| BUNCOS | • buncos n. Plural of bunco. • BUNCO v. to practice such a trick, also BUNKO. |
| JUNCOS | • juncos n. Plural of junco. • JUNCO n. (Spanish) a North American bird. |
| UNCOCK | • uncock v. To straighten or flatten (remove a cocked shape). • uncock v. (Transitive) To let down the cock of (a firearm). • uncock v. To open or spread from a cock or heap, as hay. |
| UNCOER | • UNCO adj. (Scots) strange; foreign; extraordinary. |
| UNCOES | • UNCO n. a stranger, a piece of news. |
| UNCOIL | • uncoil v. (Transitive) To unwind or untwist (something). • uncoil v. (Intransitive) To unwind or untwist oneself. • UNCOIL v. to release from a coiled position. |
| UNCOLT | • uncolt v. (Obsolete) To unhorse; to deprive of a colt or horse. • UNCOLT v. (Shakespeare) to unhorse. |
| UNCOOL | • uncool adj. (Slang) Not in accord with the current fashion, standards or mores of a particular group; not cool. • UNCOOL adj. not cool. |
| UNCOPE | • UNCOPE v. to unmuzzle or unsew the mouth (of a ferret). |
| UNCORD | • uncord v. (Transitive) To release from cords; to unbind. • UNCORD v. to free from cords. |
| UNCORK | • uncork v. (Transitive) To open (a bottle or other container sealed with a cork or stopper) by removing the cork or stopper from. • uncork v. (Transitive) To release. • UNCORK v. to draw the cork. |
| UNCOWL | • uncowl v. (Transitive) To divest or deprive of a cowl (monk’s hood or hooded robe). • uncowl v. (Transitive, figurative, archaic) To uncover; to unveil. • uncowl v. (Instransitive) To remove or pull back one’s cowl. |