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12-letter words containing a, d, e, n, o, m

  • cyber monday — the Monday after Thanksgiving, one of the busiest online shopping days.
  • dame fortune — the personification of fortune as a woman
  • danger money — extra money paid to compensate for the risks involved in certain dangerous jobs
  • dealing room — A dealing room is a place where shares, currencies, or commodities are bought and sold.
  • decalcomania — the art or process of transferring a design from prepared paper onto another surface, such as china, glass, or paper
  • decalcomanie — (dated) decalcomania.
  • declamations — Plural form of declamation.
  • decompensate — to undergo decompensation due to disease or impairment
  • decumulation — a decrease in amount or value
  • deformations — Plural form of deformation.
  • degemination — (phonetics, uncountable) inverse process of gemination, when a spoken long consonant is pronounced for an audibly shorter period.
  • delamination — separation into layers
  • delimitation — delimit.
  • demarcations — Plural form of demarcation.
  • demibastions — Plural form of demibastion.
  • demimondaine — a woman of the demimonde
  • demiromantic — Lb neologism Romantically attracted to people only after forming deep emotional bonds.
  • demodulating — Present participle of demodulate.
  • demodulation — the act or process by which an output wave or signal is obtained having the characteristics of the original modulating wave or signal; the reverse of modulation
  • demoniacally — In a demoniacal manner.
  • demonisation — the act of demonising
  • demonization — the act of turning someone into a demon
  • demonography — a treatise on demons.
  • demonstrable — A demonstrable fact or quality can be shown to be true or to exist.
  • demonstrably — capable of being demonstrated or proved.
  • demonstrated — Simple past tense and past participle of demonstrate.
  • demonstrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of demonstrate.
  • demonstrator — Demonstrators are people who are marching or gathering somewhere to show their opposition to something or their support for something.
  • demoralising — to deprive (a person or persons) of spirit, courage, discipline, etc.; destroy the morale of: The continuous barrage demoralized the infantry.
  • demoralizing — If something is demoralizing, it makes you lose so much confidence in what you are doing that you want to give up.
  • demotivating — to provide with a motive, or a cause or reason to act; incite; impel.
  • demotivation — the act of demotivating
  • denominating — Present participle of denominate.
  • denomination — A particular denomination is a particular religious group which has slightly different beliefs from other groups within the same faith.
  • denominative — giving or constituting a name; naming
  • denominators — Plural form of denominator.
  • denormalized — Simple past tense and past participle of denormalize.
  • deoxymannose — rhamnose.
  • dermabrasion — a procedure in cosmetic surgery in which rough facial skin is removed by scrubbing
  • desquamation — to come off in scales, as the skin in certain diseases; peel off.
  • determinator — a person who or a thing that determines
  • deviationism — ideological deviation (esp from orthodox Communism)
  • diamond head — promontory in SE Oahu, Hawaii, near Honolulu, consisting of the rim of an extinct volcanic crater
  • diamond lane — a highway or street lane for buses and passenger vans marked with a large diamond shape on the pavement.
  • diazomethane — a yellow odourless explosive gas, used as a methylating agent. Formula: CH2:N:N
  • dime a dozen — a cupronickel-clad coin of the U.S. and Canada, the 10th part of a dollar, equal to 10 cents.
  • dimerization — (chemistry) Any chemical reaction in which two monomers react to form a dimer.
  • discomedusan — a member of the Discomedusae, an order of jellyfish with flattened bodies
  • disenamoured — to disillusion; disenchant (usually used in the passive and followed by of or with): He was disenamored of working in the city.
  • disharmonize — (intransitive) To cause disorder.
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