Wordscapes Words Containing M

37,919 words found — all lengths, containing M

Use this list of Wordscapes Words Containing M to find your next winning play. Click any word to unscramble it and see all possible words from those letters.
Starting With M Ending With M Containing M
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3-Letter Words (103)

AIM (5) [noun] The pointing of a weapon, as a gun, a dart, or an arrow, or object, in the line of direction with the object intended to be struck; the line of fire; the direction of anything, such as a spear, a blow, a discourse, a remark, towards a particular point or object, with a view to strike or affect it. | [noun] The point intended to be hit, or object intended to be attained or affected. | [noun] Intention or goal | [noun] Initialism of America Online. AIM; AOL Instant Messenger. AMA (5) AMI (5) AMP (7) [noun] Short for ampere. | [noun] Short for amplifier. | [noun] Short for ampoule. AMU (5) [noun] A unit of mass equal to 1/12 the mass of an atom of the 12C isotope of carbon. ARM (5) [noun] The portion of the upper human appendage, from the shoulder to the wrist and sometimes including the hand. | [noun] The extended portion of the upper limb, from the shoulder to the elbow. | [noun] A limb, or locomotive or prehensile organ, of an invertebrate animal. | [adjective] Poor; lacking in riches or wealth. | [noun] (usually used in the plural) A weapon. BAM (7) [interjection] Representing a loud noise or heavy impact. | [interjection] Representing a sudden or abrupt occurrence. | [noun] A ned; a bampot. | [noun] An imposition; a cheat; a hoax. | [noun] Abbreviation of bare-arse minimum. BUM (7) [noun] The buttocks. | [noun] The anus. | [verb] To sodomize; to engage in anal sex. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A homeless person, usually a man. | [verb] To depress; to make unhappy. | [noun] A humming noise. | [noun] A bumbailiff. CAM (7) [noun] A turning or sliding piece which imparts motion to a rod, lever or block brought into sliding or rolling contact with it. | [noun] A curved wedge, movable about an axis, used for forcing or clamping two pieces together. | [noun] A ridge or mound of earth. | [noun] Camera. | [adverb] Alternative form of kam CUM (7) [preposition] Used in indicating a thing with two roles, functions, or natures, or a thing that has changed from one to another. | [conjunction] Used in indicating a thing with two or more roles, functions, or natures, or a thing that has changed from one to another. | [noun] Semen. | [adjective] Incorporating all current and previous data up to the present or at the time of measuring or collating CWM (10) [noun] A valley head created through glacial erosion and with a shape similar to an amphitheatre. DAM (6) [noun] A structure placed across a flowing body of water to stop the flow or part of the flow, generally for purposes such as retaining or diverting some of the water or retarding the release of accumulated water to avoid abrupt flooding. | [noun] The water reservoir resulting from placing such structure. | [noun] A device to prevent a tooth from getting wet during dental work, consisting of a rubber sheet held with a band. | [noun] Female parent, mother, generally regarding breeding of animals (correlative to sire). | [noun] An obsolete Indian copper coin, equal to a fortieth of a rupee. | [interjection] Damn. DIM (6) [noun] Dimness. | [verb] To make something less bright. | [verb] To become darker. DOM (6) [noun] A title anciently given to the pope, and later to other church dignitaries and some monastic orders. | [noun] A title formerly borne by member of the high nobility of Portugal and Brazil ELM (5) [noun] A tree of the genus Ulmus of the family Ulmaceae, large deciduous trees with alternate stipulate leaves and small apetalous flowers. | [noun] (usually attributive) Wood from an elm tree. EME (5) [noun] (obsolete outside Scotland) An uncle. | [noun] Friend. EMF (8) EMS (5) [noun] The name of the Latin-script letter M. | [noun] A unit of measurement equal to the height of the type in use. EMU (5) [noun] A cassowary (genus Casuarius). | [noun] A large flightless bird native to Australia, Dromaius novaehollandiae. | [noun] Any of the various units to measure electricity and magnetism in the CGS (now replaced by SI) system of units; abbreviated emu or EMU. | [noun] A person or thing that emulates. FEM (8) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A feminine or effeminate person. | [adjective] Feminine, effeminate. | [noun] A woman, a wife; a young woman or girl. GAM (6) [noun] A person's leg, especially an attractive woman's leg. | [noun] Collective noun used to refer to a group of whales, or rarely also of porpoises; a pod. | [noun] (by extension) A social gathering of whalers (whaling ships). GEM (6) [noun] A precious stone, usually of substantial monetary value or prized for its beauty or shine. | [noun] Any precious or highly valued thing or person. | [noun] Anything of small size, or expressed within brief limits, which is regarded as a gem on account of its beauty or value, such as a small picture, a verse of poetry, or an epigram. GUM (6) [noun] (often in the plural) The flesh around the teeth. | [verb] To chew, especially of a toothless person or animal. | [verb] To deepen and enlarge the spaces between the teeth of (a worn saw), as with a gummer. | [noun] Any of various viscous or sticky substances that are exuded by certain plants. GYM (9) [noun] A sports facility specialized for lifting weights and exercise. | [noun] Physical education class | [verb] To go to the gym. HAM (8) [noun] The region back of the knee joint; the popliteal space; the hock. | [noun] A thigh and buttock of an animal slaughtered for meat. | [noun] Meat from the thigh of a hog cured for food. | [noun] A dwelling. | [noun] An overacting or amateurish performer; an actor with an especially showy or exaggerated style. HEM (8) [noun] An utterance or sound of the voice like "hem", often indicative of hesitation or doubt, sometimes used to call attention. | [verb] To make the sound expressed by the word hem; to hesitate in speaking. | [interjection] Used to fill in the gap of a pause with a vocalized sound. | [noun] The border of an article of clothing doubled back and stitched together to finish the edge and prevent it from fraying. | [pronoun] Them (now only in unstressed position following a consonant). HIM (8) [pronoun] Honorific alternative letter-case form of him, sometimes used when referring to God or another important figure who is understood from context. | [noun] A male person. | [pronoun] A masculine pronoun; he as a grammatical object. HMM (10) [verb] To make a thoughtful humming noise. | [interjection] Indicating thinking or pondering. | [interjection] A demand for an answer to a question. HUM (8) [interjection] Indicating thinking or pondering. | [interjection] A demand for an answer to a question. | [noun] A hummed tune, i.e. created orally with lips closed. IMP (7) [noun] A small, mischievous sprite, or a malevolent supernatural creature, somewhat comparable to a demon but smaller and less powerful. | [noun] A mischievous child. | [noun] A baby Tasmanian devil. ISM (5) [noun] An ideology, system of thought, or practice that can be described by a word ending in -ism. | [noun] Specifically, a form of discrimination, such as racism or sexism. JAM (12) [noun] A sweet mixture of fruit boiled with sugar and allowed to congeal. Often spread on bread or toast or used in jam tarts. | [noun] A difficult situation. | [noun] Blockage, congestion. | [noun] A kind of frock for children. | [noun] (interior decorating) Either of the vertical components that form the side of an opening in a wall, such as that of a door frame, window frame, or fireplace. LAM (5) [verb] To beat or thrash. | [verb] To flee or run away. | [noun] The twenty-third letter of the Arabic alphabet, ل. It is preceded by ك and followed by م. LUM (5) [noun] A chimney. | [noun] A ventilating chimney over the shaft of a mine. | [noun] A woody valley. MAC (7) [noun] A waterproof long coat made of rubberized cloth. | [noun] By extension, any waterproof coat or raincoat. | [noun] Waterproof rubberized cloth. | [noun] A type of pasta in the form of short tubes; sometimes loosely, pasta in general. MAD (6) [verb] To be or become mad. | [verb] To madden, to anger, to frustrate. | [adjective] Insane; crazy, mentally deranged. MAE (5) MAG (6) [noun] (abbreviation) magazine (publication or ammunition) | [noun] (abbreviation) magnet | [noun] (abbreviation) mag wheel | [verb] To steal. MAN (5) [noun] An adult male human. | [noun] (collective) All human males collectively: mankind. | [noun] A human, a person of either gender, usually an adult. (See usage notes.) | [verb] To supply (something) with staff or crew (of either sex). MAP (7) [noun] A visual representation of an area, whether real or imaginary. | [noun] A graphical representation of the relationships between objects, components or themes. | [noun] A function. MAR (5) [noun] A blemish. | [verb] To spoil; to ruin; to scathe; to damage. | [noun] A small lake. MAS (5) [noun] A country cottage or farmstead in southern France. | [noun] A type of traveling dramatic performance conducted as part of a parade celebrating Carnival, originating in Trinidad and Tobago and performed throughout the Caribbean. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Abbreviation of milli-arcsecond. | [noun] A country cottage or farmstead in southern France. MAT (5) [noun] A flat piece of coarse material used for wiping one’s feet, or as a decorative or protective floor covering. | [noun] A small flat piece of material used to protect a surface from anything hot or rough; a coaster. | [noun] A floor pad to protect athletes. | [noun] (coppersmithing) An alloy of copper, tin, iron, etc.; white metal. | [noun] A showing of a movie, sporting event, or theatrical performance in the morning or afternoon. | [noun] A material or component needed for a crafting recipe. | [noun] A decorative border around a picture used to inset and center the contents of a frame. MAW (8) [noun] The stomach, especially of an animal. | [noun] The upper digestive tract (where food enters the body), especially the mouth and jaws of a fearsome and ravenous creature. | [noun] Any large, insatiable or perilous opening. | [noun] Mother. | [noun] A gull. MAX (12) [noun] An extreme, a great extent. | [noun] A kind of gin. | [verb] (usually with out) to reach the limit, to reach the maximum. MAY (8) [verb] To be strong; to have power (over). | [verb] (auxiliary) To be able; can. | [verb] To be able to go. | [noun] The hawthorn bush or its blossoms. | [noun] A maiden. MED (6) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Medications, especially prescribed psychoactive medications. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the practice of medicine. | [adjective] Intended to have a therapeutic effect; medicinal. | [verb] May; might MEL (5) MEM (7) MEN (5) [noun] An adult male human. | [noun] (collective) All human males collectively: mankind. | [noun] A human, a person of either gender, usually an adult. (See usage notes.) MET (5) [verb] To make contact (with) while in proximity. | [verb] (Of groups) To come together. | [verb] To make physical or perceptual contact. | [verb] To measure. | [verb] To dream. MEW (8) [noun] A gull, seagull. | [noun] A prison, or other place of confinement. | [noun] A hiding place; a secret store or den. | [noun] The crying sound of a cat; a meow, especially of a kitten. | [verb] To flatten the tongue against the roof of the mouth for supposed health benefits. MHO (8) [noun] A former unit of electric conductance, equivalent to and superseded by the siemens. MIB (7) MID (6) [adjective] Denoting the middle part. | [adjective] Occupying a middle position; middle. | [adjective] Made with a somewhat elevated position of some certain part of the tongue, in relation to the palate; midway between the high and the low; said of certain vowel sounds, such as, /e o ɛ ɔ/. | [noun] Middle | [noun] A mid-range. | [preposition] (in representations of German-accented English) With. MIG (6) MIL (5) [noun] An angular mil, a unit of angular measurement equal to 1⁄6400 of a complete circle. At 1000 metres one mil subtends about one metre (0.98 m). Also 1⁄6000 and 1⁄6300 are used in other countries. | [noun] A unit of measurement equal to 1⁄1000 of an inch, usually used for thin objects, such as sheets of plastic. | [noun] A former subdivision (1/1000) of the Maltese lira MIM (7) [adjective] Demure, shy. | [noun] The letter م in the Arabic script. MIR (5) MIS (5) MIX (12) [verb] To stir together. | [verb] To combine (items from two or more sources normally kept separate). | [verb] To form by mingling; to produce by the stirring together of ingredients; to concoct from different parts. | [noun] The result of mixing two or more substances; a mixture. MOA (5) [noun] Any of several species of large, extinct, flightless birds of the family Dinornithidae that were native to New Zealand; until its extinction, one species was the largest bird in the world. MOB (7) [noun] A large or disorderly group of people; especially one bent on riotous or destructive action. | [noun] A group of animals such as horses or cattle. | [noun] A flock of emus. | [noun] A promiscuous woman; a harlot or wench; a prostitute. | [noun] Mobile phone MOC (7) [noun] Moccasin (type of shoe) MOD (6) [noun] An unconventionally modern style of fashionable dress originating in England in the 1960s, characterized by ankle-length black trenchcoats and sunglasses. | [noun] A 1960s British person who dressed in such a style and was interested in modernism and the modern music of the time; the opposite of a rocker. | [noun] A modification. | [noun] A festival of Scottish Gaelic song, arts and culture, akin to the Welsh eisteddfod. MOG (6) [noun] A young cow or bull. | [noun] Leather made of the skin of the calf; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding. | [noun] A young deer, elephant, seal, whale or giraffe (also used of some other animals). | [verb] To move away; to go off. | [verb] (pickup community) To assert one's dominance over. MOL (5) [noun] In the International System of Units, the base unit of amount of substance; the amount of substance of a system which contains as many elementary entities (atoms, ions, molecules, etc.) as there are atoms in 0.012 kg of carbon-12. Symbol: mol. The number of atoms is known as Avogadro’s number. MOM (7) [noun] (familiar) mother. | [noun] An adult female owner of a pet. | [verb] To care in a motherly way. MON (5) [noun] The former currency of Japan until 1870, before the yen. | [noun] The badge or emblem a Japanese family, especially a family of the ancient feudal nobility; typically circular and consists of conventionalized forms from nature. | [noun] (used in the vocative) A colloquial means of address of man in places such as Jamaica and Shropshire in England. | [noun] A creature in a video game, usually one which is captured, trained up and used in battles. MOO (5) [noun] The characteristic lowing sound made by cattle. | [noun] A foolish woman. | [verb] Of a cow or bull, to make its characteristic lowing sound. MOP (7) [noun] An implement for washing floors, or the like, made of a piece of cloth, or a collection of thrums, or coarse yarn, fastened to a handle. | [noun] A wash with a mop; the act of mopping | [noun] A dense head of hair. MOR (5) MOS (5) [noun] Singular of mores | [noun] (abbreviation) month | [noun] A homosexual MOT (5) [noun] A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot. | [noun] A word or a motto; a device. | [noun] A note or brief strain on a bugle. | [noun] A woman; a wife. MOW (8) [noun] The act of mowing (a garden, grass etc.) | [noun] A shot played with a sweeping or scythe-like motion. | [verb] To cut down grass or crops. | [noun] A scornful grimace; a wry face. | [noun] A stack of hay, corn, beans or a barn for the storage of hay, corn, beans. | [noun] A gull, seagull. MUD (6) [noun] A mixture of water and soil or fine grained sediment. | [noun] A plaster-like mixture used to texture or smooth drywall. | [noun] (construction industry slang) Wet concrete as it is being mixed, delivered and poured. | [verb] To participate in a MUD or multi-user dungeon. MUG (6) [noun] A large cup for hot liquids, usually having a handle and used without a saucer. | [noun] The face, often used deprecatingly. | [noun] A gullible or easily-cheated person. | [noun] Motherfucker (usually in similes, e.g. "like a mug" or "as a mug") MUM (7) [noun] Mother. | [noun] Ma'am; a term of respect for an older woman. | [noun] A chrysanthemum. | [noun] Silence | [noun] A sort of strong beer, originally made in Brunswick, Germany. MUN (5) [verb] (Northern English, modal auxiliary, defective) Must. | [noun] The mouth, jaw. | [noun] Man | [noun] The person who roleplays a character in a role-playing game, especially an online play-by-post one. MUS (5) [noun] The 12th letter of the Modern Greek alphabet. MUT (5) NAM (5) NIM (5) [noun] A game in which players take turns removing objects from heaps. | [verb] To take or seize. | [verb] To filch, steal. NOM (5) [verb] To name someone as a candidate for a particular role or position, including that of an office. | [verb] To entitle, confer a name upon. | [noun] An act or instance of nominating. | [verb] To eat with noisy enjoyment. OHM (8) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of electrical resistance; the electrical resistance of a device across which a potential difference of one volt causes a current of one ampere. Symbol: Ω OMS (5) [noun] A sacred, mystical syllable used in prayer and meditation. | [verb] To chant the sacred syllable om. PAM (7) POM (7) [noun] An Englishman, a Briton; a person of British descent. | [noun] (cocktail) An American alcoholic drink containing vodka and pomegranate juice. RAM (5) [noun] A male sheep, typically uncastrated | [noun] A battering ram; a heavy object used for breaking through doors. | [noun] A warship intended to sink other ships by ramming them. | [verb] To collide with (an object), usually with the intention of damaging it or disabling its function. | [adjective] Rancid, offensive in smell or taste. REM (5) [noun] Rapid movement of the eyes, characterising REM sleep | [noun] A dose of absorbed radiation equivalent to one roentgen of X-rays or gamma rays | [noun] A remark; a programming language statement used for documentation (in BASIC for example); also used in DOS batch files. | [adjective] Remaining | [noun] A unit relative to the declared font size of the root element in a HTML document. RIM (5) [noun] An edge around something, especially when circular. | [noun] A wheelrim. | [noun] A semicircular copydesk. | [noun] A membrane. | [verb] To lick the anus of a partner as a sexual act. ROM (5) [adjective] (of type) upright, as opposed to italic | [adjective] (of text) of or related to the Latin alphabet RUM (5) [noun] A distilled spirit derived from fermented cane sugar and molasses. | [noun] A serving of rum. | [noun] A kind or brand of rum. | [noun] Any odd person or thing. | [noun] The card game rummy. SIM (5) [noun] A simulation or simulator. SUM (5) [noun] A quantity obtained by addition or aggregation. | [noun] (often plural) An arithmetic computation, especially one posed to a student as an exercise (not necessarily limited to addition). | [noun] A quantity of money. | [noun] The basic unit of money in Kyrgyzstan. | [pronoun] A certain number, at least two. | [noun] A type of administrative district used in China, Mongolia, and Russia. In Mongolia, a somon is smaller than a province. In China, it is only used in Inner Mongolia where it is equivalent to a township. TAM (5) [noun] A type of woolen hat developed in Scotland, a toorie bunnet. Originally they were worn by both genders, but now they are mostly worn by men and boys. | [noun] A traditional South and East Asian unit of weight, based upon the load of a shoulder pole and varying by place and over time but usually standardized at about 60 kg. TOM (5) [noun] A flat gong (without knob) that is struck with a felt-covered hammer. | [noun] The male of the domesticated cat. | [noun] The male of the turkey. | [noun] A tomato (the fruit). | [noun] Jewellery | [verb] (of a black person) To act in an obsequiously servile manner toward white authority. | [verb] To dig out a hole below the hatch cover of a bulker and fill it with cargo or weights to aid stability. UMM (7) UMP (7) [noun] An umpire. | [verb] To act as an umpire. VIM (8) [noun] Ready vitality and vigour. YAM (8) [noun] Any climbing vine of the genus Dioscorea in the Eastern and Western hemispheres, usually cultivated. | [noun] The edible, starchy, tuberous root of that plant, a tropical staple food. | [noun] A sweet potato; a tuber from the species Ipomoea batatas. | [noun] (Cumberland) home YOM (8) YUM (8) [adjective] Delicious. | [proper noun] Yellowdog Updater, Modified, a popular package manager in Linux | [interjection] Indicating delight at the flavor of food.

4-Letter Words (492)

ACME (8) [noun] The top or highest point; pinnacle; culmination. | [noun] The crisis or height of a disease. | [noun] Mature age; full bloom of life. AGMA (7) [noun] The nasalized velar consonant found in such words as song or wink. | [noun] The symbol ŋ, used to represent that nasal velar consonant in IPA; eng. AHEM (9) [noun] A use of the interjection, ahem. | [interjection] The sound of a quiet cough or of clearing one's throat | [interjection] An exclamation or cough to get attention AIMS (6) [noun] The pointing of a weapon, as a gun, a dart, or an arrow, or object, in the line of direction with the object intended to be struck; the line of fire; the direction of anything, such as a spear, a blow, a discourse, a remark, towards a particular point or object, with a view to strike or affect it. | [noun] The point intended to be hit, or object intended to be attained or affected. | [noun] Intention or goal ALMA (6) ALME (6) ALMS (6) [noun] Something given to the poor as charity, such as money, clothing or food. ALUM (6) [noun] An astringent salt, usually occurring in the form of pale crystals, much used in the dyeing and tanning trade and in certain medicines, and now understood to be a double sulphate of potassium and aluminium (K2SO4·Al2(SO4)3·24H2O). | [noun] Any similar double sulphate in which either or both of the potassium and aluminium is wholly or partly replaced by other univalent or tervalent cations. | [verb] To steep in, or otherwise impregnate with, a solution of alum; to treat with alum. | [noun] (shortening) A past attendee or graduate (of either gender) of a college, university or other educational institution. AMAH (9) [noun] In South Asia, a woman employed to look after children; (formerly) a wet nurse. | [noun] In China and Southeast Asia, a female domestic helper. AMAS (6) AMBO (8) [noun] A raised platform in an early Christian church, as well as in the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, and Eastern Catholic churches. | [noun] A stationary podium used for readings and homilies. | [noun] An ambulance driver. AMEN (6) [noun] An instance of saying ‘amen’. | [noun] A title of Christ; the Faithful One (especially with reference to Revelation 3:14) | [verb] To say amen. AMIA (6) AMID (7) [preposition] In the middle of; in the center of; surrounded by. AMIE (6) [noun] A female friend (French origin, used in English). AMIN (6) [noun] An organic compound derived from ammonia by replacing one or more hydrogen atoms with hydrocarbon groups. AMIR (6) [noun] A prince, commander or other leader or ruler in an Islamic nation. | [noun] A descendant of the prophet Muhammad. AMIS (6) [noun] Plural of ami, a friend (used in English, borrowed from French). | [noun] A type of West African musical instrument or drum. AMMO (8) [noun] Ammunition. | [verb] To load up on ammunition. AMOK (10) [adverb] In a violently raging or uncontrollable manner, typically used in the phrase "run amok." | [noun] A murderous frenzy, especially one attributed to a Malay warrior. AMPS (8) [noun] Short for ampere. | [noun] Short for amplifier. | [noun] Short for ampoule. AMUS (6) AMYL (9) [noun] Pentyl | [adjective] Of or pertaining to starch ARMS (6) [noun] The portion of the upper human appendage, from the shoulder to the wrist and sometimes including the hand. | [noun] The extended portion of the upper limb, from the shoulder to the elbow. | [noun] A limb, or locomotive or prehensile organ, of an invertebrate animal. | [verb] To take by the arm; to take up in one's arms. ARMY (9) [noun] A large, highly organized military force, concerned mainly with ground (rather than air or naval) operations. | [noun] The governmental agency in charge of a state's army. | [noun] A large group of people working toward the same purpose. ARUM (6) [noun] A flower or plant in the genus Arum ATMA (6) [noun] The eternal self or soul in Hindu and yogic philosophy, believed to be the innermost essence of a person. ATOM (6) [noun] The smallest possible amount of matter which still retains its identity as a chemical element, now known to consist of a nucleus surrounded by electrons. | [noun] (history of science) A hypothetical particle posited by Greek philosophers as an ultimate and indivisible component of matter. | [noun] The smallest, indivisible constituent part or unit of something. BALM (8) [noun] Any of various aromatic resins exuded from certain plants, especially trees of the genus Commiphora of Africa, Arabia and India and Myroxylon of South America. | [noun] A plant or tree yielding such substance. | [noun] Any soothing oil or lotion, especially an aromatic one. BAMS (8) [noun] Plural of bam, an exclamation or the sound of a loud impact. | [verb] Third person singular of bam, meaning to strike or shut forcefully. BARM (8) [noun] (obsolete outside dialectal) Bosom, lap. | [noun] Foam rising upon beer, or other malt liquors, when fermenting, and used as leaven in making bread and in brewing; yeast. | [noun] A small, flat, round individual loaf or roll of bread. | [verb] To spurge; foam BEAM (8) [noun] Any large piece of timber or iron long in proportion to its thickness, and prepared for use. | [noun] One of the principal horizontal timbers of a building; one of the transverse members of a ship's frame on which the decks are laid — supported at the sides by knees in wooden ships and by stringers in steel ones. | [noun] The maximum width of a vessel (note that a vessel with a beam of 15 foot can also be said to be 15 foot abeam) BEMA (8) [noun] A platform from which speakers addressed an assembly. | [noun] Raised area of worship in a synagogue upon which rests the Holy Ark containing Scrolls of Torah. BERM (8) [noun] A narrow ledge or shelf, as along the top or bottom of a slope | [noun] A raised bank or path, especially the bank of a canal opposite the towpath | [noun] A terrace formed by wave action along a beach BIMA (8) [noun] The raised platform in the front of a synagogue where the Torah is read on a podium. BLAM (8) [noun] A sudden, explosive sound, such as is made by a gunshot | [verb] To shoot, to let gunfire pass. | [verb] To shoot, to kill by gunshot. | [noun] Spam posted to a blog BOMB (10) [noun] An explosive device used or intended as a weapon. | [noun] A failure; an unpopular commercial product. | [noun] A large amount of money. BOOM (8) [noun] A low-pitched, resonant sound, such as of an explosion. | [noun] A rapid expansion or increase. | [noun] One of the calls of certain monkeys or birds. | [noun] A spar extending the foot of a sail; a spar rigged outboard from a ship's side to which boats are secured in harbour. | [noun] A period of prosperity, growth, progress, or high market activity. BRIM (8) [noun] The sea; ocean; water; flood. | [noun] An edge or border (originally specifically of the sea or a body of water). | [noun] The topmost rim or lip of a container. | [verb] Of pigs: to be in heat, to rut. | [adjective] Fierce; sharp; cold. BUMF (11) [noun] Toilet paper. | [noun] Useless papers; now especially official documents, standardized forms, sales and marketing print material, etc. BUMP (10) [noun] A light blow or jolting collision. | [noun] The sound of such a collision. | [noun] A protuberance on a level surface. BUMS (8) [noun] The buttocks. | [noun] The anus. | [verb] To sodomize; to engage in anal sex. CALM (8) [noun] (in a person) The state of being calm; peacefulness; absence of worry, anger, fear or other strong negative emotion. | [noun] (in a place or situation) The state of being calm; absence of noise and disturbance. | [noun] A period of time without wind. CAME (8) [preposition] Used to indicate that the following event, period, or change in state occurred in the past, after a time of waiting, enduring, or anticipation | [verb] To move from further away to nearer to. | [verb] To arrive. | [noun] A grooved strip of lead used to hold panes of glass together. CAMP (10) [noun] An outdoor place acting as temporary accommodation in tents or other temporary structures. | [noun] An organised event, often taking place in tents or temporary accommodation. | [noun] A base of a military group, not necessarily temporary. | [noun] An affected, exaggerated or intentionally tasteless style. CAMS (8) [noun] A turning or sliding piece which imparts motion to a rod, lever or block brought into sliding or rolling contact with it. | [noun] A curved wedge, movable about an axis, used for forcing or clamping two pieces together. | [noun] A ridge or mound of earth. CHAM (11) [noun] An autocrat or dominant critic, especially Samuel Johnson. | [noun] A ruler over various Turkish, Tatar and Mongol peoples in the Middle Ages. | [noun] An Ottoman sultan. | [verb] To chew. CHUM (11) [noun] A friend; a pal. | [noun] A roommate, especially in a college or university. | [verb] To share rooms with someone; to live together. | [noun] A mixture of (frequently rancid) fish parts and blood, dumped into the water to attract predator fish, such as sharks | [noun] A coarse mould for holding the clay while being worked on a whirler, lathe or manually. CLAM (8) [noun] A bivalve mollusk of many kinds, especially those that are edible; for example the soft-shell clam (Mya arenaria), the hard clam (Mercenaria mercenaria), the sea clam or hen clam (Spisula solidissima), and other species. The name is said to have been given originally to the Tridacna gigas, a huge East Indian bivalve. | [noun] Strong pincers or forceps. | [noun] A kind of vise, usually of wood. | [noun] A crash or clangor made by ringing all the bells of a chime at once. | [noun] Clamminess; moisture | [noun] Acronym of Clip-on Load Adjusting Mechanism. A device that can be fitted onto an oar to adjust set. COMA (8) [noun] A state of unconsciousness from which one may not wake up, usually induced by some form of trauma. | [noun] A cloud of dust surrounding the nucleus of a comet. | [noun] A defect characterized by diffuse, pear-shaped images that in an ideal image would appear as points. COMB (10) [noun] A toothed implement for grooming the hair or (formerly) for keeping it in place. | [noun] A machine used in separating choice cotton fibers from worsted cloth fibers. | [noun] A fleshy growth on the top of the head of some birds and reptiles; crest. | [noun] (abbreviation) Combination. | [noun] A valley, often wooded and often with no river COME (8) [noun] Coming, arrival; approach. | [noun] Semen | [noun] Female ejaculatory discharge. | [noun] The punctuation mark ⟨,⟩ used to indicate a set off parts of a sentence or between elements of a list. COMP (10) [noun] Clipping of comprehensive layout, a graphic design showing final proposed layout of text and images. | [noun] Clipping of comprehensive examination. | [noun] Clipping of complimentary ticket or item. CORM (8) [noun] A short, vertical, swollen underground stem of a plant (usually one of the monocots) that serves as a storage organ to enable the plant to survive winter or other adverse conditions such as drought. CRAM (8) [noun] The act of cramming (forcing or stuffing something). | [noun] Information hastily memorized. | [noun] A warp having more than two threads passing through each dent or split of the reed. CULM (8) [noun] Waste coal, used as a poor quality fuel; slack. | [noun] Anthracite, especially when found in small masses | [noun] The stem of a plant, especially of grass or sedge CWMS (11) [noun] A valley head created through glacial erosion and with a shape similar to an amphitheatre. CYMA (11) [noun] A moulding of the cornice, wavelike in form, whose outline consists of a concave and a convex line; an ogee. | [noun] A cyme. CYME (11) [noun] (spelt cime) A “head” (of unexpanded leaves, etc.); an opening bud. | [noun] A flattish or convex flower cluster, of the centrifugal or determinate type, on which each axis terminates with a flower which blooms before the flowers below it. Contrast raceme. | [noun] = cyma DAME (7) [noun] Usually capitalized as Dame: a title equivalent to Sir for a female knight. | [noun] A matron at a school, especially Eton College. | [noun] In traditional pantomime: a melodramatic female often played by a man in drag. DAMN (7) [noun] The use of "damn" as a curse. | [noun] A small, negligible quantity, being of little value; a whit or jot. | [noun] The smallest amount of concern or consideration. DAMP (9) [noun] Moisture; humidity; dampness. | [noun] Fog; fogginess; vapor. | [noun] Dejection or depression; something that spoils a positive emotion (such as enjoyment, satisfaction, expectation or courage) or a desired activity. DAMS (7) [noun] A structure placed across a flowing body of water to stop the flow or part of the flow, generally for purposes such as retaining or diverting some of the water or retarding the release of accumulated water to avoid abrupt flooding. | [noun] The water reservoir resulting from placing such structure. | [noun] A device to prevent a tooth from getting wet during dental work, consisting of a rubber sheet held with a band. DEEM (7) [noun] An opinion, a judgment, a surmise. | [verb] To judge, to pass judgment on; to doom, to sentence. | [verb] To adjudge, to decree. DEME (7) [noun] A township or other subdivision of ancient Attica. | [noun] A distinct local population of plants or animals. DEMO (7) [noun] A demonstration or visual explanation. | [noun] A recording of a song meant to demonstrate its overall sound for the purpose of getting it published or recorded more fully. | [noun] An example of a product used for demonstration and then sold at a discount. | [verb] To record a demo version of a song, usually not intended for commercial release. | [verb] To demolish (especially a house or fixture). DEMY (10) [noun] A printing paper size, 17½ inches by 22½ inches. | [noun] One holding a demyship, a kind of scholarship for Magdalen College, Oxford. | [noun] Junior scholar, specifically at Magdalen College, Oxford. DERM (7) [noun] The integument of animal; the skin. | [noun] The tissue of the skin underlying the epidermis. | [noun] A person who is skilled in, professes or practices dermatology. | [noun] (usually in the plural) guts DIME (7) [noun] A coin worth one-tenth of a U.S. dollar. | [noun] A coin worth one-tenth of a Canadian dollar. | [noun] A small amount of money | [verb] (with "on") To inform on, to turn in to the authorities, to rat on, especially anonymously. DIMS (7) [verb] To make something less bright. | [verb] To become darker. | [verb] To render dim, obscure, or dark; to make less bright