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11-letter words containing a, b, o, d, e

  • centreboard — a supplementary keel for a sailing vessel, which may be adjusted by raising and lowering
  • charbroiled — Charbroiled meat or fish has been cooked so that it burns slightly and turns black.
  • cheeseboard — A cheeseboard is a board from which cheese is served at a meal.
  • chess-board — the board, identical with a checkerboard, used for playing chess.
  • chessboards — Plural form of chessboard.
  • clapboarded — Simple past tense and past participle of clapboard.
  • cloud-based — Cloud-based technology allows you to use programs and information that are stored on the Internet rather than on your own computer.
  • codebreaker — A person who solves a code or codes.
  • cohabitated — cohabit.
  • combed yarn — cotton or worsted yarn of fibers laid parallel, superior in smoothness to carded yarn.
  • commandable — able to be commanded
  • commendable — If you describe someone's behaviour as commendable, you approve of it or are praising it.
  • commendably — worthy of praise: She did a commendable job of informing all the interested parties.
  • concludable — to bring to an end; finish; terminate: to conclude a speech with a quotation from the Bible.
  • condemnable — to express an unfavorable or adverse judgment on; indicate strong disapproval of; censure.
  • condensable — capable of being condensed.
  • conglobated — in the form of a globe or ball
  • cradleboard — a wooden frame worn on the back, used by North American Indian women for carrying an infant.
  • crookbacked — Hunchbacked.
  • crossbanded — (of a handrail) having the grain of the veneer run across that of the rail
  • crossbarred — having a crossbar or crossbars
  • daggerboard — a light bladelike board inserted into the water through a slot in the keel of a boat to reduce keeling and leeway
  • dative bond — coordinate bond
  • dative-bond — a type of covalent bond between two atoms in which the bonding electrons are supplied by one of the two atoms.
  • day boarder — a child attending a boarding school who has meals at the school but sleeps at home
  • day laborer — an unskilled worker paid by the day
  • de beauvoir — Simone (simɔn). 1908–86, French existentialist novelist and feminist, whose works include Le Sang des autres (1944), Le Deuxième Sexe (1949), and Les Mandarins (1954)
  • deal a blow — If an event deals a blow to something or someone, it causes them great difficulties or makes failure more likely.
  • dealing box — a box that holds a deck or decks of cards, allowing them to be dealt only one at a time, often used in casino games such as blackjack or chemin de fer.
  • dear-bought — having been purchased at great expense
  • debarkation — Disembarkation.
  • decarbonate — to remove carbon dioxide from (a solution, substance, etc)
  • decarbonize — to remove carbon from (the walls of the combustion chamber of an internal-combustion engine)
  • delagoa bay — an inlet of the Indian Ocean, in S Mozambique
  • deliberator — carefully weighed or considered; studied; intentional: a deliberate lie.
  • delibration — (obsolete, uncountable) The act of stripping off bark.
  • demibastion — half a bastion, having only one flank, at right angles to the wall
  • demob-happy — feeling elated in anticipation of demobilization from the armed forces
  • demountable — to remove from a mounting, setting, or place of support, as a gun.
  • denominable — Capable of being denominated or named.
  • dentolabial — (phonetics) articulated with the upper lip and lower teeth.
  • destroyable — Able to be destroyed.
  • developable — Able to be developed, in particular.
  • diabetology — (medicine) The study of the diagnosis and treatment of diabetes.
  • diagnosable — to determine the identity of (a disease, illness, etc.) by a medical examination: The doctor diagnosed the illness as influenza.
  • disavowable — capable of being disavowed
  • disposables — Plural form of disposable.
  • disprovable — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
  • dissociable — capable of being dissociated; separable: Worthy and unworthy motives are often not dissociable.
  • dissolvable — to make a solution of, as by mixing with a liquid; pass into solution: to dissolve salt in water.
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