11-letter words containing e, n, f, r, a
- confirmable — Capable of being checked, verifiable.
- confirmance — (obsolete) confirmation.
- conflagrate — to catch or set on fire
- conformable — corresponding in character; similar
- conformance — conformity
- corner flag — a flag placed on a short pole marking a corner of a football pitch
- counterfact — a conditional statement the first clause of which expresses something contrary to fact, as “If I had known.”.
- craft knife — a knife used for paper crafts, etc, that has a sharp replaceable blade
- craftswomen — Plural form of craftswoman.
- crestfallen — If you look crestfallen, you look sad and disappointed about something.
- dance floor — In a restaurant or night club, the dance floor is the area where people can dance.
- dandy fever — (in the West Indies) dengue.
- dead firing — firing of a furnace or boiler at less than normal operating temperature in order to maintain conditions desirable during a period of idleness.
- deferential — Someone who is deferential is polite and respectful towards someone else.
- defibrinate — to divest of fibrin or the protein formed in blood during clotting
- defloration — the act of deflowering
- deformation — the act of deforming; distortion
- diefenbaker — John George, 1895–1979, prime minister of Canada 1957–63.
- differentia — the character or attribute by which one species is distinguished from all others of the same genus.
- dog fancier — a person with a special interest in dogs
- draftswomen — Plural form of draftswoman.
- dragonflies — Plural form of dragonfly.
- drift angle — the angle made by the path of a drifting vessel with its heading.
- enforceable — Capable of being enforced.
- enframement — elements that surround a door or window
- enfranchise — Give the right to vote to.
- engraftment — The act of engrafting or something engrafted.
- face-harden — to harden the surface of (metal), as by chilling or casehardening.
- facinerious — (in the works of Shakespeare) extremely wicked
- fact finder — a person who searches impartially for the facts or actualities of a subject or situation, especially one appointed to conduct an official investigation, as in a labor-management conflict.
- fair enough — that is reasonable
- fair-minded — characterized by fair judgment; impartial; unprejudiced: a wise and fair-minded judge.
- fair-spoken — speaking or spoken in a courteous, civil, or plausible manner; smooth-spoken.
- fairy green — a medium yellow-green color.
- fairy queen — the queen of the fairies
- fairy stone — a fossil or other oddly shaped stone or crystal.
- fallen arch — collapse of the arch formed by the instep of the foot, resulting in flat feet
- false front — a façade falsifying the size, finish, or importance of a building, especially one having a humble purpose or cheap construction.
- falteringly — to hesitate or waver in action, purpose, intent, etc.; give way: Her courage did not falter at the prospect of hardship.
- fan the air — to strike at but fail to hit something
- fan tracery — the carved ornamentation on fan vaulting
- fancy dress — a costume for a ball, masquerade, etc., chosen to please the fancy, usually a costume characteristic of a particular period or place, class of persons, or historical or fictitious character.
- fanfaronade — bragging; bravado; bluster.
- far eastern — the countries of E Asia, including China, Japan, Korea, and sometimes adjacent areas.
- farawayness — the state of being faraway
- farinaceous — consisting or made of flour or meal, as food.
- farreaching — Alternative spelling of far-reaching.
- farthingale — a hoop skirt or framework for expanding a woman's skirt, worn in the 16th and 17th centuries.
- fatherlands — Plural form of fatherland.
- faulknerian — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or resembling the literary style of William Faulkner.