or distinct DOME (7) [noun] A structural element resembling the hollow upper half of a sphere; a cupola | [noun] Anything shaped like an upset bowl, often used as a cover | [noun] Head (uppermost part of one's body) DOMS (7) DOOM (7) [noun] Destiny, especially terrible. | [noun] An undesirable fate; an impending severe occurrence or danger that seems inevitable. | [noun] A feeling of danger, impending danger, darkness or despair. DORM (7) [verb] To reside in a dorm. | [noun] A room containing a number of beds (and often some other furniture and/or utilities) for sleeping, often applied to student and backpacker accommodation of this kind. | [noun] A building or part of a building which houses students, soldiers, monks etc. who sleep there and use communal further facilities. DOUM (7) DRAM (7) [noun] The currency of Greece in ancient times and again from 1832 until 2001, with the symbol ₯, since replaced by the euro. | [noun] A coin worth one drachma. | [noun] An Ancient Greek weight of about 66.5 grains, or 4.3 grams. | [noun] The currency of Armenia, divided into 100 luma. DRUM (7) [noun] A percussive musical instrument spanned with a thin covering on at least one end for striking, forming an acoustic chamber, affecting what materials are used to make it; a membranophone. | [noun] Any similar hollow, cylindrical object. | [noun] A barrel or large cylindrical container for liquid transport and storage. | [noun] A small hill or ridge of hills. | [noun] A social gathering or assembly held in the evening. DUMA (7) [noun] A Russian legislative assembly such as the historical duma of the Russian Empire or the modern lower house of the Federal Assembly (the Russian national parliament). | [noun] A drink mixing wine and vodka. DUMB (9) [adjective] Unable to speak; lacking power of speech (kept in "deaf, dumb, and blind"). | [adjective] Silent; unaccompanied by words. | [adjective] (especially of a person) Extremely stupid. | [verb] To silence. DUMP (9) [noun] A place where waste or garbage is left; a ground or place for dumping ashes, refuse, etc.; a disposal site. | [noun] A car or boat for dumping refuse, etc. | [noun] That which is dumped, especially in a chaotic way; a mess. | [noun] A thick, ill-shapen piece. | [noun] A deep hole in a river bed; a pool. ELMS (6) [noun] A tree of the genus Ulmus of the family Ulmaceae, large deciduous trees with alternate stipulate leaves and small apetalous flowers. | [noun] (usually attributive) Wood from an elm tree. ELMY (9) EMES (6) EMEU (6) EMFS (9) EMIC (8) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the analysis of a cultural system or its features from the perspective of a participant in that culture. EMIR (6) [noun] A prince, commander or other leader or ruler in an Islamic nation. | [noun] A descendant of the prophet Muhammad. EMIT (6) [verb] To send out or give off EMUS (6) [noun] A cassowary (genus Casuarius). | [noun] A large flightless bird native to Australia, Dromaius novaehollandiae. | [noun] A person or thing that emulates. EMYD (10) EXAM (13) [noun] The act of examining. | [noun] Particularly, an inspection by a medical professional to establish the extent and nature of any sickness or injury. | [noun] A formal test involving answering written or oral questions under a time constraint and usually without access to textbooks. FAME (9) [noun] What is said or reported; gossip, rumour. | [noun] One's reputation. | [noun] The state of being famous or well-known and spoken of. FARM (9) [noun] A place where agricultural and similar activities take place, especially the growing of crops or the raising of livestock. | [noun] A tract of land held on lease for the purpose of cultivation. | [noun] (usually in combination) A location used for an industrial purpose, having many similar structures | [verb] To cleanse; clean out; put in order; empty; empty out FEME (9) FEMS (9) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A feminine or effeminate person. | [noun] A woman, a wife; a young woman or girl. | [noun] A lesbian or other queer woman whose appearance, identity etc. is seen as feminine as opposed to butch. FILM (9) [noun] A thin layer of some substance; a pellicle; a membranous covering, causing opacity. | [noun] A medium used to capture images in a camera. | [noun] A movie. FIRM (9) [noun] A business partnership; the name under which it trades. | [noun] A business enterprise, however organized. | [noun] A criminal gang, especially based around football hooliganism. | [verb] To make firm or strong; fix securely. FLAM (9) [noun] A freak or whim; an idle fancy. | [noun] A falsehood; a lie; an illusory pretext | [verb] To deceive with a falsehood. | [noun] (drumming) Two taps (a grace note followed by a full-volume tap) played very close together in order to sound like one slightly longer note. FOAM (9) [noun] A substance composed of a large collection of bubbles or their solidified remains. | [noun] A substance formed by trapping pockets of gas in a liquid or solid. | [noun] (by extension) Sea foam; the sea. FORM (9) [noun] (heading, physical) To do with shape. | [noun] (social) To do with structure or procedure. | [noun] A blank document or template to be filled in by the user. FROM (9) [preposition] Used to indicate source or provenance. | [preposition] Originating at (a year, time, etc.) | [preposition] Used to indicate a starting point or initial reference. FUME (9) [noun] A gas or vapour/vapor that is strong-smelling or dangerous to inhale. | [noun] A material that has been vaporized from the solid or liquid state to the gas state and re-coalesced to the solid state. | [noun] Rage or excitement which deprives the mind of self-control. FUMY (12) GAMA (7) GAMB (9) GAME (7) [noun] A playful or competitive activity. | [noun] A video game. | [noun] (nearly always singular) A field of gainful activity, as an industry or profession. GAMP (9) [noun] An umbrella. GAMS (7) [noun] A person's leg, especially an attractive woman's leg. | [noun] Collective noun used to refer to a group of whales, or rarely also of porpoises; a pod. | [noun] (by extension) A social gathering of whalers (whaling ships). GAMY (10) [adjective] Having the smell, taste and texture of consumed game (meat). | [adjective] Plucky, spirited or gritty | [adjective] Risque, sordid or sexually suggestive GAUM (7) GEMS (7) [noun] A precious stone, usually of substantial monetary value or prized for its beauty or shine. | [noun] Any precious or highly valued thing or person. | [noun] Anything of small size, or expressed within brief limits, which is regarded as a gem on account of its beauty or value, such as a small picture, a verse of poetry, or an epigram. GERM (7) [noun] The small mass of cells from which a new organism develops; a seed, bud or spore. | [noun] A pathogenic microorganism. | [noun] The embryo of a seed, especially of a seed used as a cereal or grain. See Wikipedia article on cereal germ. GEUM (7) [noun] Any of the genus Geum of perennial herbaceous plants. GIMP (9) [noun] A narrow ornamental fabric or braid of silk, wool, or cotton, often stiffened with metallic wire or coarse cord running through it, used as trimming for dresses, curtains, furniture, etc. Also guimpe. | [noun] Any coarse or reinforced thread, such as a glazed thread employed in lacemaking to outline designs, or silk thread used as a fishing leader, protected from the bite of fish by a wrapping of fine wire. | [noun] The plastic cord used in the plaiting and knotting craft Scoubidou (lanyard making); or, the process itself. | [noun] A person who is lame due to a crippling of the legs or feet. | [adjective] (Scotland and N England) Neat; trim; delicate; slender; handsome; spruce; elegant. GLIM (7) [noun] Brightness; splendour | [noun] A light; a candle; a lantern; a fire. | [noun] An eye. GLOM (7) [verb] To steal, to grab. | [verb] To stare. | [verb] To attach. | [noun] Short for glomerulus. GLUM (7) [adjective] Despondent; moody; sullen | [noun] Sullenness | [verb] To look sullen; to be of a sour countenance; to be glum. GRAM (7) [noun] A unit of mass equal to one-thousandth of a kilogram. Symbol: g | [noun] A leguminous plant grown for its seeds, especially the chickpea. | [noun] The seeds of these plants. | [noun] Grandmother | [adjective] Angry | [noun] A photograph or video shared on this service. GRIM (7) [noun] Specter, ghost, haunting spirit | [verb] To make grim; to give a stern or forbidding aspect to. | [adjective] Dismal and gloomy, cold and forbidding | [noun] Anger, wrath. GRUM (7) GUMS (7) [noun] (often in the plural) The flesh around the teeth. | [verb] To chew, especially of a toothless person or animal. | [verb] To deepen and enlarge the spaces between the teeth of (a worn saw), as with a gummer. GYMS (10) [noun] A sports facility specialized for lifting weights and exercise. | [noun] Physical education class | [verb] To go to the gym. HAEM (9) [noun] The component of hemoglobin (and other hemoproteins) responsible for binding oxygen. It consists of an iron ion that binds oxygen and a porphyrin ring that binds the globin molecules; one molecule binds one molecule of oxygen. HALM (9) HAME (9) [noun] A covering, skin, membrane. | [noun] Part of the harness that fits round the neck of a draught horse that the reins pass through. | [noun] A dwelling. | [noun] The stems of various cultivated plants, left after harvesting the crop to be used as animal litter or for thatching. HAMS (9) [noun] The region back of the knee joint; the popliteal space; the hock. | [noun] A thigh and buttock of an animal slaughtered for meat. | [noun] Meat from the thigh of a hog cured for food. HARM (9) [noun] Physical injury; hurt; damage | [noun] Emotional or figurative hurt | [noun] Detriment; misfortune. HELM (9) [noun] The steering apparatus of a ship, especially the tiller or wheel. | [noun] (maritime) The member of the crew in charge of steering the boat. | [noun] A position of leadership or control. | [noun] A helmet. | [noun] The stems of various cultivated plants, left after harvesting the crop to be used as animal litter or for thatching. HEME (9) [noun] The component of hemoglobin (and other hemoproteins) responsible for binding oxygen. It consists of an iron ion that binds oxygen and a porphyrin ring that binds the globin molecules; one molecule binds one molecule of oxygen. HEMP (11) [noun] A tall annual herb, Cannabis sativa, native to Asia. | [noun] Various products of this plant, including fibres and the drug cannabis. HEMS (9) [noun] An utterance or sound of the voice like "hem", often indicative of hesitation or doubt, sometimes used to call attention. | [verb] To make the sound expressed by the word hem; to hesitate in speaking. | [noun] The border of an article of clothing doubled back and stitched together to finish the edge and prevent it from fraying. HERM (9) [noun] A rectangular pillar bearing a bust of Hermes, once used as a boundary marker and later as decoration. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A hermaphrodite. | [adjective] (of an individual organism) Having gender-ambiguous sexual organs, typically including both types of gonads. HOLM (9) [noun] (obsolete outside dialectal) The holly. | [noun] A common evergreen oak of Europe, Quercus ilex; the holm oak. | [noun] An island in a lake, river or estuary; an eyot. HOME (9) [noun] A dwelling. | [noun] One’s native land; the place or country in which one dwells; the place where one’s ancestors dwell or dwelt. | [noun] The locality where a thing is usually found, or was first found, or where it is naturally abundant; habitat; seat. HOMO (9) [noun] A human. HOMY (12) [adjective] Homely HUMP (11) [noun] A mound of earth. | [noun] A deformity in humans caused by abnormal curvature of the upper spine. | [noun] (animals) A rounded fleshy mass, such as on a camel or zebu. HUMS (9) [noun] A hummed tune, i.e. created orally with lips closed. | [noun] An often indistinct sound resembling human humming. | [noun] Busy activity, like the buzz of a beehive. HYMN (12) [noun] A song of praise or worship. | [verb] To sing a hymn. | [verb] To praise or extol in hymns. IAMB (8) [noun] A metrical foot in verse consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable. IDEM (7) [pronoun] The same. IMAM (8) [noun] (usually capitalized) A Shi'ite Muslim leader. | [noun] One who leads the salat prayers in a mosque. IMID (7) IMMY (11) IMPI (8) [noun] A group of Zulu (or other Bantu) warriors; a detachment of armed men. IMPS (8) [noun] A small, mischievous sprite, or a malevolent supernatural creature, somewhat comparable to a demon but smaller and less powerful. | [noun] A mischievous child. | [noun] A baby Tasmanian devil. ISMS (6) [noun] An ideology, system of thought, or practice that can be described by a word ending in -ism. | [noun] Specifically, a form of discrimination, such as racism or sexism. ITEM (6) [noun] A distinct physical object. | [noun] (by extension) An object that can be picked up for later use. | [noun] A line of text having a legal or other meaning; a separate particular in an account. JAMB (15) [noun] (interior decorating) Either of the vertical components that form the side of an opening in a wall, such as that of a door frame, window frame, or fireplace. | [noun] Any thick mass of rock that prevents miners from following the lode or vein. | [verb] To fix or attach a jamb to. JAMS (13) [noun] A sweet mixture of fruit boiled with sugar and allowed to congeal. Often spread on bread or toast or used in jam tarts. | [noun] A difficult situation. | [noun] Blockage, congestion. JIMP (15) JISM (13) [noun] Spirit or energy. | [noun] Semen. JUMP (15) [noun] The act of jumping; a leap; a spring; a bound. | [noun] An effort; an attempt; a venture. | [noun] A dislocation in a stratum; a fault. | [noun] A kind of loose jacket for men. KAME (10) [noun] A round hill or short ridge of sand or gravel deposited by a melting glacier. KAMI (10) [noun] An animistic God or spirit in the Shinto religion of Japan. | [noun] The metaphysical causal generator of motion, life, or divinish aura. | [noun] (papercraft) A basic origami paper, usually printed with a colour or pattern on one side. | [noun] An animistic God or spirit in the Shinto religion of Japan. KEMP (12) [noun] Coarse, rough hair, wool, or fur; (in the plural) knotty hairs that will not felt. | [adjective] Shaggy; rough. | [noun] A contest in work, etc. | [noun] A champion; a knight. LAMA (6) [noun] A master of Tibetan Buddhism. | [noun] A South American mammal of the camel family, Lama glama, used as a domestic beast of burden and a source of wool and meat. LAMB (8) [noun] A young sheep. | [noun] The flesh of a lamb or sheep used as food. | [noun] A person who is meek, docile and easily led. LAME (6) [noun] A stupid or undesirable person. | [verb] To cause (a person or animal) to become lame. | [adjective] Unable to walk properly because of a problem with one's feet or legs. | [noun] A lamina; a thin layer or plate of material, as in certain kinds of armor. | [verb] To shine. LAMP (8) [noun] A device that generates heat, light or other radiation. Especially an electric light bulb. | [noun] A device containing oil, burnt through a wick for illumination; an oil lamp. | [noun] A piece of furniture holding one or more electric light sockets. LAMS (6) [verb] To beat or thrash. | [verb] To flee or run away. | [noun] The twenty-third letter of the Arabic alphabet, ل. It is preceded by ك and followed by م. LIMA (6) LIMB (8) [noun] A major appendage of human or animal, used for locomotion (such as an arm, leg or wing). | [noun] A branch of a tree. | [noun] The part of the bow, from the handle to the tip. | [noun] The apparent visual edge of a celestial body. LIME (6) [noun] Any inorganic material containing calcium, usually calcium oxide (quicklime) or calcium hydroxide (slaked lime). | [noun] Any gluey or adhesive substance; something which traps or captures someone; sometimes a synonym for birdlime. | [verb] To treat with calcium hydroxide or calcium oxide (lime). | [noun] A deciduous tree of the genus Tilia, especially Tilia × europaea; the linden tree, or its wood. | [noun] Any of several green citrus fruit, somewhat smaller and sharper-tasting than a lemon. | [verb] To hang out/socialize in an informal, relaxed environment, especially with friends, for example at a party or on the beach. | [noun] A leash. LIMN (6) [verb] To draw or paint; to delineate. | [verb] To illuminate, as a manuscript; to decorate with gold or some other bright colour. LIMO (6) [noun] An automobile body with seats and permanent top like a coupe, and with the top projecting over the driver and a projecting front. | [noun] An automobile with such a body. | [noun] A luxury sedan or saloon car, especially one with a lengthened wheelbase or driven by a chauffeur. LIMP (8) [noun] An irregular, jerky or awkward gait. | [noun] A scraper for removing poor ore or refuse from the sieve. | [verb] To walk lamely, as if favouring one leg. | [noun] A scraper of board or sheet-iron shaped like half the head of a small cask, used for scraping the ore off the sieve in the operation of hand-jigging. | [verb] To happen; befall; chance. LIMY (9) LOAM (6) [noun] A type of soil; an earthy mixture of sand, silt and clay, with organic matter to which its fertility is chiefly due. | [noun] A mixture of sand, clay, and other materials, used in making moulds for large castings, often without a pattern. | [verb] To cover, smear, or fill with loam. LOOM (6) [noun] A utensil; tool; a weapon; (usually in compound) an article in general. | [noun] A frame or machine of wood or other material, in which a weaver forms cloth out of thread; a machine for interweaving yarn or threads into a fabric, as in knitting or lace making. | [noun] The part of an oar which is between the grip or handle and the blade, the shaft. | [noun] Loon (bird of order Gaviiformes) | [noun] A distorted appearance of something as seen indistinctly or from afar. LUMP (8) [noun] Something that protrudes, sticks out, or sticks together; a cluster or blob; a mound or mass of no particular shape. | [noun] A group, set, or unit. | [noun] A small, shaped mass of sugar, typically about a teaspoonful. LUMS (6) [noun] A chimney. | [noun] A ventilating chimney over the shaft of a mine. | [noun] A woody valley. MAAR (6) [noun] A broad volcanic crater, usually filled with water to form a lake. MABE (8) MACE (8) [noun] A heavy fighting club. | [noun] A ceremonial form of this weapon. | [noun] A long baton used by some drum majors to keep time and lead a marching band. If this baton is referred to as a mace, by convention it has a ceremonial often decorative head, which, if of metal, usually is hollow and sometimes intricately worked. | [noun] An old money of account in China equal to one tenth of a tael. | [noun] A spice obtained from the outer layer of the kernel of the fruit of the nutmeg. | [noun] Tear gas or pepper spray, especially for personal use. MACH (11) MACK (12) [noun] An individual skilled in the art of seduction using verbal skills. | [verb] To act as pimp; to pander. | [verb] To seduce or flirt with. | [noun] A raincoat or mackintosh. | [noun] An element of a ship's superstructure which places the function of a ship's mast on its exhaust stack, adding the skeletal supporting structure to the smokestack to support the mast's complement of functions. MACS (8) [noun] A waterproof long coat made of rubberized cloth. | [noun] By extension, any waterproof coat or raincoat. | [noun] Waterproof rubberized cloth. MADE (7) [noun] A grub or maggot. | [verb] To create. | [verb] To behave, to act. MADS (7) [verb] To be or become mad. | [verb] To madden, to anger, to frustrate. MAES (6) MAGE (7) [noun] A magician, wizard or sorcerer. MAGI (7) [noun] A magician, wizard or sorcerer. | [noun] (common usage) magician, and derogatorily sorcerer, trickster, conjurer, charlatan | [noun] (special usage) a Zoroastrian priest MAGS (7) [noun] (abbreviation) magazine (publication or ammunition) | [noun] (abbreviation) magnet | [noun] (abbreviation) mag wheel MAID (7) [noun] A girl or an unmarried young woman; maiden. | [noun] A female servant or cleaner (short for maidservant). | [noun] A virgin, now female but originally one of either gender. MAIL (6) [noun] A bag or wallet. | [noun] A bag containing letters to be delivered by post. | [noun] The material conveyed by the postal service. | [noun] Armour consisting of metal rings or plates linked together. | [noun] An old French coin worth half a denier. MAIM (8) [noun] A serious wound | [verb] To wound seriously; to cause permanent loss of function of a limb or part of the body. MAIN (6) [verb] Short for mainline. | [verb] To mainly play a specific character, or side, during a game. | [verb] Of a road: to convert into a main or primary road. | [noun] That which is chief or principal; the chief or main portion; the bulk, the greater part, gross. | [noun] A hand or match in a game of dice. | [noun] A basket for gathering grapes. MAIR (6) MAKE (10) [noun] Brand or kind; model. | [noun] Manner or style of construction (style of how a thing is made); form. | [noun] Origin (of a manufactured article); manufacture; production. | [noun] Mate; a spouse or companion; a match. | [noun] A halfpenny. | [noun] An agricultural tool resembling a scythe, used to cut (harvest) certain plants such as peas, reeds, or tares. MAKO (10) [noun] Mako shark MALE (6) [noun] One of the male (masculine) sex or gender. | [adjective] Belonging to the sex which typically produces sperm, or to the gender which is typically associated with it. | [adjective] Characteristic of this sex/gender. (Compare masculine, manly.) MALL (6) [noun] A pedestrianised street, especially a shopping precinct. | [noun] An enclosed shopping centre. | [noun] An alley where the game of pall mall was played. MALM (8) [noun] A soft, crumbly, chalky, grayish limestone. | [noun] An artificial mixture or chalk, clay, and sand, from which bricks are made. The resulting bricks have a light brown or yellowish color. MALT (6) [noun] Malted grain (sprouted grain) (usually barley), used in brewing and otherwise. | [noun] Malt liquor, especially malt whisky. | [noun] A milkshake with malted milk powder added for flavor. MAMA (8) [noun] (hypocoristic, usually childish) Mother, female parent. MANA (6) [noun] Power, prestige; specifically, a form of supernatural energy in Polynesian religion that inheres in things or people. | [noun] Magical power. | [noun] A monetary unit of ancient Greece and the Middle East, originally equivalent to the weight of a mina of silver. | [noun] Food miraculously produced for the Israelites in the desert in the book of Exodus. MANE (6) [noun] Longer hair growth on back of neck of an animal, especially a horse or lion | [noun] Long or thick hair of a person's head. MANO (6) MANS (6) [noun] An adult male human. | [noun] (collective) All human males collectively: mankind. | [noun] A human, a person of either gender, usually an adult. (See usage notes.) MANY (9) [noun] A multitude; a great aggregate; a mass of people; the generality; the common herd. | [noun] A considerable number. | [adjective] A large number of; numerous. MAPS (8) [noun] A visual representation of an area, whether real or imaginary. | [noun] A graphical representation of the relationships between objects, components or themes. | [noun] A function. MARC (8) [noun] The refuse matter that remains after fruit, particularly grapes, has been pressed. | [noun] An alcoholic spirit distilled from the marc of grapes. | [noun] A weight of various commodities, especially of gold and silver, used in different European countries. In France and Holland it was equal to eight ounces. MARE (6) [noun] An adult female horse. | [noun] A foolish woman. | [noun] A type of evil spirit formerly thought to sit on the chest of a sleeping person; also, the feeling of suffocation felt during sleep, attributed to such a spirit. | [noun] A large, dark plain, which may have the appearance of a sea. MARK (10) [noun] (heading) Boundary, land within a boundary. | [noun] (heading) Characteristic, sign, visible impression. | [noun] (heading) Indicator of position, objective etc. | [noun] A measure of weight (especially for gold and silver), once used throughout Europe, equivalent to 8 oz. | [verb] To walk with long, regular strides, as a soldier does. MARL (6) [noun] A mixed earthy substance, consisting of carbonate of lime, clay, and possibly sand, in very variable proportions, and accordingly designated as calcareous, clayey, or sandy. | [verb] To cover with the earthy substance called marl. | [verb] To cover, as part of a rope, with marline, marking a peculiar hitch at each turn to prevent unwinding. MARS (6) [noun] A blemish. | [verb] To spoil; to ruin; to scathe; to damage. | [noun] A small lake. MART (6) [noun] A market. | [noun] A bargain. | [verb] To buy or sell in, or as in a mart. | [noun] A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals; a letter of marque. MASH (9) [noun] A mass of mixed ingredients reduced to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure; a mass of anything in a soft pulpy state. | [noun] Ground or bruised malt, or meal of rye, wheat, corn, or other grain (or a mixture of malt and meal) steeped and stirred in hot water for making the wort. | [noun] Mashed potatoes. | [verb] To convert into a mash; to reduce to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure | [noun] A mesh. | [noun] An infatuation, a crush, a fancy MASK (10) [noun] A cover, or partial cover, for the face, used for disguise or protection. | [noun] That which disguises; a pretext or subterfuge. | [noun] A festive entertainment of dancing or other diversions, where all wear masks; a masquerade | [noun] A mesh. | [noun] Mash. | [verb] To bewilder; confuse. MASS (6) [noun] (physical) Matter, material. | [noun] A large quantity; a sum. | [verb] To form or collect into a mass; to form into a collective body; to bring together into masses; to assemble. | [noun] The Eucharist, now especially in Roman Catholicism. MAST (6) [noun] A tall, slim post or tower, usually tapering upward, used to support, for example, the sails on a ship, flags, floodlights, meteorological instruments ,or communications equipment such as an aerial, usually supported by guy-wires. | [noun] A non-judicial punishment ("NJP") disciplinary hearing under which a commanding officer studies and disposes of cases involving those under his command. | [verb] To supply and fit a mast to (a ship). | [noun] The fruit of forest-trees (beech, oak, chestnut, pecan, etc.), especially if having fallen from the tree, used as fodder for pigs and other animals. | [noun] A type of heavy cue, with the broad end of which one strikes the ball. MATE (6) [noun] A fellow, comrade, colleague, partner or someone with whom something is shared, e.g. shipmate, classmate. | [noun] (especially of a non-human animal) A breeding partner. | [noun] A friend, usually of the same sex. | [noun] The conclusive victory in a game of chess that occurs when an opponent's king is threatened with unavoidable capture. | [noun] The abovementioned plant; the leaves and shoots used for the tea MATH (9) [noun] A mowing; what is gathered from mowing. | [noun] Arithmetic calculations; (see do the math). | [noun] A math course. | [noun] A monastic or similar religious establishment in Hinduism and Jainism, usually more formal and hierarchical than an ashram. MATS (6) [noun] A flat piece of coarse material used for wiping one’s feet, or as a decorative or protective floor covering. | [noun] A small flat piece of material used to protect a surface from anything hot or rough; a coaster. | [noun] A floor pad to protect athletes. MATT (6) [noun] (coppersmithing) An alloy of copper, tin, iron, etc.; white metal. | [adjective] Dull; not reflective of light. MAUD (7) [noun] A grey plaid once worn by shepherds in Scotland and Northumbria. MAUL (6) [noun] A heavy long-handled hammer, used for splitting logs by driving a wedge into them, or in combat. | [noun] A situation where the player carrying the ball, who must be on his feet, is held by one or more opponents, and one or more of the ball carrier's team mates bind onto the ball carrier. | [verb] To handle someone or something in a rough way. MAUN (6) [verb] To have to; must. MAUT (6) MAWN (9) MAWS (9) [noun] The stomach, especially of an animal. | [noun] The upper digestive tract (where food enters the body), especially the mouth and jaws of a fearsome and ravenous creature. | [noun] Any large, insatiable or perilous opening. MAXI (13) [noun] A coat or skirt having such a hemline | [adjective] Having a hemline at ankle length | [noun] A class of racing sailing yacht that pushes at the upper limits of the International Offshore Rule of regulated sail yacht racing, having a waterline length in excess of 70-feet. MAYA (9) [noun] Magic; supernatural power as held by the gods. | [noun] The power by which the universe is made to appear; the illusion of the phenomenal world, as opposed to its true or spiritual reality. MAYO (9) [noun] A white person. | [noun] A dressing made from vegetable oil, raw egg yolks and seasoning, used on salads, with french fries, in sandwiches etc. | [noun] Any cold dish with that dressing as an ingredient. MAYS (9) [verb] To gather may, or flowers in general. | [verb] To celebrate May Day. | [noun] A maiden. MAZE (15) [noun] A labyrinth; a puzzle consisting of a complicated network of paths or passages, the aim of which is to find one's way. | [noun] Something made up of many confused or conflicting elements; a tangle. | [noun] Confusion of thought; state of bewilderment. MAZY (18) [adjective] Mazelike; like a maze. | [adjective] Not straight; zigzagging. MEAD (7) [noun] An alcoholic drink fermented from honey and water. | [noun] A drink composed of syrup of sarsaparilla or other flavouring extract, and water, and sometimes charged with carbon dioxide. | [noun] A meadow. MEAL (6) [noun] Food that is prepared and eaten, usually at a specific time, and usually in a comparatively large quantity (as opposed to a snack). | [noun] Food served or eaten as a repast. | [noun] A time or an occasion. | [noun] The coarse-ground edible part of various grains often used to feed animals; flour or a coarser blend than flour. | [noun] A speck or spot. MEAN (6) [verb] To lament. | [verb] To intend. | [verb] To convey (a meaning). | [adjective] Common; general. | [noun] (now chiefly in the plural) A method or course of action used to achieve some result. MEAT (6) [noun] The flesh (muscle tissue) of an animal used as food. | [noun] A type of meat, by anatomic position and provenance. | [noun] Food, for animals or humans, especially solid food. See also meat and drink. MEED (7) [noun] A payment or recompense made for services rendered or in recognition of some achievement; reward, deserts; award. | [noun] A gift; bribe. | [noun] Merit or desert; worth. | [verb] To reward; bribe. MEEK (10) [verb] (of horses) To tame; to break. | [adjective] Humble, non-boastful, modest, meager, or self-effacing. | [adjective] Submissive, dispirited. MEET (6) [noun] A sports competition, especially for track and field (a track meet) or swimming (a swim meet). | [noun] A gathering of riders, horses and hounds for foxhunting; a field meet for hunting. | [noun] A meeting of two trains in opposite directions on a single track, when one is put into a siding to let the other cross. | [adjective] Suitable; right; proper. MELD (7) [verb] To combine multiple similar objects into one | [noun] A combination of cards which is melded. | [verb] In card games, especially of the rummy family, to announce or display a combination of cards. MELL (6) MELS (6) MELT (6) [noun] Molten material, the product of melting. | [noun] The transition of matter from a solid state to a liquid state. | [noun] The springtime snow runoff in mountain regions. MEMO (8) [noun] A short note; a memorandum. | [noun] A record of partial results that can be reused later without recomputation. | [verb] To record something; to make a note of something. MEMS (8) [noun] The thirteenth letter of many Semitic alphabets/abjads (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others). | [noun] A memory access as part of processing. MEND (7) [noun] A place, as in clothing, which has been repaired by mending. | [noun] The act of repairing. | [verb] To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement. MENO (6) MENU (6) [noun] The details of the food to be served at a banquet; a bill of fare. | [noun] A list of dishes offered in a restaurant. | [noun] A list from which the user may select an operation to be performed, often done with a keyboard, mouse, or controller under a graphical user interface MEOU (6) MEOW (9) [noun] The cry of a cat. | [noun] The drug mephedrone. | [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MERE (6) [noun] A body of standing water, such as a lake or a pond. More specifically, it can refer to a lake that is broad in relation to its depth. Also included in place names such as Windermere. | [noun] Boundary, limit; a boundary-marker; boundary-line. | [verb] To limit; bound; divide or cause division in. | [adjective] Famous. | [adjective] Pure, unalloyed . | [noun] A Maori war-club. MERK (10) MERL (6) [noun] The Eurasian blackbird, Turdus merula. | [noun] Any blackbird. | [noun] A type of mottled colouration on dogs. MESA (6) [noun] Flat area of land or plateau higher than other land, with one or more clifflike edges. MESH (9) [noun] A structure made of connected strands of metal, fiber, or other flexible/ductile material, with evenly spaced openings between them. | [noun] The opening or space enclosed by the threads of a net between knot and knot, or the threads enclosing such a space. | [noun] The engagement of the teeth of wheels, or of a wheel and rack. MESS (6) [noun] A disagreeable mixture or confusion of things; hence, a situation resulting from blundering or from misunderstanding; disorder. | [noun] A large quantity or number. | [noun] Excrement. | [noun] Mass; a church service. META (6) [adjective] Self-referential; structured analogously, but at a higher level. | [noun] Boundary marker. | [noun] Either of the conical columns at each end of an Ancient Roman circus. | [noun] Metagame; the most effective tactics and strategies used in a competitive video game. | [noun] Metoidioplasty. METE (6) [verb] To measure. | [verb] (usually with “out”) To dispense, measure (out), allot (especially punishment, reward etc.). | [noun] A boundary or other limit; a boundary-marker; mere. | [adjective] Suitable; right; proper. METH (9) [noun] Methamphetamine, especially in the form of the crystalline hydrochloride. | [noun] Methadone. | [noun] (Mancunian) A tramp. | [noun] A spiced mead, originally from Wales. MEWL (9) [noun] A soft cry or whimper; an act of mewling. | [verb] To cry weakly with a soft, high-pitched sound; to whimper; to whine. MEWS (9) [noun] An alley where there are stables; a narrow passage; a confined place. | [noun] A place where birds of prey are housed. | [noun] A gull, seagull. | [verb] To shut away, confine, lock up. MEZE (15) [noun] Small portions of starters typical of Turkish and Greek cuisine (equivalent to Spanish tapas or Hawaiian pu pu) often served as a light meal with pita. MHOS (9) [noun] A former unit of electric conductance, equivalent to and superseded by the siemens. MIBS (8) MICA (8) [noun] Any of a group of hydrous aluminosilicate minerals characterized by highly perfect cleavage, so that they readily separate into very thin leaves, more or less