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14-letter words containing si

  • discursiveness — passing aimlessly from one subject to another; digressive; rambling.
  • disfranchising — Present participle of disfranchise.
  • disidentifying — Present participle of disidentify.
  • disillusionary — of or relating to disillusion
  • disillusioning — to free from or deprive of illusion, belief, idealism, etc.; disenchant.
  • disillusionise — Alternative spelling of disillusionize.
  • disillusionist — to disillusion.
  • disillusionize — to disillusion.
  • disimpassioned — calm; dispassionate.
  • disincarcerate — to release from imprisonment
  • disincentivise — Alternative spelling of disincentivize.
  • disincentivize — to discourage or deter by removing incentives: The expiration of tax credits will disincentivize future participation in the energy-efficiency program. More affordable cholesterol-lowering medication may disincentivize people from adopting a vegetarian diet.
  • disinclination — the absence of inclination; reluctance; unwillingness.
  • disincorporate — to remove from an incorporated state or status.
  • disinfestation — The act or process of disinfesting.
  • disinformation — false information, as about a country's military strength or plans, publicly announced or planted in the news media, especially of other countries.
  • disingenuously — In a manner that is not frank or open; deceptively.
  • disinheritance — Law. to exclude from inheritance (an heir or a next of kin).
  • disintegrating — Present participle of disintegrate.
  • disintegration — the act or process of disintegrating.
  • disintegrative — to separate into parts or lose intactness or solidness; break up; deteriorate: The old book is gradually disintegrating with age.
  • disintegrators — Plural form of disintegrator.
  • disintegratory — Causing or relating to disintegration.
  • disinteresting — absence of interest; indifference.
  • disinthralling — the act of freedom from thraldom
  • disinvestiture — the act or state of being disinvested
  • disinvolvement — the action or process of withdrawing from an obligation or commitment, especially from a political or military involvement: The secretary of state promised disinvolvement from the alliance.
  • dismissiveness — A form of denial, characterized by either passively showing indifference or disregard, or actively dismissing or rejecting ideas or evidence.
  • dispersibility — to drive or send off in various directions; scatter: to disperse a crowd.
  • disquisitional — Pertaining to disquisition; of the nature of disquisition.
  • dissimilitudes — Plural form of dissimilitude.
  • dissimulations — Plural form of dissimulation.
  • dissuasiveness — The quality of being dissuasive.
  • distensibility — Capability of swelling or stretching.
  • ditransitivity — (grammar) The state or quality of being ditransitive.
  • diverticulosis — the presence of saclike herniations of the mucosal layer of the colon through the muscular wall, common among older persons and usually producing no symptoms except occasional rectal bleeding.
  • double density — floppy disk
  • dracunculiasis — a disease caused by infection with the Guinea worm
  • drainage basin — the area drained by a river and all its tributaries. Also called catchment area, drainage area. Compare watershed (def 2).
  • draw a pension — If you draw a pension, you receive money from an insurer or the state because you have reached a particular age.
  • dream analysis — the analysis of dreams as a means of gaining access to the unconscious mind, typically involving free association.
  • drepanocytosis — Sickle-cell anemia.
  • dress designer — a person who designs clothes
  • dressing glass — a small, adjustable mirror designed to stand on a dressing table.
  • dressing table — a table or stand, usually surmounted by a mirror, in front of which a person sits while dressing, applying makeup, etc.
  • dust explosion — an explosion caused by the ignition of an inflammable dust, such as flour or sawdust, in the air
  • ecclesiastical — of or relating to the church or the clergy; churchly; clerical; not secular.
  • ecclesiasticus — a book of the Apocrypha. Abbreviation: Ecclus.
  • ecclesiologist — One versed in ecclesiology.
  • echinococcosis — a parasitic disease caused by tapeworms of the genus Echinococcosis
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