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13-letter words containing e, a, s, t, n, d

  • hereditaments — Plural form of hereditament.
  • hereditarians — Plural form of hereditarian.
  • herod antipas — died after a.d. 39, ruler of Galilee, a.d. 4–39: ordered the execution of John the Baptist and participated in the trial of Jesus.
  • horse trading — the act or fact of conducting a shrewd exchange or engaging in a horse trade; bargaining.
  • horse-trading — to bargain or trade shrewdly.
  • hotheadedness — The state or characteristic of being hotheaded; the tendency to be easily infuriated or provoked.
  • house-trained — housebroken.
  • idealizations — Plural form of idealization.
  • identicalness — The state or quality of being identical.
  • idiomaticness — Idiomaticity.
  • immediateness — The state of being immediate; immediacy.
  • in sb's stead — If you do something in someone's stead, you replace them and do it instead of them.
  • in the saddle — a seat for a rider on the back of a horse or other animal.
  • incandescents — Plural form of incandescent.
  • inconsiderate — without due regard for the rights or feelings of others: It was inconsiderate of him to keep us waiting.
  • indian desert — Thar Desert.
  • indisturbance — Freedom from disturbance; calmness; repose.
  • indoctrinates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of indoctrinate.
  • industrialise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of industrialize.
  • industrialize — to introduce industry into (an area) on a large scale.
  • infrared star — a star radiating strongly in the infrared portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.
  • insubordinate — not submitting to authority; disobedient: an insubordinate soldier.
  • inter-assured — to make (a future event) sure; ensure: This contract assures the company's profit this month.
  • intermediates — Plural form of intermediate.
  • intermodalism — pertaining to or suitable for transportation involving more than one form of carrier, as truck and rail, or truck, ship, and rail.
  • interpleaders — Plural form of interpleader.
  • intersidereal — interstellar
  • isolated pawn — a pawn without pawns of the same colour on neighbouring files
  • judgmentalism — Judgmental behaviour or attitude.
  • kindergartens — Plural form of kindergarten.
  • kiss-and-tell — revealing sth private for money
  • lady's mantle — any of various rosaceous plants of the N temperate genus Alchemilla, having small green flowers
  • land registry — In Britain, a land registry is a government office where records are kept about each area of land in a country or region, including information about who owns it.
  • landfill site — also landfill
  • landgraviates — Plural form of landgraviate.
  • landing stage — a floating platform used as a wharf.
  • lantern slide — a slide or transparency for projection by a slide projector or magic lantern.
  • last judgment — judgment (def 8).
  • lead arsenate — a white, crystalline, water-insoluble, highly poisonous powder, PbHAsO 4 , used as an insecticide.
  • lepidopterans — Plural form of lepidopteran.
  • libyan desert — a desert in N Africa, in E Libya, W Egypt, and NW Sudan, W of the Nile: part of the Sahara. About 650,000 sq. mi. (1,683,500 sq. km).
  • list enhanced — (operating system, tool)   An MS-DOS file browsing utility written by Vern Buerg in 1983. A former mainframe systems programmer, Buerg wrote DOS utilities when he began using an IBM PC and missed the file-scanning ability he had on mainframes. The software became an instant success, and his list utility was in use on an estimated 5 million PCs.
  • long-distance — of, from, or between distant places: a long-distance phone call.
  • lonsdale belt — (in Britain) a belt conferred as a trophy on professional boxing champions, in various weight categories: if a champion wins it three times it becomes his personal property
  • lymphadenitis — inflammation of a lymphatic gland.
  • magnetic disk — Also called disk, hard disk. a rigid disk coated with magnetic material, on which data and programs can be stored.
  • maiden castle — an ancient fortification in Dorsetshire, England, first erected c250 b.c. over the remains of Neolithic and Bronze Age settlements of c2000–c1500 b.c.
  • maladjustment — bad or unsatisfactory adjustment.
  • maladminister — to administer or manage badly or inefficiently: The mayor was a bungler who maladministered the city budget.
  • maladroitness — lacking in adroitness; unskillful; awkward; bungling; tactless: to handle a diplomatic crisis in a very maladroit way.
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