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13-letter words containing l, g, e, n

  • danger signal — any type of signal that indicates danger
  • dangleberries — Plural form of dangleberry.
  • darling range — a ridge in SW Western Australia, parallel to the coast. Highest point: about 582 m (1669 ft)
  • darling river — a river in SE Australia, rising in the Eastern Highlands and flowing southwest to the Murray River. Length: 2740 km (1702 miles)
  • das rheingold — an opera by Wagner (1869), one of four in a cycle based on the German myth of the Ring of the Nibelung
  • data modeling — (spelling)   US spelling of "data modelling".
  • daydreamingly — While daydreaming.
  • dean of guild — the titular head of the guild or merchant company in a Scots burgh, who formerly exercised jurisdiction over all building in the burgh in the Dean of Guild Court
  • death-dealing — fatal; lethal
  • declassifying — Present participle of declassify.
  • deconflicting — Present participle of deconflict.
  • deglutination — to extract the gluten from.
  • degradational — (geology) Pertaining to or formed by degradation.
  • degranulation — a cellular process in which cytoplasmic granules within certain cells secrete their contents, often to the outside of the cell
  • delian league — an alliance of ancient Greek states formed in 478–77 bc to fight Persia
  • delightedness — The quality of being delighted; great pleasure.
  • demonological — the study of demons or of beliefs about demons.
  • demothballing — to remove (naval or military equipment) from storage or reserve, usually for active duty; reactivate.
  • demyelinating — Present participle of demyelinate.
  • dendroecology — The science that uses dendrochronology to analyze historic ecological processes.
  • dendrological — Of, pertaining to dendrology.
  • dentosurgical — relating to or used in both dentistry and surgery
  • deontological — (of an ethical theory) regarding obligation as deriving from reason or as residing primarily in certain specific rules of conduct rather than in the maximization of some good
  • dephlegmation — the act of dephlegmating
  • deprecatingly — to express earnest disapproval of.
  • dereligionize — to remove the religious aspects from (something)
  • desacralizing — Present participle of desacralize.
  • desobligeante — a type of carriage seating only one person
  • destabilising — Present participle of destabilise.
  • destabilizing — Present participle of destabilize.
  • detribalizing — Present participle of detribalize.
  • devastatingly — tending or threatening to devastate: a devastating fire.
  • dialling code — A dialling code for a particular city or region is the series of numbers that you have to dial before a particular telephone number if you are making a call to that place from a different area.
  • dialling tone — The dialling tone is the noise which you hear when you pick up a telephone receiver and which means that you can dial the number you want.
  • diesel engine — a compression-ignition engine in which a spray of fuel, introduced into air compressed to a temperature of approximately 1000° F (538° C), ignites at a virtually constant pressure.
  • dingleberries — Plural form of dingleberry.
  • disassembling — Present participle of disassemble.
  • disemboweling — Present participle of disembowel.
  • disentangling — Present participle of disentangle.
  • disgospelling — depriving of access to the gospel
  • disgruntledly — In a disgruntled manner.
  • disintegrable — Capable of being disintegrated.
  • disobligement — disobligation
  • disquietingly — causing anxiety or uneasiness; disturbing: disquieting news.
  • disregulation — Misspelling of dysregulation.
  • 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.
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