0%

11-letter words containing e, n, r, g, i, s

  • swing voter — to cause to move to and fro, sway, or oscillate, as something suspended from above: to swing one's arms in walking.
  • swingletree — a whiffletree.
  • swingometer — a device used in television broadcasting during a general election to indicate the swing of votes from one political party to another
  • synergistic — pertaining to, characteristic of, or resembling synergy: a synergistic effect.
  • terrigenous — produced by the earth.
  • terrorising — to fill or overcome with terror.
  • thanksgiver — a person who gives thanks.
  • the strings — violins, violas, cellos, and double basses collectively
  • tiger snake — either of two highly venomous snakes, Notechis scutatus and N. ater, of Australia and Tasmania, that grow to a length of 5 feet (1.5 meters).
  • tigrishness — the quality or state of being tigrish
  • topdressing — an application of fertiliser to soil
  • transecting — to cut across; dissect transversely.
  • transfigure — to change in outward form or appearance; transform.
  • transgenics — (used with a singular verb) the branch of biology concerned with the transfer of genes to other species.
  • trypsinogen — a precursor of trypsin that is secreted by the pancreas and is activated to trypsin in the small intestine.
  • tselinograd — a former name of Akmola.
  • turing test — (artificial intelligence)   A criterion proposed by Alan Turing in 1950 for deciding whether a computer is intelligent. Turing called it "the Imitation Game" and offered it as a replacement for the question, "Can machines think?" A human holds a written conversation on any topic with an unseen correspondent (nowadays it might be by electronic mail or chat). If the human believes he is talking to another human when he is really talking to a computer then the computer has passed the Turing test and is deemed to be intelligent. Turing predicted that within 50 years (by the year 2000) technological progress would produce computing machines with a capacity of 10**9 bits, and that with such machinery, a computer program would be able to fool the average questioner for 5 minutes about 70% of the time. The Loebner Prize is a competition to find a computer program which can pass an unrestricted Turing test. See also AI-complete.
  • under siege — being surrounded and attacked
  • under-sight — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
  • under-using — to employ for some purpose; put into service; make use of: to use a knife.
  • underdesign — to prepare the preliminary sketch or the plans for (a work to be executed), especially to plan the form and structure of: to design a new bridge.
  • undersigned — being the one or ones whose signature appears at the end of a letter or document: All of the undersigned persons are bound by the contract.
  • underthings — girls' or women's underwear
  • undeserving — qualified for or having a claim to reward, assistance, etc., because of one's actions, qualities, or situation: the deserving poor; a deserving applicant.
  • undressings — acts of undressing
  • ungarnished — to provide or supply with something ornamental; adorn; decorate.
  • unobserving — not observing
  • unperishing — not perishing; enduring
  • unpresuming — not presumptuous; humble
  • unreasoning — not reasoning or exercising reason; reasonless; thoughtless; irrational: an unreasoning fanatic.
  • unreligious — irreligious.
  • unresenting — not bearing resentment or anger (toward)
  • unresisting — to withstand, strive against, or oppose: to resist infection; to resist temptation.
  • unrestingly — in an unresting manner
  • unrighteous — not righteous; not upright or virtuous; wicked; sinful; evil: an unrighteous king.
  • unsovereign — a group or body of persons or a state having sovereign authority.
  • unstrategic — pertaining to, characterized by, or of the nature of strategy: strategic movements.
  • uprightness — erect or vertical, as in position or posture.
  • vertiginous — whirling; spinning; rotary: vertiginous currents of air.
  • very signal — a colored flare fired from a special pistol (Very pistol) for signaling at night
  • visbreaking — Visbreaking is thermal cracking, when the vacuum residue is less viscous and it can then be used to produce valuable products.
  • waitressing — a woman who waits on tables, as in a restaurant.
  • warehousing — an act or instance of a person or company that warehouses something.
  • water wings — an inflatable contrivance shaped like a pair of wings, usually worn under the arms to keep the body afloat while one swims or learns to swim.
  • waterskiing — Alternative spelling of water skiing.
  • wellsprings — Plural form of wellspring.
  • west riding — a former administrative division of Yorkshire, England.
  • wharfingers — Plural form of wharfinger.
  • whimperings — Plural form of whimpering.
  • whisperings — Plural form of whispering.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?