| ABSTRUSER | • abstruser adj. (Rare) comparative form of abstruse: more abstruse. • ABSTRUSE adj. difficult to understand. |
| ANACRUSES | • anacruses n. Plural of anacrusis. • ANACRUSIS n. (Greek) one or more unstressed notes immediately preceding the first bar line. |
| CHURRUSES | • churruses n. Plural of churrus. • CHURRUS n. (Hindi) the resinous exudation of hashish, a narcotic and intoxicant, also CHARAS. |
| FRUSEMIDE | • frusemide n. Former BAN name of the drug furosemide. • FRUSEMIDE n. a synthetic diuretic drug used esp. in treating oedema, also FUROSEMIDE. |
| ICTERUSES | • ICTERUS n. (Greek) a diseased condition of the liver, jaundice. |
| KASHRUSES | • KASHRUS n. (Hebrew) the Jewish laws of diet and food preparation, also KASHRUTH, KASHRUT. |
| OESTRUSES | • oestruses n. Plural of oestrus. • œstruses n. Plural of œstrus. • OESTRUS n. (Latin) the period of heat in female mammals, also ESTRUM, OESTRUM, ESTRUS. |
| PAPYRUSES | • papyruses n. Plural of papyrus. • PAPYRUS n. (Latin) a parchment made from reeds. |
| PELORUSES | • peloruses n. Plural of pelorus. • PELORUS n. (Latin) a kind of compass from which bearings can be taken. |
| PYLORUSES | • pyloruses n. Plural of pylorus. • PYLORUS n. (Latin) the opening between the stomach and the duodenum. |
| REPERUSED | • reperused v. Simple past tense and past participle of reperuse. • REPERUSE v. to peruse again. |
| REPERUSES | • reperuses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of reperuse. • REPERUSE v. to peruse again. |
| SUPERUSER | • superuser n. (Computing) A user with complete access to the operating system and its configuration. • super-user n. Alternative spelling of superuser. • SUPERUSER n. in computing, a special facility used by a systems administrator, giving unrestricted access to the system. |
| UNDERUSED | • underused adj. Used less than normal or desirable. • underused v. Simple past tense and past participle of underuse. • UNDERUSE v. to not use to the fullest extent. |
| UNDERUSES | • underuses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of underuse. • UNDERUSE v. to not use to the fullest extent. |