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

  • vesicularity — the quality or state of being vesicular
  • vesiculation — characterized by or covered with vesicles.
  • vestibulitis — a painful inflammation of the entrance to the vagina
  • viruliferous — carrying a virus
  • visual angle — the angle subtended by an object at the lens of the eye
  • visual dbase — (language)   A Rapid Application Development suite with a compiler and intranet tools to enable developers to publish data on the web. Originally a Borland product, the first version released by dBase, Inc. was Visual dBase 5.7.
  • visual field — field of vision.
  • visual range — Meteorology. visibility (def 3).
  • visualizable — to recall or form mental images or pictures.
  • vociferously — crying out noisily; clamorous.
  • volunteerism — voluntarism (def 2).
  • well-studied — marked by or suggestive of conscious effort; not spontaneous or natural; affected: studied simplicity.
  • white squall — a whirlwind at sea or a violent disturbance of small radius not accompanied by clouds but indicated merely by whitecaps and turbulent water.
  • wilton house — a mansion in Wilton in Wiltshire: built for the 1st Earl of Pembroke in the 16th century; rebuilt after a fire in 1647 by Inigo Jones and John Webb; altered in the 19th century by James Wyatt; landscaped grounds include a famous Palladian bridge
  • wineglassful — the capacity of a wineglass, typically containing four to six fluid ounces.
  • winter blues — a feeling of depression or deep unhappiness associated with experiencing the cold and darkness of winter
  • zinc sulfate — a colorless, crystalline, water-soluble powder, ZnSO 4 ⋅7H 2 O, used for preserving skins and wood, in the electrodeposition of zinc, in the bleaching of paper, as a mordant in calico printing, and in medicine as an astringent, styptic, and emetic.
  • zinc sulfide — a white to yellow, crystalline powder, ZnS, soluble in acids, insoluble in water, occurring naturally as wurtzite and sphalerite: used as a pigment and as a phosphor on x-ray and television screens.
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