (11) UNDERGODS (12) UNDERGOES (11) [verb] To go or move under or beneath. | [verb] To experience; to pass through a phase. | [verb] To suffer or endure; bear with. UNDERGONE (11) [verb] To go or move under or beneath. | [verb] To experience; to pass through a phase. | [verb] To suffer or endure; bear with. UNDERGRAD (12) [noun] An undergraduate. UNDERHAND (14) [noun] The lower of two hands, the hand under the work. | [verb] To toss or lob with an underhand movement. | [verb] To trick, deceive or gull. UNDERJAWS (20) UNDERLAID (11) [verb] To lay (something) underneath something else; to put under. | [verb] To provide a support for something; to raise or support by something laid under. | [verb] To put a tap on (a shoe). UNDERLAIN (10) [verb] To lie in a position directly beneath. | [verb] To lie under or beneath. | [verb] To serve as a basis of; form the foundation of. UNDERLAPS (12) UNDERLAYS (13) [noun] A layer (of earth, etc.) that lies under another; substratum. | [noun] A soft floor covering that lies under a carpet. | [noun] Anything that is underlaid. UNDERLETS (10) [verb] To let below the value. | [verb] To let or lease at second hand; to sublet. UNDERLIES (10) [verb] To lie in a position directly beneath. | [verb] To lie under or beneath. | [verb] To serve as a basis of; form the foundation of. UNDERLINE (10) [noun] A line placed underneath a piece of text in order to provide emphasis or to indicate that it should be viewed in italics or (in electronic documents) that it acts as a hyperlink. | [noun] The character _. | [noun] An announcement of a theatrical performance to follow, placed in an advertisement for the current one. UNDERLING (11) [noun] A subordinate, or person of lesser rank or authority. | [noun] A low, wretched person. UNDERLIPS (12) [noun] The lower lip. UNDERMINE (12) [verb] To dig underneath (something), to make a passage for destructive or military purposes; to sap. | [verb] To weaken or work against; to hinder, sabotage. | [verb] To erode the base or foundation of something, e.g. by the action of water. UNDERMOST (12) UNDERPAID (13) [adjective] Getting too little financial compensation for one's work UNDERPART (12) [noun] A lower or underneath part | [verb] To divide (a part) and assign subordinate portions of it. UNDERPASS (12) [noun] A passage that crosses a road, railroad or similar obstacle in a tunnel underneath it. UNDERPAYS (15) [verb] To pay (someone) less than the value of their work; to pay (someone) insufficiently. | [verb] To pay less than is due for (something). UNDERPINS (12) [verb] To support from below with props or masonry. | [verb] To give support to; to corroborate. UNDERPLAY (15) [noun] The act of underplaying. | [verb] To play in a subordinate, or in an inferior manner; to underact a part. | [verb] To make something seem less important than it really is. UNDERPLOT (12) [noun] A subplot; a plot that is not the main plot of a story. | [noun] A secret scheme or trick. UNDERRATE (10) [noun] A price less than the value. | [verb] To underestimate; to make too low a rate or estimate UNDERRUNS (10) UNDERSEAS (10) UNDERSELL (10) [verb] To sell goods for a lower price than a competitor. | [verb] To sell something for less than its value. | [verb] To put forward an idea, or to market a new product, with insufficient enthusiasm. UNDERSETS (10) [noun] Undercurrent (of water) UNDERSHOT (13) [verb] To shoot not far enough or not well enough. | [verb] To not go far enough when trying to reach a goal. | [verb] (by extension) To underestimate. UNDERSIDE (11) [noun] The side that is below or underneath, the bottom. UNDERSIZE (19) [adjective] Smaller than normal, undersized. | [adjective] Smaller than appropriate, expected or sufficient. | [adjective] Small enough to fit through a screen. UNDERSOLD (11) [verb] To sell goods for a lower price than a competitor. | [verb] To sell something for less than its value. | [verb] To put forward an idea, or to market a new product, with insufficient enthusiasm. UNDERSPIN (12) UNDERTAKE (14) [verb] To take upon oneself; to start, to embark on (a specific task etc.). | [verb] To commit oneself (to an obligation, activity etc.). | [verb] To overtake on the wrong side. UNDERTONE (10) [noun] An auditory tone of low pitch or volume. | [noun] An implicit message perceived subtly alongside, but not detracting noticeably from, the explicit message conveyed in or by a book, film, verbal dialogue or similar (contrast with overtone); an undercurrent. | [noun] A pale colour, or one seen underneath another colour. UNDERTOOK (14) [verb] To take upon oneself; to start, to embark on (a specific task etc.). | [verb] To commit oneself (to an obligation, activity etc.). | [verb] To overtake on the wrong side. UNDERTOWS (13) [noun] A short-range flow of water returning seaward from the waves breaking on the shore. | [noun] (by extension) A feeling that runs contrary to one's normal one. UNDERUSED (11) [verb] To use (something) less than expected | [adjective] Used less than normal or desirable. UNDERWEAR (13) [noun] Clothes worn next to the skin, underneath outer clothing. | [noun] Underpants (boxers, briefs, panties, etc) and often bras. UNDERWENT (13) [verb] To go or move under or beneath. | [verb] To experience; to pass through a phase. | [verb] To suffer or endure; bear with. UNDERWING (14) [noun] A hind wing on an insect. | [noun] A member of the genus Catocala, a nocturnal moth which usually has brightly coloured underwings. | [noun] The underside of a bird's wing. UNDERWOOD (14) [noun] Underbrush, undergrowth. UNDERWOOL (13) UNDESIRED (11) [adjective] Not desired; unwanted. UNDILUTED (11) [adjective] Not diluted or mixed with other substances. | [adjective] Unadulterated; free from extraneous elements. UNDIVIDED (15) [adjective] Unified, whole UNDOCKING (17) [verb] To remove (a ship) from a dock. | [verb] To remove from a docking station. | [verb] To drag (a user interface element, such as a toolbar) away from its fixed position so that it floats freely. UNDOUBLED (13) UNDOUBLES (12) UNDOUBTED (13) [adjective] Without doubt; without question; certain. UNDRAINED (11) [verb] To restore that which has drained away. | [adjective] Not drained. UNDRAPING (13) UNDRAWING (14) UNDREAMED (13) [adjective] Not dreamed; not dreamt. UNDRESSED (11) [verb] To remove one's clothing. | [verb] To remove one’s clothing. | [verb] To remove the clothing of (someone). UNDRESSES (10) [verb] To remove one's clothing. | [verb] To remove one’s clothing. | [verb] To remove the clothing of (someone). UNDRILLED (11) UNDULATED (11) [verb] To cause to move in a wavelike motion. | [verb] To cause to resemble a wave | [verb] To move in wavelike motions. UNDULATES (10) [verb] To cause to move in a wavelike motion. | [verb] To cause to resemble a wave | [verb] To move in wavelike motions. UNDUTIFUL (13) [adjective] Not dutiful. UNDYNAMIC (17) UNEARTHED (13) [verb] To drive or draw from the earth. | [verb] To uncover or find; to bring out from concealment | [verb] To dig up. UNEARTHLY (15) [adjective] Not of the earth; non-terrestrial. | [adjective] Preternatural or supernatural. | [adjective] Strange, enigmatic, or mysterious. UNEASIEST (9) [adjective] Not easy; difficult. | [adjective] Restless; disturbed by pain, anxiety | [adjective] Not easy in manner; constrained UNEATABLE (11) [adjective] Not eatable; not fit for eating. UNELECTED (12) [adjective] Not elected UNENVIOUS (12) UNEQUALED (19) [adjective] Unmatched, superlative, the best ever done, record setting. UNEQUALLY (21) UNETHICAL (14) [adjective] Not morally approvable; morally bad; not ethical. UNEVENEST (12) UNEXCITED (19) [adjective] Not feeling excitement or keen interest; placid; bored. | [adjective] Not in a state of excitation. UNEXCUSED (19) UNEXPIRED (19) [adjective] Not having expired. | [adjective] Of food: not having reached its expiry date. | [adjective] Of an agreement, coupon, or law, still in force. UNEXPOSED (19) [adjective] That has not been exposed UNFAILING (13) [adjective] Inexhaustible | [adjective] Changeless | [adjective] Infallible UNFAIREST (12) [adjective] Not beautiful; uncomely; unattractive | [adjective] Sorrowful; sad | [adjective] Unseemly; disgraceful UNFASTENS (12) [verb] To detach from any connecting agency or link; to disconnect. | [verb] To come unloosed or untied. UNFEELING (13) [adjective] Without emotion or sympathy UNFEIGNED (14) [adjective] Not feigned. | [adjective] Genuine. | [adjective] Not false or hypocritical. UNFENCING (15) UNFERTILE (12) [adjective] Not fertile. UNFETTERS (12) [verb] To release from fetters; to unchain; to let loose; to free. UNFITNESS (12) UNFITTING (13) [adjective] That is not fitting for its purpose | [adjective] Improper UNFLEDGED (15) [adjective] Not having feathers; (of a bird) not yet having developed its wings and feathers and become able to fly. | [adjective] Not yet fully grown or developed; not yet mature. | [adjective] Inexperienced, like a tyro or novice. UNFLYABLE (17) UNFOCUSED (15) [adjective] Not focused UNFOLDERS (13) UNFOLDING (14) [verb] To undo a folding. | [verb] To turn out; to happen; to develop. | [verb] To reveal. UNFOUNDED (14) [adjective] Having no strong foundation; not based on solid reasons or facts. | [adjective] Not having been founded or instituted. | [adjective] Bottomless. UNFREEDOM (15) UNFREEING (13) UNFREEZES (21) [verb] To defrost something. | [verb] To thaw. | [verb] To resume movement. UNFROCKED (19) [verb] To remove from the clergy; to revoke the clergical status of. | [adjective] Not official or not (yet) uniformed UNFURLING (13) [verb] To unroll or release something that had been rolled up, typically a sail or a flag. | [verb] To roll out or debut anything. | [verb] To open up by unrolling. UNFUSSILY (15) UNGALLANT (10) [adjective] Not gallant; ignoble, dishonourable, unvaliant. UNGENTEEL (10) UNGIRDING (12) [verb] To loosen the girdle or band of. | [verb] To unbind or unload. UNGLOVING (14) UNGODLIER (11) [adjective] Of a person: lacking reverence for God; of an action: not in accordance with God's will or religious teachings. | [adjective] Immoral, sinful, or wicked. | [adjective] Extreme; unreasonable. UNGROUPED (13) [adjective] Not assembled into a group. UNGUARDED (12) [adjective] Having no guard or protection; vulnerable. | [adjective] Displaying a lack of caution or thought. UNGUENTUM (12) UNGULATES (10) [noun] An ungulate animal; a hooved mammal. UNHAIRING (13) UNHALLOWS (15) UNHANDIER (13) UNHANDILY (16) UNHANDING (14) [verb] To release from the hand; to let go. UNHANGING (14) [verb] To take down something (such as a picture) from a hanging position | [verb] Hypothetically, to undo the execution of (a person) by hanging. UNHAPPIER (16) [adjective] Not happy; sad. | [adjective] Not satisfied; unsatisfied. | [adjective] Not lucky; unlucky. UNHAPPILY (19) [adverb] Unfortunately; regrettably. | [adverb] Through evil fate or chance; wretchedly. | [adverb] Without happiness; sadly. UNHARNESS (12) [verb] To remove the harness from a horse etc. | [verb] (by extension) to liberate UNHATCHED (18) [adjective] Not yet hatched. | [adjective] Not shaded with hatching. UNHATTING (13) UNHEALTHY (18) [adjective] Characterized by, or conducive to poor health | [adjective] Sick or ill | [adjective] Tending to corrupt UNHEEDING (14) [adjective] Showing disregard UNHELMING (15) UNHELPFUL (17) [adjective] Not providing help or assistance; not helpful. UNHINGING (14) [verb] To remove the leaf of a door or a window from its supporting hinges. | [verb] To mentally disturb. UNHITCHED (18) [verb] To disconnect; to detach; to undo that which is hitched. | [adjective] Unattached. | [adjective] Unmarried; single. UNHITCHES (17) [verb] To disconnect; to detach; to undo that which is hitched. UNHOLIEST (12) [adjective] Not holy; (by extension) evil, impure, or otherwise perverted. | [adjective] Dreadful, terrible, or otherwise atrocious. UNHONORED (13) UNHOODING (14) [verb] To remove the hood from. UNHOOKING (17) [verb] To remove from a hook. | [verb] To unfasten by means of hooks. | [verb] To unfasten the bra of (its wearer). UNHOPEFUL (17) UNHORSING (13) [verb] To forcibly remove from a horse. | [verb] (by extension) To disrupt or unseat; to remove from a position. UNHOUSING (13) UNHURRIED (13) [adjective] Not hurried; not rushed. UNHUSKING (17) [verb] To remove the husk of. UNICYCLES (16) [noun] A type of cycle that has only one wheel and is powered by pedals; it is most often used by acrobats. UNIFIABLE (14) UNIFORMED (15) [verb] To clothe in a uniform. | [adjective] Dressed in a uniform. | [adjective] In an occupation that requires a uniform, such as the police force or military. UNIFORMER (14) UNIFORMLY (17) [adverb] In a uniform manner, consistently. UNILINEAL (9) UNILINEAR (9) UNIMPEDED (15) [adjective] Free from obstructions. UNINDEXED (18) UNINJURED (17) [noun] One or many people or objects that have not suffered injury. | [adjective] That did not suffer injury. UNINSURED (10) [noun] One who is not insured. | [adjective] Not insured; not having insurance. UNINVITED (13) [adjective] Not invited | [verb] To cancel or withdraw an invitation. UNIONISED (10) UNIONISES (9) [verb] To organize workers into a union. UNIONISMS (11) UNIONISTS (9) [noun] An advocate or supporter of unionism | [noun] A trade unionist UNIONIZED (19) [verb] To organize workers into a union. | [adjective] Organized into a trades union or trades unions. | [adjective] Not ionized. UNIONIZES (18) [verb] To organize workers into a union. UNISEXUAL (16) [noun] Such an animal | [adjective] Of an organism, having characteristics of a single sex (as opposed to hermaphrodites). UNITARIAN (9) [noun] One who denies the doctrine of the Trinity, believing that God exists only in one person; a unipersonalist. | [noun] A Muwahhid. | [noun] One who rejects the principle of dualism. UNITARILY (12) UNITIZERS (18) UNITIZING (19) [verb] To manage as a unit | [verb] To convert, package, or organize into one or more units UNITRUSTS (9) UNIVALENT (12) [noun] Any univalent chromosome. | [adjective] Having an atomic valence of 1, or having only one valence. | [adjective] Having a vaccine valence of 1. UNIVALVES (15) [noun] A univalve mollusk or its shell. UNIVERSAL (12) [noun] A characteristic or property that particular things have in common. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the universe. | [adjective] Common to all members of a group or class. UNIVERSES (12) [noun] The sum of everything that exists in the cosmos, including time and space itself. | [noun] An entity similar to our universe; one component of a larger entity known as the multiverse. | [noun] Everything under consideration. UNIVOCALS (14) UNJOINTED (17) [adjective] Not jointed. UNKENNELS (13) UNKINDEST (14) [adjective] Lacking kindness, sympathy, benevolence, gratitude, or similar; cruel, harsh or unjust; ungrateful. | [adjective] Not kind; contrary to nature or type; unnatural. | [adjective] Having no race or kindred; childless. UNKINKING (18) [verb] To remove the kinks from. UNKNITTED (14) [verb] To unravel. | [verb] To undo knitted stitches by reversing the knitting motion. | [adjective] Not knitted. UNKNOTTED (14) [verb] To unfasten (a knot). | [adjective] Not knotted. UNKNOWING (17) [noun] Absence of knowledge; ignorance of something. | [adjective] Without knowing; ignorant. | [adjective] Unknown, unbeknownst (to someone). UNLABELED (12) [adjective] Not labeled; having no label. UNLASHING (13) [verb] To unfasten. UNLATCHED (15) [verb] Remove from a latch | [adjective] Of a gate, etc, not latched, or that has been unlatched. UNLATCHES (14) [verb] Remove from a latch UNLEADING (11) UNLEARNED (10) [verb] To discard the knowledge of. | [verb] To break a habit. | [adjective] Of a person, ignorant, uneducated, untaught, untrained. UNLEASHED (13) [verb] To free from a leash, or as from a leash. | [verb] To let go; to release. | [verb] To precipitate; to bring about. UNLEASHES (12) [verb] To free from a leash, or as from a leash. | [verb] To let go; to release. | [verb] To precipitate; to bring about. UNLEVELED (13) UNLIKABLE (15) [adjective] Not likable UNLIMBERS (13) [verb] To deploy an artillery piece for firing (ie, to detach it from its limber). | [verb] (by extension) To clumsily put into employ a large weapon or object. | [verb] To unsling something, as a backpack, carried on the body with a strap; to bring something carried into the hands for use. UNLIMITED (12) [adjective] Limitless or without bounds; unrestricted UNLINKING (14) [verb] To decouple; to remove a link from, or separate the links of. | [verb] To delete (a file). UNLIVABLE (14) [adjective] That cannot be lived | [adjective] Unfit to be lived in; uninhabitable UNLOADERS (10) UNLOADING (11) [verb] To remove the load or cargo from (a vehicle, etc.). | [verb] To remove (the load or cargo) from a vehicle, etc. | [verb] To deposit one's load or cargo. UNLOCKING (16) [verb] To undo or open a lock or something locked by, for example, turning a key, or selecting a combination. | [verb] To obtain access to something. | [verb] To disclose or reveal previously unknown knowledge. UNLOOSENS (9) [verb] To unloose; to loosen. UNLOOSING (10) [verb] To free (someone or something) from a constraint. | [verb] To undo or loosen something that fastens, holds, entangles, or interlocks. UNLOVABLE (14) [adjective] Not lovable. UNLUCKIER (15) [adjective] Unfortunate, marked by misfortune. | [adjective] Inauspicious. | [adjective] Having ill luck. UNLUCKILY (18) UNLYRICAL (14) UNMANAGED (13) [adjective] Not managed. UNMANNING (12) [verb] To castrate; to remove the manhood of. | [verb] To sap (a person) of the strength, whether physical or emotional, required to deal with a situation. | [verb] To deprive of men. UNMARRIED (12) [noun] An unmarried person. | [adjective] Having no husband or wife. UNMASKERS (15) UNMASKING (16) [verb] To remove a mask from someone. | [verb] To expose, or reveal the true character of someone. | [verb] To remove one's mask. UNMATCHED (17) [verb] To separate a matching pair. | [adjective] (of a pair of things) not matched; odd | [adjective] (of a single thing) not matched with anything else UNMEANING (12) [adjective] Having no meaning or significance UNMERITED (12) [adjective] Not merited. UNMESHING (15) UNMINDFUL (15) [adjective] Lacking awareness; oblivious. | [adjective] Failing to remember, recognize, or pay attention to something; heedless of. UNMINGLED (13) UNMINGLES (12) UNMITERED (12) UNMITRING (12) UNMIXABLE (20) UNMOLDING (13) UNMOORING (12) [verb] To unfix or unsecure (a moored boat). | [verb] To weigh anchor. UNMOUNTED (12) [verb] To reverse a mount operation; to instruct the operating system that the file system should be disassociated from its mount point, making it no longer accessible. | [adjective] Not mounted (in various senses). UNMOVABLE (16) UNMUFFLED (18) [adjective] Not muffled. UNMUFFLES (17) UNMUSICAL (13) [adjective] Not musical: lacking in musical ability. | [adjective] Not musical: unmelodic. UNMUZZLED (30) [verb] Remove a muzzle from | [adjective] Not wearing a muzzle. UNMUZZLES (29) [verb] Remove a muzzle from UNNAILING (10) [verb] To remove the nails from. UNNATURAL (9) [adjective] Not natural. | [adjective] Not occurring in nature, the environment or atmosphere | [adjective] Going against nature; perverse. UNNERVING (13) [verb] To deprive of nerve, force, or strength; to weaken; to enfeeble. | [verb] To make somebody nervous, upset, alarm, shake the resolve of. UNNOTICED (12) [adjective] Not noticed. UNOPPOSED (14) [adjective] With no or little opposition | [adjective] Without an opponent. UNORDERED (11) [adjective] Not having been ordered. | [adjective] Not in any sorted order. UNPACKERS (17) UNPACKING (18) [verb] To remove from a package or container, particularly with respect to items that had previously been arranged closely and securely in a pack. | [verb] To empty containers that had been packed. | [verb] To analyze a concept or a text. UNPAINTED (12) [adjective] Not painted UNPEGGING (14) [verb] To remove from a peg. UNPENNING (12) UNPEOPLED (14) [adjective] Not inhabited by people. UNPEOPLES (13) [verb] To deprive of inhabitants; to depopulate. UNPERFECT (16) UNPERSONS (11) [noun] A human who has been stripped of rights, identity or humanity. UNPICKING (18) [verb] To undo sewing stitches. | [verb] To undo knitting in order to reuse the wool. | [verb] To unravel or untangle the threads of a rope etc. UNPINNING (12) [verb] To unfasten by removing a pin. | [verb] To detach (an icon, application, etc.) from the place where it was previously pinned. | [verb] To get out of a pin UNPLAITED (12) [verb] To undo or untwist plaited hair; to unbraid | [adjective] Not plaited. UNPLANNED (12) [adjective] Unintentional; not intended | [adjective] Spontaneous and not thought through in advance | [adjective] Not having any structure or organization UNPLEASED (12) UNPLUGGED (14) [verb] To disconnect from a supply, especially an