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11-letter words containing ad

  • adjudicator — a judge, esp in a competition
  • adjustments — Plural form of adjustment.
  • admeasuring — Present participle of admeasure.
  • adminicular — giving help; auxiliary, corroborative
  • administers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of administer.
  • admiralties — Plural form of admiralty.
  • admirations — Plural form of admiration.
  • admonishing — to caution, advise, or counsel against something.
  • admonitions — Plural form of admonition.
  • adnominally — In an adnominal way, used like an adnoun, adjectivally.
  • adolescence — Adolescence is the period of your life in which you develop from being a child into being an adult.
  • adolescents — Plural form of adolescent.
  • adoptionism — an early Greek theology that Jesus was a man gifted with divine powers
  • adoptionist — someone who believes in adoptionism
  • adorability — the quality of being adorable or highly attractive
  • adoxography — Fine writing on a minor or trivial subject.
  • adrammelech — one of the gods worshiped by the Sepharvites. II Kings 17:31. Compare Anammelech.
  • adrenalised — Simple past tense and past participle of adrenalise.
  • adrenalitis — (pathology) Inflammation of one or both adrenal glands, leading to an insufficiency of cortisol and/or aldosterone.
  • adrenalized — tense or highly charged
  • adscription — ascription
  • adsuki bean — adzuki bean
  • adulterants — Plural form of adulterant.
  • adulterated — made inferior, impure, etc. by adulterating
  • adulterates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of adulterate.
  • adulterator — One who or that which adulterates, or harms the purity of, something.
  • adultescent — an adult who is still actively interested in youth culture
  • adumbrating — Present participle of adumbrate.
  • adumbration — to produce a faint image or resemblance of; to outline or sketch.
  • adumbrative — foreshadowing; sketchy; faintly indicative.
  • advance fee — front money (def 3).
  • advance man — an agent of a political candidate or other public figure who travels in advance of the candidate to organize publicity, arrange meetings, and make security checks
  • advance-fee — money paid in advance, as for goods or services, to a commission agent or the like.
  • advancement — Advancement is progress in your job or in your social position.
  • advantaging — Present participle of advantage.
  • adventitial — of or relating to the adventitia
  • adventurers — Plural form of adventurer.
  • adventuress — a woman who seeks adventure, esp one who seeks success or money through daring exploits
  • adventuring — the act of doing adventurous things or having adventures
  • adventurism — Adventurism is a willingness to take risks, especially in order to obtain an unfair advantage in politics or business.
  • adventurist — If you describe someone or something as adventurist, you disapprove of them because they are willing to take risks in order to gain an unfair advantage in business or politics.
  • adventurous — Someone who is adventurous is willing to take risks and to try new methods. Something that is adventurous involves new things or ideas.
  • adverbially — of, relating to, or used as an adverb.
  • advergaming — a method of interactive marketing in which free downloadable computer games appear on websites (often as pop-ups) to advertise a company or product
  • adversarial — If you describe something as adversarial, you mean that it involves two or more people or organizations who are opposing each other.
  • adversaries — a person, group, or force that opposes or attacks; opponent; enemy; foe.
  • adversary's — a person, group, or force that opposes or attacks; opponent; enemy; foe.
  • adversative — (of a word, phrase, or clause) implying opposition or contrast. But and although are adversative conjunctions introducing adversative clauses
  • adverseness — The state or quality of being adverse, or opposed to.
  • adversities — adverse or unfavorable fortune or fate; a condition marked by misfortune, calamity, or distress: Friends will show their true colors in times of adversity.
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