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12-letter words containing s, p, i, r, e

  • despairingly — given to despair or hopelessness.
  • desulphurize — to free or become free from sulphur
  • devil's grip — pleurodynia (def 2).
  • dinosaur pen — A traditional mainframe computer room complete with raised flooring, special power, its own ultra-heavy-duty air conditioning, and a side order of Halon fire extinguishers. See boa.
  • diphtheroids — resembling diphtheria, especially in the formation of a false membrane in the throat.
  • directorship — a person or thing that directs.
  • disappearing — Present participle of disappear.
  • discerptible — capable of being torn apart; divisible.
  • discographer — a person who compiles discographies.
  • discomposure — the state of being discomposed; disorder; agitation; perturbation.
  • discorporate — Having no material body.
  • discrepances — Plural form of discrepance.
  • disempowered — Simple past tense and past participle of disempower.
  • disoperation — a relationship between two organisms in a community that is harmful to both
  • disopyramide — a substance, C 21 H 29 N 3 O, used in its phosphate form in the symptomatic and prophylactic treatment of certain cardiac arrhythmias.
  • dispauperize — to free (a person) from the state of being a pauper
  • dispensaries — Plural form of dispensary.
  • dispensatory — a book in which the composition, preparation, and uses of medicinal substances are described; a nonofficial pharmacopoeia.
  • disperse dye — any of the class of slightly water-soluble dyes dispersed in aqueous solution for dyeing synthetic textile fibers.
  • dispersement — Misspelling of disbursement.
  • dispiritedly — discouraged; dejected; disheartened; gloomy.
  • dispiritment — the state of being dispirited
  • disportments — to divert or amuse (oneself).
  • dispossessor — One who dispossesses.
  • dispreferred — Simple past tense and past participle of disprefer.
  • disprivacied — deprived of privacy
  • disprivilege — to deprive of privilege
  • dispropriate — to deprive of ownership
  • disreputable — not reputable; having a bad reputation: a disreputable barroom.
  • disreputably — In a disreputable manner.
  • disrespected — lack of respect; discourtesy; rudeness.
  • disruptively — In a disruptive manner.
  • distemperate — (obsolete) immoderate.
  • distemperoid — resembling distemper.
  • doorstepping — talking to someone at the door of their home, for political canvassing or to gather information
  • drop shipper — a wholesaler or distributor who conducts business in drop shipments.
  • dryopithecus — an extinct genus of generalized hominoids that lived in Europe and Africa during the Miocene Epoch and whose members are characterized by small molars and incisors.
  • earsplitting — ear-piercing: an earsplitting explosion.
  • east prussia — a former province in NE Germany: an enclave separated from Germany by the Polish Corridor; now divided between Poland and the Russian Federation. 14,283 sq. mi. (36,993 sq. km). Capital: Königsberg.
  • ectoparasite — an external parasite (opposed to endoparasite).
  • ekman spiral — a complex interaction on the surface of the sea between wind, rotation of the earth, and friction forces, discovered by Vagn Walfrid Ekman
  • ellipsograph — an instrument that draws ellipses
  • emancipators — Plural form of emancipator.
  • empire state — state of New York
  • 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.
  • enteroptosis — Visceroptosis of the intestines.
  • enterprising — Having or showing initiative and resourcefulness.
  • epanorthosis — (rhetoric) A rhetorical device or element in which a speaker or writer retracts a word that has been spoken and substitutes a stronger or more suitable word; often done for emphasis or sarcasm.
  • epicureanism — An ancient school of philosophy founded in Athens by Epicurus. The school rejected determinism and advocated hedonism (pleasure as the highest good), but of a restrained kind: mental pleasure was regarded more highly than physical, and the ultimate pleasure was held to be freedom from anxiety and mental pain, esp. that arising from needless fear of death and of the gods.
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