electrical socket. | [verb] To stop using electronic devices, especially for relaxation or to reduce stress. | [verb] To remove a blockage from (especially a water pipe or drain). UNPLUMBED (16) [adjective] Not measured for depth, as if with a plumb. UNPOLICED (14) UNPOPULAR (13) [adjective] Lacking popularity | [adjective] Not liked or popular; disliked or ignored by the public. UNPRESSED (12) [adjective] Not pressed. UNPUCKERS (17) UNPUZZLED (30) UNPUZZLES (29) UNQUIETER (18) UNQUIETLY (21) UNQUOTING (19) [verb] To convert (a quoted expression) back to its original form. UNRAVELED (13) [verb] To separate the threads (of); disentangle. | [verb] (of threads, etc.) To become separated; (of something woven, knitted, etc.) to come apart. | [verb] To clear from complication or difficulty; to unfold; to solve. UNREACHED (15) [adjective] Not reached. | [adjective] (of peoples) not yet reached by the Christian gospel UNREADIER (10) UNREALITY (12) [noun] Lack of reality or real existence. | [noun] The state of being unreal | [noun] That which has no reality or real existence; something unreal or imaginary UNREASONS (9) UNREELERS (9) UNREELING (10) [verb] To remove or uncoil from a reel. UNREEVING (13) [verb] To withdraw or take out, as for example a rope from a block. UNREFINED (13) [adjective] Crude, raw or unprocessed | [adjective] (of a person) lacking refinement; uncouth UNRELATED (10) [adjective] Not connected or associated | [adjective] Not related by kinship UNRELAXED (17) [adjective] Not relaxed UNREPAIRS (11) UNRESERVE (12) [noun] A lack or absence of reserve; frankness; freedom of communication. | [noun] A forest that is not set aside as a reserve. | [verb] To undo or cancel a reservation. UNRESTFUL (12) [adjective] Not restful. UNREVISED (13) [adjective] Not revised; unmodified. UNRIDABLE (12) [adjective] Not rideable. UNRIDDLED (12) [verb] To figure out the answer to (a riddle). | [verb] (by extension) To solve (a perplexing problem). | [adjective] Not having been riddled. UNRIDDLES (11) [verb] To figure out the answer to (a riddle). | [verb] (by extension) To solve (a perplexing problem). UNRIGGING (12) [verb] To remove the rigging from (a vessel, etc.). | [verb] To disable. | [verb] To undress (someone). UNRIPENED (12) [adjective] Not ripened; still unripe. UNRIPPING (14) [verb] To open something by ripping/tearing. UNRIVALED (13) [adjective] Beyond compare, far surpassing any other, unparalleled, without rival. UNROLLING (10) [verb] To straighten something that has been rolled, twisted or curled. | [verb] To emerge, be revealed or become apparent; to unfold. | [verb] To replace (a loop in a program) with a repetitive sequence of the individual instructions that the loop would carry out, sometimes used as an optimization. UNROOFING (13) [verb] To remove a roof from, e.g. a building. UNROOTING (10) [verb] To tear up by the roots; to uproot. UNROUNDED (11) [adjective] Not rounded. UNRUFFLED (16) [adjective] Not ruffled or tousled. | [adjective] Calm, not ruffled, serene, at peace, unbothered. UNRULIEST (9) UNSADDLED (12) [verb] To remove a saddle. | [verb] To throw (a rider) from the saddle. | [adjective] Not saddled. UNSADDLES (11) [verb] To remove a saddle. | [verb] To throw (a rider) from the saddle. UNSALABLE (11) [noun] Something that cannot be sold. | [adjective] Not salable; unmerchantable. UNSAYABLE (14) [adjective] Not capable of being said. | [adjective] Not allowed or not fit to be said. UNSCARRED (12) [adjective] Not scarred. UNSCATHED (15) [adjective] Not harmed or damaged in any way; untouched. UNSCENTED (12) [adjective] Unperfumed; having no scent. | [adjective] That has not been scented (detected by smell); undetected. UNSCREWED (15) [verb] To loosen a screw or thing by turning it. | [adjective] Not having been screwed. UNSEALING (10) [verb] To break the seal of (something) in order to open it. | [verb] To open by having a seal broken. | [noun] The opening of a seal. UNSEAMING (12) UNSEATING (10) [verb] To throw from one's seat; to deprive of a seat. | [verb] To deprive of the right to sit in a legislative body, as for fraud in election, or simply by defeating them in an election. UNSECURED (12) [adjective] Not physically secured; not fastened; not attached. | [adjective] Not made secure in any sense. | [adjective] Of a loan or guarantee, without collateral. UNSELFISH (15) [adjective] Not selfish UNSELLING (10) UNSERIOUS (9) [adjective] Not serious; flippant UNSETTING (10) [verb] To make not set. UNSETTLED (10) [verb] To make upset or uncomfortable | [verb] To bring into disorder or disarray | [adjective] Disturbed, upset. UNSETTLES (9) [verb] To make upset or uncomfortable | [verb] To bring into disorder or disarray UNSHACKLE (18) [verb] To remove shackles from someone or something. | [verb] To remove restrictions or inhibitions; to allow full freedom and power. UNSHAPELY (17) [adjective] Not having a distinct shape UNSHEATHE (15) [verb] To deprive of a sheath; to draw from the sheath or scabbard, as a sword. UNSHELLED (13) [adjective] Not having had the shell removed. | [adjective] Not bombarded with military shells. | [verb] To strip the shell from; to take out of the shell; to hatch. UNSHIFTED (16) UNSHIPPED (17) [verb] To unload cargo from a ship or other vessel | [verb] To remove an oar or mast from its normal position | [verb] To throw from a horse; to unseat | [adjective] Not having been shipped. UNSIGHTED (14) [adjective] Not sighted; unseen. | [adjective] Not furnished with a sight. UNSIGHTLY (16) [adjective] Displeasing to the eye. UNSKILLED (14) [adjective] Of a person or workforce: not having a skill or technical training. | [adjective] Of a job: not requiring skill or training. | [adjective] Of a made object: inexpertly made or showing a lack of skill. UNSMILING (12) [adjective] Not smiling; serious or grave UNSNAPPED (14) [verb] To unfasten (something held by snaps). | [adjective] Not having been snapped. UNSNARLED (10) [verb] To remove or undo a snarl or tangle. UNSOLDERS (10) [verb] To reverse the process of soldering, such as by breaking the joint and removing the solder UNSOUNDED (11) [adjective] Unfathomed UNSOUNDER (10) UNSOUNDLY (13) UNSPARING (12) [adjective] Without sparing; liberal; profuse; thorough. UNSPHERED (15) UNSPHERES (14) UNSPOILED (12) [adjective] Not spoiled or touched; pure. UNSPOTTED (12) [adjective] Not having spots. | [adjective] Unseen. | [adjective] Without stains or blots; sinless. UNSPRAYED (15) [adjective] Not having been sprayed. UNSTABLER (11) UNSTACKED (16) UNSTAINED (10) [adjective] Not dyed or discolored. | [adjective] Pure, pristine, clean, immaculate, unadulterated. UNSTATING (10) UNSTEELED (10) UNSTEPPED (14) [verb] To remove (the mast) from a sailing vessel. | [adjective] Not stepped; without steps. UNSTERILE (9) [adjective] Not sterile UNSTINTED (10) [adjective] Not constrained, not restrained, or not confined. UNSTOPPED (14) [verb] To remove a stoppage; to clear a blockage. | [verb] To unplug or uncork a container. | [verb] To draw out the stops of (an organ). UNSTOPPER (13) [verb] To remove the stopper from. UNSTRINGS (10) [verb] To remove the string or strings from. | [verb] To shake the nerves of; to cause anxiety or panic in. | [verb] To defuse or relax. UNSTUDIED (11) [adjective] Free of artifice or cunning; innocent, spontaneous and unaffected. | [adjective] Not gained by study. | [adjective] Not studied. UNSTYLISH (15) [adjective] Not stylish; unfashionable. UNSUBDUED (13) [adjective] Unconquered, not vanquished. | [adjective] Restless, not calm. UNSUCCESS (13) [noun] A lack of success. UNSULLIED (10) [adjective] Not sullied. UNSWATHED (16) [verb] To remove a swathe from. UNSWATHES (15) [verb] To remove a swathe from. UNTACKING (16) [verb] To unfasten (something tacked). | [verb] To remove the tack from. UNTACTFUL (14) UNTAINTED (10) [adjective] Not tainted; free of contamination; pure. UNTAMABLE (13) [adjective] Incapable of being controlled, subdued, or tamed. UNTANGLED (11) [verb] To remove tangles or knots from. | [verb] (by extension) To remove confusion or mystery from. | [adjective] Not tangled. UNTANGLES (10) [verb] To remove tangles or knots from. | [verb] (by extension) To remove confusion or mystery from. UNTEACHES (14) [verb] To cause someone to unlearn; to make someone forget something they have been taught. | [verb] To cause something previously learned to be forgotten. UNTENABLE (11) [adjective] Not able to be held, as of an opinion or position; unholdable, indefensible. | [adjective] Unfit for habitation UNTENURED (10) [adjective] Lacking tenure (permanence at an academic job). UNTETHERS (12) [verb] To undo by removing a tether. UNTHOUGHT (16) [verb] To undo the process of thinking. | [noun] That which has not been (yet) thought; that which has yet to enter into the mind; a non-existent thought. | [adjective] Not having been thought. UNTHREADS (13) [verb] To draw or remove a thread from. | [verb] To loosen the connections of. | [verb] To make one's way through. UNTHRIFTY (18) [adjective] Not thrifty. UNTHRONED (13) [verb] To dethrone. UNTHRONES (12) [verb] To dethrone. UNTIDIEST (10) [adjective] Sloppy. | [adjective] Disorganized. UNTIDYING (14) UNTIMEOUS (11) UNTOUCHED (15) [adjective] Remaining in its original, pristine state, undamaged; not altered. | [adjective] Not eaten. | [adjective] Not influenced, affected or swayed. UNTRAINED (10) [adjective] Lacking training, not having been instructed in something. UNTREATED (10) [adjective] Not treated. UNTRIMMED (14) [adjective] Not trimmed; not made tidy by cutting. | [adjective] Not adorned with trimmings. UNTRODDEN (11) [adjective] That has never been trod upon; unexplored, unspoiled. | [adjective] Of a person: undefeated. UNTRUSSED (10) [adjective] Not trussed. UNTRUSSES (9) [verb] To free from a truss; to untie or unfasten UNTUCKING (16) [verb] To remove something from a relatively hidden location or position where it is tucked. UNTUTORED (10) [adjective] Untrained, not taught or educated in a field of knowledge UNTWINING (13) [verb] To untwist the strands of (something entwined). | [verb] To free (one thing that is entwined with another), disentangle, extricate. | [verb] To become untwisted or disentangled. UNTWISTED (13) [verb] To remove a twist from. | [verb] To become untwisted. UNTYPICAL (16) [adjective] Not typical, atypical, unusual UNUSUALLY (12) [adverb] In an unusual manner. UNVARYING (16) [adjective] Persistent, constant, changeless | [adjective] Lacking variety; having a uniform character UNVEILING (13) [verb] To remove a veil from; to uncover; to reveal something hidden. | [verb] To remove a veil; to reveal oneself. | [noun] The act of unveiling or uncovering. UNVISITED (13) [adjective] Not visited. | [adjective] (of a node in a graph) Never visited. UNVOICING (15) UNWARIEST (12) UNWARLIKE (16) [adjective] Not warlike. UNWASHEDS (16) UNWEARIED (13) [adjective] Not wearied, not tired. | [adjective] Never tiring; tireless. | [adjective] Not stopping; persistent, relentless. UNWEAVING (16) UNWEETING (13) UNWEIGHTS (16) [verb] To temporarily remove the body's weight from a ski when making a turn. | [verb] To remove a statistical weighting from. UNWELCOME (16) [verb] To treat as unwelcome. | [adjective] Not welcome. UNWILLING (13) [adjective] Not willing; reluctant UNWINDERS (13) UNWINDING (14) [verb] To separate (something that is wound up) | [verb] To disentangle | [verb] To relax; to chill out; to rest and relieve of stress UNWISDOMS (15) UNWISHING (16) UNWITTING (13) [adjective] Unaware or uninformed; oblivious | [adjective] Unintentional UNWOMANLY (17) [adjective] Not womanly; unfeminine. | [adverb] In a manner unbecoming a woman. UNWORLDLY (16) [adjective] Of or relating to the spiritual as opposed to the material. | [adjective] Unconcerned with secular matters. | [adjective] Lacking sophistication. UNWORRIED (13) [adjective] Free of worries. UNWOUNDED (14) [adjective] Not wounded. UNWRAPPED (17) [verb] To open or undo, as what is wrapped or folded. | [verb] To become unwrapped. | [verb] To remove word wrap from. UNWREATHE (15) UNWRITTEN (12) [verb] To erase; to revert to a state where (something) was never written. | [verb] To nullify. | [verb] To deconstruct. UNZIPPING (23) [verb] To open something using a zipper. | [verb] To come open by means of a zipper. | [verb] To decompress (a zip file). UPBEARERS (13) UPBEARING (14) UPBINDING (15) UPBOILING (14) UPBRAIDED (15) [verb] To criticize severely. | [verb] (followed by with or for, and formerly of before the object) To charge with something wrong or disgraceful; to reproach | [verb] To treat with contempt. UPBRAIDER (14) UPCASTING (14) [verb] To cast or throw up; to turn upward. | [verb] To taunt; to reproach; to upbraid. | [verb] To cast from subtype to supertype. UPCHUCKED (23) [verb] To vomit. UPCLIMBED (18) UPCOILING (14) UPCURLING (14) UPCURVING (17) UPDARTING (13) UPFLOWING (18) UPFOLDING (16) UPGATHERS (15) UPGIRDING (14) UPGRADING (14) [verb] To improve, usually applied to technology, generally by complete replacement of one or more components | [verb] To replace with something better. | [verb] To improve the equipment or furnishings of or services rendered to UPGROWING (16) UPGROWTHS (18) [noun] The process or result of growing up; progress; development. UPHEAPING (17) UPHEAVALS (17) [noun] Change, from one state to another | [noun] The process of being heaved upward, especially the raising of part of the earth's crust. | [noun] A sudden violent upset, disruption or convulsion. UPHEAVERS (17) UPHEAVING (18) [verb] To heave or lift up; raise up or aloft. | [verb] To lift or thrust something upward forcefully, or be similarly lifted or thrust upward. | [verb] To be lifted up; rise. UPHOARDED (16) UPHOLDERS (15) UPHOLDING (16) [verb] To hold up; to lift on high; to elevate. | [verb] To keep erect; to support; to sustain; to keep from falling | [verb] To support by approval or encouragement, to confirm (something which has been questioned) UPHOLSTER (14) [noun] An upholsterer; a tradesman who finishes furniture. | [verb] To fit padding, stuffing, springs, webbing and fabric covering to (furniture). UPLANDERS (12) UPLEAPING (14) UPLIFTERS (14) UPLIFTING (15) [noun] The act of something being lifted upward. | [adjective] Improving the mood; causing cheerfulness. UPLIGHTED (16) UPLOADING (13) [verb] To transfer data to a computer on a network, especially to a server on the Internet. | [noun] The process by which something is uploaded. UPMANSHIP (18) UPPERCASE (15) [noun] Collective term for the capital letters A, B, C, ... as opposed to the small letters a, b, c, .... | [verb] To convert (text) to upper case. | [adjective] Written in upper case; capital UPPERCUTS (15) [noun] A swinging blow aimed upwards at the opponent's chin. | [noun] A cut shot that sends the ball over the wicket-keeper's head. | [verb] To strike with an uppercut UPPERMOST (15) [adjective] At a higher level, rank or position. | [adjective] Situated on higher ground, further inland, or more northerly. | [adjective] (of strata or geological time periods) younger, more recent UPPERPART (15) UPPROPPED (18) UPRAISERS (11) UPRAISING (12) [verb] To raise something up; to elevate. | [verb] To move something upright; to erect. | [noun] A raising upward. UPREACHED (17) UPREACHES (16) UPREARING (12) [verb] To raise something up; to rise up; to erect UPRIGHTED (16) UPRIGHTLY (18) UPRISINGS (12) [noun] A popular revolt that attempts to overthrow a government or its policies; an insurgency or insurrection. UPROOTALS (11) UPROOTERS (11) UPROOTING (12) [verb] To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to extirpate. | [verb] (by extension) To remove from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly. | [verb] To destroy utterly; to eradicate, exterminate. UPROUSING (12) UPRUSHING (15) UPSCALING (14) [verb] To increase in size, to scale up. UPSENDING (13) UPSETTERS (11) UPSETTING (12) [verb] To make (a person) angry, distressed, or unhappy. | [verb] To disturb, disrupt or adversely alter (something). | [verb] To tip or overturn (something). UPSHIFTED (18) [verb] To shift to a higher gear | [verb] To shift to a higher level, such as of frequency, growth rate, economic level, etc. UPSOARING (12) UPSPRINGS (14) UPSTAGING (13) [verb] To draw attention away from others, especially on-stage. | [verb] To force other actors to face away from the audience by staying upstage. | [verb] To treat snobbishly. UPSTARING (12) UPSTARTED (12) UPSTATERS (11) UPSTEPPED (16) UPSTIRRED (12) UPSTROKES (15) [noun] The upward stroke of a pen, brush, piston, etc. UPSURGING (13) UPSWELLED (15) UPSWOLLEN (14) UPTEARING (12) UPTHRUSTS (14) [noun] An upward thrust. | [noun] Buoyancy. | [noun] An upward movement of part of the Earth's crust. UPTILTING (12) UPTOSSING (12) UPTOWNERS (14) UPTURNING (12) [verb] To turn (something) up or over | [noun] A turning upward. UPWAFTING (18) UPWELLING (15) [verb] (of a fluid) To rise from a lower source; to well up. | [noun] An upward movement from a lower source. | [noun] The oceanographic phenomenon that occurs when strong, usually seasonal, winds push water away from the coast, bringing cold, nutrient-rich deep waters up to the surface URANINITE (9) [noun] Any of several brownish-black forms of uranium dioxide, UO2, (especially pitchblende) that is the chief ore of uranium; it is isomorphous with thorianite. URBANISED (12) [verb] To make something more urban in character. | [verb] To take up an urban way of life. URBANISES (11) [verb] To make something more urban in character. | [verb] To take up an urban way of life. URBANISMS (13) URBANISTS (11) [noun] A person who studies cities and their growth. | [noun] An urban planner. URBANITES (11) [noun] Someone who lives in a city or similar urban area. | [noun] One of a demographic class of young, socially-conscious, urban professionals. | [noun] Rock-like recycled building material from man-made sources. URBANIZED (21) [verb] To make something more urban in character. | [verb] To take up an urban way of life. URBANIZES (20) [verb] To make something more urban in character. | [verb] To take up an urban way of life. URCEOLATE (11) UREDINIAL (10) UREDINIUM (12) UREOTELIC (11) URETHANES (12) URGENCIES (12) [noun] The quality or condition of being urgent | [noun] Insistence, pressure URINARIES (9) URINATING (10) [verb] (urology) To pass urine from the body. URINATION (9) [noun] The process of passing urine, that is, of eliminating liquid waste from the body. URINEMIAS (11) UROCHORDS (15) UROCHROME (16) UROKINASE (13) [noun] A protease, found in the urine, which converts plasminogen to plasmin, and is used in the treatment of deep vein thrombosis. UROLOGIES (10) UROLOGIST (10) [noun] A doctor of urology. UROPYGIUM (17) [noun] The posterior part of a bird's body from which the tailfeathers grow. UROSTYLES (12) [noun] A styliform process forming the posterior extremity of the vertebral column in some fishes and amphibians. URTICANTS (11) URTICARIA (11) [noun] Itchy, swollen, red areas of the skin which can appear quickly in response to an allergen or other conditions. URTICATED (12) [verb] To have or produce a stinging sensation, as of nettles or urticating hair. URTICATES (11) [verb] To have or produce a stinging sensation, as of nettles or urticating hair. URUSHIOLS (12) USABILITY (14) [noun] The state or condition of being usable. | [noun] The degree to which an object, device, software application, etc. is easy to use with no specific training. USELESSLY (12) USHERETTE (12) [noun] A female usher. USQUABAES (20) USQUEBAES (20) USUALNESS (9) USUFRUCTS (14) UTILIDORS (10) UTILISERS (9) UTILISING (10) [verb] To make use of; to use. | [verb] To make useful; to find a practical use for. | [verb] To make best use of; to use to its fullest extent, potential, or ability. UTILITIES (9) [noun] The state or condition of being useful; usefulness. | [noun] Something that is useful. | [noun] The ability of a commodity to satisfy needs or wants; the satisfaction experienced by the consumer of that commodity. UTILIZERS (18) UTILIZING (19) [verb] To make use of; to use. | [verb] To make useful; to find a practical use for. | [verb] To make best use of; to use to its fullest extent, potential, or ability. UTOPISTIC (13) UTRICULAR (11) UTRICULUS (11) [noun] A little sac or bag; a utricle; especially, a part of the membranous labyrinth of the ear. UTTERABLE (11) UTTERANCE (11) [noun] An act of uttering. | [noun] Something spoken. | [noun] The ability to speak. | [noun] The utmost extremity (of a fight etc.). UTTERMOST (11) [noun] The utmost; the highest or greatest degree; the farthest extent. | [adjective] Outermost. | [adjective] Extreme; utmost; of the farthest, greatest, or highest degree. UVAROVITE (15) [noun] A rare chromium-bearing garnet mineral with a vivid emerald-green colour. UVEITISES (12) UXORICIDE (19) [noun] One who murders his or her wife. | [noun] The murdering of one's own wife.