elastic. MICE (8) [noun] Any small rodent of the genus Mus. | [noun] A member of the many small rodent and marsupial species resembling such a rodent. | [noun] A quiet or shy person. MICK (12) [noun] An Irishman | [noun] A Catholic, particularly of Irish descent. | [adjective] Easy. MIDI (7) [noun] A native or inhabitant of Berlin. | [noun] A doughnut with a sweet filling. | [noun] A newspaper format with pages normally measuring about 315 by 470 millimetres (12.4 in × 18.5 inches), slightly taller and wider than a tabloid but narrower and shorter than a broadsheet. MIDS (7) MIEN (6) [noun] Demeanor; facial expression or attitude, especially one which is intended by its bearer. | [noun] A specific facial expression. MIFF (12) [noun] A small argument; a quarrel. | [noun] A state of being offended. | [verb] (usually used in the passive) To offend slightly. MIGG (8) MIGS (7) MIKE (10) [noun] A microphone. | [verb] To microphone; to place one or more microphones (mikes) on. | [verb] To measure using a micrometer. | [noun] A minute. MILD (7) [noun] A relatively low-gravity beer, often with a dark colour; mild ale | [adjective] Gentle and not easily angered. | [adjective] (of a rule or punishment) Of only moderate severity; not strict. MILE (6) [noun] The international mile: a unit of length precisely equal to 1.609344 kilometers established by treaty among Anglophone nations in 1959, divided into 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards. | [noun] Any of several customary units of length derived from the 1593 English statute mile of 8 furlongs, equivalent to 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards of various precise values. | [noun] Any of many customary units of length derived from the Roman mile (mille passus) of 8 stades or 5,000 Roman feet. MILK (10) [noun] A white liquid produced by the mammary glands of female mammals to nourish their young. From certain animals, especially cows, it is also called dairy milk and is a common food for humans as a beverage or used to produce various dairy products such as butter, cheese, and yogurt. | [noun] A white (or whitish) liquid obtained from a vegetable source such as almonds, coconuts, oats, rice, and/or soy beans. Also called non-dairy milk. | [noun] An individual serving of milk. | [verb] To express milk from (a mammal, especially a cow). MILL (6) [noun] A grinding apparatus for substances such as grains, seeds, etc. | [noun] The building housing such a grinding apparatus. | [noun] A machine used for expelling the juice, sap, etc., from vegetable tissues by pressure, or by pressure in combination with a grinding, or cutting process. | [noun] An obsolete coin worth one thousandth of a US dollar, or one tenth of a cent. | [noun] An angular mil, a unit of angular measurement equal to 1⁄6400 of a complete circle. At 1000 metres one mil subtends about one metre (0.98 m). Also 1⁄6000 and 1⁄6300 are used in other countries. | [noun] A line of three matching pieces in nine men's morris and related games. | [noun] (trading card games) Discarding a card from one's deck. MILO (6) [noun] Sorghum MILS (6) [noun] An angular mil, a unit of angular measurement equal to 1⁄6400 of a complete circle. At 1000 metres one mil subtends about one metre (0.98 m). Also 1⁄6000 and 1⁄6300 are used in other countries. | [noun] A unit of measurement equal to 1⁄1000 of an inch, usually used for thin objects, such as sheets of plastic. | [noun] A former subdivision (1/1000) of the Maltese lira MILT (6) [noun] The spleen, especially of an animal bred for food. | [noun] The semen of a male fish. | [verb] To impregnate (the roe of a fish) with milt. MIME (8) [noun] A form of acting without words; pantomime. | [noun] A pantomime actor. | [noun] A classical theatrical entertainment in the form of farce. MINA (6) MIND (7) [noun] The ability for rational thought. | [noun] The ability to be aware of things. | [noun] The ability to remember things. MINE (6) [pronoun] My; belonging to me; that which belongs to me. | [noun] An excavation from which ore or solid minerals are taken, especially one consisting of underground tunnels. | [noun] Any source of wealth or resources. | [noun] Demeanor; facial expression or attitude, especially one which is intended by its bearer. MINI (6) [adjective] Miniature, tiny, small. | [noun] A miniskirt. | [noun] A minicomputer. MINK (10) [noun] (plural mink or minks) Any of various semi-aquatic, carnivorous mammals in the Mustelinae subfamily, similar to weasels, with dark fur, native to Europe and America, of which two species in different genera are extant: the American mink (Neovison vison) and the European mink (Mustela lutreola). | [noun] (plural mink) The fur or pelt of a mink, used to make apparel. | [noun] (plural minks) An article of clothing made of mink. MINT (6) [noun] A building or institution where money (originally, only coins) is produced under government licence. | [noun] A large amount of money. A vast sum or amount, etc. | [noun] Any place regarded as a source of unlimited supply; the supply itself. | [noun] Any plant in the genus Mentha in the family Lamiaceae, typically aromatic with square stems. | [noun] (provincial) Intent, purpose; an attempt, try; effort, endeavor. MINX (13) [noun] A mink. MIRE (6) [noun] Deep mud; moist, spongy earth. | [noun] An undesirable situation, a predicament. | [verb] To cause or permit to become stuck in mud; to plunge or fix in mud. | [noun] An ant. MIRI (6) MIRK (10) [noun] Archaic spelling of murk. | [verb] Archaic spelling of murk. | [adjective] Dark, murky MIRS (6) MIRY (9) [adjective] Relating to a mire; swampy, boggy. MISE (6) MISO (6) [noun] A thick paste made by fermentation of soybeans with the mold Aspergillus oryzae, used in making soups and sauces. MISS (6) [noun] A failure to hit. | [noun] A failure to obtain or accomplish. | [noun] An act of avoidance (used with the verb give). | [noun] A title of respect for a young woman (usually unmarried) with or without a name used. MIST (6) [noun] Water or other liquid finely suspended in air. | [noun] A layer of fine droplets or particles. | [noun] Anything that dims, darkens, or hinders vision. MITE (6) [noun] Any of many minute arachnids which, along with the ticks, comprise subclass Acarina (aka Acari). | [noun] A small coin formerly circulated in England, rated at about a third of a farthing. | [noun] A lepton, a small coin used in Palestine in the time of Christ. MITT (6) [noun] A mitten | [noun] An oversized, protective glove such as an oven mitt or a baseball mitt. | [noun] (especially in plural) A hand. MITY (9) MIXT (13) MOAN (6) [noun] A low, mournful cry of pain, sorrow or pleasure | [verb] To complain about; to bemoan, to bewail; to mourn. | [verb] To grieve. MOAS (6) [noun] Any of several species of large, extinct, flightless birds of the family Dinornithidae that were native to New Zealand; until its extinction, one species was the largest bird in the world. MOAT (6) [noun] A deep, wide defensive ditch, normally filled with water, surrounding a fortified habitation. | [noun] An aspect of a business which makes it more "defensible" from competitors, either because of the nature of its products, services, franchise or other reason. | [noun] A circular lowland between a resurgent dome and the walls of the caldera surrounding it. MOBS (8) [noun] A large or disorderly group of people; especially one bent on riotous or destructive action. | [noun] A group of animals such as horses or cattle. | [noun] A flock of emus. MOCK (12) [noun] An imitation, usually of lesser quality. | [noun] Mockery, the act of mocking. | [noun] A practice exam set by an educating institution to prepare students for an important exam. MOCS (8) [noun] Moccasin (type of shoe) MODE (7) [noun] One of several ancient Greek scales. | [noun] One of several common scales in modern Western music, one of which corresponds to the modern major scale and one to the natural minor scale. | [noun] A particular means of accomplishing something. | [noun] Style or fashion; popular trend. MODI (7) MODS (7) [noun] An unconventionally modern style of fashionable dress originating in England in the 1960s, characterized by ankle-length black trenchcoats and sunglasses. | [noun] A 1960s British person who dressed in such a style and was interested in modernism and the modern music of the time; the opposite of a rocker. | [noun] A modification. MOGS (7) [noun] A young cow or bull. | [noun] Leather made of the skin of the calf; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding. | [noun] A young deer, elephant, seal, whale or giraffe (also used of some other animals). MOIL (6) [noun] Hard work. | [noun] Confusion, turmoil. | [noun] A spot; a defilement. | [noun] The glass circling the tip of a blowpipe or punty, such as the residual glass after detaching a blown vessel, or the lower part of a gather. MOJO (13) [noun] A magic charm or spell. | [noun] Supernatural skill or luck. | [noun] Personal magnetism; charm. MOKE (10) [noun] A donkey. | [noun] A mesh of a net, or of anything resembling a net. | [noun] A black person. MOLA (6) [noun] A traditional textile art form of the Kuna people of Panama and Colombia, consisting of cloth panels to be worn on clothing, featuring complex designs made with multiple layers of cloth in a reverse appliqué technique. | [noun] A sunfish, Mola mola. MOLD (7) [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. | [noun] A frame or model around or on which something is formed or shaped. | [noun] Something that is made in or shaped on a mold. | [noun] A natural substance in the form of a woolly or furry growth of tiny fungi that appears when organic material lies for a long time exposed to (usually warm and moist) air. | [noun] Loose friable soil, rich in humus and fit for planting. MOLE (6) [noun] A pigmented spot on the skin, a naevus, slightly raised, and sometimes hairy. | [noun] Any of several small, burrowing insectivores of the family Talpidae. | [noun] Any of the burrowing rodents also called mole rats. | [noun] A moll, a bitch, a slut. | [noun] A massive structure, usually of stone, used as a pier, breakwater or junction between places separated by water. | [noun] In the International System of Units, the base unit of amount of substance; the amount of substance of a system which contains as many elementary entities (atoms, ions, molecules, etc.) as there are atoms in 0.012 kg of carbon-12. Symbol: mol. The number of atoms is known as Avogadro’s number. | [noun] A hemorrhagic mass of tissue in the uterus caused by a dead ovum. | [noun] One of several spicy sauces typical of the cuisine of Mexico and neighboring Central America, especially the sauce which contains chocolate and which is used in cooking main dishes, not desserts. MOLL (6) [noun] A female companion of a gangster, especially a former or current prostitute. | [noun] A prostitute or woman with loose sexual morals. | [noun] Bitch, slut; an insulting epithet applied to a female. | [adjective] Minor; in the minor mode MOLS (6) [noun] In the International System of Units, the base unit of amount of substance; the amount of substance of a system which contains as many elementary entities (atoms, ions, molecules, etc.) as there are atoms in 0.012 kg of carbon-12. Symbol: mol. The number of atoms is known as Avogadro’s number. MOLT (6) [noun] The process of shedding or losing a covering of fur, feathers or skin etc. | [noun] The skin or feathers cast off during the process of moulting. | [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To change (or to be changed) from a solid state to a liquid state, usually by a gradual heat. MOLY (9) [noun] A magic herb or plant used by Odysseus to overcome Circe. | [noun] Any plant associated with the mythological moly, especially the European allium, Allium moly. | [noun] Molybdenum MOME (8) MOMI (8) MOMS (8) [noun] (familiar) mother. | [noun] An adult female owner of a pet. | [noun] Affectionate term of address for one's mother. MONK (10) [noun] A male member of a monastic order who has devoted his life for religious service. | [noun] In earlier usage, an eremite or hermit devoted to solitude, as opposed to a cenobite, who lived communally. | [noun] A male who leads an isolated life; a loner, a hermit. | [noun] A monkey. MONO (6) [noun] A viral infection marked by extreme fatigue, high fever, and swollen lymph nodes. | [noun] A bicycle or motorcycle trick where the front wheel is lifted off the ground while riding | [adjective] Monaural or monophonic; having only a single audio channel. | [adjective] Monochrome. | [noun] An injective homomorphism | [noun] A monogamous person. | [adjective] Monosexual. MONS (6) [noun] One of the fleshy areas at the base of the fingers; a mount. | [noun] The pubic mound or mons pubis. In human anatomy or in mammals in general, the mons pubis (Latin for "pubic mound"), also known as the mons veneris (Latin, mound of Venus) or simply the mons, is the adipose tissue lying above the pubic bone of adult females, anterior to the pubic symphysis. The mons pubis forms the anterior portion of the vulva. | [noun] A mountain or extinct volcano on a planet or a moon. MONY (9) [noun] A legally or socially binding conceptual contract of entitlement to wealth, void of intrinsic value, payable for all debts and taxes, and regulated in supply. | [noun] A generally accepted means of exchange and measure of value. | [noun] A currency maintained by a state or other entity which can guarantee its value (such as a monetary union). MOOD (7) [noun] A mental or emotional state, composure. | [noun] Emotional character (of a work of music, literature, or other art). | [noun] A sullen, gloomy or angry mental state; a bad mood. | [noun] (grammar) A verb form that depends on how its containing clause relates to the speaker’s or writer’s wish, intent, or assertion about reality. MOOL (6) MOON (6) [proper noun] The Earth's moon Luna; the sole natural satellite of the Earth, represented in astronomy and astrology by ☾. | [proper noun] The god of the Moon in Heathenry. | [proper noun] A surname. MOOR (6) [noun] An extensive waste covered with patches of heath, and having a poor, light soil, but sometimes marshy, and abounding in peat; a heath | [noun] A game preserve consisting of moorland. | [verb] To cast anchor or become fastened. MOOS (6) [noun] The characteristic lowing sound made by cattle. | [noun] A foolish woman. | [verb] Of a cow or bull, to make its characteristic lowing sound. MOOT (6) [noun] A moot court. | [noun] A system of arbitration in many areas of Africa in which the primary goal is to settle a dispute and reintegrate adversaries into society rather than assess penalties. | [noun] A gathering of Rovers, usually in the form of a camp lasting 2 weeks. | [noun] A whisper, or an insinuation, also gossip or rumors. | [noun] Vagina. | [noun] The stump of a tree; the roots and bottom end of a felled tree. MOPE (8) [noun] A dull, spiritless person. | [noun] (pornography industry) A bottom feeder who "mopes" around a pornography studio hoping for his big break and often does bit parts in exchange for room and board and meager pay. | [verb] To carry oneself in a depressed, lackadaisical manner; to give oneself up to low spirits; to pout, sulk. MOPS (8) [noun] An implement for washing floors, or the like, made of a piece of cloth, or a collection of thrums, or coarse yarn, fastened to a handle. | [noun] A wash with a mop; the act of mopping | [noun] A dense head of hair. | [noun] A pug dog. MOPY (11) MORA (6) MORE (6) [adverb] To a greater degree or extent. | [adverb] Used to form the comparative form of adjectives and adverbs. | [adverb] In negative constructions: any further, any longer; any more. | [noun] A carrot; a parsnip. | [verb] To root up. MORN (6) [noun] Morning. MORS (6) MORT (6) [noun] Death; especially, the death of game in hunting. | [noun] A note sounded on a horn at the death of a deer. | [noun] The skin of a sheep or lamb that has died of disease. | [noun] A great quantity or number. | [noun] A player in a multi-user dungeon who does not have special administrator privileges and whose character can be killed. | [noun] A three-year-old salmon. | [noun] A woman; a female. MOSK (10) MOSS (6) [noun] Any of various small, green, seedless plants growing on the ground or on the surfaces of trees, stones, etc.; now specifically, a plant of the phylum Bryophyta (formerly division Musci). | [noun] A kind or species of such plants. | [noun] Any alga, lichen, bryophyte, or other plant of seemingly simple structure. MOST (6) [noun] The greatest amount. | [noun] The greater part. | [noun] A record-setting amount. | [adverb] Almost. MOTE (6) [noun] A small particle; a speck. | [verb] May or might. | [verb] Must. | [noun] A meeting for discussion. | [noun] A tiny computer for remote sensing; a component element of smartdust. MOTH (9) [noun] A usually nocturnal insect of the order Lepidoptera, distinguished from butterflies by feather-like antennae. | [noun] Anything that gradually and silently eats, consumes, or wastes any other thing. | [verb] To hunt for moths. | [noun] The plant Vigna aconitifolia, moth bean. | [noun] A small particle; a speck. MOTS (6) [noun] A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot. | [noun] A word or a motto; a device. | [noun] A note or brief strain on a bugle. MOTT (6) [noun] (chiefly Texas) A copse or small grove of trees, especially live oak or elm. | [noun] A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot. | [noun] A word or a motto; a device. MOUE (6) [noun] A pout, especially as expressing mock-annoyance or flirtatiousness. MOVE (9) [noun] The act of moving; a movement. | [noun] An act for the attainment of an object; a step in the execution of a plan or purpose. | [noun] A formalized or practiced action used in athletics, dance, physical exercise, self-defense, hand-to-hand combat, etc. MOWN (9) [verb] To cut down grass or crops. | [verb] To cut down or slaughter in great numbers. MOWS (9) [noun] A gull, seagull. | [noun] A prison, or other place of confinement. | [noun] A hiding place; a secret store or den. MOXA (13) [noun] Dried leaves of an Asian species of mugwort, Artemisia argyi as used in moxibustion. | [noun] Any other plant used in moxibustion. MOZO (15) [noun] A male servant, especially an attendant to a bullfighter. | [noun] A title of respect for a young man (usually unmarried) with or without a name used. | [noun] An unmarried man, a boy. MUCH (11) [adjective] Large, great. | [adjective] Long in duration. | [adverb] To a great extent. MUCK (12) [noun] (slimy) mud, sludge. | [noun] Soft (or slimy) manure. | [noun] Anything filthy or vile. Dirt; something that makes another thing dirty. MUDS (7) [noun] A mixture of water and soil or fine grained sediment. | [noun] A plaster-like mixture used to texture or smooth drywall. | [noun] (construction industry slang) Wet concrete as it is being mixed, delivered and poured. MUFF (12) [noun] A piece of fur or cloth, usually with open ends, used for keeping the hands warm. | [noun] Female pubic hair; female genitals. | [noun] A blown cylinder of glass which is afterward flattened out to make a sheet. | [noun] A fool, a stupid or poor-spirited person. | [noun] A muffin. MUGG (8) MUGS (7) [noun] A large cup for hot liquids, usually having a handle and used without a saucer. | [noun] The face, often used deprecatingly. | [noun] A gullible or easily-cheated person. MULE (6) [noun] The generally sterile male or female hybrid offspring of a male donkey and a female horse. | [noun] The generally sterile hybrid offspring of any two species of animals. | [noun] A hybrid plant. | [noun] A shoe that has no fitting or strap around the heel, but which covers the foot. MULL (6) [noun] A thin, soft muslin. | [noun] Marijuana that has been chopped to prepare it for smoking. | [noun] A stew of meat, broth, milk, butter, vegetables, and seasonings, thickened with soda crackers. | [noun] A promontory. | [noun] Dirt; rubbish MUMM (10) MUMP (10) MUMS (8) [noun] Mother. | [noun] Ma'am; a term of respect for an older woman. | [noun] A chrysanthemum. MUMU (8) MUNI (6) [noun] A municipal bond. | [noun] A facility operated by a municipal government, such as a golf course or train line. | [noun] The municipal government / municipality | [noun] (often italicized) A Jain or Buddhist ascetic who has taken a vow of silence MUNS (6) MUON (6) [noun] An unstable elementary particle in the lepton family, having similar properties to the electron but with a mass 207 times greater. MURA (6) MURE (6) [noun] Wall | [noun] Husks of fruit from which the juice has been squeezed. Perhaps an old spelling of myrrh | [verb] To wall in or fortify MURK (10) [adjective] Dark, murky | [noun] Darkness, or a dark or gloomy environment. | [verb] To make murky or be murky; to cloud or obscure, or to be clouded or obscured. | [verb] To murder or seriously injure. MURR (6) MUSE (6) [noun] A source of inspiration. | [noun] A poet; a bard. | [noun] An act of musing; a period of thoughtfulness. | [noun] A gap or hole in a hedge, fence, etc. through which a wild animal is accustomed to pass; a muset. MUSH (9) [noun] A somewhat liquid mess, often of food; a soft or semisolid substance. | [noun] A mixture of noise produced by the harmonics of continuous-wave stations. | [noun] The foam of a breaker. | [noun] A food comprising cracked or rolled grains cooked in water or milk; porridge. | [noun] A walk, especially across the snow with dogs. | [noun] A magic mushroom. | [noun] (chiefly Southern England) A form of address to a man. | [verb] To notch, cut, or indent (cloth, etc.) with a stamp. MUSK (10) [noun] A greasy secretion with a powerful odour, produced in a glandular sac of the male musk deer and used in the manufacture of perfumes. | [noun] A similar secretion produced by the otter and the civet. | [noun] A synthetic organic compound used as a substitute for the above. MUSS (6) [noun] A mess (disagreeable mixture or confusion of things; disorder) | [noun] A scramble, as when small objects are thrown down, to be taken by those who can seize them; a confused struggle. | [verb] To rumple, tousle or make (something) untidy. | [noun] A term of endearment. MUST (6) [noun] Something that is mandatory or required. | [verb] (modal auxiliary, defective) To do with certainty; indicates that the speaker is certain that the subject will have executed the predicate. | [verb] (modal auxiliary, defective) To do as a requirement; indicates that the sentence subject is required as an imperative or directive to execute the sentence predicate, with failure to do so resulting in a negative consequence. | [noun] The property of being stale or musty. | [noun] A time during which male elephants exhibit increased levels of sexual activity and aggressiveness (also spelled musth). MUTE (6) [noun] A stopped consonant; a stop. | [noun] An actor who does not speak; a mime performer. | [noun] A person who does not have the power of speech. | [noun] The faeces of a hawk or falcon. | [verb] To cast off; to moult. MUTS (6) MUTT (6) [noun] A mongrel dog (or sometimes cat); an animal of mixed breed or uncertain origin. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A person of diverse ancestry. | [noun] An idiot, a stupid person. | [noun] A monastic or similar religious establishment in Hinduism and Jainism, usually more formal and hierarchical than an ashram. MYNA (9) [noun] One of the South and East Asian birds of the starling family Sturnidae. MYTH (12) [noun] A traditional story which embodies a belief regarding some fact or phenomenon of experience, and in which often the forces of nature and of the soul are personified; a sacred narrative regarding a god, a hero, the origin of the world or of a people, etc. | [noun] Such stories as a genre. | [noun] A commonly-held but false belief, a common misconception; a fictitious or imaginary person or thing; a popular conception about a real person or event which exaggerates or idealizes reality. NAME (6) [noun] Any nounal word or phrase which indicates a particular person, place, class, or thing. | [noun] Reputation. | [noun] An abusive or insulting epithet. | [verb] (ditransitive) To give a name to. | [noun] Any of several types of true yam (Dioscorea) used in Caribbean Spanish cooking. NEEM (6) [noun] Azadirachta indica, a large, mostly evergreen tree from India, whose seeds yield the insecticide azadirachtin. NEMA (6) NEUM (6) [noun] Any of a set of signs used in early musical notation. | [noun] A sequence of notes to be sung to one syllable. NIMS (6) NOMA (6) [noun] A gangrenous disease leading to tissue destruction of the face, especially the mouth and cheek. NOME (6) [noun] A prefecture or unit of regional government in Greece. | [noun] A territorial division of ancient Egypt. | [noun] A type of musical composition in Ancient Greece. | [interjection] Contraction of no ma'am | [noun] A special function with which elliptic functions and modular forms can be described. NOMS (6) [verb] To eat with noisy enjoyment. | [verb] To name someone as a candidate for a particular role or position, including that of an office. | [verb] To entitle, confer a name upon. | [verb] To eat with noisy enjoyment. NORM (6) [noun] That which is normal or typical. | [noun] A rule that is enforced by members of a community. | [noun] A sentence with non-descriptive meaning, such as a command, permission or prohibition. | [verb] To endow (a vector space, etc) with a norm. NUMB (8) [verb] To cause to become numb (physically or emotionally). | [verb] To cause (a feeling) to be less intense. | [verb] To cause (the mind, faculties, etc.) to be less acute. OGAM (7) [noun] A single character in this alphabet. OHMS (9) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of electrical resistance; the electrical resistance of a device across which a potential difference of one volt causes a current of one ampere. Symbol: Ω OMEN (6) [noun] Something which portends or is perceived to portend either a good or evil event or circumstance in the future, or which causes a foreboding; a portent or augury. | [noun] A thing of prophetic significance. | [verb] To be an omen of. OMER (6) [noun] A former small Hebrew unit of dry volume equal to about 2.3 L or 2.1 quarts. | [noun] A vessel of one omer. | [noun] The sheaf of barley offered on the second day of Passover. | [noun] The counting of the omer, that is, the period of 49 days between Passover and Shavuot. OMIT (6) [verb] To leave out or exclude. | [verb] To fail to perform. | [verb] To neglect or take no notice of. OVUM (9) [noun] The female gamete in animals; the egg cell. OXIM (13) PALM (8) [noun] Any of various evergreen trees from the family Palmae or Arecaceae, which are mainly found in the tropics. | [noun] A branch or leaf of the palm, anciently borne or worn as a symbol of victory or rejoicing. | [noun] (by extension) Triumph; victory. | [noun] The inner and somewhat concave part of the human hand that extends from the wrist to the bases of the fingers. PAMS (8) PERM (8) [noun] A permanent. | [noun] A permanent wave. | [verb] To give hair a perm, using heat, chemicals etc. | [noun] A permutation. PIMA (8) [noun] A soft form of cotton having long fibres (Gossypium barbadense) PIMP (10) [noun] Someone who solicits customers for prostitution and acts as manager for a group of prostitutes; a pander. | [noun] A man who can easily attract women. | [verb] To act as a procurer of prostitutes; to pander. | [numeral] Five in Cumbrian and Welsh sheep counting PLUM (8) [noun] The fruit and its tree. | [noun] Extended senses. | [adjective] Of a dark bluish-red colour. | [verb] To plumb. POEM (8) [noun] A literary piece written in verse. | [noun] A piece of writing in the tradition of poetry, an instance of poetry. | [noun] A piece of poetic writing, that is with an intensity or depth of expression or inspiration greater than is usual in prose. POME (8) [noun] A type of fruit in which the often edible flesh arises from the swollen base of the flower and not from the carpels. | [noun] A ball of silver or other metal, filled with hot water and used by a Roman Catholic priest in cold weather to warm his hands during the service. | [verb] To grow to a head, or form a head in growing. POMP (10) [noun] Show of magnificence; parade; display; power. | [noun] A procession distinguished by ostentation and splendor; a pageant. | [verb] To make a pompous display; to conduct. POMS (8) [noun] An Englishman, a Briton; a person of British descent. | [noun] (cocktail) An American alcoholic drink containing vodka and pomegranate juice. PRAM (8) [noun] A small vehicle, usually covered, in which a newborn baby is pushed around in a lying position; a perambulator. | [noun] A flat-bottomed barge used on shallow shores to convey cargo to and from ships that cannot enter the harbour. | [noun] A similar barge used as platform for cannons in shallow waters which seagoing warships cannot enter. PRIM (8) [verb] To make affectedly precise or proper. | [verb] To dress or act smartly. | [adjective] Prudish, straight-laced | [noun] (plants) privet PROM (8) [noun] A promenade concert | [noun] (abbreviation) promenade | [noun] A formal ball held at a high school or college on special occasions, e.g. near the end of the academic year PUMA (8) [noun] The mountain lion or cougar, Puma concolor. | [noun] A woman in her 20s or 30s who seeks relationships with younger men; a younger cougar. PUMP (10) [noun] A device for moving or compressing a liquid or gas. | [noun] An instance of the action of a pump; one stroke of a pump; any action similar to pumping | [noun] A device for dispensing liquid or gas to be sold, particularly fuel. | [noun] A type of shoe, a trainer or sneaker. RAMI (6) [noun] A small spray or twig. | [noun] A branching, as of nerves or blood vessels. | [noun] The stem of a barb of a feather, from which the barbules extend. RAMP (8) [noun] An inclined surface that connects two levels; an incline. | [noun] A road that connects a freeway to a surface street or another freeway. | [noun] A mobile staircase that is attached to the doors of an aircraft at an airport | [noun] An American plant, Allium tricoccum, related to the onion; a wild leek. RAMS (6) [noun] A male sheep, typically uncastrated | [noun] A battering ram; a heavy object used for breaking through doors. | [noun] A warship intended to sink other ships by ramming them. | [noun] A French trick-taking card game related to nap and loo. REAM (6) [noun] Cream; also, the creamlike froth on ale or other liquor; froth or foam in general. | [verb] To cream; mantle; foam; froth. | [verb] To enlarge a hole, especially using a reamer; to bore a hole wider. | [noun] A bundle, package, or quantity of paper, nowadays usually containing 500 sheets. REMS (6) RIME (6) [noun] Ice formed by the rapid freezing of cold water droplets of fog on to a cold surface. | [noun] A coating or sheet of ice so formed. | [noun] A film or slimy coating. | [verb] To compose or treat in verse; versify. | [noun] A step of a ladder; a rung. | [noun] A rent or long aperture; a chink; a fissure; a crack. RIMS (6) [noun] An edge around something, especially when circular. | [noun] A wheelrim. | [noun] A semicircular copydesk. RIMY (9) [adjective] Coated in rime. ROAM (6) [verb] To wander or travel freely and with no specific destination. | [verb] To use a network or service from different locations or devices. | [verb] To transmit (resources) between different locations or devices, to allow comparable usage from any of them. ROMP (8) [noun] Someone who romps; especially, a girl or young woman who indulges in boisterous play; a tomboy. | [noun] A period of boisterous play, a frolic; now especially, a bout of sexual activity, especially when illicit. | [noun] An enjoyable, fast-paced but essentially inconsequential film, play, or other piece of entertainment. ROMS (6) ROOM (6) [noun] Opportunity or scope (to do something). | [noun] Space for something, or to carry out an activity. | [noun] A particular portion of space. | [adjective] Wide; spacious; roomy. | [adverb] Far; at a distance; wide in space or extent. | [noun] A deep blue dye. RUMP (8) [noun] The hindquarters of a four-legged mammal, not including its legs | [noun] A cut of meat from the rump of an animal. | [noun] The buttocks. RUMS (6) [noun] A distilled spirit derived from fermented cane sugar and molasses. | [noun] A serving of rum. | [noun] A kind or brand of rum. SAME (6) [adjective] Not different or other; not another or others; not different as regards self; selfsame; identical. | [adjective] Lacking variety from; indistinguishable. | [adjective] Similar, alike. | [adverb] Together. SAMP (8) [noun] An article of food consisting of coarse ground maize, or a porridge made from it. SCAM (8) [noun] A fraudulent deal. | [noun] Something that is promoted using scams. | [verb] To defraud or embezzle. SCUM (8) [noun] A layer of impurities that accumulates at the surface of a liquid (especially molten metal or water). | [noun] A greenish water vegetation (such as algae), usually found floating on the surface of ponds | [noun] The topmost liquid layer of a cesspool or septic tank. SEAM (6) [noun] A folded-back and stitched piece of fabric; especially, the stitching that joins two or more pieces of fabric. | [noun] A suture. | [noun] A thin stratum, especially of an economically viable material such as coal or mineral. | [verb] To put together with a seam. | [noun] An old English measure of grain, containing eight bushels. | [noun] Grease; tallow; lard SEEM (6) [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. | [verb] To befit; to beseem. SEME (6) [noun] Anything which serves for any purpose as a substitute for an object of which it is, in some sense, a representation or sign. | [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. | [verb] To befit; to beseem. | [noun] A folded-back and stitched piece of fabric; especially, the stitching that joins two or more pieces of fabric. | [adjective] Sprinkled, sown, strewn: said of a field or charge when strewn with small (identical) charges. | [noun] (Japanese fiction) An active or dominant male character in a same-sex relationship; a top. SEMI (6) [noun] A semi-detached house. | [noun] A semitrailer; a tractor-trailer; an eighteen-wheeler; an artic. | [noun] A semifinal. SHAM (9) [noun] A fake; an imitation that purports to be genuine. | [noun] Trickery, hoaxing. | [noun] A false front, or removable ornamental covering. SHIM (9) [noun] A wedge. | [noun] A thin piece of material, sometimes tapered, used for alignment or support. | [noun] A small library that transparently intercepts and modifies calls to an API, usually for compatibility purposes. | [noun] A person characterised by both male and female traits, or by ambiguous male-female traits, also called a he-she; transsexual. SHMO (9) SIMA (6) [noun] The upturned edge of a roof which acts as a gutter; a cyma. | [noun] The lower layer of the earth's outer crust that underlies the sial and is rich in silica, iron, and magnesium. SIMP (8) [noun] A simple person lacking common sense; a fool or simpleton. | [verb] To melancholically reminisce; to recall once fond memories now tinged with sadness, especially regarding a former lover. | [noun] A man who foolishly overvalues and defers to a woman, putting her on a pedestal. | [adjective] Made more simple; having its complexity reduced. SIMS (6) [noun] A simulation or simulator. SKIM (10) [noun] A cursory reading, skipping the details. | [noun] Skim milk. | [noun] The act of skimming. SLAM (6) [noun] A sudden impact or