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11-letter words containing fa

  • factualness — Factuality.
  • facultative — conferring a faculty, privilege, permission, or the power of doing or not doing something: a facultative enactment.
  • faddishness — The state or condition of being faddish.
  • faggot vote — (formerly) a vote created by the allotting of property to a person to give him the status of an elector
  • faineantise — the quality of being lazy or indolent
  • fair dinkum — dinkum.
  • fair enough — that is reasonable
  • fair-haired — having light-colored hair.
  • fair-minded — characterized by fair judgment; impartial; unprejudiced: a wise and fair-minded judge.
  • fair-spoken — speaking or spoken in a courteous, civil, or plausible manner; smooth-spoken.
  • fairgrounds — Alternative spelling of fairground; the grounds where a fair is held.
  • fairweatherMount, a mountain in SE Alaska. 15,292 feet (4660 meters).
  • fairy bread — slices of white bread covered with small beads of brightly coloured sugar, served as a children’s snack
  • fairy cycle — a child's bicycle
  • fairy glove — purple foxglove.
  • fairy green — a medium yellow-green color.
  • fairy queen — the queen of the fairies
  • fairy stone — a fossil or other oddly shaped stone or crystal.
  • fairy story — A fairy story is the same as a fairy tale.
  • faith-based — affiliated with, supported by, or based on a religion or religious group: faith-based charities.
  • faithlessly — In a faithless manner.
  • faithworthy — worthy of faith, trustworthy
  • falconiform — of, relating to, or belonging to the order Falconiformes, comprising the vultures, hawks, eagles, ospreys, falcons, caracaras, etc.
  • fall asleep — go to sleep
  • fall behind — to drop or descend under the force of gravity, as to a lower place through loss or lack of support.
  • fallalishly — in a slightly affected manner
  • fallen arch — collapse of the arch formed by the instep of the foot, resulting in flat feet
  • fallen idol — If you refer to someone as a fallen idol, you mean that they have lost people's respect and admiration because of something bad that they have done.
  • fallibilism — the philosophical doctrine that knowledge is hypothetical rather than certain
  • fallibilist — a supporter of fallibilism
  • fallibility — (of persons) liable to err, especially in being deceived or mistaken.
  • falling-off — If there is a falling-off of an activity, there is a decrease in its amount or intensity.
  • falling-out — a quarrel or estrangement between persons formerly in close association with one another.
  • fallow deer — A fallow deer is a small deer that has a reddish coat which develops white spots in summer.
  • fallow-deer — a Eurasian deer, Dama dama, with a fallow or yellowish coat.
  • false alarm — a false report of a fire in progress to a fire department.
  • false color — photography using infrared-sensitive film that produces images in which heat-emitting areas or objects appear red.
  • false front — a façade falsifying the size, finish, or importance of a building, especially one having a humble purpose or cheap construction.
  • false fruit — a fruit, as the apple, strawberry, or pineapple, that contains, in addition to a mature ovary and seeds, a significant amount of other tissue.
  • false labor — irregular contractions of the uterus prior to actual labor and without accompanying dilation of the cervix.
  • false oxlip — a similar and related plant that is a natural hybrid between the cowslip and primrose
  • false start — in a race
  • false teeth — dentures
  • false topaz — citrine (def 2).
  • false-start — to leave the starting line or position too early and thereby necessitate repeating the signal to begin a race.
  • falsifiable — to make false or incorrect, especially so as to deceive: to falsify income-tax reports.
  • falsifiably — In a falsifiable way.
  • falstaffian — of, relating to, or having the qualities of Falstaff, especially his robust, bawdy humor, good-natured rascality, and brazen braggadocio: Falstaffian wit.
  • falteringly — to hesitate or waver in action, purpose, intent, etc.; give way: Her courage did not falter at the prospect of hardship.
  • familiarise — to make (onself or another) well-acquainted or conversant with something.
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