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11-letter words containing d, a, r, b, l

  • day laborer — an unskilled worker paid by the day
  • dealbreaker — A dealbreaker is an issue that prevents people from reaching an agreement.
  • deflagrable — having the ability to burst into flames quickly
  • deliberated — carefully weighed or considered; studied; intentional: a deliberate lie.
  • deliberates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deliberate.
  • deliberator — carefully weighed or considered; studied; intentional: a deliberate lie.
  • delibration — (obsolete, uncountable) The act of stripping off bark.
  • deliverable — capable of delivery.
  • denumerable — capable of being put into a one-to-one correspondence with the positive integers; countable
  • denumerably — In a denumerable manner.
  • depreciable — able to be depreciated for tax deduction
  • descrambled — Simple past tense and past participle of descramble.
  • descrambler — unscrambler (def 2).
  • describable — to tell or depict in written or spoken words; give an account of: He described the accident very carefully.
  • destroyable — Able to be destroyed.
  • detribalise — Alt form detribalize.
  • detribalize — to cause (members of a tribe) to lose their characteristic customs or social, religious, or other organizational features
  • disbursable — to pay out (money), especially for expenses; expend.
  • discardable — to cast aside or dispose of; get rid of: to discard an old hat.
  • discernable — capable of being discerned; distinguishable.
  • discernably — capable of being discerned; distinguishable.
  • disprovable — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
  • disruptable — Capable of being disrupted.
  • dolabriform — shaped like an ax or a cleaver.
  • dollar bill — a piece of paper money worth one dollar
  • dorsolumbar — of, relating to, or affecting the back in the region of the lumbar vertebrae.
  • double star — two stars that appear as one if not viewed through a telescope with adequate magnification, such as two stars that are separated by a great distance but are nearly in line with each other and an observer (optical double star) or those that are relatively close together and comprise a single physical system (physical double star)
  • double-park — If someone double-parks their car or their car double-parks, they park in a road by the side of another parked car.
  • drapability — to cover or hang with cloth or other fabric, especially in graceful folds; adorn with drapery.
  • drawability — the degree to which a metal can be drawn.
  • drivability — the degree of smoothness and steadiness of acceleration of an automotive vehicle: The automatic transmission has been improved to give the new model better drivability.
  • dual number — a grammatical number category referring to exactly two persons or things
  • durableness — Durability.
  • edible crab — a species of crab, Cancer pagurus, found in the Mediterranean Sea, the North Sea, and the North Atlantic
  • fibrillated — to cause to undergo fibrillation.
  • flashboards — Plural form of flashboard.
  • floorboards — Plural form of floorboard.
  • floribundas — Plural form of floribunda.
  • frescobaldi — Girolamo [jee-raw-lah-maw] /dʒiˈrɔ lɑ mɔ/ (Show IPA), 1583–1643, Italian organist and composer.
  • gallbladder — a pear-shaped, muscular sac attached to the undersurface of the right lobe of the liver, in which bile is stored and concentrated.
  • gas bladder — air bladder (def 2).
  • gas-bladder — a vesicle or sac containing air.
  • goldbergian — Rube Goldberg.
  • grab handle — A grab handle is a handle on the side of an object such as a bathtub that you hold in order to help you get in and out.
  • gradability — a measure of a truck's pulling power expressed as the steepest grade the truck can climb with a full load.
  • ground ball — a batted ball that rolls or bounces along the ground.
  • halberdiers — Plural form of halberdier.
  • halberstadt — a town in central Germany, in Saxony-Anhalt: industrial centre noted for its historic buildings. Pop: 40 014 (2003 est)
  • half-buried — to put in the ground and cover with earth: The pirates buried the chest on the island.
  • hard labour — Hard labour is hard physical work which people have to do as punishment for a crime.
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