blow. | [noun] The shock and noise produced by violently closing a door or other object. | [noun] A slam dunk. | [noun] A type of card game, also called ruff and honours. | [noun] A shambling fellow. SLIM (6) [noun] A type of cigarette substantially longer and thinner than normal cigarettes. | [noun] A potato farl. | [noun] AIDS, or the chronic wasting associated with its later stages. SLUM (6) [noun] A dilapidated neighborhood where many people live in a state of poverty. | [noun] Inexpensive trinkets awarded as prizes in a carnival game. | [verb] To visit a neighborhood of a status below one's own. | [noun] Slumgullion; a meat-based stew SMEW (9) [noun] A small compact diving duck, Mergus albellus, that breeds in the northern taiga of Europe and Asia and winters on sheltered coasts or inland lakes. SMIT (6) [noun] Fine clay or ochre made up into balls, used for marking sheep. | [noun] An infection. | [noun] A stain. | [verb] To hit, to strike. SMOG (7) [noun] A noxious mixture of particulates and gases that is the result of urban air pollution. | [verb] To get a smog check; to check a vehicle or have it checked for emissions. SMUG (7) [verb] To make smug, or spruce. | [verb] To seize; to confiscate. | [verb] To hush up. SMUT (6) [noun] Soot. | [noun] A flake of ash or soot. | [noun] Sexually vulgar material; something that is sexual in a dirty way; pornographic material. SOMA (6) [noun] The whole axial portion of an animal, including the head, neck, trunk, and tail. | [noun] The corporeal body, as distinguished from the psyche or soul and the pneuma or spirit. | [noun] The bulbous part of a neuron, containing the cell nucleus. | [noun] (hinduism) A ritual drink in ancient Vedic and continuing Hindu culture, obtained by pressing the Soma plant. SOME (6) [adverb] Of a measurement: approximately, roughly. | [pronoun] A certain number, at least two. | [pronoun] An indefinite quantity. STEM (6) [noun] The stock of a family; a race or generation of progenitors. | [noun] A branch of a family. | [noun] An advanced or leading position; the lookout. | [verb] To stop, hinder (for instance, a river or blood). | [noun] A gleam of light; a flame. | [noun] Acronym of science, technology, engineering, (and) mathematics. STUM (6) [noun] Unfermented grape juice; must. | [noun] Wine revived by new fermentation, resulting from the admixture of must. | [verb] To ferment. SUMO (6) [noun] A stylised Japanese form of wrestling in which a wrestler loses if he is forced from the ring, or if any part of his body except the soles of his feet touches the ground. | [noun] A rikishi (sumo wrestler) SUMP (8) [noun] A hollow or pit into which liquid drains, such as a cesspool, cesspit or sink. | [noun] The lowest part of a mineshaft into which water drains. | [noun] A completely flooded cave passage, sometimes passable by diving. SUMS (6) [noun] A type of administrative district used in China, Mongolia, and Russia. In Mongolia, a somon is smaller than a province. In China, it is only used in Inner Mongolia where it is equivalent to a township. | [noun] A quantity obtained by addition or aggregation. | [noun] (often plural) An arithmetic computation, especially one posed to a student as an exercise (not necessarily limited to addition). SWAM (9) [verb] To move through the water, without touching the bottom; to propel oneself in water by natural means. | [verb] To become immersed in, or as if in, or flooded with, or as if with, a liquid | [verb] To move around freely because of excess space. SWIM (9) [noun] An act or instance of swimming. | [noun] The sound, or air bladder, of a fish. | [noun] A part of a stream much frequented by fish. | [noun] A dizziness; swoon. | [noun] Abbreviation of someone who isn't me. used as a way to avoid self-designation or self-incrimination, especially in online drug forums SWUM (9) [verb] To move through the water, without touching the bottom; to propel oneself in water by natural means. | [verb] To become immersed in, or as if in, or flooded with, or as if with, a liquid | [verb] To move around freely because of excess space. TAME (6) [verb] To make (an animal) tame; to domesticate. | [verb] To become tame or domesticated. | [verb] To make gentle or meek. | [verb] To broach or enter upon; to taste, as a liquor; to divide; to distribute; to deal out. TAMP (8) [verb] (blasting) To plug up with clay, earth, dry sand, sod, or other material, as a hole bored in a rock. | [verb] To drive in or pack down by frequent gentle strokes | [verb] To reduce the intensity of. TAMS (6) [noun] A traditional South and East Asian unit of weight, based upon the load of a shoulder pole and varying by place and over time but usually standardized at about 60 kg. | [noun] A type of woolen hat developed in Scotland, a toorie bunnet. Originally they were worn by both genders, but now they are mostly worn by men and boys. TEAM (6) [noun] A set of draught animals, such as two horses in front of a carriage. | [noun] Any group of people involved in the same activity, especially sports or work. | [noun] A group of animals moving together, especially young ducks. TEEM (6) [verb] To be stocked to overflowing. | [verb] To be prolific; to abound; to be rife. | [verb] To bring forth young, as an animal; to produce fruit, as a plant; to bear; to be pregnant; to conceive; to multiply. | [verb] To empty. | [verb] To think fit. TEMP (8) [noun] Abbreviation of tempore. | [noun] A temporary employee, usually in an office. | [noun] A temporary storage location. TERM (6) [noun] That which limits the extent of anything; limit, extremity, bound, boundary. | [noun] A chronological limitation or restriction. | [noun] Any of the binding conditions or promises in a legal contract. | [noun] A computer program that emulates a physical terminal. | [noun] One whose employment has been terminated THEM (9) [pronoun] (plural) Those ones. | [pronoun] (singular) Him, her, or it; that one. TIME (6) [noun] The inevitable progression into the future with the passing of present and past events. | [noun] A duration of time. | [noun] An instant of time. TOMB (8) [noun] A small building (or "vault") for the remains of the dead, with walls, a roof, and (if it is to be used for more than one corpse) a door. It may be partly or wholly in the ground (except for its entrance) in a cemetery, or it may be inside a church proper or in its crypt. Single tombs may be permanently sealed; those for families (or other groups) have doors for access whenever needed. | [noun] A pit in which the dead body of a human being is deposited; a grave. | [noun] One who keeps secrets. TOME (6) [noun] One in a series of volumes. | [noun] A large or scholarly book. TOMS (6) [noun] A flat gong (without knob) that is struck with a felt-covered hammer. | [noun] The male of the domesticated cat. | [noun] The male of the turkey. TOOM (6) TRAM (6) [noun] A passenger vehicle for public use that runs on tracks in the road (called a streetcar or trolley in North America). | [noun] A similar vehicle for carrying materials. | [noun] A people mover. | [noun] A silk thread formed of two or more threads twisted together, used especially for the weft, or cross threads, of the best quality of velvets and silk goods. TRIM (6) [noun] Decoration; especially, decoration placed along edges or borders. | [noun] A haircut, especially a moderate one to touch up an existing style. | [noun] Dress; gear; ornaments. TUMP (8) [noun] A mound or hillock. | [verb] To form a mass of earth or a hillock around. | [verb] To bump, knock (usually used with "over", possibly a combination of "tip" and "dump") | [noun] A tumpline. UMBO (8) [noun] A boss, or rounded elevation, or a corresponding depression, in a palate, disk, or membrane. For example the umbo in the integument of the larvæ of echinoderms or in the tympanic membrane of the ear. | [noun] One of the lateral prominences just above the hinge of a bivalve shell. | [noun] A bump or protrusion on the top of the cap. UMPS (8) [noun] An umpire. | [verb] To act as an umpire. VAMP (11) [noun] The top part of a boot or shoe, above the sole and welt and in front of the ankle seam, that covers the instep and toes; the front part of an upper; the analogous part of a stocking. | [noun] Something added to give an old thing a new appearance. | [noun] Something patched up, pieced together, improvised, or refurbished. | [noun] A flirtatious, seductive woman, especially one who exploits men by using their sexual desire for her. | [noun] A volunteer firefighter. VIMS (9) WAME (9) WARM (9) [adjective] Having a temperature slightly higher than usual, but still pleasant; mildly hot. | [adjective] Caring and friendly, of relations to another person. | [adjective] Having a color in the red-orange-yellow part of the visible electromagnetic spectrum. | [noun] The act of warming, or the state of being warmed; a heating. WHAM (12) [noun] A forceful blow | [noun] The sound of such a blow; a thud | [verb] To strike or smash (into) something with great force or impact WHIM (12) [noun] A fanciful impulse, or whimsical idea | [noun] A large capstan or vertical drum turned by horse power or steam power, for raising ore or water, etc., from mines, or for other purposes | [verb] To be seized with a whim; to be capricious. | [noun] A bird, the Eurasian wigeon. WHOM (12) [pronoun] (interrogative) What person or people; which person or people. | [pronoun] (relative) Used to refer to a previously mentioned person or people. | [pronoun] (fused relative, archaic outside set patterns) The person(s) whom; whomever. WIMP (11) [noun] Acronym of window, icon, menu, pointer. (a graphical interface paradigm) | [noun] Acronym of window-icon-mouse program. | [noun] A hypothetical class of particle, proposed to explain the dark matter problem. WOMB (11) [noun] In female mammals, the organ in which the young are conceived and grow until birth; the uterus. | [noun] The abdomen or stomach. | [noun] The stomach of a person or creature. WORM (9) [noun] A generally tubular invertebrate of the annelid phylum; an earthworm. | [noun] More loosely, any of various tubular invertebrates resembling annelids but not closely related to them, such as velvet worms, acorn worms, flatworms, or roundworms. | [noun] A type of wingless "dragon", especially a gigantic sea serpent. YAMS (9) [noun] Any climbing vine of the genus Dioscorea in the Eastern and Western hemispheres, usually cultivated. | [noun] The edible, starchy, tuberous root of that plant, a tropical staple food. | [noun] A sweet potato; a tuber from the species Ipomoea batatas. YLEM (9) [noun] In the Big Bang theory, the hot and dense plasma which made up the cosmos at the time of recombination in an early stage of its expansion and cooling, when the first atoms formed and photons decoupled. The ylem is regarded as the source of the cosmic microwave background. ZOOM (15) [verb] To communicate with someone using the Zoom videoconferencing software. | [noun] A humming noise from something moving very fast | [noun] A quick ascent ZYME (18)

5-Letter Words (1222)

ABAMP (11) ABEAM (9) [adjective] Alongside or abreast; opposite the center of the side of the ship or aircraft. | [adverb] On the beam; at a right angle to the centerline or keel of a vessel or aircraft; being at a bearing approximately 090 Degrees or 270 Degrees relative. | [adverb] Alongside or abreast; opposite the center of the side of the ship or aircraft. ABMHO (12) ABOHM (12) ABOMA (9) ABYSM (12) [noun] Hell; the infernal pit; the great deep; the primal chaos. | [noun] An abyss; a gulf, a chasm, a very deep hole. ACMES (9) [noun] The top or highest point; pinnacle; culmination. | [noun] The crisis or height of a disease. | [noun] Mature age; full bloom of life. ACMIC (11) ADEEM (8) [verb] To revoke or take away a bequest or gift in a will, typically because the item no longer exists or has been disposed of by the testator. ADMAN (8) [noun] A person in the business of devising, writing, illustrating or selling advertisements. ADMEN (8) [noun] A person in the business of devising, writing, illustrating or selling advertisements. ADMIT (8) [verb] To allow to enter; to grant entrance (to), whether into a place, into the mind, or into consideration | [verb] To allow (someone) to enter a profession or to enjoy a privilege; to recognize as qualified for a franchise. | [verb] To concede as true; to acknowledge or assent to, as an allegation which it is impossible to deny ADMIX (15) [noun] The act of admixing. | [noun] The mixture that results from admixing, especially an alloy. | [verb] To mingle with something else; to mix. AGAMA (8) [noun] Any of the various small, long-tailed lizards of the subfamily Agaminae of family Agamidae, especially in genera Acanthocercus, Agama, Dendragama, Laudakia, Phrynocephalus, Trapelus and Xenagama. AGISM (8) [noun] The treating of a person or people, especially youth or seniors, differently from others based on assumptions or stereotypes relating to their age. AGMAS (8) [noun] The nasalized velar consonant found in such words as song or wink. | [noun] The symbol ŋ, used to represent that nasal velar consonant in IPA; eng. AIMED (8) [verb] To point or direct a missile, or a weapon which propels as missile, towards an object or spot with the intent of hitting it | [verb] To direct the intention or purpose; to attempt the accomplishment of a purpose; to try to gain; to endeavor;—followed by at, or by an infinitive | [verb] To direct or point (e.g. a weapon), at a particular object; to direct, as a missile, an act, or a proceeding, at, to, or against an object AIMER (7) [noun] One who aims; a person who takes aim. | [verb] Third person singular present of "aim" (archaic/dialectal form). ALAMO (7) ALARM (7) [noun] A summons to arms, as on the approach of an enemy. | [noun] Any sound or information intended to give notice of approaching danger; a warning sound to arouse attention; a warning of danger. | [noun] A sudden attack; disturbance. ALBUM (9) [noun] A book specially designed to keep photographs, stamps, or autographs. | [noun] A collection, especially of literary items | [noun] A phonograph record that is composed of several tracks ALGUM (8) ALMAH (10) ALMAS (7) ALMEH (10) ALMES (7) ALMUD (8) ALMUG (8) ALUMS (7) [noun] An astringent salt, usually occurring in the form of pale crystals, much used in the dyeing and tanning trade and in certain medicines, and now understood to be a double sulphate of potassium and aluminium (K2SO4·Al2(SO4)3·24H2O). | [noun] Any similar double sulphate in which either or both of the potassium and aluminium is wholly or partly replaced by other univalent or tervalent cations. | [noun] (shortening) A past attendee or graduate (of either gender) of a college, university or other educational institution. AMAHS (10) [noun] In South Asia, a woman employed to look after children; (formerly) a wet nurse. | [noun] In China and Southeast Asia, a female domestic helper. AMAIN (7) AMASS (7) [noun] A large number of things collected or piled together. | [noun] The act of amassing. | [verb] To collect into a mass or heap. AMAZE (16) [noun] Amazement, astonishment. | [verb] To fill with wonder and surprise; to astonish, astound, surprise or perplex. | [verb] To undergo amazement; to be astounded. AMBER (9) [noun] Ambergris, the waxy product of the sperm whale. | [noun] A hard, generally yellow to brown translucent fossil resin, used for jewellery. One variety, blue amber, appears blue rather than yellow under direct sunlight. | [noun] A yellow-orange colour. AMBIT (9) [noun] The sphere or area of control and influence of something. | [noun] A circuit, or a boundary around a property. | [noun] The extent of actions, thoughts, or the meaning of words, etc. AMBLE (9) [noun] An unhurried leisurely walk or stroll. | [noun] An easy gait, especially that of a horse. | [verb] To stroll or walk slowly and leisurely. AMBOS (9) [noun] A raised platform in an early Christian church, as well as in the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, and Eastern Catholic churches. | [noun] A stationary podium used for readings and homilies. | [noun] An ambulance driver. AMBRY (12) [noun] A bookcase; a library or archive. | [noun] A storehouse, especially a niche or recess in a wall used for storage. | [noun] A pantry, or place to store food. AMEBA (9) [noun] A member of the genus Amoeba of unicellular protozoa that moves by means of temporary projections called pseudopodia. | [noun] The graph of the real part of the logarithms of a polynomial equation in complex numbers. | [noun] An asexual. AMEER (7) AMEND (8) [noun] (usually in the plural) An act of righting a wrong; compensation. | [verb] To make better; improve. | [verb] To become better. AMENS (7) [noun] An instance of saying ‘amen’. | [noun] A title of Christ; the Faithful One (especially with reference to Revelation 3:14) | [verb] To say amen. AMENT (7) [noun] A catkin or amentum. | [noun] A congenital idiot. AMIAS (7) AMICE (9) [noun] A hood, or cape with a hood, made of or lined with grey fur, formerly worn by the clergy. AMICI (9) [noun] Someone not a party to a case who submits a brief and/or presents oral argument in that case. AMIDE (8) [noun] Any derivative of an oxoacid in which the hydroxyl group has been replaced with an amino or substituted amino group; especially such derivatives of a carboxylic acid, the carboxamides or acid amides | [noun] Any ionic derivative of ammonia in which a hydrogen atom has been replaced with a metal cation (R-NH- or R2N-) AMIDO (8) AMIDS (8) [preposition] In the middle of; surrounded by. | [preposition] During the course of. AMIES (7) [noun] Plural of amie, a female friend (from French). AMIGA (8) [noun] A female friend or female companion, particularly used in Spanish-speaking contexts but adopted into English informal usage. AMIGO (8) [noun] Friend | [noun] (chiefly California) Mexican | [noun] A native of the Philippines who was friendly toward the Spanish. AMINE (7) [noun] A functional group formally derived from ammonia by replacing one, two or three hydrogen atoms with hydrocarbon or other radicals. | [noun] Any organic compound containing an amine functional group. AMINO (7) [noun] The amine functional group. | [adjective] Relating to an amine. AMINS (7) [noun] Plural of amin, a type of organic compound containing nitrogen. | [noun] Plural of amin, an informal term for amphetamine. AMIRS (7) [noun] A prince, commander or other leader or ruler in an Islamic nation. | [noun] A descendant of the prophet Muhammad. AMISS (7) [noun] Fault; wrong; an evil act, a bad deed. | [adjective] Wrong; faulty; out of order; improper or otherwise incorrect. | [adverb] Wrongly. AMITY (10) [noun] Friendship. The cooperative and supportive relationship between people, or animals. In this sense, the term connotes a relationship which involves mutual knowledge, esteem, affection, and respect along with a degree of rendering service to friends in times of need or crisis. | [noun] Mutual understanding and a peaceful relationship, especially between nations; peace; accord. AMMOS (9) [noun] Plural of ammo, informal short form for ammunition. | [noun] Plural of ammos, a type of sandal worn in ancient Greece. AMNIA (7) [noun] The innermost membrane of the fetal membranes of reptiles, birds, and mammals; the sac in which the embryo is suspended. AMNIC (9) AMOKS (11) [noun] Plural of amok, a state of murderous frenzy. | [verb] Third person singular of amok, to run amok or behave wildly. AMOLE (7) [noun] Any of various parts of the Agave (or similar) plants, when used as soap | [noun] Other Mexican and North American plants used as soap AMONG (8) [preposition] Denotes a mingling or intermixing with distinct or separable objects. (See Usage Note at amidst.) | [preposition] Denotes a belonging of a person or a thing to a group. | [preposition] Denotes a sharing of a common feature in a group. AMORT (7) [adjective] Lifeless, spiritless, or dull in appearance or manner. AMOUR (7) [noun] Love, affection. | [noun] Courtship; flirtation. | [noun] A love affair. AMPLE (9) [adjective] Large; great in size, extent, capacity, or bulk; for example spacious, roomy or widely extended. | [adjective] Fully sufficient; abundant; plenty | [adjective] Not contracted or brief; not concise; extended; diffusive AMPLY (12) [adverb] In an ample manner. AMPUL (9) [noun] A small hermetically sealed vial, often used to contain a sterile solution suitable for injection. | [noun] An Ancient Roman two-handled vessel. | [noun] A vessel for containing consecrated wine or oil. AMUCK (13) [adverb] In a violently raging manner; in a state of frenzied attack or behavior. | [noun] A state of violent frenzy. AMUSE (7) [verb] To entertain or occupy in a pleasant manner; to stir with pleasing emotions. | [verb] To cause laughter or amusement; to be funny. | [verb] To keep in expectation; to beguile; to delude. AMYLS (10) [noun] Plural of amyl, a univalent radical derived from pentane, commonly used in chemistry and organic compounds. ANIMA (7) [noun] The soul or animating principle of a living thing, especially as contrasted with the animus. | [noun] (Jungian psychology) The inner self (not the external persona) of a person that is in touch with the unconscious as opposed to the persona. | [noun] (Jungian psychology) The unconscious feminine aspect of a person. ANIME (7) [noun] An artistic style originating in, and associated with, Japanese animation, and that has also been adopted by a comparatively low number of animated works from other countries. | [noun] An animated work that originated in Japan, regardless of the artistic style. | [noun] An animated work, regardless of the country of origin. | [noun] The resin of the courbaril (Hymenaea courbaril), used in varnishes. ANIMI (7) [noun] Plural of animus; the rational mind or soul in philosophy, or a strong feeling of hostility or ill will. ANOMY (10) [noun] Alienation or social instability caused by erosion of standards and values. ARMED (8) [verb] To take by the arm; to take up in one's arms. | [verb] To supply with armour or (later especially) weapons. | [verb] To prepare a tool or a weapon for action; to activate. | [adjective] (chiefly in combination) Having an arm or arms, often of a specified number or type. ARMER (7) [noun] One who arms or equips with weapons. | [noun] A person who makes or sells arms/weapons. ARMET (7) [noun] A close-fitting helmet with a visor and beaver, used in the 15th and 16th centuries. ARMOR (7) [noun] A protective layer over a body, vehicle, or other object intended to deflect or diffuse damaging forces. | [noun] A natural form of this kind of protection on an animal's body. | [noun] Metal plate, protecting a ship, military vehicle, or aircraft. AROMA (7) [noun] A smell; especially a pleasant spicy or fragrant one. ARUMS (7) [noun] A flower or plant in the genus Arum ATMAN (7) [noun] (Vedanta) The true self of an individual beyond identification with worldly phenomena, the essence of an individual, an infinitesimal part of Brahman. ATMAS (7) [noun] Plural of atma, the individual soul or self in Hindu and yogic philosophy. ATOMS (7) [noun] The smallest possible amount of matter which still retains its identity as a chemical element, now known to consist of a nucleus surrounded by electrons. | [noun] (history of science) A hypothetical particle posited by Greek philosophers as an ultimate and indivisible component of matter. | [noun] The smallest, indivisible constituent part or unit of something. ATOMY (10) [noun] A floating mote or speck of dust. | [noun] An indivisible particle. | [noun] A tiny being; a very small person. | [noun] A skeleton. | [adjective] Resembling a tiny particle; made up of tiny particles. AURUM (7) [noun] The Latin name for the element gold, atomic number 79. AXIOM (14) [noun] A seemingly self-evident or necessary truth which is based on assumption; a principle or proposition which cannot actually be proved or disproved. | [noun] (proof theory) A fundamental assumption that serves as a basis for deduction of theorems; a postulate (sometimes distinguished from postulates as being universally applicable, whereas postulates are particular to a certain science or context). | [noun] An established principle in some artistic practice or science that is universally received. AXMAN (14) [noun] A man who wields an axe. | [noun] A musician who plays a guitar or saxophone. AXMEN (14) [noun] A man who wields an axe. | [noun] A musician who plays a guitar or saxophone. BALMS (9) [noun] Any of various aromatic resins exuded from certain plants, especially trees of the genus Commiphora of Africa, Arabia and India and Myroxylon of South America. | [noun] A plant or tree yielding such substance. | [noun] Any soothing oil or lotion, especially an aromatic one. BALMY (12) [adjective] Producing balm. | [adjective] Soothing or fragrant. | [adjective] Mild and pleasant. BARMS (9) [noun] The froth or foam that rises on fermenting beer or other liquids. | [noun] Plural of barm, a fungus used in baking and brewing. BARMY (12) [adjective] Odd, strange, or crazy. | [adjective] Containing barm, i.e. froth from fermented yeast. BEAMS (9) [noun] Any large piece of timber or iron long in proportion to its thickness, and prepared for use. | [noun] One of the principal horizontal timbers of a building; one of the transverse members of a ship's frame on which the decks are laid — supported at the sides by knees in wooden ships and by stringers in steel ones. | [noun] The maximum width of a vessel (note that a vessel with a beam of 15 foot can also be said to be 15 foot abeam) BEAMY (12) [adjective] Resembling a beam in size and weight; massy. | [adjective] Having horns or antlers. | [adjective] Having much beam or breadth; wide. BEDIM (10) [verb] To make dim; to obscure or darken. BEGUM (10) [verb] To daub or cover with gum. | [noun] A high-ranking Muslim woman, especially in India and Pakistan | [noun] The form of address for such a woman BEMAS (9) [noun] A platform from which speakers addressed an assembly. | [noun] Raised area of worship in a synagogue upon which rests the Holy Ark containing Scrolls of Torah. BEMIX (16) BERME (9) BERMS (9) [noun] A narrow ledge or shelf, as along the top or bottom of a slope | [noun] A raised bank or path, especially the bank of a canal opposite the towpath | [noun] A terrace formed by wave action along a beach BESOM (9) [noun] A broom made from a bundle of twigs tied onto a shaft. | [noun] A troublesome woman. | [noun] Any cleansing or purifying agent. BIMAH (12) [noun] The raised platform in the front of a synagogue where the Torah is read on a podium. BIMAS (9) [noun] The raised platform in the front of a synagogue where the Torah is read on a podium. BIMBO (11) [noun] A physically attractive woman who lacks intelligence. | [noun] A stupid or foolish person. BIOME (9) [noun] Any major regional biological community such as that of forest or desert | [noun] All the genomes of such a community BLAME (9) [noun] Censure. | [noun] Culpability for something negative or undesirable. | [noun] Responsibility for something meriting censure. | [verb] To censure (someone or something); to criticize. BLAMS (9) [noun] Plural of blam, an onomatopoeia representing a loud explosive sound. | [verb] Third person singular of blam, meaning to make a loud explosive sound or to strike forcefully. BLIMP (11) [noun] An airship constructed with a non-rigid lifting agent container. | [noun] (by extension) Any large airborne inflatable. | [noun] An obese person. BLIMY (12) BLOOM (9) [noun] A blossom; the flower of a plant; an expanded bud. | [noun] Flowers, collectively. | [noun] The opening of flowers in general; the state of blossoming or of having the flowers open. | [verb] To cause to blossom; to make flourish. | [noun] The spongy mass of metal formed in a furnace by the smelting process. BLUME (9) BOMBE (11) [noun] A dessert made from ice cream frozen in a (generally spherical or hemispherical) mold. | [noun] (chiefly in German cooking) A small, cylindrical or spherical chocolate-covered confection. (Compare truffle.) | [noun] An electromechanical device used in early cryptanalysis. BOMBS (11) [noun] An explosive device used or intended as a weapon. | [noun] A failure; an unpopular commercial product. | [noun] A large amount of money. BOOMS (9) [noun] A low-pitched, resonant sound, such as of an explosion. | [noun] A rapid expansion or increase. | [noun] One of the calls of certain monkeys or birds. BOOMY (12) [adjective] Characterized by heavy bass sounds. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a financial boom, resources boom, baby boom, etc. BOSOM (9) [noun] (somewhat obsolete) The breast or chest of a human (or sometimes of another animal). | [noun] The seat of one's inner thoughts, feelings etc.; one's secret feelings; desire. | [noun] The protected interior or inner part of something; the area enclosed as by an embrace. BREAM (9) [noun] A European fresh-water cyprinoid fish of the genus Abramis, little valued as food. Several species are known. | [noun] A species in that genus, Abramis brama. | [noun] An American fresh-water fish, of various species of Lepomis and allied genera, which are also called sunfishes and pondfishes. | [verb] To clean (e.g. a ship's bottom of clinging shells, seaweed, etc.) by the application of fire and scraping. BRIMS (9) [noun] The sea; ocean; water; flood. | [noun] An edge or border (originally specifically of the sea or a body of water). | [noun] The topmost rim or lip of a container. BROME (9) [noun] Any grass of the genus Bromus. | [noun] Bromine BROMO (9) [noun] A dose of a proprietary sedative containing bromide (a bromo-seltzer) BROOM (9) [noun] A domestic utensil with fibers bound together at the end of a long handle, used for sweeping. | [noun] An implement with which players sweep the ice to make a stone travel further and curl less; a sweeper. | [noun] Any of several yellow-flowered shrubs of the family Fabaceae, in the tribe Genisteae, including genera Cytisus, Genista, and Spartium, with long, thin branches and small or few leaves. | [verb] To clean (e.g. a ship's bottom of clinging shells, seaweed, etc.) by the application of fire and scraping. BRUME (9) [noun] Mist, fog, vapour. BUMFS (12) [noun] Plural of bumf; useless printed material or documents. | [noun] Toilet paper or similar material. BUMPH (14) [noun] Toilet paper. | [noun] Useless papers; now especially official documents, standardized forms, sales and marketing print material, etc. BUMPS (11) [noun] A light blow or jolting collision. | [noun] The sound of such a collision. | [noun] A protuberance on a level surface. BUMPY (14) [adjective] Rough; jumpy; causing or characterized by jolts and irregular movements | [adjective] Covered with or full of bumps BUXOM (16) [adjective] Pliant, obedient, tractable (to) (i.e. easily moved or bent, morally). | [adjective] Submissive, humble, meek (as subsense of 4). | [adjective] Gracious, indulgent, favourable; obliging, amiable, courteous, affable, kindly (as subsense of 1). CALMS (9) [noun] (in a person) The state of being calm; peacefulness; absence of worry, anger, fear or other strong negative emotion. | [noun] (in a place or situation) The state of being calm; absence of noise and disturbance. | [noun] A period of time without wind. CAMAS (9) [noun] Any of the North American flowering plants of the genus Camassia. | [noun] A hybrid animal produced by breeding a camel and a llama. CAMEL (9) [noun] A beast of burden, much used in desert areas, of the genus Camelus. | [noun] A light brownish color, like that of a camel (also called camel brown). | [noun] Loaded vessels lashed tightly, one on each side of another vessel, and then emptied to reduce the draught of the ship in the middle. | [noun] A ruminant, of the genus Giraffa, of the African savannah with long legs and highly elongated neck, which make it the tallest living animal; yellow fur patterned with dark spots, often in the form of a network; and two or more short, skin-covered horns, so-called; strictly speaking the horn-like projections are ossicones. CAMEO (9) [noun] A piece of jewelry, etc., carved in relief. | [noun] A single very brief appearance, especially by a prominent celebrity in a movie or song. | [verb] To appear in a cameo role. CAMES (9) [noun] A grooved strip of lead used to hold panes of glass together. CAMPI (11) [noun] Plural of campus, referring to multiple college or university grounds. CAMPO (11) [noun] A police officer assigned to a university campus. | [noun] A field or plain in a Spanish- or Portuguese-speaking area. CAMPS (11) [noun] An outdoor place acting as temporary accommodation in tents or other temporary structures. | [noun] An organised event, often taking place in tents or temporary accommodation. | [noun] A base of a military group, not necessarily temporary. CAMPY (14) [adjective] Characterized by camp or kitsch, especially when deliberate or intentional. CAROM (9) [noun] (cue sports, especially billiards) A shot in which the ball struck with the cue comes in contact with two or more balls on the table; a hitting of two or more balls with the player's ball. | [noun] A billiard-like Indian game in which players take turns flicking checker-like pieces into one of four goals on the corners of a (one meter by one meter square) board. | [verb] To make a carom (shot in billiards). | [noun] (spices) ajwain CECUM (11) [noun] A blind pouch connected to the large intestine between the ileum and the colon. CELOM (9) [noun] A fluid-filled cavity within the body of an animal. The digestive system is suspended within the cavity, which is lined by a tissue called the peritoneum. CHAMP (14) [noun] Buddy, sport, mate (as a term of address) | [noun] An ongoing winner in a game or contest. | [noun] Someone who is chosen to represent a group of people in a contest. | [noun] A meal of mashed potatoes and scallions | [noun] Champagne | [noun] (obsolete or rare) the field or ground on which carving appears in relief CHAMS (12) [noun] An autocrat or dominant critic, especially Samuel Johnson. | [noun] A ruler over various Turkish, Tatar and Mongol peoples in the Middle Ages. | [noun] An Ottoman sultan. CHARM (12) [noun] An object, act or words believed to have magic power (usually carries a positive connotation). | [noun] The ability to persuade, delight or arouse admiration; often constructed in the plural. | [noun] A small trinket on a bracelet or chain, etc., traditionally supposed to confer luck upon the wearer. | [noun] The mixed sound of many voices, especially of birds or children. CHASM (12) [noun] A deep, steep-sided rift, gap or fissure; a gorge or abyss. | [noun] (by extension) A large difference of opinion. CHEMO (12) [noun] Any chemical treatment intended to be therapeutic with respect to a disease state. | [noun] (most common usage) chemical treatment to kill or halt the replication and/or spread of cancerous cells in a patient. CHIMB (14) [noun] The top of a ridge. | [noun] The spine of an animal. | [noun] A piece of the backbone of an animal, with the adjoining parts, cut for cooking. CHIME (12) [noun] A musical instrument producing a sound when struck, similar to a bell (e.g. a tubular metal bar) or actually a bell. Often used in the plural to refer to the set: the chimes. | [noun] An individual ringing component of such a set. | [noun] A small bell or other ringing or tone-making device as a component of some other device. | [noun] The top of a ridge. CHIMP (14) [verb] To review each image on a digital camera after it is taken. | [verb] To get very excited when showing images on a digital