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12-letter words containing a, n, e, r

  • extortionate — (of a price) much too high; exorbitant.
  • extra virgin — olive oil: of finest quality
  • extra-strong — stronger than average; very strong
  • extracampine — (psychiatry, of hallucination) Beyond the possible sensory field.
  • extracranial — on the exterior of the skull, outside the skull
  • extraditions — Plural form of extradition.
  • extramundane — Outside or beyond the physical world.
  • extraneously — In an extraneous manner.
  • extranuclear — situated or occurring in part of a cell outside the nucleus
  • extrasensory — Of or relating to extrasensory perception.
  • extrauterine — Existing, formed, or occurring outside the uterus.
  • extravagance — Lack of restraint in spending money or use of resources.
  • extravagancy — (archaic, 17-19th centuries) The characteristic of being extravagant.
  • extravaganza — An elaborate and spectacular entertainment or production.
  • extravaganze — Irregular plural form of extravaganza.
  • extraversion — Alternative spelling of extroversion.
  • extropianism — Belief in, or support for, the theory of extropy.
  • extrordinary — Misspelling of extraordinary.
  • exulceration — the process of ulceration
  • eye-watering — painful or extremely unpleasant
  • face-centred — (of a crystal) having a lattice point at the centre of each face of each unit cell as well as at the corners
  • facial nerve — either one of the seventh pair of cranial nerves composed of motor fibers that control muscles of the face except those used in chewing.
  • fainthearted — lacking courage; cowardly; timorous.
  • fair-skinned — having pale skin; pale-complexioned
  • fairnitickle — a freckle resembling a fern seed
  • 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
  • familiarness — commonly or generally known or seen: a familiar sight.
  • 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.
  • 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
  • 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
  • fast neutron — a neutron produced by nuclear fission that has lost little energy by collision; a neutron with a kinetic energy in excess of 0.1 MeV
  • fatherliness — The property of being fatherly.
  • fault-finder — a person who habitually finds fault, complains, or objects, especially in a petty way.
  • favorite son — (at a national political convention) a candidate nominated for office by delegates from his or her own state.
  • favouredness — the quality of or extent to which something is favoured
  • fearlessness — without fear; bold or brave; intrepid.
  • fearsomeness — causing fear: a fearsome noise.
  • featherbrain — a foolish or giddy person; scatterbrain.
  • featheriness — The state or quality of being feathery.
  • febrifacient — producing fever.
  • federalizing — Present participle of federalize.
  • fence lizard — either of two spiny lizards, Sceloporus undulatus and S. occidentalis, of the U.S. and northern Mexico, often seen on fences.
  • fenestration — the design and disposition of windows and other exterior openings of a building.
  • fenfluramine — a sympathomimetic substance, C 12 H 16 F 3 N, formerly used mainly as an anorectic in the treatment of obesity but withdrawn from the market in 1997 because of its potential to cause valvular heart disease.
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