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12-letter words containing a, d, i, n, t

  • right-angled — A right-angled triangle has one angle that is a right angle.
  • right-handed — having the right hand or arm more serviceable than the left; using the right hand by preference: a right-handed painter.
  • right-hander — a person who is right-handed, especially a baseball pitcher who throws with the right hand.
  • romanticized — interpreted according to romantic precepts
  • rutlandshire — a former county, now part of Leicestershire, in central England.
  • saddle joint — (on a sill, coping, or the like) a vertical joint raised above the level of the washes on each side.
  • saddle point — a point at which a function of two variables has partial derivatives equal to zero but at which the function has neither a maximum nor a minimum value.
  • sailing date — the date that a ship or boat departs on a sailing voyage
  • sanctifiedly — in a sanctified manner
  • sand casting — Sand casting is a process in which a molten metal is poured into a mold made from sand.
  • sand cricket — Jerusalem cricket.
  • sandblasting — the act or process of using a sandblast to clean, grind, or decorate a surface
  • sandpainting — a type of painting done by American Indians, esp in the healing ceremonies of the Navaho, using fine coloured sand on a neutral ground
  • sandy blight — trachoma.
  • scalding hot — that scalds; burning; too hot
  • scarlatinoid — resembling scarlatina or its eruptions.
  • scott domain — An algebraic, boundedly complete, complete partial order. Often simply called a domain.
  • section hand — a person who works on a section gang.
  • sedimentable — capable of forming sediment
  • semi-dormant — lying asleep or as if asleep; inactive, as in sleep; torpid: The lecturer's sudden shout woke the dormant audience.
  • semidominant — producing an intermediate, heterozygous phenotype
  • sialadenitis — inflammation of one or more of the salivary glands.
  • side against — one of the surfaces forming the outside of or bounding a thing, or one of the lines bounding a geometric figure.
  • slide-action — (of a rifle or shotgun) having a lever that when slid back and forth ejects the empty case and cocks and reloads the piece.
  • sliding seat — a rower's seat that rides on wheels in metal tracks fastened to the boat's frame, allowing the seat to slide back and forth, thereby tapping the rower's leg strength to maximize the stroke.
  • smith island — a group of islands in S Maryland and N Virginia, in Chesapeake Bay.
  • snail darter — a tan, striped, snail-eating perch, Percina tanasi, 3 inches (7.5 cm) long, occurring only in the Tennessee River: a threatened species.
  • soft landing — space vehicle
  • sorting yard — sorting tracks.
  • south island — the largest island of New Zealand. 58,093 sq. mi. (150,460 sq. km).
  • speed dating — an organized social event in which participants have one-on-one conversations typically limited to less than ten minutes, for the purpose of meeting people they would like to date.
  • speedboating — the act, practice, or sport of traveling in a speedboat.
  • speedskating — a form of ice skating in which contestants race against each other or the clock over various distances
  • spider plant — Also called ribbon plant. a plant, Chlorophytum comosum, of the lily family, native to southern Africa, that has long, narrow leaves and clusters of white flowers and is widely cultivated as a houseplant.
  • stand in for — to substitute for
  • stand-offish — If you say that someone is stand-offish, you mean that they behave in a formal and rather unfriendly way.
  • standardized — to bring to or make of an established standard size, weight, quality, strength, or the like: to standardize manufactured parts.
  • standing cup — a tall decorative cup of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, having a raised cover.
  • standpattism — belief in or the practice of resisting or refusing to accept change, especially in politics.
  • stannic acid — any of the series of acids usually occurring as amorphous powders and varying in composition from H 2 SnO 3 (alpha-stannic acid) to H 4 SnO 4 .
  • station days — days on which ceremonies are held in station churches
  • steady-going — steadfast; faithful; unchanging: steady-going service to the cause of justice.
  • steam-driven — powered by steam
  • stellar wind — the radial outflow of ionized gas from a star.
  • stick around — to pierce or puncture with something pointed, as a pin, dagger, or spear; stab: to stick one's finger with a needle.
  • stickhandler — a hockey or lacrosse player, esp. one who is talented at stickhandling.
  • stride piano — a style of jazz piano playing in which the right hand plays the melody while the left hand plays a single bass note or octave on the strong beat and a chord on the weak beat, developed in Harlem during the 1920s, partly from ragtime piano playing.
  • strike hands — to show agreement by clasping hands
  • stringhalted — afflicted with stringhalt
  • studdingsail — a light sail, sometimes set outboard of either of the leeches of a square sail and extended by booms.
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