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11-letter words containing o, u, t, d, e

  • demountable — to remove from a mounting, setting, or place of support, as a gun.
  • demy quarto — a book size, 113⁄4 by 85⁄8 inches
  • denouements — Plural form of denouement.
  • dentigerous — bearing or having teeth
  • deobstruent — a drug which removes obstructions in the body by aiding the opening of ducts
  • deplumation — to deprive of feathers; pluck.
  • depollution — to eliminate, clean up, or decrease pollution in (an area).
  • depopulated — (of a place) reduced in population
  • depopulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of depopulate.
  • depopulator — a thing that causes a decrease in population
  • deputations — Plural form of deputation.
  • destitution — Destitution is the state of having no money or possessions.
  • destruction — Destruction is the act of destroying something, or the state of being destroyed.
  • destructors — Plural form of destructor.
  • desultorily — lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  • deuce court — the receiver's right-hand service court, into which the ball is served when the score is deuce.
  • deuteranope — a person suffering from deuteranopia
  • deuteration — the process of introducing deuterium into a molecule or chemical compound
  • deuterogamy — a marriage after the death or divorce of the first spouse
  • deuteronomy — the fifth book of the Old Testament, containing a second statement of the Mosaic Law
  • deuterotoky — parthenogenesis in which both males and females are produced
  • devaluation — a decrease in the exchange value of a currency against gold or other currencies, brought about by a government
  • dexterously — skillful or adroit in the use of the hands or body.
  • dextrocular — favoring the right eye, rather than the left, by habit or for effective vision (opposed to sinistrocular).
  • dinotherium — any elephantlike mammal of the extinct genus Dinotherium, from the later Tertiary Period of Europe and Asia, having large, outwardly curving tusks.
  • disasterous — Misspelling of disastrous.
  • discontinue — to put an end to; stop; terminate: to discontinue nuclear testing.
  • discotheque — a nightclub for dancing to live or recorded music and often featuring sophisticated sound systems, elaborate lighting, and other effects.
  • discounters — Plural form of discounter.
  • discourtesy — lack or breach of courtesy; incivility; rudeness.
  • disquietous — causing disquiet
  • dissentious — contentious; quarrelsome.
  • dissolutely — In a dissolute manner.
  • documentary — Also, documental [dok-yuh-men-tl] /ˌdɒk yəˈmɛn tl/ (Show IPA). pertaining to, consisting of, or derived from documents: a documentary history of France.
  • documenters — Plural form of documenter.
  • documenting — Present participle of document.
  • don quixoteDon, Don Quixote.
  • donut peach — fruit
  • doorbusters — Plural form of doorbuster.
  • dotted quad — dot notation
  • double coat — an outer coat of hair on a dog serving as protection against underbrush and resistant to weather, combined with an undercoat of softer hair for warmth and waterproofing.
  • double date — two couples meeting socially
  • double duty — designed to fill two functions: double-duty tools.
  • double flat — a symbol () that lowers the pitch of the note following it by two semitones.
  • double ikat — a method of printing woven fabric by tie-dyeing the warp yarns (warp ikat) the weft yarns (weft ikat) or both (double ikat) before weaving.
  • double knit — a weft-knit fabric that consists of two single-knit fabrics intimately interlooped.
  • double knot — any of various knots that are reinforced with a second tying
  • double salt — a salt that crystallizes as a single substance but ionizes as two distinct salts when dissolved, as carnallite, KMgCl 3 ⋅6H 2 O.
  • double star — two stars that appear as one if not viewed through a telescope with adequate magnification, such as two stars that are separated by a great distance but are nearly in line with each other and an observer (optical double star) or those that are relatively close together and comprise a single physical system (physical double star)
  • double take — a rapid or surprised second look, either literal or figurative, at a person or situation whose significance had not been completely grasped at first: His friends did a double take when they saw how much weight he had lost.
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