10-Letter Words (658)

UBIQUINONE (21) [noun] Any of several isoprenyl quinones that have a role in cellular respiration UBIQUITIES (21) UBIQUITOUS (21) [adjective] Being everywhere at once: omnipresent. | [adjective] Appearing to be everywhere at once; being or seeming to be in more than one location at the same time. | [adjective] Widespread; very prevalent. UDOMETRIES (13) UFOLOGICAL (16) UFOLOGISTS (14) UGLINESSES (11) [noun] The condition of being ugly | [noun] An unsightly or frightful object UINTAHITES (13) ULCERATING (13) [verb] To cause an ulcer to develop. | [verb] To become ulcerous. ULCERATION (12) ULCERATIVE (15) ULTERIORLY (13) ULTIMACIES (14) ULTIMATELY (15) [adverb] Indicating the last item. | [adverb] Indicating the most important action. | [adverb] Used to indicate the etymon at which a given etymological derivation terminates. ULTIMATING (13) ULTIMATUMS (14) [noun] A final statement of terms or conditions made by one party to another, especially one that expresses a threat of reprisal or war. ULTRABASIC (14) [noun] Ultramafic | [adjective] Ultramafic ULTRACLEAN (12) [adjective] Exceptionally clean. ULTRADENSE (11) ULTRAFICHE (18) ULTRAHEATS (13) ULTRAHEAVY (19) ULTRAHUMAN (15) ULTRAISTIC (12) ULTRALIGHT (14) [noun] An aircraft that weighs very little | [adjective] Extremely light; weighing very little, of utmost lightness. ULTRAMAFIC (17) [noun] A rock with such properties. | [adjective] Describing igneous rocks that contain magnesium and iron and only a very small amount of silica, such as are found in the Earth’s mantle. ULTRAMICRO (14) ULTRAQUIET (19) ULTRARAPID (13) ULTRARIGHT (14) ULTRASHARP (15) ULTRASHORT (13) [noun] A bond with an extremely short term, typically less than a year | [adjective] Very short. | [adjective] Extremely short in duration, typically on the femtosecond scale ULTRASLICK (16) ULTRASMALL (12) ULTRASMART (12) ULTRASONIC (12) [adjective] (acoustics) Beyond (higher in frequency than) the range of sound perceptible to the human ear; with a frequency of 20 kilohertz or higher. ULTRASOUND (11) [noun] Sound with a frequency greater than the upper limit of human hearing, which is approximately 20 kilohertz. | [noun] The use of ultrasonic waves for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes. | [verb] To treat with ultrasound. ULTRAVACUA (15) ULULATIONS (10) UMBELLIFER (17) [noun] Any plant of the family Apiaceae, also called Umbelliferae, whose inflorescence is an umbel, such as a carrot or celery. UMBILICALS (16) [noun] A cord connecting an astronaut to a spacecraft, or a craft to ground control prior to launch, etc. UMBILICATE (16) [adjective] Having a navel | [adjective] (of a mushroom etc.) Having a small umbo in a central depression, or a depression in the center of the cap | [adjective] Supported by a central stalk. UMBRAGEOUS (15) UMBRELLAED (15) UNABATEDLY (16) UNABRIDGED (15) [noun] An unabridged publication, especially a reference work | [adjective] (of a book or document) Not abridged, shortened, expurgated or condensed; complete. UNABSORBED (15) [adjective] Not having been absorbed. UNACADEMIC (17) [adjective] Not academic. UNACCENTED (15) [adjective] Of a word, having no diacritical mark; accentless. | [adjective] Of a vowel or syllable, pronounced with no, or little stress. | [adjective] Not pronounced with a distinctive accent. UNACCEPTED (17) UNACHIEVED (19) UNACTORISH (15) UNADJUSTED (19) [adjective] Not adjusted, especially not altered to fit new or changed data or circumstances UNADMITTED (14) UNAFFECTED (19) [verb] (very rare) To not affect. | [noun] Someone not affected, as by a disease. | [adjective] Not affected or changed. UNAFFLUENT (16) UNALLURING (11) UNAMENABLE (14) [adjective] Not amenable UNANALYZED (23) [adjective] Opposite of analyzed, not tested or scrutinized. UNANCHORED (16) [verb] To raise an anchor or to free a vessel from an anchor. | [verb] (by extension) To liberate. | [verb] To become loose or physically unattached. UNANSWERED (14) [adjective] That has not been answered or addressed. UNAPPARENT (14) [adjective] Not apparent; not be seen on surface. UNAPPEASED (15) [adjective] That has not been appeased UNAPPROVED (18) [adjective] Not approved. | [adjective] Not proven. UNARGUABLE (13) [noun] Such a situation | [adjective] Not arguable; that cannot be reasonably argued against. UNARGUABLY (16) UNARROGANT (11) UNARTISTIC (12) [adjective] Not artistic. UNASSAILED (11) UNASSIGNED (12) [adjective] Not assigned. | [adjective] Without a value assigned to it. UNASSISTED (11) [adjective] Not assisted; without assistance | [adverb] Without assistance. UNASSUAGED (12) [adjective] Not assuaged; not calmed, appeased, mitigated, alleviated, satisfied or diminished. UNASSUMING (13) [adjective] Modest and having no pretensions or ostentation UNATHLETIC (15) UNATTACHED (16) [adjective] Not attached or joined; disconnected. | [adjective] Not married or involved in a romantic relationship. | [adjective] Not connected with or belonging to a particular group or organization. UNATTENDED (12) [adjective] Not attended; without persons present. | [adjective] Not attended to; not receiving attention. UNATTESTED (11) [adjective] Not supported by attestation; lacking supporting evidence in the form of assurance from an authority. UNAVAILING (14) [adjective] Fruitless, futile, useless. UNAWAKENED (18) [adjective] Not awakened; sleeping; unconscious; unaware. UNBALANCED (15) [verb] To cause to be out of balance. | [adjective] Not balanced, without equilibrium; dizzy | [adjective] Irrational or mentally deranged UNBALANCES (14) [verb] To cause to be out of balance. UNBANDAGED (15) UNBANDAGES (14) UNBAPTIZED (24) [adjective] Not baptized. UNBARBERED (15) UNBEARABLE (14) [adjective] So unpleasant or painful as to be unendurable UNBEARABLY (17) [adverb] In an unbearable manner, not bearably, in a way unable to be borne UNBEATABLE (14) [noun] Someone or something that can't be beaten | [adjective] That cannot be beaten, defeated or overcome UNBEATABLY (17) UNBECOMING (17) [verb] To misbecome. | [noun] The process by which something unbecomes. | [adjective] Not flattering, attractive or appropriate. UNBEHOLDEN (16) [adjective] Not beholden; not obliged or bound by duty or expectations. | [adjective] Unseen. UNBELIEVER (15) [noun] One who does not believe, particularly in a deity (used by believers to describe other people) UNBENDABLE (15) [adjective] Not bendable UNBIBLICAL (16) [adjective] Not biblical; contrary to biblical teachings. UNBLEACHED (18) [adjective] Not bleached. UNBLENCHED (18) UNBLINKING (17) [adjective] Not blinking. UNBLOCKING (19) [verb] To remove or clear a block or obstruction from. | [verb] To free or make available. | [verb] In whist, to throw away a high card so as not to interrupt one's partner's long suit. UNBLUSHING (16) [adjective] Not blushing | [adjective] Shameless UNBONNETED (13) [verb] To remove a bonnet from. | [verb] To take off one's bonnet. | [adjective] Not wearing a bonnet. UNBOSOMING (15) [verb] To tell someone about (one's troubles), and thus obtain relief. | [verb] To free (oneself) of the burden of one's troubles by telling of them. | [verb] To confess a misdeed. UNBRAIDING (14) [verb] To disentangle the strands of a braid UNBRANCHED (18) [adjective] Having no branches | [adjective] Straight-chain UNBREECHED (18) UNBREECHES (17) UNBRIDLING (14) [verb] To remove the bridle, and other tack, from (a horse or other animal). | [verb] To remove restraint from. UNBUCKLING (19) [verb] To unfasten (the buckle of (a belt, shoe, etc)) | [noun] The act of unfastening a buckle. UNBUDGETED (15) UNBUFFERED (19) UNBUILDING (14) [verb] To dismantle or deconstruct (something previously built). UNBUNDLING (14) [verb] To separate parts which have been bundled together. | [verb] To break down a product or service into a number of separate elements that can be charged for individually. | [noun] The process by which something is unbundled. UNBURDENED (14) [verb] To free from burden, or relieve from trouble. | [adjective] Not burdened; without a burden UNBURNABLE (14) [adjective] That is difficult or impossible to burn UNBUTTERED (13) [adjective] Not buttered. UNBUTTONED (13) [verb] To open (something) by undoing its buttons. | [verb] To come open by having its buttons unfastened. | [adjective] In disarray. UNCALCINED (15) UNCANCELED (15) UNCANDIDLY (17) UNCANNIEST (12) [adjective] Strange, and mysteriously unsettling (as if supernatural); weird. | [adjective] Careless. UNCARPETED (15) [adjective] Not carpeted. UNCENSORED (13) [adjective] Unedited; not having had objectionable content removed UNCENSURED (13) UNCHAINING (16) [verb] To remove chains from; to free; to liberate. UNCHANGING (17) [verb] To revert or reverse a change | [verb] To not change; be unchanging; remain constant | [adjective] Remaining constantly unchanged UNCHARGING (17) UNCHARMING (18) UNCHASTELY (18) UNCHASTITY (18) UNCHEWABLE (20) UNCHURCHED (21) [adjective] Who does not generally attend church. UNCHURCHES (20) [verb] To expel from membership of a congregation or church; to excommunicate. UNCHURCHLY (23) UNCILIATED (13) UNCLAMPING (17) [verb] To remove a clamp from. UNCLASPING (15) [verb] To release the clasp from something | [verb] To become unfastened | [verb] To separate from being clasped UNCLEANEST (12) UNCLEAREST (12) UNCLENCHED (18) [verb] To open (something that was clenched). | [verb] To relax, especially one's muscles. | [adjective] Not clenched UNCLENCHES (17) [verb] To open (something that was clenched). | [verb] To relax, especially one's muscles. UNCLINCHED (18) UNCLINCHES (17) UNCLIPPING (17) [verb] To release something by removing a clip. UNCLOAKING (17) [verb] To remove a cloak or cover from; to deprive of a cloak or cover; to unmask; to reveal. | [verb] To remove one's cloak. | [verb] To become visible again by turning off a cloaking device. UNCLOGGING (15) [verb] To remove a blockage from. | [verb] To have a blockage removed. UNCLOTHING (16) [verb] To strip of clothes or covering; to make naked. UNCLOUDING (14) UNCLUTTERS (12) UNCOALESCE (14) UNCOATINGS (13) UNCODIFIED (17) UNCOERCIVE (17) UNCOFFINED (19) UNCOMBINED (17) [adjective] Not combined with another UNCOMMONER (16) UNCOMMONLY (19) [adverb] To an uncommon degree; unusually or extremely. | [adverb] Not often; on rare occasions. UNCONCERNS (14) UNCONFINED (16) [adjective] Not confined; free from physical restraint. UNCONFUSED (16) UNCONFUSES (15) UNCONSUMED (15) [adjective] Not consumed. UNCONVOYED (19) UNCORSETED (13) UNCOUPLERS (14) UNCOUPLING (15) [verb] To disconnect or detach one thing from another. | [verb] To come loose. | [verb] To loose, as dogs, from their couples. UNCOVERING (16) [verb] To remove a cover from. | [verb] To reveal the identity of. | [verb] To show openly; to disclose; to reveal. UNCREATING (13) [verb] To kill; to destroy; to deprive of existence; to annihilate. | [verb] To undo the act of creating. UNCREATIVE (15) [adjective] Not creative. UNCREDITED (14) [adjective] Unacknowledged. | [adjective] Not believed. | [adjective] Not appearing in the credits. UNCRIPPLED (17) UNCRITICAL (14) [adjective] Lacking critique or critical examination; undiscriminating. | [adjective] Having a disregard for critical standards or procedures. | [adjective] Slow to criticize. UNCROSSING (13) [verb] To move something, especially one's arms or legs, from a crossed position. | [verb] To undo the crossing or traversal of. | [noun] Movement out of a crossed position. UNCROWNING (16) [verb] To deprive of the monarchy or other authority or status. | [verb] To remove a crown from (often figuratively). UNCRUMPLED (17) [verb] To return something that has been crumpled closer to its original state. | [verb] Having been crumpled, to return closer to its original state. UNCRUMPLES (16) [verb] To return something that has been crumpled closer to its original state. | [verb] Having been crumpled, to return closer to its original state. UNCTUOUSLY (15) UNCULTURED (13) [adjective] Not cultured or civilized; lacking in delicacy or refinement. UNDECADENT (14) UNDECEIVED (17) [verb] To free from misconception, deception or error. | [adjective] Not having been deceived. UNDECEIVES (16) [verb] To free from misconception, deception or error. UNDECIDEDS (15) [noun] A voter etc. who has not yet come to a decision. UNDECLARED (14) [adjective] Not declared UNDEFEATED (15) [adjective] Never defeated; always victorious UNDEFENDED (16) [adjective] Not defended. UNDEFORMED (17) UNDENIABLE (13) [adjective] Irrefutable, or impossible to deny UNDENIABLY (16) [adverb] In an undeniable manner, or to an undeniable extent. | [adverb] Used as a modal adverb to assert that that the indicated statement is undeniable. UNDERACTED (14) [verb] To act in an understated manner or with little expressiveness UNDERBELLY (16) [noun] The underside of an animal. | [noun] The underside of any thing. | [noun] The side which is not normally seen, normally a dark, immoral place. UNDERBRIMS (15) UNDERBRUSH (16) [noun] The small trees and other plants that clutter the floor of a forest. | [verb] To clear (an area) of underbrush. | [verb] To work among the underbrush. UNDERCARDS (14) [noun] A list of minor or supporting contests printed on the same bill as the main event (primarily fighting or racing, such as the main fight at a boxing match or wrestling, horse or car racing, etc.), occurring before or after the main event. | [noun] The events so listed. | [noun] A card lower than another given card or pair. UNDERCLASS (13) [noun] The poorest class of people in a given society. UNDERCOATS (13) [noun] A layer of short hairs underneath the longer ones of an animal's fur | [noun] A coat of paint or other material applied onto a surface before that of a topcoat; a coloured primer | [noun] A coat for wearing indoors, under an overcoat. UNDERCOOLS (13) [verb] To cool insufficiently | [verb] To supercool UNDERCOUNT (13) [noun] An incorrect count that is too low. | [verb] To count to an insufficient degree; to count one thing disproportionately less than another UNDERCOVER (16) [noun] A person who works undercover. | [verb] To provide too little coverage. | [adjective] Performed or happening in secret. UNDERCROFT (16) [noun] A cellar or vaulted storage room. | [noun] A ground-level car park that occupies the base of a building. UNDERDOING (13) UNDEREATEN (11) UNDERFEEDS (15) [verb] To feed inadequately or insufficiently UNDERFUNDS (15) [verb] To provide insufficient funds (for). UNDERGIRDS (13) [verb] To strengthen, secure, or reinforce by passing a rope, cable, or chain around the underside of an object. | [verb] To give fundamental support; provide with a sound or secure basis; provide supportive evidence for. | [verb] To lend moral support to. UNDERGLAZE (21) [noun] A decorative slip applied to the surface of pottery before glazing. | [verb] To apply a decorative slip to the surface of pottery before glazing. UNDERGOING (13) [verb] To go or move under or beneath. | [verb] To experience; to pass through a phase. | [verb] To suffer or endure; bear with. UNDERGRADS (13) [noun] An undergraduate. UNDERLINED (12) [verb] To draw a line underneath something, especially to add emphasis; to underscore | [verb] To emphasise or stress something | [verb] To influence secretly. UNDERLINES (11) [noun] A line placed underneath a piece of text in order to provide emphasis or to indicate that it should be viewed in italics or (in electronic documents) that it acts as a hyperlink. | [noun] The character _. | [noun] An announcement of a theatrical performance to follow, placed in an advertisement for the current one. UNDERLINGS (12) [noun] A subordinate, or person of lesser rank or authority. | [noun] A low, wretched person. UNDERLYING (15) [verb] To lie in a position directly beneath. | [verb] To lie under or beneath. | [verb] To serve as a basis of; form the foundation of. UNDERMINED (14) [verb] To dig underneath (something), to make a passage for destructive or military purposes; to sap. | [verb] To weaken or work against; to hinder, sabotage. | [verb] To erode the base or foundation of something, e.g. by the action of water. UNDERMINES (13) [verb] To dig underneath (something), to make a passage for destructive or military purposes; to sap. | [verb] To weaken or work against; to hinder, sabotage. | [verb] To erode the base or foundation of something, e.g. by the action of water. UNDERNEATH (14) [noun] The lower surface or part of something. | [noun] A background radio sound track played during a specific announcement or program. | [adjective] Under, lower. UNDERPANTS (13) [noun] Underwear covering the genitalia and often buttocks, usually going no higher than the navel. UNDERPARTS (13) [noun] A lower or underneath part UNDERPLAYS (16) [verb] To play in a subordinate, or in an inferior manner; to underact a part. | [verb] To make something seem less important than it really is. | [verb] To play a low card when holding a high one, in the hope of a future advantage. UNDERPLOTS (13) [noun] A subplot; a plot that is not the main plot of a story. | [noun] A secret scheme or trick. UNDERPRICE (15) [verb] To set a price at less than the value of an item | [verb] To sell at a lower price than another (especially than a competitor) UNDERPROOF (16) [verb] To proof insufficiently. | [adjective] Having a lower alcohol content than proof spirit. UNDERRATED (12) [verb] To underestimate; to make too low a rate or estimate | [adjective] Not given enough recognition for its quality UNDERRATES (11) [verb] To underestimate; to make too low a rate or estimate UNDERREACT (13) UNDERSCORE (13) [noun] An underline; a line drawn or printed beneath text; the character _. | [noun] A piece of background music. | [verb] To underline; to mark a line beneath text. UNDERSELLS (11) [verb] To sell goods for a lower price than a competitor. | [verb] To sell something for less than its value. | [verb] To put forward an idea, or to market a new product, with insufficient enthusiasm. UNDERSEXED (19) [adjective] Lacking sufficient sexual desire or activity; sexually unfulfilled; sexually frustrated. UNDERSHIRT (14) [noun] An undergarment worn beneath a shirt, often collarless and sleeveless. UNDERSHOOT (14) [noun] The situation where a neuron's membrane potential falls below the normal resting potential. | [noun] An instance of undershooting. | [verb] To shoot not far enough or not well enough. UNDERSHRUB (16) [noun] A low-growing shrub. UNDERSIDES (12) [noun] The side that is below or underneath, the bottom. UNDERSIZED (21) [adjective] Below the usual or expected size UNDERSKIRT (15) [noun] A skirt worn underneath another skirt; a petticoat. | [noun] An under layer of a multi-layer gown over which outer skirts are draped. UNDERSLUNG (12) [adjective] Supported from above (especially from the underside of a wing etc) | [adjective] Having a low center of gravity UNDERSPINS (13) UNDERSTAND (12) [verb] To grasp a concept fully and thoroughly, especially (of words, statements, art, etc.) to be aware of the meaning of and (of people) to be aware of the intent of. | [verb] To believe, to think one grasps sufficiently despite potentially incomplete knowledge. | [verb] (obsolete outside circus, acrobatics) To stand underneath, to support. UNDERSTATE (11) [verb] To state (something) with less completeness than needed; to minimise or downplay. | [verb] To state (something) with a lack of emphasis, in order to express irony. | [verb] To state a quantity that is too low. UNDERSTEER (11) [noun] The condition in which the front wheels of a car fail to follow the desired curve while cornering, instead following more of a straight-line trajectory, losing a degree of traction, and so slipping off the required line. | [verb] The action of a car when it does not follow the desired curve while cornering. Tyre slip of the front wheels. UNDERSTOOD (12) [verb] To grasp a concept fully and thoroughly, especially (of words, statements, art, etc.) to be aware of the meaning of and (of people) to be aware of the intent of. | [verb] To believe, to think one grasps sufficiently despite potentially incomplete knowledge. | [verb] (obsolete outside circus, acrobatics) To stand underneath, to support. UNDERSTORY (14) [noun] The layer of plants that grow in the shade of the canopy of a forest. UNDERSTUDY (15) [noun] A performer who understudies; a standby. | [verb] To study or know a role to such an extent as to be able to replace the normal performer when required. | [verb] To act as an understudy (to someone). UNDERTAKEN (15) [verb] To take upon oneself; to start, to embark on (a specific task etc.). | [verb] To commit oneself (to an obligation, activity etc.). | [verb] To overtake on the wrong side. UNDERTAKER (15) [noun] A funeral director; someone whose business is to manage funerals, burials and cremations. | [noun] A person receiving land in Ireland during the Elizabethan era, so named because they gave an undertaking to abide by several conditions regarding marriage, to be loyal to the crown, and to use English as their spoken language. | [noun] A contractor for the royal revenue in England, one of those who undertook to manage the House of Commons for the king in the Addled Parliament of 1614. UNDERTAKES (15) [verb] To take upon oneself; to start, to embark on (a specific task etc.). | [verb] To commit oneself (to an obligation, activity etc.). | [verb] To overtake on the wrong side. UNDERTAXED (19) UNDERTAXES (18) UNDERTONES (11) [noun] An auditory tone of low pitch or volume. | [noun] An implicit message perceived subtly alongside, but not detracting noticeably from, the explicit message conveyed in or by a book, film, verbal dialogue or similar (contrast with overtone); an undercurrent. | [noun] A pale colour, or one seen underneath another colour. UNDERTRICK (17) [noun] A trick that declarer does not win, causing the contract to go down. UNDERVALUE (14) [noun] An undervaluation; a price or rate below the actual worth. | [verb] To underestimate, or assign too low a value to. | [verb] To have too little regard for. UNDERWATER (14) [noun] Underlying water or body of water, for example in an aquifer or the deep ocean | [noun] A type of lure which lies beneath the water surface. | [verb] To water or irrigate insufficiently UNDERWHELM (19) [verb] To fail to impress; to perform disappointingly. UNDERWINGS (15) [noun] A hind wing on an insect. | [noun] A member of the genus Catocala, a nocturnal moth which usually has brightly coloured underwings. | [noun] The underside of a bird's wing. UNDERWOODS (15) [noun] Underbrush, undergrowth. UNDERWOOLS (14) UNDERWORLD (15) [noun] The world of the dead, located underneath the world of the living; the afterlife. | [noun] That part of society that is engaged in crime or vice. | [noun] The portion of a game that is set below ground. UNDERWRITE (14) [verb] To write below or under; subscribe. | [verb] To subscribe (a document, policy etc.) with one's name. | [verb] To sign; to put one's name to. UNDERWROTE (14) [verb] To write below or under; subscribe. | [verb] To subscribe (a document, policy etc.) with one's name. | [verb] To sign; to put one's name to. UNDESERVED (15) [adjective] Not deserved, earned or merited; unjustifiable or unfair. UNDETECTED (14) [adjective] Not found; undiscovered. UNDETERRED (12) [adjective] Not deterred or put off; undiscouraged UNDIDACTIC (16) UNDIGESTED (13) [adjective] Not digested UNDIRECTED (14) [adjective] Not directed UNDISMAYED (17) [adjective] Not dismayed; hopeful; calm. UNDISPUTED (14) [adjective] Universally agreed upon; not disputed | [adjective] Unchallenged and accepted without question UNDOCTORED (14) UNDOGMATIC (16) [adjective] Not dogmatic. UNDOMESTIC (15) UNDOUBLING (14) UNDOUBTING (14) UNDRAMATIC (15) [adjective] Not dramatic; lacking in dramatic action. UNDRESSING (12) [verb] To remove one's clothing. | [verb] To remove one’s clothing. | [verb] To remove the clothing of (someone). UNDULATING (12) [verb] To cause to move in a wavelike motion. | [verb] To cause to resemble a wave | [verb] To move in wavelike motions. UNDULATION (11) [noun] An instance or act of undulating. | [noun] A wavy appearance or outline; waviness. | [noun] A tremulous tone produced by a peculiar pressure of the finger on a string. UNDULATORY (14) UNEARTHING (14) [verb] To drive or draw from the earth. | [verb] To uncover or find; to bring out from concealment | [verb] To dig up. UNEASINESS (10) [noun] The state of being uneasy, nervous or restless. | [noun] An anxious state of mind; anxiety. UNECONOMIC (16) [adjective] Financially inefficient, costly, wasteful, or loss making UNEDIFYING (18) [adjective] Not edifying. | [adjective] Ungraceful, usually due to a clash of expectations or disparity of knowledge. UNEDUCABLE (15) UNEDUCATED (14) [adjective] Not educated UNEMPHATIC (19) [adjective] Not emphatic UNEMPLOYED (18) [noun] Unemployed people. | [adjective] Having no job despite being able and willing to work. | [adjective] Having no use, not doing work UNENCLOSED (13) [adjective] Not enclosed. UNENDINGLY (15) UNENFORCED (16) UNENLARGED (12) UNENRICHED (16) [adjective] Not enriched. UNENVIABLE (15) [adjective] Difficult, undesirable, or unpleasant; not to be envied. UNEQUALLED (20) [adjective] Without equal; unmatched. UNERRINGLY (14) UNEVENNESS (13) UNEVENTFUL (16) [adjective] Monotonous; lacking significant or noteworthy events UNEXAMINED (20) [adjective] That which has not been examined UNEXAMPLED (22) [adjective] Lacking prior examples; unprecedented. UNEXCELLED (20) [adjective] Excelling all others in some way. UNEXCITING (20) [adjective] Not exciting UNEXPECTED (22) [adjective] Not expected, anticipated or foreseen. UNEXPENDED (21) UNEXPLODED (21) [adjective] Not exploded UNEXPLORED (20) [adjective] Which has not been explored. UNFADINGLY (18) UNFAIRNESS (13) [noun] The state of being unfair; lack of justice. | [noun] An unjust act. UNFAITHFUL (19) [adjective] Not having religious faith. | [adjective] Not keeping good faith; disloyal; not faithful. | [adjective] Adulterous. UNFAMILIAR (15) [noun] An unfamiliar person; a stranger. | [adjective] Strange, not familiar. UNFASTENED (14) [verb] To detach from any connecting agency or link; to disconnect. | [verb] To come unloosed or untied. | [adjective] Not fastened. UNFATHERED (17) [verb] To cause someone to become less of a father. | [verb] To cause someone to be fatherless. | [adjective] Not raised by or acknowledged by a father. UNFAVORITE (16) [noun] Something that is not a favourite; particularly something that is especially disliked. | [verb] To remove from one’s list of favorites. | [adjective] Not preferred; in particular, especially disliked. UNFEASIBLE (15) [adjective] Infeasible: not feasible. UNFEMININE (15) [adjective] Not feminine; not characteristic of, typical of, or appropriate for a woman. UNFETTERED (14) [verb] To release from fetters; to unchain; to let loose; to free. | [adjective] Not bound by chains or shackles. | [adjective] (by extension) Not restricted. UNFILIALLY (16) UNFILTERED (14) [adjective] Without a filter (e.g., a cigarette). | [adjective] Having not been filtered (e.g., coffee grounds). | [adjective] (by extension) unrestrained, unrestricted, frank UNFINDABLE (16) UNFINISHED (17) [adjective] Not finished, not completed. UNFLAGGING (16) [adjective] Never tiring or lacking energy; without rest; without slowing. UNFOCUSSED (16) [adjective] Not focused UNFOLDMENT (16) [noun] Unfolding UNFORESEEN (13) [noun] An event, incident, cost, etc. that was not foreseen. | [adjective] Not foreseen. | [adjective] Not expected. UNFORESTED (14) [adjective] Not covered with forest. UNFREEDOMS (16) UNFREEZING (23) [verb] To defrost something. | [verb] To thaw. | [verb] To resume movement. UNFRIENDED (15) [verb] To sever as friends. | [verb] To defriend; to remove from one's friends list (e.g. on a social networking website). | [adjective] Having no friends; friendless. UNFRIENDLY (17) [noun] An enemy. | [adjective] Not friendly; hostile; mean. | [adjective] Unfavourable. | [adverb] In an unkind or unfriendly manner; not as a friend UNFROCKING (20) [verb] To remove from the clergy; to revoke the clergical status of. UNFRUITFUL (16) [adjective] Not bearing fruit. UNGAINLIER (11) [adjective] Clumsy; lacking grace. | [adjective] Difficult to move or to manage; unwieldy. | [adjective] Unsuitable; unprofitable. UNGENEROUS (11) [adjective] Not generous; stingy. UNGIMMICKY (24) UNGODLIEST (12) [adjective] Of a person: lacking reverence for God; of an action: not in accordance with God's will or religious teachings. | [adjective] Immoral, sinful, or wicked. | [adjective] Extreme; unreasonable. UNGRACEFUL (16) [adjective] Not graceful; lacking grace. UNGRACIOUS (13) [adjective] Not gracious; unkind or cold-hearted. UNGRATEFUL (14) [noun] A person who fails to show gratitude; an ingrate. | [adjective] Not grateful; not expressing gratitude. UNGRUDGING (14) [adjective] Lacking envy or reluctance UNGUARDING (13) [verb] To deprive of a guard; to leave unprotected. UNHALLOWED (17) [adjective] Not hallowed or blessed; unholy. UNHAMPERED (18) [adjective] Not hampered. UNHANDIEST (14) UNHANDSOME (16) [adjective] Not handsome. UNHAPPIEST (17) [adjective] Not happy; sad. | [adjective] Not satisfied; unsatisfied. | [adjective] Not lucky; unlucky. UNHERALDED (15) [adjective] Without prior warning; unexpected or unannounced. | [adjective] Not greeted with excitement or acclaim. UNHINDERED (15) [adjective] Not hindered, slowed, blocked or hampered. | [adjective] Pertaining to a molecule where the reactive center is not blocked from chemical attack due to the surrounding uncreative substituents not preventing reactive agents accessing the reactive site. UNHITCHING (19) [verb] To disconnect; to detach; to undo that which is hitched. UNHOLINESS (13) UNHOUSELED (14) [adjective] Not having taken the housel. UNHUMOROUS (15) UNHYGIENIC (19) [adjective] Lacking hygiene; unclean. UNICAMERAL (14) [adjective] Of, or having, a single legislative chamber. | [adjective] Of a script or typeface: making no distinction between upper and lower case, but rather having only one case. UNICYCLIST (17) UNIFOLIATE (13) UNIFORMEST (15) UNIFORMING (16) [verb] To clothe in a uniform. UNIFORMITY (18) [noun] The state of being uniform, alike and lacking variety. | [noun] The absence of alternatives or diversity; sameness. UNILATERAL (10) [adjective] Done by one side only. | [adjective] Affecting only one side of the body. | [adjective] Binding or affecting one party only. UNILINGUAL (11) [noun] A person who understands only one language | [adjective] Knowing or using a single language UNILOCULAR (12) [adjective] Having a single loculus or compartment. UNIMPAIRED (15) [adjective] Not impaired. UNIMPOSING (15) [adjective] Not imposing; not grand or magnificent; modest. UNIMPROVED (18) [adjective] Not improved UNINDICTED (14) UNINFECTED (16) [adjective] Not infected. UNINFLATED (14) UNINFORMED (16) [adjective] Not informed; ignorant. | [adjective] Not imbued with life or activity. UNINITIATE (10) UNINSPIRED (13) [verb] To divest of inspiration. | [adjective] Lacking inspiration; dull or dry UNINTENDED (12) [adjective] Not intended; unplanned UNINTEREST (10) UNINVITING (14) [adjective] Not welcoming; not attractive. UNINVOLVED (17) [adjective] Not involved. | [adjective] Emotionally distant. | [adjective] Of potential mates, available because not in a committed relationship. UNIONISING (11) [verb] To organize workers into a union. UNIONIZING (20) [verb] To organize workers into a union. UNIQUENESS (19) [noun] The state or quality of being unique or one of a kind. UNITARIANS (10) [noun] One who denies the doctrine of the Trinity, believing that God exists only in one person; a unipersonalist. | [noun] A Muwahhid. | [noun] One who rejects the principle of dualism. UNIVALENTS (13) [noun] Any univalent chromosome. UNIVARIATE (13) [noun] A polynomial or function with only one variable | [adjective] Having or involving a single variable UNIVERSALS (13) [noun] A characteristic or property that particular things have in common. UNIVERSITY (16) [noun] Institution of higher education (typically accepting students from the age of about 17 or 18, depending on country, but in some exceptional cases able to take younger students) where subjects are studied and researched in depth and degrees are offered. UNIVOCALLY (18) UNJOINTING (18) [verb] To dislocate. | [verb] To disjoint. UNJUSTNESS (17) UNKENNELED (15) UNKINDLIER (15) UNKINDNESS (15) [noun] The state or quality of being unkind. | [noun] An unkind act. | [noun] The collective noun for ravens UNKNITTING (15) [verb] To unravel. | [verb] To undo knitted stitches by reversing the knitting motion. UNKNOTTING (15) [verb] To unfasten (a knot). | [noun] The act of untying a knot. UNKNOWABLE (19) [noun] Something that cannot be known. | [adjective] Not knowable; not able to be known. UNKNOWINGS (18) UNLADYLIKE (18) [adjective] Not ladylike; ill-mannered. UNLAMENTED (13) [adjective] Not lamented. UNLATCHING (16) [verb] Remove from a latch UNLAWFULLY (19) [adverb] In a manner not conforming to the law. UNLEARNING (11) [noun] The process by which something is unlearned. UNLEASHING (14) [verb] To free from a leash, or as from a leash. | [verb] To let go; to release. | [verb] To precipitate; to bring about. UNLEAVENED (14) [adjective] Without any yeast or other raising agent UNLETTERED (11) [adjective] Not instructed in letters; not well educated; unable to read | [adjective] Not expressed in or marked with letters UNLEVELING (14) UNLEVELLED (14) UNLICENSED (13) [adjective] Not licensed; not officially authorized. | [adjective] Without permission. | [adjective] Free from requiring a license. UNLIKELIER (14) [adjective] Not likely; improbable; not to be reasonably expected. | [adjective] Not holding out a prospect of success; likely to fail; unpromising. UNLIKENESS (14) UNLIMBERED (15) [verb] To deploy an artillery piece for firing (ie, to detach it from its limber). | [verb] (by extension) To clumsily put into employ a large weapon or object. | [verb] To unsling something, as a backpack, carried on the body with a strap; to bring something carried into the hands for use. UNLITERARY (13) UNLOOSENED (11) [verb] To unloose; to loosen. UNLOVELIER (13) UNLUCKIEST (16) [adjective] Unfortunate, marked by misfortune. | [adjective] Inauspicious. | [adjective] Having ill luck. UNMANNERED (13) [adjective] Having poor manners or social skills; ill-mannered; rude. UNMANNERLY (15) [adjective] Not mannerly. | [adverb] In a way that is not mannerly; discourteously, rudely. UNMARRIEDS (13) UNMEASURED (13) [adjective] Not having been measured. | [adjective] Beyond measure; vast; measureless. UNMEDIATED (14) [adjective] Not mediated UNMERCIFUL (17) [adjective] Not showing mercy UNMILITARY (15) [adjective] Not military. UNMINGLING (14) UNMITERING (13) UNMODIFIED (17) [adjective] Not modified UNMOLESTED (13) [adjective] Not molested UNMORALITY (15) UNMUFFLING (19) UNMUZZLING (31) [verb] Remove a muzzle from UNNAMEABLE (14) [adjective] That cannot, or should not, be named UNNEUROTIC (12) UNNUMBERED (15) [adjective] Not identified with a number | [adjective] Too numerous to be counted; countless or innumerable UNOBSERVED (16) [adjective] Not seen or observed | [adverb] Whilst not being seen or observed UNOCCUPIED (17) [adjective] (of a house etc) Not inhabited, especially by a tenant | [adjective] Not being used; vacant or free | [adjective] Not employed on a task; idle UNOFFICIAL (18) [adjective] Not officially established. | [adjective] Not acting with official authority. | [adjective] Not listed in a national pharmacopeia etc. UNOPENABLE (14) UNORIGINAL (11) [adjective] Lacking originality. | [adjective] Not being the first or earliest version of something, not original. | [adjective] Without an origin or source. UNORTHODOX (21) [adjective] Unusual, unconventional, or idiosyncratic UNPASSABLE (14) [adjective] Not able to be passed. | [adjective] Unable to pass successfully as the gender one wishes to be seen as. UNPASTORAL (12) UNPEDANTIC (15) UNPEOPLING (15) [verb] To deprive of inhabitants; to depopulate. UNPLAITING (13) [verb] To undo or untwist plaited hair; to unbraid UNPLAYABLE (17) [adjective] (of an audio or visual recording) Unable to be played on specified equipment, or at all. | [adjective] (of the delivery of a ball) Impossible to play or to defend against. | [adjective] That cannot be played, or is so tedious, complicated, buggy, etc. as to discourage or preclude playing. UNPLEASANT (12) [adjective] Not pleasant. UNPLEASING (13) [adjective] Not pleasing; unpleasant. UNPLUGGING (15) [verb] To disconnect from a supply, especially an electrical socket. | [verb] To stop using electronic devices, especially for relaxation or to reduce stress. | [verb] To remove a blockage from (especially a water pipe or drain). UNPOLISHED (16) [adjective] Not polished; not brought to a polish. | [adjective] Deprived of polish. | [adjective] Not refined in manners or style UNPOLLUTED (13) [verb] To remove pollutants from; to purify. | [adjective] Not polluted; uncontaminated UNPREGNANT (13) UNPREPARED (15) [noun] A black mark given to a pupil who arrives at a lesson without the necessary items or preparation. | [adjective] Not prepared; caught by surprise. UNPRODUCED (16) UNPROMPTED (17) [adjective] Not prompted UNPROVABLE (17) [adjective] That cannot be proved or verified by any test UNPROVOKED (20) [verb] To undo or counter a provocation. | [adjective] Happening without provocation or motivation. | [adverb] Happening without provocation or motivation. UNPUCKERED (19) UNPUNCTUAL (14) [adjective] Not punctual. UNPUNISHED (16) [adjective] Not punished UNPUZZLING (31) UNQUIETEST (19) UNRAVELING (14) [verb] To separate the threads (of); disentangle. | [verb] (of threads, etc.) To become separated; (of something woven, knitted, etc.) to come apart. | [verb] To clear from complication or difficulty; to unfold; to solve. UNRAVELLED (14) [verb] To separate the threads (of); disentangle. | [verb] (of threads, etc.) To become separated; (of something woven, knitted, etc.) to come apart. | [verb] To clear from complication or difficulty; to unfold; to solve. UNRAVISHED (17) UNREADABLE (13) [adjective] That cannot be read or is not easy to read. | [adjective] Not sufficiently interesting to be worth reading. UNREADIEST (11) UNREALIZED (20) [adjective] Not realized; possible to obtain or achieve, yet not obtained or achieved. UNREASONED (11) [adjective] Not reasoned; irrational. UNRECORDED (14) [adjective] Not recorded. UNREDEEMED (14) [verb] To fall from grace; to change from a state of virtuousness to sinfulness or wrongdoing. | [adjective] (of a person) Not redeemed; not granted redemption or salvation; unsaved. | [adjective] (of a coupon or offer) Unspent; not used in a purchase, and thus still usable. UNREFORMED (16) [adjective] Not reformed UNRELIABLE (12) [adjective] Not reliable. UNRELIEVED (14) [adjective] Utter; complete; without relief. UNREMARKED (17) [adjective] (often with "upon") Not the subject of any remark | [adjective] Not remarked or noticed; unnoticed. UNREPORTED (13) [adjective] Not reported UNREQUITED (20) [adjective] Unanswered; not returned; not reciprocated; not repaid. UNRESERVED (14) [adjective] (of a person) Not reserved, without reservations. | [adjective] Not booked in advance. | [verb] To undo or cancel a reservation. UNRESERVES (13) UNRESOLVED (14) [verb] To undo a resolution. | [adjective] Not resolved. UNRESTORED (11) [verb] To undo work that was done to restore something. | [adjective] Not having been restored UNREVEALED (14) [adjective] Not revealed; hidden; secret. UNREVIEWED (17) UNREWARDED (15) [adjective] Not rewarded UNRHYTHMIC (23) UNRIDDLING (13) [verb] To figure out the answer to (a riddle). | [verb] (by extension) To solve (a perplexing problem). | [noun] The solving of a riddle. UNRIPENESS (12) UNRIVALLED (14) [adjective] Having no rival; better than any possible competitor UNROMANTIC (14) [adjective] Not romantic UNROUNDING (12) UNRULINESS (10) UNSADDLING (13) [verb] To remove a saddle. | [verb] To throw (a rider) from the saddle. UNSAFETIES (13) UNSALARIED (11) [adjective] Without a salary. UNSANITARY (13) [adjective] Not sanitary; unhealthy; dirty. UNSATURATE (10) UNSCALABLE (14) [adjective] Not scalable, that cannot be climbed. | [adjective] Not scalable, that cannot be changed in scale. UNSCHOOLED (16) [adjective] Not schooled; not having been to school. | [adjective] Inexperienced; not having developed skill or knowledge in some area. | [verb] To educate (a child) in an alternative to the regular school method, focused on the learner-chosen activities as a primary means for learning. UNSCRAMBLE (16) [verb] To reverse the process of scrambling, decrypt. | [verb] To put into order or restore to order. UNSCREENED (13) [adjective] Not screened, or not having been screened | [adjective] (of cables etc.) not protected by a built-in screen. UNSCREWING (16) [verb] To loosen a screw or thing by turning it. | [noun] The act by which something is unscrewed. UNSCRIPTED (15) [adjective] Not scripted; without a script. | [adjective] (by extension) Unplanned, unexpected, spontaneous. UNSEASONED (11) [adjective] Not sprinkled with seasoning. | [adjective] Lacking experience. | [adjective] Unseasonable UNSEEMLIER (12) [adjective] Inconsistent with established standards of good form or taste. UNSELECTED (13) [verb] To cancel a previous selection, especially by removing a mark from a tick box | [verb] To reverse the previous selection of. | [adjective] Not selected. UNSELLABLE (12) [adjective] Not sellable; very hard to sell. UNSETTLING (11) [verb] To make upset or uncomfortable | [verb] To bring into disorder or disarray | [noun] The weakening of some previously established system or norm. UNSHACKLED (20) [verb] To remove shackles from someone or something. | [verb] To remove restrictions or inhibitions; to allow full freedom and power. | [adjective] Not shackled. UNSHACKLES (19) [verb] To remove shackles from someone or something. | [verb] To remove restrictions or inhibitions; to allow full freedom and power. UNSHAKABLE (19) [adjective] Not able to be shaken; firm, solid | [adjective] Resolute, unfaltering, unwavering | [adjective] Having no errors or loopholes; unassailable UNSHAKABLY (22) UNSHEATHED (17) [verb] To deprive of a sheath; to draw from the sheath or scabbard, as a sword. | [adjective] Not protected by a sheath. UNSHEATHES (16) [verb] To deprive of a sheath; to draw from the sheath or scabbard, as a sword. UNSHELLING (14) UNSHIFTING (17) UNSHIPPING (18) [verb] To unload cargo from a ship or other vessel | [verb] To remove an oar or mast from its normal position | [verb] To throw from a horse; to unseat UNSIGHTING (15) UNSINKABLE (16) [adjective] Of a ship: that cannot be sunk. | [adjective] That cannot be overcome or defeated. UNSKILLFUL (17) [adjective] Not skillful. UNSLAKABLE (16) [adjective] That cannot be slaked UNSLINGING (12) [verb] To take something from a hanging or slung position. UNSMOOTHED (16) UNSNAPPING (15) [verb] To unfasten (something held by snaps). UNSNARLING (11) [verb] To remove or undo a snarl or tangle. UNSOCIABLE (14) [noun] A person who is not sociable. | [adjective] Not desiring the company of others | [adjective] Not congenial or compatible UNSOCIABLY (17) UNSOCIALLY (15) UNSOLDERED (12) [verb] To reverse the process of soldering, such as by breaking the joint and removing the solder UNSOLVABLE (15) [adjective] Not solvable. | [adjective] Provably not solvable. UNSOUNDEST (11) UNSPEAKING (17) [adjective] Silent, not talking. | [adjective] Mute, unable to speak for physical or psychological reasons. | [verb] To retract what one has spoken, to unsay. UNSPECIFIC (19) [adjective] Not specific: nonspecific. UNSPHERING (16) UNSTABLEST (12) UNSTACKING (17) UNSTEADIED (12) UNSTEADIER (11) [adjective] Not held firmly in position, physically unstable. | [adjective] Lacking regularity or uniformity. | [adjective] Inconstant in purpose, or volatile in behavior. UNSTEADIES (11) UNSTEADILY (14) UNSTEELING (11) UNSTEPPING (15) [verb] To remove (the mast) from a sailing vessel. UNSTICKING (17) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To free from the condition of being stuck. | [noun] The act of removing something that was stuck UNSTINTING (11) [adjective] Generous and tireless with one's contributions of time, money, etc. UNSTITCHED (16) [adjective] Not stitched | [verb] To take out stitches from. | [verb] To unravel or disunite; to cause to come apart. UNSTITCHES (15) [verb] To take out stitches from. | [verb] To unravel or disunite; to cause to come apart. UNSTOPPERS (14) [verb] To remove the stopper from. UNSTOPPING (15) [verb] To remove a stoppage; to clear a blockage. | [verb] To unplug or uncork a container. | [verb] To draw out the stops of (an organ). UNSTRAINED (11) [adjective] Not strained or tense. | [adjective] Not having been forced through a strainer. UNSTRAPPED (15) [verb] To loosen or remove the straps from (something). | [adjective] Not strapped. UNSTRESSED (11) [adjective] (of a vowel) not stressed or accentuated | [adjective] Not subject to stress UNSTRESSES (10) UNSUITABLE (12) [adjective] Not suitable; unfit; inappropriate. UNSUITABLY (15) UNSWATHING (17) [verb] To remove a swathe from. UNSWEARING (14) UNSWERVING (17) [adjective] Not deviating; not yielding or straying or varying. UNTALENTED (11) [adjective] Not talented; lacking in talent. UNTANGLING (12) [verb] To remove tangles or knots from. | [verb] (by extension) To remove confusion or mystery from. UNTEACHING (16) [verb] To cause someone to unlearn; to make someone forget something they have been taught. | [verb] To cause something previously learned to be forgotten. UNTEMPERED (15) [adjective] Not tempered; not conditioned by a process. | [adjective] In the case of a person, inexperienced; untested. UNTENANTED (11) [adjective] Not leased to or occupied by a tenant; unoccupied. UNTESTABLE (12) UNTETHERED (14) [adjective] Not tethered; not tied down. | [adjective] Unrestrained. UNTHINKING (18) [verb] To undo the process of thinking. | [adjective] Without proper thought; thoughtless. | [adjective] Showing no regard; careless or unconcerned. UNTHREADED (15) [verb] To draw or remove a thread from. | [verb] To loosen the connections of. | [verb] To make one's way through. UNTHRONING (14) [verb] To dethrone. UNTIDINESS (11) UNTILLABLE (12) UNTIMELIER (12) UNTIRINGLY (14) UNTOGETHER (14) [noun] That which is untogether. | [adjective] Not together; separated; alone. | [adjective] Not together; disorganised; sloppy. UNTOWARDLY (17) UNTRAVELED (14) [adjective] (of a road etc) Bearing few travellers | [adjective] (of a person) Not having travelled UNTREADING (12) UNTRIMMING (15) UNTROUBLED (13) [adjective] Without worries; free from care. UNTRUSSING (11) [verb] To free from a truss; to untie or unfasten UNTRUSTING (11) [adjective] Without trust; not inclined to trust. UNTRUTHFUL (16) [adjective] Not giving the truth; providing untrue facts; lying. | [adjective] Pertaining to falsehood; corrupt; dishonest. UNTWISTING (14) [verb] To remove a twist from. | [verb] To become untwisted. | [noun] The process by which something is untwisted. UNUTILIZED (20) [adjective] Not utilized; unused. UNWARINESS (13) UNWAVERING (17) [adjective] Never doubted; always steady and on course UNWEARABLE (15) [noun] Something, such as clothing, that cannot be worn | [adjective] Not able to be worn UNWEIGHTED (18) [adjective] Not weighted (used especially of an average or other statistic) UNWIELDIER (14) [adjective] Lacking strength; weak. | [adjective] Ungraceful in movement. | [adjective] Difficult to carry, handle, manage or operate because of its size, weight, shape or complexity. UNWIELDILY (17) UNWINNABLE (15) [adjective] Unable to be won. UNWONTEDLY (17) UNWORKABLE (19) [noun] Something that is not workable, or cannot be made to work. | [adjective] Not workable or operable; not practical; unmanageable. UNWORTHIER (16) [adjective] Not worthy; lacking value or merit; worthless. UNWORTHIES (16) UNWORTHILY (19) UNWRAPPING (18) [verb] To open or undo, as what is wrapped or folded. | [verb] To become unwrapped. | [verb] To remove word wrap from. UNWREATHED (17) UNWREATHES (16) UNYIELDING (15) [adjective] Not giving in; not bending; stubborn. UPBRAIDERS (15) UPBRAIDING (16) [verb] To criticize severely. | [verb] (followed by with or for, and formerly of before the object) To charge with something wrong or disgraceful; to reproach | [verb] To treat with contempt. UPBRINGING (16) [noun] The traits acquired during one's childhood training | [noun] The raising or training of a child. UPBUILDING (16) [verb] To build up (literally). | [verb] To build up; to develop (figuratively). | [noun] The process of building something up; gradual development or accumulation. UPCHUCKING (24) [verb] To vomit. UPCLIMBING (19) UPFLINGING (17) UPGATHERED (17) UPGRADABLE (16) UPHOARDING (17) UPHOLSTERS (15) [verb] To fit padding, stuffing, springs, webbing and fabric covering to (furniture). UPHOLSTERY (18) [noun] The craft or business of upholstering furniture. | [noun] The materials used in upholstering furniture. UPLIGHTING (17) UPMANSHIPS (19) UPPERCASED (17) UPPERCASES (16) UPPERPARTS (16) UPPISHNESS (17) UPPITINESS (14) UPPITYNESS (17) UPPROPPING (19) UPREACHING (18) UPRIGHTING (17) UPROARIOUS (12) [adjective] Characterized by loud, confused noise, or by noisy and uncontrollable laughter. UPSHIFTING (19) [verb] To shift to a higher gear | [verb] To shift to a higher level, such as of frequency, growth rate, economic level, etc. UPSHOOTING (16) UPSTANDING (14) [adjective] Honest; reputable; respectable | [verb] To stand up; arise; be erect; rise. | [adjective] Standing up UPSTARTING (13) UPSTEPPING (17) UPSTIRRING (13) UPSWEEPING (18) UPSWELLING (16) UPSWINGING (17) UPTHROWING (19) UPWARDNESS (16) UPWELLINGS (16) [noun] An upward movement from a lower source. | [noun] The oceanographic phenomenon that occurs when strong, usually seasonal, winds push water away from the coast, bringing cold, nutrient-rich deep waters up to the surface URANINITES (10) URBANISING (13) [verb] To make something more urban in character. | [verb] To take up an urban way of life. URBANISTIC (14) URBANITIES (12) URBANIZING (22) [verb] To make something more urban in character. | [verb] To take up an urban way of life. URBANOLOGY (16) UREDOSPORE (13) UREOTELISM (12) URETHRITIS (13) [noun] Inflammation of the urethra. URICOSURIC (14) URICOTELIC (14) URINALYSES (13) [noun] The comprehensive analysis of urine. URINALYSIS (13) [noun] The comprehensive analysis of urine. URINATIONS (10) URINOMETER (12) UROCHROMES (17) UROGENITAL (11) [adjective] Of, or relating to the urinary and/or the genital systems UROKINASES (14) UROLOGICAL (13) UROLOGISTS (11) [noun] A doctor of urology. UROPYGIUMS (18) UROSCOPIES (14) URTICARIAL (12) URTICARIAS (12) URTICATING (13) [verb] To have or produce a stinging sensation, as of nettles or urticating hair. URTICATION (12) USABLENESS (12) USEFULNESS (13) [noun] The quality or degree of being useful. USHERETTES (13) [noun] A female usher. USQUEBAUGH (25) [noun] Whisky. USURIOUSLY (13) USURPATION (12) UTILIZABLE (21) UTOPIANISM (14) [noun] The belief in a system for an ideal society, usually regarded as unrealistic. UTTERANCES (12) [noun] An act of uttering. | [noun] Something spoken. | [noun] The ability to speak. UTTERMOSTS (12) UVAROVITES (16) UVULITISES (13) UXORICIDES (20) [noun] One who murders his or her wife. | [noun] The murdering of one's own wife. UXORIOUSLY (20)

