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11-letter words containing e, d, g

  • sixth grade — (in the US) the sixth school year after kindergarten, usually containing pupils around 11 or 12 years old
  • skulduggery — dishonorable proceedings; mean dishonesty or trickery: bribery, graft, and other such skulduggery.
  • slaughtered — the killing or butchering of cattle, sheep, etc., especially for food.
  • sleigh ride — trip on a sledge
  • sluggardise — indolence or laziness
  • sluggardize — to make lazy or sluggish
  • smouldering — burning slowly without flame, usually emitting smoke
  • sneezeguard — a plastic or glass shield overhanging a salad bar, buffet, or the like to protect the food from contamination.
  • sniffer dog — a dog trained to find illegal drugs or explosives by smell.
  • snow bridge — a mass of snow bridging a crevasse, sometimes affording a risky way across it
  • sockdolager — something unusually large, heavy, etc.
  • sockdoliger — a conclusive argument; a hard blow
  • sockdologer — a decisive blow or remark
  • solid angle — an angle formed by three or more planes intersecting in a common point or formed at the vertex of a cone.
  • sound stage — a large, soundproof studio used for filming motion pictures.
  • south ogden — a town in N Utah.
  • southbridge — a town in S Massachusetts.
  • speed light — an electronic flash lamp.
  • speedcoding — (language)   A pseudocode interpreter for mathematics on IBM 701 and IBM 650 written by John Backus in 1953.
  • spindlelegs — (used with a plural verb) long, thin legs.
  • splodginess — the state of being splodgy
  • sponge down — to wipe clean with a damp sponge or cloth
  • spotted gum — an Australian eucalyptus tree, Eucalyptus maculata
  • spreadingly — in a spreading manner
  • spring tide — the large rise and fall of the tide at or soon after the new or the full moon.
  • springfield — a state in the central United States: a part of the Midwest. 56,400 sq. mi. (146,075 sq. km). Capital: Springfield. Abbreviation: IL (for use with zip code), Ill.
  • starlighted — lit by the stars
  • stemwinding — wound by turning a knob at the stem.
  • stepdancing — a dance emphasizing footwork or certain steps instead of other bodily gestures or movement
  • stevedoring — the act or practice of loading or unloading a ship, ship's cargo, etc
  • stigmatized — marked out or described (as something bad)
  • stoneground — (of wheat or other grain) ground between millstones, especially those made of burstone, so as to retain the whole of the grain and preserve nutritional content.
  • stourbridge — an industrial town in W central England, in Dudley unitary authority, West Midlands. Pop: 55 480 (2001)
  • strategized — to make up or determine strategy; plan.
  • strong side — the side of the offensive line where the tight end is positioned, thereby the side having the greater number of players.
  • sub-heading — a title or heading of a subdivision, as in a chapter, essay, or newspaper article.
  • sugar-cured — (especially of ham or bacon) cured in a mixture of sugar, salt, and sodium nitrate or sodium nitrite.
  • sugarcoated — to cover with sugar: to sugarcoat a pill.
  • superceding — supersede.
  • superseding — to replace in power, authority, effectiveness, acceptance, use, etc., as by another person or thing.
  • sweat gland — one of the minute, coiled, tubular glands of the skin that secrete sweat.
  • sweat lodge — (especially among North American Indians) a special building used for cleansing and purifying one's body by sweating, in which heated water is poured over heated stones to produce steam.
  • tanning bed — a boxlike bed having a hinged cover and equipped with sunlamps to produce a suntan.
  • target date — the date set or aimed at for the commencement, fulfillment, or completion of some effort: The target date for the book is next May.
  • teeth-ridge — alveolar ridge.
  • telegraphed — an apparatus, system, or process for transmitting messages or signals to a distant place, especially by means of an electric device consisting essentially of a sending instrument and a distant receiving instrument connected by a conducting wire or other communications channel.
  • tenth grade — (in the US) the tenth year of school, when students are 15 or 16 years old
  • tettigoniid — long-horned grasshopper.
  • texas hedge — the opposite of a normal hedging operation, in which risk is increased by buying more than one financial instrument of the same kind
  • the diggers — a radical English Puritan group, led by Gerrard Winstanley, which advocated communal ownership of land (1649–50)
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