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12-letter words containing a, d, k, l

  • abd-el-kadir — 1807?–83, Algerian leader.
  • acknowledged — recognized as being true or existing
  • acknowledger — to admit to be real or true; recognize the existence, truth, or fact of: to acknowledge one's mistakes.
  • acknowledges — to admit to be real or true; recognize the existence, truth, or fact of: to acknowledge one's mistakes.
  • aldermanlike — resembling an alderman, esp in being pompous
  • alkyl halide — a compound with the type formula RX, where R is an alkyl group and X is a halogen.
  • all kinds of — You can use all kinds of to emphasize that there are a great number and variety of particular things or people.
  • and the like — If you mention particular things or people and then add and the like, you are indicating that there are other similar things or people that can be included in what you are saying.
  • back molding — a molding, as a backband, applied to interior window and door trim to conceal the edge of the wall surface.
  • backhandedly — In a backhanded manner.
  • backpedaling — to retard the forward motion by pressing backward on the pedal, especially of a bicycle with coaster brakes.
  • backpedalled — (AU, NZ, British) Simple past tense and past participle of backpedal.
  • baked alaska — a dessert consisting of cake and ice cream covered with meringue and cooked very quickly in a hot oven
  • baker island — an island in the central Pacific near the equator, belonging to the U.S. 1 sq. mi. (2.6 sq. km).
  • baklava code — (humour, programming)   Code with too many layers. Also known as Lasagne Code.
  • baldwin park — city in SW Calif.: suburb of Los Angeles: pop. 76,000
  • bank holiday — A bank holiday is a public holiday.
  • banks island — an island of N Canada, in the Northwest Territories: the westernmost island of the Arctic Archipelago. Area: about 67 340 sq km (26 000 sq miles)
  • beaked whale — any of a worldwide family (Ziphiidae) of medium-sized toothed whales characterized by a long, narrow snout
  • black comedy — a comedy dealing with an unpleasant situation in a pessimistic or macabre manner
  • black friday — the day after the US Thanksgiving Day in late November, regarded as the start of the Christmas shopping season
  • black medick — a small European leguminous plant, Medicago lupulina, with trifoliate leaves, small yellow flowers, and black pods
  • black powder — gunpowder as used in sports involving modern muzzleloading firearms
  • black-coated — (esp formerly) (of a worker) clerical or professional, as distinguished from commercial or industrial
  • blackbirding — a common European thrush, Turdus merula, the male of which is black with a yellow bill.
  • blackhearted — wicked; evil
  • bladder kelp — any of various giant brown algae with air bladders that buoy up the leafy portions
  • bladderwrack — any of several seaweeds of the genera Fucus and Ascophyllum, esp F. vesiculosus, that grow in the intertidal regions of rocky shores and have branched brown fronds with air bladders
  • block island — an island off the coast of and a part of Rhode Island, at the E entrance to Long Island Sound.
  • candlesticks — Plural form of candlestick.
  • closed-stack — having access to the stacks limited to the staff of the library or to a limited group of library users.
  • cook islands — a group of islands in the SW Pacific, an overseas territory of New Zealand: consists of the Lower Cooks and the Northern Cooks Capital: Avarua, on Rarotonga. Pop: 10 447 (2013 est). Area: 234 sq km (90 sq miles)
  • dak bungalow — (in India, formerly) a house where travellers on a dak route could be accommodated
  • damask steel — Damascus steel
  • dandrufflike — Resembling or characteristic of dandruff.
  • dark glasses — Dark glasses are glasses which have dark-coloured lenses to protect your eyes in the sunshine.
  • dark lantern — a lantern having a sliding shutter or panel to dim or hide the light
  • dark mineral — any rock-forming mineral that has a specific gravity greater than 2.8 and that is generally dark in color.
  • dasher block — a block at the end of a yard or gaff for supporting a signal or ensign halyard.
  • daughterlike — Resembling a daughter.
  • daydreamlike — resembling a daydream
  • deckle strap — a strap on each edge of the moving web of paper on a paper-making machine that fixes the width of the paper
  • deerstalkers — Plural form of deerstalker.
  • deerstalking — The hunting of deer on foot, by stealing upon them unawares.
  • devil's mark — (in witchcraft) a mark, as a scar or blemish, on the body of a person who has made a compact with a devil.
  • dialkylamine — (organic chemistry) Any secondary amine formed from two alkyl groups.
  • display hack — (graphics)   A program with the same approximate purpose as a kaleidoscope: to make pretty pictures. Famous display hacks include munching squares, smoking clover, the BSD Unix "rain(6)" program, "worms(6)" on miscellaneous Unixes, and the X "kaleid(1)" program. Display hacks can also be implemented without programming by creating text files containing numerous escape sequences for interpretation by a video terminal; one notable example displayed, on any VT100, a Christmas tree with twinkling lights and a toy train circling its base. The hack value of a display hack is proportional to the aesthetic value of the images times the cleverness of the algorithm divided by the size of the code. Synonym psychedelicware.
  • display pack — an empty box, etc, on a shop shelf, advertising a piece of merchandise that, due to its value or size, is not stored on the shelf. The display pack is normally taken to the till and there exchanged, on payment, for the actual item
  • dockwalloper — longshoreman
  • donald knuth — (person)   Donald E. Knuth, the author of the TeX document formatting system, Metafont its font-design program and the 3 volume computer science "Bible" of algorithms, "The Art of Computer Programming". Knuth suggested the name "Backus-Naur Form" and was also involved in the SOL simulation language, and developed the WEB literate programming system. See also MIX, Turingol.

On this page, we collect all 12-letter words with A-D-K-L. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 12-letter word that contains in A-D-K-L to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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