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11-letter words containing a, n, t, i, p

  • antiphrasis — the use of a word in a sense opposite to its normal one, esp for ironic effect
  • antiplastic — allaying or preventing the growth of new tissue.
  • antipopular — opposed to the people or to popular cause
  • antipoverty — acting against poverty
  • antiprotons — Plural form of antiproton.
  • antipyresis — checking or preventing fever.
  • antipyretic — preventing or alleviating fever
  • antipyrotic — relieving the pain and stimulating the healing of burns.
  • antiseptics — pertaining to or affecting antisepsis.
  • antispastic — preventing or reducing spasms
  • antispyware — Designed or intended to combat or eliminate spyware on a computer system.
  • antistrophe — the second of two movements made by a chorus during the performance of a choral ode
  • antityphoid — preventing or acting against typhoid
  • antitypical — something that is foreshadowed by a type or symbol, as a New Testament event prefigured in the Old Testament.
  • antiutopian — Opposing utopian values.
  • apicodental — articulated with the apex of the tongue near the upper front teeth, as ( (θ) ; t h) ) and (; ð) ; th) )
  • apocopation — to shorten by apocope.
  • apocynthion — the point at which a spacecraft in lunar orbit is farthest from the moon
  • apodization — (mathematics) Any of several techniques to modify the form of a mathematical function, or of a spectrum etc. by smoothing or removing irregularities.
  • apoferritin — a homogeneous protein, found especially in the intestinal mucosa and the liver, that interacts with a ferric hydroxide-ferric phosphate complex to form ferritin.
  • aponeurotic — a whitish, fibrous membrane that connects a muscle to a bone or fascia.
  • apoproteins — Plural form of apoprotein.
  • apparations — Plural form of apparation.
  • apparitions — Plural form of apparition.
  • appellation — An appellation is a name or title that a person, place, or thing is given.
  • appertained — Past participle of appertain.
  • appertinent — (obsolete) That which belongs to something else; an appurtenant.
  • application — An application for something such as a job or membership of an organization is a formal written request for it.
  • appointable — to name or assign to a position, an office, or the like; designate: to appoint a new treasurer; to appoint a judge to the bench.
  • appointment — The appointment of a person to a particular job is the choice of that person to do it.
  • apportioned — to distribute or allocate proportionally; divide and assign according to some rule of proportional distribution: to apportion expenses among the three men.
  • apportioner — to distribute or allocate proportionally; divide and assign according to some rule of proportional distribution: to apportion expenses among the three men.
  • appositions — Plural form of apposition.
  • apprecation — (obsolete) Earnest prayer; devout wish.
  • apprenticed — a person who works for another in order to learn a trade: an apprentice to a plumber.
  • apprentices — Plural form of apprentice.
  • approbating — Present participle of approbate.
  • approbation — Approbation is approval of something or agreement to it.
  • approximant — an articulation in which one articulator is close to another, but not sufficiently so to form a stop or a fricative.
  • aptitudinal — capability; ability; innate or acquired capacity for something; talent: She has a special aptitude for mathematics.
  • artisanship — the occupation or product of a craftsperson or artisan
  • artophorion — pyx (def 1a).
  • ascriptions — Plural form of ascription.
  • asperations — Plural form of asperation.
  • aspergation — the action of sprinkling, suffusing or irrigating with water
  • asphyxiants — Plural form of asphyxiant.
  • aspirations — a strong desire, longing, or aim; ambition: intellectual aspirations.
  • asportation — the removal or taking away of something
  • assumptions — something taken for granted; a supposition: a correct assumption. Synonyms: presupposition; hypothesis, conjecture, guess, postulate, theory.
  • at gunpoint — If you are held at gunpoint, someone is threatening to shoot and kill you if you do not obey them.
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