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9-letter words containing f, t

  • conflates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of conflate.
  • conflicts — Plural form of conflict.
  • confluent — flowing together or merging
  • confronte — (of two animals) face to face
  • confronts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of confront.
  • confuting — Present participle of confute.
  • copyfight — the conflict between copyright holders and other individuals over the use, distribution, and replication of copyright materials
  • cord foot — a quantity of wood 4 feet high, 4 feet wide, and 1 foot long (1.2 m × 1.2 m × 0.3 meters), or 16 cu. ft. (0.5 cu. m).
  • cornforth — Sir John Warcup. 1917–2014, Australian chemist, who shared the 1975 Nobel prize for chemistry with Vladimir Prelog for their work on stereochemistry
  • count for — to check over (the separate units or groups of a collection) one by one to determine the total number; add up; enumerate: He counted his tickets and found he had ten.
  • count off — to separate into equal divisions by counting
  • countrify — to make countrified.
  • countryfy — Alternative spelling of countrify.
  • cowlstaff — a staff or pole used by two people to carry a vessel, sometimes used as a weapon
  • craftiest — Superlative form of crafty.
  • craftless — without craft or cunning
  • craftsman — A craftsman is a man who makes things skilfully with his hands.
  • craftsmen — a person who practices or is highly skilled in a craft; artisan.
  • craftwork — works of artistry or craft
  • crossfoot — Accounting. to total figures horizontally across columns instead of vertically.
  • crowfoots — Plural form of crowfoot.
  • cteniform — resembling a comb
  • cult film — a film that a certain group of people admire very much
  • cystiform — resembling a cyst
  • data feed — (data, architecture)   Some process for transferring data from one system to another in a predetermined form.
  • data file — a file containing data that is used by a computer program
  • data flow — (architecture)   A data flow architecture or language performs a computation when all the operands are available. Data flow is one kind of data driven architecture, the other is demand driven. It is a technique for specifying fine-grain concurrency, usually in the form of two-dimensional graphs in which instructions that are available for concurrent execution are written alongside each other while those that must be executed in sequence are written one under the other. Data dependencies between instructions are indicated by directed arcs. Instructions do not reference memory since the data dependence arcs allow data to be transmitted directly from the producing instruction to the consuming one. Data flow schemes differ chiefly in the way that they handle re-entrant code. Static schemes disallow it, dynamic schemes use either "code copying" or "tagging" at every point of reentry. An example of a data flow architecture is MIT's VAL machine.
  • data fork — Macintosh file system
  • date from — If something dates from a particular time, it started or was made at that time.
  • day shift — a group of workers who work a shift during the daytime in an industry or occupation where a night shift or a back shift is also worked
  • de forest — Lee. 1873–1961, US inventor of telegraphic, telephonic, and radio equipment: patented the first triode valve (1907)
  • dead lift — a direct lifting without any mechanical assistance, as of a dead weight
  • deaf-mute — A deaf-mute is someone who cannot hear or speak. This word could cause offence.
  • debateful — quarrelsome
  • deceitful — If you say that someone is deceitful, you mean that they behave in a dishonest way by making other people believe something that is not true.
  • decertify — to withdraw or remove a certificate or certification from (a person, organization, or country)
  • defaecate — Alt form defecate.
  • defalcate — to misuse or misappropriate property or funds entrusted to one
  • defaulted — failure to act; inaction or neglect: They lost their best client by sheer default.
  • defaulter — A defaulter is someone who does not do something that they are legally supposed to do, such as make a payment at a particular time, or appear in a court of law.
  • defeating — Present participle of defeat.
  • defeatism — Defeatism is a way of thinking or talking which suggests that you expect to be unsuccessful.
  • defeatist — A defeatist is someone who thinks or talks in a way that suggests that they expect to be unsuccessful.
  • defeature — to blemish or disfigure (a person or thing)
  • defecated — Simple past tense and past participle of defecate.
  • defecates — to void excrement from the bowels through the anus; have a bowel movement.
  • defecator — One who defecates.
  • defecting — a shortcoming, fault, or imperfection: a defect in an argument; a defect in a machine.
  • defection — the act or an instance of defecting
  • defective — If something is defective, there is something wrong with it and it does not work properly.
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