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10-letter words containing e, a

  • -appointed — -appointed combines with adverbs to form adjectives such as well-appointed that describe a building or room that is equipped or furnished in the way that is mentioned.
  • -barrelled — -barrelled combines with adjectives to form adjectives that describe a gun which has a barrel or barrels of the specified type.
  • -cephalous — having a (specified) kind of head or number of heads; -cephalic
  • -flavoured — -flavoured is used after nouns such as strawberry and chocolate to indicate that a food or drink is flavoured with strawberry or chocolate.
  • -organized — -organized is added to nouns to form adjectives which indicate who organizes something.
  • -populated — inhabited by the people or in the manner mentioned
  • -resistant — -resistant is added to nouns to form adjectives that describe something as not being harmed or affected by the thing mentioned.
  • -spattered — -spattered is added to nouns to form adjectives which indicate that a liquid has spattered onto something.
  • -yard line — In football, a team's 5-yard line, or 10-yard line, and so on, is a line painted across the field and numbered, that marks the distance from the goal line.
  • a cappella — without instrumental accompaniment
  • a fast one — a deceptive act
  • a good bet — If you tell someone that something is a good bet, you are suggesting that it is the thing or course of action that they should choose.
  • a good few — You use not a few when you are referring to quite a lot of things or people. You can also use a good few in this way, mainly in British English.
  • a good one — an unbelievable assertion
  • a l'etuvee — stewed.
  • a l'orange — prepared or served with slices of orange, orange peel, or an orange-flavored sauce: duck à l'orange.
  • a la carte — An à la carte menu in a restaurant offers you a choice of individually priced dishes for each course.
  • a mile off — If you say that you can see or recognize something a mile off, you are emphasizing that it is very obvious and easy to recognize.
  • à outrance — to the utmost; to the bitter end; to the death
  • a raw deal — If you say that you are getting a raw deal, you mean that you are being treated unfairly.
  • a wary eye — If you keep a wary eye on something or someone, you are cautious about them and watch them to see what they will do or what will happen to them.
  • a-language — (language)   An early ALGOL-like surface syntax for Lisp.
  • a.n. other — an unnamed person: used in team lists, etc, to indicate a place that remains to be filled
  • aardwolves — Plural form of aardwolf.
  • ab aeterno — from the most remote antiquity.
  • ab origine — Latin. from the very beginning; from the source or origin.
  • abacterial — not caused by or characterized by the presence of bacteria
  • abalienate — (civil law, transitive) To transfer the title of from one to another; to alienate.
  • abasements — Plural form of abasement.
  • abatements — Plural form of abatement.
  • abbreviate — If you abbreviate something, especially a word or a piece of writing, you make it shorter.
  • abdelkader — ?1807–83, Algerian nationalist, who resisted the French invasion of Algeria and established (1837) an independent state. He surrendered to the French in 1847
  • abdicative — to renounce or relinquish a throne, right, power, claim, responsibility, or the like, especially in a formal manner: The aging founder of the firm decided to abdicate.
  • aberdevine — a former name for the siskin, when kept as a cagebird
  • aberdonian — a native or inhabitant of Aberdeen
  • aberrantly — in an aberrant manner
  • aberration — An aberration is an incident or way of behaving that is not typical.
  • aberrative — Descriptive of an object or measurement that has deviated or been knocked, momentarily and sharply, from the more dominant, normal or expected course or trajectory to which it either has or is expected to return in the longer term.
  • abhorrence — Someone's abhorrence of something is their strong hatred of it.
  • abhorrency — (obsolete) Aberrancy. (Attested only in the late 16th century.).
  • abhorrible — (rare, obsolete) Detestable. (mid 17th century).
  • abiogenist — a person who believes in abiogenesis
  • abirritate — to soothe or make less irritable
  • abiturient — a German student who is leaving secondary school and going to university after taking the final examination
  • abjectness — The state of being abject; abasement; meanness; servility. (Late 16th century.).
  • ablatively — in a way that relates to the melting or wearing away of an expendable part
  • ablutomane — a person who is obsessive about washing himself or herself
  • abnegating — Present participle of abnegate.
  • abnegation — a giving up of rights, etc.; self-denial; renunciation
  • abnegative — (obsolete, rare): Denying; renouncing; negative.

On this page, we collect all 10-letter words with E-A. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 10-letter word that contains in E-A to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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