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11-letter words containing u, n, a, b, d

  • demountable — to remove from a mounting, setting, or place of support, as a gun.
  • denumerable — capable of being put into a one-to-one correspondence with the positive integers; countable
  • denumerably — In a denumerable manner.
  • disturbance — the act of disturbing.
  • double-bank — to have two rowers pull (each of a number of oars).
  • drum'n'bass — a type of electronic dance music using mainly bass guitar and drum sounds
  • drumbeating — That to beat on drums.
  • dual number — a grammatical number category referring to exactly two persons or things
  • durableness — Durability.
  • dustbin man — (in British English) a man that is employed to collect domestic refuse
  • fauxbourdon — Music. a 15th-century compositional technique employing three voices, the upper and lower voices progressing an octave or a sixth apart while the middle voice extemporaneously doubles the upper part at a fourth below.
  • floribundas — Plural form of floribunda.
  • ground bait — chum2 (def 1).
  • ground ball — a batted ball that rolls or bounces along the ground.
  • ground bass — a short fundamental bass part continually repeated throughout a movement.
  • ground beam — a reinforced concrete beam for supporting walls, joists, etc., at or near ground level, itself either resting directly upon the ground or supported at both ends by piers.
  • guttae band — regula.
  • headbutting — Present participle of headbutt.
  • house brand — a brand name used by a retailer for a product or product line made specifically for or by the retailer.
  • hunchbacked — humpbacked.
  • husbandable — Capable of being husbanded, or managed with economy.
  • husbandland — the holding once held by a husband or tenant farmer or the quantity of land held by him, approximately 32 acres
  • husbandless — Without a husband.
  • husbandlike — resembling a husband
  • ibn khaldun — Abd-al-Rahman [ahb-dahl-rah-mahn] /ɑb dɑlˈrɑ mɑn/ (Show IPA), 1332–1406, Arab historian and philosopher.
  • ibn-khaldun — 1332–1406, Arab historian and philosopher. His Kitab al-`ibar (Book of Examples) is a history of Islam
  • indian club — a metal or wooden club shaped like a large bottle, swung singly or in pairs for exercising the arms.
  • indubitable — that cannot be doubted; patently evident or certain; unquestionable.
  • indubitably — that cannot be doubted; patently evident or certain; unquestionable.
  • infibulated — Simple past tense and past participle of infibulate.
  • infundibula — Plural form of infundibulum.
  • inturbidate — to make turbid
  • landlubbers — Plural form of landlubber.
  • landlubbing — an unseasoned sailor or someone unfamiliar with the sea.
  • launderable — to wash (clothes, linens, etc.).
  • laundry bag — A laundry bag is a bag for clothes that that are about to be washed.
  • lenard tube — an early cathode-ray tube having at the end opposite the cathode a window of thin glass or metal allowing cathode rays (Lenard rays) to pass out into the atmosphere.
  • maceranduba — the milk tree, native to Brazil
  • mandibulate — having mandibles.
  • monday club — (in Britain) a club made up of right-wing Conservatives who originally met together for lunch on Monday: founded in 1961
  • non-audible — capable of being heard; loud enough to be heard; actually heard.
  • nondurables — Plural form of nondurable.
  • nudibranchs — Plural form of nudibranch.
  • ombudswoman — a woman employed to investigate complaints against government or institutional officials, employers, etc.
  • out-of-band — 1.   (communications)   The exchange of call control information on a dedicated channel, separate from that used by the telephone call or data transmission. 2. Sometimes used to describe what communications people call "shift characters", such as the ESC that leads control sequences for many terminals, or the level shift indicators in the old 5-bit Baudot codes. 3. In personal communication, using methods other than electronic mail, such as telephone or snail-mail. 4.   (software)   Values returned by a function that are not in its "natural" range of return values, but rather signal some kind of exception. Many C functions that normally return a non-negative integer return -1 to indicate failure. This use confuses "out-of-band" with "out-of-range". It is actually a clear example of in-band signalling since it uses the same "channel" for control and data. Compare hidden flag, green bytes, fence.
  • outbalanced — Simple past tense and past participle of outbalance.
  • paper-bound — a book bound in a flexible paper cover, often a lower-priced edition of a hardcover book.
  • round about — In spoken English, round about means approximately.
  • round table — conference, meeting
  • round-table — noting or pertaining to a conference, discussion, or deliberation in which each participant has equal status, equal time to present views, etc.: round-table discussions.
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