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11-letter words containing d, o, n, t, e

  • deplumation — to deprive of feathers; pluck.
  • depollution — to eliminate, clean up, or decrease pollution in (an area).
  • deportation — the act of expelling an alien from a country; expulsion
  • deportments — Plural form of deportment.
  • depositions — Plural form of deposition.
  • depravation — to make morally bad or evil; vitiate; corrupt.
  • deprecation — to express earnest disapproval of.
  • depredation — The depredations of a person, animal, or force are their harmful actions, which usually involve taking or damaging something.
  • deprivation — If you suffer deprivation, you do not have or are prevented from having something that you want or need.
  • deprotonate — (chemistry, ergative) To remove one or more protons from (a molecule).
  • deputations — Plural form of deputation.
  • dereliction — If a building or a piece of land is in a state of dereliction, it is deserted or abandoned.
  • derivations — Plural form of derivation.
  • dermatozoon — any microscopic animal or protozoan living as a parasite on or in the skin of the host.
  • dermopteran — flying lemur
  • derogations — Plural form of derogation.
  • desalinator — an apparatus used in the process of desalination
  • description — You can say that something is beyond description, or that it defies description, to emphasize that it is very unusual, impressive, terrible, or extreme.
  • desecration — a desecrating or being desecrated
  • desiccation — Desiccation is the process of becoming completely dried out.
  • designation — A designation is a description, name, or title that is given to someone or something. Designation is the fact of giving that description, name, or title.
  • designators — Plural form of designator.
  • designatory — to mark or point out; indicate; show; specify.
  • desolations — Plural form of desolation.
  • desperation — Desperation is the feeling that you have when you are in such a bad situation that you will try anything to change it.
  • despoilment — The act of despoiling; a plundering; despoliation.
  • dessication — Misspelling of desiccation.
  • destination — The destination of someone or something is the place to which they are going or being sent.
  • destitution — Destitution is the state of having no money or possessions.
  • destruction — Destruction is the act of destroying something, or the state of being destroyed.
  • detestation — intense hatred; abhorrence
  • detonations — Plural form of detonation.
  • detoxifying — Present participle of detoxify.
  • detractions — Plural form of detraction.
  • deuteranope — a person suffering from deuteranopia
  • deuteration — the process of introducing deuterium into a molecule or chemical compound
  • deuteronomy — the fifth book of the Old Testament, containing a second statement of the Mosaic Law
  • devaluation — a decrease in the exchange value of a currency against gold or other currencies, brought about by a government
  • devastation — Devastation is severe and widespread destruction or damage.
  • development — Development is the gradual growth or formation of something.
  • devolvement — to transfer or delegate (a duty, responsibility, etc.) to or upon another; pass on.
  • devotedness — State of being devoted.
  • devotionals — Plural form of devotional.
  • devotionist — a person who practises formal devotion
  • diatessaron — (in classical Greece) the interval of a perfect fourth
  • dicotyledon — any flowering plant of the class Dicotyledonae, normally having two embryonic seed leaves and leaves with netlike veins. The group includes many herbaceous plants and most families of trees and shrubs
  • digestional — the process in the alimentary canal by which food is broken up physically, as by the action of the teeth, and chemically, as by the action of enzymes, and converted into a substance suitable for absorption and assimilation into the body.
  • dimentional — Misspelling of dimensional.
  • dimethicone — Polydimethylsiloxane.
  • dinotherium — any elephantlike mammal of the extinct genus Dinotherium, from the later Tertiary Period of Europe and Asia, having large, outwardly curving tusks.
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