camera. | [noun] A species of great ape in the genus Pan, native to Africa, and believed by biologists to be the closest extant relative to humans. CHIRM (12) [noun] A din or confused noise, as of many voices, birdsong, etc. | [verb] To chirp or to make a mournful cry, as a bird does. CHOMP (14) [noun] The act of chomping (see below) | [verb] To bite or chew loudly or heavily. | [verb] (Perl) To remove the final character from (a text string) if it is a newline (or, less commonly, some other programmer-specified character). CHUMP (14) [verb] To bite or chew loudly or heavily. | [verb] (Perl) To remove the final character from (a text string) if it is a newline (or, less commonly, some other programmer-specified character). | [noun] An incompetent person, a blockhead; a loser. CHUMS (12) [noun] A friend; a pal. | [noun] A roommate, especially in a college or university. | [verb] To share rooms with someone; to live together. CHYME (15) [noun] The thick semifluid mass of partly digested food that is passed from the stomach to the duodenum. CIMEX (16) [noun] A genus of parasitic insects that includes bedbugs, characterized by flat bodies and piercing mouthparts used to feed on blood. CLAIM (9) [noun] A demand of ownership made for something. | [noun] The thing claimed. | [noun] The right or ground of demanding. CLAMP (11) [noun] A brace, band, or clasp for strengthening or holding things together. | [noun] An instrument used to temporarily shut off blood vessels, etc. | [noun] A parking enforcement device used to immobilise a car until it can be towed or a fine is paid; a wheel clamp. | [noun] A heavy footstep; a tramp. CLAMS (9) [noun] Acronym of Clip-on Load Adjusting Mechanism. A device that can be fitted onto an oar to adjust set. | [noun] A bivalve mollusk of many kinds, especially those that are edible; for example the soft-shell clam (Mya arenaria), the hard clam (Mercenaria mercenaria), the sea clam or hen clam (Spisula solidissima), and other species. The name is said to have been given originally to the Tridacna gigas, a huge East Indian bivalve. | [noun] Strong pincers or forceps. CLIMB (11) [noun] An act of climbing. | [noun] The act of getting to somewhere more elevated. | [noun] An upwards struggle CLIME (9) [noun] A particular region defined by its weather or climate. | [noun] Climate. CLOMB (11) [verb] To ascend; rise; to go up. | [verb] To mount; to move upwards on. | [verb] To scale; to get to the top of something. CLOMP (11) [noun] The sound of feet hitting the ground loudly. | [verb] To walk heavily or clumsily, as with clogs. | [verb] To make some object hit something, thereby producing a clomping sound. CLUMP (11) [noun] A cluster or lump; an unshaped piece or mass. | [noun] A thick group or bunch, especially of bushes or hair. | [noun] A dull thud. COMAE (9) [noun] A cloud of dust surrounding the nucleus of a comet. | [noun] A defect characterized by diffuse, pear-shaped images that in an ideal image would appear as points. | [noun] A tuft or bunch, such as the assemblage of branches forming the head of a tree, a cluster of bracts when empty and terminating the inflorescence of a plant, or a tuft of long hairs on certain seeds. COMAL (9) [noun] A thin, griddle-like pan used in Mexican cooking for making tortillas and roasting foods. COMAS (9) [noun] A state of unconsciousness from which one may not wake up, usually induced by some form of trauma. COMBE (11) [noun] A valley, often wooded and often with no river | [noun] A cirque. COMBO (11) [noun] A small musical group. | [noun] A combination. | [noun] An action composed of a sequence of simpler actions, especially a composite attacking move in a fighting game. COMBS (11) [noun] A toothed implement for grooming the hair or (formerly) for keeping it in place. | [noun] A machine used in separating choice cotton fibers from worsted cloth fibers. | [noun] A fleshy growth on the top of the head of some birds and reptiles; crest. COMER (9) [noun] One in a race who is catching up to others and shows promise of winning. | [noun] One who is catching up in some contest and has a likelihood of victory. | [noun] One who arrives. COMES (9) [verb] To move from further away to nearer to. | [verb] To arrive. | [verb] To appear, to manifest itself. | [noun] The answer to the theme, or dux, in a fugue. COMET (9) [noun] A celestial body consisting mainly of ice, dust and gas in a (usually very eccentric) orbit around the Sun and having a "tail" of matter blown back from it by the solar wind as it approaches the Sun. | [noun] A celestial phenomenon with the appearance given by the orbiting celestial body. | [noun] Any of several species of hummingbird found in the Andes. COMFY (15) [adjective] Comfortable. COMIC (11) [noun] A comedian. | [noun] A story composed of cartoon images arranged in sequence, usually with textual captions; a graphic novel. | [noun] A children's newspaper. COMIX (16) [noun] A plural form of "comic," referring to comic books or comic strips, often used as an alternative spelling emphasizing the artistic medium. COMMA (11) [noun] The punctuation mark ⟨,⟩ used to indicate a set off parts of a sentence or between elements of a list. | [noun] A similar-looking subscript diacritical mark. | [noun] Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the genus Polygonia, having a comma-shaped white mark on the underwings, especially Polygonia c-album and Polygonia c-aureum of North Africa, Europe, and Asia. COMMY (14) COMPO (11) [noun] The act or principle of compensating. | [noun] Something which is regarded as an equivalent; something which compensates for loss. | [noun] The extinction of debts of which two persons are reciprocally debtors by the credits of which they are reciprocally creditors; the payment of a debt by a credit of equal amount. COMPS (11) [noun] Clipping of comprehensive layout, a graphic design showing final proposed layout of text and images. | [noun] Clipping of comprehensive examination. | [noun] Clipping of complimentary ticket or item. COMPT (11) COMTE (9) [noun] A French nobleman or count. COOMB (11) [noun] An old English measure of corn (e.g., wheat), equal to half a quarter or 4 bushels. | [noun] A valley, often wooded and often with no river | [noun] A cirque. CORMS (9) [noun] A short, vertical, swollen underground stem of a plant (usually one of the monocots) that serves as a storage organ to enable the plant to survive winter or other adverse conditions such as drought. CRAMP (11) [noun] A painful contraction of a muscle which cannot be controlled. | [noun] That which confines or contracts; a restraint; a shackle; a hindrance. | [noun] A clamp for carpentry or masonry. CRAMS (9) [noun] The act of cramming (forcing or stuffing something). | [noun] Information hastily memorized. | [noun] A warp having more than two threads passing through each dent or split of the reed. CREAM (9) [noun] The butterfat/milkfat part of milk which rises to the top; this part when separated from the remainder. | [noun] A yellowish white colour; the colour of cream. | [noun] Frosting, custard, creamer or another substance similar to the oily part of milk or to whipped cream. CREME (9) [noun] A very sugary, fluffy white cream derivative. | [noun] Cream CRIME (9) [noun] A specific act committed in violation of the law. | [noun] Any great sin or wickedness; iniquity. | [noun] That which occasions crime. CRIMP (11) [noun] A fastener or a fastening method that secures parts by bending metal around a joint and squeezing it together, often with a tool that adds indentations to capture the parts. | [noun] The natural curliness of wool fibres. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Hair that is shaped so it bends back and forth in many short kinks. | [noun] An agent who procures seamen, soldier, etc., especially by decoying, entrapping, impressing, or seducing them. CRUMB (11) [noun] A small piece which breaks off from baked food (such as cake, biscuit or bread). | [noun] A small piece of other material, such as rubber. | [noun] A bit, small amount. CRUMP (11) [noun] The sound of a muffled explosion. | [verb] To produce such a sound. | [verb] For one's health to decline rapidly (but not as rapidly as crash). | [adjective] Hard or crusty; dry baked | [adjective] Crooked; bent. CULMS (9) [noun] Waste coal, used as a poor quality fuel; slack. | [noun] Anthracite, especially when found in small masses | [noun] The stem of a plant, especially of grass or sedge CUMIN (9) [noun] The flowering plant Cuminum cyminum, in the family Apiaceae. | [noun] Its aromatic long seed, used as a spice, notably in Indian, Middle Eastern, and Mexican cookery. CYMAE (12) [noun] A moulding of the cornice, wavelike in form, whose outline consists of a concave and a convex line; an ogee. | [noun] A cyme. CYMAR (12) CYMAS (12) [noun] A moulding of the cornice, wavelike in form, whose outline consists of a concave and a convex line; an ogee. | [noun] A cyme. CYMES (12) [noun] (spelt cime) A “head” (of unexpanded leaves, etc.); an opening bud. | [noun] A flattish or convex flower cluster, of the centrifugal or determinate type, on which each axis terminates with a flower which blooms before the flowers below it. Contrast raceme. | [noun] = cyma CYMOL (12) DAMAN (8) DAMAR (8) [noun] A large tree of the order Coniferae, indigenous to the East Indies and Australasia, now genus Agathis. | [noun] A clear to yellow resin, obtained in Malaya from trees of the genera Shorea (Dipterocarpaceae family) and Symplocos (Symplocaceae family), used in varnishes and inks | [noun] Any of various hard resins, obtained especially from evergreen trees, notably of the genera Agathis (Araucariaceae family) and Hopea (Dipterocarpaceae family), native to southeast Asia, also used in varnishes and lacquers. DAMES (8) [noun] Usually capitalized as Dame: a title equivalent to Sir for a female knight. | [noun] A matron at a school, especially Eton College. | [noun] In traditional pantomime: a melodramatic female often played by a man in drag. DAMNS (8) [noun] The use of "damn" as a curse. | [noun] A small, negligible quantity, being of little value; a whit or jot. | [noun] The smallest amount of concern or consideration. DAMPS (10) [noun] Moisture; humidity; dampness. | [noun] Fog; fogginess; vapor. | [noun] Dejection or depression; something that spoils a positive emotion (such as enjoyment, satisfaction, expectation or courage) or a desired activity. DATUM (8) [noun] (plural: data) A measurement of something on a scale understood by both the recorder (a person or device) and the reader (another person or device). The scale is arbitrarily defined, such as from 1 to 10 by ones, 1 to 100 by 0.1, or simply true or false, on or off, yes, no, or maybe, etc. | [noun] (plural: data) A fact known from direct observation. | [noun] (plural: data) A premise from which conclusions are drawn. DEEMS (8) [noun] An opinion, a judgment, a surmise. | [verb] To judge, to pass judgment on; to doom, to sentence. | [verb] To adjudge, to decree. DEGUM (9) DEISM (8) [noun] A philosophical belief in the existence of a god (or goddess) knowable through human reason; especially, a belief in a creator god unaccompanied by any belief in supernatural phenomena or specific religious doctrines. | [noun] Belief in a god who ceased to intervene with existence after acting as the cause of the cosmos. DEMES (8) [noun] A township or other subdivision of ancient Attica. | [noun] A distinct local population of plants or animals. DEMIT (8) [noun] The act of demitting. | [noun] A document certifying that a person has (honourably) demitted, as from a Masonic lodge. | [verb] To let fall; to depress; to yield. DEMOB (10) [noun] Demobilization; release from military service. | [verb] To demobilize; to release someone from military service. DEMON (8) [noun] An evil supernatural spirit. | [noun] A neutral supernatural spirit. | [noun] Someone with great strength, passion or skill for a particular activity, pursuit etc.; an enthusiast. DEMOS (8) [noun] A demonstration or visual explanation. | [noun] A recording of a song meant to demonstrate its overall sound for the purpose of getting it published or recorded more fully. | [noun] An example of a product used for demonstration and then sold at a discount. DEMUR (8) [noun] Stop; pause; hesitation as to proceeding; suspense of decision or action; scruple. | [verb] To linger; to stay; to tarry | [verb] To delay; to pause; to suspend proceedings or judgment in view of a doubt or difficulty; to hesitate; to put off the determination or conclusion of an affair. DENIM (8) [noun] A textile often made of cotton with a distinct diagonal pattern. DERMA (8) [noun] The inner layer of the skin; the dermis | [noun] A Jewish dish of roast or boiled seasoned meat and flour etc. in a casing, especially kishke DERMS (8) DIMER (8) [noun] A molecule consisting of two identical halves, formed by joining two identical molecules, sometimes with a single atom acting as a bridge. DIMES (8) [noun] A coin worth one-tenth of a U.S. dollar. | [noun] A coin worth one-tenth of a Canadian dollar. | [noun] A small amount of money DIMLY (11) [adverb] In a dim manner. DISME (8) DOGMA (9) [noun] An authoritative principle, belief or statement of opinion, especially one considered to be absolutely true and indisputable, regardless of evidence or without evidence to support it. | [noun] A doctrine (or set of doctrines) relating to matters such as morality and faith, set forth authoritatively by a religious organization or leader. DOLMA (8) [noun] Any of a family of stuffed vegetable dishes. The filling generally consists of rice, minced meat or grains, together with onion, herbs and spices. DOMAL (8) [adjective] Of or relating to a dome. | [adjective] In the shape of a dome. | [adjective] Of or relating to an astrological house. DOMED (9) [adjective] In the form of a dome. DOMES (8) [noun] A structural element resembling the hollow upper half of a sphere; a cupola | [noun] Anything shaped like an upset bowl, often used as a cover | [noun] Head (uppermost part of one's body) DOMIC (10) DOOMS (8) [noun] Destiny, especially terrible. | [noun] An undesirable fate; an impending severe occurrence or danger that seems inevitable. | [noun] A feeling of danger, impending danger, darkness or despair. DOOMY (11) [adjective] Filled with doom and gloom: depressing or pessimistic DORMS (8) [noun] A room containing a number of beds (and often some other furniture and/or utilities) for sleeping, often applied to student and backpacker accommodation of this kind. | [noun] A building or part of a building which houses students, soldiers, monks etc. who sleep there and use communal further facilities. | [noun] A dormitory town. DORMY (11) [adjective] In match play, leading the match by the same number of holes as remain to be played. DOUMA (8) DOUMS (8) DRAMA (8) [noun] A composition, normally in prose, telling a story and intended to be represented by actors impersonating the characters and speaking the dialogue | [noun] Such a work for television, radio or the cinema (usually one that is not a comedy) | [noun] Theatrical plays in general DRAMS (8) [noun] The currency of Greece in ancient times and again from 1832 until 2001, with the symbol ₯, since replaced by the euro. | [noun] A coin worth one drachma. | [noun] An Ancient Greek weight of about 66.5 grains, or 4.3 grams. DREAM (8) [noun] Imaginary events seen in the mind while sleeping. | [noun] A hope or wish. | [noun] A visionary scheme; a wild conceit; an idle fancy. DRUMS (8) [noun] A percussive musical instrument spanned with a thin covering on at least one end for striking, forming an acoustic chamber, affecting what materials are used to make it; a membranophone. | [noun] Any similar hollow, cylindrical object. | [noun] A barrel or large cylindrical container for liquid transport and storage. DUMAS (8) [noun] A Russian legislative assembly such as the historical duma of the Russian Empire or the modern lower house of the Federal Assembly (the Russian national parliament). | [noun] A drink mixing wine and vodka. DUMBS (10) [verb] To silence. | [verb] To make stupid. | [verb] To represent as stupid. DUMKA (12) [noun] A genre of instrumental folk music from Ukraine. | [noun] An individual composition in this genre. DUMKY (15) [noun] A genre of instrumental folk music from Ukraine. | [noun] An individual composition in this genre. DUMMY (13) [noun] A silent person; a person who does not talk. | [noun] An unintelligent person. | [noun] A figure of a person or animal used by a ventriloquist; a puppet. DUMPS (10) [noun] A place where waste or garbage is left; a ground or place for dumping ashes, refuse, etc.; a disposal site. | [noun] A car or boat for dumping refuse, etc. | [noun] That which is dumped, especially in a chaotic way; a mess. DUMPY (13) [noun] A short, stout person or animal, especially one of a breed of very short-legged chickens. | [noun] A small bottle of beer. | [adjective] Short and thick; stout or stocky DUNAM (8) [noun] An Ottoman Turkish unit of surface area nominally equal to 1,600 square (Turkish) paces but actually varied at a provincial and local level according to land quality to accommodate its colloquial sense of the amount of land able to be plowed in a day, roughly equivalent to the Byzantine stremma or English acre. | [noun] A modern Turkish unit of surface area equal to a decare (1000 m2), equivalent to the modern Greek stremma. | [noun] Various other units in other areas of the former Ottoman Empire, usually equated to the decare but sometimes varying (as in Iraq, where it is 2500 m2). DUOMI (8) DUOMO (8) [noun] A cathedral, especially one in Italy. DURUM (8) [noun] Triticum turgidum subsp. durum, syn. Triticum durum (hard wheat), the flour of which is used to make pasta and bread. EDEMA (8) [noun] An excessive accumulation of serum in tissue spaces or a body cavity. | [noun] A similar swelling in plants caused by excessive accumulation of water. ELEMI (7) [noun] A tree, Canarium luzonicum, native to the Philippines. | [noun] A resin harvested from the elemi tree. EMBAR (9) EMBAY (12) [verb] To bathe; to steep. | [verb] To shut in, enclose, shelter or trap, such as ships in a bay. EMBED (10) [noun] An embedded reporter or journalist, such as a war reporter assigned to and travelling with a military unit, or a political reporter assigned to follow and report on the campaign of a candidate. | [noun] An element of an advertisement, etc. serving as a subliminal message. | [noun] An item embedded in another document. EMBER (9) [noun] A glowing piece of coal or wood. | [noun] Smoldering ash. | [adjective] Making a circuit of the year or the seasons; recurring in each quarter of the year, as certain religious days set apart for fasting and prayer. EMBOW (12) EMCEE (9) [noun] A rapper. | [noun] Initialism of main colour. | [noun] Initialism of matching colour. EMEER (7) EMEND (8) [verb] To correct and revise (text or a document). EMERY (10) [noun] An impure type of corundum, often used for sanding or polishing. | [verb] To sand or polish with emery. | [verb] To coat with emery. EMEUS (7) EMIRS (7) [noun] A prince, commander or other leader or ruler in an Islamic nation. | [noun] A descendant of the prophet Muhammad. EMITS (7) [verb] To send out or give off EMMER (9) [noun] A species of wheat, Triticum dicoccon, one of a group of hulled wheats that are important food grains. EMMET (9) [noun] An ant. | [noun] (Cornish dialect) A tourist. EMOTE (7) [noun] A virtual action, presented to other users as reported speech, rather than a direct message. | [noun] (Twitch-speak) Short for emoticon. | [verb] To display emotions openly, especially while acting. EMPTY (12) [noun] (usually plural) A container, especially a bottle, whose contents have been used up, leaving it empty. | [verb] To make empty; to void; to remove the contents of. | [verb] Of a river, duct, etc: to drain or flow toward an ultimate destination. EMYDE (11) EMYDS (11) ENEMA (7) [noun] An injection of fluid into the large intestine by way of the rectum, usually for medical purposes. | [noun] The fluid so injected. | [noun] A device for administering such an injection. ENEMY (10) [noun] Someone who is hostile to, feels hatred towards, opposes the interests of, or intends injury to someone else. | [noun] A hostile force or nation; a fighting member of such a force or nation. | [noun] Something harmful or threatening to another ENORM (7) ENZYM (19) ETYMA (10) [noun] The source word, or words, of a given word or expression. EXAMS (14) [noun] The act of examining. | [noun] Particularly, an inspection by a medical professional to establish the extent and nature of any sickness or injury. | [noun] A formal test involving answering written or oral questions under a time constraint and usually without access to textbooks. FAMED (11) [adjective] Having fame; famous or noted. FAMES (10) FANUM (10) FARMS (10) [noun] A place where agricultural and similar activities take place, especially the growing of crops or the raising of livestock. | [noun] A tract of land held on lease for the purpose of cultivation. | [noun] (usually in combination) A location used for an industrial purpose, having many similar structures FEMES (10) FEMME (12) [noun] A woman, a wife; a young woman or girl. | [noun] A lesbian or other queer woman whose appearance, identity etc. is seen as feminine as opposed to butch. | [noun] A person whose gender is feminine-leaning, such as a feminine non-binary person. FEMUR (10) [noun] A thighbone. | [noun] The middle segment of the leg of an insect, between the trochanter and the tibia. | [noun] A segment of the leg of an arachnid. FERMI (10) [noun] An obsolete unit of length equal to one femtometer or femtometre (10−15 m). FILMS (10) [noun] A thin layer of some substance; a pellicle; a membranous covering, causing opacity. | [noun] A medium used to capture images in a camera. | [noun] A movie. FILMY (13) [adjective] Resembling or made of a thin film; gauzy | [adjective] Covered by (or as if by) a film; hazy FILUM (10) FIRMS (10) [noun] A business partnership; the name under which it trades. | [noun] A business enterprise, however organized. | [noun] A criminal gang, especially based around football hooliganism. FLAME (10) [noun] The visible part of fire; a stream of burning vapour or gas, emitting light and heat. | [noun] A romantic partner or lover in a usually short-lived but passionate affair. | [noun] Intentionally insulting criticism or remark meant to incite anger. FLAMS (10) [verb] To deceive with a falsehood. | [verb] (drumming) To play (notes as) a flam. FLAMY (13) FLEAM (10) FLUME (10) [noun] A ravine or gorge, usually one with water running through. | [noun] An open channel or trough used to direct or divert liquids. | [verb] To transport (logs of wood) by floating them along a water-filled channel or trough. FLUMP (12) [noun] The dull sound so produced. | [noun] A type of large marshmallow. | [noun] (by extension) A fat out-of-shape person. FOAMS (10) [noun] A substance composed of a large collection of bubbles or their solidified remains. | [noun] A substance formed by trapping pockets of gas in a liquid or solid. | [noun] (by extension) Sea foam; the sea. FOAMY (13) [noun] An inexpensive surfboard made of extruded polystyrene foam | [adjective] Full of foam. FORAM (10) FORME (10) [noun] (heading, physical) To do with shape. | [noun] (social) To do with structure or procedure. | [noun] A blank document or template to be filled in by the user. FORMS (10) [noun] (heading, physical) To do with shape. | [noun] (social) To do with structure or procedure. | [noun] A blank document or template to be filled in by the user. FORUM (10) [noun] A place for discussion. | [noun] A gathering for the purpose of discussion. | [noun] A form of discussion involving a panel of presenters and often participation by members of the audience. FRAME (10) [noun] The structural elements of a building or other constructed object. | [noun] Anything composed of parts fitted and united together; a fabric; a structure. | [noun] The structure of a person's body; the human body. FREMD (11) FRUMP (12) [noun] A frumpy person, somebody who is unattractive, drab or dowdy. | [noun] The clothes that such a person would wear. | [noun] A bad-tempered person. FUMED (11) [verb] To expose (something) to fumes; specifically, to expose wood, etc., to ammonia in order to produce dark tints. | [verb] To apply or offer incense to. | [verb] To emit fumes. FUMER (10) FUMES (10) [noun] A gas or vapour/vapor that is strong-smelling or dangerous to inhale. | [noun] A material that has been vaporized from the solid or liquid state to the gas state and re-coalesced to the solid state. | [noun] Rage or excitement which deprives the mind of self-control. FUMET (10) [noun] A type of concentrated food stock that is added to sauces to enhance their flavour. Variations are fish fumet and mushroom fumet. | [noun] A ragout of partridge and rabbit braised in wine. | [noun] The stench or high flavour of game or other meat when kept long. | [noun] The dung of deer, hares, etc. GAMAS (8) GAMAY (11) [noun] Any of several varieties of red grape used for making Beaujolais and other red wines. GAMBA (10) [noun] A rank of organ pipes, so called for a supposed resemblance of the sound to that of a viola da gamba. | [noun] A stringed instrument related to the violin family, but held in the lap between the legs like a cello, usually with C-holes, a flat back, a fretted neck and six strings, played with an underhanded bow hold. | [noun] The metacarpus or metatarsus of ruminants, etc. GAMBE (10) GAMBS (10) GAMED (9) [verb] To gamble. | [verb] To play card games, board games, or video games. | [verb] To exploit loopholes in a system or bureaucracy in a way which defeats or nullifies the spirit of the rules in effect, usually to obtain a result which otherwise would be unobtainable. GAMER (8) [noun] A person who plays any kind of game. | [noun] A person whose hobby is video games. | [noun] A person who games the system. | [adjective] Willing to participate. GAMES (8) [noun] A playful or competitive activity. | [noun] A video game. | [noun] (nearly always singular) A field of gainful activity, as an industry or profession. GAMEY (11) [adjective] Having the smell, taste and texture of consumed game (meat). | [adjective] Plucky, spirited or gritty | [adjective] Risque, sordid or sexually suggestive GAMIC (10) GAMIN (8) [noun] A homeless boy; a male street urchin; also (more generally), a cheeky, street-smart boy. GAMMA (10) [noun] The third letter of the Greek alphabet (Γ, γ), preceded by beta (Β, β) and followed by delta, (Δ, δ). | [noun] The Gamma function, symbolized by Γ. | [noun] A constant approximately equal to 0.55721566, symbolized by γ (also known as the Euler–Mascheroni constant). GAMMY (13) [adjective] Injured, or not functioning properly (with respect to legs). | [noun] Grandmother. | [noun] A blowjob; fellatio. GAMPS (10) [noun] An umbrella. GAMUT (8) [noun] A (normally) complete range. | [noun] All the notes in the musical scale. | [noun] All the colours available to a device such as a monitor or printer. GAUMS (8) GEMMA (10) [noun] A bud; an asexual reproductive structure, as found in liverworts and hydra, able to produce new individuals from a cluster of cells. GEMMY (13) GEMOT (8) GENOM (8) GERMS (8) [noun] The small mass of cells from which a new organism develops; a seed, bud or spore. | [noun] A pathogenic microorganism. | [noun] The embryo of a seed, especially of a seed used as a cereal or grain. See Wikipedia article on cereal germ. GERMY (11) [adjective] That carries germs. GEUMS (8) [noun] Any of the genus Geum of perennial herbaceous plants. GIMEL (8) GIMME (10) [noun] That which is easily obtained, or certain to occur. GIMPS (10) [noun] A narrow ornamental fabric or braid of silk, wool, or cotton, often stiffened with metallic wire or coarse cord running through it, used as trimming for dresses, curtains, furniture, etc. Also guimpe. | [noun] Any coarse or reinforced thread, such as a glazed thread employed in lacemaking to outline designs, or silk thread used as a fishing leader, protected from the bite of fish by a wrapping of fine wire. | [noun] The plastic cord used in the plaiting and knotting craft Scoubidou (lanyard making); or, the process itself. GIMPY (13) GISMO (8) [noun] Something, generally a device, for which one does not know the proper term. GIZMO (17) [noun] Something, generally a device, for which one does not know the proper term. GLEAM (8) [noun] A small or indistinct shaft or stream of light. | [noun] A glimpse or hint; an indistinct sign of something. | [noun] Brightness or shininess; splendor. GLIME (8) GLIMS (8) [noun] Brightness; splendour | [noun] A light; a candle; a lantern; a fire. | [noun] An eye. GLOAM (8) GLOMS (8) [verb] To steal, to grab. | [verb] To stare. | [verb] To attach. GLOOM (8) [noun] Darkness, dimness or obscurity. | [noun] A melancholic, depressing or despondent atmosphere. | [noun] Cloudiness or heaviness of mind; melancholy; aspect of sorrow; low spirits; dullness. GLUME (8) [noun] A basal, membranous, outer sterile husk or bract in the flowers of grasses (Poaceae) and sedges (Cyperaceae). GNOME (8) [noun] A brief reflection or maxim; a pithy saying. | [noun] (magic, Rosicrucianism) An elemental (spirit or corporeal creature associated with a classical element) associated with earth. | [noun] (fantasy literature) One of a race of imaginary human-like beings, usually depicted as short and typically bearded males, who inhabit the inner parts of the earth and act as guardians of mines, mineral treasure, etc.; in modern fantasy literature, when distinguished from dwarves, gnomes are usually even smaller than dwarves and more focussed on engineering than mining. GOLEM (8) [noun] A humanoid creature made from clay, animated by magic. | [noun] (by extension) A humanoid creature made from any previously inanimate matter, such as wood or stone, animated by magic. GOMBO (10) GOYIM (11) [noun] A non-Jew, a gentile. (See usage notes) GRAMA (8) GRAMP (10) [noun] Grandpa, grandfather. GRAMS (8) [noun] A photograph or video shared on this service. | [noun] A unit of mass equal to one-thousandth of a kilogram. Symbol: g | [noun] Grandmother | [noun] Grandmother GRIME (8) [noun] Dirt, grease, soot, etc. that is ingrained and difficult to remove. | [noun] A genre of urban music that emerged in London, England, in the early 2000s, primarily a development of UK garage, dancehall, and hip hop. | [verb] To begrime; to cake with dirt. GRIMY (11) [adjective] Stained or covered with grime. | [adjective] From the urban musical genre called grime. GROOM (8) [noun] A man who is about to marry. | [noun] A person who cares for horses. | [noun] One of several officers of the English royal household, chiefly in the lord chamberlain's department. GRUME (8) [noun] A thick semisolid | [noun] A clot (of blood) GRUMP (10) [noun] A habitually grumpy or complaining person. | [noun] A grumpy mood. | [verb] To complain. GUMBO (10) [noun] A soup or stew made with okra. | [noun] A fine silty soil that when wet becomes very thick and heavy. | [noun] The edible immature mucilaginous seed pod (properly, capsule) of the Abelmoschus esculentus. GUMMA (10) [noun] A soft, non-cancerous growth, a form of granuloma, resulting from the tertiary stage of syphilis. GUMMY (13) [noun] A sheep that is losing or has lost its teeth. | [adjective] Showing the gums. | [noun] A species of shark, Mustelus antarcticus, endemic to southern and south-eastern Australia, the meat of which is sold as flake. | [noun] (usually in the plural) A gummi candy. HAEMS (10) HAKIM (14) [noun] A doctor, usually practicing traditional medicine. | [noun] A judge or governor in Islamic India. HALMA (10) [noun] A board game invented by George Howard Monks in which the players' men jump over those in adjacent squares. | [noun] In the Greek pentathlon, the long jump with weights in the hands. HALMS (10) HAMAL (10) HAMES (10) [noun] A covering, skin, membrane. | [noun] Part of the harness that fits round the neck of a draught horse that the reins pass through. | [noun] A mess. HAMMY (15) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of ham. | [adjective] Amateurish; characterized by overacting. | [noun] One of the great tendons situated in each side of the ham, or space back of the knee, and connected with the muscles of the back of the thigh. | [noun] A hamster. HAMZA (19) [noun] A sign (ء‎ - a stand-alone hamza) used in the written Arabic language representing a glottal stop. Hamza may appear as a stand-alone letter or most commonly diacritically over or under other letters, e.g. أ‎ (over an alif - ا‎), إ‎ (under an alif), ؤ‎ (over a wāw - و‎) or ئ‎ (over a dotless yāʾ - ى‎). The exact seat of hamza is governed by an orthographic rule - "seat of hamza rule". HAREM (10) [noun] The private part of an Arab household, traditionally forbidden to male strangers. | [noun] A group of someone's girlfriends, wives and/or concubines in a polygamous household. | [noun] A group of female animals (cows) herded and controlled by a male animal (bull) of that species for breeding purposes. Such behaviour is exhibited by bovids including cattle and buffalo as well as moose, elephants, seals, sea lions, baboons, and elephant seals. HARMS (10) [noun] Physical injury; hurt; damage | [noun] Emotional or figurative hurt | [noun] Detriment; misfortune. HAULM (10) [noun] The stems of various cultivated plants, left after harvesting the crop to be used as animal litter or for thatching. | [noun] An individual plant stem. | [noun] Part of a harness; a hame. HELMS (10) [noun] The stems of various cultivated plants, left after harvesting the crop to be used as animal litter or for thatching. | [noun] An individual plant stem. | [noun] Part of a harness; a hame. HEMAL (10) [adjective] Pertaining to the blood or blood vessels. | [adjective] Ventral rather than neural. HEMES (10) HEMIC (12) HEMIN (10) HEMPS (12) HEMPY (15) HERMA (10) HERMS (10) [noun] A rectangular pillar bearing a bust of Hermes, once used as a boundary marker and later as decoration. