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11-letter words containing a, b, r, g

  • ibn gabirol — Arabic name of Avicebrón.
  • ibn-gabirol — Solomon. ?1021–?58, Jewish philosopher and poet, born in Spain. His work The Fountain of Life influenced Western medieval philosophers
  • icebreaking — Serving the purpose of breaking ice.
  • imbricating — Present participle of imbricate.
  • impregnable — susceptible to impregnation, as an egg.
  • impregnably — In an impregnable manner; in a manner to defy attack.
  • inebriating — to make drunk; intoxicate.
  • infrangible — that cannot be broken or separated; unbreakable: infrangible moral strength.
  • infrangibly — In an infrangible manner.
  • ingenerable — (rare) incapable of being generated or created.
  • interrobang — a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question.
  • jabberingly — in a jabbering manner
  • job sharing — to share the responsibility and duties of a single full-time job with one or more other employees.
  • keyboarding — the row or set of keys on a piano, organ, or the like.
  • klausenburg — German name of Cluj-Napoca.
  • laborsaving — designed or intended to reduce or replace human labor: The dishwasher is a laborsaving device.
  • land bridge — Geology. an actual or hypothetical strip of land, subject to submergence, that connects adjacent continental landmasses and serves as a route of dispersal for plants and animals: a prehistoric land bridge between Asia and North America.
  • landgrabber — the seizing of land by a nation, state, or organization, especially illegally, underhandedly, or unfairly.
  • langobardic — Lombard1 (def 4).
  • large black — a heavy black breed of pig with long lop ears: used for crossbreeding
  • laundry bag — A laundry bag is a bag for clothes that that are about to be washed.
  • lawbreaking — Unlawful; illegal.
  • ledger beam — a reinforced-concrete beam having projecting ledges for receiving the ends of joists or the like.
  • libertinage — libertine practices or habits of life; disregard of authority or convention in sexual or religious matters.
  • light bread — white bread.
  • long barrow — a funerary barrow having an elongate shape, sometimes constructed over a megalithic chamber tomb and usually containing one or more inhumed corpses along with artifacts: primarily Neolithic but extending into the Bronze Age.
  • long branch — a city in E New Jersey: seaside resort.
  • lubricating — to apply some oily or greasy substance to (a machine, parts of a mechanism, etc.) in order to diminish friction; oil or grease (something).
  • mail bridge — (messaging)   A mail gateway that forwards electronic mail messages between two or more networks if they meet certain administrative criteria.
  • marbleizing — Present participle of marbleize.
  • marlboroughJohn Churchill, 1st Duke of, Churchill, John, 1st Duke of Marlborough.
  • marsh buggy — swamp buggy.
  • martinsburg — a city in NE West Virginia.
  • maryborough — a seaport in E Australia.
  • merit badge — an insignia or device granted by the Boy Scouts, worn especially on a uniform to indicate special achievement.
  • mystery bag — a sausage
  • negrophobia — strong fear or dislike of black people.
  • nonbreaking — Alternative spelling of non-breaking.
  • nursing bra — a bra for breastfeeding mothers which provides additional support and has cups that can be folded down so the infant can be fed without the mother having to remove the bra
  • objurgating — Present participle of objurgate.
  • objurgation — to reproach or denounce vehemently; upbraid harshly; berate sharply.
  • objurgative — That objurgates; sharply disapproving.
  • objurgatory — to reproach or denounce vehemently; upbraid harshly; berate sharply.
  • obsignatory — (obsolete) Ratifying; confirming by sealing.
  • oil embargo — a prohibition of the trade of petroleum from one country to another
  • omnibearing — the magnetic bearing of an omnirange station.
  • orange book — (security, standard)   A standard from the US Government National Computer Security Council (an arm of the U.S. National Security Agency), "Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria, DOD standard 5200.28-STD, December 1985" which defines criteria for trusted computer products. There are four levels, A, B, C, and D. Each level adds more features and requirements. D is a non-secure system. C1 requires user log-on, but allows group ID. C2 requires individual log-on with password and an audit mechanism. (Most Unix implementations are roughly C1, and can be upgraded to about C2 without excessive pain). Levels B and A provide mandatory control. Access is based on standard Department of Defense clearances. B1 requires DOD clearance levels. B2 guarantees the path between the user and the security system and provides assurances that the system can be tested and clearances cannot be downgraded. B3 requires that the system is characterised by a mathematical model that must be viable. A1 requires a system characterized by a mathematical model that can be proven. See also crayola books, book titles.
  • organizable — to form as or into a whole consisting of interdependent or coordinated parts, especially for united action: to organize a committee.
  • outbreaking — The act of breaking out.
  • overbearing — domineering; dictatorial; haughtily or rudely arrogant.
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