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11-letter words containing t, e, n, d

  • coordinates — clothes of matching or harmonious colours and design, suitable for wearing together
  • copyediting — Alternative spelling of copy editing.
  • cotransduce — to cause (genes) to undergo cotransduction
  • cottonseeds — Plural form of cottonseed.
  • counterbids — Plural form of counterbid.
  • counterbond — a bond that protects a person who has entered into a bond for another person
  • counterdraw — to copy (a painting, etc) by tracing it onto a transparent material, such as oiled paper
  • counterdrug — Against the trafficking of drugs.
  • countermand — If you countermand an order, you cancel it, usually by giving a different order.
  • counterraid — a retaliatory raid on an enemy
  • countersued — Simple past tense and past participle of countersue.
  • counterword — a word widely used in a sense much looser than its original meaning, such as tremendous or awful
  • countrified — You use countrified to describe something that seems or looks like something in the country, rather than in a town.
  • countryfied — countrified
  • countrymade — (in India) Describing a weapon manufactured illegally in a cottage industry.
  • countryside — The countryside is land which is away from towns and cities.
  • countrywide — Something that happens or exists countrywide happens or exists throughout the whole of a particular country.
  • court dance — a dignified dance for performance at a court. Compare folk dance (def 1).
  • credentials — Someone's credentials are their previous achievements, training, and general background, which indicate that they are qualified to do something.
  • credit line — A person or company's credit line is the amount of credit that they are allowed, for example, by a credit card company or a bank.
  • credit note — A credit note is a piece of paper that a shop gives you when you return goods that you have bought from it. It states that you are entitled to take goods of the same value without paying for them.
  • crenellated — In a castle, a crenellated wall has gaps in the top or openings through which to fire at attackers.
  • crescentade — a religious crusade or war fought under the flag of Turkey
  • cystadenoma — Hidrocystoma.
  • danger list — on
  • dante chair — a chair of the Renaissance having two transverse pairs of curved legs crossing beneath the seat and rising to support the arms and back.
  • dastardness — the sate or quality of being a dastard
  • data driven — A data driven architecture/language performs computations in an order dictated by data dependencies. Two kinds of data driven computation are dataflow and demand driven. From about 1970 research in parallel data driven computation increased. Centres of excellence emerged at MIT, CERT-ONERA in France, NTT and ETL in Japan and Manchester University.
  • dative bond — coordinate bond
  • dative-bond — a type of covalent bond between two atoms in which the bonding electrons are supplied by one of the two atoms.
  • datum plane — the horizontal plane from which heights and depths are calculated
  • dauntlessly — In a dauntless manner.
  • day student — a student at a college or secondary school who does not reside in a facility provided by the school
  • day-neutral — (of plants) having an ability to mature and bloom that is not affected by day length
  • de la rentaOscar, 1932–2014, U.S. fashion designer, born in the Dominican Republic.
  • deacon seat — a bench running most of the length of a bunkhouse in a lumbering camp.
  • dead center — the position of maximum (top dead center) or minimum (bottom dead center) extension of a crank and a connecting rod, in which both are in the same straight line
  • dead centre — the exact top (top dead centre) or bottom (bottom dead centre) of the piston stroke in a reciprocating engine or pump
  • dead nettle — any of various plants belonging to the genus Lamium, of the mint family, native to the Old World, having opposite leaves and clusters of small reddish or white flowers.
  • dead-nettle — any Eurasian plant of the genus Lamium, such as L. alba (white dead-nettle), having leaves resembling nettles but lacking stinging hairs: family Lamiaceae (labiates)
  • deadenylate — (biochemistry, genetics) To remove an adenylate group from a protein; especially to activate an enzyme by this means.
  • deamidating — Present participle of deamidate.
  • deamidation — (biochemistry) The conversion of glutamine, asparagine, glutamine residues in a polypeptide to glutamic acid or aspartic acid by treatment with strong acid, transamidase or deamidase.
  • deamination — to remove the amino group from (a compound).
  • dean's list — a list of students achieving the highest grades, periodically issued at certain colleges
  • death angel — Azrael.
  • death grant — (in the British National Insurance scheme) a grant payable to a relative, executor, etc, after the death of a person
  • death knell — something that heralds death or destruction
  • deathliness — The state or quality of being deathly.
  • debarkation — Disembarkation.
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