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A hermaphrodite. HILUM (10) [noun] The eye of a bean or other seed; the mark or scar at the point of attachment of an ovule or seed to its base or support. | [noun] The nucleus of a starch grain. | [noun] A depression or fissure through which ducts, nerves, or blood vessels enter and leave a gland or organ; a porta. HOKUM (14) [noun] (An instance of) meaningless nonsense with an outward appearance of being impressive and legitimate. | [noun] (An instance of) excessively contrived, hackneyed, or sentimental material in a film, television programme, theater production, etc. | [noun] A film, television programme, theater production, etc., containing excessively contrived, hackneyed, or sentimental material. HOLMS (10) [noun] (obsolete outside dialectal) The holly. | [noun] A common evergreen oak of Europe, Quercus ilex; the holm oak. | [noun] An island in a lake, river or estuary; an eyot. HOMED (11) [verb] (of animals) To return to its owner. | [verb] (always with "in on") To seek or aim for something. HOMER (10) [noun] Various former units of volume, particularly: | [noun] A former Hebrew unit of dry volume, about equal to 230 L or 6 1/2 US bushels. | [noun] A four-base hit; a home run HOMES (10) [noun] An informal term of address, like man or dude. | [noun] A dwelling. | [noun] One’s native land; the place or country in which one dwells; the place where one’s ancestors dwell or dwelt. HOMEY (13) [noun] Someone, particularly a friend or male acquaintance, from one's hometown. | [noun] A close friend or fellow member of a youth gang. | [noun] An inner-city youth. | [adjective] Befitting a home; cozy, intimate. HOMOS (10) [noun] A human. HUMAN (10) [noun] A human being, whether man, woman or child. | [verb] To behave as or become, or to cause to behave as or become, a human. | [adjective] (notcomp) Of or belonging to the species Homo sapiens or its closest relatives. HUMIC (12) [adjective] Of, or relating to humus. HUMID (11) [adjective] Containing perceptible moisture (usually describing air or atmosphere); damp; moist; somewhat wet or watery. HUMOR (10) [noun] The quality of being amusing, comical, funny. | [noun] A mood, especially a bad mood; a temporary state of mind or disposition brought upon by an event; an abrupt illogical inclination or whim. | [noun] Any of the fluids in an animal body, especially the four "cardinal humours" of blood, yellow bile, black bile and phlegm that were believed to control the health and mood of the human body. HUMPH (15) [verb] To utter "humph!" in doubt or disapproval. | [interjection] Used to express doubt or disapproval HUMPS (12) [noun] A mound of earth. | [noun] A deformity in humans caused by abnormal curvature of the upper spine. | [noun] (animals) A rounded fleshy mass, such as on a camel or zebu. HUMPY (15) [noun] A hut or temporary shelter made from bark and tree branches, especially for Aborigines. HUMUS (10) [noun] A large group of natural organic compounds, found in the soil, formed from the chemical and biological decomposition of plant and animal residues and from the synthetic activity of microorganisms | [noun] A Levantine Arab dip made of chickpea paste with various additions, such as olive oil, fresh garlic, lemon juice, and tahini, often eaten with pitta bread, or as a meze. It is mostly eaten in the Levant. HYMEN (13) [noun] A membrane which completely or partially occludes the vaginal opening in human females. | [noun] Marriage. HYMNS (13) [noun] A song of praise or worship. | [verb] To sing a hymn. | [verb] To praise or extol in hymns. IAMBI (9) [noun] An iamb IAMBS (9) [noun] A metrical foot in verse consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable. IDIOM (8) [noun] A manner of speaking, a mode of expression peculiar to a language, person, or group of people. | [noun] A language or language variety; specifically, a restricted dialect used in a given historical period, context etc. | [noun] An established expression whose meaning is not deducible from the literal meanings of its component words, often peculiar to a given language. IHRAM (10) ILEUM (7) [noun] The last, and usually the longest, division of the small intestine; the part between the jejunum and large intestine. ILIUM (7) [noun] The upper and widest of the three bones that make up each side of the hipbone and pelvis. | [noun] The ileum, part of the small intestine. IMAGE (8) [noun] An optical or other representation of a real object; a graphic; a picture. | [noun] A mental picture of something not real or not present. | [noun] A statue or idol. IMAGO (8) [noun] The final developmental stage of an insect after undergoing metamorphosis. | [noun] An idealised concept of a loved one, formed in childhood and retained unconsciously into adult life, the basis for the psychological formation of personality archetypes. IMAMS (9) [noun] (usually capitalized) A Shi'ite Muslim leader. | [noun] One who leads the salat prayers in a mosque. IMAUM (9) IMBED (10) [verb] To lay as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed. | [verb] (by extension) To include in surrounding matter. | [verb] To encapsulate within another document or data file. IMBUE (9) [verb] To wet or stain an object completely with some physical quality. | [verb] In general, to act in a way which results in an object becoming completely permeated or impregnated by some quality. IMIDE (8) [noun] A form of amide in which the nitrogen atom is attached to two carbonyl groups - R1CONHCOR2 IMIDO (8) IMIDS (8) IMINE (7) [noun] Any of a class of organic nitrogen compounds having the general formula R2C=NR; they are tautomeric with enamines. IMINO (7) IMMIX (16) IMPED (10) [noun] A creature without feet | [adjective] Engrafted, eked, implanted; supplemented by imping. | [verb] To plant or engraft. IMPEL (9) [verb] To urge a person; to press on; to incite to action or motion via intrinsic motivation. | [verb] To drive forward; to propel an object, to provide an impetus for motion or action. IMPIS (9) [noun] A group of Zulu (or other Bantu) warriors; a detachment of armed men. IMPLY (12) [verb] (of a proposition) to have as a necessary consequence | [verb] (of a person) to suggest by logical inference | [verb] (of a person or proposition) to hint; to insinuate; to suggest tacitly and avoid a direct statement INARM (7) ITEMS (7) [noun] A distinct physical object. | [noun] (by extension) An object that can be picked up for later use. | [noun] A line of text having a legal or other meaning; a separate particular in an account. JAMBE (16) JAMBS (16) [noun] (interior decorating) Either of the vertical components that form the side of an opening in a wall, such as that of a door frame, window frame, or fireplace. | [noun] Any thick mass of rock that prevents miners from following the lode or vein. JAMMY (19) [noun] A gun. | [adjective] Resembling jam in taste, texture, etc. | [adjective] Covered in jam. JEMMY (19) [noun] A baked sheep's head. | [noun] An immigrant. | [noun] A greatcoat. JIMMY (19) [noun] (especially New England and Philadelphia) Chocolate sprinkles used as a topping for ice cream, cookies, or cupcakes. | [noun] A marijuana cigarette. | [noun] A device used to circumvent a locking mechanism; a slim jim. JIMPY (19) JISMS (14) [noun] Spirit or energy. | [noun] Semen. JORAM (14) JORUM (14) [noun] A large vessel for drinking (usually alcoholic beverages). | [noun] A large quantity. | [noun] The contents, or quantity of the contents, of such a vessel. JUGUM (15) [noun] One of the ridges commonly found on the fruit of umbelliferous plants. | [noun] A pair of opposite leaflets of a pinnate plant. JUMBO (16) [noun] An especially large or powerful person, animal, or thing. | [noun] A platform-mounted machine for drilling rock. | [adjective] Especially large or powerful. | [noun] Short for mumbo jumbo. JUMPS (16) [noun] The act of jumping; a leap; a spring; a bound. | [noun] An effort; an attempt; a venture. | [noun] A dislocation in a stratum; a fault. JUMPY (19) [adjective] Nervous and excited. KALAM (11) KAMES (11) [noun] A round hill or short ridge of sand or gravel deposited by a melting glacier. KAMIK (15) KARMA (11) [noun] The sum total of a person's actions, which determine the person's next incarnation in samsara, the cycle of death and rebirth. | [noun] A force or law of nature which causes one to reap what one sows; destiny; fate. | [noun] A distinctive feeling, aura, or atmosphere. KELIM (11) [noun] A flat tapestry-woven carpet or rug. KEMPS (13) [noun] Coarse, rough hair, wool, or fur; (in the plural) knotty hairs that will not felt. | [noun] A contest in work, etc. | [noun] A champion; a knight. KEMPT (13) [adjective] Neat and tidy; especially used of hair KHOUM (14) [noun] A subdivision of the Mauritanian ouguiya. 5 khoums equal one ouguiya. KILIM (11) [noun] A flat tapestry-woven carpet or rug. KUMYS (14) LAMAS (7) [noun] A master of Tibetan Buddhism. | [noun] A South American mammal of the camel family, Lama glama, used as a domestic beast of burden and a source of wool and meat. LAMBS (9) [noun] A young sheep. | [noun] The flesh of a lamb or sheep used as food. | [noun] A person who is meek, docile and easily led. LAMBY (12) LAMED (8) [verb] To cause (a person or animal) to become lame. | [verb] To shine. | [noun] The twelfth letter of many Semitic alphabets/abjads (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others). LAMER (7) [adjective] Unable to walk properly because of a problem with one's feet or legs. | [adjective] Moving with pain or difficulty on account of injury, defect or temporary obstruction of a function. | [adjective] (by extension) Hobbling; limping; inefficient; imperfect. LAMES (7) [verb] To cause (a person or animal) to become lame. | [verb] To shine. | [noun] Small steel plates combined so as to slide one upon other and form a piece of armour. LAMIA (7) [noun] A monster preying upon human beings and who sucked the blood of children, often described as having the head and breasts of a woman and the lower half of a serpent. LAMPS (9) [noun] A device that generates heat, light or other radiation. Especially an electric light bulb. | [noun] A device containing oil, burnt through a wick for illumination; an oil lamp. | [noun] A piece of furniture holding one or more electric light sockets. LARUM (7) LEMAN (7) [noun] One beloved; a lover, a sweetheart of either sex (especially a secret lover, gallant, or mistress). | [noun] (often negative) A paramour. LEMMA (9) [noun] A proposition proved or accepted for immediate use in the proof of some other proposition. | [noun] The canonical form of an inflected word; i.e., the form usually found as the headword in a dictionary, such as the nominative singular of a noun, the bare infinitive of a verb, etc. | [noun] (psycholinguistics) The theoretical abstract conceptual form of a word, representing a specific meaning, before the creation of a specific phonological form as the sounds of a lexeme, which may find representation in a specific written form as a dictionary or lexicographic word. | [noun] The outer shell of a fruit or similar body. LEMON (7) [noun] A yellowish citrus fruit. | [noun] A semitropical evergreen tree, Citrus limon, that bears such fruits. | [noun] A taste or flavour/flavor of lemons. LEMUR (7) [noun] Any strepsirrhine primate of the infraorder Lemuriformes, superfamily Lemuroidea, native only to Madagascar and some surrounding islands. | [noun] Any of the genus Lemur, represented by the ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta). | [noun] A loris (Lemur tardigradus, now Loris tardigradus), predating the 10th edition of Systema Naturæ. LIMAN (7) LIMAS (7) LIMBA (9) [noun] A large African tree, Terminalia superba, whose hard wood is used for furniture, table tennis paddles and musical instruments. LIMBI (9) [noun] A border of an anatomical part, such as the edge of the cornea. LIMBO (9) [noun] (Roman Catholic theology, since circa 400 A.D.) The place where innocent souls exist temporarily until they can enter heaven, notably those of the saints who died before the advent of Christ (limbus patruum) and those of unbaptized but innocent children (limbus infantum). | [noun] (by extension, since the 16th century) Any in-between place, state or condition of neglect or oblivion which results in an unresolved status, delay or deadlock. | [noun] A dance played by taking turns crossing under a horizontal bar or stick. The stick is lowered with each round, and the game is won by the player who passes under the bar in the lowest position. LIMBS (9) [noun] A major appendage of human or animal, used for locomotion (such as an arm, leg or wing). | [noun] A branch of a tree. | [noun] The part of the bow, from the handle to the tip. LIMBY (12) LIMED (8) [verb] To treat with calcium hydroxide or calcium oxide (lime). | [verb] To smear with birdlime. | [verb] To apply limewash. LIMEN (7) [noun] A liminal point; the threshold of a physiological or psychological response. LIMES (7) [noun] A boundary or border, especially of the Roman Empire. | [noun] Any inorganic material containing calcium, usually calcium oxide (quicklime) or calcium hydroxide (slaked lime). | [noun] Any gluey or adhesive substance; something which traps or captures someone; sometimes a synonym for birdlime. LIMEY (10) [noun] An Englishman or other Briton, or a person of British descent. | [adjective] Resembling limes (the fruit); lime-like. | [adjective] Of, or pertaining to, limes (the fruit). LIMIT (7) [noun] A restriction; a bound beyond which one may not go. | [noun] A value to which a sequence converges. Equivalently, the common value of the upper limit and the lower limit of a sequence: if the upper and lower limits are different, then the sequence has no limit (i.e., does not converge). | [noun] Any of several abstractions of this concept of limit. | [verb] To restrict; not to allow to go beyond a certain bound, to set boundaries. LIMNS (7) [verb] To draw or paint; to delineate. | [verb] To illuminate, as a manuscript; to decorate with gold or some other bright colour. LIMOS (7) [noun] An automobile body with seats and permanent top like a coupe, and with the top projecting over the driver and a projecting front. | [noun] An automobile with such a body. | [noun] A luxury sedan or saloon car, especially one with a lengthened wheelbase or driven by a chauffeur. LIMPA (9) LIMPS (9) [noun] An irregular, jerky or awkward gait. | [noun] A scraper for removing poor ore or refuse from the sieve. | [verb] To walk lamely, as if favouring one leg. LINUM (7) LLAMA (7) [noun] A South American mammal of the camel family, Lama glama, used as a domestic beast of burden and a source of wool and meat. LOAMS (7) LOAMY (10) [adjective] Consisting of loam; partaking of the nature of loam; resembling loam. LOCUM (9) [noun] Short for locum tenens. | [noun] A share in a Genoese trading vessel. LOOMS (7) [noun] A utensil; tool; a weapon; (usually in compound) an article in general. | [noun] A frame or machine of wood or other material, in which a weaver forms cloth out of thread; a machine for interweaving yarn or threads into a fabric, as in knitting or lace making. | [noun] The part of an oar which is between the grip or handle and the blade, the shaft. LUMEN (7) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of luminous flux; the light that is emitted in a solid angle of one steradian from a source of one candela. Symbol: lm. | [noun] The cavity or channel within a tube or tubular organ. | [noun] The cavity bounded by a plant cell wall. LUMPS (9) [noun] Something that protrudes, sticks out, or sticks together; a cluster or blob; a mound or mass of no particular shape. | [noun] A group, set, or unit. | [noun] A small, shaped mass of sugar, typically about a teaspoonful. LUMPY (12) [adjective] Full of lumps, not smooth. | [adjective] Of a water surface: covered in many small waves as a result of wind; choppy. LYMPH (15) [noun] (poetical) Pure water. | [noun] A colourless, watery bodily fluid, carried by the lymphatic system, that consists mainly of white blood cells. | [noun] Discharge from a sore, inflammation etc. MAARS (7) [noun] A broad volcanic crater, usually filled with water to form a lake. MABES (9) MACAW (12) [noun] Any of various parrots of the genera Ara, Anodorhynchus, Cyanopsitta, Orthopsittaca, Primolius and Diopsittaca of Central and South America, including the largest parrots and characterized by long sabre-shaped tails, curved powerful bills, and usually brilliant plumage. MACED (10) [verb] To hit someone or something with a mace. | [verb] To spray in defense or attack with mace (pepper spray or tear gas) using a hand-held device. | [verb] To spray a similar noxious chemical in defense or attack using an available hand-held device such as an aerosol spray can. MACER (9) [noun] A mace bearer; specifically, an officer of a court in Scotland. MACES (9) [noun] A heavy fighting club. | [noun] A ceremonial form of this weapon. | [noun] A long baton used by some drum majors to keep time and lead a marching band. If this baton is referred to as a mace, by convention it has a ceremonial often decorative head, which, if of metal, usually is hollow and sometimes intricately worked. MACHE (12) [noun] Valerianella locusta, a small dicot annual plant of the family Caprifoliaceae often cultivated as a salad green or herb. | [noun] A former unit of volumic radioactivity: the quantity of radon (ignoring its daughters) per litre of air which ionizes a sustained current of 0.001 esu. | [noun] Glutinous rice balls flavoured with coconut and pandan. MACHO (12) [noun] A macho person; a person who tends to display masculine characteristics, such as domineering, fierceness, and bravado. | [noun] The striped mullet of California (Mugil cephalus, syn. Mugil mexicanus). | [noun] A male llama. MACHS (12) MACKS (13) [noun] An individual skilled in the art of seduction using verbal skills. | [noun] A raincoat or mackintosh. | [noun] An element of a ship's superstructure which places the function of a ship's mast on its exhaust stack, adding the skeletal supporting structure to the smokestack to support the mast's complement of functions. MACLE (9) [noun] Chiastolite; so called from the tessellated appearance of a cross-section. | [noun] A crystal having a similar tessellated appearance. | [noun] A twin crystal. MACON (9) MACRO (9) [adjective] Very large in scope or scale. | [adjective] Of a lifestyle incorporating a dietary regimen including locally grown, seasonal, natural foods, or of the diet itself. | [adjective] Long-lived. | [noun] A comparatively human-friendly abbreviation of complex input to a computer program. | [noun] Macro lens MADAM (10) [noun] A polite form of address for a woman or lady. | [noun] The mistress of a household. | [noun] A conceited or quarrelsome girl. MADLY (11) [adverb] In a mad manner; without reason or understanding; wildly. MADRE (8) MAFIA (10) [noun] A hierarchically structured secret organisation engaged in illegal activities like distribution of narcotics, gambling and extortion. | [noun] A crime syndicate. | [noun] A trusted group of associates, as of a political leader. MAFIC (12) [noun] A rock with such properties. | [adjective] Describing rocks, such as silicate minerals, magmas, and volcanic and intrusive igneous rocks, which contain relatively high concentrations of magnesium and iron. MAGES (8) [noun] A magician, wizard or sorcerer. MAGIC (10) [noun] The application of rituals or actions, especially those based on occult knowledge, to subdue or manipulate natural or supernatural beings and forces in order to have some benefit from them | [noun] A specific ritual or procedure associated with such magic; a spell. | [noun] The supernatural forces which are drawn on in such a ritual MAGMA (10) [noun] The molten matter within the earth, the source of the material of lava flows, dikes of eruptive rocks, etc. | [noun] A basic algebraic structure consisting of a set equipped with a single binary operation. | [noun] Any soft doughy mass. MAGOT (8) MAGUS (8) [noun] (common usage) magician, and derogatorily sorcerer, trickster, conjurer, charlatan | [noun] (special usage) a Zoroastrian priest MAHOE (10) [noun] Any of certain trees in the mallow family, native to the Caribbean. | [noun] Either of two different trees, usually found around the tropics. MAIDS (8) [noun] A girl or an unmarried young woman; maiden. | [noun] A female servant or cleaner (short for maidservant). | [noun] A virgin, now female but originally one of either gender. MAILE (7) MAILL (7) MAILS (7) [noun] A bag or wallet. | [noun] A bag containing letters to be delivered by post. | [noun] The material conveyed by the postal service. MAIMS (9) [verb] To wound seriously; to cause permanent loss of function of a limb or part of the body. MAINS (7) [verb] Short for mainline. | [verb] To mainly play a specific character, or side, during a game. | [verb] Of a road: to convert into a main or primary road. | [noun] The farm attached to a mansion house. MAIRS (7) MAIST (7) MAIZE (16) [noun] Corn; a type of grain of the species Zea mays. MAJOR (14) [noun] A military rank between captain and lieutenant colonel. | [noun] The main area of study of a student working toward a degree at a college or university. | [noun] A student at a college or university concentrating on a given area of study. MAKAR (11) [noun] A poet writing in Scots. MAKER (11) [noun] Someone who makes; a person or thing that makes or produces something. | [noun] (usually capitalized and preceded by the) God. | [noun] A poet. MAKES (11) [noun] Brand or kind; model. | [noun] Manner or style of construction (style of how a thing is made); form. | [noun] Origin (of a manufactured article); manufacture; production. MAKOS (11) [noun] Mako shark MALAR (7) [noun] The cheekbone, which forms a part of the lower edge of the orbit. | [adjective] Pertaining to the cheek. MALES (7) [noun] One of the male (masculine) sex or gender. MALIC (9) MALLS (7) [noun] A pedestrianised street, especially a shopping precinct. | [noun] An enclosed shopping centre. | [noun] An alley where the game of pall mall was played. MALMS (9) [noun] A soft, crumbly, chalky, grayish limestone. | [noun] An artificial mixture or chalk, clay, and sand, from which bricks are made. The resulting bricks have a light brown or yellowish color. MALMY (12) MALTS (7) [noun] Malted grain (sprouted grain) (usually barley), used in brewing and otherwise. | [noun] Malt liquor, especially malt whisky. | [noun] A milkshake with malted milk powder added for flavor. MALTY (10) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or characteristic of malt MAMAS (9) [noun] (hypocoristic, usually childish) Mother, female parent. MAMBA (11) [noun] Any of various venomous snakes of the genus Dendroaspis, native to Africa, that live in trees. MAMBO (11) [noun] A voodoo priestess (in Haiti) | [noun] A Latin-American musical genre, adapted from rumba, originating from Cuba in the 1940s, or a dance or rhythm of this genre. | [verb] To perform this dance. MAMEY (12) [noun] The evergreen tree Mammea americana, or its edible fruit | [noun] The flowering plant Magnolia guatemalensis | [noun] The tree Pouteria sapota, or its fruit. MAMIE (9) MAMMA (11) [noun] The milk-secreting organ of female humans and other mammals which includes the mammary gland and the nipple or teat; a breast; an udder. (plural: mammae) | [noun] An accessory cloud like a mammary in appearance, which can form on the underside of most cloud genera | [noun] (hypocoristic, usually childish) Mother, female parent. MAMMY (14) [noun] Mamma; mother | [noun] (historical, often pejorative) In the southern United States, a black nanny employed to look after white children; or in the antebellum South, a female slave who was close to the household and looked after the children. MANAS (7) MANED (8) MANES (7) [noun] The souls or spirits of dead ancestors, conceived as deities or the subjects of reverence, or of other deceased relatives. | [noun] Longer hair growth on back of neck of an animal, especially a horse or lion | [noun] Long or thick hair of a person's head. MANGE (8) [noun] A skin disease of mammals caused by parasitic mites (Sarcoptes spp., Demodecidae spp.). MANGO (8) [noun] A tropical Asian fruit tree, Mangifera indica. | [noun] The fruit of the mango tree. | [noun] A pickled vegetable or fruit with a spicy stuffing; a vegetable or fruit which has been mangoed. MANGY (11) [adjective] Afflicted with mange. | [adjective] (by extension) Worn and squalid-looking; bedraggled or decrepit. MANIA (7) [noun] Violent derangement of mind; madness; insanity. | [noun] Excessive or unreasonable desire; insane passion affecting one or many people; fanaticism. | [noun] The state of abnormally elevated or irritable mood, arousal, and/or energy levels. MANIC (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to someone who exhibits mania or craziness; wicked. | [adjective] Suffering from mania, the state of an abnormally elevated or irritable mood, arousal, and/or energy levels. MANLY (10) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a man. | [adjective] Having qualities befitting a man; courageous, resolute, noble. MANNA (7) [noun] Food miraculously produced for the Israelites in the desert in the book of Exodus. | [noun] (by extension) Any boon which comes into one's hands by good luck. | [noun] The sugary sap of the manna gum tree which oozes out from holes drilled by insects and falls to the ground around the tree.http//www.museum.vic.gov.au/forest/plants/gum.html MANOR (7) [noun] A landed estate. | [noun] The main house of such an estate or a similar residence; a mansion. | [noun] A district over which a feudal lord could exercise certain rights and privileges in medieval western Europe. MANOS (7) MANSE (7) [verb] To excommunicate; curse. | [noun] A house inhabited by the minister of a parish. | [noun] A family dwelling, an owner-occupied house. MANTA (7) [noun] A kind of fabric or blanket used in Latin America and southwestern United States. | [noun] Any of several very large pelagic rays of the genus Manta, with winglike pectoral fins, a long tail, and two fins resembling horns that project from the head. MANUS (7) [noun] A hand, as the part of the fore limb below the forearm in a human, or the corresponding part in other vertebrates. | [noun] (Roman law) The power over other people, especially that of a man over his wife. MAPLE (9) [noun] A tree of the Acer genus, characterised by its usually palmate leaves and winged seeds. | [noun] The wood of such a tree, prized for its hardness and attractive appearance MAQUI (16) MARCH (12) [noun] A formal, rhythmic way of walking, used especially by soldiers, bands and in ceremonies. | [noun] A political rally or parade | [noun] Any song in the genre of music written for marching (see Wikipedia's article on this type of music) | [noun] A border region, especially one originally set up to defend a boundary. | [noun] Smallage. MARCS (9) [noun] The refuse matter that remains after fruit, particularly grapes, has been pressed. | [noun] An alcoholic spirit distilled from the marc of grapes. | [noun] A weight of various commodities, especially of gold and silver, used in different European countries. In France and Holland it was equal to eight ounces. MARES (7) [noun] An adult female horse. | [noun] A foolish woman. | [noun] A type of evil spirit formerly thought to sit on the chest of a sleeping person; also, the feeling of suffocation felt during sleep, attributed to such a spirit. MARGE (8) [noun] Margin; edge; verge. | [noun] Margarine. MARIA (7) [noun] A large, dark plain, which may have the appearance of a sea. | [noun] On Saturn's moon Titan, a large expanse of what is thought to be liquid hydrocarbons. MARKS (11) [noun] (heading) Boundary, land within a boundary. | [noun] (heading) Characteristic, sign, visible impression. | [noun] (heading) Indicator of position, objective etc. MARLS (7) [verb] To cover with the earthy substance called marl. | [verb] To cover, as part of a rope, with marline, marking a peculiar hitch at each turn to prevent unwinding. MARLY (10) MARRY (10) [verb] To enter into the conjugal or connubial state; to take a husband or a wife. | [verb] (in passive) To be joined to (someone) as spouse according to law or custom. | [verb] To arrange for the marriage of; to give away as wife or husband. | [interjection] Indeed!, in truth!; a term of asseveration. MARSE (7) MARSH (10) [noun] An area of low, wet land, often with tall grass. MARTS (7) [noun] A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals; a letter of marque. | [noun] A brand or make of a manufactured product, especially of a motor car (in contradistinction to a model). | [noun] A ship commissioned for making captures. MARVY (13) [adjective] Great, awesome, brilliant MASER (7) [noun] A device for the coherent amplification or generation of electromagnetic radiation (especially of microwave frequency) by the use of excitation energy in resonant atomic or molecular systems | [noun] Any celestial object that generates microwaves using the same method | [noun] The maple tree, or maple wood. MASHY (13) MASKS (11) [noun] A cover, or partial cover, for the face, used for disguise or protection. | [noun] That which disguises; a pretext or subterfuge. | [noun] A festive entertainment of dancing or other diversions, where all wear masks; a masquerade MASON (7) [noun] A bricklayer, one whose occupation is to build with stone or brick | [noun] One who prepares stone for building purposes. | [noun] A member of the fraternity of Freemasons. See Freemason. MASSA (7) [noun] Someone who has control over something or someone. | [noun] The owner of an animal or slave. | [noun] The captain of a merchant ship; a master mariner. MASSE (7) MASSY (10) [adjective] Heavy; massive. | [noun] Someone who has control over something or someone. | [noun] The owner of an animal or slave. MASTS (7) [noun] A tall, slim post or tower, usually tapering upward, used to support, for example, the sails on a ship, flags, floodlights, meteorological instruments ,or communications equipment such as an aerial, usually supported by guy-wires. | [noun] A non-judicial punishment ("NJP") disciplinary hearing under which a commanding officer studies and disposes of cases involving those under his command. | [verb] To supply and fit a mast to (a ship). MATCH (12) [noun] A competitive sporting event such as a boxing meet, a baseball game, or a cricket match. | [noun] Any contest or trial of strength or skill, or to determine superiority. | [noun] Someone with a measure of an attribute equaling or exceeding the object of comparison. | [noun] A device made of wood or paper, at the tip coated with chemicals that ignite with the friction of being dragged (struck) against a rough dry surface. MATED (8) [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. | [verb] (by extension) To place in a losing situation that has no escape. | [verb] To match, fit together without space between. MATER (7) [noun] Mother. | [noun] A meninx; the dura mater, arachnoid mater, or pia mater of the brain. | [noun] Someone or something that mates. | [noun] Tomato. MATES (7) [noun] The conclusive victory in a game of chess that occurs when an opponent's king is threatened with unavoidable capture. | [noun] (by extension) Any losing situation with no escape; utter defeat. | [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. MATEY (10) [noun] The conclusive victory in a game of chess that occurs when an opponent's king is threatened with unavoidable capture. | [noun] (by extension) Any losing situation with no escape; utter defeat. | [noun] A fellow, comrade, colleague, partner or someone with whom something is shared, e.g. shipmate, classmate. MATHS (10) [noun] An abstract representational system used in the study of numbers, shapes, structure, change and the relationships between these concepts. | [noun] A person's ability to count, calculate, and use different systems of mathematics at differing levels. MATIN (7) [noun] Morning | [adjective] Of or relating to matins MATTE (7) [noun] A decorative border around a picture used to inset and center the contents of a frame. | [noun] A background, often painted or created with computers | [noun] (pyrometallurgy) The molten metal sulfide phases typically formed during smelting of copper, nickel, and other base metals. MATTS (7) MATZA (16) MATZO (16) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MAUDS (8) [noun] A grey plaid once worn by shepherds in Scotland and Northumbria. MAULS (7) [noun] A heavy long-handled hammer, used for splitting logs by driving a wedge into them, or in combat. | [noun] A situation where the player carrying the ball, who must be on his feet, is held by one or more opponents, and one or more of the ball carrier's team mates bind onto the ball carrier. | [verb] To handle someone or something in a rough way. MAUND (8) [noun] A wicker basket. | [noun] A unit of capacity with various specific local values. | [noun] A handbasket with two lids. | [noun] A unit of weight in southern and western Asia, whose value varied widely by location. Two maunds made one chest of opium in East India. One maund equalled 136 pounds of opium in Turkey. | [noun] Begging MAUTS (7) MAUVE (10) [noun] A bright purple synthetic dye. | [noun] The colour of this dye; a pale purple or violet colour. | [adjective] Having a pale purple colour. MAVEN (10) [noun] An expert in a given field. MAVIE (10) MAVIN (10) MAVIS (10) [noun] Song thrush. MAWED (11) MAXES (14) [verb] (usually with out) to reach the limit, to reach the maximum. MAXIM (16) [noun] A self-evident axiom or premise; a pithy expression of a general principle or rule. | [noun] A precept; a succinct statement or observation of a rule of conduct or moral teaching. MAXIS (14) [noun] A coat or skirt having such a hemline | [noun] A class of racing sailing yacht that pushes at the upper limits of the International Offshore Rule of regulated sail yacht racing, having a waterline length in excess of 70-feet. | [noun] A music single with more than two tracks, i.e. not just an A-side and a B-side. MAYAN (10) MAYAS (10) MAYBE (12) [noun] Something that is possibly true. | [noun] An answer that shows neither agreement nor disagreement. | [noun] A future event that may or may not happen. MAYED (11) MAYOR (10) [noun] The chief executive of the municipal government of a city, borough, &c., formerly usually appointed as a caretaker by European royal courts but now usually appointed or elected locally. | [noun] Short for mayor of the palace, the royal stewards of the Frankish Empire. | [noun] Synonym of mair, various former officials in the Kingdom of Scotland. MAYOS (10) [noun] A white person. | [noun] A dressing made from vegetable oil, raw egg yolks and seasoning, used on salads, with french fries, in sandwiches etc. | [noun] Any cold dish with that dressing as an ingredient. MAYST (10) [verb] To be strong; to have power (over). | [verb] (auxiliary) To be able; can. | [verb] To be able to go. MAZED (17) [verb] To amaze, astonish, bewilder | [verb] To daze, stupefy, or confuse MAZER (16) [noun] The maple tree, or maple wood. | [noun] A large drinking bowl made from such wood; a mazer bowl. MAZES (16) [noun] A labyrinth; a puzzle consisting of a complicated network of paths or passages, the aim of which is to find one's way. | [noun] Something made up of many confused or conflicting elements; a tangle. | [noun] Confusion of thought; state of bewilderment. MBIRA (9) [noun] A thumb piano, a musical instrument having a small sound box fitted with a row of tuned tabs that are plucked with the thumbs, originating among the Shona of southern Africa; any type of plucked lamellophone of the same type as the Shona instrument. MEADS (8) [noun] An alcoholic drink fermented from honey and water. | [noun] A drink composed of syrup of sarsaparilla or other flavouring extract, and water, and sometimes charged with carbon dioxide. | [noun] A meadow. MEALS (7) [noun] Food that is prepared and eaten, usually at a specific time, and usually in a comparatively large quantity (as opposed to a snack). | [noun] Food served or eaten as a repast. | [noun] A time or an occasion. MEALY (10) [adjective] Resembling meal (the foodstuff). MEANS (7) [verb] To lament. | [verb] To intend. | [verb] To convey (a meaning). MEANT (7) [verb] To intend. | [verb] To convey (a meaning). | [verb] To have conviction in (something said or expressed); to be sincere in (what one says). MEANY (10) [noun] A mean (unkind or miserly) person; a killjoy. | [noun] A villain. MEATS (7) [noun] The flesh (muscle tissue) of an animal used as food. | [noun] A type of meat, by anatomic position and provenance. | [noun] Food, for animals or humans, especially solid food. See also meat and drink. MEATY (10) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing meat. | [adjective] Resembling meat in flavour, etc. | [adjective] Of a person or a body part, large and solid. MECCA (11) MEDAL (8) [noun] A stamped metal disc used as a personal ornament, a charm, or a religious object. | [noun] A stamped or cast metal object (usually a disc), particularly one awarded as a prize or reward. | [verb] To win a medal. MEDIA (8) [noun] The middle layer of the wall of a blood vessel or lymph vessel which is composed of connective and muscular tissue. | [noun] A voiced stop consonant. | [noun] One of the major veins of the insect wing, between the radius and the cubitus | [noun] Means and institutions for publishing and broadcasting information. MEDIC (10) [noun] A doctor. | [noun] A paramedic, someone with special training in first aid, especially in the military. | [noun] A medical student. | [noun] Any of various European and North African herbs, of the genus Medicago, several of which are grown for fodder etc. MEDII (8) MEEDS (8) [noun] A payment or recompense made for services rendered or in recognition of some achievement; reward, deserts; award. | [noun] A gift; bribe. | [noun] Merit or desert; worth. MEETS (7) [noun] A sports competition, especially for track and field (a track meet) or swimming (a swim meet). | [noun] A gathering of riders, horses and hounds for foxhunting; a field meet for hunting. | [noun] A meeting of two trains in opposite directions on a single track, when one is put into a siding to let the other cross. MEINY (10) MELDS (8) [verb] To combine multiple similar objects into one | [verb] In card games, especially of the rummy family, to announce or display a combination of cards. MELEE (7) [noun] A battle fought at close range; hand-to-hand combat; brawling. | [noun] A noisy, confused or tumultuous fight, argument or scrap. | [noun] Any any confused, disorganised, disordered or chaotic situation. MELIC (9) [noun] Any of various grasses, of the genus Melica, from north temperate regions | [adjective] Of or pertaining to Greek lyric verse. MELLS (7) MELON (7) [noun] Any of various plants of the family Cucurbitaceae grown for food, generally not including the cucumber. | [noun] The fruit of such plants. | [noun] A light pinkish orange colour, like that of some melon flesh. | [noun] The result of heptazine being polymerized with the tri-s-triazine units linked through an amine (NH) link. MELTS (7) [noun] Molten material, the product of melting. | [noun] The transition of matter from a solid state to a liquid state. | [noun] The springtime snow runoff in mountain regions. MEMOS (9) [noun] A short note; a memorandum. | [noun] A record of partial results that can be reused later without recomputation. | [verb] To record something; to make a note of something. MENAD (8) MENDS (8) [noun] A place, as in clothing, which has been repaired by mending. | [noun] The act of repairing. | [verb] To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement. MENSA (7) MENSE (7) MENTA (7) MENUS (7) [noun] The details of the food to be served at a banquet; a bill of fare. | [noun] A list of dishes offered in a restaurant. | [noun] A list from which the user may select an operation to be performed, often done with a keyboard, mouse, or controller under a graphical user interface MEOUS (7) MEOWS (10) [noun] The cry of a cat. | [noun] The drug mephedrone. | [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MERCY (12) [noun] Relenting; forbearance to cause or allow harm to another. | [noun] Forgiveness or compassion, especially toward those less fortunate. | [noun] A tendency toward forgiveness, pity, or compassion. MERDE (8) [noun] (quaint) shit MERER (7) MERES (7) [noun] A body of standing water, such as a lake or a pond. More specifically, it can refer to a lake that is broad in relation to its depth. Also included in place names such as Windermere. | [noun] Boundary, limit; a boundary-marker; boundary-line. | [noun] A Maori war-club. MERGE (8) [noun] The joining together of multiple sources. | [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To combine into a whole. MERIT (7) [noun] A claim to commendation or a reward. | [noun] A mark or token of approbation or to recognize excellence. | [noun] Something deserving or worthy of positive recognition or reward. MERKS (11) MERLE (7) [noun] The Eurasian blackbird, Turdus merula. | [noun] Any blackbird. | [noun] A type of mottled colouration on dogs. MERLS (7) [noun] The Eurasian blackbird, Turdus merula. | [noun] Any blackbird. | [noun] A type of mottled colouration on dogs. MERRY (10) [adjective] Jolly and full of high spirits. | [adjective] Festive and full of fun and laughter. | [adjective] Brisk | [noun] An English wild cherry. MESAS (7) [noun] Flat area of land or plateau higher than other land, with one or more clifflike edges. MESHY (13) MESIC (9) [adjective] (of a habitat) Moist. | [adjective] (of an organism) Adapted to a moist habitat. