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11-letter words containing f, e, t, i, r

  • olfactories — of or relating to the sense of smell: olfactory organs.
  • outfielders — Plural form of outfielder.
  • overcertify — to certify (a bank check) for an amount greater than the balance in the drawer's account.
  • overfatigue — excessive tiredness from which recuperation is difficult.
  • overfreight — to load too heavily
  • overinflate — to inflate to an excessive degree
  • patelliform — having the form of a patella; shaped like a saucer, kneecap, or limpet shell.
  • perfectible — capable of becoming or of being made perfect; improvable.
  • perforation — a hole, or one of a series of holes, bored or punched through something, as those between individual postage stamps of a sheet to facilitate separation.
  • perforative — that perforates readily
  • pestiferous — bringing or bearing disease.
  • petit fours — a small teacake, variously frosted and decorated.
  • pettifogger — a lawyer of inferior status who conducts unimportant cases, esp one who is unscrupulous or resorts to trickery
  • pin-feather — an undeveloped feather before the web portions have expanded.
  • pipe fitter — a person who installs and repairs pipe systems.
  • podetiiform — shaped like a podetium.
  • point after — a score given for a successful kick between the goalposts and above the crossbar, following a touchdown
  • prefectship — the position of, or period served as, a prefect
  • prefunction — the kind of action or activity proper to a person, thing, or institution; the purpose for which something is designed or exists; role.
  • presanctify — to sanctify ahead of an event
  • priestcraft — the training, knowledge, and abilities necessary to a priest.
  • prize fight — A prize fight is a boxing match where the boxers are paid to fight, especially one that is not official.
  • profeminist — advocating social, political, legal, and economic rights for women equal to those of men.
  • profiterole — a small cream puff with a sweet or savory filling, as of cream and chocolate sauce.
  • proliferate — spread
  • quantifiers — Logic. an expression, as “all” or “some,” that indicates the quantity of a proposition. Compare existential quantifier, universal quantifier.
  • quarter cif — (communications, standard)   (QCIF), a video format standard used in videoconferencing, that transfers one fourth as much data as Common Intermediate Format (CIF). QCIF is defined in ITU H.261 as having 144 lines and 176 pixels per line, with half as many chrominance pixels in each direction. QCIF is suitable for videoconferencing systems that use telephone lines. The codec standard specifies that QCIF compatibility is mandatory, and CIF compatibility is optional.
  • quarterlife — designating the period of life immediately following adolescence, usually the early twenties to early thirties
  • quatrefoils — Plural form of quatrefoil.
  • rain forest — a tropical forest, usually of tall, densely growing, broad-leaved evergreen trees in an area of high annual rainfall.
  • rankshifted — that has been shifted from one linguistic rank to another
  • rarefaction — the act or process of rarefying.
  • rectifiable — able to be rectified.
  • refactoring — (object-oriented, programming)   Improving a computer program by reorganising its internal structure without altering its external behaviour. When software developers add new features to a program, the code degrades because the original program was not designed with the extra features in mind. This problem could be solved by either rewriting the existing code or working around the problems which arise when adding the new features. Redesigning a program is extra work, but not doing so would create a program which is more complicated than it needs to be. Refactoring is a collection of techniques which have been designed to provide an alternative to the two situations mentioned above. The techniques enable programmers to restructure code so that the design of a program is clearer. It also allows programmers to extract reusable components, streamline a program, and make additions to the program easier to implement. Refactoring is usually done by renaming methods, moving fields from one class to another, and moving code into a separate method. Although it is done using small and simple steps, refactoring a program will vastly improve its design and structure, making it easier to maintain and leading to more robust code.
  • refectioner — a person in charge of a refectory
  • referential — having reference: referential to something.
  • reflections — thoughts, esp careful or long-considered ones
  • refocillate — to refresh, revive, give new life
  • reformation — the act of reforming; state of being reformed.
  • reformative — the improvement or amendment of what is wrong, corrupt, unsatisfactory, etc.: social reform; spelling reform.
  • refortified — to protect or strengthen against attack; surround or provide with defensive military works.
  • refrainment — to abstain from an impulse to say or do something (often followed by from): I refrained from telling him what I thought.
  • refrigerant — refrigerating; cooling.
  • refrigerate — to make or keep cold or cool, as for preservation.
  • refuctoring — (humour, programming)   Taking a well-designed piece of code and, through a series of small, reversible changes, making it completely unmaintainable by anyone except yourself. The term is a humourous play on the term refactoring and was coined by Jason Gorman in a pub in 2002. Refuctoring techniques include: Using Pig Latin as a naming convention. Stating The Bleeding Obvious - writing comments that paraphrase the code (e.g., "declare an integer called I with an initial value of zero"). Module Gravity Well - adding all new code to the biggest module. Unique Modeling Language - inventing your own visual notation. Treasure Hunt - Writing code consisting mostly of references to other code and documents that reference other documents. Rainy Day Module - writing spare code just in case somebody needs it later.
  • reification — to convert into or regard as a concrete thing: to reify a concept.
  • reinfection — an act or fact of infecting; state of being infected.
  • reinflation — Economics. a persistent, substantial rise in the general level of prices related to an increase in the volume of money and resulting in the loss of value of currency (opposed to deflation).
  • reptiliform — having the form or appearance of a reptile
  • riefenstahl — Leni [ley-nee] /ˈleɪ ni/ (Show IPA), 1902–2003, German film director.
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