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11-letter words containing e, d, t, a

  • disregulate — Misspelling of dysregulate.
  • disrelation — the absence of relation
  • disruptable — Capable of being disrupted.
  • disseminate — to scatter or spread widely, as though sowing seed; promulgate extensively; broadcast; disperse: to disseminate information about preventive medicine.
  • dissimilate — to modify by dissimilation.
  • dissimulate — to disguise or conceal under a false appearance; dissemble: to dissimulate one's true feelings about a rival.
  • dissipative — to scatter in various directions; disperse; dispel.
  • dissociated — Simple past tense and past participle of dissociate.
  • dissociates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dissociate.
  • distantiate — to put or keep at an emotional or intellectual distance
  • distantness — The state or quality of being distant or remote.
  • distasteful — unpleasant, offensive, or causing dislike: a distasteful chore.
  • distillable — Capable of being distilled, especially capably of being distilled without chemical decomposition.
  • distillates — Plural form of distillate.
  • distractive — tending to distract.
  • disturbance — the act of disturbing.
  • divaricated — Spread-out, divergent, especially of a branch etc. which is at nearly ninety degrees to the main stem.
  • divellicate — to separate; pull apart
  • 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.
  • dna testing — genetic profiling
  • do a stroke — If someone does not do a stroke of work, they are very lazy and do no work at all.
  • do to death — overdo sth, do sth too often
  • doc martens — a brand of lace-up boots with thick lightweight resistant soles
  • doctorspeak — the language of physicians and other health professionals; specialized or technical jargon used by healthcare workers.
  • doctrinaire — a person who tries to apply some doctrine or theory without sufficient regard for practical considerations; an impractical theorist.
  • documentary — Also, documental [dok-yuh-men-tl] /ˌdɒk yəˈmɛn tl/ (Show IPA). pertaining to, consisting of, or derived from documents: a documentary history of France.
  • dodecastyle — having 12 columns.
  • dog eat dog — marked by destructive or ruthless competition; without self-restraint, ethics, etc.: It's a dog-eat-dog industry.
  • dog-catcher — a person employed by a municipal pound, humane society, or the like, to find and impound stray or homeless dogs, cats, etc.
  • dog-eat-dog — marked by destructive or ruthless competition; without self-restraint, ethics, etc.: It's a dog-eat-dog industry.
  • dogcatchers — Plural form of dogcatcher.
  • dollar rate — a variable amount of foreign currency quoted against one unit of the US Dollar
  • domesticate — to convert (animals, plants, etc.) to domestic uses; tame.
  • domiciliate — to domicile.
  • donut peach — fruit
  • dope addict — Slang. a drug addict.
  • dorset naga — a British-grown variety of the Naga Jolokia chilli pepper, noted for its extreme heat
  • dot address — An Internet address in dot notation.
  • dot leaders — (text)   A row of full stops intended to guide the reader's eye across the page from a column of variable length items on the left to the corresponding items in a column on the right. Used, for example, in the contents page of a book to tie a heading on the left to its page number on the right.
  • dotted pair — (programming)   The usual LISP syntax for representing a cons cell that is not a list. For example, the expression (cons 'foo 42) returns a cons cell that is output as (foo . 42) which represents a cons cell whose car is the symbol "foo" and whose cdr is the integer 42.
  • dotted quad — dot notation
  • double coat — an outer coat of hair on a dog serving as protection against underbrush and resistant to weather, combined with an undercoat of softer hair for warmth and waterproofing.
  • double date — two couples meeting socially
  • double flat — a symbol () that lowers the pitch of the note following it by two semitones.
  • double ikat — a method of printing woven fabric by tie-dyeing the warp yarns (warp ikat) the weft yarns (weft ikat) or both (double ikat) before weaving.
  • double salt — a salt that crystallizes as a single substance but ionizes as two distinct salts when dissolved, as carnallite, KMgCl 3 ⋅6H 2 O.
  • double star — two stars that appear as one if not viewed through a telescope with adequate magnification, such as two stars that are separated by a great distance but are nearly in line with each other and an observer (optical double star) or those that are relatively close together and comprise a single physical system (physical double star)
  • double take — a rapid or surprised second look, either literal or figurative, at a person or situation whose significance had not been completely grasped at first: His friends did a double take when they saw how much weight he had lost.
  • double talk — speech using nonsense syllables along with words in a rapid patter.
  • double tape — a ribbon of material, usually with a plastic base, coated on one side (single tape) or both sides (double tape) with a substance containing iron oxide, to make it sensitive to impulses from an electromagnet: used to record sound, images, data, etc.
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