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11-letter words containing s, i, g, n, e, t

  • pre-testing — an advance or preliminary testing or trial, as of a new product.
  • preexisting — to exist beforehand.
  • prosecuting — carrying out a prosecution
  • proselyting — a person who has changed from one opinion, religious belief, sect, or the like, to another; convert.
  • prospecting — Usually, prospects. an apparent probability of advancement, success, profit, etc. the outlook for the future: good business prospects.
  • questioning — indicating or implying a question: a questioning tone in her voice.
  • rasterising — (algorithm)   A transformation that can be applied to an image to prepare it for printing. Rasterising reduces resolution by a factor of typically four to eight. It also reduces sensitivity to paper properties. Rasterising can be combined with dithering.
  • rasterizing — rasterising
  • redesignate — to mark or point out; indicate; show; specify.
  • redigestion — the act or process of redigesting
  • redshirting — a high-school or college athlete kept out of varsity competition for one year to develop skills and extend eligibility. a child held back from starting kindergarten for one year, the practice of which is believed by some parents to give the child academic, athletic, and social advantages.
  • regimentals — of or relating to a regiment.
  • religionist — excessive or exaggerated religious zeal.
  • resentingly — in a resenting manner; resentfully
  • resignation — the act of resigning.
  • resistingly — in a resisting manner
  • restringent — (of medicines and chemicals) causing contraction of body tissues, checking blood flow, or restricting secretions of fluids
  • resultingly — as a result.
  • ringstraked — ring-streaked.
  • samuel ting — Samuel C(hao) C(hung) [chou choo ng] /tʃaʊ tʃʊŋ/ (Show IPA), born 1936, U.S. physicist: Nobel prize 1976.
  • scatterling — a person with no fixed home; a wanderer; a vagabond
  • scientology — the philosophy of the Church of Scientology, a nondenominational movement founded in the US in the 1950s, which emphasizes self-knowledge as a means of realizing full spiritual potential
  • sea bathing — the activity of swimming in the sea
  • segregation — the act or practice of segregating; a setting apart or separation of people or things from others or from the main body or group: gender segregation in some fundamentalist religions.
  • self-acting — acting by itself; automatic.
  • self-hating — harbouring feelings of self-hatred
  • self-ignite — to ignite without spark or flame.
  • sempstering — the profession of being a tailor
  • set against — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • set-jetting — the practice of visiting places used as locations in feature films
  • sherringtonSir Charles Scott, 1861–1952, English physiologist: Nobel Prize in medicine 1932.
  • shoe-string — a shoelace.
  • sightscreen — a white screen set in line with the wicket as an aid to the batsman in seeing the ball when it is bowled.
  • sightseeing — the act of visiting and seeing places and objects of interest.
  • sign writer — someone whose job is to produce signs for businesses
  • sign-posted — a post bearing a sign that gives information or guidance.
  • signatories — having signed, or joined in signing, a document: the signatory powers to a treaty.
  • signet ring — a finger ring containing a small seal, one's initial, or the like.
  • significate — something signified
  • single knot — overhand knot.
  • single malt — a type of whisky that is made at a single distillery and from one type of malted grain
  • single tape — a ribbon of material, usually with a plastic base, coated on one side (single tape) or both sides (double tape) with a substance containing iron oxide, to make it sensitive to impulses from an electromagnet: used to record sound, images, data, etc.
  • single-foot — rack3 (def 1).
  • single-knit — a fabric made on warp knit.
  • single-malt — (of whiskey, especially Scotch) made from unblended malt whiskey distilled at one distillery.
  • single-shot — (of a firearm) requiring loading before each shot; not having or using a cartridge magazine.
  • single-step — to perform a single instruction on (a program), generally under the control of a debug program
  • singlestick — a short, heavy stick.
  • singletrack — (of a railroad or section of a railroad's route) having but one set of tracks, so that trains going in opposite directions must be scheduled to meet only at points where there are sidings.
  • singulative — a grammatical form or construction that expresses a singular entity or indicates that an individual is singled out from a group, especially as opposed to a collective noun, as snowflake as opposed to snow.
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