9-letter words containing int
- intendent — Obsolete form of intendant.
- intendeth — Archaic third-person singular form of intend.
- intending — designing or aiming to be; prospective or aspiring: intending surgeons.
- intenible — incapable of containing or holding something, such as water
- intensate — (transitive) To intensify.
- intensely — existing or occurring in a high or extreme degree: intense heat.
- intensest — Superlative form of intense.
- intensify — to make intense or more intense.
- intension — intensification; increase in degree.
- intensity — the quality or condition of being intense.
- intensive — of, relating to, or characterized by intensity: intensive questioning.
- intention — an act or instance of determining mentally upon some action or result.
- intentive — Paying attention; attentive, heedful.
- inter nos — between (or among) ourselves
- interacts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of interact.
- interarch — to have intersecting arches
- interbank — Agreed, arranged, or operating between banks.
- interbase — A commercial active DBMS.
- interbond — (chemistry) Between bonds.
- interbred — to crossbreed (a plant or animal).
- intercede — to act or interpose in behalf of someone in difficulty or trouble, as by pleading or petition: to intercede with the governor for a condemned man.
- interceed — Obsolete form of intercede.
- intercell — intercellular
- intercept — to take, seize, or halt (someone or something on the way from one place to another); cut off from an intended destination: to intercept a messenger.
- intercity — a large or important town.
- interclan — a group of families or households, as among the Scottish Highlanders, the heads of which claim descent from a common ancestor: the Mackenzie clan.
- interclub — a heavy stick, usually thicker at one end than at the other, suitable for use as a weapon; a cudgel.
- intercome — (intransitive) To intervene; interpose; interfere.
- intercoms — Plural form of intercom.
- intercrop — to grow one crop between the rows of another, as in an orchard or field.
- interdash — to intersperse with hasty strokes of a pen or other writing instrument
- interdata — (company) A computer manufacturer. Interdata became Perkin-Elmer, then Concurrent.
- interdeal — to negotiate or deal mutually
- interdict — Civil Law. any prohibitory act or decree of a court or an administrative officer.
- interdine — (of members of different tribes, etc) to eat together
- interduce — (construction) An intertie.
- interests — the feeling of a person whose attention, concern, or curiosity is particularly engaged by something: She has a great interest in the poetry of Donne.
- interface — a surface regarded as the common boundary of two bodies, spaces, or phases.
- interfere — to come into opposition, as one thing with another, especially with the effect of hampering action or procedure (often followed by with): Constant distractions interfere with work.
- interfile — to combine two or more similarly arranged sets of items, as cards or documents, into a single file.
- interfirm — occurring between two or more companies
- interflow — to flow into each other; intermingle.
- interfold — to fold one within another; fold together.
- interfuse — to intersperse, intermingle, or permeate with something.
- intergang — occurring between two or more gangs, or occurring between the members of a single gang
- intergrow — to grow among each other
- interiors — being within; inside of anything; internal; inner; further toward a center: the interior rooms of a house.
- interject — to insert between other things: to interject a clarification of a previous statement.
- interjoin — (mathematics) To interconnect two sets.
- interknit — to knit together, one with another; intertwine.