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11-letter words containing a, g, e, d, l

  • middle ages — medieval period
  • middle game — the stage between the opening and the end game, characterized by complicated moves by both opponents with pieces at full strength.
  • middle-aged — being of the age intermediate between youth and old age, roughly between 45 and 65.
  • misdealings — Plural form of misdealing.
  • misleadings — Plural form of misleading.
  • mispleading — a mistake in pleading, as a misjoinder of parties or a misstatement of a cause of action.
  • new england — an area in the NE United States, including the states of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
  • new-fangled — If someone describes a new idea or a new piece of equipment as new-fangled, they mean that it is too complicated or is unnecessary.
  • non-aligned — not aligned: nonaligned machine parts.
  • nondelegate — a person who is not an official delegate
  • odaxelagnia — (rare) A paraphilia in which biting or being bitten leads to sexual arousal.
  • overloading — (language)   (Or "Operator overloading"). Use of a single symbol to represent operators with different argument types, e.g. "-", used either, as a monadic operator to negate an expression, or as a dyadic operator to return the difference between two expressions. Another example is "+" used to add either integers or floating-point numbers. Overloading is also known as ad-hoc polymorphism. User-defined operator overloading is provided by several modern programming languages, e.g. C++'s class system and the functional programming language Haskell's type classes. Ad-hoc polymorphism (better described as overloading) is the ability to use the same syntax for objects of different types, e.g. "+" for addition of reals and integers or "-" for unary negation or diadic subtraction. Parametric polymorphism allows the same object code for a function to handle arguments of many types but overloading only reuses syntax and requires different code to handle different types.
  • pedagogical — of or relating to a pedagogue or pedagogy.
  • pedological — the scientific study of the nature and development of children.
  • plagiarised — to take and use by plagiarism.
  • plantigrade — walking on the whole sole of the foot, as humans, and bears.
  • powder flag — red flag (def 4).
  • preen gland — uropygial gland.
  • prodigalize — to spend lavishly
  • prolongated — to prolong.
  • promulgated — to make known by open declaration; publish; proclaim formally or put into operation (a law, decree of a court, etc.).
  • pseudologia — a psychological condition in which a patient tells elaborate, false stories believing them to be true
  • quadrangles — Plural form of quadrangle.
  • quinagolide — A dopamine agonist used to treat elevated levels of prolactin.
  • repaglinide — an oral drug used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes, often in combination with metformin.
  • rewardingly — in a rewarding way or manner
  • ring-tailed — having the tail ringed with alternating colors, as a raccoon.
  • ringed seal — an Arctic seal, Phoca hispida, having irregular, pale, ring-shaped markings around its body.
  • round angle — perigon.
  • saddle gall — a raw area of skin, with loss of hair, on the back or behind the elbow of a horse caused by uneven pressure by the saddle or girth
  • salad green — a leafy green vegetable, as lettuce, watercress, or escarole, served raw as or in a salad.
  • scaffoldage — a scaffold or scaffolding
  • scent gland — any of various specialized skin glands, occurring in many kinds of animals, that emit an odor commonly functioning as a social or sexual signal or a defensive weapon.
  • self-regard — consideration for oneself or one's own interests.
  • shell gland — a gland in certain invertebrates that secretes the components required for forming the shell of an egg
  • side glance — a look sideways at someone or something
  • side-glance — a glance directed to the side; an oblique or sideways look: a side-glance of displeasure at her interrupter.
  • sidewalking — the practice of shopkeepers standing on the sidewalk outside their shops to attract customers.
  • single-hand — to sail (a craft) without help from others.
  • slaughtered — the killing or butchering of cattle, sheep, etc., especially for food.
  • sluggardise — indolence or laziness
  • sluggardize — to make lazy or sluggish
  • sockdolager — something unusually large, heavy, etc.
  • solid angle — an angle formed by three or more planes intersecting in a common point or formed at the vertex of a cone.
  • spreadingly — in a spreading manner
  • starlighted — lit by the stars
  • sweat gland — one of the minute, coiled, tubular glands of the skin that secrete sweat.
  • sweat lodge — (especially among North American Indians) a special building used for cleansing and purifying one's body by sweating, in which heated water is poured over heated stones to produce steam.
  • telegraphed — an apparatus, system, or process for transmitting messages or signals to a distant place, especially by means of an electric device consisting essentially of a sending instrument and a distant receiving instrument connected by a conducting wire or other communications channel.
  • trade guild — a medieval guild composed of tradesmen.
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