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to mesons; mesonic. MESNE (7) [noun] A mesne lord. | [adjective] Intermediate. MESON (7) [noun] (rare outside entomology) The mesial plane dividing the body into similar right and left halves. | [noun] A member of a group of subatomic particles having a mass intermediate between electrons and protons. (The most easily detected mesons fit this definition.) | [noun] (now specifically) An elementary particle that is composed of a quark and an antiquark, such as a kaon or pion. (Mesons composed of rarer quarks are much heavier.) MESSY (10) [adjective] (of a place, situation, person, etc) In a disorderly state; chaotic; disorderly. | [adjective] (of a person) Prone to causing mess. | [adjective] (of a situation) Difficult or unpleasant to deal with. METAL (7) [noun] (heading) Chemical elements or alloys, and the mines where their ores come from. | [noun] A light tincture used in a coat of arms, specifically argent and or. | [noun] Molten glass that is to be blown or moulded to form objects. METED (8) [verb] To measure. | [verb] (usually with “out”) To dispense, measure (out), allot (especially punishment, reward etc.). METER (7) [noun] (always meter) A device that measures things. | [noun] (always meter) A parking meter or similar device for collecting payment. | [noun] (always meter) One who metes or measures. METES (7) [verb] To measure. | [verb] (usually with “out”) To dispense, measure (out), allot (especially punishment, reward etc.). | [noun] A boundary or other limit; a boundary-marker; mere. METHS (10) [noun] Methylated spirits. | [noun] Methamphetamine, especially in the form of the crystalline hydrochloride. | [noun] Methadone. METIS (7) [noun] A person of mixed-race ancestry. | [noun] A person of mixed European and Indigenous descent. | [noun] A person who self-identifies as Métis. | [noun] (knowledge management) Practical intelligence; street smarts. METRE (7) [verb] To measure with a metering device. | [verb] To imprint a postage mark with a postage meter. | [verb] To regulate the flow of or to deliver in regulated amounts (usually of fluids but sometimes of other things such as anticipation or breath). | [noun] The rhythm or measure in verse and musical composition. METRO (7) [noun] An underground railway. | [noun] A train that runs on such an underground railway. | [noun] An urban rapid transit light railway | [noun] A metropolitan area MEWED (11) [verb] To shut away, confine, lock up. | [verb] (of a bird) To moult. | [verb] (of a bird) To cause to moult. MEWLS (10) [noun] A soft cry or whimper; an act of mewling. | [verb] To cry weakly with a soft, high-pitched sound; to whimper; to whine. MEZES (16) [noun] Small portions of starters typical of Turkish and Greek cuisine (equivalent to Spanish tapas or Hawaiian pu pu) often served as a light meal with pita. MEZZO (25) [noun] Mezzo-soprano MIAOU (7) MIAOW (10) [noun] The cry of a cat. | [noun] The drug mephedrone. | [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MIASM (9) [noun] An unhealthy vapor or atmosphere; a miasma. | [noun] A predisposition to a particular disease, which interferes with subsequent treatment of it. MIAUL (7) [noun] The cry of a cat. | [verb] To give the cry of a cat. MICAS (9) MICHE (12) MICKS (13) [noun] An Irishman | [noun] A Catholic, particularly of Irish descent. MICRA (9) MICRO (9) [noun] (gaming slang) micromanagement | [verb] (gaming slang) to micromanage | [adjective] Small, relatively small; used to contrast levels of the noun modified. MIDDY (12) [noun] A midshipman | [noun] A measure of 285 ml (10 fl oz) of beer; a pot. MIDGE (9) [noun] Any of various small two-winged flies, for example, from the family Chironomidae or non-biting midges, the family Chaoboridae or phantom midges, and the family Ceratopogonidae or biting midges, all belonging to the order Diptera | [noun] Any bait or lure designed to resemble a midge MIDIS (8) [noun] A native or inhabitant of Berlin. | [noun] A doughnut with a sweet filling. | [noun] A newspaper format with pages normally measuring about 315 by 470 millimetres (12.4 in × 18.5 inches), slightly taller and wider than a tabloid but narrower and shorter than a broadsheet. MIDST (8) [noun] A place in the middle of something; may be used of a literal or metaphorical location. | [preposition] Among, in the middle of; amid. MIENS (7) [noun] Demeanor; facial expression or attitude, especially one which is intended by its bearer. | [noun] A specific facial expression. MIFFS (13) [noun] A small argument; a quarrel. | [noun] A state of being offended. | [verb] (usually used in the passive) To offend slightly. MIFFY (16) [adjective] Easily irritated or offended. | [adjective] Particular; fussy. MIGGS (9) MIGHT (11) [noun] Power, strength, force or influence held by a person or group. | [noun] Physical strength or force. | [noun] The ability to do something. | [verb] To be strong; to have power (over). MIKED (12) [verb] To microphone; to place one or more microphones (mikes) on. | [verb] To measure using a micrometer. MIKES (11) [noun] A microphone. | [verb] To microphone; to place one or more microphones (mikes) on. | [verb] To measure using a micrometer. MIKRA (11) MILCH (12) [adjective] (of a cow, animal, etc.) Giving milk; in note | [adjective] Tender; pitiful; weeping. MILER (7) [noun] (often in combination) An athlete or a horse who specializes in running races of one mile, or a specified number of miles. | [noun] (in combination) A race whose length is the specified number of miles. MILES (7) [noun] The international mile: a unit of length precisely equal to 1.609344 kilometers established by treaty among Anglophone nations in 1959, divided into 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards. | [noun] Any of several customary units of length derived from the 1593 English statute mile of 8 furlongs, equivalent to 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards of various precise values. | [noun] Any of many customary units of length derived from the Roman mile (mille passus) of 8 stades or 5,000 Roman feet. MILIA (7) [noun] A keratin-filled cyst that can appear just under the epidermis or on the roof of the mouth. MILKS (11) [noun] A white liquid produced by the mammary glands of female mammals to nourish their young. From certain animals, especially cows, it is also called dairy milk and is a common food for humans as a beverage or used to produce various dairy products such as butter, cheese, and yogurt. | [noun] A white (or whitish) liquid obtained from a vegetable source such as almonds, coconuts, oats, rice, and/or soy beans. Also called non-dairy milk. | [noun] An individual serving of milk. MILKY (14) [adjective] Resembling milk in color, consistency, smell, etc.; consisting of milk. | [adjective] (color science) Of the black in an image, appearing as dark gray rather than black. | [adjective] (of a drink) Containing (an especially large amount of) milk. MILLE (7) MILLS (7) [noun] A grinding apparatus for substances such as grains, seeds, etc. | [noun] The building housing such a grinding apparatus. | [noun] A machine used for expelling the juice, sap, etc., from vegetable tissues by pressure, or by pressure in combination with a grinding, or cutting process. MILOS (7) MILPA (9) MILTS (7) [noun] The spleen, especially of an animal bred for food. | [noun] The semen of a male fish. MILTY (10) MIMED (10) [verb] To mimic. | [verb] To act without words. | [verb] To represent an action or object through gesture, without the use of sound. MIMEO (9) [noun] A mimeograph. | [noun] An unpublished academic paper. | [verb] To mimeograph. MIMER (9) MIMES (9) [noun] A form of acting without words; pantomime. | [noun] A pantomime actor. | [noun] A classical theatrical entertainment in the form of farce. MIMIC (11) [noun] A person who practices mimicry, or mime. | [noun] An imitation. | [verb] To imitate, especially in order to ridicule. MINAE (7) MINAS (7) MINCE (9) [noun] Finely chopped meat. | [noun] Finely chopped mixed fruit used in Christmas pies; mincemeat. | [noun] An affected (often dainty or short and precise) gait. MINCY (12) MINDS (8) [noun] The ability for rational thought. | [noun] The ability to be aware of things. | [noun] The ability to remember things. MINED (8) [verb] To remove (ore) from the ground. | [verb] To dig into, for ore or metal. | [verb] To sow mines (the explosive devices) in (an area). MINER (7) [noun] A person who works in a mine. | [noun] An operator of ordnance mines and similar explosives. | [noun] Any bird of one of four species of Australian endemic honeyeaters in the genus Manorina. MINES (7) [noun] Demeanor; facial expression or attitude, especially one which is intended by its bearer. | [noun] A specific facial expression. | [noun] An excavation from which ore or solid minerals are taken, especially one consisting of underground tunnels. MINGY (11) [adjective] Mean, miserly, stingy. MINIM (9) [noun] A half note, drawn as a semibreve with a stem. | [noun] A unit of volume, in the Imperial and U.S. customary systems, 1/60 fluid drachm. Approximately equal to 1 drop, 62 μL or 0.9 grain (weight) of water. | [noun] A short vertical stroke used in handwriting. MINIS (7) [noun] A miniskirt. | [noun] A minicomputer. MINKE (11) [noun] A minke whale, one of two species of baleen whales within Balaenoptera, the northern-dwelling species of which is often seen in coastal waters. MINKS (11) [noun] (plural mink or minks) Any of various semi-aquatic, carnivorous mammals in the Mustelinae subfamily, similar to weasels, with dark fur, native to Europe and America, of which two species in different genera are extant: the American mink (Neovison vison) and the European mink (Mustela lutreola). | [noun] (plural mink) The fur or pelt of a mink, used to make apparel. | [noun] (plural minks) An article of clothing made of mink. MINNY (10) MINOR (7) [noun] A person who is below the age of majority, consent, criminal responsibility or other adult responsibilities and accountabilities. | [noun] A subject area of secondary concentration of a student at a college or university, or the student who has chosen such a secondary concentration. | [noun] Determinant of a square submatrix MINTS (7) [noun] A building or institution where money (originally, only coins) is produced under government licence. | [noun] A large amount of money. A vast sum or amount, etc. | [noun] Any place regarded as a source of unlimited supply; the supply itself. MINTY (10) MINUS (7) [noun] The minus sign (−). | [noun] A negative quantity. | [noun] A downside or disadvantage. MIRED (8) [verb] To cause or permit to become stuck in mud; to plunge or fix in mud. | [verb] To sink into mud. | [verb] To weigh down. | [noun] A unit of measurement for color temperature. MIRES (7) [noun] Deep mud; moist, spongy earth. | [noun] An undesirable situation, a predicament. | [verb] To cause or permit to become stuck in mud; to plunge or fix in mud. MIREX (14) [noun] The pesticide and fire retardant perchloropentacyclodecane, which is a persistent organic pollutant. MIRKS (11) MIRKY (14) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MIRTH (10) [noun] The emotion usually following humour and accompanied by laughter; merriment; jollity; gaiety. | [noun] That which causes merriment. MIRZA (16) MISDO (8) MISER (7) [noun] A person who hoards money rather than spending it; one who is cheap or extremely parsimonious. | [noun] A kind of earth auger, typically large-bored and often hand-operated. MISES (7) MISOS (7) MISSY (10) [noun] A young female, or miss; as a term of mild disparagement, typically used jokingly or rebukingly. | [adjective] Girlish; effeminate; sentimental. | [adjective] Of, or pertaining to, female clothing or clothing sizes. | [noun] An impure yellow sulphate of iron; yellow copperas or copiapite. MISTS (7) [noun] Water or other liquid finely suspended in air. | [noun] A layer of fine droplets or particles. | [noun] Anything that dims, darkens, or hinders vision. MISTY (10) [adjective] Covered in mist; foggy. | [adjective] Dim; vague; obscure. | [adjective] With tears in the eyes; dewy-eyed. MITER (7) [noun] A covering for the head, worn on solemn occasions by church dignitaries, which has been made in many forms, mostly recently a tall cap with two points or peaks. | [noun] The surface forming the bevelled end or edge of a piece where a miter joint is made; also, a joint formed or a junction effected by two beveled ends or edges; a miter joint. | [noun] A 13th-century coin minted in Europe which circulated in Ireland as a debased counterfeit sterling penny, outlawed under Edward I. MITES (7) [noun] Any of many minute arachnids which, along with the ticks, comprise subclass Acarina (aka Acari). | [noun] A small coin formerly circulated in England, rated at about a third of a farthing. | [noun] A lepton, a small coin used in Palestine in the time of Christ. MITIS (7) MITRE (7) [noun] A covering for the head, worn on solemn occasions by church dignitaries, which has been made in many forms, mostly recently a tall cap with two points or peaks. | [noun] The surface forming the bevelled end or edge of a piece where a miter joint is made; also, a joint formed or a junction effected by two beveled ends or edges; a miter joint. | [noun] A 13th-century coin minted in Europe which circulated in Ireland as a debased counterfeit sterling penny, outlawed under Edward I. MITTS (7) [noun] A mitten | [noun] An oversized, protective glove such as an oven mitt or a baseball mitt. | [noun] (especially in plural) A hand. MIXED (15) [verb] To stir together. | [verb] To combine (items from two or more sources normally kept separate). | [verb] To form by mingling; to produce by the stirring together of ingredients; to concoct from different parts. MIXER (14) [noun] One who, or a device that, mixes or merges things together. | [noun] One who mixes or socializes. | [noun] A machine outfitted with (typically blunt) blades with which it mixes or beats ingredients in a bowl below. MIXES (14) [verb] To stir together. | [verb] To combine (items from two or more sources normally kept separate). | [verb] To form by mingling; to produce by the stirring together of ingredients; to concoct from different parts. MIXUP (16) [noun] A case of confusion. MIZEN (16) [noun] Mizzenmast. | [noun] A fore-and-aft sail set on a mizzenmast. MOANS (7) [noun] A low, mournful cry of pain, sorrow or pleasure | [verb] To complain about; to bemoan, to bewail; to mourn. | [verb] To grieve. MOATS (7) [noun] A deep, wide defensive ditch, normally filled with water, surrounding a fortified habitation. | [noun] An aspect of a business which makes it more "defensible" from competitors, either because of the nature of its products, services, franchise or other reason. | [noun] A circular lowland between a resurgent dome and the walls of the caldera surrounding it. MOCHA (12) [noun] A coffee drink with chocolate syrup added, or a serving thereof; a caffè mocha. | [noun] A coffee and chocolate mixed flavour. | [noun] A dark brown colour, like that of mocha coffee. MOCKS (13) [noun] An imitation, usually of lesser quality. | [noun] Mockery, the act of mocking. | [noun] A practice exam set by an educating institution to prepare students for an important exam. MODAL (8) [noun] A modal proposition. | [noun] A modal form, notably a modal auxiliary. | [noun] (grammar) A modal verb. MODEL (8) [noun] A person who serves as a subject for artwork or fashion, usually in the medium of photography but also for painting or drawing. | [noun] A person, usually an attractive female, hired to show items or goods to the public, such as items given away as prizes on a TV game show. | [noun] A representation of a physical object, usually in miniature. MODEM (10) [noun] A device that encodes digital computer signals into analog/analogue telephone signals and vice versa and allows computers to communicate over a phone line. | [verb] To transmit by modem. MODES (8) [noun] One of several ancient Greek scales. | [noun] One of several common scales in modern Western music, one of which corresponds to the modern major scale and one to the natural minor scale. | [noun] A particular means of accomplishing something. MODUS (8) MOGGY (12) [noun] A young cow or bull. | [noun] Leather made of the skin of the calf; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding. | [noun] A young deer, elephant, seal, whale or giraffe (also used of some other animals). MOGUL (8) [noun] A rich or powerful person; a magnate. | [noun] A hump or bump on a skiing piste. | [noun] A larger-sized (39 mm diameter) screw base used for large, high-power light bulbs, known as mogul (screw) base light bulbs. MOHEL (10) [noun] The person who performs the circumcision in a Jewish bris. MOHUR (10) MOILS (7) [noun] Hard work. | [noun] Confusion, turmoil. | [noun] A spot; a defilement. MOIRA (7) MOIRE (7) [noun] Originally, a fine textile fabric made of the hair of an Asiatic goat. | [noun] Any textile fabric to which a watered appearance is given. MOIST (7) [verb] To moisten. | [adjective] Slightly wet; characterised by the presence of moisture, not dry; damp. | [adjective] Of eyes: tearful, wet with tears. MOJOS (14) [noun] A magic charm or spell. | [noun] Supernatural skill or luck. | [noun] Personal magnetism; charm. MOKES (11) [noun] A donkey. | [noun] A mesh of a net, or of anything resembling a net. | [noun] A black person. MOLAL (7) [adjective] Of or designating a solution that contains one mole of solute per 1000g of solvent MOLAR (7) [noun] A back tooth having a broad surface used for grinding one's food. | [adjective] Of or relating to the molar teeth, or to grinding. | [noun] A unit of concentration equal to one mole per litre. MOLAS (7) [noun] A traditional textile art form of the Kuna people of Panama and Colombia, consisting of cloth panels to be worn on clothing, featuring complex designs made with multiple layers of cloth in a reverse appliqué technique. | [noun] A sunfish, Mola mola. MOLDS (8) [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. | [noun] A frame or model around or on which something is formed or shaped. | [noun] Something that is made in or shaped on a mold. MOLDY (11) [adjective] Covered with mold. | [adjective] Stale or musty. MOLES (7) [noun] A pigmented spot on the skin, a naevus, slightly raised, and sometimes hairy. | [noun] Any of several small, burrowing insectivores of the family Talpidae. | [noun] Any of the burrowing rodents also called mole rats. MOLLS (7) [noun] A female companion of a gangster, especially a former or current prostitute. | [noun] A prostitute or woman with loose sexual morals. | [noun] Bitch, slut; an insulting epithet applied to a female. MOLLY (10) [noun] A woman or girl, especially of low status. | [noun] An effeminate male, a male homosexual. | [noun] Pure MDMA powder. | [noun] A fish of the genus Poecilia, except for those known as guppies. MOLTO (7) MOLTS (7) [noun] The process of shedding or losing a covering of fur, feathers or skin etc. | [noun] The skin or feathers cast off during the process of moulting. | [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. MOMES (9) MOMMA (11) [noun] Mother | [noun] A voluptuous woman. | [noun] One's wife or girlfriend. MOMMY (14) [noun] (usually childish) Mother. | [verb] To treat someone like a mother would; to mother someone. | [adjective] (chiefly in the superlative) Characteristic of a mother; motherly. MOMUS (9) MONAD (8) [noun] An ultimate atom, or simple, unextended point; something ultimate and indivisible. | [noun] A single individual (such as a pollen grain) that is free from others, not united in a group. | [noun] A monoid object in the category of endofunctors of a fixed category. MONAS (7) MONDE (8) MONDO (8) [noun] A dialogue between master and student designed to obtain an intuitive truth. | [adjective] Big, large; major, significant. | [adverb] Very, extremely, really. MONEY (10) [noun] A legally or socially binding conceptual contract of entitlement to wealth, void of intrinsic value, payable for all debts and taxes, and regulated in supply. | [noun] A generally accepted means of exchange and measure of value. | [noun] A currency maintained by a state or other entity which can guarantee its value (such as a monetary union). MONGO (8) [noun] Still-usable things salvaged (by sanmen) from garbage. MONIE (7) MONKS (11) [noun] A male member of a monastic order who has devoted his life for religious service. | [noun] In earlier usage, an eremite or hermit devoted to solitude, as opposed to a cenobite, who lived communally. | [noun] A male who leads an isolated life; a loner, a hermit. MONOS (7) [noun] A bicycle or motorcycle trick where the front wheel is lifted off the ground while riding | [noun] A monogamous person. | [noun] An injective homomorphism MONTE (7) [noun] A game in which three or four cards are dealt face-up and players bet on which of them will first be matched in suit by others dealt. | [noun] (Latin America) A wood or forest; timberland. MONTH (10) [noun] A period into which a year is divided, historically based on the phases of the moon. | [noun] A period of 30 days, 31 days, or some alternation thereof. | [noun] (in the plural) A woman's period; menstrual discharge. MOOCH (12) [noun] An aimless stroll. | [noun] One who mooches; a moocher. | [noun] A unit of time comprising ten days, used to measure how long someone holds a job. MOODS (8) [noun] A mental or emotional state, composure. | [noun] Emotional character (of a work of music, literature, or other art). | [noun] A sullen, gloomy or angry mental state; a bad mood. MOODY (11) [adjective] Given to sudden or frequent changes of mind; temperamental. | [adjective] Sulky or depressed. | [adjective] Dour, gloomy or brooding. MOOED (8) [verb] Of a cow or bull, to make its characteristic lowing sound. MOOLA (7) [noun] Money, cash. MOOLS (7) MOONS (7) [noun] (by extension of Moon) Any natural satellite of a planet. | [noun] A month, particularly a lunar month. | [noun] A crescent-like outwork in a fortification. MOONY (10) [noun] The act of mooning, flashing the buttocks. | [noun] A silly person. | [adjective] Resembling the moon. MOORS (7) [noun] An extensive waste covered with patches of heath, and having a poor, light soil, but sometimes marshy, and abounding in peat; a heath | [noun] A game preserve consisting of moorland. | [verb] To cast anchor or become fastened. MOORY (10) MOOSE (7) [noun] The largest member of the deer family (Alces americanus, sometimes included in Alces alces), of which the male has very large, palmate antlers. | [noun] An ugly person. | [noun] An Asian girl taken as a lover. MOOTS (7) [noun] A moot court. | [noun] A system of arbitration in many areas of Africa in which the primary goal is to settle a dispute and reintegrate adversaries into society rather than assess penalties. | [noun] A gathering of Rovers, usually in the form of a camp lasting 2 weeks. MOPED (10) [verb] To carry oneself in a depressed, lackadaisical manner; to give oneself up to low spirits; to pout, sulk. | [verb] To make spiritless and stupid. | [adjective] Melancholic, dejected. | [noun] A lightweight, two-wheeled vehicle equipped with a small motor and pedals, designed to go no faster than some specified speed limit. MOPER (9) MOPES (9) [verb] To carry oneself in a depressed, lackadaisical manner; to give oneself up to low spirits; to pout, sulk. | [verb] To make spiritless and stupid. MOPEY (12) MORAE (7) MORAL (7) [noun] (of a narrative) The ethical significance or practical lesson. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Moral practices or teachings: modes of conduct. | [noun] A morality play. MORAS (7) MORAY (10) [noun] Any of the large cosmopolitan carnivorous eels of the family Muraenidae. MOREL (7) [noun] Any of several edible mushrooms, especially the common morel or yellow morel. | [noun] Any of several fungi in the genus Morchella, the upper part of which is covered with a reticulated and pitted hymenium. | [noun] A variety of cultivated cherry, Prunus cerasus 'austera', having a dark skin MORES (7) [noun] A set of moral norms or customs derived from generally accepted practices rather than written laws. | [noun] A carrot; a parsnip. | [noun] A root; stock. | [verb] To root up. MORNS (7) [noun] Morning. MORON (7) [noun] A stupid person; an idiot; a fool. | [noun] A person of mild mental subnormality in the former classification of mental retardation, having an intelligence quotient of 50–70. MORPH (12) [noun] (grammar) A physical form representing some morpheme in language. It is a recurrent distinctive sound or sequence of sounds. | [noun] An allomorph: one of a set of realizations that a morpheme can have in different contexts. | [noun] Local variety of a species, distinguishable from other populations of the species by morphology or behaviour. | [noun] A computer-generated gradual change from one image to another. MORRO (7) MORSE (7) [noun] A clasp or fastening used to fasten a cope in the front, usually decorative. | [noun] A walrus. MORTS (7) [noun] Death; especially, the death of game in hunting. | [noun] A note sounded on a horn at the death of a deer. | [noun] The skin of a sheep or lamb that has died of disease. MOSEY (10) [verb] To set off, get going; to start a journey. | [verb] To go off quickly: to hurry up. | [verb] To amble; to walk or proceed in a leisurely manner. MOSKS (11) MOSSO (7) MOSSY (10) [noun] Mosquito | [adjective] Covered in or overgrown with moss. MOSTE (7) MOSTS (7) MOTEL (7) [noun] A type of hotel or lodging establishment, often located near a major highway, which typically features a series of rooms the entrances of which are immediately adjacent to a parking lot to facilitate convenient access to automobiles parked there. | [noun] A low-cost short-stay hotel, often with hourly rates rather than daily rates, and notorious for permitting illicit sexual activities; love hotel. | [verb] To stay in a motel or motels. MOTES (7) [noun] A small particle; a speck. | [noun] A meeting for discussion. | [noun] A body of persons who meet for discussion, especially about the management of affairs. MOTET (7) [noun] A composition adapted to sacred words in the elaborate polyphonic church style; an anthem. MOTEY (10) MOTHS (10) [noun] A small particle; a speck. | [noun] A meeting for discussion. | [noun] A body of persons who meet for discussion, especially about the management of affairs. MOTHY (13) [adjective] Infested with moths | [adjective] Moth-eaten MOTIF (10) [noun] A recurring or dominant element; a theme. | [noun] A short melodic passage that is repeated in several parts of a work. | [noun] A decorative figure that is repeated in a design or pattern. MOTOR (7) [noun] A machine or device that converts other energy forms into mechanical energy, or imparts motion. | [noun] A motor car, or automobile. | [noun] A source of power for something; an inspiration; a driving force. MOTTE (7) [noun] A raised earth mound, often topped with a wooden or stone structure and surrounded with a ditch. | [noun] A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot. | [noun] A word or a motto; a device. MOTTO (7) [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, forming part of an heraldic achievement. | [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, prefixed to an essay, discourse, chapter, canto, or the like, suggestive of its subject matter; a short, suggestive expression of a guiding principle; a maxim. | [noun] A paper packet containing a sweetmeat, cracker, etc., together with a scrap of paper bearing a motto. MOTTS (7) MOUCH (12) MOUES (7) [noun] A pout, especially as expressing mock-annoyance or flirtatiousness. MOULD (8) [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. | [noun] A frame or model around or on which something is formed or shaped. | [noun] Something that is made in or shaped on a mold. | [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. MOULT (7) [noun] The process of shedding or losing a covering of fur, feathers or skin etc. | [noun] The skin or feathers cast off during the process of moulting. | [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. MOUND (8) [noun] An artificial hill or elevation of earth; a raised bank; an embankment thrown up for defense | [noun] A natural elevation appearing as if thrown up artificially; a regular and isolated hill, hillock, or knoll. | [noun] Elevated area of dirt upon which the pitcher stands to pitch. MOUNT (7) [noun] A hill or mountain. | [noun] Any of seven fleshy prominences in the palm of the hand, taken to represent the influences of various heavenly bodies. | [noun] A bulwark for offence or defence; a mound. | [noun] An animal, usually a horse, used to ride on, unlike a draught horse MOURN (7) [noun] Sorrow, grief. | [noun] A ring fitted upon the head of a lance to prevent wounding an adversary in tilting. | [verb] To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death). MOUSE (7) [noun] Any small rodent of the genus Mus. | [noun] A member of the many small rodent and marsupial species resembling such a rodent. | [noun] A quiet or shy person. MOUSY (10) [noun] A mouse. | [adjective] Resembling a mouse. | [adjective] Abounding or infested with mice. MOUTH (10) [noun] The opening of a creature through which food is ingested. | [noun] The end of a river out of which water flows into a sea or other large body of water. | [noun] An outlet, aperture or orifice. MOVED (11) [verb] To change place or posture; to go, in any manner, from one place or position to another. | [verb] To act; to take action; to begin to act | [verb] To change residence, for example from one house, town, or state, to another; to go and live at another place. See also move out and move in. MOVER (10) [noun] Someone who or something that moves. | [noun] A dancer. | [noun] A person employed to help people move their possessions from one residence to another. MOVES (10) [noun] The act of moving; a movement. | [noun] An act for the attainment of an object; a step in the execution of a plan or purpose. | [noun] A formalized or practiced action used in athletics, dance, physical exercise, self-defense, hand-to-hand combat, etc. MOVIE (10) [noun] A recorded sequence of images displayed on a screen at a rate sufficiently fast to create the appearance of motion. | [noun] (usually plural) A cinema. MOWED (11) [verb] To cut down grass or crops. | [verb] To cut down or slaughter in great numbers. | [verb] To make grimaces, mock. MOWER (10) [noun] A lawnmower, a machine used to cut grass. | [noun] A person who cuts grass. MOXAS (14) MOXIE (14) [noun] Nerve, spunk, strength of character. | [noun] Verve. | [noun] Wit, smarts, skill. MOZOS (16) [noun] A male servant, especially an attendant to a bullfighter. | [noun] A title of respect