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11-letter words containing f, a, i, n

  • fractioning — Mathematics. a number usually expressed in the form a/b. a ratio of algebraic quantities similarly expressed.
  • fractionize — to divide (a number or quantity) into fractions
  • fractionlet — a small piece
  • fragileness — easily broken, shattered, or damaged; delicate; brittle; frail: a fragile ceramic container; a very fragile alliance.
  • fragmenting — a part broken off or detached: scattered fragments of the broken vase.
  • fragmentise — Alternative form of fragmentize.
  • fragmentize — to break (something) into fragments; break (something) apart.
  • franchisees — Plural form of franchisee.
  • franchisers — Plural form of franchiser.
  • franchising — a privilege of a public nature conferred on an individual, group, or company by a government: a franchise to operate a bus system.
  • franciscans — of or relating to St. Francis or the Franciscans.
  • francomania — an obsession with France or French things
  • francophile — friendly to or having a strong liking for France or the French.
  • frangipanis — Plural form of frangipani.
  • frangipanni — Archaic form of frangipani.
  • frank dobie — (James) Frank, 1888–1964, U.S. folklorist, educator, and author.
  • franklinite — a mineral of the spinel group, an oxide of zinc, manganese, and iron, occurring in black octahedral crystals or in masses: formerly mined for zinc.
  • frantically — desperate or wild with excitement, passion, fear, pain, etc.; frenzied.
  • franticness — desperate or wild with excitement, passion, fear, pain, etc.; frenzied.
  • franz kline — Franz (Josef) [joh-zuh f,, -suh f] /ˈdʒoʊ zəf,, -səf/ (Show IPA), 1910–62, U.S. painter.
  • frappuccino — Iced cappuccino.
  • fraternises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fraternise.
  • fraternized — Simple past tense and past participle of fraternize.
  • fraternizer — A person who fraternizes.
  • fraternizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fraternize.
  • freefalling — Present participle of freefall.
  • freelancing — Present participle of freelance.
  • freeloading — to take advantage of others for free food, entertainment, etc.
  • freemartins — Plural form of freemartin.
  • freudianism — of or relating to Sigmund Freud or his doctrines, especially with respect to the causes and treatment of neurotic and psychopathic states, the interpretation of dreams, etc.
  • friableness — The state or quality of being friable; friability.
  • friar minor — a friar belonging to the branch of the Franciscan order that observes the strict rule of St. Francis. Compare capuchin (def 4), Friar Minor Conventual.
  • fringe area — an area just beyond the outer limits of satisfactory reception, characterized by a weak and possibly unstable signal.
  • fructuation — the process of producing fruit
  • fruit ranch — a farm where fruit is the main produce.
  • fruitarians — Plural form of fruitarian.
  • frustrating — to make (plans, efforts, etc.) worthless or of no avail; defeat; nullify: The student's indifference frustrated the teacher's efforts to help him.
  • frustration — act of frustrating; state of being frustrated: the frustration of the president's efforts.
  • fucoxanthin — a brown carotenoid pigment occurring in brown algae, diatoms, and dinoflagellates.
  • fuel-saving — (of a vehicle) using less fuel for a further distance
  • fulgurating — (of pains) sharp and piercing.
  • fulguration — to flash or dart like lightning.
  • full gainer — a dive in which the diver takes off facing forward and performs a backward somersault, entering the water feet first and facing away from the springboard.
  • fulminating — Present participle of fulminate.
  • fulmination — a violent denunciation or censure: a sermon that was one long fulmination.
  • fulminatory — Thundering; striking terror.
  • funambulism — The art of walking on a tightrope or a slack-rope.
  • funambulist — a tightrope walker.
  • functionals — Plural form of functional.
  • functionary — a person who functions in a specified capacity, especially in government service; an official: civil servants, bureaucrats, and other functionaries.
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