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12-letter words containing a, d, e, s

  • disadventure — misfortune; bad luck
  • disaffecting — Present participle of disaffect.
  • disaffection — the absence or alienation of affection or goodwill; estrangement; disloyalty: Disaffection often leads to outright treason.
  • disaffiliate — to sever affiliation with; disassociate: He disaffiliated himself from the political group he had once led.
  • disaggregate — to separate (an aggregate or mass) into its component parts.
  • disagreeable — contrary to one's taste or liking; unpleasant; offensive; repugnant.
  • disagreeably — In a disagreeable manner.
  • disagreeance — (obsolete) disagreement.
  • disagreement — the act, state, or fact of disagreeing.
  • disallowable — to refuse to allow; reject; veto: to disallow a claim for compensation.
  • disallowance — to refuse to allow; reject; veto: to disallow a claim for compensation.
  • disambiguate — to remove the ambiguity from; make unambiguous: In order to disambiguate the sentence “She lectured on the famous passenger ship,” you'll have to write either “lectured on board” or “lectured about.”.
  • disamenities — Plural form of disamenity.
  • disappearing — Present participle of disappear.
  • disappointed — depressed or discouraged by the failure of one's hopes or expectations: a disappointed suitor.
  • disassembled — Simple past tense and past participle of disassemble.
  • disassembler — A program for converting machine code into a low-level symbolic language.
  • disassembles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disassemble.
  • disassociate — to dissociate.
  • disauthorize — to take authority away from (a person or organization)
  • discalceated — Deprived of shoes or sandals.
  • discandering — discandying, melting from a state of being candied
  • disceptation — (archaic) Controversy; disputation; discussion.
  • discographer — a person who compiles discographies.
  • discolorated — Simple past tense and past participle of discolorate.
  • discomedusan — a member of the Discomedusae, an order of jellyfish with flattened bodies
  • disconsolate — without consolation or solace; hopelessly unhappy; inconsolable: Loss of her pet dog made her disconsolate.
  • discorporate — Having no material body.
  • discountable — That can be discounted (in all senses).
  • discoverable — to see, get knowledge of, learn of, find, or find out; gain sight or knowledge of (something previously unseen or unknown): to discover America; to discover electricity. Synonyms: detect, espy, descry, discern, ascertain, unearth, ferret out, notice.
  • discrepances — Plural form of discrepance.
  • discretional — discretionary.
  • discriminate — to make a distinction in favor of or against a person or thing on the basis of the group, class, or category to which the person or thing belongs rather than according to actual merit; show partiality: The new law discriminates against foreigners. He discriminates in favor of his relatives.
  • diseasedness — The state of being diseased; sickness.
  • disembarking — Present participle of disembark.
  • disembarrass — to disentangle or extricate from something troublesome, embarrassing, or the like.
  • disembrangle — to disentangle (a person or thing)
  • disenamoured — to disillusion; disenchant (usually used in the passive and followed by of or with): He was disenamored of working in the city.
  • disenchanted — to rid of or free from enchantment, illusion, credulity, etc.; disillusion: The harshness of everyday reality disenchanted him of his idealistic hopes.
  • disenchanter — One who disenchants.
  • disentangled — Simple past tense and past participle of disentangle.
  • disentranced — to bring out of an entranced condition; disenchant.
  • disestablish — to deprive of the character of being established; cancel; abolish.
  • disfranchise — to deprive (a person) of a right of citizenship, as of the right to vote.
  • disgavelling — the act or quality of being without gavelkind
  • disgracefull — Archaic form of disgraceful.
  • disgregation — the separation of components from a whole, esp of people from a company
  • dish antenna — an open, relatively shallow container of pottery, glass, metal, wood, etc., used for various purposes, especially for holding or serving food.
  • dishabituate — to cause to be no longer habituated or accustomed.
  • disharmonize — (intransitive) To cause disorder.
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