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13-letter words containing a, r, t, n

  • dirty laundry — personal or private matters that could cause embarrassment if made public: You didn't have to air our dirty linen to all your friends!
  • dirty old man — a mature or elderly man with lewd or obscene preoccupations.
  • dirty-laundry — personal or private matters that could cause embarrassment if made public: You didn't have to air our dirty linen to all your friends!
  • disagreements — Plural form of disagreement.
  • disaster fund — a fund set up to relieve people or countries afflicted by a disaster
  • disaster zone — area affected by a catastrophe
  • discoloration — the act or fact of discoloring or the state of being discolored.
  • discount card — a card that entitles the holder to buy goods from a seller at a discount
  • discount rate — the rate of interest charged in discounting commercial paper.
  • discretionary — subject or left to one's own discretion.
  • discriminants — Plural form of discriminant.
  • discriminated — Simple past tense and past participle of discriminate.
  • discriminates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of discriminate.
  • discriminator — a person or thing that discriminates.
  • disembarkment — to go ashore from a ship.
  • disenthralled — to free from bondage; liberate: to be disenthralled from morbid fantasies.
  • disfiguration — an act or instance of disfiguring.
  • disheartening — to depress the hope, courage, or spirits of; discourage.
  • disintegrable — Capable of being disintegrated.
  • disintegrated — Simple past tense and past participle of disintegrate.
  • disintegrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disintegrate.
  • disintegrator — One who, or that which, disintegrates.
  • disinthralled — freed from thraldom
  • disinvigorate — to deprive of vigour
  • disordinately — in a manner that lacks order
  • disorientated — to disorient.
  • disorientates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disorientate.
  • disparagement — the act of disparaging.
  • disparateness — The degree to which a thing is disparate.
  • disregulation — Misspelling of dysregulation.
  • disreputation — disrepute.
  • disseminators — Plural form of disseminator.
  • dissertations — Plural form of dissertation.
  • distance race — a running race longer than 1500 meters (1635 yards).
  • distortionary — an act or instance of distorting.
  • distractingly — to draw away or divert, as the mind or attention: The music distracted him from his work.
  • divarications — Plural form of divarication.
  • doctrinairism — Doctrinaire attitudes generally.
  • documentarian — Movies, Television. a filmmaker, producer, etc., who specializes in documentaries.
  • documentaries — Plural form of documentary.
  • documentarily — Also, documental [dok-yuh-men-tl] /ˌdɒk yəˈmɛn tl/ (Show IPA). pertaining to, consisting of, or derived from documents: a documentary history of France.
  • documentarist — Movies, Television. a filmmaker, producer, etc., who specializes in documentaries.
  • documentarize — to put in the form of a documentary
  • dollarization — the conversion of a country's currency system into U.S. dollars.
  • domain theory — (theory)   A branch of mathematics introduced by Dana Scott in 1970 as a mathematical theory of programming languages, and for nearly a quarter of a century developed almost exclusively in connection with denotational semantics in computer science. In denotational semantics of programming languages, the meaning of a program is taken to be an element of a domain. A domain is a mathematical structure consisting of a set of values (or "points") and an ordering relation, <= on those values. Domain theory is the study of such structures. ("<=" is written in LaTeX as \subseteq) Different domains correspond to the different types of object with which a program deals. In a language containing functions, we might have a domain X -> Y which is the set of functions from domain X to domain Y with the ordering f <= g iff for all x in X, f x <= g x. In the pure lambda-calculus all objects are functions or applications of functions to other functions. To represent the meaning of such programs, we must solve the recursive equation over domains, D = D -> D which states that domain D is (isomorphic to) some function space from D to itself. I.e. it is a fixed point D = F(D) for some operator F that takes a domain D to D -> D. The equivalent equation has no non-trivial solution in set theory. There are many definitions of domains, with different properties and suitable for different purposes. One commonly used definition is that of Scott domains, often simply called domains, which are omega-algebraic, consistently complete CPOs. There are domain-theoretic computational models in other branches of mathematics including dynamical systems, fractals, measure theory, integration theory, probability theory, and stochastic processes. See also abstract interpretation, bottom, pointed domain.
  • dome fastener — a fastening device consisting of one part with a projecting knob that snaps into a hole on another like part, used esp in closures in clothing
  • down the road — a long, narrow stretch with a smoothed or paved surface, made for traveling by motor vehicle, carriage, etc., between two or more points; street or highway.
  • down to earth — practical and realistic: a down-to-earth person.
  • down-to-earth — practical and realistic: a down-to-earth person.
  • downheartedly — In a downhearted manner.
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