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12-letter words containing r, e, s, i, d, n

  • disorientate — to disorient.
  • disorienting — to cause to lose one's way: The strange streets disoriented him.
  • dispensaries — Plural form of dispensary.
  • dispensatory — a book in which the composition, preparation, and uses of medicinal substances are described; a nonofficial pharmacopoeia.
  • dispersement — Misspelling of disbursement.
  • dispiritment — the state of being dispirited
  • disportments — to divert or amuse (oneself).
  • disregarding — to pay no attention to; leave out of consideration; ignore: Disregard the footnotes.
  • disseminator — to scatter or spread widely, as though sowing seed; promulgate extensively; broadcast; disperse: to disseminate information about preventive medicine.
  • dissenterish — having a part of the character or quality of a dissenter
  • dissenterism — the beliefs and practices of dissenters
  • dissertation — a written essay, treatise, or thesis, especially one written by a candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
  • disservicing — harmful or injurious service; an ill turn.
  • disseverance — The act of dissevering; separation.
  • disseverment — Disseverance.
  • distrainable — Capable of being, or liable to be, distrained.
  • distress gun — a gun fired at one-minute intervals as a signal of distress.
  • distringases — Plural form of distringas.
  • disturbances — Plural form of disturbance.
  • ditransitive — noting or pertaining to a verb taking both a direct and an indirect object, as give in “I gave him the package.”.
  • divergencies — Plural form of divergency.
  • diversifying — Present participle of diversify.
  • diversionary — tending to divert or distract the attention: diversionary tactics of the guerrilla fighters.
  • diversionist — a person engaged in activities that divert attention from a primary focus.
  • doctrinaires — Plural form of doctrinaire.
  • dog's dinner — mess, failure
  • dominatrices — Plural form of dominatrixThe 'Concise Oxford English Dictionary' [Eleventh Edition].
  • doorstepping — talking to someone at the door of their home, for political canvassing or to gather information
  • dorsiflexion — flexion toward the back.
  • dorsiventral — Botany. having distinct dorsal and ventral sides, as most foliage leaves.
  • drawlingness — the quality or characteristic of a drawler
  • dream vision — a conventional device used in narrative verse, employed especially by medieval poets, that presents a story as told by one who falls asleep and dreams the events of the poem: Dante's Divine Comedy exemplifies the dream vision in its most developed form.
  • driving seat — In a vehicle such as a car or a bus, the driving seat is the seat where the person who is driving the vehicle sits.
  • driving test — the examination that new drivers must take in order to be officially allowed to drive when not under instruction
  • droughtiness — Dryness of the weather; lack of rain.
  • dysenterical — Alternative form of dysenteric.
  • enchiridions — Plural form of enchiridion.
  • endocarditis — Inflammation of the endocardium.
  • endometritis — Inflammation of the endometrium.
  • endomorphism — changes in a cooling body of igneous rock brought about by assimilation of fragments of, or chemical reaction with, the surrounding country rock
  • endoparasite — A parasite, such as a tapeworm, that lives inside its host.
  • enduringness — The quality of being enduring; lastingness.
  • enfranchised — Simple past tense and past participle of enfranchise.
  • entertissued — interwoven
  • eradications — Plural form of eradication.
  • ex-president — a former chief executive or head of state of a republic
  • expenditures — Plural form of expenditure.
  • externalised — Simple past tense and past participle of externalise.
  • extraditions — Plural form of extradition.
  • fair-skinned — having pale skin; pale-complexioned
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