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11-letter words containing d, o, n, a, g, e

  • gormandizer — A person who gormandizes; a glutton or gourmand.
  • gormandizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gormandize.
  • gourmandise — unrestrained enjoyment of fine foods, wines, and the like.
  • gourmandize — to enjoy fine food and drink, especially often and in lavish quantity.
  • grade point — Education. a numerical equivalent to a received letter grade, usually 0 for F, 1 for D, 2 for C, 3 for B, and 4 for A, that is multiplied by the number of credits for the course: used to compute a grade point average.
  • grand monde — fashionable society; high society
  • grand opera — a serious, usually tragic, opera in which most of the text is set to music.
  • grandiosely — affectedly grand or important; pompous: grandiose words.
  • grandmother — the mother of one's father or mother.
  • groenendael — former name of Belgian sheepdog.
  • ground beam — a reinforced concrete beam for supporting walls, joists, etc., at or near ground level, itself either resting directly upon the ground or supported at both ends by piers.
  • ground game — game animals, such as hares or deer, found on the earth's surface: distinguished from game birds
  • ground wave — a radio wave that propagates on or near the earth's surface and is affected by the ground and the troposphere.
  • groundshare — to share the facilities and running costs of a single stadium with another team
  • groundwater — the water beneath the surface of the ground, consisting largely of surface water that has seeped down: the source of water in springs and wells.
  • guardswomen — Plural form of guardswoman.
  • halogenated — Simple past tense and past participle of halogenate.
  • heading dog — a dog that heads off a flock of sheep or a single sheep
  • hearing dog — a dog that has been trained to alert a hearing-impaired person to sounds, as a telephone ringing or dangerous noises.
  • homogenated — Homogenized.
  • hydrogenase — an enzyme in certain microorganisms that speeds up the reversible oxidation of hydrogen
  • hydrogenate — to combine or treat with hydrogen, especially to add hydrogen to the molecule of (an unsaturated organic compound).
  • inorganized — Unorganized.
  • invigorated — Give strength or energy to.
  • isogradient — a line on a weather map or chart connecting points having the same horizontal gradient of a meteorological quantity, as temperature, pressure, or the like.
  • keyboarding — the row or set of keys on a piano, organ, or the like.
  • knot garden — an intricately designed flower or herb garden with plants arranged to create an interlacing pattern, sometimes with fanciful topiary and carefully tended paths.
  • langue d'oc — the Romance language of medieval southern France: developed into modern Provençal.
  • leading dog — a dog trained to lead a flock of sheep to prevent them breaking or stampeding
  • lenat, doug — Doug Lenat
  • long-haired — Sometimes Disparaging. an intellectual.
  • long-headed — Anthropology. dolichocephalic.
  • long-tailed — (of an animal) having a long tail
  • longhandles — long underwear.
  • megadontism — macrodontia.
  • misdiagnose — to make an incorrect diagnosis.
  • mogen david — Star of David.
  • monogrammed — Past participle of monogram.
  • monographed — Simple past tense and past participle of monograph.
  • nacogdoches — a city in N Texas.
  • non-aligned — not aligned: nonaligned machine parts.
  • nondelegate — a person who is not an official delegate
  • nongraduate — a person who is not a graduate of an educational institution
  • odaxelagnia — (rare) A paraphilia in which biting or being bitten leads to sexual arousal.
  • open dating — the practice of putting a freshness date on food packages.
  • overdrawing — Present participle of overdraw.
  • overloading — (language)   (Or "Operator overloading"). Use of a single symbol to represent operators with different argument types, e.g. "-", used either, as a monadic operator to negate an expression, or as a dyadic operator to return the difference between two expressions. Another example is "+" used to add either integers or floating-point numbers. Overloading is also known as ad-hoc polymorphism. User-defined operator overloading is provided by several modern programming languages, e.g. C++'s class system and the functional programming language Haskell's type classes. Ad-hoc polymorphism (better described as overloading) is the ability to use the same syntax for objects of different types, e.g. "+" for addition of reals and integers or "-" for unary negation or diadic subtraction. Parametric polymorphism allows the same object code for a function to handle arguments of many types but overloading only reuses syntax and requires different code to handle different types.
  • oxygen acid — oxyacid.
  • pentagonoid — like a pentagon in shape.
  • perigordian — of, relating to, or characteristic of an Upper Paleolithic cultural epoch in southern France, especially of the Périgord region.
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