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12-letter words containing d, e, b, o

  • double steal — a play in which two base runners steal a base each.
  • double sugar — disaccharide.
  • double track — two railways side by side, typically for traffic in two directions
  • double truck — Typesetting. a chase for holding the type for a center spread, especially for a newspaper.
  • double-blind — of or relating to an experiment or clinical trial in which neither the subjects nor the researchers know which subjects are receiving the active medication, treatment, etc., and which are not: a technique for eliminating subjective bias from the test results.
  • double-check — a simultaneous check by two pieces in which the moving of one piece to give check also results in discovering a check by another piece.
  • double-click — to click a mouse button twice in rapid succession, as to open a program or select a file: Double-click on the desktop icon.
  • double-cross — to prove treacherous to; betray or swindle, as by a double cross.
  • double-digit — of or denoting a percentage greater than ten.
  • double-edged — having two cutting edges, as a razor blade.
  • double-ended — having the two ends alike.
  • double-faced — practicing duplicity; hypocritical.
  • double-glaze — If someone double-glazes a house or its windows, they fit windows that have two layers of glass which keeps the inside of the house warmer and quieter.
  • double-quick — very quick or rapid.
  • double-sided — double-faced (defs 2, 3).
  • double-space — to type (text, copy, etc.) leaving a full space between lines: Always double-space a term paper.
  • double-think — illogical or deliberately perverse thinking in terms that distort or reverse the truth to make it more acceptable
  • double-width — twice the usual width: double-wide mobile homes consisting of two sections bolted together.
  • doubledecker — Alternative spelling of double-decker.
  • doubleganger — doppelgänger.
  • doubleheader — Sports. two games, as of baseball, between the same teams on the same day in immediate succession. two games, as of basketball, between two different pairs of teams on the same day in immediate succession.
  • doubtfulness — of uncertain outcome or result.
  • downloadable — Capable of being downloaded.
  • dry-bone ore — a porous variety of smithsonite found near the surface of the earth.
  • duke of albaDuke of, Alva, Fernando Alvarez de Toledo.
  • dutch borneo — the former name of the southern and larger part of the island of Borneo: now part of Indonesia.
  • dyer's-broom — woadwaxen.
  • ebb and flow — tidal movement
  • egads button — a switch that triggers the destruction in flight of a malfunctioning missile.
  • embroiderers — Plural form of embroiderer.
  • embroideries — Plural form of embroidery.
  • embroidering — Present participle of embroider.
  • endomembrane — (biology) All the membraneous components inside a eukaryotic cell, including the nuclear envelope, endoplastic reticulum, and Golgi apparatus.
  • endosymbiont — (ecology) An organism that lives within the body or cells of another organism.
  • english bond — a bond used in brickwork that has a course of headers alternating with a course of stretchers
  • fardel-bound — (of ruminants) having the food impacted in the third compartment of the stomach; costive; constipated.
  • fibroadenoma — a benign tumor originating from glandular tissue, as in the female breast.
  • fingerboards — Plural form of fingerboard.
  • flannelboard — a flannel-covered surface to which other flannel pieces, as letters of the alphabet, numbers, etc., adhere merely by contact, used mainly in schools as a visual aid.
  • flemish bond — a brickwork bond having alternate stretchers and headers in each course, each header being centered above and below a stretcher.
  • float bridge — a bridge, as from a pier to a boat, floating at one end and hinged at the other to permit loading and unloading at any level of water.
  • flutterboard — a kickboard.
  • forebodement — The act of foreboding.
  • forebodingly — a prediction; portent.
  • forebuilding — (architecture,historical) An outer defense work of a castle used to protect the entrance to the keep.
  • foreign body — object lodged where it does not belong
  • found object — a natural or manufactured object that is perceived as being aesthetically satisfying and exhibited as such.
  • french broad — a river in W North Carolina and E Tennessee, flowing N and NW to join the Holston River at Knoxville to form the Tennessee River. 210 miles (338 km) long.
  • full-blooded — of unmixed ancestry; thoroughbred: a full-blooded Cherokee.
  • fully booked — having no vacancies or spaces
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