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11-letter words containing e, c, a, l, r

  • deallocator — One who, or that which, deallocates.
  • decartelize — to break up (a cartel)
  • decelerated — Simple past tense and past participle of decelerate.
  • decelerates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decelerate.
  • declamatory — A declamatory phrase, statement, or way of speaking is dramatic and confident.
  • declaration — A declaration is an official announcement or statement.
  • declarative — making a statement or assertion
  • declarators — Plural form of declarator.
  • declaratory — (of a statute) stating the existing law on a particular subject; explanatory
  • declare for — If you declare for something or someone, you say that you are in favour of them.
  • declarement — (obsolete) declaration.
  • declinatory — a plea that has the aim of demonstrating that the accused is exempt from legal authority and punishment
  • declinature — the act of refusing politely
  • decolorants — Plural form of decolorant.
  • decorrelate — To reduce the correlation between signals.
  • decremental — relating to a small amount that is taken away
  • deculturate — to cause the loss or abandonment of culture or cultural characteristics of (a people, society, etc.).
  • deflazacort — A glucocorticoid prodrug used as an anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressant.
  • deliverance — Deliverance is rescue from imprisonment, danger, or evil.
  • delta force — (in the US) an élite army unit involved in counterterrorist operations abroad
  • dendritical — Alternative form of dendritic.
  • dental care — Dental care is medical care and hygiene relating to your teeth.
  • depreciable — able to be depreciated for tax deduction
  • deracialize — to remove racial characteristics from (a person)
  • desacralize — to render less sacred; to secularize
  • descrambled — Simple past tense and past participle of descramble.
  • descrambler — unscrambler (def 2).
  • describable — to tell or depict in written or spoken words; give an account of: He described the accident very carefully.
  • dextrocular — favoring the right eye, rather than the left, by habit or for effective vision (opposed to sinistrocular).
  • diametrical — of or along a diameter
  • dilacerated — Simple past tense and past participle of dilacerate.
  • dimercaprol — a colorless, oily, viscous liquid, C 3 H 8 OS 2 , originally developed as an antidote to lewisite and now used in treating bismuth, gold, mercury, and arsenic poisoning.
  • diphycercal — having a tail or caudal fin with the spinal column extending horizontally to the end of the tail, characteristic of lungfish, several other primitive fishes, and the juvenile stage of modern bony fishes.
  • direct mail — mail, usually consisting of advertising matter, appeals for donations, or the like, sent simultaneously to large numbers of possible individual customers or contributors. Abbreviation: DM.
  • direct-dial — being a telephone or telephone system enabling long-distance calls to be direct-dialed.
  • directional — of, relating to, or indicating direction in space.
  • directorial — pertaining to a director or directorate.
  • discardable — to cast aside or dispose of; get rid of: to discard an old hat.
  • discernable — capable of being discerned; distinguishable.
  • discernably — capable of being discerned; distinguishable.
  • disclaimers — Plural form of disclaimer.
  • discolorate — (transitive, dated) To discolor.
  • disgraceful — bringing or deserving disgrace; shameful; dishonorable; disreputable.
  • diverticula — a blind, tubular sac or process branching off from a canal or cavity, especially an abnormal, saclike herniation of the mucosal layer through the muscular wall of the colon.
  • dreadlocked — Wearing dreadlocks.
  • dry cleaner — a business that dry-cleans garments, draperies, etc.
  • dry-cleanse — to dry-clean.
  • duplicature — a folding or doubling of a part on itself, as a membrane.
  • early music — music of the medieval, Renaissance, and early Baroque periods, especially revived and played on period instruments; European music after ancient music and before the classical music era, from the beginning of the Middle Ages to about 1750.
  • earth-color — (often initial capital letter) the planet third in order from the sun, having an equatorial diameter of 7926 miles (12,755 km) and a polar diameter of 7900 miles (12,714 km), a mean distance from the sun of 92.9 million miles (149.6 million km), and a period of revolution of 365.26 days, and having one satellite.
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