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

  • conductance — the ability of a system to conduct electricity, measured by the ratio of the current flowing through the system to the potential difference across it; the reciprocal of resistance. It is measured in reciprocal ohms, mhos, or siemens
  • conductible — personal behavior; way of acting; bearing or deportment.
  • conductress — a female conductor
  • confounders — Plural form of confounder.
  • conjectured — Simple past tense and past participle of conjecture.
  • constituted — to compose; form: mortar constituted of lime and sand.
  • constructed — to build or form by putting together parts; frame; devise.
  • consuetudes — Plural form of consuetude.
  • consummated — to bring to a state of perfection; fulfill.
  • continuedly — in a continued manner
  • contributed — to give (money, time, knowledge, assistance, etc.) to a common supply, fund, etc., as for charitable purposes.
  • cordon bleu — Cordon bleu is used to describe cookery or cooks of the highest standard.
  • corrigendum — an error to be corrected
  • cotransduce — to cause (genes) to undergo cotransduction
  • 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).
  • crowdfunded — Simple past tense and past participle of crowdfund.
  • cudgellings — beatings with a cudgel
  • cumbernauld — a town in central Scotland, in North Lanarkshire, northeast of Glasgow: developed as a new town since 1956. Pop: 49 664 (2001)
  • cummerbunds — Plural form of cummerbund.
  • curmudgeons — Plural form of curmudgeon.
  • dance music — music that is suitable for dancing
  • dangerously — full of danger or risk; causing danger; perilous; risky; hazardous; unsafe.
  • danish blue — a strong-tasting white cheese with blue veins
  • dark nebula — a type of nebula that is observed by its blocking of radiation from other sources
  • datum plane — the horizontal plane from which heights and depths are calculated
  • dauntlessly — In a dauntless manner.
  • day nursery — A day nursery is a place where children who are too young to go to school can be left all day while their parents are at work.
  • 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
  • debauchment — The act of debauching or corrupting; the act of seducing from virtue or duty.
  • debouchment — the act or an instance of debouching
  • debt burden — A debt burden is a large amount of money that one country or organization owes to another and which they find very difficult to repay.
  • declinature — the act of refusing politely
  • declutching — Present participle of declutch.
  • decommunize — to return (property) from public to private ownership
  • decompounds — Plural form of decompound.
  • deconstruct — In philosophy and literary criticism, to deconstruct an idea or text means to show the contradictions in its meaning, and to show how it does not fully explain what it claims to explain.
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