11-letter words containing e, n, t, d
- transandine — crossing or beyond the Andes
- transborder — the part or edge of a surface or area that forms its outer boundary.
- transcended — to rise above or go beyond; overpass; exceed: to transcend the limits of thought; kindness transcends courtesy.
- transdermal — Also, transdermic. transcutaneous.
- transferred — to convey or remove from one place, person, etc., to another: He transferred the package from one hand to the other.
- transformed — to change in form, appearance, or structure; metamorphose.
- transgender — noting or relating to a person whose gender identity does not correspond to that person’s biological sex assigned at birth: the transgender movement; transgender rights.
- transpadane — on the farther side, especially the northern side of the Po River.
- transponder — a radio, radar, or sonar transceiver that automatically transmits a signal upon reception of a designated incoming signal.
- transported — emotionally moved; ecstatic: transported by the music.
- trendsetter — a person or thing that establishes a new trend or fashion.
- trepidation — tremulous fear, alarm, or agitation; perturbation.
- trickledown — of, relating to, or based on the trickle-down theory: the trickle-down benefits to the local community.
- tricornered — having three corners; tricorn.
- trinitytide — the period between Trinity Sunday and Advent.
- triple bond — a chemical linkage consisting of three covalent bonds between two atoms of a molecule, represented in chemical formulas by three lines or six dots, as CH≡CH or CH⋮⋮CH.
- truncheoned — the club carried by a police officer; billy.
- trundle bed — truckle bed.
- trundletail — a dog with a curly tail.
- trypanocide — a drug or substance that kills trypanosomes
- tselinograd — a former name of Akmola.
- tube bundle — A tube bundle is a set of tubes in a shell-and-tube heat exchanger.
- tudorbethan — (of a contemporary building) imitative of Tudor and Elizabethan architecture
- tumble down — collapse, fall
- tumble-down — dilapidated; ruined; rundown: He lived in a tumble-down shack.
- tuning head — the part of a stringed instrument where the tension of the strings is adjusted by means of screwed pegs.
- twenty-fold — having twenty sections, aspects, divisions, kinds, etc.
- twin-bedded — A twin-bedded room has two single beds.
- twofoldness — the quality or state of being twofold
- typefounder — a person who casts metallic printer's type
- tyrannicide — the act of killing a tyrant.
- ultramodern — very advanced in ideas, design, or techniques.
- un-budgeted — an estimate, often itemized, of expected income and expense for a given period in the future.
- un-hydrated — (of paper pulp) beaten until gelatinous for making into water-resistant paper.
- un-nurtured — to feed and protect: to nurture one's offspring.
- un-rebutted — to refute by evidence or argument.
- unabrogated — not abrogated, revoked, or annulled
- unaccounted — an oral or written description of particular events or situations; narrative: an account of the meetings; an account of the trip.
- unacquitted — to relieve from a charge of fault or crime; declare not guilty: They acquitted him of the crime. The jury acquitted her, but I still think she's guilty.
- unactivated — to make active; cause to function or act.
- unadaptable — capable of being adapted.
- unadoptable — (of children or animals) not able to be adopted or placed in a home
- unafflicted — to distress with mental or bodily pain; trouble greatly or grievously: to be afflicted with arthritis.
- unalienated — to make indifferent or hostile: By refusing to get a job, he has alienated his entire family.
- unallocated — to set apart for a particular purpose; assign or allot: to allocate funds for new projects.
- unamortized — Finance. to liquidate or extinguish (a mortgage, debt, or other obligation), especially by periodic payments to the creditor or to a sinking fund. to write off a cost of (an asset) gradually.
- unannotated — supplied with or containing explanatory notes, textual comments, etc.: an annotated edition of Milton's poetry.
- unappointed — by, through, or as a result of an appointment (often in contrast with elected): an appointed official.
- unaspirated — Phonetics. to articulate (a speech sound, especially a stop) so as to produce an audible puff of breath, as with the first t of total, the second t being unaspirated. to articulate (the beginning of a word or syllable) with an h -sound, as in which, pronounced (hwich), or hitch as opposed to witch or itch.
- unattainted — Law. to condemn by a sentence or a bill or act of attainder.