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11-letter words containing a, l, d, r, i, g

  • gradational — any process or change taking place through a series of stages, by degrees, or in a gradual manner.
  • granadillas — Plural form of granadilla.
  • grand final — the final game of the season in any of various sports, esp football
  • grandiflora — any of several plant varieties or hybrids characterized by large showy flowers, as certain kinds of petunias, baby's breath, or roses.
  • grandiosely — affectedly grand or important; pompous: grandiose words.
  • graveldiver — any of several eellike fishes of the family Scytalinidae, found off the Pacific coast of North America, especially Scytalina cerdale, which burrows among rocks.
  • greenlandic — a dialect of Inuit, spoken in Greenland.
  • grenadelike — Resembling a grenade (weapon).
  • griddlecake — a thin cake of batter cooked on a griddle; pancake.
  • grindelwald — a valley and resort in central Switzerland, in the Bernese Oberland: mountaineering centre, with the Wetterhorn and the Eiger nearby
  • handrailing — Handrail.
  • hang glider — a kitelike glider consisting of a V -shaped wing underneath which the pilot is strapped: kept aloft by updrafts and guided by the pilot's shifting body weight.
  • hang-glider — a kitelike glider consisting of a V -shaped wing underneath which the pilot is strapped: kept aloft by updrafts and guided by the pilot's shifting body weight.
  • highlanders — Plural form of highlander.
  • kaliningrad — a seaport in the W Russian Federation in Europe, on the Bay of Danzig.
  • ladyfingers — Plural form of ladyfinger.
  • laggen-gird — the bottom hoop securing the staves of a tub or barrel.
  • land bridge — Geology. an actual or hypothetical strip of land, subject to submergence, that connects adjacent continental landmasses and serves as a route of dispersal for plants and animals: a prehistoric land bridge between Asia and North America.
  • landgravine — the wife of a landgrave.
  • langobardic — Lombard1 (def 4).
  • laterigrade — having a sideways manner of moving, as a crab.
  • launderings — Plural form of laundering.
  • lead singer — main singer in a popular music group
  • legendaries — of, relating to, or of the nature of a legend.
  • legendarily — of, relating to, or of the nature of a legend.
  • legerdemain — sleight of hand.
  • lethargized — Simple past tense and past participle of lethargize.
  • life guards — (in Britain) a cavalry regiment forming part of the ceremonial guard of the monarch.
  • light bread — white bread.
  • light draft — the draft of a vessel at its light displacement.
  • light-armed — carrying light weapons: light-armed troops.
  • lip-reading — the reading or understanding, as by a deaf person, of spoken words from the movements of another's lips without hearing the sounds made.
  • loading arm — A loading arm is a flexible piping unit that loads and unloads liquids and gases.
  • long radius — the distance from the centre of a regular polygon to a vertex
  • long-haired — Sometimes Disparaging. an intellectual.
  • madrigalist — a composer or singer of madrigals.
  • mail bridge — (messaging)   A mail gateway that forwards electronic mail messages between two or more networks if they meet certain administrative criteria.
  • marmalading — Present participle of marmalade.
  • 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.
  • paragliding — a sport resembling hang gliding, in which a person jumps from an aircraft or high place wearing a wide, rectangular, steerable parachute.
  • plagiarised — to take and use by plagiarism.
  • plantigrade — walking on the whole sole of the foot, as humans, and bears.
  • prodigality — the quality or fact of being prodigal; wasteful extravagance in spending.
  • prodigalize — to spend lavishly
  • quadrupling — Present participle of quadruple.
  • radiologist — the science dealing with x-rays or nuclear radiation, especially for medical uses.
  • railroading — a permanent road laid with rails, commonly in one or more pairs of continuous lines forming a track or tracks, on which locomotives and cars are run for the transportation of passengers, freight, and mail.
  • repaglinide — an oral drug used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes, often in combination with metformin.
  • rewardingly — in a rewarding way or manner
  • riding lamp — a light on a boat or ship showing that it is at anchor
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