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11-letter words containing a, t, n, g, l

  • postlanding — occurring after a landing (of an aircraft, shuttle, etc)
  • postulating — to ask, demand, or claim.
  • prolongated — to prolong.
  • range light — one of a pattern of navigation lights, usually fixed ashore, used by vessels for manoeuvring in narrow channels at night
  • range table — one of a number of identical small tables that can be used together to form a single table.
  • realignment — an adjustment to a line; arrangement in a straight line.
  • rectangular — shaped like a rectangle.
  • regimentals — of or relating to a regiment.
  • repugnantly — distasteful, objectionable, or offensive: a repugnant smell.
  • revaluating — to make a new or revised valuation of; revalue.
  • right angle — the angle formed by two radii of a circle that are drawn to the extremities of an arc equal to one quarter of the circle; the angle formed by two perpendicular lines that intersect; an angle of 90°.
  • ring-tailed — having the tail ringed with alternating colors, as a raccoon.
  • sailboating — the sport of using a sailing boat
  • salpingitis — inflammation of a salpinx.
  • salting out — the addition of salt to a mixture to precipitate proteins, soaps, and other simple organic compounds.
  • salting-out — Salting-out is the effect when adding a salt to a solvent containing an organic solute reduces the solubility of that solute.
  • samuel ting — Samuel C(hao) C(hung) [chou choo ng] /tʃaʊ tʃʊŋ/ (Show IPA), born 1936, U.S. physicist: Nobel prize 1976.
  • satin glass — an American art glassware having colored glass set into indentations in a thickness of opaque glass, the whole covered with clear glass and etched slightly with acid.
  • scatterling — a person with no fixed home; a wanderer; a vagabond
  • scent gland — any of various specialized skin glands, occurring in many kinds of animals, that emit an odor commonly functioning as a social or sexual signal or a defensive weapon.
  • self-acting — acting by itself; automatic.
  • self-hating — harbouring feelings of self-hatred
  • sigillation — the act of sealing
  • singability — to utter words or sounds in succession with musical modulations of the voice; vocalize melodically.
  • single malt — a type of whisky that is made at a single distillery and from one type of malted grain
  • single tape — a ribbon of material, usually with a plastic base, coated on one side (single tape) or both sides (double tape) with a substance containing iron oxide, to make it sensitive to impulses from an electromagnet: used to record sound, images, data, etc.
  • single-malt — (of whiskey, especially Scotch) made from unblended malt whiskey distilled at one distillery.
  • singletrack — (of a railroad or section of a railroad's route) having but one set of tracks, so that trains going in opposite directions must be scheduled to meet only at points where there are sidings.
  • singularist — someone who advocates singularism
  • singularity — the state, fact, or quality of being singular.
  • singulative — a grammatical form or construction that expresses a singular entity or indicates that an individual is singled out from a group, especially as opposed to a collective noun, as snowflake as opposed to snow.
  • slag cement — a cement composed of about 80 percent granulated slag and about 20 percent hydrated lime.
  • slot racing — the activity of racing slot cars.
  • slow-acting — working or acting slowly, not immediately
  • snatchingly — in a snatching manner
  • speculating — to engage in thought or reflection; meditate (often followed by on, upon, or a clause).
  • stabilizing — to make or hold stable, firm, or steadfast.
  • stagflation — an inflationary period accompanied by rising unemployment and lack of growth in consumer demand and business activity.
  • startlingly — creating sudden alarm, surprise, or wonder; astonishing.
  • steelmaking — the manufacture of steel.
  • stimulating — to rouse to action or effort, as by encouragement or pressure; spur on; incite: to stimulate his interest in mathematics.
  • stipulating — to make an express demand or arrangement as a condition of agreement (often followed by for).
  • strangulate — Pathology, Surgery. to compress or constrict (a duct, intestine, vessel, etc.) so as to prevent circulation or suppress function.
  • streamingly — in a streaming manner
  • strong gale — a wind of 47–54 miles per hour (21–24 m/sec).
  • subungulate — any member of the superorder of animal termed Subungulata (also called Paenungulata), containing the elephant, sea cow and hyrax, as well as two extinct orders
  • supplanting — to take the place of (another), as through force, scheming, strategy, or the like.
  • sweat gland — one of the minute, coiled, tubular glands of the skin that secrete sweat.
  • tailhopping — the act of hopping to lift the tails of the skis off the ground while flexing the knees into a crouching position
  • taking lens — a camera in which the image appears on a ground-glass viewer (focusing screen) after being reflected by a mirror or after passing through a prism or semitransparent glass; in one type (single-lens reflex camera) light passes through the same lens to both the ground glass and the film, while in another type (twin-lens reflex camera) light passes through one lens (viewing lens) to the ground glass and through a second lens (taking lens) to the film, the lenses being mechanically coupled for focusing.
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