0%

11-letter words containing d, e, t, i

  • excruciated — Simple past tense and past participle of excruciate.
  • exhilarated — Simple past tense and past participle of exhilarate.
  • expatriated — Simple past tense and past participle of expatriate.
  • expediently — In an expedient manner.
  • expeditions — Plural form of expedition.
  • expeditious — Done with speed and efficiency.
  • expenditure — The action of spending funds.
  • expiry date — the date on which something comes to an end, can no longer be used, or is no longer safe to be eaten
  • extraditing — Present participle of extradite.
  • extradition — The action of extraditing a person accused or convicted of a crime.
  • eye dialect — nonstandard respelling of words to suggest dialectal or informal pronunciation
  • facilitated — to make easier or less difficult; help forward (an action, a process, etc.): Careful planning facilitates any kind of work.
  • fact finder — a person who searches impartially for the facts or actualities of a subject or situation, especially one appointed to conduct an official investigation, as in a labor-management conflict.
  • faith-based — affiliated with, supported by, or based on a religion or religious group: faith-based charities.
  • fanaticised — Simple past tense and past participle of fanaticise.
  • fanaticized — to make fanatical.
  • far-sighted — seeing objects at a distance more clearly than those near at hand; hyperopic.
  • fastigiated — Alternative form of fastigiate.
  • faultfinder — a person who habitually finds fault, complains, or objects, especially in a petty way.
  • fecundating — Present participle of fecundate.
  • fecundation — to make prolific or fruitful.
  • federalists — a series of 85 essays (1787–88) by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, written in support of the Constitution.
  • federations — Plural form of federation.
  • feldspathic — of, relating to, or containing feldspar.
  • felicitated — Simple past tense and past participle of felicitate.
  • feudalistic — the feudal system, or its principles and practices.
  • feudalities — Plural form of feudality.
  • feudatories — Plural form of feudatory.
  • fibrillated — to cause to undergo fibrillation.
  • fiddlestick — anything; a bit: I don't care a fiddlestick for what they say.
  • fidgetiness — The state or condition of being fidgety.
  • field event — an event in a track meet that involves throwing something, as a discus or javelin, or jumping and is not performed on the running track.
  • field sport — Hunting, shooting birds, and fishing with a rod are referred to as field sports when they are done mainly for pleasure.
  • field study — observation of nature in the wild
  • field trial — a competition among sporting dogs under natural conditions in the field, in which the animals are judged on the basis of excellence of performance in hunting.
  • field-strip — to take apart (a weapon) for cleaning, lubrication, and repair or for inspection.
  • fieldstones — Plural form of fieldstone.
  • fifth grade — the fifth year of school, when children are ten or eleven years old
  • fillet weld — a weld with a triangular cross section joining two surfaces that meet in an interior right angle.
  • finasteride — a drug, C 23 H 36 N 2 O 2 , that inhibits testosterone metabolism, used in the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia and male-pattern baldness.
  • first aider — someone in an organization who has been trained to give immediate medical help in an emergency
  • first grade — school year: age 6-7
  • first-order — Not higher-order.
  • five-gaited — noting an American saddle horse that has been trained to execute the rack and slow gait in addition to the walk, trot, and canter, and that is used chiefly for showing.
  • fixed asset — any long-term asset, as a building, tract of land, or patent.
  • fixed costs — a cost unvarying with a change in the volume of business (distinguished from variable cost).
  • fixed point — (mathematics)   The fixed point of a function, f is any value, x for which f x = x. A function may have any number of fixed points from none (e.g. f x = x+1) to infinitely many (e.g. f x = x). The fixed point combinator, written as either "fix" or "Y" will return the fixed point of a function. See also least fixed point.
  • fixed trust — unit trust (def 1).
  • fixed-point — (programming)   A number representation scheme where a number, F is represented by an integer I such that F=I*R^-P, where R is the (assumed) radix of the representation and P is the (fixed) number of digits after the radix point. On computers with no floating-point unit, fixed-point calculations are significantly faster than floating-point as all the operations are basically integer operations. Fixed-point representation also has the advantage of having uniform density, i.e., the smallest resolvable difference of the representation is R^-P throughout the representable range, in contrast to floating-point representations. For example, in PL/I, FIXED data has both a precision and a scale-factor (P above). So a number declared as 'FIXED DECIMAL(7,2)' has a precision of seven and a scale-factor of two, indicating five integer and two fractional decimal digits. The smallest difference between numbers will be 0.01.
  • fixed-width — record
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?