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11-letter words containing i, d, e, a, s

  • disentrayle — to pass out as if from the entrails
  • disfavoured — Simple past tense and past participle of disfavour.
  • disfavourer — one who does not favour
  • disfeatured — Simple past tense and past participle of disfeature.
  • disgavelled — freed from gavelkind
  • disgraceful — bringing or deserving disgrace; shameful; dishonorable; disreputable.
  • disguisable — to change the appearance or guise of so as to conceal identity or mislead, as by means of deceptive garb: The king was disguised as a peasant.
  • dish aerial — a microwave aerial, used esp in radar, radio telescopes, and satellite broadcasting, consisting of a parabolic reflector
  • disheartens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dishearten.
  • dishearting — Present participle of disheart.
  • dishwashers — Plural form of dishwasher.
  • disk sander — a sander that uses a revolving abrasive disk driven by an electric motor.
  • dislikeable — Alternative spelling of dislikable.
  • dismissable — Capable of being dismissed.
  • disordinate — opposed to or violating moral or legal order
  • disorganise — To make less organised; to reduce to chaos.
  • disorganize — to destroy the organization, systematic arrangement, or orderly connection of; throw into confusion or disorder.
  • disparately — distinct in kind; essentially different; dissimilar: disparate ideas.
  • disparities — Plural form of disparity.
  • dispatchers — Plural form of dispatcher.
  • dispellable — to drive off in various directions; disperse; dissipate: to dispel the dense fog.
  • dispensable — capable of being dispensed with or done without; not necessary or essential.
  • dispensably — in a dispensable manner
  • dispensator — a person who dispenses; distributor; administrator.
  • dispersants — Plural form of dispersant.
  • displayable — Capable of being displayed.
  • displeasant — displeasing
  • displeasing — to incur the dissatisfaction, dislike, or disapproval of; offend; annoy: His reply displeased the judge.
  • displeasure — dissatisfaction, disapproval, or annoyance.
  • displuviate — (of the atrium of an ancient Roman house) having roofs sloping downward and outward from a central opening.
  • disposables — Plural form of disposable.
  • disprovable — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
  • disputative — Tending to dispute.
  • disregarded — to pay no attention to; leave out of consideration; ignore: Disregard the footnotes.
  • disregulate — Misspelling of dysregulate.
  • disrelation — the absence of relation
  • disruptable — Capable of being disrupted.
  • disseminate — to scatter or spread widely, as though sowing seed; promulgate extensively; broadcast; disperse: to disseminate information about preventive medicine.
  • dissimilate — to modify by dissimilation.
  • dissimulate — to disguise or conceal under a false appearance; dissemble: to dissimulate one's true feelings about a rival.
  • dissipative — to scatter in various directions; disperse; dispel.
  • dissociable — capable of being dissociated; separable: Worthy and unworthy motives are often not dissociable.
  • dissociated — Simple past tense and past participle of dissociate.
  • dissociates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dissociate.
  • dissolvable — to make a solution of, as by mixing with a liquid; pass into solution: to dissolve salt in water.
  • dissonances — Plural form of dissonance.
  • dissuadable — That can be dissuaded.
  • dissyllable — disyllable.
  • distantiate — to put or keep at an emotional or intellectual distance
  • distantness — The state or quality of being distant or remote.
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