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12-letter words containing y, n

  • in the money — any circulating medium of exchange, including coins, paper money, and demand deposits.
  • in the nuddy — in the nude; naked
  • in your face — involving confrontation; defiant; provocative.
  • in-your-face — involving confrontation; defiant; provocative.
  • inaccessibly — In an inaccessible manner.
  • inaccurately — In an inaccurate manner; incorrectly; inexactly.
  • inadequately — not adequate or sufficient; inept or unsuitable.
  • inadmissibly — In an inadmissible way.
  • inadvertency — inadvertence.
  • inapparently — in an inapparent manner
  • inapplicably — In an inapplicable manner.
  • inaudibility — not audible; incapable of being heard.
  • inauguratory — Inaugural; being the first instance.
  • incalculably — very numerous or great.
  • incapability — not capable.
  • incautiously — In an incautious manner; with a lack of caution.
  • incestuously — involving incest.
  • inch by inch — a unit of length, 1/12 (0.0833) foot, equivalent to 2.54 centimeters.
  • inchoatively — in an inchoative or rudimentary fashion; initially
  • incidentally — apart or aside from the main subject of attention, discussion, etc.; by the way; parenthetically.
  • inclusionary — (of zoning, housing programs, etc.) stipulating that a certain percentage of new housing will be priced within the reach of middle-income buyers or renters.
  • incoherently — without logical or meaningful connection; disjointed; rambling: an incoherent sentence.
  • incommutably — In an incommutable manner.
  • incomparably — beyond comparison; matchless or unequaled: incomparable beauty.
  • incompatibly — In an incompatible manner.
  • incompetency — the quality or condition of being incompetent; lack of ability.
  • incompletely — not complete; lacking some part.
  • incomputably — In an incomputable way.
  • inconcinnity — lack of proportion and congruity; inelegance.
  • inconformity — lack of conformity; failure or refusal to conform; nonconformity.
  • incongruency — Incongruence.
  • inconsolably — not able to be comforted or consoled; disconsolate: She was inconsolable when her son died.
  • inconstantly — In an inconstant manner.
  • incontinency — unable to restrain natural discharges or evacuations of urine or feces.
  • incorporeity — the quality of being incorporeal; disembodied existence or entity; incorporeality.
  • incorrigibly — not corrigible; bad beyond correction or reform: incorrigible behavior; an incorrigible liar.
  • increasingly — growing larger or greater; enlarging; augmenting.
  • incurability — The quality or state of being incurable—not being able to be cured.
  • indecisively — characterized by indecision, as persons; irresolute; undecided.
  • indecorously — not decorous; violating generally accepted standards of good taste or propriety; unseemly.
  • indefeasibly — In an indefeasible manner.
  • indefectibly — In an indefectible manner.
  • indefensibly — In an indefensible manner.
  • indefinitely — not definite; without fixed or specified limit; unlimited: an indefinite number.
  • indelibility — making marks that cannot be erased, removed, or the like: indelible ink.
  • indelicately — In an indelicate manner.
  • indemnifying — Present participle of indemnify.
  • indent style — (programming)   Rules for formatting code to make it easier to visually match up the beginning and end of a block of statements, particularly one controlled by a control statement such as "if", "else", "for", "while", "do". This becomes important with large, nested blocks of code. Indent styles vary in the placement of "" and "" with respect to the statement(s) they enclose and the controlling statement. The normal style is "Allman style", named after Eric Allman, a Berkeley hacker who wrote many BSD utilities in it. It is sometimes called "BSD style". It resembles normal indent style in Pascal and ALGOL. Basic indent per level is eight or four spaces. This is the only indent style to clearly associate the controlling statement and the beginning and the end of the block by aligning them vertically, which probably explains its widespread adoption. if (cond) { } Other styles such as K&R style, Whitesmiths style and GNU style are either obsolete or should be avoided because they make it harder (much harder in some cases) to match braces with each other and with the control statement that controls them. Many related languages such as Perl offer the same choices while others, following B, eschew braces and rely entirely on relative indentation to express block structure. In Python, braces can be used to override indentation.
  • independency — independence (def 1).
  • indexicality — (philosophy) The quality or state of being indexical.
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