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11-letter words containing i, d, b

  • undividable — unable to be divided
  • undivisible — capable of being divided.
  • undrainable — unable to be drained
  • undrinkable — suitable for drinking.
  • undriveable — unable to be driven
  • undubiously — of uncertain outcome: in dubious battle.
  • unforbidden — a past participle of forbid.
  • unhidebound — not having a skin covering the body
  • uninhabited — having inhabitants; occupied; lived in or on: an inhabited island.
  • uninhibited — not inhibited or restricted: uninhibited freedom to act.
  • uninscribed — having no writing, letters, or design inscribed on the surface
  • unliberated — continuing to be bound by traditional sexual and social roles
  • unobligated — to bind or oblige morally or legally: to obligate oneself to purchase a building.
  • unpublished — to issue (printed or otherwise reproduced textual or graphic material, computer software, etc.) for sale or distribution to the public.
  • unreducible — not able to be reduced or made into a simpler form or smaller quantity; irreducible
  • unsubmitted — to give over or yield to the power or authority of another (often used reflexively).
  • unsubsiding — to sink to a low or lower level.
  • unurbanized — to make or cause to become urban, as a locality.
  • vagabondize — to behave like a vagabond
  • wading bird — wader (def 2).
  • walk-behind — being a motor-driven machine, as a power lawn mower or a snowblower, designed for operation with the operator walking behind and guiding the machine by its handle controls.
  • wattlebirds — Plural form of wattlebird.
  • weaverbirds — Plural form of weaverbird.
  • web du bois — William Edward Burghardt [burg-hahrd] /ˈbɜrg hɑrd/ (Show IPA), 1868–1963, U.S. educator and writer.
  • weighbridge — a platform scale that stands flush with a road and is used for weighing trucks, livestock, etc.
  • weldability — to unite or fuse (as pieces of metal) by hammering, compressing, or the like, especially after rendering soft or pasty by heat, and sometimes with the addition of fusible material like or unlike the pieces to be united.
  • whidah bird — any of various predominantly black African weaverbirds of the genus Vidua and related genera, the males of which grow very long tail feathers in the breeding season
  • whirlybirds — Plural form of whirlybird.
  • white bread — bread baked with bleached flour
  • white-bread — pertaining to or characteristic of the white middle class; bourgeois: a typical white-bread suburban neighborhood.
  • white-robed — clothed in a white robe.
  • whiteboards — Plural form of whiteboard.
  • whydah bird — any of various predominantly black African weaverbirds of the genus Vidua and related genera, the males of which grow very long tail feathers in the breeding season
  • wild rubber — rubber obtained from trees growing wild.
  • wildebeests — Plural form of wildebeest.
  • wind-broken — having the breathing impaired; affected with heaves.
  • windbaggery — Informal. an empty, voluble, pretentious talker.
  • windbreaker — A wind -resistant jacket with a close-fitting neck, waistband, and cuffs.
  • window back — woodwork, especially paneling, beneath the stool of a window.
  • winged bean — a tropical Asian vine, Psophocarpus tetragonolobus, of the legume family, of which the pods, seeds, leaves, and flowers are edible and nutritious.
  • wiper blade — the long thin part of a windscreen wiper, edged with rubber, that makes contact with the windscreen
  • wizard book — (publication)   Hal Abelson, Gerald Sussman and Julie Sussman's "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs" (MIT Press, 1984; ISBN 0-262-01077-1), an excellent computer science text used in introductory courses at MIT. So called because of the wizard on the jacket. One of the bibles of the LISP/Scheme world. Also, less commonly, known as the Purple Book.
  • wood rabbit — a cottontail.
  • yorba linda — a city in SW California.
  • zinc blende — sphalerite.
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