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11-letter words containing t, g, r

  • counterglow — gegenschein.
  • countersign — If you countersign a document, you sign it after someone else has signed it.
  • countersing — (ethology, of a bird) To sing in response to the song of another.
  • crepitating — Present participle of crepitate.
  • crib-biting — a harmful habit of horses in which the animal leans on the manger or seizes it with the teeth and swallows a gulp of air
  • criticising — to censure or find fault with.
  • criticizing — Present participle of criticize.
  • crochetings — a collection of crochet-work
  • cropdusting — the spreading of fungicide, etc on crops in the form of dust, often from an aircraft
  • crown agent — a member of a board appointed by the Minister for Overseas Development to provide financial, commercial, and professional services for a number of overseas governments and international bodies
  • crown graft — a type of graft in which the scion is inserted at the crown of the stock
  • cryptogamic — Of, relating to, or denoting cryptogams.
  • cryptogenic — (esp of diseases) of unknown or obscure origin
  • cryptograms — Plural form of cryptogram.
  • cryptograph — something written in code or cipher
  • cryptologic — cryptography.
  • crystallog. — crystallography
  • cult figure — a person who inspires devotion in a particular group of people
  • culture gap — a divide between two social groups that have different cultures
  • culturology — a branch of anthropology concerned with the study of cultural institutions as distinct from the people who are involved in them.
  • curb weight — the weight of an automotive vehicle including fuel, coolant, and lubricants but excluding occupants and cargo.
  • cut through — to penetrate or go through by cutting
  • cutty grass — a species of sedge, Cyperus ustulatus, of New Zealand with sharp leaves
  • cystography — radiography of the urinary bladder using a contrast medium
  • dactylogram — a fingerprint
  • danger list — on
  • data logger — data logging
  • day trading — the practice of buying and selling shares on the same day, often via the internet, in order to make a quick profit
  • dear-bought — having been purchased at great expense
  • death grant — (in the British National Insurance scheme) a grant payable to a relative, executor, etc, after the death of a person
  • decentering — to put out of center.
  • deflagrated — Simple past tense and past participle of deflagrate.
  • deflagrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deflagrate.
  • deflagrator — a piece of equipment for bringing about deflagration
  • deforesting — Present participle of deforest.
  • degenerated — to fall below a normal or desirable level in physical, mental, or moral qualities; deteriorate: The morale of the soldiers degenerated, and they were unable to fight.
  • degenerates — Plural form of degenerate.
  • degerminate — degerm (def 2).
  • deglutitory — of or relating to swallowing
  • degradation — You use degradation to refer to a situation, condition, or experience which you consider shameful and disgusting, especially one which involves poverty or immorality.
  • degradative — causing degradation
  • degranulate — (of a cell) lose or release granules of a substance, typically as part of an immune reaction.
  • degustatory — tasty; having a pleasant flavour
  • dehydrating — Present participle of dehydrate.
  • deintegrate — (obsolete) To disintegrate.
  • delustering — a chemical process for reducing the luster of rayon yarns by adding a finely divided pigment to the spinning solution.
  • demarcating — Present participle of demarcate.
  • demarketing — advertising that urges the public to limit the consumption of a product, as at a time of shortage.
  • demigration — moving from one place to another
  • denigrating — to speak damagingly of; criticize in a derogatory manner; sully; defame: to denigrate someone's character.
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