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11-letter words containing f, o, d, s

  • misinformed — to give false or misleading information to.
  • most-deform — deformed; ugly.
  • nonforested — Unforested.
  • noninfested — not infested
  • odoriferous — yielding or diffusing an odor.
  • old flemish — the Flemish language before c1300.
  • old frisian — the Frisian language before c1500. Abbreviation: OFris.
  • outfielders — Plural form of outfielder.
  • overstaffed — If you say that a place is overstaffed, you think there are more people working there than is necessary.
  • overstuffed — stuffed or filled to excess.
  • oxford bags — trousers with very wide baggy legs, originally popular in the 1920s
  • oxford shoe — oxford (def 1).
  • oxfordshire — a county in S England. 1008 sq. mi. (2610 sq. km).
  • passo fundo — a city in S Brazil.
  • personified — to attribute human nature or character to (an inanimate object or an abstraction), as in speech or writing.
  • pierrefonds — a former city in S Quebec, Canada, now part of Montreal.
  • polysulfide — a sulfide whose molecules contain two or more atoms of sulfur.
  • professedly — allegedly; pretendedly: He is only professedly poor.
  • proud flesh — granulation tissue.
  • rediffusion — act of diffusing; state of being diffused.
  • road safety — prevention of traffic accidents
  • saddle roof — curved covering for a building
  • safe period — an interval of the menstrual cycle when fertilization is considered to be least likely, usually a number of days prior and subsequent to the onset of menstruation.
  • sam hold of — to collect; gather up
  • scaffoldage — a scaffold or scaffolding
  • scaffolding — a temporary structure for holding workers and materials during the erection, repair, or decoration of a building.
  • scarf cloud — pileus (def 3).
  • school fund — the money provided by a government or raised by parents and teachers to finance the running of a school
  • second self — one who associates so closely with a given person as to assume that person's mode of behavior, personality, beliefs, etc.
  • second-feet — a unit of measurement of liquid flow, especially of rivers, equal to one cubic foot per second.
  • second-foot — a unit of measurement of liquid flow, especially of rivers, equal to one cubic foot per second.
  • second-half — happening in the second half of a game
  • self-avowed — acknowledged; declared: an avowed enemy.
  • self-formed — external appearance of a clearly defined area, as distinguished from color or material; configuration: a triangular form.
  • self-loader — semiautomatic (def 3).
  • self-parody — a humorous or satirical imitation of a serious piece of literature or writing: his hilarious parody of Hamlet's soliloquy.
  • self-poised — acting with poise.
  • sending-off — If there is a sending-off during a game of football, a player is told to leave the field by the referee, as a punishment for seriously breaking the rules.
  • set forward — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • severalfold — comprising several parts or members.
  • short field — the area of the infield between third base and second, covered by the shortstop.
  • slow-footed — proceeding at a slow pace.
  • sniffer dog — a dog trained to find illegal drugs or explosives by smell.
  • social fund — (in Britain) a social security fund from which loans or payments may be made to people in cases of extreme need
  • sodium-free — (of food) containing less than 5 mg of sodium per serving
  • soft drinks — A soft drink is a cold, nonalcoholic drink such as lemonade or fruit juice, or a carbonated drink.
  • soft ground — an etching ground usually mixed with tallow. Compare hard ground.
  • soft sawder — flattery; compliments
  • soft solder — a solder fusible at temperatures below 700°F (370°C), generally an alloy of lead and tin.
  • soft-boiled — to boil (an egg) just long enough for the yolk and white to partially solidify, usually three or four minutes.
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