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11-letter words containing y, a, g, i, n

  • legendarily — of, relating to, or of the nature of a legend.
  • ley farming — the alternation at intervals of several years of crop growing and grassland pasture
  • lianyungang — a city in NE Jiangsu province, in E China.
  • lienyunkang — Lianyungang.
  • ligamentary — Of or relating to ligaments.
  • loading bay — dock where cargo is loaded
  • longanimity — patient endurance of hardship, injuries, or offense; forbearance.
  • lymphangial — pertaining to the lymphatic vessels.
  • maddeningly — driving to madness or frenzy: a maddening thirst.
  • magnanimity — the quality of being magnanimous.
  • malignantly — disposed to cause harm, suffering, or distress deliberately; feeling or showing ill will or hatred.
  • marginality — pertaining to a margin.
  • merrymaking — the act of taking part gaily or enthusiastically in some festive or merry celebration.
  • methylating — Present participle of methylate.
  • misapplying — Present participle of misapply.
  • miscarrying — Present participle of miscarry.
  • mistakingly — an error in action, calculation, opinion, or judgment caused by poor reasoning, carelessness, insufficient knowledge, etc.
  • moneymaking — profitable: a moneymaking scheme.
  • morgan city — a city in S Louisiana: headquarters for offshore oil drilling and base for shrimp fleet.
  • multiagency — involving multiple agencies
  • myth-making — a creator of myths.
  • negotiatory — Of or pertaining to negotiation.
  • non-gravity — the force of attraction by which terrestrial bodies tend to fall toward the center of the earth.
  • nyiregyhaza — a city in NE Hungary.
  • obsignatory — (obsolete) Ratifying; confirming by sealing.
  • odynophagia — Severe pain in mouth or esophagus when attempting to swallow.
  • onion gravy — a type of gravy made with onions and stock and usually served with meat
  • or anything — You can add or anything to the end of a clause or sentence in order to refer vaguely to other things that are or may be similar to what has just been mentioned.
  • orange lily — a bulbous lily, Lilium bulbiferum, of the mountainous regions of southern Europe, having erect, crimson-spotted, orange flowers.
  • organically — in an organic manner.
  • originality — the quality or state of being original.
  • oxygen acid — oxyacid.
  • oxygenation — to treat, combine, or enrich with oxygen: to oxygenate the blood.
  • panegyrical — a lofty oration or writing in praise of a person or thing; eulogy.
  • panegyricon — a collection of sermons
  • parking bay — a space in a car park designed to be large enough to park a vehicle in
  • pearly king — the male London costermonger whose ceremonial clothes display the most lavish collection of pearl buttons
  • pharyngitic — relating to the medical condition of pharyngitis that is characterized by pain and swelling of the pharynx
  • pharyngitis — inflammation of the mucous membrane of the pharynx; sore throat.
  • placatingly — in a placating manner
  • planigraphy — an x-ray photograph in which a given plane of the body is well defined and those above and below it purposely out of focus.
  • play-acting — Play-acting is behaviour where someone pretends to have attitudes or feelings that they do not really have.
  • playwriting — the art or technique of writing theatrical plays; the work or profession of a playwright.
  • polling day — date of election voting
  • polylingual — pertaining to, expressed in, or using several languages; multilingual.
  • preachingly — in a preaching manner, with preaching
  • quantifying — to determine, indicate, or express the quantity of.
  • quaveringly — In a quavering manner; tremulously.
  • ravishingly — extremely beautiful or attractive; enchanting; entrancing.
  • ray casting — (graphics)   A simplified form of ray tracing. A ray is fired from each pixel in the view plane, and information is accumulated from all the voxels in the volume data it intersects. Each voxel is first given an associated colour and opacity. The ray is sampled at a fixed number of evenly spaced locations and the colour and opacity are trilinearly interpolated from the eight nearest voxels. These are then composed linearly back to front to give a single colour for the pixel. Ray casting was invented by John Carmack for the game Wolfenstein 3D. It is faster and lower quality than ray tracing, and is ideal for interactive applications. It parallelises well, although random access is needed to the voxels.
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