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11-letter words containing m, e, r

  • damask rose — a rose, Rosa damascena, native to Asia and cultivated for its pink or red fragrant flowers, which are used to make the perfume attar
  • damp course — A damp course is a layer of waterproof material which is put into the bottom of the outside wall of a building to prevent moisture from rising.
  • dance drama — drama performed through dance movements, frequently with dialogue.
  • dark comedy — a play, movie, etc., having elements of comedy and tragedy, often involving gloomy or morbid satire.
  • dark matter — Dark matter is material that is believed to form a large part of the universe, but which has never been seen.
  • daydreamers — Plural form of daydreamer.
  • daydreaming — indulgence in daydreams
  • dde manager — An Oracle product that lets Microsoft Windows applications that support the Dynamic Data Exchange (DDE) protocol act as front end tools for Oracle. It allows applications like Excel, Word, Ami Professional, WingZ and ToolBook to query, update, graph and report information stored in Oracle.
  • dead matter — type that has already been used or is not going to be used
  • death march — a long-distance forced march, usually undertaken by prisoners, on which a lot of the marchers die
  • debridement — the surgical removal of dead tissue or cellular debris from the surface of a wound
  • decameronic — resembling or having characteristics of the Decameron written by Boccaccio
  • decemvirate — a board of decemvirs
  • declamatory — A declamatory phrase, statement, or way of speaking is dramatic and confident.
  • declarement — (obsolete) declaration.
  • decompilers — Plural form of decompiler.
  • decomposers — Plural form of decomposer.
  • decremental — relating to a small amount that is taken away
  • decremented — Simple past tense and past participle of decrement.
  • decumbiture — the act of lying recumbent and, in particular, as a sick patient in bed
  • dedramatize — to cause to be less dramatic
  • deforcement — (legal) A keeping out by force or wrong; a wrongful withholding, as of lands or tenements, to which another has a right.
  • deformalize — to make (something) less formal
  • deformation — the act of deforming; distortion
  • deformative — making worse by alteration
  • deformities — Plural form of deformity.
  • degerminate — degerm (def 2).
  • deglamorize — to make (a person or thing) less glamorous
  • degree mill — an academic institution with low standards that awards many degrees
  • deliveryman — a man whose job is to deliver a product
  • deliverymen — Plural form of deliveryman.
  • demagoguery — the methods, practices, or rhetoric of a demagogue
  • demarcating — Present participle of demarcate.
  • demarcation — Demarcation is the establishment of boundaries or limits separating two areas, groups, or things.
  • demarcative — (of a phonological feature) serving to indicate the beginning or end of each successive word in an utterance, as word-initial stress in Hungarian or penultimate stress in Polish.
  • demarkation — the determining and marking off of the boundaries of something.
  • demarketing — advertising that urges the public to limit the consumption of a product, as at a time of shortage.
  • demesmerize — (transitive) To relieve from mesmeric influence.
  • demetrius i — (Poliorcetes) 337?–283 b.c, king of Macedonia 294–286 (son of Antigonus I).
  • demi-hunter — a watch having a hinged case with a hole in the lid permitting the time to be seen even when the lid is closed.
  • demi-vierge — a girl or woman who behaves in a sexually provocative and permissive way without yielding her virginity.
  • demigration — moving from one place to another
  • democracies — Plural form of democracy.
  • democratise — To make democratic.
  • democratism — The principles or spirit of a democracy.
  • democratize — If a country or a system is democratized, it is made democratic.
  • demodulator — a device used in demodulation
  • demographer — the science of vital and social statistics, as of the births, deaths, diseases, marriages, etc., of populations.
  • demographic — Demographic means relating to or concerning demography.
  • demonocracy — power of or rule by demons
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