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

  • uncontinued — lasting or enduring without interruption: continued good health.
  • uncontrived — obviously planned or forced; artificial; strained: a contrived story.
  • unconvicted — to prove or declare guilty of an offense, especially after a legal trial: to convict a prisoner of a felony.
  • undeposited — to place for safekeeping or in trust, especially in a bank account: He deposited his paycheck every Friday.
  • underaction — inadequate activity
  • undistorted — not truly or completely representing the facts or reality; misrepresented; false: She has a distorted view of life.
  • unemotioned — unaffected by emotion
  • unexploited — to utilize, especially for profit; turn to practical account: to exploit a business opportunity.
  • unforfeited — not forfeited
  • unfortified — to protect or strengthen against attack; surround or provide with defensive military works.
  • unidiomatic — peculiar to or characteristic of a particular language or dialect: idiomatic French.
  • unit holder — an investor in a unit trust fund
  • unit record — Computers. a single unit of input or output, as a punch card or line of printout.
  • unmentioned — to refer briefly to; name, specify, or speak of: Don't forget to mention her contribution to the project.
  • unmoistened — not having been moistened
  • unmonitored — (especially formerly) a student appointed to assist in the conduct of a class or school, as to help take attendance or keep order.
  • unmortified — not humiliated or shamed
  • unmotivated — to provide with a motive, or a cause or reason to act; incite; impel.
  • unobligated — to bind or oblige morally or legally: to obligate oneself to purchase a building.
  • unportioned — a part of any whole, either separated from or integrated with it: I read a portion of the manuscript.
  • unprovident — lacking caution; improvident; imprudent
  • unsolicited — given or supplied without being requested or asked for: unsolicited advice.
  • unwithstood — not opposed or resisted; not withstood
  • upgradation — the process, state, or act of upgrading
  • utgard-loki — a Jotun appearing in the story of Thor's voyage to Utgard: at first disguised under another name (Skrymir)
  • valediction — an act of bidding farewell or taking leave.
  • valedictory — bidding goodbye; saying farewell: a valedictory speech.
  • vasodilator — a nerve or drug that causes vasodilatation.
  • venditation — a boastful or ostentatious display
  • vent window — (on an automobile) a small, pivoting window fitted into a main side window to provide draft-free ventilation.
  • video nasty — A video nasty is an extremely violent or frightening film which people can only buy on video.
  • videotaping — magnetic tape on which the electronic impulses produced by the video and audio portions of a television program, motion picture, etc., are recorded (distinguished from audiotape).
  • videotheque — a cinema in which videos are shown
  • vindication — the act of vindicating.
  • vindicatory — tending or serving to vindicate.
  • violet wood — kingwood.
  • vladivostok — a seaport in the SE Russian Federation in Asia, on the Sea of Japan: eastern terminus of the Trans-Siberian Railroad.
  • volsteadism — the policy of prohibiting the sale of alcoholic beverages.
  • wainscotted — Having a wainscot.
  • waistcoated — Wearing a waistcoat.
  • wait around — If you wait around or wait about, you stay in the same place, usually doing very little, because you cannot act before something happens or before someone arrives.
  • weight down — If you weight something down, you put something heavy on it or in it in order to prevent it from moving easily.
  • whit monday — the Monday following Whitsunday.
  • white cloud — a small, brightly colored freshwater fish, Tanichthys albonubes, native to China: popular in home aquariums.
  • white goods — household appliances
  • white sound — white noise.
  • white-robed — clothed in a white robe.
  • whiteboards — Plural form of whiteboard.
  • whodunnitry — the style or genre of novels, plays, etc concerned with crime
  • widemouthed — (of a person, object, body of water, etc.) having a mouth that is wide: a widemouthed river.
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