11-Letter Words (492)

UBIQUINONES (22) [noun] Any of several isoprenyl quinones that have a role in cellular respiration ULCERATIONS (13) ULCEROGENIC (16) ULTRABASICS (15) ULTRACASUAL (13) ULTRAFICHES (19) ULTRAHEATED (15) ULTRALIGHTS (15) [noun] An aircraft that weighs very little ULTRAMARINE (13) [noun] A brilliant blue pigment that is either extracted from mineral deposits or made synthetically; traditionally made from ground-up lapis lazuli. | [noun] A brilliant pure dark blue or slightly purplish colour. | [adjective] Of a brilliant blue colour. ULTRAMODERN (14) [adjective] Extremely modern. ULTRASECRET (13) ULTRASIMPLE (15) ULTRASMOOTH (16) ULTRASONICS (13) [noun] The science and technology of ultrasound ULTRASOUNDS (12) [noun] Sound with a frequency greater than the upper limit of human hearing, which is approximately 20 kilohertz. | [noun] The use of ultrasonic waves for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes. ULTRAVACUUM (18) ULTRAVIOLET (14) [noun] Ultraviolet colour. | [adjective] Of electromagnetic radiation beyond (higher in frequency than) light visible to the human eye; radiation with wavelengths from 380 nanometre - 10 nanometre ULTRAVIRILE (14) UMBELLIFERS (18) [noun] Any plant of the family Apiaceae, also called Umbelliferae, whose inflorescence is an umbel, such as a carrot or celery. UMBILICATED (18) UMBILICUSES (17) [noun] Navel | [noun] Hilum | [noun] A depression or opening in the center of the base of many spiral shells. UMBRELLAING (16) UNABASHEDLY (20) [adverb] In an unabashed manner; without embarrassment or hesitation. UNABSORBENT (15) UNACCOUNTED (16) [adjective] Not accounted UNADAPTABLE (16) [adjective] Not adaptable. UNADDRESSED (14) [verb] To delete or forget the address of some entity. | [adjective] Not bearing an address. | [adjective] Not discussed or considered. UNADOPTABLE (16) UNADVISEDLY (19) [adverb] In an unadvised manner. UNAESTHETIC (16) [adjective] Not aesthetic. UNAFFECTING (20) UNALIENABLE (13) [adjective] Not alienable. UNALIENATED (12) UNALLOCATED (14) [adjective] That has not yet been allocated. UNALTERABLE (13) [adjective] Incapable of changing or being altered | [adjective] Irrevocable or irreversible UNALTERABLY (16) UNAMBIGUOUS (16) [adjective] Clear, and having no uncertainty or ambiguity UNAMBITIOUS (15) [adjective] Having little ambition for success or achievement UNAMORTIZED (23) UNAMPLIFIED (19) [adjective] Not amplified UNANCHORING (17) UNANIMITIES (13) UNANIMOUSLY (16) [adverb] In a unanimous manner; without objection. UNANNOTATED (12) UNANNOUNCED (14) [adjective] Not announced beforehand. UNAPPEALING (16) [adjective] Not appealing UNAPTNESSES (13) UNASHAMEDLY (20) [adverb] In an unashamed manner. UNASPIRATED (14) [adjective] Not aspirated. UNASSEMBLED (16) UNASSERTIVE (14) [adjective] Not assertive UNAUTHENTIC (16) [adjective] Not authentic UNAUTOMATED (14) UNAVAILABLE (16) [noun] (history) A communist who operated underground and was therefore not available for a political leadership position. | [adjective] Unavailing; ineffective. | [adjective] Not available. UNAVOIDABLE (17) [noun] Something that cannot be avoided. | [adjective] Impossible to avoid; bound to happen. | [adjective] Not voidable; incapable of being made null or void. UNAVOIDABLY (20) [adverb] In an unavoidable manner. UNAWARENESS (14) UNBALANCING (16) [verb] To cause to be out of balance. UNBALLASTED (14) UNBANDAGING (16) UNBEAUTIFUL (16) [adjective] Not beautiful; ugly or inelegant. UNBEKNOWNST (20) [adverb] (followed by to) without the knowledge of UNBELIEVERS (16) [noun] One who does not believe, particularly in a deity (used by believers to describe other people) UNBELIEVING (17) [adjective] That does not believe; incredulous, skeptical UNBESEEMING (16) UNBLEMISHED (19) [adjective] Faultless or lacking blemishes. | [adjective] Free from evil or corruption. UNBONNETING (14) [verb] To remove a bonnet from. | [verb] To take off one's bonnet. UNBRACKETED (20) UNBREAKABLE (19) [noun] Something that cannot be broken. | [adjective] Difficult to break and therefore able to withstand rough usage | [adjective] (of a horse) not able to be broken in UNBREECHING (19) UNBRILLIANT (13) UNBUDGEABLE (17) [adjective] That cannot be made to budge; immovable, fixed. UNBUDGEABLY (20) UNBUDGINGLY (19) UNBUILDABLE (16) UNBURDENING (15) [verb] To free from burden, or relieve from trouble. | [noun] The act by which one unburdens oneself. UNBUTTONING (14) [verb] To open (something) by undoing its buttons. | [verb] To come open by having its buttons unfastened. | [noun] An act of unfastening buttons. UNCALCIFIED (19) UNCALLOUSED (14) UNCANNINESS (13) UNCANONICAL (15) [adjective] Not canonical. UNCAPTIONED (16) UNCASTRATED (14) [adjective] (of a male person or animal) Not castrated; possessing testicles. | [adjective] Not weakened, censored, or the like. UNCATALOGED (15) [adjective] Not catalogued UNCATCHABLE (20) [adjective] Not catchable; that cannot be caught. UNCEASINGLY (17) UNCERTAINLY (16) [adverb] In an uncertain manner. UNCERTAINTY (16) [noun] Doubt; the condition of being uncertain or without conviction. | [noun] Something uncertain or ambiguous. | [noun] A parameter that measures the dispersion of a range of measured values. UNCERTIFIED (17) [adjective] Lacking certification or official documentation | [adjective] Not officially registered UNCHANNELED (17) UNCHARTERED (17) [adjective] Not chartered; not supplied with a charter. UNCHECKABLE (24) UNCHILDLIKE (21) UNCHRISTIAN (16) [adjective] Not of the Christian faith. | [adjective] Not in accord with Christian principles; without Christian spirit; unbefitting a Christian. UNCHURCHING (22) [verb] To expel from membership of a congregation or church; to excommunicate. UNCINEMATIC (17) UNCIVILIZED (26) [adjective] Crude, barbarous, wild, uncultured. | [adjective] Used to describe people who display a marked lack of manners as defined by a given culture. | [adjective] Used to describe behaviours deemed savage or inappropriate. UNCLARIFIED (17) UNCLARITIES (13) UNCLASSICAL (15) UNCLEANNESS (13) UNCLENCHING (19) [verb] To open (something that was clenched). | [verb] To relax, especially one's muscles. UNCLIMBABLE (19) UNCLINCHING (19) UNCLOUDEDLY (18) UNCLUBBABLE (19) UNCLUTTERED (14) [verb] To eliminate clutter from. | [verb] To eliminate clutter. | [adjective] Not cluttered; without clutter UNCOALESCED (16) UNCOALESCES (15) UNCOFFINING (20) UNCOLLECTED (16) [adjective] Not collected or gathered. | [adjective] Absent in mind; not having one's thoughts collected. UNCOMBATIVE (20) UNCOMMITTED (18) [adjective] Not inclined toward either side in a matter under dispute. | [adjective] Not bound or pledged to a cause, party etc. | [adjective] (of an update to a database etc.) Not yet written to disk and logged. UNCOMMONEST (17) UNCOMPLETED (18) [adjective] Not completed. UNCONCEALED (16) [adjective] Open to view; not hidden or concealed UNCONCERNED (16) [adjective] Indifferent and having no interest; aloof. | [adjective] Not worried, anxious or apprehensive. | [adjective] Having no involvement. UNCONFESSED (17) [adjective] Not acknowledged | [adjective] Not confessed (to a priest) UNCONFIRMED (19) [adjective] Not finally established, settled or confirmed. | [adjective] Not having undergone the ritual of confirmation. UNCONFUSING (17) UNCONGENIAL (14) [adjective] Not congenial, compatible or sympathetic. | [adjective] Not appropriate; unsuitable. | [adjective] Not pleasing; disagreeable. UNCONNECTED (16) [adjective] Not connected or joined. | [adjective] Confused or disconnected. | [adjective] Without connections of family, etc. UNCONQUERED (23) [adjective] Not conquered UNCONSCIOUS (15) [noun] Unconscious mind | [adjective] Not awake; having no awareness. | [adjective] Without directed thought or awareness. UNCONTESTED (14) [adjective] Not contested or disputed; not made the object of competition. UNCONTRIVED (17) [adjective] Not contrived. UNCONVERTED (17) [adjective] Not converted (especially in the religious sense). UNCONVINCED (19) [adjective] Not convinced or lacking conviction | [verb] To cause to abandon a conviction. UNCORRECTED (16) [adjective] Not corrected. UNCOUNTABLE (15) [noun] (grammar) An uncountable noun. | [adjective] So many as to be incapable of being counted. | [adjective] Incapable of being put into one-to-one correspondence with the natural numbers or any subset thereof. UNCOUTHNESS (16) UNCROSSABLE (15) UNCRUMPLING (18) [verb] To return something that has been crumpled closer to its original state. | [verb] Having been crumpled, to return closer to its original state. UNCRUSHABLE (18) [adjective] Not crushable; that cannot be crushed. UNCURTAINED (14) [adjective] Without curtains. UNCUSTOMARY (18) [adjective] Not customary UNCYNICALLY (21) UNDANCEABLE (16) UNDAUNTABLE (14) UNDAUNTEDLY (16) UNDEBATABLE (16) [adjective] Not debatable; that cannot be debated. UNDEBATABLY (19) UNDECEIVING (18) [verb] To free from misconception, deception or error. UNDECIDABLE (17) [adjective] Incapable of being algorithmically decided in finite time. For example, a set of strings is undecidable if it is impossible to program a computer (even one with infinite memory) to determine whether or not specified strings are included. | [adjective] (of a WFF) logically independent from the axioms of a given theory; i.e., that it can never be either proved or disproved (i.e., have its negation proved) on the basis of the axioms of the given theory. (Note: this latter definition is independent of any time bounds or computability issues, i.e., more Platonic.) UNDECILLION (14) UNDECORATED (15) [adjective] Not possessing decorations. UNDEDICATED (16) UNDEFINABLE (17) UNDELEGATED (14) UNDELIVERED (16) [adjective] Not delivered UNDEMANDING (16) [adjective] Not demanding UNDERACTING (15) [verb] To act in an understated manner or with little expressiveness UNDERACTIVE (17) [adjective] Less than normally active. UNDERBIDDER (16) UNDERBODIES (15) [noun] The underparts of a bird or animal. | [noun] The underside of a vehicle. UNDERBOSSES (14) [noun] An assistant to the boss of a crime family UNDERBOUGHT (18) UNDERBUDDED (17) UNDERBUYING (18) UNDERCHARGE (18) [noun] A monetary charge that is less than the correct amount. | [verb] To charge less than the correct amount. | [verb] To put too small a charge into. UNDERCOOLED (15) [verb] To cool insufficiently | [verb] To supercool | [adjective] Insufficiently cooled UNDERCOUNTS (14) [verb] To count to an insufficient degree; to count one thing disproportionately less than another UNDERCROFTS (17) [noun] A cellar or vaulted storage room. | [noun] A ground-level car park that occupies the base of a building. UNDEREATING (13) UNDEREXPOSE (21) [verb] To take a photograph using too small an exposure | [verb] To provide with insufficient publicity | [adjective] The condition when a photograph is darker than it should be because the film was not exposed to sufficient light either because the camera aperture was too small or the duration of light was too short. UNDERFUNDED (17) [adjective] Insufficiently funded. | [verb] To provide insufficient funds (for). UNDERGIRDED (15) [verb] To strengthen, secure, or reinforce by passing a rope, cable, or chain around the underside of an object. | [verb] To give fundamental support; provide with a sound or secure basis; provide supportive evidence for. | [verb] To lend moral support to. UNDERGLAZES (22) [noun] A decorative slip applied to the surface of pottery before glazing. UNDERGROUND (14) [noun] An underground railway, especially for mass transit of people in urban areas. | [noun] A train that runs on such an underground railway. | [noun] A rapid transit system, regardless of the elevation of its right of way. UNDERGROWTH (19) [noun] The plants in a forest which only reach a relatively low height (such as shrubs and bushes). UNDERHANDED (17) [verb] To toss or lob with an underhand movement. | [verb] To trick, deceive or gull. | [verb] To excavate downward in successive steps or horizontal slices while positioned above on unbroken ore. UNDERLAPPED (17) UNDERLAYING (16) [verb] To lay (something) underneath something else; to put under. | [verb] To provide a support for something; to raise or support by something laid under. | [verb] To put a tap on (a shoe). UNDERLINING (13) [verb] To draw a line underneath something, especially to add emphasis; to underscore | [verb] To emphasise or stress something | [verb] To influence secretly. | [noun] A lining on the inside of a garment. UNDERMANNED (15) [verb] To fail to provide with enough workers or crew. | [adjective] Insufficiently manned; understaffed UNDERMINING (15) [verb] To dig underneath (something), to make a passage for destructive or military purposes; to sap. | [verb] To weaken or work against; to hinder, sabotage. | [verb] To erode the base or foundation of something, e.g. by the action of water. UNDERPASSES (14) [noun] A passage that crosses a road, railroad or similar obstacle in a tunnel underneath it. UNDERPAYING (18) [verb] To pay (someone) less than the value of their work; to pay (someone) insufficiently. | [verb] To pay less than is due for (something). UNDERPINNED (15) [verb] To support from below with props or masonry. | [verb] To give support to; to corroborate. UNDERPLAYED (18) [verb] To play in a subordinate, or in an inferior manner; to underact a part. | [verb] To make something seem less important than it really is. | [verb] To play a low card when holding a high one, in the hope of a future advantage. UNDERPRICED (17) [adjective] Having a relatively or abnormally low price UNDERPRICES (16) [verb] To set a price at less than the value of an item | [verb] To sell at a lower price than another (especially than a competitor) UNDERRATING (13) [verb] To underestimate; to make too low a rate or estimate UNDERREACTS (14) UNDERREPORT (14) [verb] To report a number falsely, making it smaller than it ought to be, especially to do so intentionally | [verb] As a group, to report something less frequently than it actually occurs UNDERSCORED (15) [verb] To underline; to mark a line beneath text. | [verb] To emphasize or draw attention to. UNDERSCORES (14) [noun] An underline; a line drawn or printed beneath text; the character _. | [noun] A piece of background music. | [verb] To underline; to mark a line beneath text. UNDERSERVED (16) [verb] To supply something with insufficient services or resources. | [adjective] Underresourced; not having sufficient service. UNDERSHIRTS (15) [noun] An undergarment worn beneath a shirt, often collarless and sleeveless. UNDERSHOOTS (15) [verb] To shoot not far enough or not well enough. | [verb] To not go far enough when trying to reach a goal. | [verb] (by extension) To underestimate. UNDERSHORTS (15) [noun] Underpants, type of underwear worn in skin contact with the hip portion of the body, small enough to be worn invisibly under shorts. Typically refers to male, not female, underpants. UNDERSHRUBS (17) [noun] A low-growing shrub. UNDERSIGNED (14) [noun] The person or those people, mentioned in a document, whose names and signatures appear at the end | [adjective] (of a document) having signatures at the end or bottom | [adjective] (of a person) having signed at the end of a document UNDERSKIRTS (16) [noun] A skirt worn underneath another skirt; a petticoat. | [noun] An under layer of a multi-layer gown over which outer skirts are draped. UNDERSTANDS (13) [verb] To grasp a concept fully and thoroughly, especially (of words, statements, art, etc.) to be aware of the meaning of and (of people) to be aware of the intent of. | [verb] To believe, to think one grasps sufficiently despite potentially incomplete knowledge. | [verb] (obsolete outside circus, acrobatics) To stand underneath, to support. UNDERSTATED (13) [verb] To state (something) with less completeness than needed; to minimise or downplay. | [verb] To state (something) with a lack of emphasis, in order to express irony. | [verb] To state a quantity that is too low. UNDERSTATES (12) [verb] To state (something) with less completeness than needed; to minimise or downplay. | [verb] To state (something) with a lack of emphasis, in order to express irony. | [verb] To state a quantity that is too low. UNDERSTEERS (12) [noun] The condition in which the front wheels of a car fail to follow the desired curve while cornering, instead following more of a straight-line trajectory, losing a degree of traction, and so slipping off the required line. | [verb] The action of a car when it does not follow the desired curve while cornering. Tyre slip of the front wheels. UNDERSUPPLY (19) [noun] An inadequate supply. | [verb] To provide with insufficient supplies; to supply inadequately UNDERTAKERS (16) [noun] A funeral director; someone whose business is to manage funerals, burials and cremations. | [noun] A person receiving land in Ireland during the Elizabethan era, so named because they gave an undertaking to abide by several conditions regarding marriage, to be loyal to the crown, and to use English as their spoken language. | [noun] A contractor for the royal revenue in England, one of those who undertook to manage the House of Commons for the king in the Addled Parliament of 1614. UNDERTAKING (17) [verb] To take upon oneself; to start, to embark on (a specific task etc.). | [verb] To commit oneself (to an obligation, activity etc.). | [verb] To overtake on the wrong side. UNDERTAXING (20) UNDERTENANT (12) [noun] A tenant who holds property from another tenant; a subtenant UNDERTHRUST (15) [verb] (of a tectonic plate) To thrust under another UNDERTRICKS (18) [noun] A trick that declarer does not win, causing the contract to go down. UNDERVALUED (16) [verb] To underestimate, or assign too low a value to. | [verb] To have too little regard for. | [adjective] Assigned an in appropriately low value. UNDERVALUES (15) [verb] To underestimate, or assign too low a value to. | [verb] To have too little regard for. UNDERWEIGHT (19) [noun] The state or quality of being underweight. | [noun] An underweight person. | [verb] To underestimate the weight of. UNDERWHELMS (20) [verb] To fail to impress; to perform disappointingly. UNDERWORLDS (16) [noun] The world of the dead, located underneath the world of the living; the afterlife. | [noun] That part of society that is engaged in crime or vice. | [noun] The portion of a game that is set below ground. UNDERWRITER (15) [noun] An entity assuming a financial risk. | [noun] A person working for an insurance company who arranges and authorizes an insurance policy with a broker or insured. | [noun] An entity undertaking to market newly issued securities. UNDERWRITES (15) [verb] To write below or under; subscribe. | [verb] To subscribe (a document, policy etc.) with one's name. | [verb] To sign; to put one's name to. UNDESCENDED (16) [adjective] Not descended. UNDESERVING (16) [adjective] Considered unworthy of reward. UNDESIGNING (14) UNDESIRABLE (14) [noun] An undesirable person | [adjective] Objectionable or not likely to please UNDESIRABLY (17) UNDEVELOPED (18) [adjective] Not developed or used | [adjective] Not built on, unbuilt; not ready for building on | [adjective] Lagging behind others, especially in economic or social matters UNDEVIATING (16) [adjective] That does not deviate, veer or turn aside; unswerving. | [adjective] That does not change; steady. UNDIAGNOSED (14) [adjective] (of a disease or condition) That had not been diagnosed UNDIGNIFIED (17) [adjective] Lacking in or damaging to dignity | [verb] To treat without dignity. | [verb] To demean. UNDISCLOSED (15) [adjective] Not disclosed; kept secret. UNDISCUSSED (15) [adjective] Not discussed, not having been put under discussion. UNDISGUISED (14) [adjective] Not disguised, plainly visible. UNDISSOLVED (16) [adjective] Not dissolved UNDISTORTED (13) [adjective] Free from distortion UNDISTURBED (15) [adjective] Not disturbed or agitated | [adjective] Calm UNDOUBTABLE (16) [adjective] Incapable of being doubted; undoubted; indubitable. UNDOUBTEDLY (18) [adverb] Without doubt; definitely. UNDRINKABLE (18) [noun] Anything not suitable for drinking. | [adjective] Not drinkable. UNDULATIONS (12) [noun] An instance or act of undulating. | [noun] A wavy appearance or outline; waviness. | [noun] A tremulous tone produced by a peculiar pressure of the finger on a string. UNDUTIFULLY (18) UNEARMARKED (18) UNECCENTRIC (17) UNELABORATE (13) UNELECTABLE (15) [noun] A person who is unable or unfit to be elected to office. | [adjective] (of a person or party) Incapable of being elected to political office, especially due to a lack of suitable qualities or policies. UNEMOTIONAL (13) [adjective] Showing little or no feeling. | [adjective] Reasoned and objective, involving reason or intellect rather than feelings. UNEMPIRICAL (17) UNEMPLOYEDS (19) UNENCHANTED (17) UNENDEARING (13) UNENDURABLE (14) [adjective] Not to be endured; intolerable. UNENDURABLY (17) UNEQUIVOCAL (25) [adjective] Unambiguous; without equivocation or ambiguity; singularly clear, unmistakable, or unquestionable | [adjective] (possibly obsolete) Without equal, matchless. UNESCAPABLE (17) [adjective] Impossible to avoid or escape, not escapable; ineluctable. UNESSENTIAL (11) [adjective] Not essential. | [adjective] Void of essence, or real being. UNEVALUATED (15) UNEXCITABLE (22) [adjective] Not excitable, not easily excited. | [adjective] Not capable of being excited. UNEXERCISED (21) [adjective] Not having been subjected to physical exercise. | [adjective] Not having been exercised UNEXPLAINED (21) [adjective] Not explained. Of unknown cause or origin. UNEXPLOITED (21) [adjective] Not exploited UNEXPRESSED (21) [adjective] Not expressed. UNFAILINGLY (18) [adverb] Without fail; reliably; always. UNFALTERING (15) [adjective] Without faltering, continuous, steadfast. UNFASTENING (15) [verb] To detach from any connecting agency or link; to disconnect. | [verb] To come unloosed or untied. UNFAVORABLE (19) [adjective] Serving to hinder or oppose; adverse, disadvantageous, inconducive, unsuitable. | [adjective] Not auspicious; ill-boding. | [adjective] Of a belief, state of mind, etc.: not favourable; disapproving. UNFAVORABLY (22) [adverb] In an unfavorable manner. UNFEELINGLY (18) UNFEIGNEDLY (19) UNFERMENTED (17) [adjective] That has not been fermented | [adjective] That has been produced without fermentation UNFETTERING (15) [verb] To release from fetters; to unchain; to let loose; to free. UNFITNESSES (14) UNFLAPPABLE (20) [adjective] Remaining composed and level-headed at all times; impossible to fluster; not becoming frustrated or irritated easily. UNFLAPPABLY (23) UNFLINCHING (20) [adjective] Without flinching; staying committed despite any difficulty; steadfast. UNFOLDMENTS (17) [noun] Unfolding UNFORGIVING (19) [adjective] Unwilling or unable to forgive or show mercy. | [adjective] Having no allowance for weakness. UNFORTIFIED (18) [adjective] Not fortified UNFORTUNATE (14) [noun] An unlucky person; one who has fallen into bad circumstances. | [adjective] Not favored by fortune | [adjective] Marked or accompanied by or resulting in misfortune UNFRIVOLOUS (17) UNFULFILLED (18) [adjective] Lacking fulfillment; marked by a feeling of failure to achieve goals or desires. | [adjective] Not yet provided as promised, particularly with respect to a contract or an order for a supply of something. UNFURNISHED (18) [adjective] Not furnished; having no furnishings. UNGAINLIEST (12) [adjective] Clumsy; lacking grace. | [adjective] Difficult to move or to manage; unwieldy. | [adjective] Unsuitable; unprofitable. UNGALLANTLY (15) UNGARNISHED (16) UNGLAMOROUS (14) [adjective] Not glamorous; humdrum or prosaic. UNGODLINESS (13) UNGRASPABLE (16) [adjective] Not able to be reached or grasped. | [adjective] Not able to be remembered or comprehended. UNGUARDEDLY (17) UNGUESSABLE (14) [adjective] Not capable of being guessed. UNHACKNEYED (24) [adjective] Not hackneyed. UNHALLOWING (18) UNHANDINESS (15) UNHAPPINESS (18) [noun] The feeling of not being happy UNHARNESSED (15) [verb] To remove the harness from a horse etc. | [verb] (by extension) to liberate UNHARNESSES (14) [verb] To remove the harness from a horse etc. | [verb] (by extension) to liberate UNHARVESTED (18) UNHEALTHFUL (20) [adjective] Not promoting health; detrimental to health. UNHEALTHIER (17) [adjective] Characterized by, or conducive to poor health | [adjective] Sick or ill | [adjective] Tending to corrupt UNHEALTHILY (20) UNHELPFULLY (22) UNHURRIEDLY (18) UNICELLULAR (13) [noun] A single-celled organism; a unicell. | [adjective] Describing any microorganism that has a single cell UNICYCLISTS (18) UNIDIOMATIC (16) [adjective] Not idiomatic. UNIFICATION (16) [noun] The act of unifying. | [noun] The state of being unified. | [noun] (mathematical logic) Given two terms, their join with respect to a specialisation order. UNIFORMNESS (16) UNIGNORABLE (14) UNIMMUNIZED (25) UNIMPORTANT (15) [adjective] Petty; not important or noteworthy UNIMPRESSED (16) [verb] Too fail to impress positively; to leave very little impression or a bad impression; | [adjective] Not impressed UNINFLECTED (17) [adjective] (of a language) That which does not use inflection. | [adjective] (of a word) That which has not been inflected. UNINHABITED (17) [adjective] Not inhabited; having no inhabitants UNINHIBITED (17) [adjective] Not inhibited; having no inhibitions. UNINITIATED (12) [adjective] Not having been initiated. | [adjective] Of a person, not having the special knowledge of a particular group. UNINITIATES (11) UNINSPECTED (16) UNINSPIRING (14) [adjective] Not inspiring. UNINSULATED (12) [adjective] Lacking insulation; not insulated UNINSURABLE (13) [noun] A person or thing that cannot be insured. | [adjective] Not insurable; unable to be insured. UNINTERESTS (11) UNINUCLEATE (13) [adjective] Having a single nucleus UNINVENTIVE (17) [adjective] Not inventive. UNIPARENTAL (13) UNIRRIGATED (13) UNITIZATION (20) UNIVERSALLY (17) [adverb] In a universal manner. UNJUSTIFIED (22) [adjective] Not justified (in any sense) | [verb] To remove or negate the justification for. UNKENNELING (16) UNKENNELLED (16) UNKINDLIEST (16) UNKNOWINGLY (22) [adverb] Without awareness, without intent. UNLAUNDERED (13) UNLEARNABLE (13) UNLEVELLING (15) UNLIBERATED (14) [adjective] Not liberated; unfreed. UNLIKELIEST (15) [adjective] Not likely; improbable; not to be reasonably expected. | [adjective] Not holding out a prospect of success; likely to fail; unpromising. UNLIMBERING (16) [verb] To deploy an artillery piece for firing (ie, to detach it from its limber). | [verb] (by extension) To clumsily put into employ a large weapon or object. | [verb] To unsling something, as a backpack, carried on the body with a strap; to bring something carried into the hands for use. UNLIMITEDLY (17) UNLOCALIZED (23) UNLOOSENING (12) [verb] To unloose; to loosen. UNLOVELIEST (14) UNLUCKINESS (17) UNMAGNIFIED (18) UNMALICIOUS (15) UNMANLINESS (13) UNMASCULINE (15) [adjective] Not masculine; not characteristic of, typical of, or appropriate for a man UNMATCHABLE (20) [adjective] Unable to be matched. | [adjective] Uniquely good; not approached by anything else in quality or excellence. UNMEDICATED (17) UNMELODIOUS (14) [adjective] Not melodious. UNMEMORABLE (17) [adjective] Not memorable UNMEMORABLY (20) UNMITIGATED (15) [adjective] Not mitigated. | [adjective] (intensifier) Total, complete, utter. UNMONITORED (14) [adjective] Not monitored; unwatched UNMOTIVATED (17) [adjective] Lacking motivation, without impetus to strive or excel. | [adjective] For which there is no motive. UNNATURALLY (14) [adverb] In an unnatural manner. UNNECESSARY (16) [adjective] Not needed or necessary. | [adjective] Done in addition to requirements; unrequired. UNNERVINGLY (18) UNNILHEXIUM (23) UNOBTRUSIVE (16) [adjective] Not noticeable or blatant; inconspicuous. UNORGANIZED (22) [adjective] Not having been organized. | [adjective] (of a territory) Lacking a normal system of government. UNORTHODOXY (25) [noun] Lack of orthodoxy; the quality or state of being unorthodox UNPALATABLE (15) [noun] Anything distasteful. | [adjective] Unpleasant to the taste | [adjective] (by extension) unpleasant or disagreeable UNPATRIOTIC (15) [adjective] Not patriotic UNPERCEIVED (19) [adjective] Not perceived UNPERFORMED (19) [adjective] Not performed UNPERSUADED (15) [adjective] Not persuaded UNPERTURBED (16) [adjective] Not perturbed UNPLAUSIBLE (15) [adjective] Implausible UNPOLARIZED (23) UNPOLITICAL (15) [adjective] Not political UNPRACTICAL (17) [adjective] Not practical, impractical UNPRESSURED (14) UNPRINTABLE (15) [noun] Something that is not printable. | [adjective] Not printable; obscene, or that cannot be displayed textually. UNPROCESSED (16) [adjective] Not processed UNPROFESSED (17) UNPROMISING (16) [verb] To revoke or annul (something promised before). | [adjective] Not promising UNPROTECTED (16) [adjective] Not protected; lacking defence or protection; exposed. UNPUBLISHED (19) [adjective] Not published. UNPUCKERING (20) UNQUALIFIED (24) [adjective] Not qualified, ineligible, unfit for a position or task. | [adjective] Not elaborated upon, or not accompanied by restrictions or qualification; undescribed. | [adjective] Outright; thorough; utter. UNQUIETNESS (20) UNRAVELLING (15) [verb] To separate the threads (of); disentangle. | [verb] (of threads, etc.) To become separated; (of something woven, knitted, etc.) to come apart. | [verb] To clear from complication or difficulty; to unfold; to solve. UNREACHABLE (18) [noun] A person or thing that cannot be reached. | [adjective] Unable to be reached; impossible to attain. UNREADINESS (12) UNREALISTIC (13) [adjective] Not realistic. UNREALITIES (11) [noun] Lack of reality or real existence. | [noun] The state of being unreal | [noun] That which has no reality or real existence; something unreal or imaginary UNREASONING (12) [adjective] Behaving without reason. UNRECEPTIVE (18) [adjective] Not receptive UNRECLAIMED (16) [adjective] Not reclaimed. UNRECOVERED (17) UNREDRESSED (13) [adjective] Not redressed. UNREGULATED (13) [adjective] Not regulated UNREHEARSED (15) [adjective] Not rehearsed UNRELENTING (12) [adjective] Not relenting; having no pity; not being or becoming lenient, mild, gentle, or merciful UNRELUCTANT (13) UNREMITTING (14) [adjective] Incessant; never slackening UNREMOVABLE (18) [adjective] Unable to be removed. UNREPENTANT (13) [adjective] Feeling or showing no sorrow or regret for wrongdoing. UNREPRESSED (14) [adjective] Not repressed. UNRESISTANT (11) UNRESTRAINT (11) UNRETOUCHED (17) UNREWARDING (16) [adjective] Not providing reward or satisfaction UNRIGHTEOUS (15) [adjective] Not righteous. UNSATISFIED (15) [adjective] Not satisfied, especially with the quantity of something UNSATURATED (12) [adjective] (of a solution) Not saturated; capable of dissolving more of a solute at the same temperature. | [adjective] Of a compound containing atoms sharing more than one valence bond, especially of an organic compound having one or more double bonds or triple bonds between carbon atoms. | [adjective] (of a colour) Not chromatically pure; diluted. UNSATURATES (11) UNSCHEDULED (18) [adjective] Not scheduled; impromptu UNSCHOLARLY (19) [adjective] Not scholarly. UNSCRAMBLED (18) [verb] To reverse the process of scrambling, decrypt. | [verb] To put into order or restore to order. UNSCRAMBLER (17) UNSCRAMBLES (17) [verb] To reverse the process of scrambling, decrypt. | [verb] To put into order or restore to order. UNSEAWORTHY (20) [adjective] Unfit for a sea voyage. UNSEEMLIEST (13) [adjective] Inconsistent with established standards of good form or taste. UNSEGMENTED (15) [adjective] Not segmented. UNSELECTIVE (16) [adjective] Not selective; open and inclusive UNSELFISHLY (20) UNSEPARATED (14) [adjective] Not separated. UNSHACKLING (21) [verb] To remove shackles from someone or something. | [verb] To remove restrictions or inhibitions; to allow full freedom and power. UNSHEATHING (18) [verb] To deprive of a sheath; to draw from the sheath or scabbard, as a sword. UNSHOCKABLE (22) [adjective] Incapable of being shocked (scandalised or appalled). UNSIGHTLIER (15) [adjective] Displeasing to the eye. UNSOLDERING (13) [verb] To reverse the process of soldering, such as by breaking the joint and removing the solder UNSOLDIERLY (15) [adjective] Not soldierly, not appropriate for a soldier. | [adverb] In a manner that is not appropriate for a soldier. UNSOLICITED (14) [adjective] Not requested, welcome or invited. UNSOUNDNESS (12) UNSPARINGLY (17) UNSPEAKABLE (19) [adjective] Incapable of being spoken or uttered | [adjective] Unfit or not permitted to be spoken or described. | [adjective] Extremely bad or objectionable. UNSPEAKABLY (22) UNSPECIFIED (19) [adjective] Not specified; not thoroughly explained or detailed; not adequately commented. UNSPIRITUAL (13) [adjective] Not spiritual; lacking metaphysical significance. UNSTARTLING (12) UNSTEADIEST (12) [adjective] Not held firmly in position, physically unstable. | [adjective] Lacking regularity or uniformity. | [adjective] Inconstant in purpose, or volatile in behavior. UNSTEADYING (16) UNSTITCHING (17) [verb] To take out stitches from. | [verb] To unravel or disunite; to cause to come apart. UNSTOPPABLE (17) [adjective] Unable to be stopped. UNSTOPPABLY (20) UNSTOPPERED (16) [verb] To remove the stopper from. UNSTRAPPING (16) [verb] To loosen or remove the straps from (something). UNSTRINGING (13) [verb] To remove the string or strings from. | [verb] To shake the nerves of; to cause anxiety or panic in. | [verb] To defuse or relax. UNSUCCESSES (15) UNSUPPORTED (16) [adjective] Without physical support. | [adjective] For which support or help is not available. | [adjective] Without confirmation from a credible source, without verifying support UNSURPASSED (14) [adjective] Surpassing all others in some way UNSURPRISED (14) [adjective] Not surprised UNSUSPECTED (16) [adjective] Not suspected; not having raised suspicion. UNSWEETENED (15) [verb] To remove or lower the sweetness of. | [adjective] Not sweetened UNTARNISHED (15) [adjective] Not tarnished UNTEACHABLE (18) [noun] Someone who cannot be taught. | [adjective] Not teachable. UNTECHNICAL (18) [adjective] Not technical. UNTETHERING (15) [verb] To undo by removing a tether. UNTHINKABLE (20) [adjective] Incapable of being believed; incredible. | [adjective] Inconceivable or unimaginable; extremely improbable in a way that goes against common sense. UNTHINKABLY (23) UNTHREADING (16) [verb] To draw or remove a thread from. | [verb] To loosen the connections of. | [verb] To make one's way through. UNTIMELIEST (13) UNTOUCHABLE (18) [noun] A criminal who is so adept that they cannot be arrested or convicted. | [noun] A pariah. | [noun] In the Indian caste system, a member of the lowest caste. UNTRACEABLE (15) [adjective] Not able to be traced or tracked down UNTRAMMELED (16) [adjective] Not limited or restricted; unrestrained; limitless. UNTRAVERSED (15) UNTYPICALLY (21) UNUSUALNESS (11) UNUTTERABLE (13) [adjective] Not utterable; incapable of being spoken or voiced UNUTTERABLY (16) UNVARNISHED (18) [adjective] Not having been coated with varnish (or a similar surface treatment). | [adjective] (by extension) Natural, unmodified, unembellished, not exaggerated, as in unvarnished truth. UNWARRANTED (15) [adjective] Not warranted; being without warrant, authority, or guaranty; unwarrantable. | [adjective] Unjustified, inappropriate or undeserved. UNWATCHABLE (21) [adjective] That cannot be watched; that does not bear watching. UNWEARIEDLY (18) UNWEATHERED (18) UNWEETINGLY (18) UNWEIGHTING (19) [verb] To temporarily remove the body's weight from a ski when making a turn. | [verb] To remove a statistical weighting from. UNWHOLESOME (19) [adjective] Not wholesome; unfavorable to health; unhealthful. | [adjective] Not sound; tainted; defective. | [adjective] Indicating unsound health; characteristic of or suggesting an unsound condition, physical or mental; repulsive; offensive. UNWIELDIEST (15) [adjective] Lacking strength; weak. | [adjective] Ungraceful in movement. | [adjective] Difficult to carry, handle, manage or operate because of its size, weight, shape or complexity. UNWILLINGLY (18) [adverb] In an unwilling or uncooperative manner. UNWITTINGLY (18) [adverb] In an unwitting manner; inadvertently, obliviously, unintentionally, unknowingly. UNWORTHIEST (17) [adjective] Not worthy; lacking value or merit; worthless. UNWREATHING (18) UPBRINGINGS (17) [noun] The traits acquired during one's childhood training | [noun] The raising or training of a child. UPGATHERING (18) UPGRADEABLE (17) UPHOLSTERED (17) [verb] To fit padding, stuffing, springs, webbing and fabric covering to (furniture). | [adjective] Covered in or characterized by upholstery. UPHOLSTERER (16) [noun] A craftsman who upholsters furniture. UPPERCASING (18) UPRIGHTNESS (17) [noun] The state of being moral, honest and honourable. | [noun] The state of being erect, or vertical. | [noun] The result or product of being upright. UPSPRINGING (17) UPTHRUSTING (17) UPTIGHTNESS (17) URANOGRAPHY (20) [noun] Celestial cartography; the mapping of celestial bodies. UREDIOSPORE (14) UREDOSPORES (14) UREOTELISMS (13) URICOTELISM (15) URINOMETERS (13) UROCHORDATE (17) [noun] Any marine invertebrate of the subphylum Urochordata; the sea squirts URTICATIONS (13) USABILITIES (13) USELESSNESS (11) [noun] The quality of being useless USQUEBAUGHS (26) USUALNESSES (11) USURPATIONS (13) UTILITARIAN (11) [noun] Someone who practices or advocates utilitarianism. | [adjective] Of or relating to utility | [adjective] Pertaining to utilitarianism UTILIZATION (20) [noun] The act of using something. | [noun] The manner in which something is used. | [noun] The state of being used. UTOPIANISMS (15)

