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11-letter words containing t, i, u, p

  • compulsitor — a thing, such as a mandate, that compels
  • compunction — If you say that someone has no compunction about doing something, you mean that they do it without feeling ashamed or guilty.
  • computation — Computation is mathematical calculation.
  • computative — of, relating to, or involving computation
  • computerise — (chiefly, British) alternative spelling of computerize.
  • computerist — a computer user
  • computerize — To computerize a system, process, or type of work means to arrange for a lot of the work to be done by computer.
  • computernik — a person who is very interested in, and knowledgeable about, computers
  • conceptious — prolific or fruitful
  • conspicuity — conspicuousness
  • consumption — The consumption of fuel or natural resources is the amount of them that is used or the act of using them.
  • consumptive — A consumptive person suffers from tuberculosis.
  • corruptible — susceptible to corruption; capable of being corrupted
  • corruptions — Plural form of corruption.
  • counter-pin — bedspread.
  • crapulosity — the quality of being crapulous or crapulent
  • cropdusting — the spreading of fungicide, etc on crops in the form of dust, often from an aircraft
  • cuckoo spit — a white frothy mass on the stems and leaves of many plants, produced by froghopper larvae (cuckoo spit insects), which feed on the plant juices
  • cuckoo-spit — Also called frog spit. a frothy secretion found on plants, exuded by the young of certain insects, as the froghoppers, and serving as a protective covering.
  • cuckoopints — Plural form of cuckoopint.
  • culpability — guilt or blame that is deserved; blameworthiness.
  • cupellation — the process of recovering precious metals from lead by melting the alloy in a cupel and oxidizing the lead by means of an air blast
  • curatorship — The rank or period of being a curator.
  • curie point — the temperature above which a ferromagnetic substance loses its ferromagnetism and becomes paramagnetic
  • cuspidation — decoration using cusps
  • custard pie — Custard pies are artificial pies which people sometimes throw at each other as a joke.
  • custard-pie — characteristic of a type of slapstick comedy in which a performer throws a pie in another's face: popular especially in the era of vaudeville and early silent films.
  • decrepitude — Decrepitude is the state of being very old and in poor condition.
  • deduplicate — to remove (duplicated material) from a system
  • demultiplex — (electronics) To separate signals that were previously multiplexed (combined using a multiplexer).
  • depasturing — Present participle of depasture.
  • deplumation — to deprive of feathers; pluck.
  • depollution — to eliminate, clean up, or decrease pollution in (an area).
  • deputations — Plural form of deputation.
  • disculpated — Simple past tense and past participle of disculpate.
  • dispatchful — of or relating to dispatch, particularly in terms of haste
  • displuviate — (of the atrium of an ancient Roman house) having roofs sloping downward and outward from a central opening.
  • disputation — the act of disputing or debating; verbal controversy; discussion or debate.
  • disputative — Tending to dispute.
  • disruptable — Capable of being disrupted.
  • disruptants — Plural form of disruptant.
  • disruptions — Plural form of disruption.
  • do up right — to do carefully or thoroughly
  • duck typing — (programming)   A term coined by Dave Thomas for a kind of dynamic typing typical of some programming languages, such as Smalltalk, Ruby or Visual FoxPro, where a variable's run-time value determines the operations that can be performed on it. The term comes from the "duck test": if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck. Duck typing considers the methods to which a value responds and the attributes it posesses rather than its relationship to a type hierarchy. This encourages greater polymorphism because types are enforced as late as possible.
  • duopolistic — Characteristic of a duopoly.
  • duplicating — Present participle of duplicate.
  • duplication — an act or instance of duplicating.
  • duplicative — a copy exactly like an original.
  • duplicators — Plural form of duplicator.
  • duplicature — a folding or doubling of a part on itself, as a membrane.
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