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13-letter words containing l, e, g

  • disgospelling — depriving of access to the gospel
  • disgracefully — In a disgraceful manner.
  • disgruntledly — In a disgruntled manner.
  • disintegrable — Capable of being disintegrated.
  • disobligement — disobligation
  • disquietingly — causing anxiety or uneasiness; disturbing: disquieting news.
  • disregardable — to pay no attention to; leave out of consideration; ignore: Disregard the footnotes.
  • disregardless — (nonstandard) Regardless.
  • disregulation — Misspelling of dysregulation.
  • distress flag — any flag flown by a vessel to show that it is in distress, as an ensign flown at half-mast or upside down.
  • distressingly — great pain, anxiety, or sorrow; acute physical or mental suffering; affliction; trouble.
  • dividing line — distinction
  • diving beetle — any of numerous predaceous water beetles of the family Dytiscidae, having the body adapted for swimming.
  • diving petrel — any of several small seabirds of the family Pelecanoididae, of Southern Hemisphere seas, having compact bodies, tubelike processes near the nostrils, and usually drab plumage.
  • diving reflex — a reflex of humans, other mammals, reptiles, and birds, triggered by immersion in cold water, that slows the heart rate and diverts blood flow to the brain, heart, and lungs: serves to conserve oxygen until breathing resumes and to delay potential brain damage.
  • dog-leg stair — a half-turn stair, the successive flights of which are immediately side by side and connected by an intervening platform.
  • domineeringly — In a domineering manner.
  • doppelgangers — Plural form of doppelganger.
  • double dagger — a mark (‡) used for references, as footnotes.
  • double garage — a garage that can hold two vehicles
  • double magnum — Jeroboam (def 2).
  • double-acting — (of a reciprocating engine, pump, etc.) having pistons accomplishing work in both directions, fluid being admitted alternately to opposite ends of the cylinders. Compare single-acting.
  • double-figure — double-digit.
  • double-glazed — of, having, or provided with double glazing: double-glazed windows and doors.
  • double-tongue — to interrupt the wind flow by moving the tongue as if pronouncing t and k alternately, especially in playing rapid passages or staccato notes on a brass instrument.
  • doughnut hole — a funding shortfall in the standard drug benefit offered by many Medicare prescription drug plans
  • douglas scale — an international scale of sea disturbance and swell ranging from 0 to 9 with one figure for disturbance and one for swell
  • downregulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of downregulate.
  • draggletailed — untidy; bedraggled; slovenly.
  • drawing table — a table having a surface consisting of a drawing board adjustable to various heights and angles.
  • drilling crew — The drilling crew are the people who operate a drilling rig.
  • driving wheel — Machinery. a main wheel that communicates motion to others.
  • drug smuggler — trafficker in illegal substances
  • drum paneling — flush paneling in a door.
  • dual heritage — an upbringing in which one's parents are of different ethnic or religious backgrounds
  • duck-egg blue — a pale greenish-blue colour
  • due diligence — the degree of care that is to be reasonably expected or that is legally required, esp. of persons giving professional advice
  • due-diligence — reasonable care and caution exercised by a person who is buying, selling, giving professional advice, etc., especially as required by law to protect against incurring liability: The court said there was due diligence on the part of the plaintiff.
  • duino elegies — a collection of ten poems (1923) by Rainer Maria Rilke.
  • dun laoghaire — a seaport in E Republic of Ireland, near Dublin.
  • durable goods — Durable goods or durables are goods such as televisions or cars which are expected to last a long time, and are bought infrequently.
  • dysregulation — A failure to regulate properly.
  • ear-splitting — ear-piercing: an earsplitting explosion.
  • early closing — shop closure at earlier hour
  • early english — pertaining to the first style of Gothic architecture in England, ending in the latter half of the 13th century, characterized by the use of lancet arches, plate tracery, and narrow openings.
  • early warning — An early warning system warns people that something bad is likely to happen, for example that a machine is about to stop working, or that a country is being attacked.
  • early-evening — taking place or being presented in the early part of the evening
  • early-morning — taking place or being presented in the early part of the morning
  • easter-ledges — a pudding made from the young leaves of the bistort
  • eco-labelling — the practice or system of using eco-labels
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