12-Letter Words (421)

UBIQUITOUSLY (26) UGLIFICATION (18) ULTIMATENESS (14) ULTRACAREFUL (17) [adjective] Extremely careful. ULTRACOMPACT (20) ULTRADISTANT (13) ULTRAHEATING (16) ULTRALEFTISM (17) ULTRALEFTIST (15) ULTRALIBERAL (14) ULTRAMARINES (14) ULTRAMONTANE (14) [noun] Someone who acknowledges the supremacy of the Pope | [adjective] Respecting the supremacy of the Pope. | [adjective] From the other side of a mountain range, particularly the Alps. ULTRAPRECISE (16) ULTRARADICAL (15) ULTRAREALISM (14) ULTRAREALIST (12) ULTRAREFINED (16) ULTRASERIOUS (12) ULTRAVACUUMS (19) ULTRAVIOLENT (15) ULTRAVIOLETS (15) UMBILICATION (18) UMBRAGEOUSLY (20) UNACCEPTABLE (20) [noun] Something that is not acceptable. | [adjective] Unsatisfactory; not acceptable | [adjective] Not conforming to accepted usage UNACCEPTABLY (23) [adverb] Not within the limits of what is generally considered to be acceptable. UNACCLIMATED (19) UNACCREDITED (18) [adjective] Not accredited; lacking accreditation. UNACCUSTOMED (19) [verb] To make or become used to a change from something one was accustomed to. | [adjective] Not used to an event or thing, not accustomed. UNACQUAINTED (24) [adjective] Not acquainted, unfamiliar (with someone or something). | [adjective] Not usual; unfamiliar; strange. UNADVERTISED (17) [adjective] Not advertised UNAFFECTEDLY (24) UNAFFILIATED (19) [verb] To discontinue one's affiliation with an organisation. | [noun] A person or organization having no affiliation. | [adjective] Not affiliated, not associated UNAFFORDABLE (21) [adjective] Too expensive to be afforded. UNAGGRESSIVE (17) [adjective] Not aggressive; peaceable; not violent. UNALLEVIATED (16) [adjective] Relentless UNAMBIVALENT (19) [adjective] Not ambivalent. UNANALYZABLE (26) [adjective] That cannot be analysed. UNANSWERABLE (17) [noun] Something that cannot be answered. | [adjective] Not answerable; impossible to answer. | [adjective] Impossible to dispute or rebut; irrefutable; conclusive. UNANSWERABLY (20) UNAPOLOGETIC (17) [adjective] Not apologetic, especially when being apologetic would be appropriate. UNAPPEALABLE (18) [adjective] (of a verdict etc) Not appealable; that may not be appealed, or sent to a higher court for judgement UNAPPEASABLE (18) [adjective] Not able to be appeased or satisfied UNAPPEASABLY (21) UNAPPETIZING (26) [adjective] Not appetizing UNASSAILABLE (14) [noun] Something, such as a belief, that cannot be assailed. | [adjective] Secure against attack; impregnable. | [adjective] (by extension) Undeniable, incontestable or incontrovertible. UNASSAILABLY (17) UNASSOCIATED (15) [adjective] Not associated UNATTAINABLE (14) [noun] Anything that cannot be attained. | [adjective] Impossible to attain or reach; unable to accomplish UNATTENUATED (13) UNATTRACTIVE (17) [noun] An aesthetically unattractive person | [adjective] Not handsome or beautiful or appealing. | [adjective] Lacking the power to attract interest. UNATTRIBUTED (15) [adjective] Lacking attribution; of unknown authorship UNAUTHORIZED (25) [adjective] Not having any authority | [adjective] Without official authorization UNAVAILINGLY (19) UNBARRICADED (18) UNBECOMINGLY (22) UNBELIEVABLE (19) [adjective] Not to be believed. | [adjective] Incredible; so surprising it is almost unable to believe. | [adjective] Implausible or improbable. UNBELIEVABLY (22) [adverb] (manner) In a manner that one does not believe. | [adverb] (degree) To an extent not to be believed. | [adverb] (evaluative) Contrary to expectations, amazingly. UNBIASEDNESS (15) UNBLINKINGLY (22) UNBLUSHINGLY (21) UNBREACHABLE (21) [adjective] Impossible to breach UNBREATHABLE (19) [adjective] Not suitable for breathing. | [adjective] Not letting air seep through. UNBRIDGEABLE (18) [adjective] Unable to be bridged or crossed; impossible to span. UNCALCULATED (17) [adjective] Not calculated; lacking forethought. UNCALIBRATED (17) UNCAPTURABLE (18) UNCELEBRATED (17) [adjective] Not celebrated; ignored UNCENSORIOUS (14) UNCHALLENGED (19) [adjective] Not having any challengers. | [adjective] Lacking experience due to lack of challenges; untested. UNCHANGEABLE (20) [noun] Something that cannot be changed. | [adjective] Not changeable; incapable of being changed or of changing; immutable. UNCHANGEABLY (23) UNCHANGINGLY (22) UNCHAPERONED (20) [adjective] Not chaperoned; not having a chaperone UNCHARITABLE (19) [adjective] Not charitable UNCHARITABLY (22) UNCHASTENESS (17) UNCHASTITIES (17) UNCHIVALROUS (20) [adjective] Not chivalrous. UNCHRISTENED (18) UNCHRONICLED (20) UNCINARIASES (14) UNCINARIASIS (14) [noun] Hookworm disease UNCIRCULATED (17) [adjective] Not circulated. UNCLASSIFIED (18) [adjective] Not classified | [verb] To declassify. UNCLUTTERING (15) UNCOALESCING (17) UNCOERCIVELY (22) UNCOMMERCIAL (20) [noun] A spoof advertisement created for countercultural purposes. | [adjective] Not commercial; often specifically not commercially viable UNCOMMONNESS (18) [noun] The state or quality of being uncommon. UNCOMPELLING (19) UNCOMPLACENT (20) UNCOMPOUNDED (20) [adjective] Not compounded. UNCONFORMITY (22) [noun] A lack of conformity | [noun] A gap in time in rock strata, where erosion occurs while deposition slows or stops UNCONFOUNDED (19) UNCONJUGATED (23) UNCONSIDERED (16) [adjective] Not considered. UNCONSTRAINT (14) UNCONTRACTED (17) UNCONTROLLED (15) [adjective] Not controlled; not under control. UNCONVINCING (20) [verb] To cause to abandon a conviction. | [adjective] Not convincing, plausible or believable UNCORRELATED (15) [adjective] Not correlated | [adjective] Having a covariance of zero UNCOURAGEOUS (15) UNCOVENANTED (18) [adjective] Not bound by a covenant. | [adjective] Not promised by covenant. UNCRITICALLY (19) [adverb] In an uncritical manner. UNCTUOUSNESS (14) UNCULTIVABLE (19) [adjective] Not capable of cultivation UNCULTIVATED (18) [adjective] Not cultivated by agricultural methods; not prepared for cultivation. | [adjective] Inadequately educated; lacking art or knowledge | [adjective] Not attended to or fostered. UNDECILLIONS (15) UNDECIPHERED (21) [adjective] Not deciphered. UNDECOMPOSED (20) UNDEFOLIATED (17) UNDEMOCRATIC (19) [adjective] Not democratic UNDEPENDABLE (18) [adjective] Not dependable. UNDERACHIEVE (21) [verb] To achieve less than expected; to fail to fulfil one's potential. UNDERBELLIES (15) [noun] The underside of an animal. | [noun] The underside of any thing. | [noun] The side which is not normally seen, normally a dark, immoral place. UNDERBIDDERS (17) UNDERBIDDING (18) [verb] To bid too low. | [verb] To bid lower than another. | [verb] To bid less than the full value of a hand of cards. UNDERBRUSHES (18) UNDERBUDDING (18) UNDERCHARGED (20) [verb] To charge less than the correct amount. | [verb] To put too small a charge into. UNDERCHARGES (19) [verb] To charge less than the correct amount. | [verb] To put too small a charge into. UNDERCLASSES (15) [noun] The poorest class of people in a given society. UNDERCLOTHES (18) [noun] Clothes worn next to the skin and underneath outer clothing UNDERCOATING (16) [verb] To apply an undercoat to. | [noun] A coat of paint or other material applied onto a surface before that of a topcoat; an undercoat UNDERCOOLING (16) [verb] To cool insufficiently | [verb] To supercool | [noun] An instance of insufficient cooling UNDERCOUNTED (16) [verb] To count to an insufficient degree; to count one thing disproportionately less than another UNDERCURRENT (15) [noun] A current of water which flows under the surface, and often in a different direction from surface currents. | [noun] A tendency of feeling or opinion that is concealed rather than exposed. | [verb] To flow under some surface. UNDERCUTTING (16) [verb] To sell (something) at a lower price, or to work for lower wages, than a competitor. | [verb] To create an overhang by cutting away material from underneath. | [verb] To undermine. UNDERDRAWERS (17) UNDEREXPOSED (23) [verb] To take a photograph using too small an exposure | [verb] To provide with insufficient publicity UNDEREXPOSES (22) [verb] To take a photograph using too small an exposure | [verb] To provide with insufficient publicity UNDERFEEDING (18) [verb] To feed inadequately or insufficiently UNDERFUNDING (18) [verb] To provide insufficient funds (for). | [noun] The condition of being underfunded. UNDERGARMENT (16) [noun] Any garment worn underneath others, especially one worn next to the skin; an item of underwear. | [noun] (in the plural) Temple garments worn by the followers of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. UNDERGIRDING (16) [verb] To strengthen, secure, or reinforce by passing a rope, cable, or chain around the underside of an object. | [verb] To give fundamental support; provide with a sound or secure basis; provide supportive evidence for. | [verb] To lend moral support to. UNDERGROUNDS (15) [noun] An underground railway, especially for mass transit of people in urban areas. | [noun] A train that runs on such an underground railway. | [noun] A rapid transit system, regardless of the elevation of its right of way. UNDERGROWTHS (20) UNDERINSURED (14) [noun] One who has insufficient insurance. | [adjective] Not having sufficient insurance to cover loss or damage | [adjective] Not having proper health insurance UNDERLAPPING (18) UNDERLAYMENT (18) UNDERLETTING (14) [noun] The act of one who sublets. | [verb] To let below the value. | [verb] To let or lease at second hand; to sublet. UNDERLYINGLY (20) UNDERPAYMENT (20) UNDERPINNING (16) [verb] To support from below with props or masonry. | [verb] To give support to; to corroborate. | [noun] A support or foundation, especially as a structure of masonry that supports a wall. UNDERPLAYING (19) [verb] To play in a subordinate, or in an inferior manner; to underact a part. | [verb] To make something seem less important than it really is. | [verb] To play a low card when holding a high one, in the hope of a future advantage. UNDERPOWERED (19) [verb] To supply with insufficient power. | [adjective] Having insufficient power for its operation. UNDERPRICING (18) [verb] To set a price at less than the value of an item | [verb] To sell at a lower price than another (especially than a competitor) UNDERREACTED (16) UNDERREPORTS (15) [verb] To report a number falsely, making it smaller than it ought to be, especially to do so intentionally | [verb] As a group, to report something less frequently than it actually occurs UNDERRUNNING (14) UNDERSCORING (16) [verb] To underline; to mark a line beneath text. | [verb] To emphasize or draw attention to. | [noun] An underline. UNDERSELLING (14) [verb] To sell goods for a lower price than a competitor. | [verb] To sell something for less than its value. | [verb] To put forward an idea, or to market a new product, with insufficient enthusiasm. UNDERSHIRTED (17) UNDERSTAFFED (20) [adjective] Having an inadequate number of workers or assistants UNDERSTATING (14) [verb] To state (something) with less completeness than needed; to minimise or downplay. | [verb] To state (something) with a lack of emphasis, in order to express irony. | [verb] To state a quantity that is too low. UNDERSTEERED (14) [verb] The action of a car when it does not follow the desired curve while cornering. Tyre slip of the front wheels. UNDERSTORIES (13) [noun] The layer of plants that grow in the shade of the canopy of a forest. UNDERSTUDIED (15) [adjective] Insufficiently studied. | [verb] To study or know a role to such an extent as to be able to replace the normal performer when required. | [verb] To act as an understudy (to someone). UNDERSTUDIES (14) [noun] A performer who understudies; a standby. | [verb] To study or know a role to such an extent as to be able to replace the normal performer when required. | [verb] To act as an understudy (to someone). UNDERSURFACE (18) [noun] The underneath surface; the bottom, or underside UNDERTAKINGS (18) [noun] The business of an undertaker, or the management of funerals | [noun] A promise or pledge; a guarantee | [noun] That which is undertaken; any business, work, or project which a person engages in, or attempts to perform; an enterprise UNDERTENANTS (13) [noun] A tenant who holds property from another tenant; a subtenant UNDERTHRUSTS (16) [verb] (of a tectonic plate) To thrust under another UNDERUTILIZE (22) [verb] Underuse UNDERVALUING (17) [verb] To underestimate, or assign too low a value to. | [verb] To have too little regard for. | [noun] An undervaluation. UNDERWEIGHTS (20) [verb] To underestimate the weight of. | [verb] To give insufficient weight to (a consideration); to underestimate the importance of. UNDERWHELMED (22) [verb] To fail to impress; to perform disappointingly. UNDERWRITERS (16) [noun] An entity assuming a financial risk. | [noun] A person working for an insurance company who arranges and authorizes an insurance policy with a broker or insured. | [noun] An entity undertaking to market newly issued securities. UNDERWRITING (17) [verb] To write below or under; subscribe. | [verb] To subscribe (a document, policy etc.) with one's name. | [verb] To sign; to put one's name to. UNDERWRITTEN (16) [verb] To write below or under; subscribe. | [verb] To subscribe (a document, policy etc.) with one's name. | [verb] To sign; to put one's name to. UNDESIGNATED (15) [adjective] Not designated. UNDESIRABLES (15) [noun] An undesirable person UNDETECTABLE (17) [adjective] Unable to be detected; not detectable. UNDETERMINED (16) [adjective] Not determined; not settled; not decided. | [adjective] Not limited; not defined; indeterminate. UNDIGESTIBLE (16) UNDIMINISHED (19) [adjective] Not diminished. UNDIPLOMATIC (19) [adjective] Not diplomatic or tactful | [adjective] Lacking sensitivity or the skill of dealing with others UNDISCHARGED (20) [adjective] Not discharged UNDISCOVERED (19) [adjective] That has not been discovered; unknown. | [adjective] That has not yet been discovered; unexplored. | [verb] To forget something discovered earlier. UNDISPUTABLE (17) [adjective] Not disputable; not open to question; obviously true UNDISTRACTED (16) [adjective] Not distracted UNDOCUMENTED (18) [adjective] Lacking instructions or reference material. | [adjective] Not having official documents that provide identification, authorization, etc. | [noun] An immigrant who has entered a country (often as a migrant worker) and has no documentation authorizing them to (still) be present there. UNDRAMATIZED (25) UNDUPLICATED (18) UNEASINESSES (12) UNECOLOGICAL (17) UNECONOMICAL (18) [adjective] Not economical UNEMBITTERED (17) UNEMPLOYABLE (21) [noun] An individual who is not suited to employment. | [adjective] Not employable. UNEMPLOYMENT (21) [noun] The state of having no job; joblessness. | [noun] The phenomenon of joblessness in an economy. | [noun] The level of joblessness in an economy, often measured as a percentage of the workforce. UNENCUMBERED (19) [adjective] Not burdened with worries, cares or responsibilities. | [adjective] Free of encumbrance. | [adjective] (of property) Not subject to any claims. UNEVENNESSES (15) UNEVENTFULLY (21) UNEXPECTEDLY (27) [adverb] In an unexpected manner. UNEXPRESSIVE (24) [adjective] Not expressive UNEXPURGATED (23) [adjective] Not expurgated, not having had anything objectionable removed UNFAIRNESSES (15) [noun] The state of being unfair; lack of justice. | [noun] An unjust act. UNFAITHFULLY (24) UNFAMILIARLY (20) UNFASTIDIOUS (16) UNFATHOMABLE (22) [adjective] Impossible to fathom or understand. | [adjective] Difficult to penetrate. UNFERTILIZED (25) [adjective] Not fertilized; uninseminated UNFLAGGINGLY (21) UNFLAMBOYANT (22) UNFLATTERING (16) [verb] To show in a bad light; to portray unfavorably. | [adjective] Not flattering. UNFORGIVABLE (21) [adjective] Not forgivable; inexcusable. UNFORMULATED (18) [adjective] Not formulated. UNFORTUNATES (15) [noun] An unlucky person; one who has fallen into bad circumstances. UNFREQUENTED (25) [adjective] Not frequented. UNFRUITFULLY (21) UNGAINLINESS (13) UNGENEROSITY (16) UNGENEROUSLY (16) UNGENTRIFIED (17) UNGERMINATED (16) UNGLAMORIZED (25) UNGOVERNABLE (18) [adjective] Not governable UNGRACEFULLY (21) UNGRACIOUSLY (18) UNGRATEFULLY (19) UNHANDSOMELY (21) UNHARNESSING (16) [verb] To remove the harness from a horse etc. | [verb] (by extension) to liberate UNHEALTHIEST (18) [adjective] Characterized by, or conducive to poor health | [adjective] Sick or ill | [adjective] Tending to corrupt UNHESITATING (16) [adjective] Not hesitating; with no hesitation. UNHISTORICAL (17) [adjective] Not historical; not based on history. UNHOLINESSES (15) UNHYDROLYZED (32) UNHYPHENATED (24) [verb] To remove or displace a hyphen from. | [adjective] Lacking a hyphen. | [adjective] Of people, belonging to a single ethnicity or nationality: names for multi-ethnic/multi-nationality groups generally require a hyphen to connect the names being combined. UNHYSTERICAL (20) UNICAMERALLY (19) UNIDENTIFIED (17) [adjective] Not identified; having an unknown or unnamed identity. UNIFICATIONS (17) [noun] The act of unifying. | [noun] The state of being unified. | [noun] (mathematical logic) Given two terms, their join with respect to a specialisation order. UNIFOLIOLATE (15) UNIFORMITIES (17) [noun] The state of being uniform, alike and lacking variety. | [noun] The absence of alternatives or diversity; sameness. UNILATERALLY (15) [adverb] In a unilateral way. UNILLUSIONED (13) UNIMAGINABLE (17) [adjective] Unable to be imagined; inconceivable or mind-boggling; beyond belief UNIMAGINABLY (20) [adverb] To an extent or in a way that cannot be, or could not have been, imagined UNIMPRESSIVE (19) [adjective] Lacking the ability to impress, inability to produce an impression. UNINFLUENCED (18) [adjective] Not influenced UNINOCULATED (15) UNINSTRUCTED (15) [adjective] Not instructed | [adjective] Uneducated UNINTEGRATED (14) UNINTERESTED (13) [adjective] Unmotivated by personal interest; unbiased, disinterested. | [adjective] Not interested; indifferent, not concerned. UNIONISATION (12) UNIONIZATION (21) UNIQUENESSES (21) UNIRONICALLY (17) UNIRRADIATED (14) UNISEXUALITY (22) UNITARIANISM (14) UNITIZATIONS (21) UNIVERSALISM (17) [noun] The state of being universal; universality. | [noun] The belief that all souls can attain salvation. | [noun] Alternative form of Unitarian Universalism UNIVERSALIST (15) [noun] A proponent of universalism. | [adjective] Universal in scope. UNIVERSALITY (18) [noun] The property of being universal, common to all members of a class UNIVERSALIZE (24) [verb] To make universal, to make consistent or common across all cases. UNIVERSITIES (15) [noun] Institution of higher education (typically accepting students from the age of about 17 or 18, depending on country, but in some exceptional cases able to take younger students) where subjects are studied and researched in depth and degrees are offered. UNJUSTNESSES (19) UNKENNELLING (17) UNKINDLINESS (17) UNKINDNESSES (17) [noun] The state or quality of being unkind. | [noun] An unkind act. | [noun] The collective noun for ravens UNLAWFULNESS (18) UNLIKELIHOOD (20) [noun] Absence of likelihood; the state of being unlikely or improbable; improbability. UNLIKELINESS (16) UNLIKENESSES (16) UNLISTENABLE (14) [adjective] (acoustics) Of a sound quality or characteristic that a person cannot long listen to. UNLOVELINESS (15) UNMANAGEABLE (17) [adjective] Not manageable; not readily submitting to handling or management; not easily restrained, governed, or directed UNMANAGEABLY (20) UNMANNEREDLY (18) UNMARKETABLE (20) [adjective] Not marketable UNMEASURABLE (16) [adjective] Not able to be measured; immeasurable. UNMECHANIZED (29) UNMERCIFULLY (22) UNMISTAKABLE (20) [adjective] Unique, such that it cannot be mistaken for something else. UNMISTAKABLY (23) [adverb] In an unmistakable manner; unquestionably. UNMODERNIZED (25) [adjective] Not modernized. UNMORALITIES (14) UNMYELINATED (18) UNNEGOTIABLE (15) UNNEWSWORTHY (24) UNNILHEXIUMS (24) UNNILPENTIUM (16) UNNILQUADIUM (24) UNNOTICEABLE (16) [adjective] Not noticeable. UNNOURISHING (16) UNOBSERVABLE (19) [noun] Something that cannot be observed. | [adjective] That cannot be observed. UNOBSTRUCTED (17) [adjective] Not obstructed UNOBTAINABLE (16) [noun] Someone or something that cannot be obtained. | [adjective] Unable to be obtained: not able to be acquired or reached. UNOFFICIALLY (23) [adverb] In a way that is not official. UNORNAMENTED (15) [adjective] Not ornamented; without ornament. UNORTHODOXLY (26) UNOXYGENATED (24) UNPARALLELED (15) [adjective] Having no parallel; without equal; lacking anything similar or worthy of comparison. UNPARDONABLE (17) [adjective] Impossible to pardon; impossible to excuse or justify UNPATENTABLE (16) UNPERCEPTIVE (21) [adjective] Not perceptive. UNPERSUASIVE (17) [adjective] Not persuasive UNPLEASANTLY (17) UNPOPULARITY (19) [noun] The property or degree of being unpopular UNPREJUDICED (25) [adjective] Not prejudiced. UNPRETENDING (16) [adjective] Unpretentious, real, genuine UNPRINCIPLED (19) [adjective] Lacking moral values UNPRIVILEGED (19) [adjective] Not having special privileges, opposite of privileged. | [adjective] Not requiring special privileges UNPRODUCTIVE (20) [adjective] Not productive; useless; fruitless. | [adjective] (of affixes, mechanisms of word formation, etc) No longer used to produce new words (). UNPROFITABLE (19) [adjective] Not making a profit UNPROFITABLY (22) UNPROGRAMMED (20) UNPRONOUNCED (17) UNPROPITIOUS (16) [adjective] Not propitious; unfavourable, untimely UNPROSPEROUS (16) [adjective] Not prosperous. UNPUBLICIZED (28) [adjective] Not publicized. UNPUNCTUATED (17) [verb] To remove punctuation from (a text). | [adjective] Not punctuated, lacking punctuation. UNQUENCHABLE (28) [adjective] That cannot be quenched. UNQUESTIONED (22) [adjective] (of a person) Not subjected to an interrogation | [adjective] (of a fact) Accepted without question; indisputable UNREALIZABLE (23) [adjective] Not realizable; unable to be achieved or realized. UNREASONABLE (14) [adjective] Without the ability to reason; unreasoning. | [adjective] Not reasonable; going beyond what could be expected or asked for. UNREASONABLY (17) [adverb] In an unreasonable manner. | [adverb] To an unreasonable degree. UNRECOGNIZED (25) [adjective] Not recognized UNRECONCILED (17) [adjective] Not reconciled | [adjective] Inconsistent | [verb] To sever; to make no longer reconciled to each other. UNRECYCLABLE (21) UNREDEEMABLE (17) [adjective] Not redeemable; irredeemable. UNREFLECTIVE (20) [adjective] Not reflective; thoughtless UNREGENERATE (13) [adjective] Which cannot be transformed in mind and spirit | [adjective] Stubborn UNREGISTERED (14) [adjective] Not registered. | [verb] To undo the process of registration for. | [verb] To undo a registration process. UNREINFORCED (18) UNRELIEVEDLY (19) UNREMARKABLE (20) [adjective] Not remarkable. UNREMARKABLY (23) UNREMEMBERED (19) [adjective] Not remembered UNREPEATABLE (16) [adjective] Unable to be repeated | [adjective] (of an experiment or procedure) That gives different results when repeated UNRESERVEDLY (19) [adverb] In an unreserved manner; showing emotion or lack of restraint. UNRESOLVABLE (17) [adjective] Not able to be resolved UNRESPONSIVE (17) [adjective] Not responsive; unreactive. | [adjective] Indifferent or apathetic; emotionless. UNRESTRAINED (13) [verb] To free from restraints. | [adjective] Immoderate; not restrained or held in check | [adjective] Spontaneous, natural and informal; unconstrained UNRESTRAINTS (12) UNRESTRICTED (15) [adjective] Not restricted or confined | [adjective] Having no security classification UNRETURNABLE (14) UNREVIEWABLE (20) UNRHETORICAL (17) UNRIPENESSES (14) UNRULINESSES (12) UNSANCTIONED (15) [adjective] Not sanctioned; not approved by a sanctioning body. UNSCIENTIFIC (19) [adjective] Not scientific UNSCRAMBLERS (18) UNSCRAMBLING (19) [verb] To reverse the process of scrambling, decrypt. | [verb] To put into order or restore to order. UNSCRIPTURAL (16) [adjective] Not scriptural. UNSCRUPULOUS (16) [adjective] Without scruples; immoral. | [adjective] Contemptuous of what is right or honorable. UNSEARCHABLE (19) [adjective] That cannot be investigated or searched into; unknowable, inscrutable. | [adjective] That cannot be sought out or looked for. | [adjective] Not capable of being searched; on which one cannot perform a search. UNSEARCHABLY (22) UNSEASONABLE (14) [adjective] Not in accordance with the season. UNSEASONABLY (17) [adverb] Not in accordance with the season. UNSEEMLINESS (14) UNSEGREGATED (15) [adjective] Not segregated UNSENSITIZED (22) UNSETTLEMENT (14) UNSETTLINGLY (16) UNSIGHTLIEST (16) [adjective] Displeasing to the eye. UNSKILLFULLY (22) UNSTABLENESS (14) UNSTEADINESS (13) UNSTERILIZED (22) [adjective] Not sterilized. UNSTINTINGLY (16) UNSTOPPERING (17) [verb] To remove the stopper from. UNSTRATIFIED (16) UNSTRUCTURED (15) [adjective] Lacking structure. UNSUBSIDIZED (25) UNSUCCESSFUL (19) [adjective] Failed, not successful. UNSUPERVISED (18) [adjective] Not supervised; not being constantly observed. UNSURPRISING (15) [adjective] Not surprising; expected. UNSUSPECTING (17) [adjective] Not suspecting; without any suspicion. UNSUSPICIOUS (16) [adjective] Not suspicious; not suspecting, unaware (of something). | [adjective] Not arousing suspicion. UNSYSTEMATIC (19) [adjective] Not systematic UNTENABILITY (17) UNTHINKINGLY (23) UNTIDINESSES (13) UNTIMELINESS (14) UNTOUCHABLES (19) [noun] A criminal who is so adept that they cannot be arrested or convicted. | [noun] A pariah. | [noun] In the Indian caste system, a member of the lowest caste. UNTOWARDNESS (16) UNTRANSLATED (13) [adjective] Not translated; still in the original language. | [adjective] Not converted from a processed mRNA sequence into a protein. UNTRUTHFULLY (21) UNVACCINATED (20) [adjective] Not vaccinated UNVENTILATED (16) [adjective] Not ventilated, lacking ventilation. UNVERBALIZED (27) UNVERIFIABLE (20) [adjective] Not capable of being verified, confirmed, checked or proven. UNWARINESSES (15) UNWASHEDNESS (19) UNWAVERINGLY (22) UNWIELDINESS (16) UNWONTEDNESS (16) UNWORTHINESS (18) UNYIELDINGLY (20) UPHOLSTERERS (17) [noun] A craftsman who upholsters furniture. UPHOLSTERIES (17) UPHOLSTERING (18) [verb] To fit padding, stuffing, springs, webbing and fabric covering to (furniture). | [noun] The padding, springs, webbing, and covers found on furniture | [noun] The application of upholstery to furniture. UPPERCUTTING (19) [verb] To strike with an uppercut UPPISHNESSES (19) UPPITINESSES (16) UPPITYNESSES (19) UPROARIOUSLY (17) UPROOTEDNESS (15) UPWARDNESSES (18) URBANISATION (14) [noun] The process of the formation and growth of cities | [noun] The change in a country or region when its population migrates from rural to urban areas | [noun] The proportion of a region's population that live in towns and cities; the rate at which this proportion is growing URBANIZATION (23) [noun] The process of the formation and growth of cities | [noun] The change in a country or region when its population migrates from rural to urban areas | [noun] The proportion of a region's population that live in towns and cities; the rate at which this proportion is growing URBANOLOGIES (15) URBANOLOGIST (15) UREDIOSPORES (15) URETHRITISES (15) URETHROSCOPE (19) URICOTELISMS (16) URINOGENITAL (13) UROCHORDATES (18) [noun] Any marine invertebrate of the subphylum Urochordata; the sea squirts UROLITHIASES (15) UROLITHIASIS (15) [noun] Presence of calculi in the urinary tract. USABLENESSES (14) USEFULNESSES (15) USUFRUCTUARY (20) USURIOUSNESS (12) UTILITARIANS (12) [noun] Someone who practices or advocates utilitarianism. UTILIZATIONS (21) [noun] The act of using something. | [noun] The manner in which something is used. | [noun] The state of being used. UXORIOUSNESS (19)

