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9-letter words containing i, n, r, e

  • insurable — capable of being or proper to be insured, as against loss or harm.
  • insurance — the act, system, or business of providing financial protection for property, life, health, etc, against specified contingencies, such as death, loss, or damage, and involving payment of regular premiums in return for a policy guaranteeing such protection
  • insurgent — a person who rises in forcible opposition to lawful authority, especially a person who engages in armed resistance to a government or to the execution of its laws; rebel.
  • inswinger — a bowled ball that veers from off side to leg side.
  • integrals — Plural form of integral.
  • integrand — the expression to be integrated.
  • integrant — making up or being a part of a whole; constituent.
  • integraph — integrator (def 2).
  • integrase — (enzyme) Any enzyme that integrates viral DNA into that of an infected cell.
  • integrate — to bring together or incorporate (parts) into a whole.
  • integrins — Plural form of integrin.
  • integrity — adherence to moral and ethical principles; soundness of moral character; honesty.
  • integrous — (rare) Having or characterized by integrity.
  • inter nos — between (or among) ourselves
  • interacts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of interact.
  • interarch — to have intersecting arches
  • interbank — Agreed, arranged, or operating between banks.
  • interbase — A commercial active DBMS.
  • interbond — (chemistry) Between bonds.
  • interbred — to crossbreed (a plant or animal).
  • intercede — to act or interpose in behalf of someone in difficulty or trouble, as by pleading or petition: to intercede with the governor for a condemned man.
  • interceed — Obsolete form of intercede.
  • intercell — intercellular
  • intercept — to take, seize, or halt (someone or something on the way from one place to another); cut off from an intended destination: to intercept a messenger.
  • intercity — a large or important town.
  • interclan — a group of families or households, as among the Scottish Highlanders, the heads of which claim descent from a common ancestor: the Mackenzie clan.
  • interclub — a heavy stick, usually thicker at one end than at the other, suitable for use as a weapon; a cudgel.
  • intercome — (intransitive) To intervene; interpose; interfere.
  • intercoms — Plural form of intercom.
  • intercrop — to grow one crop between the rows of another, as in an orchard or field.
  • interdash — to intersperse with hasty strokes of a pen or other writing instrument
  • interdata — (company)   A computer manufacturer. Interdata became Perkin-Elmer, then Concurrent.
  • interdeal — to negotiate or deal mutually
  • interdict — Civil Law. any prohibitory act or decree of a court or an administrative officer.
  • interdine — (of members of different tribes, etc) to eat together
  • interduce — (construction) An intertie.
  • interests — the feeling of a person whose attention, concern, or curiosity is particularly engaged by something: She has a great interest in the poetry of Donne.
  • interface — a surface regarded as the common boundary of two bodies, spaces, or phases.
  • interfere — to come into opposition, as one thing with another, especially with the effect of hampering action or procedure (often followed by with): Constant distractions interfere with work.
  • interfile — to combine two or more similarly arranged sets of items, as cards or documents, into a single file.
  • interfirm — occurring between two or more companies
  • interflow — to flow into each other; intermingle.
  • interfold — to fold one within another; fold together.
  • interfuse — to intersperse, intermingle, or permeate with something.
  • intergang — occurring between two or more gangs, or occurring between the members of a single gang
  • intergrow — to grow among each other
  • interiors — being within; inside of anything; internal; inner; further toward a center: the interior rooms of a house.
  • interject — to insert between other things: to interject a clarification of a previous statement.
  • interjoin — (mathematics) To interconnect two sets.
  • interknit — to knit together, one with another; intertwine.
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