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13-letter words containing d, e, n, m

  • compartmented — Divided into compartments.
  • compendiously — of or like a compendium; containing the substance of a subject, often an exclusive subject, in a brief form; concise: a compendious history of the world.
  • completedness — having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full: a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
  • complexedness — complexity
  • componentized — Simple past tense and past participle of componentize.
  • compound leaf — a leaf consisting of two or more leaflets borne on the same leafstalk
  • compound lens — a lens consisting of more than one component lens
  • compound time — compound meter
  • compound tone — (in acoustic analysis) a sound composed of several sinusoidal waveforms superimposed upon one main one
  • comprehendeth — Archaic third-person singular form of comprehend.
  • comprehending — to understand the nature or meaning of; grasp with the mind; perceive: He did not comprehend the significance of the ambassador's remark.
  • computer nerd — someone who is inordinately preoccupied with using computers, at the expense of ordinary social skills
  • comradeliness — the quality of being comradely
  • condemnations — Plural form of condemnation.
  • conductimetry — the science of measuring the conductivity of solutions.
  • confirmedness — The quality of being confirmed.
  • conglomerated — Simple past tense and past participle of conglomerate.
  • consimilitude — the quality of resembling or of being mutually alike
  • contemporised — to place in or regard as belonging to the same age or time.
  • contemporized — Simple past tense and past participle of contemporize.
  • costardmonger — a costermonger
  • counterdemand — a demand made in response to another demand
  • countermanded — Simple past tense and past participle of countermand.
  • countermelody — a secondary melody that accompanies the primary melody
  • cover-mounted — Cover-mounted items such as cassettes, videos and CDs are attached to the front of a magazine as free gifts.
  • credentialism — a tendency to value formal qualifications, esp at the expense of competence and experience
  • criminal code — the body of laws regulating how crimes are to be punished
  • culloden moor — a moor in NE Scotland, near Inverness: site of the battle that ended the Jacobite Rebellion 1746.
  • dalton system — a method of progressive education whereby students contract to carry through on their own responsibility the year's work as divided up into monthly assignments.
  • damson cheese — thick damson jam
  • dance company — a group of dancers, usually including business and technical personnel
  • danse macabre — dance of death
  • data modeling — (spelling)   US spelling of "data modelling".
  • daydreamingly — While daydreaming.
  • de-motivation — the act or an instance of motivating, or providing with a reason to act in a certain way: I don't understand what her motivation was for quitting her job. Synonyms: motive, inspiration, inducement, cause, impetus.
  • deaf-and-dumb — unable to hear or speak
  • decamethonium — a drug that is used to relax or loosen the muscles
  • decimal point — A decimal point is the dot in front of a decimal fraction.
  • decision time — a time at which an important decision must be taken
  • decisionmaker — One who makes decisions.
  • declinometers — Plural form of declinometer.
  • decommissions — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decommission.
  • decommunizing — Present participle of decommunize.
  • decompensated — Simple past tense and past participle of decompensate.
  • decompensates — Psychology. to lose the ability to maintain normal or appropriate psychological defenses, sometimes resulting in depression, anxiety, or delusions.
  • decompilation — The act, or the result of decompiling.
  • decomposition — Decomposition is the process of decay that takes place when a living thing changes chemically after dying.
  • decompounding — Present participle of decompound.
  • decompressing — Present participle of decompress.
  • decompression — Decompression is the reduction of the force on something that is caused by the weight of the air.
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