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8-letter words containing i, a

  • additive — An additive is a substance which is added in small amounts to foods or other things in order to improve them or to make them last longer.
  • additory — additional
  • adducing — Present participle of adduce.
  • adelaide — the capital of South Australia: Port Adelaide, 11 km (7 miles) away on St Vincent Gulf, handles the bulk of exports. Pop: 1 225 235 (2011)
  • adenitis — inflammation of a gland or lymph node
  • adenoids — Adenoids are soft lumps of flesh at the back and top of a person's throat that sometimes become swollen and have to be removed.
  • adenosis — a minor glandular condition typified by swelling of the lymph glands
  • adessive — a grammatical case in Finno-Ugric languages indicating place
  • adhering — to stay attached; stick fast; cleave; cling (usually followed by to): The mud adhered to his shoes.
  • adhesion — Adhesion is the ability of one thing to stick firmly to another.
  • adhesive — An adhesive is a substance such as glue, which is used to make things stick firmly together.
  • adiantum — The maidenhair fern and related ferns (of the genus Adiantum).
  • adiposis — obesity or excessive fatness
  • adiprene — a polyurethane elastomer with exceptional abrasion resistance and strength
  • adjoined — to be close to or in contact with; abut on: His property adjoins the lake.
  • adjoints — Plural form of adjoint.
  • adjuring — Present participle of adjure.
  • adlerian — of or relating to Alfred Adler or his ideas
  • adlibbed — to improvise all or part of (a speech, a piece of music, etc.): to ad-lib one's lines.
  • admirals — Plural form of admiral.
  • admirers — to regard with wonder, pleasure, or approval.
  • admiring — An admiring expression shows that you like or respect someone or something.
  • admitted — to allow to enter; grant or afford entrance to: to admit a student to college.
  • admittee — a person who has been (or will be) admitted
  • admitter — a person who admits or something which admits
  • admonish — If you admonish someone, you tell them very seriously that they have done something wrong.
  • adnation — the adhesion or cohesion of different plants
  • adonijah — a son of David, put to death at the order of Solomon. II Sam. 3:4; I Kings 2:19–25.
  • adonises — Classical Mythology. a youth slain by a wild boar but permitted by Zeus to pass four months every year in the lower world with Persephone, four with Aphrodite, and four wherever he chose.
  • adopting — Present participle of adopt.
  • adoption — the act of adopting: the adoption of a new amendment.
  • adoptive — Someone's adoptive family is the family that adopted them.
  • adorning — Make more beautiful or attractive.
  • adrian i — died a.d. 795, pope 772–795.
  • adrian v — died 1276, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1276.
  • adriatic — of or relating to the Adriatic Sea, or to the inhabitants of its coast or islands
  • adrienne — a feminine name
  • adroitly — expert or nimble in the use of the hands or body.
  • adscript — a serf bound to the land which they work or occupy, and who can be bought or sold along with it
  • adularia — a white or colourless glassy variety of orthoclase in the form of prismatic crystals. It occurs in metamorphic rocks and is a minor gemstone. Formula: KAlSi3O8
  • adultism — A predisposition towards adults (or a bias against children).
  • aduncity — the quality of being hooked or curved inward
  • advisees — one of a group of students assigned to a faculty adviser for help in selection of a course of studies.
  • advisers — Plural form of adviser.
  • advising — to give counsel to; offer an opinion or suggestion as worth following: I advise you to be cautious.
  • advisors — Plural form of advisor.
  • advisory — An advisory group regularly gives suggestions and help to people or organizations, especially about a particular subject or area of activity.
  • adynamia — loss of vital power or strength, esp as the result of illness; weakness or debility
  • adynamic — Not dynamic; without strength or vigor.
  • aeacides — a patronymic for any of the descendants of Aeacus, as Achilles, Peleus, and Telamon.
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