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11-letter words containing a, d, r, b, i

  • swear blind — to assert emphatically
  • switchboard — a structural unit on which are mounted switches and instruments necessary to complete telephone circuits manually.
  • tabularised — to tabulate.
  • tabularized — to tabulate.
  • timber yard — A timber yard is a place where timber is stored and sold.
  • trailblazed — to blaze a trail through (a forest, wilderness, or the like) for others to follow.
  • unbarricade — to unblock or open (a door, etc); to free from a barrier or obstacle
  • underivable — to receive or obtain from a source or origin (usually followed by from).
  • undesirable — not desirable or attractive; objectionable: undesirable qualities.
  • undrainable — unable to be drained
  • undrinkable — suitable for drinking.
  • undriveable — unable to be driven
  • unliberated — continuing to be bound by traditional sexual and social roles
  • unurbanized — to make or cause to become urban, as a locality.
  • wading bird — wader (def 2).
  • wattlebirds — Plural form of wattlebird.
  • weaverbirds — Plural form of weaverbird.
  • whidah bird — any of various predominantly black African weaverbirds of the genus Vidua and related genera, the males of which grow very long tail feathers in the breeding season
  • white bread — bread baked with bleached flour
  • white-bread — pertaining to or characteristic of the white middle class; bourgeois: a typical white-bread suburban neighborhood.
  • whiteboards — Plural form of whiteboard.
  • whydah bird — any of various predominantly black African weaverbirds of the genus Vidua and related genera, the males of which grow very long tail feathers in the breeding season
  • windbaggery — Informal. an empty, voluble, pretentious talker.
  • windbreaker — A wind -resistant jacket with a close-fitting neck, waistband, and cuffs.
  • wiper blade — the long thin part of a windscreen wiper, edged with rubber, that makes contact with the windscreen
  • wizard book — (publication)   Hal Abelson, Gerald Sussman and Julie Sussman's "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs" (MIT Press, 1984; ISBN 0-262-01077-1), an excellent computer science text used in introductory courses at MIT. So called because of the wizard on the jacket. One of the bibles of the LISP/Scheme world. Also, less commonly, known as the Purple Book.
  • wood rabbit — a cottontail.
  • yorba linda — a city in SW California.
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