0%

11-letter words containing r, a, d, i, n, t

  • demarketing — advertising that urges the public to limit the consumption of a product, as at a time of shortage.
  • demigration — moving from one place to another
  • denaturized — Simple past tense and past participle of denaturize.
  • dendritical — Alternative form of dendritic.
  • denervation — to cut off the nerve supply from (an organ or body part) by surgery or anesthetic block.
  • denigrating — to speak damagingly of; criticize in a derogatory manner; sully; defame: to denigrate someone's character.
  • denigration — to speak damagingly of; criticize in a derogatory manner; sully; defame: to denigrate someone's character.
  • denigrative — tending to denigrate
  • denigratory — to speak damagingly of; criticize in a derogatory manner; sully; defame: to denigrate someone's character.
  • denitration — Chemistry. to free from nitric acid or nitrates; remove oxides of nitrogen from.
  • denominator — In mathematics, the denominator is the number which appears under the line in a fraction.
  • depasturing — Present participle of depasture.
  • deploration — the act of deploring
  • deportation — the act of expelling an alien from a country; expulsion
  • depravation — to make morally bad or evil; vitiate; corrupt.
  • deprecating — A deprecating attitude, gesture, or remark shows that you think that something is not very good, especially something associated with yourself.
  • deprecation — to express earnest disapproval of.
  • depredation — The depredations of a person, animal, or force are their harmful actions, which usually involve taking or damaging something.
  • deprivation — If you suffer deprivation, you do not have or are prevented from having something that you want or need.
  • deracinated — to pull up by the roots; uproot; extirpate; eradicate.
  • deracinates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deracinate Pulls up by the roots.
  • derailments — Plural form of derailment.
  • derivations — Plural form of derivation.
  • derogations — Plural form of derogation.
  • desalinator — an apparatus used in the process of desalination
  • desecrating — Present participle of desecrate.
  • desecration — a desecrating or being desecrated
  • designators — Plural form of designator.
  • designatory — to mark or point out; indicate; show; specify.
  • desperation — Desperation is the feeling that you have when you are in such a bad situation that you will try anything to change it.
  • determinacy — the quality of being defined or fixed
  • determinant — A determinant of something causes it to be of a particular kind or to happen in a particular way.
  • determinate — Determinate means fixed and definite.
  • detractions — Plural form of detraction.
  • detrainment — The act of detraining.
  • detrimental — Something that is detrimental to something else has a harmful or damaging effect on it.
  • deuteration — the process of introducing deuterium into a molecule or chemical compound
  • diatessaron — (in classical Greece) the interval of a perfect fourth
  • differentia — the character or attribute by which one species is distinguished from all others of the same genus.
  • diffraction — the phenomenon exhibited by wave fronts that, passing the edge of an opaque body, are modulated, thereby causing a redistribution of energy within the front: it is detectable in light waves by the presence of a pattern of closely spaced dark and light bands (diffraction pattern) at the edge of a shadow.
  • dignitaries — a person who holds a high rank or office, as in the government or church.
  • dilutionary — causing, involving, or relating to the dilution of company stocks
  • dinnerplate — A plate on which dinner can be served.
  • directional — of, relating to, or indicating direction in space.
  • disarmament — the act or an instance of disarming.
  • disattiring — Present participle of disattire.
  • discardment — the act or process of discarding
  • discreation — to reduce to nothing; annihilate.
  • disenthrall — to free from bondage; liberate: to be disenthralled from morbid fantasies.
  • disentrance — to bring out of an entranced condition; disenchant.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?