11-letter words containing f, e, r, t
- best friend — a dearest friend
- better half — one's spouse
- bored stiff — very bored
- boston fern — a cultivated fern (Nephrolepis exaltata var. bostoniensis) with odd-pinnate leaves, used as a house plant
- bottle fern — a fern, Cystopteris fragilis, of rocky, wooded areas throughout North America, having grayish-green fronds and brittle stalks.
- breakfasted — the first meal of the day; morning meal: A hearty breakfast was served at 7 a.m.
- breast-feed — When a woman breast-feeds her baby, she feeds it with milk from her breasts, rather than from a bottle.
- brute force — physical strength, power
- bulletproof — Something that is bulletproof is made of a strong material that bullets cannot pass through.
- bullfighter — A bullfighter is the person who tries to injure or kill the bull in a bullfight.
- butterfield — William. 1814–1900, British architect of the Gothic Revival; his buildings include Keble College, Oxford (1870) and All Saints, Margaret Street, London (1849–59)
- butterflies — tremors in the stomach region due to nervousness
- butterflyer — a swimmer who performs the butterfly stroke
- buy-to-fret — denoting the practice of buying a property to let to tenants during a period when property values are falling
- cafe brulot — black coffee flavored with sugar, lemon and orange rinds, cloves, cinnamon, and brandy, ignited and allowed to flame briefly.
- cafe filtre — a strong black filtered coffee
- cafetoriums — Plural form of cafetorium.
- calefactory — giving warmth
- californite — vesuvianite jade.
- canto fermo — a melody that is the basis to which other parts are added in polyphonic music
- carefullest — Superlative form of careful.
- cattle farm — a farm on which cattle are raised
- ceftriaxone — (pharmaceutical drug) A synthetic cephalosporin antibiotic.
- center-fire — (of a cartridge) having the primer in the center of the base. Compare rimfire (def 1).
- centerfield — the area of the outfield beyond second base and between right field and left field.
- centerfolds — Plural form of centerfold.
- centre half — a defender who plays in the middle of the defence
- centre-fire — (of a cartridge) having the primer in the centre of the base
- centrifical — Misspelling of centrifugal.
- centrifugal — acting, moving, or tending to move away from a centre
- centrifuged — an apparatus that rotates at high speed and by centrifugal force separates substances of different densities, as milk and cream.
- centrifuges — Plural form of centrifuge.
- certifiable — If you describe someone as certifiable, you think that their behaviour is extremely unreasonable or foolish.
- certifiably — capable of being certified.
- certificate — A certificate is an official document stating that particular facts are true.
- chamfer bit — a bit for beveling the edge of a hole.
- chieftainry — the area governed by a chieftain
- circumflect — to emphasize with a circumflex accent
- city father — You can refer to a member of a city council or city's government as a city father.
- cluster fly — a dipterous fly, Pollenia rudis, that tends to gather in large numbers in attics in the autumn: family Calliphoridae. The larvae are parasitic in earthworms
- coat flower — a plant, Petrorhagia saxifraga, of the pink family, native to Eurasia, having pink or white flowers in terminal branching clusters.
- cockfighter — One who engages in a cockfight.
- coffee tree — any of several rubiaceous trees of the genus Coffea, esp C. arabica, the seeds of which are used in the preparation of the beverage coffee
- comfortable — If a piece of furniture or an item of clothing is comfortable, it makes you feel physically relaxed when you use it, for example because it is soft.
- comfortless — to soothe, console, or reassure; bring cheer to: They tried to comfort her after her loss.
- confarreate — of or relating to confarreation
- confederate — Someone's confederates are the people they are working with in a secret activity.
- configurate — to shape or fashion
- conflagrate — to catch or set on fire
- convert.f90 — A Fortran77 to Fortran90 translator by Michael Metcalf <[email protected]>. The significant differences between the two Fortrans make this package useful.