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13-letter words containing r, e, i, n, t, p

  • impersonators — Plural form of impersonator.
  • impertinences — Plural form of impertinence.
  • impertinently — intrusive or presumptuous, as persons or their actions; insolently rude; uncivil: a brash, impertinent youth.
  • importunately — urgent or persistent in solicitation, sometimes annoyingly so.
  • importunities — Plural form of importunity.
  • impressionist — a person who follows or adheres to the theories, methods, and practices of impressionism, especially in the fields of painting, music, or literature.
  • imprisonments — Plural form of imprisonment.
  • improvidently — In an improvident manner.
  • in deep water — the deep part of a body of water, especially an area of the ocean floor having a depth greater than 18,000 feet (5400 meters).
  • in perpetuity — the state or character of being perpetual (often preceded by in): to desire happiness in perpetuity.
  • in receipt of — If you are in receipt of something, you have received it or you receive it regularly.
  • in repertoire — denoting the performance of two or more plays, ballets, etc, by the same company in the same venue on different evenings over a period of time
  • in respect of — with regard, with reference
  • in respect to — with regard to
  • in retrospect — contemplation of the past; a survey of past time, events, etc.
  • in the hopper — a person or thing that hops.
  • in triplicate — in three copies, times three
  • in-perpetuity — the state or character of being perpetual (often preceded by in): to desire happiness in perpetuity.
  • inappropriate — not appropriate; not proper or suitable: an inappropriate dress for the occasion.
  • incorporative — Tending to incorporate or include things.
  • incorruptable — Misspelling of incorruptible.
  • incorruptible — not corruptible: incorruptible integrity.
  • incorruptness — The state of being incorrupt.
  • indentureship — a deed or agreement executed in two or more copies with edges correspondingly indented as a means of identification.
  • indirect jump — (programming)   A jump via an indirect address, i.e. the jump instruction contains the address of a memory location that contains the address of the next instruction to execute. The location containing the address to jump to is sometimes called a vector. Indirect jumps make normal code hard to understand because the jump target is a run-time property of the program that depends on the execution history. They are useful for, e.g. allowing user code to replace operating system code or setting up event handlers.
  • injured party — victim
  • inner product — Also called dot product, scalar product. the quantity obtained by multiplying the corresponding coordinates of each of two vectors and adding the products, equal to the product of the magnitudes of the vectors and the cosine of the angle between them.
  • inoperational — Not operational.
  • inopportunely — In an inopportune manner.
  • insect powder — a powdered chemical that kills insects; insecticide
  • inspectorates — Plural form of inspectorate.
  • inspectorship — The condition of being an inspector; the office of an inspector.
  • insupportable — not endurable; unbearable; insufferable: insupportable pain.
  • intemperately — given to or characterized by excessive or immoderate indulgence in alcoholic beverages.
  • inter-company — a number of individuals assembled or associated together; group of people.
  • interceptable — Able to be intercepted.
  • interceptions — Plural form of interception.
  • intercropping — Present participle of intercrop.
  • interdepended — Simple past tense and past participle of interdepend.
  • interepidemic — Also, epidemical. (of a disease) affecting many persons at the same time, and spreading from person to person in a locality where the disease is not permanently prevalent.
  • interiorscape — An installation of plants decorating the inside of a building.
  • interoception — Any of the senses that detect conditions within the body.
  • interoceptive — pertaining to interoceptors, the stimuli acting upon them, or the nerve impulses initiated by them.
  • interoceptors — a receptor, especially of the viscera, responding to stimuli originating from within the body.
  • interoperable — capable of being used or operated reciprocally: interoperable weapons systems.
  • interoperably — capable of being used or operated reciprocally: interoperable weapons systems.
  • interoperates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of interoperate.
  • interpandemic — occurring between two pandemics
  • interparental — of or relating to a parent.
  • interparietal — situated between the two parietal bones of the skull
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