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12-letter words containing b, e, t, i

  • customisable — Alternative spelling of customizable.
  • customizable — to modify or build according to individual or personal specifications or preference: to customize an automobile.
  • cybercasting — the broadcasting of news, entertainment, etc., using the Internet, specifically the World Wide Web.
  • cybernetical — of or relating to cybernetics
  • cyberreality — A reality created in cyberspace.
  • cyberspastic — (humour)   A person suffering from information overload while browsing the Internet or web. Compare webhead.
  • de-stabilise — to make unstable; rid of stabilizing attributes: conflicts that tend to destabilize world peace.
  • debilitating — tending to weaken or enfeeble
  • debilitation — to make weak or feeble; enfeeble: The siege of pneumonia debilitated her completely.
  • debilitative — producing or bringing about a weakened state
  • debit policy — a policy for industrial life insurance sold door to door by an agent who collects the premiums.
  • debt service — the amount set aside annually in a fund to pay the interest and the part of the principal due on a debt.
  • debut single — the first single produced by a particular singer or band
  • decidability — the capability of being decided
  • defibrillate — to stop fibrillation of (the heart), as by the use of electric current
  • definability — The quality of being definable.
  • deliberately — carefully weighed or considered; studied; intentional: a deliberate lie.
  • deliberating — carefully weighed or considered; studied; intentional: a deliberate lie.
  • deliberation — Deliberation is the long and careful consideration of a subject.
  • deliberative — A deliberative institution or procedure has the power or the right to make important decisions.
  • demibastions — Plural form of demibastion.
  • derivability — The condition of being derivable.
  • desirability — worth having or wanting; pleasing, excellent, or fine: a desirable apartment.
  • destabilised — Simple past tense and past participle of destabilise.
  • destabilises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of destabilise.
  • destabilized — to make unstable; rid of stabilizing attributes: conflicts that tend to destabilize world peace.
  • destabilizer — a person who or a thing that destabilizes
  • destabilizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of destabilize.
  • destructible — capable of being or liable to be destroyed
  • desublimated — Psychology. to divert the energy of (a sexual or other biological impulse) from its immediate goal to one of a more acceptable social, moral, or aesthetic nature or use.
  • determinable — able to be decided, fixed, or found out
  • determinably — In a determinable way.
  • detonability — the quality of being detonable
  • detribalized — Simple past tense and past participle of detribalize.
  • diabetogenic — causing or producing diabetes
  • dibranchiate — of, relating to, or belonging to the Dibranchiata, a group or former order of cephalopod molluscs, including the octopuses, squids, and cuttlefish, having two gills
  • dining table — a table, especially one seating several persons, where meals are served and eaten, especially the major or more formal meals.
  • dinner table — dining table.
  • direct debit — regular automatic bank payment
  • direct labor — labor performed, as by workers on a production line, and considered in computing costs per unit of production.
  • dirty blonde — woman's hair colour: dark blonde
  • disabilities — Plural form of disability.
  • disablements — Plural form of disablement.
  • disambiguate — to remove the ambiguity from; make unambiguous: In order to disambiguate the sentence “She lectured on the famous passenger ship,” you'll have to write either “lectured on board” or “lectured about.”.
  • disbursement — the act or an instance of disbursing.
  • disburthened — Simple past tense and past participle of disburthen.
  • discerptible — capable of being torn apart; divisible.
  • discountable — That can be discounted (in all senses).
  • disestablish — to deprive of the character of being established; cancel; abolish.
  • dishabituate — to cause to be no longer habituated or accustomed.
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