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10-letter words containing r, a, z, e

  • glamorizer — One who glamorizes.
  • glamorizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of glamorize.
  • glamourize — to make glamorous.
  • glaze over — If your eyes glaze over, they become dull and lose all expression, usually because you are bored or are thinking about something else.
  • gormandize — gourmandise1 .
  • grangerize — to augment the illustrative content of (a book) by inserting additional prints, drawings, engravings, etc., not included in the original volume.
  • graphitize — to convert into graphite.
  • grecianize — to make like the ancient Greeks
  • grenz rays — X-rays of long wavelength produced in a device when electrons are accelerated through 25 kilovolts or less
  • hackerazzo — a person who hacks into the computer or phone of a celebrity in order to gain information about him or her
  • hakenkreuz — a swastika, especially that used as the emblem of the Nazi party and the Third Reich.
  • hansardize — to prove that (a member of parliament) has changed his views from those quoted in Hansard
  • harmonized — Add notes to (a melody) to produce harmony.
  • harmonizer — to bring into harmony, accord, or agreement: to harmonize one's views with the new situation.
  • harmonizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of harmonize.
  • hazardless — an unavoidable danger or risk, even though often foreseeable: The job was full of hazards.
  • hazel park — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit.
  • heparinize — Add heparin to (blood or a container about to be filled with blood) to prevent it from coagulating.
  • hydrazides — Plural form of hydrazide.
  • hydrazoate — a salt of hydrazoic acid; azide.
  • idolatrize — (transitive) To make an idol of; to idolize.
  • immoralize — to make or cause to be immoral.
  • imperatriz — a city in NE Brazil, on the Tocantins River.
  • inorganize — To corrupt an organization; disorganize.
  • insularize — to make into an island or represent as insular.
  • interzonal — occurring or conducted between two or more zones
  • jargonized — Simple past tense and past participle of jargonize.
  • jaruzelski — Wojciech (Witold) [voi-chekh vee-tawld] /ˈvɔɪ tʃɛx ˈvi tɔld/ (Show IPA), 1923–2014, Polish general and political leader: prime minister 1981–85; president 1989–90.
  • jazzercise — vigorous dancing done to jazz dance music as an exercise for physical fitness.
  • jazzperson — A jazz musician.
  • jeopardize — to put in jeopardy; hazard; risk; imperil: He jeopardized his life every time he dived from the tower.
  • journalize — to tell or relate as one would in keeping a journal.
  • keratinize — Change or become changed into a form containing keratin.
  • laminarize — to make or design (a surface on an aircraft, or the flow over such a surface) so that it will be laminar
  • large-size — (of clothing, goods, merchandise, etc) of a bigger size than average
  • lateralize — (of the brain) show laterality.
  • lazarettos — Plural form of lazaretto.
  • lethargize — to make lethargic; stupefy.
  • liberalize — Remove or loosen restrictions on (something, typically an economic or political system).
  • like crazy — mentally deranged; demented; insane.
  • linearized — Simple past tense and past participle of linearize.
  • lipizzaner — one of a breed of compact, finely shaped, usually gray or white horses developed at the Austrian Imperial Stud and used generally in dressage exhibitions.
  • lippizaner — one of a breed of compact, finely shaped, usually gray or white horses developed at the Austrian Imperial Stud and used generally in dressage exhibitions.
  • literalize — to make literal; interpret literally.
  • lizardlike — Reminding of a lizard.
  • localizers — Plural form of localizer.
  • magnetizer — One who, or that which, imparts magnetism.
  • marbleized — Simple past tense and past participle of marbleize.
  • marbleizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of marbleize.
  • markiewicz — Constance, Countess, original name Constance Gore-Booth. 1868–1927, Irish nationalist, married to a Polish count. She fought in the Easter Rising (1916) and was sentenced to death but reprieved. The first woman elected to the British parliament (1918), she refused to take her seat
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