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11-letter words containing q, u, i

  • quitclaimed — Simple past tense and past participle of quitclaim.
  • quite (so)! — certainly! I agree!
  • quite a bit — a small piece or quantity of anything: a bit of string.
  • quiveringly — While quivering, or as if quivering.
  • quizmasters — Plural form of quizmaster.
  • quizzacious — (nonce, obsolete) Mocking or satirical.
  • quizzically — odd, queer, or comical.
  • quotability — The degree to which a person, literature, or a speech is useful or relevant for being quoted.
  • quotidianly — daily: a quotidian report.
  • re-acquaint — to make more or less familiar, aware, or conversant (usually followed by with): to acquaint the mayor with our plan.
  • requalified — to provide with proper or necessary skills, knowledge, credentials, etc.; make competent: to qualify oneself for a job.
  • requirement — that which is required; a thing demanded or obligatory: One of the requirements of the job is accuracy.
  • requisition — the act of requiring or demanding.
  • requisitory — a demand, usually in writing, made by a prosecutor that a sentence be passed against an accused party, and stating reasons for the demand
  • requiteless — without requital; unrequited
  • requitement — to make repayment or return for (service, benefits, etc.).
  • san joaquin — a river in California, flowing NW from the Sierra Nevada Mountains to the Sacramento River. 350 miles (560 km) long.
  • semiaquatic — partly aquatic; growing or living in or close to water, or carrying out part of its life cycle in water.
  • semiquinone — any of the class of free radicals formed as intermediates in the oxidation of a hydroquinone to a quinone.
  • sesquialter — in the ratio of 3:2
  • sesquioxide — an oxide containing three atoms of oxygen and two of another element, as aluminum oxide, Al 2 O 3 .
  • sesquipedal — given to using long words.
  • sesquiplane — a biplane having one wing with not more than half the surface area of the other wing.
  • soliloquise — to utter a soliloquy; talk to oneself.
  • soliloquist — to utter a soliloquy; talk to oneself.
  • soliloquize — to utter a soliloquy; talk to oneself.
  • squall line — a line or extended narrow region within which squalls or thunderstorms occur, often several hundred miles long.
  • square inch — a unit of area measurement equal to a square measuring one inch on each side; 6.452 square centimeters. 2 , sq. in. Abbreviation: in.
  • square mile — a unit of area measurement equal to a square measuring one mile on each side; 2.59 square kilometers. 2 , sq. mi. Abbreviation: mi.
  • square sail — a sail set beneath a horizontal yard, the normal position of which, when not trimmed to the wind, is directly athwartships.
  • square with — a rectangle having all four sides of equal length.
  • squassation — a form of strappado in which the victim, with arms bound behind and feet heavily weighted, was jerked up and down at the end of a rope passed under the arms.
  • squattiness — the condition or quality of being squat
  • squeakingly — in a squeaking manner
  • squint-eyed — affected with or characterized by strabismus.
  • squintingly — in a way that makes one squint
  • squirearchy — the collective body of squires or landed gentry of a country.
  • squirreling — any of numerous arboreal, bushy-tailed rodents of the genus Sciurus, of the family Sciuridae.
  • squishiness — soft and wet: The ground was squishy from the rain.
  • st. quentin — a city in N France, on the Somme: retaken from the Germans 1918.
  • sympathique — pleasing or congenial
  • téléférique — a cableway
  • the antique — the style of ancient art, esp Greek or Roman art, or an example of it
  • tocqueville — Alexis Charles Henri Maurice Clérel de [a-lek-see sharl ahn-ree maw-rees kley-rel duh] /a lɛkˈsi ˈʃarl ɑ̃ˈri mɔˈris kleɪˈrɛl də/ (Show IPA), 1805–59, French statesman and author.
  • tranquility — quality or state of being tranquil; calmness; peacefulness; quiet; serenity.
  • tranquilize — calm sb with drugs
  • triquetrous — three-sided; triangular.
  • unacquitted — to relieve from a charge of fault or crime; declare not guilty: They acquitted him of the crime. The jury acquitted her, but I still think she's guilty.
  • unequitable — inequitable.
  • unequivocal — not equivocal; unambiguous; clear; having only one possible meaning or interpretation: an unequivocal indication of assent; unequivocal proof.
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