13-Letter Words (304)

UGLIFICATIONS (19) ULTRACAUTIOUS (15) ULTRACRITICAL (17) [adjective] Extremely or excessively critical ULTRADISTANCE (16) ULTRAFAMILIAR (18) ULTRAFEMININE (18) ULTRAFILTRATE (16) ULTRALEFTISMS (18) ULTRALEFTISTS (16) ULTRALIBERALS (15) ULTRAMARATHON (18) [noun] A running race over a distance longer than 42.195 km, the length of a standard marathon. ULTRAMILITANT (15) ULTRAMONTANES (15) [noun] Someone who acknowledges the supremacy of the Pope ULTRAORTHODOX (24) ULTRAPHYSICAL (23) ULTRAPOWERFUL (21) ULTRARADICALS (16) ULTRARAREFIED (17) ULTRARATIONAL (13) ULTRAREALISMS (15) ULTRAREALISTS (13) ULTRARELIABLE (15) ULTRARIGHTIST (17) ULTRAROMANTIC (17) ULTRAROYALIST (16) ULTRAVIOLENCE (18) ULTRAVIRILITY (19) UMBELLIFEROUS (20) UMBILICATIONS (19) UNACCOMPANIED (22) [adjective] Travelling without companions | [adjective] Performed or scored without accompaniment; solo UNACCOUNTABLE (19) [adjective] Inexplicable; unable to account for, or explain. | [adjective] Not responsible; free from accountability or control. UNACCOUNTABLY (22) UNADJUDICATED (25) UNADULTERATED (15) [adjective] Pure; not mixed or adulterated with anything | [adjective] Utter or out-and-out, especially in the phrase unadulterated truth UNADVENTUROUS (17) [adjective] Not adventurous UNAMBIGUOUSLY (21) [adverb] In a manner that is not ambiguous; leaving no doubt; clearly UNANTICIPATED (18) [adjective] Not anticipated. UNAPOLOGIZING (26) UNAPPEALINGLY (21) UNAPPRECIATED (20) [adjective] Not deemed to have any value, valueless, worthless | [adjective] (of an investment) Not having risen in value UNARTICULATED (16) [adjective] Not articulated UNASSERTIVELY (19) UNASSIMILABLE (17) UNASSIMILATED (16) [adjective] Not assimilated. UNASSUAGEABLE (16) UNAWARENESSES (16) UNBEAUTIFULLY (21) UNBELIEVINGLY (22) UNBELLIGERENT (16) UNBOUNDEDNESS (17) UNBOWDLERIZED (29) UNCALCULATING (18) UNCANNINESSES (15) UNCAPITALIZED (27) UNCEREMONIOUS (17) [adjective] Not ceremonious. UNCERTAINNESS (15) UNCERTAINTIES (15) [noun] Doubt; the condition of being uncertain or without conviction. | [noun] Something uncertain or ambiguous. | [noun] A parameter that measures the dispersion of a range of measured values. UNCHALLENGING (20) [adjective] Not challenging; easy to do. UNCHARISMATIC (22) [adjective] Not charismatic; lacking charisma. UNCHLORINATED (19) UNCIRCUMCISED (22) [adjective] Not circumcised, intact. | [adjective] (by extension) Not Jewish or Muslim; gentile | [adjective] Spiritually impure; irreligious. UNCLEANLINESS (15) [noun] The state of being unclean or dirty. UNCLEANNESSES (15) UNCOLLECTIBLE (19) UNCOMFORTABLE (22) [adjective] Not comfortable; causing discomfort. | [adjective] Experiencing discomfort. | [adjective] Uneasy or anxious. UNCOMFORTABLY (25) [adverb] In an uncomfortable manner. UNCOMPENSATED (20) [adjective] Not compensated; having no compensation. | [adjective] Not paid for one's work. UNCOMPETITIVE (22) [adjective] That does not involve competition; not competitive UNCOMPLAINING (20) [adjective] Without complaint; patient and tolerant UNCOMPLICATED (22) [verb] To remove complications from. | [adjective] Simple, not complicated, basic. UNCONCEIVABLE (22) UNCONCERNEDLY (21) UNCONDITIONAL (16) [adjective] Absolute; without conditions, limitations, reservations or qualifications. UNCONDITIONED (17) [adjective] Without conditions; absolute. | [adjective] Not having been conditioned. | [adjective] Not treated with hair conditioner. | [verb] To free from prior conditioning. UNCONFORMABLE (22) [adjective] Not conformable. | [adjective] Exhibiting unconformity. UNCONFORMABLY (25) UNCONQUERABLE (26) [adjective] Not conquerable; indomitable. UNCONQUERABLY (29) UNCONSCIOUSES (17) UNCONSCIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In an unconscious manner; unknowingly UNCONSECRATED (18) [adjective] Not consecrated UNCONSTRAINED (16) [adjective] Not constrained UNCONSTRAINTS (15) UNCONSTRICTED (18) [adjective] Not constricted UNCONSTRUCTED (18) [adjective] Not (yet) constructed UNCONSUMMATED (20) [adjective] Not consummated UNCONTAINABLE (17) [adjective] That cannot be contained. UNCONTENTIOUS (15) [adjective] Not contentious. UNCOOPERATIVE (20) [adjective] Not cooperative. UNCOORDINATED (17) [adjective] (of a project etc) Not coordinated or properly planned | [adjective] (of body movement) Lacking coordination UNCORRECTABLE (19) UNCOUTHNESSES (18) UNCUSTOMARILY (20) UNDELIVERABLE (19) UNDERACHIEVED (23) [verb] To achieve less than expected; to fail to fulfil one's potential. UNDERACHIEVER (22) UNDERACHIEVES (22) [verb] To achieve less than expected; to fail to fulfil one's potential. UNDERACTIVITY (22) UNDERBUDGETED (19) UNDERCARRIAGE (17) [noun] The supporting structural framework of a vehicle. | [noun] The landing gear of an aircraft. | [noun] The genitalia. UNDERCHARGING (21) [verb] To charge less than the correct amount. | [verb] To put too small a charge into. UNDERCLASSMAN (18) UNDERCLASSMEN (18) UNDERCLOTHING (20) [noun] Clothing worn next to the skin; underwear UNDERCOATINGS (17) UNDERCOUNTING (17) [verb] To count to an insufficient degree; to count one thing disproportionately less than another UNDERCURRENTS (16) [noun] A current of water which flows under the surface, and often in a different direction from surface currents. | [noun] A tendency of feeling or opinion that is concealed rather than exposed. | [verb] To flow under some surface. UNDEREDUCATED (18) [verb] To give an inadequate education. | [adjective] Insufficiently educated. UNDEREMPHASES (21) UNDEREMPHASIS (21) UNDEREMPLOYED (22) [adjective] Employed in a job that offers fewer work hours than desired. UNDERESTIMATE (16) [noun] An estimate that is too low. | [verb] To perceive (someone or something) as having a lower value, quantity, worth, etc., than what he/she/it actually has. UNDEREXPOSING (24) [verb] To take a photograph using too small an exposure | [verb] To provide with insufficient publicity UNDEREXPOSURE (23) UNDERFINANCED (20) [adjective] Lacking sufficient financing UNDERGARMENTS (17) [noun] Any garment worn underneath others, especially one worn next to the skin; an item of underwear. | [noun] (in the plural) Temple garments worn by the followers of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. UNDERGRADUATE (16) [noun] A student at a university who has not yet received a degree. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or being an undergraduate. UNDERGROUNDER (16) UNDERHANDEDLY (22) UNDERINFLATED (18) UNDERLAYMENTS (19) UNDERPAINTING (17) [noun] An initial layer of paint, often monochromatic, applied to a ground as a base for subsequent layers. | [noun] A painting that the artist later painted over to create the final work. UNDERPAYMENTS (21) UNDERPINNINGS (17) [noun] A support or foundation, especially as a structure of masonry that supports a wall. | [noun] A basis for something. | [noun] The lower body or legs. UNDERPREPARED (19) [adjective] Not adequately prepared. UNDERREACTING (17) UNDERREPORTED (17) [verb] To report a number falsely, making it smaller than it ought to be, especially to do so intentionally | [verb] As a group, to report something less frequently than it actually occurs | [adjective] Reported as smaller or lesser than reality UNDERSHOOTING (18) [verb] To shoot not far enough or not well enough. | [verb] To not go far enough when trying to reach a goal. | [verb] (by extension) To underestimate. UNDERSTAFFING (21) [verb] To furnish with too few staff; to staff inadequately. | [noun] The situation of having insufficient members of staff. UNDERSTANDING (16) [verb] To grasp a concept fully and thoroughly, especially (of words, statements, art, etc.) to be aware of the meaning of and (of people) to be aware of the intent of. | [verb] To believe, to think one grasps sufficiently despite potentially incomplete knowledge. | [verb] (obsolete outside circus, acrobatics) To stand underneath, to support. UNDERSTATEDLY (18) UNDERSTEERING (15) [verb] The action of a car when it does not follow the desired curve while cornering. Tyre slip of the front wheels. UNDERSTRAPPER (18) [noun] Any underling or inferior in office. | [noun] A freelance operator for MI5. UNDERSTRENGTH (18) UNDERSTUDYING (19) [verb] To study or know a role to such an extent as to be able to replace the normal performer when required. | [verb] To act as an understudy (to someone). | [verb] To act in a similar manner to some known person. UNDERSUPPLIES (18) [verb] To provide with insufficient supplies; to supply inadequately UNDERSURFACES (19) [noun] The underneath surface; the bottom, or underside UNDERUTILIZED (24) [adjective] Insufficiently utilized | [verb] Underuse UNDERUTILIZES (23) [verb] Underuse UNDERWHELMING (23) [adjective] Failing to interest; not as exciting as promised or expected. UNDESCRIBABLE (20) [adjective] Impossible, or very difficult to describe. | [adjective] Exceeding all description. UNDEVIATINGLY (21) UNDIAGNOSABLE (17) UNDIALECTICAL (18) UNDISCIPLINED (19) [adjective] Not subjected to discipline, control or correction; uncorrected | [adjective] Lacking in self-control; ungovernable UNDISCOURAGED (18) UNDISGUISEDLY (19) UNDISSOCIATED (17) [adjective] Not dissociated UNDISTRIBUTED (17) [adjective] Not distributed UNDOCTRINAIRE (16) UNDUTIFULNESS (17) UNEARTHLINESS (16) UNELECTRIFIED (19) UNEMBARRASSED (18) [adjective] Not embarrassed UNEMBELLISHED (21) [adjective] Plain, unadorned, or simple. UNEMOTIONALLY (18) UNEMPLOYABLES (22) [noun] An individual who is not suited to employment. UNEMPLOYMENTS (22) UNENCOURAGING (17) UNENFORCEABLE (20) [adjective] Resistant to enforcement. UNENLIGHTENED (18) [adjective] Not enlightened; ignorant in general or of some particular fact. UNEQUIVOCABLY (32) UNEQUIVOCALLY (30) [adverb] In a way that leaves no doubt; in an unequivocal or unambiguous manner, unquestionably. UNESTABLISHED (19) [adjective] Not established. UNEXCEPTIONAL (24) [adjective] Not exceptional. UNEXPLAINABLE (24) [adjective] That doesn't have a known or readily available explaination. UNFALSIFIABLE (21) UNFALTERINGLY (20) UNFAMILIARITY (21) [noun] Lack of familiarity; ignorance or inexperience. UNFASHIONABLE (21) [adjective] That cannot be fashioned; unshapely, distorted. | [adjective] Not fashionable UNFASHIONABLY (24) UNFEELINGNESS (17) UNFLINCHINGLY (25) UNFORESEEABLE (18) [adjective] Incapable of being foreseen or anticipated UNFORGETTABLE (19) [adjective] Very difficult or impossible to forget UNFORGETTABLY (22) UNFORTHCOMING (24) [adjective] Not forthcoming; laconic or uncooperative UNFORTUNATELY (19) [adverb] Happening through bad luck, or because of some unfortunate event. | [adverb] Used (as a parenthetical word) to express disappointment, compassion, sorrow, regret or grief. UNFULFILLABLE (21) UNGENTLEMANLY (19) [adjective] Not gentlemanly; not adhering to the high moral standards expected of a gentleman; impolite, unchivalrous, or indecent. | [adverb] In a manner not befitting a gentleman. UNGODLINESSES (15) UNGRAMMATICAL (20) [adjective] In violation of one or more of the rules and conventions of a language as defined by the grammar, resulting in unacceptable or incorrect usage. UNGUARDEDNESS (16) UNHANDINESSES (17) UNHAPPINESSES (20) [noun] The feeling of not being happy UNHEALTHINESS (19) UNHOMOGENIZED (29) UNIDEOLOGICAL (17) UNIFORMNESSES (18) UNIMAGINATIVE (19) [adjective] Not imaginative. UNIMPASSIONED (18) [adjective] Not impassioned; lacking passion; without emotion. UNIMPEACHABLE (24) [adjective] Not able to be impeached or reproached. | [adjective] Blameless. | [adjective] Beyond doubt. UNIMPEACHABLY (27) UNINFORMATIVE (21) [adjective] Lacking useful or interesting information UNINHABITABLE (20) [adjective] Not fit for people (or other living things) to live in; not able to be inhabited. UNINHIBITEDLY (22) UNINSTRUCTIVE (18) UNINTELLIGENT (14) [adjective] Not intelligent. UNINTENTIONAL (13) [adjective] Not intended or deliberate; inadvertent; unwitting UNINTERESTING (14) [adjective] Arousing little or no interest; boring or uneventful. UNINTERRUPTED (16) [adjective] Continuing with no interruption UNINTIMIDATED (17) UNIONISATIONS (13) UNIONIZATIONS (22) UNIPARENTALLY (18) UNITARIANISMS (15) UNIVERSALISMS (18) UNIVERSALISTS (16) [noun] A proponent of universalism. UNIVERSALIZED (26) [verb] To make universal, to make consistent or common across all cases. UNIVERSALIZES (25) [verb] To make universal, to make consistent or common across all cases. UNIVERSALNESS (16) UNJUSTIFIABLE (25) [adjective] That cannot be justified, excused or pardoned. UNJUSTIFIABLY (28) UNKNOWABILITY (25) UNLIKELIHOODS (21) [noun] Absence of likelihood; the state of being unlikely or improbable; improbability. UNLUCKINESSES (19) UNMALICIOUSLY (20) UNMANIPULATED (18) UNMANLINESSES (15) UNMENTIONABLE (17) [noun] Something not to be discussed in polite society. | [adjective] Not mentionable UNMETABOLIZED (27) UNMITIGATEDLY (20) UNNATURALNESS (13) UNNECESSARILY (18) [adverb] In an unnecessary way; not by necessity. | [adverb] To an extent beyond what is needed. UNNILPENTIUMS (17) UNNILQUADIUMS (25) UNOBTRUSIVELY (21) [adverb] In an unobtrusive manner; in a manner that is not noticeable or blatant. UNORTHODOXIES (24) [noun] Lack of orthodoxy; the quality or state of being unorthodox UNPARASITIZED (25) UNPASTEURIZED (25) [adjective] Not pasteurized. UNPERFORMABLE (22) UNPICTURESQUE (26) [adjective] Not picturesque; unattractive. UNPRECEDENTED (19) [adjective] Never before seen, done, or experienced; without precedent. UNPREDICTABLE (20) [noun] An unpredictable thing. | [adjective] Unable to be predicted. UNPREDICTABLY (23) [adverb] In an unpredictable way. UNPRESSURIZED (25) [adjective] Not pressurized. UNPRETENTIOUS (15) [adjective] Simple, humble, not pretentious, plain. UNPROBLEMATIC (21) [adjective] Not problematic (presenting problems) or controversial. UNPROGRESSIVE (19) [adjective] Not progressive; not contributing to progress. UNPROMISINGLY (21) UNPUBLISHABLE (22) UNPUNCTUALITY (20) UNQUALIFIEDLY (29) UNQUESTIONING (23) [adjective] Believing without question; having absolute loyalty | [adjective] Naive. UNQUIETNESSES (22) UNREADINESSES (14) UNREASONINGLY (17) UNRECLAIMABLE (19) UNRECOVERABLE (20) [adjective] Not recoverable; that cannot be recovered. | [adjective] From which recovery is not possible. UNRELENTINGLY (17) UNRELIABILITY (18) [noun] The quality of being unreliable. UNREMINISCENT (17) UNREMITTINGLY (19) UNREPENTANTLY (18) UNREPRESENTED (16) [adjective] Not represented UNRESPECTABLE (19) UNRIGHTEOUSLY (20) UNSALVAGEABLE (19) [adjective] That cannot be salvaged; not salvageable UNSELECTIVELY (21) UNSELFISHNESS (19) UNSENSATIONAL (13) [adjective] Not sensational UNSENTIMENTAL (15) [adjective] Not sentimental. UNSERIOUSNESS (13) UNSERVICEABLE (20) [adjective] Unusable; of no use. | [adjective] Not working (machinery, etc). | [adjective] Impractical. UNSETTLEDNESS (14) UNSETTLEMENTS (15) UNSIGHTLINESS (17) UNSOCIABILITY (20) UNSOUNDNESSES (14) UNSPECIALIZED (27) [adjective] Having no speciality, or particular purpose | [adjective] (of a cell or tissue) Having no special function UNSPECIFIABLE (22) [adjective] Unable to be specified. UNSPECTACULAR (19) [adjective] Not spectacular. UNSUBSTANTIAL (15) [adjective] Insubstantial. UNSUITABILITY (18) UNSUPPORTABLE (19) [adjective] Not able to be supported or endured. UNSURPASSABLE (17) [adjective] Not surpassable; unable to be surpassed. UNSUSCEPTIBLE (19) [adjective] Not susceptible. UNSUSTAINABLE (15) [adjective] Not sustainable UNSYMMETRICAL (22) [adjective] Not symmetrical. UNSYMPATHETIC (25) [adjective] Not sympathetic UNTHEORETICAL (18) UNTHREATENING (17) [adjective] Not threatening UNTRADITIONAL (14) [adjective] Not traditional, or departing from tradition UNTRANSFORMED (19) [adjective] Not transformed; free of any transformation UNTRUSTWORTHY (22) [adjective] Not deserving of trust; unreliable. UNUSUALNESSES (13) UNWARRANTABLE (18) [adjective] Not warrantable; indefensible; not vindicable; not justifiable UNWARRANTABLY (21) UNWHOLESOMELY (24) UNWILLINGNESS (17) [noun] The property of being unwilling. UNWORKABILITY (25) UNWORLDLINESS (17) UPGRADABILITY (22) UPPERCLASSMAN (21) [noun] A junior or senior student in a school or college. UPPERCLASSMEN (21) [noun] A junior or senior student in a school or college. UPRIGHTNESSES (19) UPTIGHTNESSES (19) URANOGRAPHIES (19) URBANISATIONS (15) URBANIZATIONS (24) URBANOLOGISTS (16) UREDINIOSPORE (16) URETHROSCOPES (20) USELESSNESSES (13)

