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12-letter words containing f, t

  • out of joint — the place at which two things, or separate parts of one thing, are joined or united, either rigidly or in such a way as to permit motion; juncture.
  • out of order — an authoritative direction or instruction; command; mandate.
  • out of phase — in an unsynchronized way
  • out of place — a particular portion of space, whether of definite or indefinite extent.
  • out of plumb — not vertical
  • out of print — of, for, or comprising newspapers and magazines: print media.
  • out of reach — beyond arm's length
  • out of round — not having perfect roundness
  • out of scale — If something is out of scale with the things near it, it is too big or too small in relation to them.
  • out of shape — person: unfit
  • out of sight — Slang. fantastic; great; marvelous: an out-of-sight guitarist.
  • out of sorts — a particular kind, species, variety, class, or group, distinguished by a common character or nature: to develop a new sort of painting; nice people, of course, but not really our sort.
  • out of stock — a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
  • out of style — no longer fashionable
  • out of tempo — not in tempo
  • out of touch — not up to date
  • out of voice — with the voice temporarily in a poor condition, esp for singing
  • out of whack — to strike with a smart, resounding blow or blows.
  • out-of-court — conducted or agreed upon between contending parties without court decision: an out-of-court settlement of a lawsuit.
  • out-of-doors — Also, out-of-door. outdoor.
  • out-of-print — being no longer published; no longer printed or reprinted: a bookstore specializing in out-of-print books.
  • out-of-round — not perfectly round.
  • out-of-sight — Slang. fantastic; great; marvelous: an out-of-sight guitarist.
  • out-of-state — of, relating to, or from another state of the U.S.: a car with an out-of-state license plate; out-of-state vacationers.
  • outer office — the reception area of an office, outside of the main working area
  • outfangthief — the right of a lord to try a thief captured within his jurisdiction, regardless of where the thief is from
  • outline font — (text)   (Or "vector font") A font defined as a set of lines and curves as opposed to a bitmap font. An outline font (e.g. PostScript, TrueType, RISC OS) can be scaled to any size and otherwise transformed more easily than a bitmap font, and with more attractive results, though this requires a lot of numerical processing. The result of transforming a character in an outline font in a particular way is often saved as a bitmap in a font cache to avoid repeating the calculations if that character is to be drawn again.
  • outperformed — Simple past tense and past participle of outperform.
  • outperformer — One who outperforms.
  • outside-left — a footballer who plays on the outside left wing of the field
  • over-fraught — Archaic. filled or laden (with): ships fraught with precious wares.
  • over-inflate — to distend; swell or puff out; dilate: The king cobra inflates its hood.
  • over-stuffed — stuffed or filled to excess.
  • overdrafting — the removal of more water from ground and surface basins than is replaced by rain and melting snow.
  • overfatigued — excessively fatigued
  • overflow bit — (architecture)   A processor flag bit set by the ALU to indicate overflow.
  • overidentify — to identify with someone else to an excessive degree
  • overstaffing — the provision of an excessive number of staff for (a factory, hotel, etc)
  • pacific time — the civil time officially adopted for a country or region, usually the civil time of some specific meridian lying within the region. The standard time zones in the U.S. (Atlantic time, Eastern time, Central time, Mountain time, Pacific time, Yukon time, Alaska-Hawaii time, and Bering time) use the civil times of the 60th, 75th, 90th, 105th, 120th, 135th, 150th, and 165th meridians respectively, the difference of time between one zone and the next being exactly one hour.
  • pacification — to pacify.
  • palification — the act of fortifying something with stakes
  • pallet knife — a small, flat utensil for picking up and handling pastry paste.
  • panification — the making of bread
  • paper profit — an unrealized profit due to the appreciation of something owned but not yet sold.
  • parrot fever — psittacosis.
  • parvifoliate — (of plants) having small leaves in comparison with the size of the stem
  • passionfruit — any edible fruit of a passionflower, as the maypop.
  • past perfect — pluperfect.
  • patent cliff — a potential sharp drop in sales and revenue for a company when one of its patents expires: the looming patent cliffs faced by pharmaceutical firms.
  • patent flour — a fine grade of flour, consisting chiefly of the inner part of the endosperm.
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