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12-letter words containing l, e, s, i

  • implementors — Plural form of implementor.
  • implicatures — Plural form of implicature.
  • implicitness — The state or quality of being implicit.
  • impoliteness — not polite or courteous; discourteous; rude: an impolite reply.
  • impressional — a strong effect produced on the intellect, feelings, conscience, etc.
  • impressively — having the ability to impress the mind; arousing admiration, awe, respect, etc.; moving; admirable: an impressive ceremony; an impressive appearance.
  • imprisonable — capable of being imprisoned or incarcerated
  • in rehearsal — being prepared for public performance
  • in sb's life — If you talk about the man or woman in someone's life, you mean the person they are having a relationship with, especially a sexual relationship.
  • in spadefuls — in an extreme or emphatic way
  • in the flesh — the soft substance of a human or other animal body, consisting of muscle and fat.
  • in the least — You can use in the least and the least bit to emphasize a negative.
  • inaccessible — Unable to be reached.
  • inaccessibly — In an inaccessible manner.
  • inadmissible — not admissible; not allowable: Such evidence would be inadmissible in any court.
  • inappeasable — unable to be soothed or appeased: inappeasable anger.
  • incalescence — The state of being incalescent, or growing warm.
  • incapsulated — Simple past tense and past participle of incapsulate.
  • incapsulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of incapsulate.
  • incestuously — involving incest.
  • inclemencies — (of the weather, the elements, etc.) severe, rough, or harsh; stormy.
  • inclusive of — including; taking into account
  • inclusive or — the connective that gives the value true to a disjunction if either or both of the disjuncts are true
  • inconclusive — not conclusive; not resolving fully all doubts or questions: inconclusive evidence.
  • inconsolable — not able to be comforted or consoled; disconsolate: She was inconsolable when her son died.
  • inconsumable — not consumable; incapable of being consumed.
  • increasingly — growing larger or greater; enlarging; augmenting.
  • indecisively — characterized by indecision, as persons; irresolute; undecided.
  • indecorously — not decorous; violating generally accepted standards of good taste or propriety; unseemly.
  • indefeasible — not defeasible; not to be annulled or made void; not forfeitable.
  • indefeasibly — In an indefeasible manner.
  • indefensible — not justifiable; inexcusable: indefensible behavior.
  • indefensibly — In an indefensible manner.
  • indefinables — Plural form of indefinable.
  • indelicacies — Plural form of indelicacy.
  • indent style — (programming)   Rules for formatting code to make it easier to visually match up the beginning and end of a block of statements, particularly one controlled by a control statement such as "if", "else", "for", "while", "do". This becomes important with large, nested blocks of code. Indent styles vary in the placement of "" and "" with respect to the statement(s) they enclose and the controlling statement. The normal style is "Allman style", named after Eric Allman, a Berkeley hacker who wrote many BSD utilities in it. It is sometimes called "BSD style". It resembles normal indent style in Pascal and ALGOL. Basic indent per level is eight or four spaces. This is the only indent style to clearly associate the controlling statement and the beginning and the end of the block by aligning them vertically, which probably explains its widespread adoption. if (cond) { } Other styles such as K&R style, Whitesmiths style and GNU style are either obsolete or should be avoided because they make it harder (much harder in some cases) to match braces with each other and with the control statement that controls them. Many related languages such as Perl offer the same choices while others, following B, eschew braces and rely entirely on relative indentation to express block structure. In Python, braces can be used to override indentation.
  • index fossil — a widely distributed fossil, of narrow range in time, regarded as characteristic of a given geological formation, used especially in determining the age of related formations.
  • indigenously — originating in and characteristic of a particular region or country; native (often followed by to): the plants indigenous to Canada; the indigenous peoples of southern Africa.
  • indigestible — not digestible; not easily digested.
  • indiscipline — lack of discipline or control: a campus problem of student indiscipline.
  • indiscreetly — not discreet; lacking prudence, good judgment, or circumspection: an indiscreet remark.
  • indisposable — Not disposable.
  • indisputable — not disputable or deniable; uncontestable. indisputable evidence.
  • indissoluble — not dissoluble; incapable of being dissolved, decomposed, undone, or destroyed.
  • indologenous — producing or causing the production of indole.
  • indulgencies — indulgence.
  • inelasticity — not elastic; lacking flexibility or resilience; unyielding.
  • inequalities — Plural form of inequality.
  • inessentials — Plural form of inessential.
  • inexcuseable — Alternative form of inexcusable.
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