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11-letter words containing m, a, i, l, e

  • confirmable — Capable of being checked, verifiable.
  • conterminal — having a common boundary; bordering; contiguous.
  • cremaillere — a trench or fortification constructed in an indented or saw-tooth pattern
  • criminalese — the jargon of criminals
  • criminalise — (chiefly, British) alternative spelling of criminalize.
  • criminalize — If a government criminalizes an action or person, it officially declares that the action or the person's behaviour is illegal.
  • cromwellian — of, relating to, or characteristic of the politics, practices, etc., of Oliver Cromwell or of the Commonwealth and Protectorate.
  • culminative — (of stress or tone accent) serving to indicate the number of independent words or the important points in an utterance by assigning prominence to one syllable in each word or close-knit group of words.
  • curtailment — The curtailment of something is the act of reducing or limiting it.
  • cytomegalic — of or relating to a disease characterized by enlarged cells
  • damselflies — Plural form of damselfly.
  • decimalized — Simple past tense and past participle of decimalize.
  • decimalizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decimalize.
  • declamation — a rhetorical or emotional speech, made esp in order to protest or condemn; tirade
  • deformalize — to make (something) less formal
  • deglamorize — to make (a person or thing) less glamorous
  • delaminated — Describing any structure whose laminations have been removed.
  • delimitated — Simple past tense and past participle of delimitate.
  • deliveryman — a man whose job is to deliver a product
  • demagogical — Demagogic.
  • demand bill — a bill of exchange that is payable on demand
  • demandingly — In a demanding way.
  • demeaningly — In a demeaning manner.
  • demonically — In a demonic way.
  • demoralised — to deprive (a person or persons) of spirit, courage, discipline, etc.; destroy the morale of: The continuous barrage demoralized the infantry.
  • demoralises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of demoralise.
  • demoralized — dispirited; disheartened
  • demoralizer — Agent noun of demoralize; one who demoralizes.
  • demoralizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of demoralize.
  • demutualise — If a building society or insurance company demutualises, it abandons its mutual status and becomes a limited company.
  • demutualize — If a savings and loan association or an insurance company demutualizes, it abandons its mutual status and becomes a different kind of company.
  • demyelinate — to remove the myelin sheath from (a nerve fibre)
  • denominable — Capable of being denominated or named.
  • denormalize — (transitive, databases) To add redundancy to (a database schema), the opposite of normalization, typically in order to optimize its performance.
  • deplumation — to deprive of feathers; pluck.
  • derailments — Plural form of derailment.
  • desublimate — Psychology. to divert the energy of (a sexual or other biological impulse) from its immediate goal to one of a more acceptable social, moral, or aesthetic nature or use.
  • detrimental — Something that is detrimental to something else has a harmful or damaging effect on it.
  • diametrical — of or along a diameter
  • dilatometer — a device for measuring expansion caused by changes in temperature in substances.
  • dimensional — Of or pertaining to dimensions.
  • dimentional — Misspelling of dimensional.
  • dimercaprol — a colorless, oily, viscous liquid, C 3 H 8 OS 2 , originally developed as an antidote to lewisite and now used in treating bismuth, gold, mercury, and arsenic poisoning.
  • diplomacies — Plural form of diplomacy.
  • diplomatese — the type of language or jargon used by diplomats, thought to be excessively complicated, cautious, or vague
  • diplomatize — to use diplomacy or tact.
  • direct mail — mail, usually consisting of advertising matter, appeals for donations, or the like, sent simultaneously to large numbers of possible individual customers or contributors. Abbreviation: DM.
  • disablement — to make unable or unfit; weaken or destroy the capability of; incapacitate: The detective successfully disabled the bomb. He was disabled by the accident.
  • disassemble — to take apart.
  • disassembly — to take apart.
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