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11-letter words containing a, g, e

  • danger list — on
  • danger zone — a dangerous area
  • dangerously — full of danger or risk; causing danger; perilous; risky; hazardous; unsafe.
  • dangleberry — a blue huckleberry (Gaylussacia frondosa), native to E North America
  • dapple-gray — gray spotted with darker gray
  • dapple-grey — a horse with a grey coat having spots of darker colour
  • dark energy — unobserved energy whose existence is proposed to account for the observed acceleration in the expansion of the universe
  • darlingness — the quality or characteristic of being darling, sweet, or charming
  • darning egg — a rounded piece of wood or plastic used in darning to support the fabric around the hole
  • data logger — data logging
  • day surgery — a system in which a patient comes into hospital for a surgical procedure, has the operation, recovers and is released from hospital in the course of a single day
  • daydreaming — indulgence in daydreams
  • dde manager — An Oracle product that lets Microsoft Windows applications that support the Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE) protocol act as front end tools for Oracle. It allows applications like Excel, Word, Ami Professional, WingZ and ToolBook to query, update, graph and report information stored in Oracle.
  • dead firing — firing of a furnace or boiler at less than normal operating temperature in order to maintain conditions desirable during a period of idleness.
  • dead ringer — a person or thing that closely resembles another; ringer: That old car is a dead ringer for the one we used to own.
  • dead weight — A dead weight is a load which is surprisingly heavy and difficult to lift.
  • deadeningly — in a deadening manner
  • deadlocking — Present participle of deadlock.
  • deadpanning — Present participle of deadpan.
  • deafeningly — to make deaf: The accident deafened him for life.
  • dealing box — a box that holds a deck or decks of cards, allowing them to be dealt only one at a time, often used in casino games such as blackjack or chemin de fer.
  • deamidating — Present participle of deamidate.
  • dear-bought — having been purchased at great expense
  • death angel — Azrael.
  • death grant — (in the British National Insurance scheme) a grant payable to a relative, executor, etc, after the death of a person
  • decade-long — lasting for a decade: After a decadelong study, the drug has finally been approved by the FDA.
  • decollating — Present participle of decollate.
  • decolletage — the low-cut neckline of a woman's garment
  • decussating — Present participle of decussate.
  • defalcating — Present participle of defalcate.
  • defatigable — (very, rare) Easily tired or wearied; capable of being fatigued.
  • deflagrable — having the ability to burst into flames quickly
  • deflagrated — Simple past tense and past participle of deflagrate.
  • deflagrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deflagrate.
  • deflagrator — a piece of equipment for bringing about deflagration
  • defoliating — Present participle of defoliate.
  • deganawidah — ("The Peacemaker") flourished 1550–1600, Huron prophet, cofounder of the Iroquois Confederacy.
  • degenerated — to fall below a normal or desirable level in physical, mental, or moral qualities; deteriorate: The morale of the soldiers degenerated, and they were unable to fight.
  • degenerates — Plural form of degenerate.
  • degerminate — degerm (def 2).
  • deglaciated — having had glaciation removed
  • deglamorize — to make (a person or thing) less glamorous
  • deglutinate — to extract the gluten from (a cereal, esp wheat)
  • degradation — You use degradation to refer to a situation, condition, or experience which you consider shameful and disgusting, especially one which involves poverty or immorality.
  • degradative — causing degradation
  • degradingly — that degrades; debasing; humiliating: degrading submission.
  • degranulate — (of a cell) lose or release granules of a substance, typically as part of an immune reaction.
  • degustation — the act of sampling a wide variety of foods, wines, etc.
  • degustatory — tasty; having a pleasant flavour
  • dehydrating — Present participle of dehydrate.
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