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11-letter words containing k, e, d, g

  • acknowledge — If you acknowledge a fact or a situation, you accept or admit that it is true or that it exists.
  • awkward age — early adolescence.
  • awning deck — a weather deck supported on very light scantlings.
  • back garden — a garden at the rear of a house
  • back-logged — a reserve or accumulation, as of stock, work, or business: a backlog of business orders.
  • backlighted — Simple past tense and past participle of backlight.
  • book-ending — a support placed at the end of a row of books to hold them upright, usually used in pairs.
  • bridge deck — a deck on top of a bridge house; flying bridge.
  • bulkheading — the construction of bulkheads; bulkheads in general.
  • check digit — a digit derived from and appended to a string of data digits, used to detect corruption of the data string during transmission or transcription
  • cracked gas — Cracked gas is gas from a refining process, which is often compressed afterwards.
  • dark energy — unobserved energy whose existence is proposed to account for the observed acceleration in the expansion of the universe
  • deadlocking — Present participle of deadlock.
  • deck bridge — a bridge with an upper horizontal beam that carries the roadway
  • deckle edge — the rough edge of handmade paper, caused by pulp seeping between the mould and the deckle: often left as ornamentation in fine books and writing papers
  • demarketing — advertising that urges the public to limit the consumption of a product, as at a time of shortage.
  • dogger bank — a shoal in the North Sea, between N England and Denmark: fishing grounds; naval battle 1915.
  • dongle-disk — /don'gl disk/ (Or "key disk") A kind of dongle consisting of a special floppy disk that is required in order to perform some task. Some contain special coding that allows an application to identify it uniquely, others *are* special code that does something that normally-resident programs don't or can't. For example, AT&T's "Unix PC" would only come up in root mode with a special boot disk.
  • drakensberg — a mountain range in the E Republic of South Africa: highest peak, 10,988 feet (3350 meters).
  • dressmaking — a person whose occupation is the making or alteration of women's dresses, coats, etc.
  • drudge-work — work that is menial and tedious and therefore distasteful; drudgery.
  • drunkalogue — an account of a person’s problems with alcohol
  • dry-dockage — the act or fact of placing a ship in a dry dock.
  • duck plague — an acute, highly fatal disease of ducks caused by a herpesvirus
  • duck-legged — having legs that are unusually short: He crept up in a half-crouch that made him look duck-legged.
  • flight deck — Navy. the upper deck of an aircraft carrier, constructed and equipped for the landing and takeoff of aircraft.
  • frankpledge — a system of dividing a community into tithings or groups of ten men, each member of which was responsible for the conduct of the other members of his group and for the assurance that a member charged with a breach of the law would be produced at court.
  • garden pink — the plant Dianthus plumarius
  • george dickGeorge Frederick, 1881–1967, U.S. internist.
  • gob-smacked — utterly astounded; astonished.
  • godforsaken — desolate; remote; deserted: They live in some godforsaken place 40 miles from the nearest town.
  • godlikeness — The quality of being godlike.
  • goldbricked — Simple past tense and past participle of goldbrick.
  • goldbricker — Informal. a brick made to look like gold, sold by a swindler.
  • golden buck — a dish consisting of Welsh rabbit topped with a poached egg.
  • good-looker — a person with a pleasingly attractive appearance.
  • greek salad — a salad of lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers, olives, onions, and feta cheese, served with a vinaigrette.
  • grenadelike — Resembling a grenade (weapon).
  • griddlecake — a thin cake of batter cooked on a griddle; pancake.
  • headshaking — The act of shaking one's head, in disagreement or disapproval.
  • high-necked — (of a garment) high at the neck.
  • hot-desking — the practice of not assigning permanent desks in a workplace, so that employees may work at any available desk
  • inky smudge — a judge
  • kew gardens — the Royal Botanic Gardens in the Greater London borough of Richmond-upon-Thames, on the River Thames; established in 1759 and given to the nation in 1841
  • keyboarding — the row or set of keys on a piano, organ, or the like.
  • keyed bugle — a bugle that has keys to make it possible to play a chromatic scale
  • kierkegaard — Sören Aabye [sœ-ruh n aw-by] /ˈsœ rən ˈɔ bü/ (Show IPA), 1813–55, Danish philosopher and theologian.
  • knife-edged — having a thin, sharp edge.
  • knightheads — Plural form of knighthead.
  • knot garden — an intricately designed flower or herb garden with plants arranged to create an interlacing pattern, sometimes with fanciful topiary and carefully tended paths.

On this page, we collect all 11-letter words with K-E-D-G. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 11-letter word that contains in K-E-D-G to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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