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English 7 letter words - Containing letters eucr - page 1

Next letter probability

s : 35.02%

t : 23.40%

a : 22.91%

l : 22.42%

o : 21.77%

n : 18.82%

i : 16.86%

h : 15.55%

d : 15.06%

p : 12.77%

b : 9.82%

m : 9.66%

k : 9.17%

f : 4.26%

y : 4.09%

g : 3.93%

v : 3.60%

q : 2.62%

w : 1.15%

x : 0.65%

j : 0.65%

z : 0.16%

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accrued

accrued

adj

  1. Having increased through accrual; having risen over time or due to financial transactions.

verb

  1. simple past tense and past participle of accrue

accruer

accruer

noun

  1. (law) The act of accruing; accretion.

accrues

accrues

noun

  1. plural of accrue

verb

  1. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of accrue

accurre

accurse

accurse

verb

  1. To damn; to wish misery or evil upon

accuser

accuser

noun

  1. One who accuses; one who brings a charge of crime or fault.

acerous

acerous

adj

  1. (zoology) Destitute of tentacles.
  2. (zoology) Without antennae.
  3. Alternative spelling of acerose

acquire

acquire

verb

  1. (computing) To sample signals and convert them into digital values.
  2. (medicine) To contract.
  3. (transitive) To gain, usually by one's own exertions; to get as one's own
  4. (transitive) To get.

acuerdo

adducer

adducer

noun

  1. One who adduces.

aneuric

apercus

apercus

noun

  1. plural of apercu

archeus

archeus

noun

  1. (alchemy) The vital principle or force believed by the Paracelsians to be responsible for alchemical reactions within living bodies, and hence for the growth and continuation of life.

arcuale

arcuate

arcuate

adj

  1. curved into the shape of a bow

arcuses

arecuna

aucaner

auresca

auricle

auricle

noun

  1. (anatomy) An anterior ear-shaped appendage of the left or right atrium of the human heart.
  2. (anatomy) Synonym of atrium.
  3. (anatomy) The outer ear or pinna.
  4. (biology) Any appendage in the shape of an ear or earlobe.

becquer

becrush

becrust

becurry

becurse

becurse

verb

  1. (transitive) To cover with curses; curse all over.

becurst

berceau

bescour

bescurf

blucher

blucher

noun

  1. (historical) A form of horse-drawn carriage; a Blucher coach.
  2. A sturdy laced leather half-boot.

boucher

bouncer

bouncer

noun

  1. (Internet) An account or server (as with IRC and FTP) that invisibly redirects requests to another, used for anonymity or vanity.
  2. (cricket) A short-pitched ball that bounces up towards, or above the height of the batsman’s head.
  3. (dated) One who bounces; a large, heavy person who makes much noise in moving.
  4. (informal) A member of security personnel employed by bars, nightclubs, etc to maintain order and deal with patrons who cause trouble.
  5. (slang, archaic) A boaster; a bully.
  6. (slang, archaic) A bold lie.
  7. (slang, archaic) A liar.
  8. A bouncy castle.
  9. A kind of seat mounted in a framework in which a baby can bounce up and down.
  10. Something big; a good stout example of the kind.

broucek

brubeck

brucine

brucine

noun

  1. (organic chemistry) An alkaloid related to strychnine, found in several plant species, notably Strychnos nux-vomica (nux vomica).

brucite

brucite

noun

  1. (mineralogy) A mineral form of magnesium hydroxide, Mg(OH)₂, often found in thin foliated plates, but may be fibrous (see nemalite), of a white or greenish color and vitreous to pearly luster.

bruckle

bruckle

adj

  1. (dialectal) Frail, weak, fragile.

buceros

buchner

buckers

buckers

noun

  1. plural of bucker

buckler

buckler

noun

  1. (nautical) A block of wood or plate of iron made to fit a hawse hole, or the circular opening in a half-port, to prevent water from entering when the vessel pitches.
  2. (obsolete) A shield resembling the Roman scutum. In modern usage, a smaller variety of shield is usually implied by this term.
  3. (zoology) One of the large, bony, external plates found on many ganoid fishes.
  4. (zoology) The anterior segment of the shell of a trilobite.
  5. A kind of shield, of various shapes and sizes, held in the hand or worn on the arm (usually the left), for protecting the front of the body. In the sword and buckler play of the Middle Ages in England, the buckler was a small shield, used not to cover the body but to stop or parry blows.
  6. One who buckles something.

