We found 89 words by descrambling these letters UNERRANT

6 Letter Words Unscrambled From UNERRANT


5 Letter Words Unscrambled From UNERRANT


4 Letter Words Unscrambled From UNERRANT


3 Letter Words Unscrambled From UNERRANT


2 Letter Words Unscrambled From UNERRANT


More About The Unscrambled Letters in UNERRANT

Our word finder found 89 words from the 8 scrambled letters in A E N N R R T U you searched for.

These valid words can be used in all popular word scramble games, including Scrabble, Words With Friends, and similar word games.

Furthermore, we grouped the unscrambled letters into the following categories:

What Can The Letters UNERRANT Mean ?

These are the meanings of the letters UNERRANT when you unscramble them.

  • Errant (a.)
    Journeying; itinerant; -- formerly applied to judges who went on circuit and to bailiffs at large.
  • Errant (a.)
    Notorious; notoriously bad; downright; arrant.
  • Errant (a.)
    Wandering; deviating from an appointed course, or from a direct path; roving.
  • Errant (n.)
    One who wanders about.
  • Nature (n.)
    Conformity to that which is natural, as distinguished from that which is artifical, or forced, or remote from actual experience.
  • Nature (n.)
    Constitution or quality of mind or character.
  • Nature (n.)
    Hence: Kind, sort; character; quality.
  • Nature (n.)
    Natural affection or reverence.
  • Nature (n.)
    Physical constitution or existence; the vital powers; the natural life.
  • Nature (n.)
    The established or regular course of things; usual order of events; connection of cause and effect.
  • Nature (n.)
    The existing system of things; the world of matter, or of matter and mind; the creation; the universe.
  • Nature (n.)
    The personified sum and order of causes and effects; the powers which produce existing phenomena, whether in the total or in detail; the agencies which carry on the processes of creation or of being; -- often conceived of as a single and separate entity, embodying the total of all finite agencies and forces as disconnected from a creating or ordering intelligence.
  • Nature (n.)
    The sum of qualities and attributes which make a person or thing what it is, as distinct from others; native character; inherent or essential qualities or attributes; peculiar constitution or quality of being.
  • Nature (v. t.)
    To endow with natural qualities.
  • Ranter (n.)
    A noisy talker; a raving declaimer.
  • Ranter (n.)
    One of a religious sect which sprung up in 1645; -- called also Seekers. See Seeker.
  • Ranter (n.)
    One of the Primitive Methodists, who seceded from the Wesleyan Methodists on the ground of their deficiency in fervor and zeal; -- so called in contempt.
  • Return (n.)
    A day in bank. See Return day, below.
  • Return (n.)
    A payment; a remittance; a requital.
  • Return (n.)
    An account, or formal report, of an action performed, of a duty discharged, of facts or statistics, and the like; as, election returns; a return of the amount of goods produced or sold; especially, in the plural, a set of tabulated statistics prepared for general information.
  • Return (n.)
    An answer; as, a return to one's question.
  • Return (n.)
    An official account, report, or statement, rendered to the commander or other superior officer; as, the return of men fit for duty; the return of the number of the sick; the return of provisions, etc.
  • Return (n.)
    That which is returned.
  • Return (n.)
    The act of returning (intransitive), or coming back to the same place or condition; as, the return of one long absent; the return of health; the return of the seasons, or of an anniversary.
  • Return (n.)
    The act of returning (transitive), or sending back to the same place or condition; restitution; repayment; requital; retribution; as, the return of anything borrowed, as a book or money; a good return in tennis.
  • Return (n.)
    The certificate of an officer stating what he has done in execution of a writ, precept, etc., indorsed on the document.
  • Return (n.)
    The continuation in a different direction, most often at a right angle, of a building, face of a building, or any member, as a molding or mold; -- applied to the shorter in contradistinction to the longer; thus, a facade of sixty feet east and west has a return of twenty feet north and south.
  • Return (n.)
    The profit on, or advantage received from, labor, or an investment, undertaking, adventure, etc.
  • Return (n.)
    The rendering back or delivery of writ, precept, or execution, to the proper officer or court.
  • Return (n.)
    The sending back of a commission with the certificate of the commissioners.
  • Return (n.)
    The turnings and windings of a trench or mine.
  • Return (v. i.)
    To come back, or begin again, after an interval, regular or irregular; to appear again.
  • Return (v. i.)
    To go back in thought, narration, or argument.
  • Return (v. i.)
    To revert; to pass back into possession.
  • Return (v. i.)
    To speak in answer; to reply; to respond.
  • Return (v. i.)
    To turn back; to go or come again to the same place or condition.
  • Return (v. t.)
    Hence, to elect according to the official report of the election officers.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To bat (the ball) back over the net.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To bring or send back to a tribunal, or to an office, with a certificate of what has been done; as, to return a writ.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To bring, carry, send, or turn, back; as, to return a borrowed book, or a hired horse.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To convey into official custody, or to a general depository.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To give back in reply; as, to return an answer; to return thanks.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To give in requital or recompense; to requite.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To lead in response to the lead of one's partner; as, to return a trump; to return a diamond for a club.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To render, as an account, usually an official account, to a superior; to report officially by a list or statement; as, to return a list of stores, of killed or wounded; to return the result of an election.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To repay; as, to return borrowed money.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To report, or bring back and make known.
  • Return (v. t.)
    To retort; to throw back; as, to return the lie.
  • Runner (n.)
    A detective.
  • Runner (n.)
    A food fish (Elagatis pinnulatus) of Florida and the West Indies; -- called also skipjack, shoemaker, and yellowtail. The name alludes to its rapid successive leaps from the water.
  • Runner (n.)
    A horizontal channel in a mold, through which the metal flows to the cavity formed by the pattern; also, the waste metal left in such a channel.
  • Runner (n.)
    A messenger.
  • Runner (n.)
    A movable slab or rubber used in grinding or polishing a surface of stone.
  • Runner (n.)
    A rope rove through a block and used to increase the mechanical power of a tackle.
  • Runner (n.)
    A slender trailing branch which takes root at the joints or end and there forms new plants, as in the strawberry and the common cinquefoil.
  • Runner (n.)
    A smuggler.
  • Runner (n.)
    A tool on which lenses are fastened in a group, for polishing or grinding.
  • Runner (n.)
    A trough or channel for leading molten metal from a furnace to a ladle, mold, or pig bed.
  • Runner (n.)
    Any cursorial bird.
  • Runner (n.)
    One employed to solicit patronage, as for a steamboat, hotel, shop, etc.
  • Runner (n.)
    One of the pieces on which a sled or sleigh slides; also the part or blade of a skate which slides on the ice.
  • Runner (n.)
    One who, or that which, runs; a racer.
  • Runner (n.)
    The movable piece to which the ribs of an umbrella are attached.
  • Runner (n.)
    The rotating stone of a set of millstones.
  • Tanner (n.)
    One whose occupation is to tan hides, or convert them into leather by the use of tan.
  • Turner (n.)
    A person who practices athletic or gymnastic exercises.
  • Turner (n.)
    A variety of pigeon; a tumbler.
  • Turner (n.)
    One who turns; especially, one whose occupation is to form articles with a lathe.
  • unrent (unknown)
    Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.

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