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12-letter words containing a, f, e

  • fair-skinned — having pale skin; pale-complexioned
  • fair-weather — used in or intended for fair weather only.
  • fairnitickle — a freckle resembling a fern seed
  • faith healer — healing effected through prayer or religious faith; divine healing.
  • faith-healer — healing effected through prayer or religious faith; divine healing.
  • faithfullest — Superlative form of faithful.
  • faithfulness — strict or thorough in the performance of duty: a faithful worker.
  • faits divers — brief news stories, as those typically found in some French newspapers, that are sensational, lurid, etc.
  • fall in love — become infatuated
  • fall webworm — the larva of any of several moths, as Hyphantria cunea (fall webworm) or Loxostege similalis (garden webworm) which spins a web over the foliage on which it feeds.
  • false acacia — black locust.
  • false aralia — any of several Polynesian shrubs or small trees belonging to the genus Dizygotheca, of the ginseng family, having palmately compound, mottled leaves and often grown as a houseplant.
  • false arrest — arrest or detention of a person contrary to or unauthorized by law.
  • false bottom — a horizontal partition above the actual bottom of a box, trunk, etc., especially one forming a secret compartment.
  • false cirrus — a type of thick cirrus cloud spreading from the top of a cumulonimbus cloud
  • false colour — colour used in a computer or photographic display to help in interpreting the image, as in the use of red to show high temperatures and blue to show low temperatures in an infrared image converter
  • false friend — a word or expression in one language that, because it resembles one in another language, is often wrongly taken to have the same meaning, for example, the French agenda which means diary, not agenda
  • false gavial — a SE Asian crocodile, Tomistoma schlegeli, similar to but smaller than the gavial
  • false indigo — any of several North American shrubs belonging to the genus Amorpha, of the legume family, especially A. fruticosa, having compound leaves with pinnate leaflets and long, dense clusters of purplish flowers.
  • false mildew — downy mildew (def 1).
  • false-acacia — Also called false acacia, yellow locust. a North American tree, Robinia pseudoacacia, of the legume family, having pinnate leaves and clusters of fragrant white flowers.
  • false-mildew — Also called false mildew. any fungus of the family Peronosporaceae, causing many plant diseases and producing a white, downy mass of conidiophores, usually on the under surface of the leaves of the host plant.
  • falsehearted — Alternative spelling of false-hearted.
  • familiarised — Simple past tense and past participle of familiarise.
  • familiarized — to make (onself or another) well-acquainted or conversant with something.
  • familiarizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of familiarize.
  • familiarness — commonly or generally known or seen: a familiar sight.
  • family bible — a large Bible usually having pages at the front for recording the marriages, births, and deaths in a family.
  • family hotel — a hotel owned by a family in which family members work
  • family leave — a leave of absence from work in order to have or take care of a baby or to care for an ailing family member.
  • family style — a way of serving food, as in boardinghouses and some restaurants, in which the people at the table help themselves from large dishes passed around from hand to hand
  • fan magazine — a magazine containing information and gossip about celebrities.
  • fancifulness — The quality of being fanciful.
  • faneuil hall — a market house and public hall in Boston, Massachusetts, called “the Cradle of Liberty” because it was used as a meeting place by American patriots immediately before the Revolutionary War.
  • fantasticate — to make or render fantastic.
  • far and near — at or to a great distance; a long way off; at or to a remote point: We sailed far ahead of the fleet.
  • far and wide — at or to a great distance; a long way off; at or to a remote point: We sailed far ahead of the fleet.
  • far-reaching — extending far in influence, effect, etc.: the far-reaching effect of his speech.
  • faraday cage — an enclosure constructed of grounded wire mesh or parallel wires that shields sensitive electrical instruments from electrostatic interference.
  • farcicalness — The property of being farcical.
  • fardel-bound — (of ruminants) having the food impacted in the third compartment of the stomach; costive; constipated.
  • fare-dodging — the practice of trying to travel on public transport without paying the fare
  • farm produce — agricultural products regarded collectively
  • farsightedly — In a farsighted manner.
  • farthingales — Plural form of farthingale.
  • farthingdale — (British, dated, 13th-19th C.) A unit of area equal to one quarter of an acre.
  • farthingless — without a farthing, having no money
  • fasciculated — Grouped in a fascicle; fascicled.
  • fascinatedly — In a fascinated manner; with fascination.
  • fashiousness — the quality of being fashious; troublesomeness
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