verb

  1. (transitive, obsolete) To shield; to defend.

buckner

bucrane

buncher

buncher

noun

  1. (electronics, physics) A circuit that causes electrons or other charged particles in a particle beam to group together.
  2. (manufacturing) A machine that twists strands together during the manufacture of metal wire; a strander.
  3. (military, RAF, World War II) A ground-based radio transmitter, configured within a system to guide aircraft to their allocated airfields.
  4. A person who bunches.
  5. An illegitimate supplier of laboratory animals who obtains the animals by kidnapping pets or illegally trapping strays.

burlace

butcher

butcher

adj

  1. comparative form of butch: more butch

noun

  1. (Cockney rhyming slang, from butcher's hook) A look.
  2. (colloquial, archaic, card games) A king playing card.
  3. (figurative) A brutal or indiscriminate killer.
  4. (informal, obsolete) A person who sells candy, drinks, etc. in theatres, trains, circuses, etc.
  5. A person who prepares and sells meat (and sometimes also slaughters the animals).

verb

  1. (transitive) To kill brutally.
  2. (transitive) To mess up hopelessly; to botch.
  3. (transitive) To ruin (something), often to the point of defamation.
  4. (transitive) To slaughter (animals) and prepare (meat) for market.
  5. (transitive) To work as a butcher.

caesura

caesura

noun

  1. (Classical prosody) Using two words to divide a metrical foot.
  2. (rare) A break of an era or other measure of history and time; where one era ends and another begins; turning point.
  3. (typography) The caesura mark ‖ or ||.
  4. A pause or interruption in a poem, music, building, or other work of art.

capture

capture

noun

  1. (computing) A particular match found for a pattern in a text string.
  2. An act of capturing; a seizing by force or stratagem.
  3. Something that has been captured; a captive.
  4. The recording or storage of something for later playback.
  5. The securing of an object of strife or desire, as by the power of some attraction.

verb

  1. (transitive) To remove or take control of an opponent’s piece in a game (e.g., chess, go, checkers).
  2. (transitive) To reproduce convincingly.
  3. (transitive) To store (as in sounds or image) for later revisitation.
  4. (transitive) To take control of; to seize by force or stratagem.

carbure

cardecu

cardecu

noun

  1. (historical) A silver French coin worth a quarter of an écu.

careful

careful

adj

  1. (obsolete) Full of care or grief; sorrowful, sad.
  2. (obsolete) Full of cares or anxiety; worried, troubled.
  3. Conscientious and painstaking; meticulous.
  4. Taking care; attentive to potential danger, error or harm; cautious.

cargued

carneau

carneus

carouse

carouse

noun

  1. A drinking bout; a carousal.
  2. A large draught of liquor.

verb

  1. (intransitive) To drink to excess.
  2. (intransitive) To engage in a noisy or drunken social gathering.

carreau

caruage

catreus

caulker

caulker

noun

  1. (informal) Archaic form of corker (“something large or remarkable, a whopper”).
  2. (slang, archaic) An alcoholic drink; a dram.
  3. A person who caulks various structures (as ships) and certain types of piping.
  4. A tool used for caulking ships; a caulking iron.

caunter

caurale

causers

causers

noun

  1. plural of causer

causeur

cautery

cautery

noun

  1. (surgery) A device used for cutting or sealing body tissue.
  2. (surgery) The process of using either extreme heat or extreme cold to either cut or seal body tissue.

cauvery

cedrium

censure

censure

noun

  1. (obsolete) Judgment either favorable or unfavorable; opinion.
  2. An official reprimand.
  3. Judicial or ecclesiastical sentence or reprimand; condemnatory judgment.
  4. The act of blaming, criticizing, or condemning as wrong; reprehension.

verb

  1. (obsolete) To form or express a judgment in regard to; to estimate; to judge.
  2. To criticize harshly.
  3. To formally rebuke.

centaur

centaur

noun

  1. (Greek mythology) A mythical beast having a horse's body with a man's head and torso in place of the head and neck of the horse.
  2. (astronomy, also capitalised) An icy planetoid that orbits the Sun between Jupiter and Neptune.
  3. (chess) A chess-playing team comprising a human player and a computer who work together.

