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13-letter words containing a, l, e, s, n

  • depersonalize — To depersonalize a system or a situation means to treat it as if it did not really involve people, or to treat it as if the people involved were not really important.
  • derealisation — Alternative form of derealization.
  • desacralizing — Present participle of desacralize.
  • desert island — A desert island is a small tropical island, where nobody lives.
  • desirableness — The quality of being desirable.
  • desk calendar — a loose-leaf calendar containing one or two pages for each day, with spaces for notes.
  • desobligeante — a type of carriage seating only one person
  • destabilising — Present participle of destabilise.
  • destabilizing — Present participle of destabilize.
  • destructional — of or pertaining to destruction
  • desublimation — (physics) deposition (transformation of gas into solid without an intermediate liquid phase).
  • desulfuration — to desulfurize.
  • devastatingly — tending or threatening to devastate: a devastating fire.
  • devotionalist — a devotee
  • diencephalons — Plural form of diencephalon.
  • dieselization — The conversion of a petrol engine to run on diesel fuel.
  • differentials — Plural form of differential.
  • dilettanteish — Alternative form of dilettantish.
  • dilettanteism — The condition of being a dilettante; the desultory pursuit of art, science, or literature.
  • dimensionally — Mathematics. a property of space; extension in a given direction: A straight line has one dimension, a parallelogram has two dimensions, and a parallelepiped has three dimensions. the generalization of this property to spaces with curvilinear extension, as the surface of a sphere. the generalization of this property to vector spaces and to Hilbert space. the generalization of this property to fractals, which can have dimensions that are noninteger real numbers. extension in time: Space-time has three dimensions of space and one of time.
  • disallowances — Plural form of disallowance.
  • disassembling — Present participle of disassemble.
  • disciplinable — subject to or meriting disciplinary action: a disciplinable breach of rules.
  • disconsolated — Obsolete form of disconsolate.
  • discriminable — capable of being discriminated or distinguished.
  • disentailment — The action of freeing property from entail.
  • disentangling — Present participle of disentangle.
  • disenthralled — to free from bondage; liberate: to be disenthralled from morbid fantasies.
  • dishonourable — showing lack of honor or integrity; ignoble; base; disgraceful; shameful: Cheating is dishonorable.
  • disilluminate — to darken
  • disintegrable — Capable of being disintegrated.
  • disinthralled — freed from thraldom
  • dismantlement — to deprive or strip of apparatus, furniture, equipment, defenses, etc.: to dismantle a ship; to dismantle a fortress.
  • disordinately — in a manner that lacks order
  • displacements — Plural form of displacement.
  • display panel — an electronic screen on which information can be displayed
  • disregulation — Misspelling of dysregulation.
  • documentalist — a specialist in documentation; a person working strictly with information and record-keeping.
  • dolman sleeve — a sleeve tapered from a very large armhole to fit closely at the wrist, used on women's garments.
  • donkey's tail — a succulent Mexican plant, Sedum morganianum, of the stonecrop family, bearing small, rose-colored flowers and long, hanging, nearly cylindrical stems with closely packed whitish-green leaves.
  • doppelgangers — Plural form of doppelganger.
  • downregulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of downregulate.
  • dreadlessness — the state or quality of being without fear or dread
  • dreamlessness — The state or condition of being dreamless; lack of dreams.
  • drinkableness — the quality of being drinkable, the capacity to be drunk, drinkability
  • dysmenorrheal — painful menstruation.
  • dysregulation — A failure to regulate properly.
  • ear-splitting — ear-piercing: an earsplitting explosion.
  • early closing — shop closure at earlier hour
  • early english — pertaining to the first style of Gothic architecture in England, ending in the latter half of the 13th century, characterized by the use of lancet arches, plate tracery, and narrow openings.
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