10-letter words containing d, i, e, l
- epicondyle — (anatomy) A protuberance above the condyle of a bone to which ligaments or tendons are attached.
- epicycloid — A curve traced by a point on the circumference of a circle rolling on the exterior of another circle.
- epidemical — Alternative form of epidemic.
- epididymal — Of, in or pertaining to the epididymis, the tube in male mammals which connects the efferent ducts from the rear of each testicle to its vas deferens.
- epileptoid — resembling epilepsy
- eradicable — Capable of being eradicated.
- escadrille — A French squadron of aircraft.
- escalading — Present participle of escalade.
- espadrille — A light canvas shoe with a plaited fiber sole.
- espaliered — Simple past tense and past participle of espalier.
- ethanediol — (organic compound) ethylene glycol.
- ethelred i — died 871, king of Wessex (866–71). He led resistance to the Danish invasion of England; died following his victory at Ashdown
- euglenoids — Plural form of euglenoid.
- evidential — Of or providing evidence.
- exfoliated — Simple past tense and past participle of exfoliate.
- expeditely — in an expedite manner
- explicated — Simple past tense and past participle of explicate.
- extendible — extensible
- facsimiled — Simple past tense and past participle of facsimile.
- familicide — The murder of an entire family by a family member.
- far afield — a long distance away
- federalism — the federal principle of government.
- federalist — a series of 85 essays (1787–88) by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, written in support of the Constitution.
- federalize — to bring under the control of a federal government: to federalize the National Guard.
- ferrofluid — A fluid containing a magnetic suspension.
- fertilised — Simple past tense and past participle of fertilise.
- fertilized — Simple past tense and past participle of fertilize.
- feudalized — Simple past tense and past participle of feudalize.
- fiddle bow — a bow with which the strings of the violin or a similar instrument are set in vibration.
- fiddleback — something shaped like a fiddle.
- fiddlehead — Nautical. a billethead having a form similar to the volute carved at the upper end of a violin.
- fiddlewood — the heavy, hard, durable wood of various West Indian and other trees.
- fidelities — Plural form of fidelity.
- field army — army (def 2).
- field coil — a coil that generates a magnetic field when an electric current is passed through it: used in various electrical devices, as motors, generators, or electromagnets.
- field corn — feed corn grown for stock.
- field crop — any of the herbaceous plants grown on a large scale in cultivated fields: primarily a grain, forage, sugar, oil, or fiber crop.
- field goal — Football. a three-point goal made by place-kicking or drop-kicking the ball between the opponent's goalposts above the crossbar.
- field hand — a person who works in the fields of a farm or plantation.
- field lark — meadowlark.
- field lens — the lens in an eyepiece that is farthest from the eye and that deviates rays toward the center of the eye lens.
- field line — an imaginary line or curve in a field of force, as an electric field, such that the direction of the line at any point is that of the force in the field at that point.
- field mint — an herb, Mentha arvensis, of North America, having downy leaves and small flowers that grow in circles in the leaf axils.
- field rank — the rank of major, lieutenant colonel, or colonel
- field stop — the aperture that limits the field of view of a lens or system of lenses.
- field term — a university term spent in the field, such as a term spent in another country as part of a foreign language course
- field tile — an earthenware drain used in farm drainage
- field trip — a trip by students to gain firsthand knowledge away from the classroom, as to a museum, factory, geological area, or environment of certain plants and animals.
- field vole — a small rodent, Microtus agrestis, also known as the short-tailed vole
- field work — Also, field work. work done in the field, as research, exploration, surveying, or interviewing: archaeological fieldwork.