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10-letter words containing d, e, c, l, i, n

  • incidently — (obsolete) Alternative spelling of incidentally.
  • includable — to contain, as a whole does parts or any part or element: The package includes the computer, program, disks, and a manual.
  • includible — to contain, as a whole does parts or any part or element: The package includes the computer, program, disks, and a manual.
  • incredible — so extraordinary as to seem impossible: incredible speed.
  • incredibly — so extraordinary as to seem impossible: incredible speed.
  • inculcated — to implant by repeated statement or admonition; teach persistently and earnestly (usually followed by upon or in): to inculcate virtue in the young.
  • inculpated — Simple past tense and past participle of inculpate.
  • indecently — offending against generally accepted standards of propriety or good taste; improper; vulgar: indecent jokes; indecent language; indecent behavior.
  • indelicacy — the quality or condition of being indelicate.
  • indelicate — offensive to a sense of generally accepted propriety, modesty, or decency; improper, unrefined, or coarse: indelicate language.
  • indicolite — Mineralogy. a dark-blue tourmaline, used as a gem.
  • indictable — liable to being indicted, as a person.
  • indirectly — not in a direct course or path; deviating from a straight line; roundabout: an indirect course in sailing.
  • induceable — Capable of being induced.
  • indulgence — the act or practice of indulging; gratification of desire.
  • indulgency — indulgence.
  • ineducable — incapable of being educated, especially because of some condition, as mental retardation or emotional disturbance.
  • influenced — the capacity or power of persons or things to be a compelling force on or produce effects on the actions, behavior, opinions, etc., of others: He used family influence to get the contract.
  • inoculated — to implant (a disease agent or antigen) in a person, animal, or plant to produce a disease for study or to stimulate disease resistance.
  • interclude — to confine
  • interlaced — Simple past tense and past participle of interlace.
  • inverclyde — a council area of W central Scotland: created in 1996 from part of Strathclyde region. Administrative centre: Greenock. Pop: 83 050 (2003 est). Area: 162 sq km (63 sq miles)
  • involucred — (botany) Having an involucre.
  • leucocidin — an exotoxin, produced by bacteria, that destroys leucocytes
  • line dance — a kind of partnerless dance in which the dancers stand side by side in a line or lines and perform, in unison, a series of set, often complex, steps to various kinds of popular music
  • line-dance — to participate in a line dance.
  • luminesced — Simple past tense and past participle of luminesce.
  • maledicent — ((archaic)) one who enjoys using slanderous language.
  • medicinals — Plural form of medicinal.
  • midchannel — (geography) In the middle of a channel.
  • nonmedical — of or relating to the science or practice of medicine: medical history; medical treatment.
  • nucleoside — any of the class of compounds derived by the hydrolysis of nucleic acids or nucleotides, consisting typically of deoxyribose or ribose combined with adenine, guanine, cytosine, uracil, or thymine.
  • nucleotide — any of a group of molecules that, when linked together, form the building blocks of DNA or RNA: composed of a phosphate group, the bases adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine, and a pentose sugar, in RNA the thymine base being replaced by uracil.
  • occidental — (usually initial capital letter) of, relating to, or characteristic of the Occident or its natives and inhabitants.
  • pedantical — ostentatious in one's learning.
  • placidness — pleasantly calm or peaceful; unruffled; tranquil; serenely quiet or undisturbed: placid waters.
  • principled — imbued with or having moral principles (often used in combination): high-principled.
  • red-pencil — to delete, censor, correct, or abridge (written material) with or as if with a pencil having a red lead: His book was heavily red-penciled before it got clearance.
  • scandalise — to shock or horrify by something considered immoral or improper.
  • scandalize — to shock or horrify by something considered immoral or improper.
  • scheduling — a plan of procedure, usually written, for a proposed objective, especially with reference to the sequence of and time allotted for each item or operation necessary to its completion: The schedule allows three weeks for this stage.
  • seducingly — in a seducing manner
  • seleucidan — Seleucid.
  • stencilled — a device for applying a pattern, design, words, etc., to a surface, consisting of a thin sheet of cardboard, metal, or other material from which figures or letters have been cut out, a coloring substance, ink, etc., being rubbed, brushed, or pressed over the sheet, passing through the perforations and onto the surface.
  • un-spliced — to join together or unite (two ropes or parts of a rope) by the interweaving of strands.
  • uncalcined — not calcined or reduced to ash; not consumed or purged by burning
  • unchiseled — cut, shaped, etc., with a chisel: chiseled stone.
  • unciliated — not ciliated or ciliate
  • uncredible — not able to be believed
  • uncrippled — not crippled
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