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

  • fraudulency — characterized by, involving, or proceeding from fraud, as actions, enterprise, methods, or gains: a fraudulent scheme to evade taxes.
  • freudianism — of or relating to Sigmund Freud or his doctrines, especially with respect to the causes and treatment of neurotic and psychopathic states, the interpretation of dreams, etc.
  • fruit drink — a (non-alcoholic) beverage made from fruit
  • fuck around — to have sexual intercourse with.
  • fund-raiser — a person who solicits contributions or pledges.
  • fundamental — serving as, or being an essential part of, a foundation or basis; basic; underlying: fundamental principles; the fundamental structure.
  • funded debt — a debt, as in the form of bonds, having a long period of maturity.
  • fundholders — Plural form of fundholder.
  • fundholding — (economics) The holding of a fund.
  • fundraisers — Plural form of fundraiser.
  • fundraising — to collect by fund-raising: The charity needs to fund-raise more than a million dollars.
  • funduscopic — Relating to funduscopy.
  • funemployed — without a paid job but enjoying the free time: Ask one of your funemployed friends to come along with you.
  • funeralized — to hold or officiate at a funeral service for.
  • fusion food — food which is made using a style of cooking which combines traditional Western techniques and ingredients with those used in Eastern cuisine
  • fuss around — to engage in idle, aimless, or annoying activity
  • futz around — to pass time in idleness (usually followed by around).
  • genderfluid — Not conforming to fixed gender roles.
  • genuflected — Simple past tense and past participle of genuflect.
  • gladfulness — The quality of being gladful.
  • goof around — to blunder; make an error, misjudgment, etc.
  • grand mufti — a Muslim religious leader.
  • ground beef — meat: minced beef
  • ground-fish — bottom-fish.
  • growth fund — a mutual fund that invests primarily in growth stocks.
  • half-ruinedruins, the remains of a building, city, etc., that has been destroyed or that is in disrepair or a state of decay: We visited the ruins of ancient Greece.
  • handcuffing — Present participle of handcuff.
  • heedfulness — The state or quality of being heedful.
  • humidifying — Present participle of humidify.
  • hundredfold — a hundred times as great or as much.
  • ill-founded — based on weak evidence, illogical reasoning, or the like: an ill-founded theory.
  • income fund — a mutual fund that invests primarily in stocks that are likely to continue to pay or increase dividends.
  • infecundity — not fecund; unfruitful; barren.
  • infeudation — the act of putting a vassal in possession of a fief
  • infibulated — Simple past tense and past participle of infibulate.
  • infield out — a put-out recorded by a member of the infield.
  • infinitudes — Plural form of infinitude.
  • infundibula — Plural form of infundibulum.
  • insufflated — Simple past tense and past participle of insufflate.
  • janus-faced — having two faces, one looking forward, one looking backward, as the Roman deity Janus.
  • latifundium — a great estate.
  • leflunomide — An inhibitor of pyrimidine synthesis, used to treat some forms of arthritis.
  • mindfulness — the state or quality of being mindful or aware of something.
  • minifundium — A smallholding, in Latin America, that is too small to support a family.
  • misfortuned — (archaic) unlucky, unfortunate.
  • mutual fund — an investment company that issues shares continuously and is obligated to repurchase them from shareholders on demand.
  • needfulness — The property of being needful or necessary.
  • nullifidian — a person who has no faith or religion; skeptic.
  • out of hand — the terminal, prehensile part of the upper limb in humans and other primates, consisting of the wrist, metacarpal area, fingers, and thumb.
  • 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.
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