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11-letter words containing e, s, p, i

  • impersonate — to assume the character or appearance of; pretend to be: He was arrested for impersonating a police officer.
  • impetuosity — the quality or condition of being impetuous.
  • impetuously — of, relating to, or characterized by sudden or rash action, emotion, etc.; impulsive: an impetuous decision; an impetuous person.
  • impiousness — Quality of being impious.
  • implausible — not plausible; not having the appearance of truth or credibility: an implausible alibi.
  • imponderous — (obsolete) imponderable.
  • importances — the quality or state of being important; consequence; significance.
  • impostumate — affected by an abscess
  • imprecisely — In an imprecise manner.
  • imprecision — not precise; not exact; vague or ill-defined.
  • impregnates — to make pregnant; get with child or young.
  • impresarios — Plural form of impresario.
  • impressible — capable of being impressed; impressionable.
  • impressibly — In an impressible manner.
  • impressions — Plural form of impression.
  • impressment — the act of impressing people or property into public service or use.
  • improvisate — To improvise; to extemporize.
  • improvisers — Plural form of improviser.
  • impuissance — Impotence, weakness.
  • impulse buy — spur-of-the-moment purchase
  • impulsively — actuated or swayed by emotional or involuntary impulses: an impulsive child.
  • in close-up — If you see something in close-up, you see it in great detail in a photograph or piece of film which has been taken very near to the subject.
  • in lockstep — When members of the armed forces march in lockstep, they march very close to each other.
  • in personam — (of a judicial act) directed against a specific person or persons
  • in progress — a movement toward a goal or to a further or higher stage: the progress of a student toward a degree.
  • in prospect — expected, predicted
  • in spite of — a malicious, usually petty, desire to harm, annoy, frustrate, or humiliate another person; bitter ill will; malice.
  • in the soup — a liquid food made by boiling or simmering meat, fish, or vegetables with various added ingredients.
  • incapsulate — Alternative form of encapsulate.
  • incompassed — Simple past tense and past participle of incompass.
  • incompletes — Plural form of incomplete.
  • incomposite — not composite or consisting of parts; simple; not divisible into parts
  • ineptitudes — Plural form of ineptitude.
  • inescapable — incapable of being escaped, ignored, or avoided; ineluctable: inescapable responsibilities.
  • inescapably — incapable of being escaped, ignored, or avoided; ineluctable: inescapable responsibilities.
  • inexpensive — not expensive; not high in price; costing little.
  • inexplosive — not explosive; incapable of exploding or being exploded.
  • inner space — the environment beneath the surface of the sea
  • innerspring — having or characterized by a large number of enclosed coil springs within an overall padding: innerspring construction.
  • inscriptive — of, relating to, or of the nature of an inscription.
  • insculpture — an inscription or carving
  • inseparable — incapable of being separated, parted, or disjoined: inseparable companions.
  • inseparably — In an inseparable manner.
  • inside loop — a loop during which the top of the airplane is on the inner side of the curve described by the course of flight.
  • insipidness — without distinctive, interesting, or stimulating qualities; vapid: an insipid personality.
  • inspectable — to look carefully at or over; view closely and critically: to inspect every part of the motor.
  • inspections — Plural form of inspection.
  • inspirative — to fill with an animating, quickening, or exalting influence: His courage inspired his followers.
  • inspissated — Simple past tense and past participle of inspissate.
  • inspissates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of inspissate.
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