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12-letter words that end in le

  • hopkinsville — a city in S Kentucky.
  • horse nettle — a large, prickly North American weed, Solanum carolinense, of the nightshade family, having violet to white flowers in a few clusters.
  • hydrolysable — Alternative spelling of hydrolyzable.
  • hydrolyzable — Able to be hydrolyzed.
  • hypermutable — Of or in a state in which mutation is abnormally frequent.
  • hypnotisable — Alternative spelling of hypnotizable.
  • hypnotizable — One who is susceptible to hypnosis.
  • identifiable — to recognize or establish as being a particular person or thing; verify the identity of: to identify handwriting; to identify the bearer of a check.
  • illusionable — Liable to illusion.
  • immeasurable — incapable of being measured; limitless: the immeasurable vastness of the universe.
  • immensurable — immeasurable.
  • impardonable — (obsolete) unpardonable.
  • impenetrable — not penetrable; that cannot be penetrated, pierced, entered, etc.
  • imperforable — not able to be perforated
  • imperishable — not subject to decay; indestructible; enduring.
  • impierceable — not able to be pierced
  • imponderable — not ponderable; that cannot be precisely determined, measured, or evaluated.
  • imprisonable — capable of being imprisoned or incarcerated
  • in principle — an accepted or professed rule of action or conduct: a person of good moral principles.
  • inacceptable — Unacceptable.
  • inaccessible — Unable to be reached.
  • inadmissible — not admissible; not allowable: Such evidence would be inadmissible in any court.
  • inappeasable — unable to be soothed or appeased: inappeasable anger.
  • inappellable — incapable of being appealed against, as a court decision; unchallengeable
  • inapplicable — not applicable; unsuitable.
  • incalculable — very numerous or great.
  • incharitable — Obsolete form of uncharitable.
  • incoagulable — of a nature that cannot be coagulated
  • incognizable — Not cognizable; incapable of being recognised.
  • incommutable — not exchangeable.
  • incomparable — beyond comparison; matchless or unequaled: incomparable beauty.
  • incompatible — not compatible; unable to exist together in harmony: She asked for a divorce because they were utterly incompatible.
  • incomputable — incapable of being computed; incalculable.
  • inconfutable — (obsolete) Not confutable.
  • inconsolable — not able to be comforted or consoled; disconsolate: She was inconsolable when her son died.
  • inconsumable — not consumable; incapable of being consumed.
  • incorporable — able to be incorporated.
  • incorrigible — not corrigible; bad beyond correction or reform: incorrigible behavior; an incorrigible liar.
  • incorrodible — incapable of being corroded; not corrodible
  • increditable — (rare) Incapable of being believed; not creditable.
  • indeclinable — not capable of being declined; having no inflected forms: used especially of a word belonging to a form class most of whose members are declined, as the Latin adjective decem, “ten.”.
  • indefeasible — not defeasible; not to be annulled or made void; not forfeitable.
  • indefectible — not defectible; not liable to defect or failure.
  • indefensible — not justifiable; inexcusable: indefensible behavior.
  • 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.
  • indigestible — not digestible; not easily digested.
  • indisposable — Not disposable.
  • indisputable — not disputable or deniable; uncontestable. indisputable evidence.
  • indissoluble — not dissoluble; incapable of being dissolved, decomposed, undone, or destroyed.
  • indivertible — incapable of being diverted or turned aside
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