11-letter words containing l, a, t, e, r
- rationalise — to ascribe (one's acts, opinions, etc.) to causes that superficially seem reasonable and valid but that actually are unrelated to the true, possibly unconscious and often less creditable or agreeable causes.
- rationalize — to ascribe (one's acts, opinions, etc.) to causes that superficially seem reasonable and valid but that actually are unrelated to the true, possibly unconscious and often less creditable or agreeable causes.
- rattle-bush — blue false indigo.
- rattlebrain — a giddy, empty-headed, talkative person.
- rattlesnake — any of several New World pit vipers of the genera Crotalus and Sistrurus, having a rattle composed of a series of horny, interlocking elements at the end of the tail.
- re-allocate — to set apart for a particular purpose; assign or allot: to allocate funds for new projects.
- re-escalate — to escalate again
- re-evaluate — to determine or set the value or amount of; appraise: to evaluate property.
- readability — Also, readableness. the state or quality of being readable.
- real estate — property, especially in land: three acres of real estate.
- real tennis — an ancient form of tennis played in a four-walled indoor court with various openings, a sloping-roofed corridor along three sides, and a buttress on the fourth side
- realignment — an adjustment to a line; arrangement in a straight line.
- realization — the making or being made real of something imagined, planned, etc.
- reallotment — the act or process of reallotting something
- realpolitik — political realism or practical politics, especially policy based on power rather than on ideals.
- recalculate — to calculate again, especially for the purpose of finding an error or confirming a previous computation.
- recalescent — a brightening exhibited by cooling iron as latent heat of transformation is liberated.
- recalibrate — to determine, check, or rectify the graduation of (any instrument giving quantitative measurements).
- recatalogue — to catalogue (something, such as a book or collection of books) again
- recirculate — to move in a circle or circuit; move or pass through a circuit back to the starting point: Blood circulates throughout the body.
- reclamation — the reclaiming of desert, marshy, or submerged areas or other wasteland for cultivation or other use.
- reclination — to lean or lie back; rest in a recumbent position.
- recreatable — to create anew.
- recruitable — a newly enlisted or drafted member of the armed forces.
- rectangular — shaped like a rectangle.
- rectifiable — able to be rectified.
- rectilinear — forming a straight line.
- rectiserial — arranged in straight rows
- recultivate — to plant, tend, harvest, or improve (plants) again
- redactional — to put into suitable literary form; revise; edit.
- redoubtable — that is to be feared; formidable.
- reductional — of, characterized by, or relating to reduction
- redundantly — characterized by verbosity or unnecessary repetition in expressing ideas; prolix: a redundant style.
- reduplicate — to double; repeat.
- reestablish — to found, institute, build, or bring into being on a firm or stable basis: to establish a university; to establish a medical practice.
- reevaluated — to determine or set the value or amount of; appraise: to evaluate property.
- referential — having reference: referential to something.
- reflectance — the ratio of the intensity of reflected radiation to that of the radiation incident on a surface.
- refocillate — to refresh, revive, give new life
- reformulate — to formulate again.
- regimentals — of or relating to a regiment.
- registrable — a book in which records of acts, events, names, etc., are kept.
- regrettable — causing or deserving regret; unfortunate; deplorable.
- regrettably — causing or deserving regret; unfortunate; deplorable.
- reinflation — Economics. a persistent, substantial rise in the general level of prices related to an increase in the volume of money and resulting in the loss of value of currency (opposed to deflation).
- reinoculate — to inoculate again
- relatedness — associated; connected.
- relationism — a doctrine maintaining the existence of relations between things
- relationist — a person who maintains a theory rooted in the relation between ideas
- relative to — a person who is connected with another or others by blood or marriage.