centrum

centrum

noun

  1. (seismology) The focus or place of origin of an earthquake.
  2. A center.
  3. The basis or fundamental portion of one of the cranial segments, regarded as analogous to vertebrae.
  4. The central body of a vertebra; the solid piece to which the arches and some other parts are or may be attached.

centure

century

century

noun

  1. (US, informal) A banknote in the denomination of one hundred dollars.
  2. (cricket) A hundred runs scored either by a single player in one innings, or by two players in a partnership.
  3. (snooker) A score of one hundred points.
  4. (sports) A race a hundred units (as meters, kilometres, miles) in length.
  5. A hundred things of the same kind; a hundred.
  6. A period of 100 consecutive years; often specifically a numbered period with conventional start and end dates, e.g., the twentieth century, which stretches from (strictly) 1901 through 2000, or (informally) 1900 through 1999. The first century AD was from 1 to 100.
  7. A political division of ancient Rome, meeting in the Centuriate Assembly.
  8. A unit in ancient Roman army, originally of 100 army soldiers as part of a cohort, later of more varied sizes (but typically containing 60 to 70 or 80) soldiers or other men (guards, police, firemen), commanded by a centurion.

cerasus

cereous

cereous

adj

  1. (obsolete) waxen; like wax

ceriums

ceriums

noun

  1. plural of cerium

cernuda

cerumen

cerumen

noun

  1. earwax

ceruses

cestrum

cesurae

cesural

cesural

adj

  1. Alternative form of caesural

cesuras

cesuras

noun

  1. plural of cesura

charque

chaucer

chaucer

Proper noun

  1. notably borne by a 14th century English author, best remembered for The Canterbury Tales.

chaufer

chaumer

chelura

chequer

chequer

noun

  1. Alternative spelling of checker (in certain senses only)
  2. The edible fruit of the wild service tree, Sorbus torminalis.

verb

  1. Alternative spelling of checker

chergui

chergui

noun

  1. Alternative form of sharqi

cherubs

cherubs

noun

  1. plural of cherub

chetrum

chetrum

noun

  1. A subdivision of currency, equal to one hundredth of a Bhutanese ngultrum

choreus

choreus

noun

  1. (prosody) A tribrach.
  2. (prosody) A trochee.

chouser

chouser

noun

  1. Agent noun of chouse: one who chouses.

chucker

chucker

noun

  1. (cricket) A bowler who throws or chucks the ball rather than bowls it.
  2. One who chucks; a thrower.

chudder

chuffer

chugger

chugger

noun

  1. (fishing) A type of fish lure or fly that makes a popping or chugging sound when twitched.
  2. (informal, derogatory) A street fundraiser, especially a private contractor, working on behalf of a charity, who is aggressive or invasive.
  3. A vehicle, train or boat with an engine that makes a chugging noise when running.
  4. One who chugs a drink, especially an alcoholic drink.

chukker

chukker

noun

  1. One of the six playing periods, each 7½ minutes long, of a game of polo.

chummer

chummer

noun

  1. One who fishes by casting chum into the water to attract the fish.

chunder

chunder

noun

  1. (UK, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, slang) An act of vomiting.
  2. (UK, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, slang) Vomit.
  3. Heavy, sticky snow that makes snowsports difficult.

verb

  1. (Australia, New Zealand, Britain, slang) To throw up, to vomit.
  2. Of a motor vehicle: to rumble loudly, to roar.

chunner

chunner

verb

  1. (intransitive) To talk tiresomely or at length; to chatter on.

chunter

chunter

verb

  1. (British, Ireland, dialect) To grumble, complain.
  2. (British, Ireland, dialect) To speak in a soft, indistinct manner, mutter.

