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11-letter words containing i, n, a, y

  • appealingly — evoking or attracting interest, desire, curiosity, sympathy, or the like; attractive.
  • appeasingly — in an appeasing manner
  • approvingly — to speak or think favorably of; pronounce or consider agreeable or good; judge favorably: to approve the policies of the administration.
  • arrestingly — attracting or capable of attracting attention or interest; striking: an arresting smile.
  • arylamines' — any of a group of amines in which one or more of the hydrogen atoms of ammonia are replaced by aromatic groups.
  • arytenoidal — relating to the arytenoid cartilages in the larynx and also to other parts relating to them
  • as anything — You use as anything after an adjective to emphasize a quality that someone has.
  • ascendingly — moving upward; rising.
  • asphyxiants — Plural form of asphyxiant.
  • assentingly — in a concurring or complying manner
  • assessingly — So as to assess.
  • astringency — An astringent taste.
  • asynartetic — having or containing two different types of metre
  • asynclitism — The position of a baby in the uterus such that the head is presenting first, tilted to the shoulder and thus no longer in line with the birth canal.
  • at any time — If something could happen at any time, it is possible that it will happen very soon, though nobody can predict exactly when.
  • attentively — while giving attention; observantly: Please listen attentively.
  • attentivity — The quality of being attentive; attentiveness.
  • attorneyism — the slyness and cleverness associated with attorneys
  • authenticly — Alternative spelling of authentically.
  • autodynamic — Supplying its own power.
  • baby lotion — a skin lotion for babies
  • baby-minder — a person who is paid to look after other people's babies or very young children
  • babyishness — The state or quality of being babyish.
  • babylonians — of or relating to Babylon or Babylonia.
  • babysitting — to take charge of a child while the parents are temporarily away.
  • baking tray — A baking tray is the same as a baking sheet.
  • ballyhooing — Present participle of ballyhoo.
  • bankability — acceptable for processing by a bank: bankable checks and money orders.
  • banteringly — in a bantering fashion
  • baranavichy — a city in W central Belarus, SW of Minsk.
  • barley wine — an exceptionally strong beer
  • barnyardism — a smutty or indecent word or expression.
  • baroclinity — a common state of fluid stratification in which surfaces of constant pressure and others of constant density are not parallel but intersect.
  • barycentric — Of or relating to the center of gravity.
  • baryshnikov — Mikhail. born 1948, Soviet-born ballet dancer, who defected (1974) to the West while on tour with the Kirov Ballet: director (1980–90) of the American Ballet Theatre
  • batting eye — the batter's visual appraisal of balls pitched toward home plate.
  • bayonetting — (British) present participle of bayonet.
  • beautifying — Present participle of beautify.
  • bellyaching — constant complaining
  • benactyzine — a crystalline drug, C20H25NO3, used to make tranquilizers
  • beneficiary — Someone who is a beneficiary of something is helped by it.
  • benignantly — kind, especially to inferiors; gracious: a benignant sovereign.
  • bibliomancy — prediction of the future by interpreting a passage chosen at random from a book, esp the Bible
  • bicentenary — A bicentenary is a year in which you celebrate something important that happened exactly two hundred years earlier.
  • bimillenary — marking a two-thousandth anniversary
  • binary cell — an electronic element that can assume either of two stable states and is capable of storing a binary digit.
  • binary code — Binary code is a computer code that uses the binary number system.
  • binary data — binary file
  • binary file — (file format)   Any file format for digital data that does not consist of a sequence of printable characters (text). The term is often used for executable machine code. All digital data, including characters, is actually binary data (unless it uses some (rare) system with more than two discrete levels) but the distinction between binary and text is well established. On modern operating systems a text file is simply a binary file that happens to contain only printable characters, but some older systems distinguish the two file types, requiring programs to handle them differently. A common class of binary files is programs in machine language ("executable files") ready to load into memory and execute. Binary files may also be used to store data output by a program, and intended to be read by that or another program but not by humans. Binary files are more efficient for this purpose because the data (e.g. numerical data) does not need to be converted between the binary form used by the CPU and a printable (ASCII) representation. The disadvantage is that it is usually necessary to write special purpose programs to manipulate such files since most general purpose utilities operate on text files. There is also a problem sharing binary numerical data between processors with different endianness. Some communications protocols handle only text files, e.g. most electronic mail systems before MIME became widespread in about 1995. The FTP utility must be put into "binary" mode in order to copy a binary file since in its default "ascii" mode translates between the different newline characters used on the sending and receiving computers. Confusingly, some word processor files, and rich text files, are actually binary files because they contain non-printable characters and require special programs to view, edit and print them.
  • binary form — a structure consisting of two sections, each being played twice
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