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

  • cold fusion — the process of creating nuclear fusion at room temperature in order to create a power source
  • columniform — Having the form of a column.
  • confidently — having strong belief or full assurance; sure: confident of fulfillment.
  • confidingly — In a confiding manner; in a matter that confides.
  • confineless — Boundless.
  • confirmable — Capable of being checked, verifiable.
  • confirmedly — In a manner that is confirmed; definitely, as has been demonstrated.
  • confiscable — subject or liable to confiscation or seizure
  • conflictful — involving conflict
  • conflicting — clashing; contradictory
  • confliction — to come into collision or disagreement; be contradictory, at variance, or in opposition; clash: The account of one eyewitness conflicted with that of the other. My class conflicts with my going to the concert.
  • conflictive — to come into collision or disagreement; be contradictory, at variance, or in opposition; clash: The account of one eyewitness conflicted with that of the other. My class conflicts with my going to the concert.
  • conflictory — to come into collision or disagreement; be contradictory, at variance, or in opposition; clash: The account of one eyewitness conflicted with that of the other. My class conflicts with my going to the concert.
  • conflictual — of, relating to, or involving conflict
  • confusingly — causing or tending to cause confusion: a confusing attempt at explanation.
  • confusional — the act of confusing.
  • cooling fan — (in an automotive vehicle) a device that keeps an engine cool
  • counterfoil — A counterfoil is the part of a cheque, ticket, or other document that you keep when you give the other part to someone else.
  • cycloolefin — any of the homologous series of unsaturated, alicyclic hydrocarbons, as cyclooctatetraene and cyclopentadiene, containing one double bond in the ring and having the general formula C 11 H 2n−2 .
  • danish loaf — a large white loaf with a centre split having the top crust dusted with flour, esp one baked on the sole of the oven
  • deafeningly — to make deaf: The accident deafened him for life.
  • defalcating — Present participle of defalcate.
  • defalcation — the amount embezzled
  • defensively — serving to defend; protective: defensive armament.
  • deferential — Someone who is deferential is polite and respectful towards someone else.
  • deficiently — In a deficient manner.
  • defilements — Plural form of defilement.
  • defiliation — the denial of or lack of a male child
  • deflections — Plural form of deflection.
  • defloration — the act of deflowering
  • deflowering — Present participle of deflower.
  • defoliating — Present participle of defoliate.
  • defoliation — to strip (a tree, bush, etc.) of leaves.
  • differently — not alike in character or quality; distinct in nature; dissimilar: The two brothers are very different, although they are identical twins.
  • diffidently — lacking confidence in one's own ability, worth, or fitness; timid; shy.
  • diffusional — Of or pertaining to diffusion.
  • dignifiable — Capable of being dignified.
  • dignifiedly — In a dignified manner.
  • direfulness — the state or fact of being direful
  • dobsonflies — Plural form of dobsonfly.
  • dog fouling — the offence of being in charge of a dog and failing to remove the faeces after it defecates in a public place
  • dolphinfish — dolphin (def 2).
  • dragonflies — Plural form of dragonfly.
  • drift angle — the angle made by the path of a drifting vessel with its heading.
  • dunfermline — an administrative district in E Scotland, in the Fife region. 120 sq. mi. (311 sq. km).
  • dutifulness — The state of being dutiful.
  • ecofriendly — Alternative spelling of eco-friendly.
  • efficiently — performing or functioning in the best possible manner with the least waste of time and effort; having and using requisite knowledge, skill, and industry; competent; capable: a reliable, efficient assistant.
  • emulsifying — Present participle of emulsify.
  • end of line — (character)   (EOL) Synonym for newline, derived perhaps from the original CDC 6600 Pascal. The abbreviation "EOL" is now rare, but widely recognised and occasionally used for brevity. Used in the example entry under BNF. Out of context this would probably be (deliberately) ambiguous because different systems used different (combinations of) characters to mark the end of a line. Unix uses a line feed; DOS uses carriage return, line feed (CRLF) and the Macintosh uses carriage return. See also EOF.
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