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11-letter words containing b, e, l, t, a

  • redoubtable — that is to be feared; formidable.
  • reestablish — to found, institute, build, or bring into being on a firm or stable basis: to establish a university; to establish a medical practice.
  • registrable — a book in which records of acts, events, names, etc., are kept.
  • regrettable — causing or deserving regret; unfortunate; deplorable.
  • regrettably — causing or deserving regret; unfortunate; deplorable.
  • reliability — the ability to be relied on or depended on, as for accuracy, honesty, or achievement.
  • relocatable — constructed so as to be movable; portable, prefabricated, or modular: relocatable classroom units.
  • relubricate — to lubricate again or with new lubricant
  • rentability — a payment made periodically by a tenant to a landlord in return for the use of land, a building, an apartment, an office, or other property.
  • repatriable — to bring or send back (a person, especially a prisoner of war, a refugee, etc.) to his or her country or land of citizenship.
  • respectable — worthy of respect or esteem; estimable; worthy: a respectable citizen.
  • respectably — worthy of respect or esteem; estimable; worthy: a respectable citizen.
  • restabilize — to stabilize again
  • restartable — capable of being restarted
  • retraceable — to trace backward; go back over: to retrace one's steps.
  • retractable — to withdraw (a statement, opinion, etc.) as inaccurate or unjustified, especially formally or explicitly; take back.
  • retractible — to withdraw (a statement, opinion, etc.) as inaccurate or unjustified, especially formally or explicitly; take back.
  • retrainable — able to be retrained
  • retrievable — to recover or regain: to retrieve the stray ball.
  • retrobulbar — situated behind the eyeball.
  • reusability — reuse
  • robot plane — an unmanned plane
  • rotor blade — one airfoil of the rotor of a rotary-wing aircraft.
  • round table — conference, meeting
  • round-table — noting or pertaining to a conference, discussion, or deliberation in which each participant has equal status, equal time to present views, etc.: round-table discussions.
  • rumble seat — Also called, British, dickey. a seat recessed into the back of a coupe or roadster, covered by a hinged lid that opens to form the back of the seat when in use.
  • safety belt — seat belt.
  • safety bolt — a bolt or lock on a door or gate that cannot be moved from the outside
  • saleability — subject to or suitable for sale; readily sold: The books were sent back by the store in salable condition.
  • satirizable — able to be satirized or ridiculed
  • satisfiable — to fulfill the desires, expectations, needs, or demands of (a person, the mind, etc.); give full contentment to: The hearty meal satisfied him.
  • senate bill — a proposed new law introduced for debate before the upper chamber of the legislature in, for example, the US, Canada, Australia, etc
  • skatemobile — a scooterlike vehicle built of boxes, boards, or the like, and mounted on skate wheels.
  • slate black — a slightly purplish black.
  • snack table — a small portable folding table used for an individual serving.
  • st.-lambert — a city in S Quebec, in E Canada, across from Montreal, on the St. Lawrence.
  • stable door — a door with an upper and lower leaf that may be opened separately
  • stable girl — a girl or woman who looks after or attends horses in stables
  • stag beetle — any of numerous lamellicorn beetles of the family Lucanidae, some of the males of which have mandibles resembling the antlers of a stag.
  • steam table — a boxlike table or counter, usually of stainless steel, with receptacles in the top into which containers of food may be fitted to be kept warm by steam or hot water in the compartment below.
  • stickleback — any of the small, pugnacious, spiny-backed fishes of the family Gasterosteidae, inhabiting northern fresh waters and sea inlets, the male of which builds and guards the nest.
  • stress ball — a small rubber ball squeezed in the hand as a means of relieving stress
  • sub-article — a written composition in prose, usually nonfiction, on a specific topic, forming an independent part of a book or other publication, as a newspaper or magazine.
  • subaffluent — between poor and affluent
  • subinterval — an interval that is a subset of a given interval.
  • subjectable — that which forms a basic matter of thought, discussion, investigation, etc.: a subject of conversation.
  • sublethally — in a sublethal manner
  • subliteracy — below average literacy
  • subliterary — not intended as literature
  • subliterate — less than fully literate.
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