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12-letter words containing a, d, s, c, i

  • disciplinary — of, for, or constituting discipline; enforcing or administering discipline: disciplinary action.
  • disclamation — the act of disclaiming; renunciation; disavowal.
  • discographer — a person who compiles discographies.
  • discographic — of or relating to a discography
  • 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.
  • disconsonant — Not consonant; discordant.
  • discordantly — disagreeable to the ear; dissonant; harsh.
  • discorporate — Having no material body.
  • discountable — That can be discounted (in all senses).
  • discouraging — to deprive of courage, hope, or confidence; dishearten; dispirit.
  • 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.
  • discriminant — a relatively simple expression that determines some of the properties, as the nature of the roots, of a given equation or function.
  • 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.
  • disculpating — Present participle of disculpate.
  • discussional — an act or instance of discussing; consideration or examination by argument, comment, etc., especially to explore solutions; informal debate.
  • 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.
  • disentranced — to bring out of an entranced condition; disenchant.
  • disfranchise — to deprive (a person) of a right of citizenship, as of the right to vote.
  • disgracefull — Archaic form of disgraceful.
  • disincarnate — (Of a being) without a body.
  • disinfectant — any chemical agent used chiefly on inanimate objects to destroy or inhibit the growth of harmful organisms.
  • disintricate — (transitive) To disentangle.
  • dislocatedly — in a dislocated manner
  • dislocations — Plural form of dislocation.
  • disordinance — (obsolete) disarrangement; disturbance.
  • dispatch box — a case or box used to hold valuables or documents, esp official state documents
  • dispatchable — Capable of being dispatched.
  • displaceable — Capable of being displaced.
  • displacement — the act of displacing.
  • display case — glass box, cabinet
  • 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
  • displeasance — the state or cause of being displeased
  • disprivacied — deprived of privacy
  • dissemblance — dissembling; dissimulation.
  • disseverance — The act of dissevering; separation.
  • dissociality — the fact or characteristic of being dissocial
  • dissocialize — to render dissocial
  • dissociating — Present participle of dissociate.
  • dissociation — an act or instance of dissociating.
  • dissociative — to sever the association of (oneself); separate: He tried to dissociate himself from the bigotry in his past.
  • distanceless — without distance
  • distractable — Alternative form of distractible.
  • distractedly — having the attention diverted: She tossed several rocks to the far left and slipped past the distracted sentry.
  • distractible — to draw away or divert, as the mind or attention: The music distracted him from his work.
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