10-letter words containing i, t, a, r
- immigrated — Simple past tense and past participle of immigrate.
- immigrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of immigrate.
- immigrator — to come to a country of which one is not a native, usually for permanent residence.
- immiserate — to make miserable.
- immoderate — not moderate; exceeding just or reasonable limits; excessive; extreme.
- immoralist — indifference toward or opposition to conventional morality.
- immorality — immoral quality, character, or conduct; wickedness; evilness.
- immortally — not mortal; not liable or subject to death; undying: our immortal souls.
- immuration — to enclose within walls.
- impairment — the state of being diminished, weakened, or damaged, especially mentally or physically: cognitive impairment in older adults.
- imparities — Plural form of imparity.
- impartable — Capable of being imparted.
- impartance — Impartation.
- impartible — not partible; indivisible.
- impartment — to make known; tell; relate; disclose: to impart a secret.
- imperative — imperative language
- imperators — Plural form of imperator.
- imperatrix — Feminine of imperator; empress.
- imperatriz — a city in NE Brazil, on the Tocantins River.
- impermeant — That cannot permeate through a specified semipermeable membrane.
- impetrable — (obsolete) Capable of being obtained or influenced by petition.
- implorator — a person who implores
- import ban — a ban on the importation of certain products from a certain country into the home country
- importable — to bring in (merchandise, commodities, workers, etc.) from a foreign country for use, sale, processing, reexport, or services.
- importance — the quality or state of being important; consequence; significance.
- importancy — (obsolete) importance; significance.
- imprecated — Simple past tense and past participle of imprecate.
- imprecates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of imprecate.
- impregnant — (obsolete) Not pregnant; unfertilized or infertile.
- impregnate — to make pregnant; get with child or young.
- imprimatur — an official license to print or publish a book, pamphlet, etc., especially a license issued by a censor of the Roman Catholic Church. Compare nihil obstat.
- in a trice — If someone does something in a trice, they do it very quickly.
- in battery — in firing position after recovery from the recoil of a previous discharge
- in earnest — If something is done or happens in earnest, it happens to a much greater extent and more seriously than before.
- in feather — feathered
- in plaster — If you have a leg or arm in plaster, you have a cover made of plaster of Paris around your leg or arm, in order to protect a broken bone and allow it to mend.
- in private — belonging to some particular person: private property.
- in reality — the state or quality of being real.
- in tatters — torn, in shreds
- in the air — a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and minute amounts of other gases that surrounds the earth and forms its atmosphere.
- in the raw — uncooked, as articles of food: a raw carrot.
- in transit — travelling, moving
- in-migrant — a person who in-migrates.
- in-migrate — to move or settle into a different part of one's country or home territory.
- inaccurate — not accurate; incorrect or untrue.
- inamoratas — Plural form of inamorata.
- inamoratos — Plural form of inamorato.
- inapparent — not apparent.
- inartistic — lacking in artistic sense or appreciation.
- inaugurate — to make a formal beginning of; initiate; commence; begin: The end of World War II inaugurated the era of nuclear power.