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

  • disafforest — To deforest.
  • disapparate — To disappear (magically).
  • disarmament — the act or an instance of disarming.
  • disasterous — Misspelling of disastrous.
  • disattiring — Present participle of disattire.
  • discardment — the act or process of discarding
  • disceptator — a person who disputes or disagrees
  • discolorate — (transitive, dated) To discolor.
  • discreation — to reduce to nothing; annihilate.
  • disenthrall — to free from bondage; liberate: to be disenthralled from morbid fantasies.
  • disentrance — to bring out of an entranced condition; disenchant.
  • disentrayle — to pass out as if from the entrails
  • disfeatured — Simple past tense and past participle of disfeature.
  • disheartens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dishearten.
  • dishearting — Present participle of disheart.
  • disordinate — opposed to or violating moral or legal order
  • disparately — distinct in kind; essentially different; dissimilar: disparate ideas.
  • disparities — Plural form of disparity.
  • dispatchers — Plural form of dispatcher.
  • dispensator — a person who dispenses; distributor; administrator.
  • dispersants — Plural form of dispersant.
  • disregulate — Misspelling of dysregulate.
  • disrelation — the absence of relation
  • disrotatory — (organic chemistry) Describing an electrocyclic reaction in which the substituents at the interacting termini of the conjugated system rotate in opposite senses.
  • disruptable — Capable of being disrupted.
  • disruptants — Plural form of disruptant.
  • distractful — (archaic) distracting.
  • distracting — Preventing concentration or diverting attention; disturbing.
  • distraction — the act of distracting.
  • distractive — tending to distract.
  • distractors — Plural form of distractor.
  • distraining — Present participle of distrain.
  • disturbance — the act of disturbing.
  • dithyrambic — of, relating to, or of the nature of a dithyramb, or an impassioned oration.
  • dittography — reduplication of letters or syllables in writing, printing, etc., usually through error.
  • divaricated — Spread-out, divergent, especially of a branch etc. which is at nearly ninety degrees to the main stem.
  • divaricator — to spread apart; branch; diverge.
  • diverticula — a blind, tubular sac or process branching off from a canal or cavity, especially an abnormal, saclike herniation of the mucosal layer through the muscular wall of the colon.
  • divulgatory — to make publicly known; publish.
  • doctrinaire — a person who tries to apply some doctrine or theory without sufficient regard for practical considerations; an impractical theorist.
  • doctrinally — of, relating to, or concerned with doctrine: a doctrinal dispute.
  • dog curtain — a flap on a canvas cover for a binnacle, affording a view of the compass when raised.
  • dotted pair — (programming)   The usual LISP syntax for representing a cons cell that is not a list. For example, the expression (cons 'foo 42) returns a cons cell that is output as (foo . 42) which represents a cons cell whose car is the symbol "foo" and whose cdr is the integer 42.
  • downpatrick — a market town in Northern Ireland: reputedly the burial place of Saint Patrick. Pop: 10 316 (2001)
  • draft chair — a chair so designed as to fend off drafts from behind, as a wing chair.
  • drag artist — an entertainer who wears drag
  • draize test — a test assessing the potential of drugs, chemicals, cosmetics, and other commercial products to produce irritation, pain, or damage to the human eye by studying its effect on a rabbit's eye.
  • dramaticism — a dramatic character or way of behaving
  • dramatising — Present participle of dramatise.
  • dramatizing — Present participle of dramatize.
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