churled

churned

churned

verb

  1. simple past tense and past participle of churn

churner

churner

noun

  1. The vessel in which cream is churned to make butter.

churred

churred

verb

  1. simple past tense and past participle of churr

circule

cirques

cirques

noun

  1. plural of cirque

ciruela

ciruela

noun

  1. The plant Spondias purpurea.

ciruses

claquer

claquer

noun

  1. Alternative form of claqueur

clauber

clauber

noun

  1. Alternative form of clabber

cleruch

cleruch

noun

  1. (historical) A settler under the system of cleruchy

closure

closure

noun

  1. (mathematics) The smallest set that both includes a given subset and possesses some given property.
  2. (obsolete) That which encloses or confines; an enclosure.
  3. (politics) A method of ending a parliamentary debate and securing an immediate vote upon a measure before a legislative body.
  4. (programming) An abstraction that represents a function within an environment, a context consisting of the variables that are both bound at a particular time during the execution of the program and that are within the function's scope.
  5. (sociology) The phenomenon by which a group maintains its resources by the exclusion of others from their group based on varied criteria. ᵂᵖ
  6. (topology, of a set) The smallest closed set which contains the given set.
  7. A device to facilitate temporary and repeatable opening and closing.
  8. A feeling of completeness; the experience of an emotional conclusion, usually to a difficult period.
  9. An event or occurrence that signifies an ending.
  10. That which closes or shuts; that by which separate parts are fastened or closed.
  11. The act of shutting or closing something permanently or temporarily.
  12. The act of shutting; a closing.
  13. The process whereby the reader of a comic book infers the sequence of events by looking at the picture panels.

cloture

cloture

noun

  1. (law, politics, chiefly US) In legislative assemblies that permit unlimited debate (that is, a filibuster): a motion, procedure or rule by which debate is ended so that a vote may be taken on the matter. For example, in the United States Senate, a three-fifths majority vote of the body is required to invoke cloture and terminate debate.

verb

  1. To end legislative debate by this means.

cloured

cloured

verb

  1. simple past tense and past participle of clour

clouter

clouter

noun

  1. (obsolete) One who patches clothes.
  2. One who clouts or strikes.

clubber

clubber

noun

  1. One who clubs, who hits objects with a club.
  2. One who partakes in clubbing, who frequents nightclubs.

cludder

clumber

clumper

clumper

noun

  1. A grass or other plant that tends to form clumps.

verb

  1. (obsolete, intransitive) To form into clumps or masses.

clunker

clunker

noun

  1. (informal) A decrepit motor car.
  2. (informal) Anything which is in poor condition or of poor quality.

clunter

cluster

cluster

noun

  1. (army) A small metal design that indicates that a medal has been awarded to the same person before.
  2. (astronomy) A group of galaxies or stars that appear near each other.
  3. (chemistry) An ensemble of bound atoms or molecules, intermediate in size between a molecule and a bulk solid.
  4. (computing) A group of computers that work together.
  5. (computing) A logical data storage unit containing one or more physical sectors (see block).
  6. (linguistics, education) A sequence of two or more words that occur in language with high frequency but are not idiomatic; a chunk, bundle, or lexical bundle.
  7. (military) A set of bombs or mines released as part of the same blast.
  8. (music) A secundal chord of three or more notes.
  9. (phonetics) A group of consonants.
  10. (slang, euphemistic) A clusterfuck.
  11. (statistics, cluster analysis) A subset of a population whose members are sufficiently similar to each other and distinct from others as to be considered a distinct group; such a grouping in a set of observed data that is statistically significant.
  12. A group or bunch of several discrete items that are close to each other.
  13. A number of individuals grouped together or collected in one place; a crowd; a mob.

verb

  1. (intransitive) To form a cluster or group.
  2. (transitive) To collect into clusters.
  3. (transitive) To cover with clusters.

cluther

clutier

clutter

clutter

noun

  1. (countable) Alternative form of clowder (“collective noun for cats”).
  2. (obsolete) Clatter; confused noise.
  3. (uncountable) A confused disordered jumble of things.
  4. (uncountable) Background echoes, from clouds etc., on a radar or sonar screen.

verb

  1. (obsolete, intransitive) To clot or coagulate, like blood.
  2. To fill something with clutter.
  3. To make a confused noise; to bustle.
  4. To utter words hurriedly, especially (but not exclusively) as a speech disorder (compare cluttering).

cneorum

coeburn

coenure

coenure

noun

  1. the larva of Taenia coenurus, the canine tapeworm - causes staggers in sheep

coenuri

coenuri

noun

  1. plural of coenurus

coiture

coluber

colures

colures

noun

  1. plural of colure

combure

congrue

congrue

verb

  1. (obsolete) To agree; to be suitable.

conjure

conjure

noun

  1. (African-American Vernacular) The practice of magic; hoodoo; conjuration.