14-Letter Words (215)

UBIQUITOUSNESS (25) ULTIMATENESSES (16) ULTIMOGENITURE (17) [noun] A system of inheritance in which the youngest son or youngest child inherits an estate. ULTRACIVILIZED (29) ULTRACOMPETENT (20) ULTRAEFFICIENT (22) ULTRAENERGETIC (17) ULTRAEXCLUSIVE (26) ULTRAFILTRATES (17) ULTRAGLAMOROUS (17) ULTRAHAZARDOUS (27) ULTRAMARATHONS (19) [noun] A running race over a distance longer than 42.195 km, the length of a standard marathon. ULTRAMASCULINE (18) ULTRAMICROTOME (20) ULTRAMICROTOMY (23) ULTRAMILITANTS (16) ULTRAMINIATURE (16) ULTRAMODERNIST (17) ULTRAMONTANISM (18) ULTRAPATRIOTIC (18) ULTRAPRACTICAL (20) ULTRAPRECISION (18) ULTRAREALISTIC (16) ULTRARIGHTISTS (18) ULTRAROYALISTS (17) ULTRASENSITIVE (17) ULTRASONICALLY (19) ULTRASTRUCTURE (16) [noun] The fine, detailed structure of a biological specimen that can only be observed by electron microscopy ULTRAVIOLENCES (19) UMBRAGEOUSNESS (19) UNACADEMICALLY (24) UNACCLIMATIZED (30) UNACCOMMODATED (24) UNACCULTURATED (19) UNACCUSTOMEDLY (24) UNACKNOWLEDGED (26) [adjective] Not acknowledged UNAFFECTEDNESS (23) UNAFFECTIONATE (22) [adjective] Not affectionate; dispassionate. UNALTERABILITY (19) UNAMBIVALENTLY (24) UNANESTHETIZED (27) UNAPPETIZINGLY (31) UNAPPRECIATION (20) UNAPPRECIATIVE (23) [adjective] Not appreciative UNAPPROACHABLE (25) [adjective] Not accessible or able to be reached. | [adjective] Aloof and unfriendly. | [adjective] Without any serious competition; unbeatable. UNAPPROACHABLY (28) UNAPPROPRIATED (21) [adjective] That has not been appropriated for a specific use, or assigned to a specific person or organization. UNASSUMINGNESS (17) UNATTRACTIVELY (22) UNATTRIBUTABLE (18) UNAVAILABILITY (22) [noun] The state of being unavailable UNAVAILINGNESS (18) UNBECOMINGNESS (21) UNBIASEDNESSES (17) UNBUREAUCRATIC (20) UNBUSINESSLIKE (20) [adjective] Not businesslike. UNCHANGINGNESS (21) UNCHASTENESSES (19) UNCHAUVINISTIC (24) UNCHIVALROUSLY (25) UNCIRCUMCISION (22) UNCLASSIFIABLE (21) [adjective] Incapable of being classified. UNCOLLECTIBLES (20) UNCOMMONNESSES (20) UNCOMMUNICABLE (24) UNCOMPREHENDED (25) UNCOMPROMISING (23) [adjective] Inflexible and unwilling to negotiate or make concessions. | [adjective] Principled. UNCOMPUTERIZED (30) UNCONFORMITIES (21) [noun] A lack of conformity | [noun] A gap in time in rock strata, where erosion occurs while deposition slows or stops UNCONGENIALITY (20) UNCONSCIONABLE (20) [adjective] Not conscionable; unscrupulous and lacking principles or conscience. | [adjective] Excessive, imprudent or unreasonable. UNCONSCIONABLY (23) UNCONSOLIDATED (18) [adjective] Not (yet) consolidated UNCONSTRUCTIVE (21) [adjective] Not constructive; unhelpful. UNCONTAMINATED (19) [adjective] Not contaminated; unpolluted. UNCONTEMPLATED (21) UNCONTEMPORARY (23) UNCONTRADICTED (20) [adjective] Not contradicted; without contradiction; unquestioned. UNCONTROLLABLE (18) [adjective] Not able to be controlled, contained or governed. UNCONTROLLABLY (21) [adverb] In an uncontrollable manner; without being subject to control. UNCONVENTIONAL (19) [noun] Something or someone that is unconventional. | [adjective] Not adhering to convention or accepted standards | [adjective] Out of the ordinary UNCONVINCINGLY (25) UNCORROBORATED (19) [adjective] Not corroborated UNCREDENTIALED (18) UNCRYSTALLIZED (29) UNCTUOUSNESSES (16) UNDECIDABILITY (23) UNDECIPHERABLE (24) [adjective] Not easily deciphered; difficult to read. UNDENIABLENESS (17) UNDERACHIEVERS (23) UNDERACHIEVING (24) [verb] To achieve less than expected; to fail to fulfil one's potential. UNDERCARRIAGES (18) [noun] The supporting structural framework of a vehicle. | [noun] The landing gear of an aircraft. | [noun] The genitalia. UNDERCLOTHINGS (21) UNDERDEVELOPED (22) [verb] To develop insufficiently. | [adjective] Immature and not fully developed | [adjective] Having a low level of economic productivity and technological sophistication UNDEREMPHASIZE (31) [verb] To place insufficient emphasis on. UNDERESTIMATED (18) [verb] To perceive (someone or something) as having a lower value, quantity, worth, etc., than what he/she/it actually has. UNDERESTIMATES (17) [noun] An estimate that is too low. | [verb] To perceive (someone or something) as having a lower value, quantity, worth, etc., than what he/she/it actually has. UNDEREXPOSURES (24) UNDERGRADUATES (17) [noun] A student at a university who has not yet received a degree. UNDERGROUNDERS (17) UNDERINFLATION (18) UNDERNOURISHED (19) [adjective] Provided with insufficient nourishment to sustain proper health and growth. UNDERNUTRITION (15) [noun] Inadequate nutrition, either due to a lack of food, or to the inability of the body to absorb its nutrients UNDERPAINTINGS (18) UNDERPOPULATED (20) [adjective] Having an insufficient population for economic viability UNDERREPORTING (18) [verb] To report a number falsely, making it smaller than it ought to be, especially to do so intentionally | [verb] As a group, to report something less frequently than it actually occurs | [noun] The act, or the result of insufficiently reporting UNDERSATURATED (16) [adjective] Insufficiently saturated | [adjective] (of igneous rock) Having minerals without free silica UNDERSECRETARY (20) [noun] An administrator immediately subordinate to a head of a government department or to a member of a cabinet | [noun] An assistant or deputy secretary of a government department in the Philippines and some other countries. UNDERSTAFFINGS (22) UNDERSTANDABLE (18) [adjective] Capable of being understood; comprehensible. | [adjective] Capable of being accepted or excused under the circumstances. UNDERSTANDABLY (21) [adverb] For reasons that are easy to understand or sympathise with. | [adverb] In an understandable manner. UNDERSTANDINGS (17) [noun] (gerund) The act of one that understands or comprehends; comprehension; knowledge; discernment. | [noun] Reason or intelligence, ability to grasp the full meaning of knowledge, ability to infer. | [noun] Opinion, judgement or outlook. UNDERSTATEMENT (17) [noun] An incomplete statement, particularly: UNDERSTRAPPERS (19) [noun] Any underling or inferior in office. | [noun] A freelance operator for MI5. UNDERTHRUSTING (19) [verb] (of a tectonic plate) To thrust under another UNDERUTILIZING (25) [verb] Underuse UNDERVALUATION (18) UNDESIRABILITY (20) UNDETERMINABLE (19) UNDISCOVERABLE (22) [adjective] Unable to be discovered; hidden perfectly. | [adjective] Not subject to being produced in response to a discovery request. UNDOGMATICALLY (23) UNDOMESTICATED (20) [adjective] Not domesticated UNDRAMATICALLY (22) UNEMPHATICALLY (26) UNENLIGHTENING (19) [adjective] Not enlightening UNENTERPRISING (17) [adjective] Lacking the property of being enterprising. UNENTHUSIASTIC (19) [adjective] Without enthusiasm; unexcited. UNEVENTFULNESS (20) UNEXPECTEDNESS (26) UNFAITHFULNESS (23) UNFLAPPABILITY (26) UNFLATTERINGLY (21) UNFRIENDLINESS (18) UNFRUITFULNESS (20) UNGAINLINESSES (15) UNGENEROSITIES (15) UNGRACIOUSNESS (17) UNGRATEFULNESS (18) UNHESITATINGLY (21) UNHYSTERICALLY (25) UNIDENTIFIABLE (20) [adjective] Difficult, if not impossible, to identify or name UNIDIMENSIONAL (17) [adjective] One-dimensional UNIDIRECTIONAL (17) [noun] A fabric in which the majority of fibres run in the same single direction. | [adjective] Pertaining to only one direction, e.g.: where all component parts are aligned in the same direction in space. UNIFORMITARIAN (19) UNILLUMINATING (17) UNINCORPORATED (19) [adjective] Not organized as a corporation. | [adjective] (of land or the like) Not contained in a municipality. | [verb] To undo or remove the incorporation of. UNINGRATIATING (16) UNINTELLECTUAL (16) [adjective] (of a person) Not intellectual. | [adjective] (of a task) Not requiring the use of the intellect. UNINTELLIGIBLE (17) [adjective] Not intelligible; unable to be understood. UNINTELLIGIBLY (20) UNISEXUALITIES (21) UNIVERSALISTIC (19) UNIVERSALITIES (17) UNIVERSALIZING (27) [verb] To make universal, to make consistent or common across all cases. UNKINDLINESSES (19) UNLAWFULNESSES (20) UNLIKELINESSES (18) UNLOVELINESSES (17) UNMANNERLINESS (16) UNMENTIONABLES (18) [noun] Something not to be discussed in polite society. | [noun] Undergarments, underwear, drawers | [noun] Genitals UNOSTENTATIOUS (14) [adjective] Not ostentatious; simple; unpresuming. UNPALATABILITY (21) UNPLEASANTNESS (16) [noun] The property of being unpleasant or disagreeable. | [noun] An unpleasant behaviour, occurrence, etc. UNPOPULARITIES (18) UNPREDICTABLES (21) UNPREMEDITATED (20) [adjective] Performed, but not planned or thought out in advance; extemporaneous, but not unintentional. UNPREPAREDNESS (19) UNPROFESSIONAL (19) [noun] One who is not a professional. | [adjective] Unbecoming of a professional; hence inappropriate in the workplace | [adjective] Lacking a profession. UNPROGRAMMABLE (23) UNQUANTIFIABLE (28) [noun] Something that cannot be quantified. | [adjective] Incapable of being quantified or precisely defined mathematically. UNQUESTIONABLE (25) [adjective] Undeniable, obvious UNQUESTIONABLY (28) [adverb] Without question; beyond doubt; indubitably. | [adverb] OK, right-on UNRECOGNIZABLE (28) [adjective] That cannot be recognized, especially because of substantial changes UNRECOGNIZABLY (31) UNRECONCILABLE (20) UNREFRIGERATED (19) UNREGENERATELY (18) UNRESERVEDNESS (18) UNRESPONSIVELY (22) UNRESTRAINEDLY (18) UNROMANTICALLY (21) UNROMANTICIZED (28) UNSATISFACTORY (22) [adjective] Inadequate, substandard or not satisfactory UNSCRUPULOUSLY (21) UNSEEMLINESSES (16) UNSKILLFULNESS (21) UNSOCIABLENESS (18) UNSTABLENESSES (16) UNSTANDARDIZED (26) UNSTEADINESSES (15) UNSUCCESSFULLY (24) [adverb] Not successfully; without success; to no avail. UNSURPRISINGLY (20) [adverb] Not surprisingly, as could be expected. UNSYNCHRONIZED (32) UNSYSTEMATIZED (29) UNTENABILITIES (16) UNTHINKABILITY (26) UNTIMELINESSES (16) UNTOUCHABILITY (24) UNTOWARDNESSES (18) UNTRANSLATABLE (16) [noun] A word or phrase that is impossible to translate satisfactorily from one language to another. | [adjective] Not able to be translated. UNTRUTHFULNESS (20) UNWASHEDNESSES (21) UNWIELDINESSES (18) UNWONTEDNESSES (18) UNWORTHINESSES (20) UPGRADEABILITY (23) UPROARIOUSNESS (16) UPROOTEDNESSES (17) UPSTANDINGNESS (18) URBANISTICALLY (21) UREDINIOSPORES (17) USUFRUCTUARIES (19) USURIOUSNESSES (14) UTILITARIANISM (16) [noun] A system of ethics based on the premise that something's value may be measured by its usefulness. | [noun] The theory that action should be directed toward achieving the "greatest happiness for the greatest number of people" (hedonistic universalism), or one of various related theories. UXORIOUSNESSES (21)

15-Letter Words (125)

ULTIMOGENITURES (18) ULTRACENTRIFUGE (21) [noun] A high-speed centrifuge, especially one free from convection that is used to separate colloidal particles. | [verb] To submit a material to ultracentrifugation ULTRACOMMERCIAL (23) ULTRACONVENIENT (20) ULTRADEMOCRATIC (22) ULTRAFASTIDIOUS (19) ULTRAFILTRATION (18) [noun] Filtration through a semipermeable membrane that only allows small molecules through. ULTRALIBERALISM (19) ULTRAMARATHONER (20) ULTRAMICROSCOPE (23) [noun] A microscope that uses bright illumination against a black background to view small particles ULTRAMICROTOMES (21) ULTRAMODERNISTS (18) ULTRAMONTANISMS (19) ULTRASONOGRAPHY (24) [noun] The use of ultrasound to produce diagnostic images of the internal organs of the body, or of a foetus. | [noun] The use of ultrasound to form images of underwater structures. ULTRASTRUCTURAL (17) ULTRASTRUCTURES (17) [noun] The fine, detailed structure of a biological specimen that can only be observed by electron microscopy ULTRAVIRILITIES (18) UNACCEPTABILITY (26) UNACCOMMODATING (25) [adjective] Not accommodating. UNADULTERATEDLY (20) UNALTERABLENESS (17) UNANSWERABILITY (23) UNANTICIPATEDLY (23) UNAPPRECIATIONS (21) UNASSAILABILITY (20) UNBOUNDEDNESSES (19) UNCATEGORIZABLE (29) UNCEREMONIOUSLY (22) [adverb] In an unceremonious manner, abruptly, without the due formalities. UNCERTAINNESSES (17) UNCHALLENGEABLE (23) [adjective] Not open to challenge; indisputable UNCHANGEABILITY (26) UNCHOREOGRAPHED (27) UNCHRONOLOGICAL (23) UNCIRCUMCISIONS (23) UNCLEANLINESSES (17) UNCLIMBABLENESS (23) UNCOMMUNICATIVE (26) [adjective] Tending not to communicate; not communicating. UNCOMPASSIONATE (21) [adjective] Not compassionate. UNCOMPLAININGLY (25) UNCOMPLIMENTARY (26) [adjective] Not complimentary; negative or insulting. UNCOMPREHENDING (26) [adjective] Lacking comprehension or understanding. UNCOMPROMISABLE (25) UNCONCERNEDNESS (20) UNCONDITIONALLY (21) [adverb] Without condition, absolutely. UNCONSCIOUSNESS (19) [noun] The state of lacking consciousness, of being unconscious | [noun] Ignorance or innocence; the state of being uninformed or unaware UNCONTROVERSIAL (20) [adjective] Not controversial. UNCOPYRIGHTABLE (28) UNDEMONSTRATIVE (21) [adjective] Not given to showing emotion or feelings; reserved or distant. UNDERACTIVITIES (21) UNDEREMPHASIZED (33) [adjective] Insufficiently emphasized UNDEREMPHASIZES (32) [verb] To place insufficient emphasis on. UNDEREMPLOYMENT (25) UNDERESTIMATING (19) [verb] To perceive (someone or something) as having a lower value, quantity, worth, etc., than what he/she/it actually has. UNDERESTIMATION (18) [noun] An underestimate UNDERHANDEDNESS (21) [noun] The characteristic of being underhanded. UNDERINFLATIONS (19) UNDERINVESTMENT (21) UNDERNUTRITIONS (16) UNDERPRIVILEGED (23) [noun] A deprived person; deprived people (normally used as a plural). | [adjective] Deprived of the opportunities and advantages of others, usually through no fault of one's own. UNDERPRODUCTION (21) UNDERPUBLICIZED (32) UNDERSTANDINGLY (21) UNDERSTATEMENTS (18) [noun] An incomplete statement, particularly: UNDERVALUATIONS (19) UNDESIRABLENESS (18) UNDISTINGUISHED (21) [adjective] Not distinguished: not marked by conspicuous qualities. | [adjective] Not distinguished: not having an air of distinction. UNDUTIFULNESSES (19) UNEARTHLINESSES (18) UNEMPLOYABILITY (27) UNENDURABLENESS (18) UNEXCEPTIONABLE (28) [adjective] Beyond reproach; unimpeachable UNEXCEPTIONABLY (31) UNEXTRAORDINARY (26) UNFAMILIARITIES (20) [noun] Lack of familiarity; ignorance or inexperience. UNFAVORABLENESS (23) UNFEELINGNESSES (19) UNFORGIVINGNESS (23) UNFOSSILIFEROUS (21) UNGUARDEDNESSES (18) UNHEALTHINESSES (21) UNIFORMITARIANS (20) UNIMAGINATIVELY (24) UNINFORMATIVELY (26) UNINHIBITEDNESS (21) UNINTELLIGENTLY (19) UNINTENTIONALLY (18) [adverb] In an unintentional manner; not intentionally. UNINTERRUPTEDLY (21) UNIVERSALNESSES (18) UNKNOWABILITIES (24) UNKNOWLEDGEABLE (26) [adjective] Lacking knowledge, ignorant, naive, or foolish. UNMELODIOUSNESS (18) UNMITIGATEDNESS (19) UNNATURALNESSES (15) UNOBJECTIONABLE (28) [adjective] Not objectionable; not causing any objection. UNOBTRUSIVENESS (20) UNPARLIAMENTARY (22) [adjective] Unsuitable to be used in parliament | [adjective] Contrary to the rules of parliament UNPRECEDENTEDLY (24) UNPREPOSSESSING (20) [adjective] Unimpressive or unremarkable; dull and ordinary; nondescript. UNPRETENTIOUSLY (20) UNPROFESSIONALS (20) UNPRONOUNCEABLE (21) [noun] Something difficult or impossible to pronounce. | [adjective] Impossible or difficult to pronounce or articulate. UNPUNCTUALITIES (19) UNQUESTIONINGLY (28) UNREALISTICALLY (20) [adverb] In an unrealistic manner. UNRECONSTRUCTED (20) [verb] To reverse or undo the effects of reconstruction. | [adjective] Not reconstructed. | [adjective] Unreconciled to social or cultural change; particularly with respect to the Reconstruction after the American Civil War. UNRELIABILITIES (17) [noun] The quality of being unreliable. UNREVOLUTIONARY (21) UNRIGHTEOUSNESS (19) UNSELFISHNESSES (21) UNSERIOUSNESSES (15) UNSETTLEDNESSES (16) UNSIGHTLINESSES (19) UNSOCIABILITIES (19) UNSOPHISTICATED (23) [adjective] Not sophisticated; lacking sophistication. UNSPORTSMANLIKE (23) [adjective] Violating the accepted standards of sportsmanship UNSUBSTANTIALLY (20) UNSUBSTANTIATED (18) [verb] To prove false; to disprove or discredit. | [verb] (human services) To officially categorize (an allegation) as unsubstantiated. | [verb] To call into question; to create doubt about. UNSUITABILITIES (17) UNSYMMETRICALLY (27) UNTRADITIONALLY (19) UNWILLINGNESSES (19) UNWORKABILITIES (24) UNWORLDLINESSES (19) UPGRADABILITIES (21) UTILITARIANISMS (17)

About This Word List

This page lists all upwords words starting with the letter U. Whether you're playing Upwords, looking for crossword answers, or solving a word puzzle, this list gives you every valid word to choose from. Click any word to use our word unscrambler and see all possible words from those letters.

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