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11-letter words containing f, o, t

  • fatiloquent — Prophetic; speaking of fate.
  • fatty tumor — lipoma.
  • fatuousness — The characteristic of being fatuous.
  • fault block — a mass of rock bounded on at least two opposite sides by faults.
  • favouritism — (British) The unfair favouring of one person or group at the expense of another.
  • feather rot — a viral disease of birds that causes the feathers to become brittle and break off and the beak and claws to become soft.
  • featherbone — a substitute for whalebone, made from the quills of domestic fowls.
  • fecundation — to make prolific or fruitful.
  • federations — Plural form of federation.
  • feedthrough — a connector used to pass a conductor through a circuit board or enclosure.
  • felicitator — to compliment upon a happy event; congratulate.
  • feme covert — a married woman.
  • femtosecond — One quadrillionth of a second.
  • fergusonite — a rare-earth mineral, yttrium columbate and tantalate, found in pegmatites.
  • ferrocement — (of a boat hull) constructed of mortar troweled over a wire mesh that has been preshaped over a mold.
  • ferromagnet — a ferromagnetic substance.
  • fertigation — (agriculture) the application of fertilizers or other water-soluble products through an irrigation system.
  • fescue foot — a disease of the feet of cattle associated with feeding on certain fungus-infested fescue grasses, characterized by lameness and sometimes leading to gangrene.
  • fesse point — the midpoint of a shield
  • festination — a gait marked by an involuntary hurrying in walking, observed in certain nerve diseases.
  • fetoprotein — (protein) Any of several antigens produced in a developing embryo, of which the most common is alpha-fetoprotein.
  • fetter bone — the great pastern bone of a horse. See under pastern (def 2).
  • feudatories — Plural form of feudatory.
  • feuilletons — (British) Plural form of feuilleton.
  • fianchettos — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fianchetto.
  • fibre optic — using or consisting of very thin flexible fibres of glass down which information modulated on light is carried
  • fibrination — (medicine) The state of acquiring or having an excess of fibrin.
  • fibroblasts — Plural form of fibroblast.
  • fibrocement — (formerly) cement combined with asbestos fibre, used esp in sheets for building
  • fibrocystic — showing or having the increased fibrosis associated with dilated glandular structure, as in the breast nodules of fibrocystic disease.
  • fibronectin — a fibrous protein that binds to collagen, fibrin, and other proteins and also to the cell membranes, functioning as an anchor and connector.
  • fictionally — In a fictional manner.
  • field sport — Hunting, shooting birds, and fishing with a rod are referred to as field sports when they are done mainly for pleasure.
  • fieldstones — Plural form of fieldstone.
  • fifth force — a theoretical force in nature in addition to the strong and weak forces, gravitation, and the electromagnetic force.
  • fight-o-net — (messaging)   A distortion of FidoNet, often applied after a flurry of flamage in a particular echo, especially the SYSOP echo or Fidonews.
  • figurations — Plural form of figuration.
  • filamentous — composed of or containing filaments.
  • film studio — a place where films are made
  • filmization — an adaptation of a novel, play, etc., for a motion picture.
  • filtrations — Plural form of filtration.
  • fimbriation — fimbriate or fringed condition.
  • finger post — a post with one or more directional signs, terminating in a pointed finger or hand.
  • first blood — the first killing or wounding in a fight or war
  • first floor — the ground floor of a building.
  • first mover — the Aristotelian conception of God as the unmoved mover of everything else
  • first world — the major industrialized non-Communist nations, including those in Western Europe, the United States, Canada, and Japan.
  • first-order — Not higher-order.
  • fish doctor — a scaleless, brightly colored eelpout, Gymnelis viridis, of Arctic waters.
  • fit to kill — adapted or suited; appropriate: This water isn't fit for drinking. A long-necked giraffe is fit for browsing treetops.
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