verb

  1. (intransitive) To perform magic tricks.
  2. (intransitive, archaic) To practice black magic.
  3. (intransitive, obsolete) To conspire or plot.
  4. (transitive) To evoke.
  5. (transitive) To imagine or picture in the mind.
  6. (transitive) To summon (a devil, etc.) using supernatural power.
  7. (transitive, archaic) To enchant or bewitch.
  8. (transitive, archaic) To make an urgent request to; to appeal to or beseech.

conquer

conquer

verb

  1. (dated) To gain, win, or obtain by effort.
  2. To acquire by force of arms, win in war; to become ruler of; to subjugate.
  3. To defeat in combat; to subjugate.
  4. To overcome an abstract obstacle.

conteur

copreus

corbeau

corbeau

noun

  1. (historical) A man who carts away the dead plague victims.
  2. A very dark shade of green, almost black.
  3. The black vulture, Coragyps atratus.

corbleu

cordeau

cordeau

noun

  1. (archaic) A detonating cord.

coresus

corneum

corneum

noun

  1. (anatomy) The outermost layer of the skin.

cornule

cornute

cornute

adj

  1. cornuted

verb

  1. (transitive) To give 'horns' to; to make a cuckold of.

coruler

coruler

noun

  1. One who jointly rules with somebody else.

coucher

coucher

noun

  1. (UK, law, obsolete) A factor or agent resident in a country for traffic.
  2. (papermaking) One who couches paper.
  3. One who couches.
  4. The book in which a corporation or other body registers its particular acts.

cougher

cougher

noun

  1. A person who coughs.

couleur

couleur

noun

  1. (card games) A suit of cards, in certain French card games.

coulier

coulter

coulter

noun

  1. (Britain) Alternative spelling of colter

coulure

coulure

noun

  1. A disease affecting grapes, manifested by the premature dropping of the fruit.

counter

counter

adj

  1. Contrary or opposing

adv

  1. Contrary, in opposition; in an opposite direction.
  2. In the wrong way; contrary to the right course.

noun

  1. (Internet) A hit counter.
  2. (curling) Any stone lying closer to the center than any of the opponent's stones.
  3. (grammar) A class of word used along with numbers to count objects and events, typically mass nouns. Although rare and optional in English (e.g. "20 head of cattle"), they are numerous and required in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean.
  4. (historical) The prison attached to a city court; a compter.
  5. (martial arts) A proactive defensive hold or move in reaction to a hold or move by one's opponent.
  6. (music) Alternative form of contra Formerly used to designate any under part which served for contrast to a principal part, but now used as equivalent to countertenor.
  7. (nautical) The overhanging stern of a vessel above the waterline, below and somewhat forward of the stern proper.
  8. (programming) A variable, memory location, etc. whose contents are incremented to keep a count.
  9. (typography) The enclosed or partly closed negative space of a glyph.
  10. A reckoner; someone who collects data by counting; an enumerator.
  11. A shop tabletop on which goods are examined, weighed or measured.
  12. A table or board on which money is counted and over which business is transacted
  13. A telltale; a contrivance attached to an engine, printing press, or other machine, for the purpose of counting the revolutions or the pulsations.
  14. An object (now especially a small disc) used in counting or keeping count, or as a marker in games, etc.
  15. In a bathroom, a surface, often built into the wall and above a cabinet, which holds the washbasin.
  16. In a kitchen, a surface, often built into the wall and above a cabinet, designed to be used for food preparation.
  17. One who counts.
  18. The breast of a horse; that part of a horse between the shoulders and under the neck.
  19. The piece of a shoe or a boot around the heel of the foot (above the heel of the shoe/boot).

verb

  1. (boxing) To return a blow while receiving one, as in boxing.
  2. (transitive, obsolete) To encounter.
  3. To contradict, oppose.
  4. To take action in response to; to respond.

coupler

coupler

noun

  1. (music) A device that connects two keyboards of an organ together so that they play together.
  2. (now rare) Someone who couples things together, especially someone whose job it is to couple railway carriages.
  3. A device used to convert electronic information into audible sound signals for transmission over telephone lines.
  4. An electrical device used to transfer energy from one electric device to another, especially without a physical connection.
  5. Anything that serves to couple things together; but especially a device that couples railway carriages.

coupure

coupure

noun

  1. (fortification) A passage cut through the glacis to facilitate sallies by the besieged.