for a young man (usually unmarried) with or without a name used. | [noun] An unmarried man, a boy. MUCID (10) [adjective] Musty; mouldy; slimy; mucous MUCIN (9) [noun] Any of several glycoproteins found in mucus MUCKS (13) [noun] (slimy) mud, sludge. | [noun] Soft (or slimy) manure. | [noun] Anything filthy or vile. Dirt; something that makes another thing dirty. MUCKY (16) [adjective] Covered in muck. | [adjective] Obscene, pornographic. MUCOR (9) MUCRO (9) [noun] A pointed end, often sharp, abruptly terminating an organ, such as a projection at the tip of a leaf; the posterior tip of a cuttlebone; or the distal part of the furcula in Collembola. MUCUS (9) [noun] A slippery secretion from the lining of the mucous membranes. MUDDY (12) [verb] To get mud on (something). | [verb] To make a mess of, or create confusion with regard to; to muddle. | [adjective] Covered with or full of mud or wet soil. MUDRA (8) [noun] Any of several formal symbolic hand postures used in classical dance of India and in Hindu and Buddhist iconography. | [noun] Any of the formal body positions and postures used in yoga and meditation. MUFFS (13) [noun] A piece of fur or cloth, usually with open ends, used for keeping the hands warm. | [noun] Female pubic hair; female genitals. | [noun] A blown cylinder of glass which is afterward flattened out to make a sheet. MUFTI (10) [noun] A Muslim scholar and interpreter of shari’a law, who can deliver a fatwa. | [noun] A civilian dress when worn by a member of the military, or casual dress when worn by a pupil of a school who normally would wear uniform. MUGGS (9) MUGGY (12) [adjective] (Of the weather, air, etc) humid, or hot and humid. | [adjective] Wet or mouldy MUHLY (13) MUJIK (18) MULCH (12) [noun] Any material used to cover the top layer of soil to protect, insulate, or decorate it, or to discourage weeds or retain moisture. | [noun] A material used as mulch, as a decorative redwood bark mulch. | [verb] To apply mulch. MULCT (9) [noun] A fine or penalty, especially a pecuniary one. | [verb] To impose such a fine or penalty. | [verb] To swindle (someone) out of money. MULED (8) MULES (7) [noun] The generally sterile male or female hybrid offspring of a male donkey and a female horse. | [noun] The generally sterile hybrid offspring of any two species of animals. | [noun] A hybrid plant. | [verb] To remove skin from (an animal) to prevent myiasis. MULEY (10) [adjective] (of cattle or deer) Without horns. | [noun] Mule deer MULLA (7) [noun] A religious scholar and teacher of sharia law. MULLS (7) [noun] A thin, soft muslin. | [noun] Marijuana that has been chopped to prepare it for smoking. | [noun] A stew of meat, broth, milk, butter, vegetables, and seasonings, thickened with soda crackers. MUMMS (11) MUMMY (14) [noun] An embalmed human or animal corpse wrapped in linen bandages for burial, especially as practised by the ancient Egyptians and some Native American tribes. | [noun] (by extension) A reanimated embalmed human corpse, as a typical character in horror films. | [noun] (by extension) Any naturally preserved human or animal body. | [noun] (usually childish) mother. MUMPS (11) [noun] A grimace. | [verb] To mumble, speak unclearly. | [verb] To move the lips with the mouth closed; to mumble, as in sulkiness. MUMUS (9) MUNCH (12) [noun] A location or restaurant where good eating can be expected. | [noun] An act of eating. | [noun] Food. MUNGO (8) [noun] A material of short fiber and inferior quality obtained by deviling woollen rags or the remnants of woollen goods, specifically those of felted, milled, or hard-spun woollen cloth, as distinguished from shoddy, or the deviled product of loose-textured woollen goods or worsted. MUNIS (7) [noun] A municipal bond. | [noun] A facility operated by a municipal government, such as a golf course or train line. | [noun] The municipal government / municipality MUONS (7) [noun] An unstable elementary particle in the lepton family, having similar properties to the electron but with a mass 207 times greater. MURAL (7) [noun] A large painting, usually drawn on a wall. | [verb] To create a mural. | [adjective] Of or relating to a wall; on, or in, or against a wall. MURAS (7) MURED (8) [verb] To wall in or fortify | [verb] To enclose or imprison within walls. MURES (7) [noun] Wall | [noun] Husks of fruit from which the juice has been squeezed. Perhaps an old spelling of myrrh MUREX (14) [noun] Any of the genus Murex of marine gastropods. MURID (8) [noun] Any rodent in the family Muridae. MURKS (11) MURKY (14) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MURRA (7) MURRE (7) [noun] Any seabird of the genus Uria in the family Alcidae (the auks). MURRS (7) MURRY (10) MUSCA (9) MUSED (8) [verb] To become lost in thought, to ponder. | [verb] To say (something) with due consideration or thought. | [verb] To think on; to meditate on. MUSER (7) MUSES (7) [noun] A source of inspiration. | [noun] A poet; a bard. | [noun] An act of musing; a period of thoughtfulness. MUSHY (13) [adjective] Resembling or having the consistency of mush; semiliquid, pasty, or granular. | [adjective] Soft; squishy. | [adjective] Overly sappy, corny, or cheesy; maudlin. MUSIC (9) [noun] A series of sounds organized in time, employing melody, harmony, tempo etc. usually to convey a mood. | [noun] Any pleasing or interesting sounds. | [noun] An art form, created by organizing of pitch, rhythm, and sounds made using musical instruments and sometimes singing. MUSKS (11) [noun] A greasy secretion with a powerful odour, produced in a glandular sac of the male musk deer and used in the manufacture of perfumes. | [noun] A similar secretion produced by the otter and the civet. | [noun] A synthetic organic compound used as a substitute for the above. MUSKY (14) [adjective] Having the scent of musk | [noun] Muskellunge MUSSY (10) MUSTH (10) [noun] A time during which male elephants exhibit increased levels of sexual activity and aggressiveness and often secrete leaking temporin from the sides of their heads. MUSTS (7) [noun] Something that is mandatory or required. | [noun] The property of being stale or musty. | [noun] Something that exhibits the property of being stale or musty. MUSTY (10) [adjective] Having a stale odor. MUTCH (12) [noun] A nightcap (hat worn to bed). | [noun] A linen or muslin hat, especially one of a type once commonly worn by elderly women and young children. MUTED (8) [verb] To silence, to make quiet. | [verb] To turn off the sound of. | [verb] Of a bird: to defecate. MUTER (7) MUTES (7) [noun] A stopped consonant; a stop. | [noun] An actor who does not speak; a mime performer. | [noun] A person who does not have the power of speech. MUTON (7) [noun] A unit of mutation forming part of a recon. MUTTS (7) [noun] A monastic or similar religious establishment in Hinduism and Jainism, usually more formal and hierarchical than an ashram. | [noun] A mongrel dog (or sometimes cat); an animal of mixed breed or uncertain origin. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A person of diverse ancestry. MUZZY (28) [adjective] Hazy, indistinct, blurred, unfocussed. | [adjective] Dazed; bewildered; tipsy. | [noun] A Muslim. MYNAH (13) [noun] One of the South and East Asian birds of the starling family Sturnidae. MYNAS (10) [noun] One of the South and East Asian birds of the starling family Sturnidae. MYOID (11) MYOMA (12) MYOPE (12) [noun] One who has myopia. MYOPY (15) MYRRH (13) [noun] A red-brown resinous material, the dried sap of a tree of the species Commiphora myrrha. | [noun] The herb chervil. MYSID (11) [noun] Any crustacean of the family Mysidae. MYTHS (13) [noun] A traditional story which embodies a belief regarding some fact or phenomenon of experience, and in which often the forces of nature and of the soul are personified; a sacred narrative regarding a god, a hero, the origin of the world or of a people, etc. | [noun] Such stories as a genre. | [noun] A commonly-held but false belief, a common misconception; a fictitious or imaginary person or thing; a popular conception about a real person or event which exaggerates or idealizes reality. MYTHY (16) NAMED (8) [verb] (ditransitive) To give a name to. | [verb] To mention, specify. | [verb] To identify as relevant or important NAMER (7) NAMES (7) [noun] Any nounal word or phrase which indicates a particular person, place, class, or thing. | [noun] Reputation. | [noun] An abusive or insulting epithet. NEEMS (7) [noun] Azadirachta indica, a large, mostly evergreen tree from India, whose seeds yield the insecticide azadirachtin. NEMAS (7) NEUME (7) [noun] Any of a set of signs used in early musical notation. | [noun] A sequence of notes to be sung to one syllable. NEUMS (7) [noun] Any of a set of signs used in early musical notation. | [noun] A sequence of notes to be sung to one syllable. NIMBI (9) [noun] A circle of light; a halo. | [noun] A gray rain cloud. NIZAM (16) [noun] The hereditary sovereign of Hyderabad, a former state of India. | [noun] The Turkish regular army; a soldier in the Turkish army. NOMAD (8) [noun] A member of a society or class who herd animals from pasture to pasture with no fixed home. | [noun] A person who changes residence frequently. | [noun] A player who changes teams frequently. NOMAS (7) NOMEN (7) [noun] The name of a citizen of Ancient Rome, designating them as a member of a gens. | [noun] The birth name of a pharaoh, the fifth of the five names of the royal titulary, traditionally encircled by a cartouche and preceded by the title zꜣ-rꜥ. NOMES (7) [noun] A prefecture or unit of regional government in Greece. | [noun] A territorial division of ancient Egypt. | [noun] A type of musical composition in Ancient Greece. NOMOI (7) NOMOS (7) NORMS (7) [noun] That which is normal or typical. | [noun] A rule that is enforced by members of a community. | [noun] A sentence with non-descriptive meaning, such as a command, permission or prohibition. NOTUM (7) [noun] The back; the dorsal aspect of the thorax in insects. NUMBS (9) [verb] To cause to become numb (physically or emotionally). | [verb] To cause (a feeling) to be less intense. | [verb] To cause (the mind, faculties, etc.) to be less acute. NUMEN (7) [noun] A divinity, especially a local or presiding god. | [noun] An influence or phenomenon at once mystical and transcendant. NYMPH (15) [noun] (Greek, Roman) Any female nature spirit associated with water, forests, grotto, wind, etc. | [noun] A young girl, especially one who is attractive, beautiful or graceful. | [noun] The larva of certain insects. OAKUM (11) [noun] A material, consisting of tarred fibres, used to caulk or pack joints in plumbing, masonry, and wooden shipbuilding. | [noun] The coarse portion separated from flax or hemp in hackling. ODEUM (8) [noun] An ancient Greek or Roman building used for performances of music and poetry. | [noun] A theatre or concert hall. ODIUM (8) [noun] Hatred; dislike. | [noun] The quality that provokes hatred; offensiveness. OGAMS (8) [noun] A single character in this alphabet. OGHAM (11) [noun] A single character in this alphabet. | [proper noun] An ancient Celtic alphabet historically used to write Primitive Irish. OHMIC (12) OLEUM (7) [noun] A solution of sulfur trioxide in sulfuric acid. OMASA (7) [noun] The third part of the stomach of a ruminant. OMBER (9) OMBRE (9) [noun] A large Mediterranean food fish Umbrina cirrosa | [noun] (colors) A gradual blending of one color hue to another, usually moving tints and shades from light to dark. OMEGA (8) [noun] The twenty-fourth letter of the Classical and the Modern Greek alphabet, and the twenty-eighth letter of the Old and the Ancient Greek alphabet, i.e. the last letter of every Greek alphabet. Uppercase version: Ω; lowercase: ω. | [noun] (often capitalized) The end; the final, last or ultimate in a sequence. | [noun] Angular velocity; symbol: ω. OMENS (7) [noun] Something which portends or is perceived to portend either a good or evil event or circumstance in the future, or which causes a foreboding; a portent or augury. | [noun] A thing of prophetic significance. | [verb] To be an omen of. OMERS (7) [noun] A former small Hebrew unit of dry volume equal to about 2.3 L or 2.1 quarts. | [noun] A vessel of one omer. | [noun] The sheaf of barley offered on the second day of Passover. OMITS (7) [verb] To leave out or exclude. | [verb] To fail to perform. | [verb] To neglect or take no notice of. ONIUM (7) OOMPH (12) [noun] Strength, power, passion or effectiveness; clout. | [noun] Sex appeal. | [noun] A bassy grunting or thudding sound. OPIUM (9) [noun] A yellow-brown, addictive narcotic drug obtained from the dried juice of unripe pods of the opium poppy, Papaver somniferum, and containing alkaloids such as morphine, codeine, and papaverine. | [noun] Anything that numbs or stupefies. ORMER (7) [noun] An abalone or sea-ear, particularly Haliotis tuberculata, common in the Channel Islands. OSMIC (9) [adjective] Pertaining to, derived from, or containing, osmium; specifically, designating those compounds in which it has a higher valence. OSMOL (7) OXIME (14) OXIMS (14) PALMS (9) [noun] Any of various evergreen trees from the family Palmae or Arecaceae, which are mainly found in the tropics. | [noun] A branch or leaf of the palm, anciently borne or worn as a symbol of victory or rejoicing. | [noun] (by extension) Triumph; victory. PALMY (12) [adjective] Made out of palm leaves or palm sap. | [adjective] Of, related to, or abounding in palm trees. | [adjective] Prosperous, flourishing, booming or thriving. PAMPA (11) PERMS (9) [noun] A permanent. | [noun] A permanent wave. | [verb] To give hair a perm, using heat, chemicals etc. PIGMY (13) [noun] (often capitalized) A member of one of various Ancient Equatorial African tribal peoples, notable for their very short stature. | [noun] A member of a race of dwarfs. | [noun] Any dwarfish person or thing. PIMAS (9) PIMPS (11) [noun] Someone who solicits customers for prostitution and acts as manager for a group of prostitutes; a pander. | [noun] A man who can easily attract women. | [verb] To act as a procurer of prostitutes; to pander. PLASM (9) [noun] A mold or matrix in which anything is cast or formed to a particular shape. | [noun] Protoplasm PLUMB (11) [noun] A little mass of lead, or the like, attached to a line, and used by builders, etc., to indicate a vertical direction. | [noun] A weight on the end of a long line, used by sailors to determine the depth of water. | [noun] The perpendicular direction or position. | [noun] The fruit and its tree. PLUME (9) [noun] A feather of a bird, especially a large or showy one used as a decoration. | [noun] A cluster of feathers worn as an ornament, especially on a helmet; a hackle. | [noun] A token of honour or prowess; that on which one prides oneself; a prize or reward. | [verb] To adorn, cover, or furnish with feathers or plumes, or as if with feathers or plumes. PLUMP (11) [verb] To grow plump; to swell out. | [verb] To make plump; to fill (out) or support; often with up. | [verb] To cast or let drop all at once, suddenly and heavily. | [noun] The sound of a sudden heavy fall. | [noun] A knot or cluster; a group; a crowd. PLUMS (9) [noun] The fruit and its tree. | [noun] Extended senses. | [verb] To plumb. PLUMY (12) [adjective] Covered or adorned with plumes, or as with plumes; feathery. POEMS (9) [noun] A literary piece written in verse. | [noun] A piece of writing in the tradition of poetry, an instance of poetry. | [noun] A piece of poetic writing, that is with an intensity or depth of expression or inspiration greater than is usual in prose. POMES (9) [noun] A type of fruit in which the often edible flesh arises from the swollen base of the flower and not from the carpels. | [noun] A ball of silver or other metal, filled with hot water and used by a Roman Catholic priest in cold weather to warm his hands during the service. POMMY (14) [noun] A pom; a person of British descent, a Briton; an Englishman. | [adjective] English; British. POMPS (11) [noun] Show of magnificence; parade; display; power. | [noun] A procession distinguished by ostentation and splendor; a pageant. PRAAM (9) [noun] A flat-bottomed barge used on shallow shores to convey cargo to and from ships that cannot enter the harbour. | [noun] A similar barge used as platform for cannons in shallow waters which seagoing warships cannot enter. | [noun] A type of dinghy with a flat bow. PRAMS (9) [noun] A small vehicle, usually covered, in which a newborn baby is pushed around in a lying position; a perambulator. | [noun] A flat-bottomed barge used on shallow shores to convey cargo to and from ships that cannot enter the harbour. | [noun] A similar barge used as platform for cannons in shallow waters which seagoing warships cannot enter. PRIMA (9) PRIME (9) [noun] The first hour of daylight; the first canonical hour. | [noun] The religious service appointed to this hour. | [noun] The early morning generally. | [verb] To prepare a mechanism for its main work. | [noun] An intermediate sprint within a race, usually offering a prize and/or points. PRIMI (9) PRIMO (9) [noun] The principal part of a duet. | [adjective] Best; first-class. PRIMP (11) [verb] To spend time improving one's appearance, often in front of a mirror. | [verb] To dress in an affected manner. PRIMS (9) [verb] To make affectedly precise or proper. | [verb] To dress or act smartly. PRISM (9) [noun] A polyhedron with parallel ends of the same size and shape, the other faces being parallelogram-shaped sides. | [noun] A transparent block in the shape of a prism (typically with triangular ends), used to split or reflect light. | [noun] A crystal in which the faces are parallel to the vertical axis. PROEM (9) [noun] An introduction, preface or preamble. PROMO (9) [noun] An interview or monologue intended to promote a character or an upcoming match. | [verb] To promote; to publicize. | [noun] An advancement in rank or position. PROMS (9) [noun] A promenade concert | [noun] (abbreviation) promenade | [noun] A formal ball held at a high school or college on special occasions, e.g. near the end of the academic year PSALM (9) [noun] A sacred song; a poetical composition for use in the praise or worship of God. | [noun] One of the hymns by David and others, collected into one book of the Old Testament, or a modern metrical version of such a hymn for public worship. | [verb] To extol in psalms; to make music; to sing PUMAS (9) [noun] The mountain lion or cougar, Puma concolor. | [noun] A woman in her 20s or 30s who seeks relationships with younger men; a younger cougar. PUMPS (11) [noun] A device for moving or compressing a liquid or gas. | [noun] An instance of the action of a pump; one stroke of a pump; any action similar to pumping | [noun] A device for dispensing liquid or gas to be sold, particularly fuel. PYGMY (16) [noun] (often capitalized) A member of one of various Ancient Equatorial African tribal peoples, notable for their very short stature. | [noun] A member of a race of dwarfs. | [noun] Any dwarfish person or thing. QUALM (16) [noun] A feeling of apprehension, doubt, fear etc. | [noun] A sudden sickly feeling; queasiness. | [noun] A prick of the conscience; a moral scruple, a pang of guilt. (Now often in negative constructions.) RAMEE (7) RAMET (7) RAMIE (7) [noun] (usually countable) A tall, tropical Asian perennial herb, Boehmeria nivea, cultivated for its fibrous stems. | [noun] (usually uncountable) fibre extracted from this plant, resembling flax. RAMMY (12) [adjective] Of a food, taste, odour etc.: like a ram; pungent, rank. | [adjective] Frisky, lecherous. | [noun] A disorderly argument or disturbance; a fracas. RAMPS (9) [noun] An inclined surface that connects two levels; an incline. | [noun] A road that connects a freeway to a surface street or another freeway. | [noun] A mobile staircase that is attached to the doors of an aircraft at an airport RAMUS (7) [noun] A small spray or twig. | [noun] A branching, as of nerves or blood vessels. | [noun] The stem of a barb of a feather, from which the barbules extend. REALM (7) [noun] An abstract sphere of influence, real or imagined. | [noun] The domain of a certain abstraction. | [noun] A scope of operation in networking or security. REAMS (7) [verb] To cream; mantle; foam; froth. | [verb] To enlarge a hole, especially using a reamer; to bore a hole wider. | [verb] To shape or form, especially using a reamer. REARM (7) [verb] To replace or restore the weapons or arms of a previously defeated, or disarmed army, country, person or other body. REGMA (8) REHEM (10) REMAN (7) [verb] To supply with new personnel. | [adjective] Having the property of having undergone remanufacture REMAP (9) [verb] To assign differently; to relabel or repurpose. | [verb] To map again. REMET (7) REMEX (14) [noun] Quill | [noun] The flight feather of a bird. REMIT (7) [noun] Terms of reference; set of responsibilities; scope. | [noun] A communication from a superior court to a subordinate court. | [verb] To transmit or send (e.g. money in payment); to supply. REMIX (14) [noun] A rearrangement of an older piece of music, possibly including various cosmetic changes. | [noun] A piece of music formed by combining existing pieces of music together, possibly including various other cosmetic changes | [verb] To mix again. RETEM (7) RHEUM (10) [noun] Watery or thin discharge of serum or mucus, especially from the eyes or nose, formerly thought to cause disease. | [noun] Illness or disease thought to be caused by such secretions; a catarrh, a cold; rheumatism. | [noun] Tears. RHOMB (12) [noun] A rhombus. | [noun] A rhombohedron. RHUMB (12) [noun] A line which crosses successive meridians at a constant angle | [noun] One of the 32 points of the compass (compass points) | [noun] A unit of angular measure equal to 1/32 of a circle or 11.25° RHYME (13) [noun] Rhyming verse (poetic form) | [noun] A thought expressed in verse; a verse; a poem; a tale told in verse. | [noun] A word that rhymes with another. RIMED (8) [verb] To compose or treat in verse; versify. | [verb] (followed by with) Of a word, to be pronounced identically with another from the vowel in its stressed syllable to the end. | [verb] Of two or more words, to be pronounced identically from the vowel in the stressed syllable of each to the end of each. RIMER (7) RIMES (7) [verb] To compose or treat in verse; versify. | [verb] (followed by with) Of a word, to be pronounced identically with another from the vowel in its stressed syllable to the end. | [verb] Of two or more words, to be pronounced identically from the vowel in the stressed syllable of each to the end of each. ROAMS (7) [verb] To wander or travel freely and with no specific destination. | [verb] To use a network or service from different locations or devices. | [verb] To transmit (resources) between different locations or devices, to allow comparable usage from any of them. ROMAN (7) [noun] One of the main three types used for the Latin alphabet (the others being italics and blackletter), in which the ascenders are mostly straight. | [noun] A novel. | [adjective] (of type) upright, as opposed to italic ROMEO (7) ROMPS (9) [noun] Someone who romps; especially, a girl or young woman who indulges in boisterous play; a tomboy. | [noun] A period of boisterous play, a frolic; now especially, a bout of sexual activity, especially when illicit. | [noun] An enjoyable, fast-paced but essentially inconsequential film, play, or other piece of entertainment. ROOMS (7) [noun] Opportunity or scope (to do something). | [noun] Space for something, or to carry out an activity. | [noun] A particular portion of space. ROOMY (10) [noun] A roommate. | [adjective] Spacious, expansive, comfortable. RUMBA (9) [noun] A slow-paced Cuban partner dance in 4:4 time. | [verb] To dance the rumba RUMEN (7) [noun] The first compartment of the stomach of a cow or other ruminants. RUMMY (12) [noun] A card game with many rule variants, conceptually similar to mahjong. | [noun] A rum-drinking alcoholic. | [adjective] Resembling or tasting of rum. RUMOR (7) [noun] A statement or claim of questionable accuracy, from no known reliable source, usually spread by word of mouth. | [noun] Information or misinformation of the kind contained in such claims. | [verb] (usually used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip. RUMPS (9) [noun] The hindquarters of a four-legged mammal, not including its legs | [noun] A cut of meat from the rump of an animal. | [noun] The buttocks. SAGUM (8) SALMI (7) [noun] A rich stew or ragout, especially of game. SAMBA (9) [noun] A Brazilian ballroom dance or dance style. | [noun] A Brazilian musical genre, to which the aforementioned dance is danced, which has its roots in West Africa via the slave trade. | [verb] To dance the samba. SAMBO (9) [noun] A sandwich. SAMEK (11) SAMPS (9) SATEM (7) SCAMP (11) [noun] A rascal, swindler, or rogue; a ne'er-do-well. | [noun] A mischievous person, especially a playful, impish youngster. | [verb] To skimp; to do something in a skimpy or slipshod fashion. | [noun] A preliminary design sketch. SCAMS (9) [noun] A fraudulent deal. | [noun] Something that is promoted using scams. SCHMO (12) [noun] A stupid or obnoxious person. SCRAM (9) [verb] Leave in a hurry, go away. | [noun] The emergency shutdown device of a nuclear reactor, originally specifically by insertion of one or more safety control rods. | [noun] An activation of the emergency shutdown of a nuclear reactor. | [noun] A scratch, especially caused by claws or fingernails. SCRIM (9) [noun] A kind of light cotton or linen fabric, often woven in openwork patterns, -- used for curtains, etc,. | [noun] A large military scarf, usually camouflage coloured and used for concealment when not used as a scarf. | [noun] A woven, nonwoven or knitted fabric composed of continuous strands of material used for reinforcing or strengthening membranes. | [noun] A practice match between one or more organized teams usually in preparation for a more competitive format, such as a tournament. SCRUM (9) [noun] A tightly-packed and disorderly crowd of people. | [noun] Specifically used in the Canadian media to describe a tightly-packed group of reporters surrounding a member of the Canadian House of Commons while in the Parliament Buildings. | [noun] In rugby union or rugby league, all the forwards joined together in an organised way. Also known as a scrummage. SCUMS (9) [noun] A layer of impurities that accumulates at the surface of a liquid (especially molten metal or water). | [noun] A greenish water vegetation (such as algae), usually found floating on the surface of ponds | [noun] The topmost liquid layer of a cesspool or septic tank. SEAMS (7) [noun] A folded-back and stitched piece of fabric; especially, the stitching that joins two or more pieces of fabric. | [noun] A suture. | [noun] A thin stratum, especially of an economically viable material such as coal or mineral. SEAMY (10) [adjective] Sordid, squalid or corrupt. | [adjective] Having or showing a seam. SEBUM (9) [noun] A thick oily substance, secreted by the sebaceous glands of the skin, that consists of fat, keratin and cellular debris. SEDUM (8) [noun] Any of various succulent plants, of the genus Sedum, native to temperate zones; the stonecrop SEEMS (7) [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. | [verb] To befit; to beseem. SEISM (7) SEMEN (7) [noun] A sticky, milky fluid produced in male reproductive organs that contains the reproductive cells. SEMES (7) [noun] A folded-back and stitched piece of fabric; especially, the stitching that joins two or more pieces of fabric. | [noun] A suture. | [noun] A thin stratum, especially of an economically viable material such as coal or mineral. | [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. SEMIS (7) [noun] A semi-detached house. | [noun] A semitrailer; a tractor-trailer; an eighteen-wheeler; an artic. | [noun] A semifinal. | [noun] A small bronze coin minted during the Roman Republic, valued at half an as. SERUM (7) [noun] The clear yellowish liquid obtained upon separating whole blood into its solid and liquid components after it has been allowed to clot. | [noun] Blood serum from the tissues of immunized animals, containing antibodies and used to transfer immunity to another individual, called antiserum. | [noun] A watery liquid from animal tissue, especially one that moistens the surface of serous membranes or that is exuded by such membranes when they become inflamed, such as in edema or a blister. SHAME (10) [noun] Uncomfortable or painful feeling due to recognition or consciousness of one's own impropriety or dishonor or something being exposed that should have been kept private. | [noun] Something to regret. | [noun] Reproach incurred or suffered; dishonour; ignominy; derision. | [verb] To cause to feel shame. SHAMS (10) [noun] A fake; an imitation that purports to be genuine. | [noun] Trickery, hoaxing. | [noun] A false front, or removable ornamental covering. SHAWM (13) [noun] A mediaeval double-reed wind instrument with a conical wooden body. SHIMS (10) [noun] A wedge. | [noun] A thin piece of material, sometimes tapered, used for alignment or support. | [noun] A small library that transparently intercepts and modifies calls to an API, usually for compatibility purposes. SIGMA (8) [noun] The eighteenth letter of the Classical and Modern Greek alphabets, the twentieth letter of Old and Ancient. | [noun] The symbol Σ, used to indicate summation of a set or series. | [noun] The symbol σ, used to indicate one standard deviation from the mean, particularly in a normal distribution. SIMAR (7) SIMAS (7) SIMPS (9) [noun] A simple person lacking common sense; a fool or simpleton. | [noun] A man who foolishly overvalues and defers to a woman, putting her on a pedestal. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who foolishly overvalues someone else and defers to them, putting them on a pedestal. SIXMO (14) SKELM (11) SKIMO (11) SKIMP (13) [verb] To mock, deride, scorn, scold, make fun of. | [noun] A skimpy or insubstantial thing, especially a piece of clothing. | [noun] (in the plural) Underwear. SKIMS (11) [verb] To pass lightly; to glide along in an even, smooth course; to glide along near the surface. | [verb] To pass near the surface of; to brush the surface of; to glide swiftly along the surface of. | [verb] To hasten along with superficial attention. SLAMS (7) [verb] To shut with sudden force so as to produce a shock and noise. | [verb] To put in or on a particular place with force and loud noise. (Often followed by a preposition such as down, against or into.) | [verb] To strike forcefully with some implement. SLIME (7) [noun] Soft, moist earth or clay, having an adhesive quality; viscous mud; any substance of a dirty nature, that is moist, soft, and adhesive; bitumen; mud containing metallic ore, obtained in the preparatory dressing. | [noun] Any mucilaginous substance; or a mucus-like substance which exudes from the bodies of certain animals, such as snails or slugs. | [noun] A sneaky, unethical person; a slimeball. SLIMS (7) [noun] A type of cigarette substantially longer and thinner than normal cigarettes. | [noun] A potato farl. | [noun] AIDS, or the chronic wasting associated with its later stages. SLIMY (10) [noun] A ponyfish. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to slime | [adjective] Resembling, of the nature of, covered or daubed with, or abounding in slime SLUMP (9) [noun] A heavy or helpless collapse; a slouching or drooping posture; a period of poor activity or performance, especially an extended period. | [noun] A measure of the fluidity of freshly mixed concrete, based on how much the concrete formed in a standard slump cone sags when the cone is removed. | [noun] A boggy place. SLUMS (7) [noun] A dilapidated neighborhood where many people live in a state of poverty. | [noun] Inexpensive trinkets awarded as prizes in a carnival game. | [verb] To visit a neighborhood of a status below one's own. SMACK (13) [noun] A distinct flavor, especially if slight. | [noun] A slight trace of something; a smattering. | [noun] Heroin. | [noun] A small sailing vessel, commonly rigged as a sloop, used chiefly in the coasting and fishing trade and often called a fishing smack | [noun] A sharp blow; a slap. See also: spank. SMALL (7) [noun] Any part of something that is smaller or slimmer than the rest, now usually with anatomical reference to the back. | [verb] To make little or less. | [verb] To become small; to dwindle. SMALT (7) [noun] A deep blue pigment made from powdered glass mixed with cobalt oxide SMARM (9) [noun] Smarmy language or behavior. | [noun] A style of fan fiction in which characters are warm and caring toward each other but without sexual overtones. | [verb] To fawn, to be unctuous. SMART (7) [verb] To hurt or sting. | [verb] To cause a smart or sting in. | [verb] To feel a pungent pain of mind; to feel sharp pain or grief; be punished severely; to feel the sting of evil. | [adjective] Exhibiting social ability or cleverness. | [noun] A sharp, quick, lively pain; a sting. SMASH (10) [noun] The sound of a violent impact; a violent striking together. | [noun] A traffic collision. | [noun] Something very successful or popular (as music, food, fashion, etc); a hit. SMAZE (16) [noun] Smoky haze in the air. SMEAR (7) [noun] A mark made by smearing. | [noun] Any of various forms of distortion that make a signal harder to see or hear. | [noun] A Pap smear. SMEEK (11) SMELL (7) [noun] A sensation, pleasant or unpleasant, detected by inhaling air (or, the case of water-breathing animals, water) carrying airborne molecules of a substance. | [noun] The sense that detects odours. | [noun] A conclusion or intuition that a situation is wrong, more complex than it seems, or otherwise inappropriate. SMELT (7) [noun] Any small anadromous fish of the family Osmeridae, found in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and in lakes in North America and northern part of Europe. | [noun] A fool; a simpleton. | [verb] To sense a smell or smells. | [noun] Production of metal, especially iron, from ore in a process that involves melting and chemical reduction of metal compounds into purified metal. SMERK (11) SMEWS (10) [noun] A small compact diving duck, Mergus albellus, that breeds in the northern taiga of Europe and Asia and winters on sheltered coasts or inland lakes. SMILE (7) [noun] A facial expression comprised by flexing the muscles of both ends of one's mouth, often showing the front teeth, without vocalisation, and in humans is a common involuntary or voluntary expression of happiness, pleasure, amusement or anxiety. | [noun] Favour; propitious regard. | [noun] A drink bought by one person for another. SMIRK (11) [noun] An uneven, often crooked smile that is insolent, self-satisfied or scornful | [noun] A forced or affected smile; a simper | [verb] To smile in a way that is affected, smug, insolent or contemptuous. SMITE (7) [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To strike down or kill with godly force. | [verb] To injure with divine power. SMITH (10) [noun] A craftsperson who works metal into desired forms using a hammer and other tools, sometimes heating the metal to make it more workable, especially a blacksmith. | [noun] (by extension) One who makes anything; wright. | [noun] An artist. | [verb] To forge, to form, usually on an anvil; by heating and pounding. SMOCK (13) [noun] A type of undergarment worn by women; a shift or slip. | [noun] A blouse; a smock frock. | [noun] A loose garment worn as protection by a painter, etc. SMOGS (8) [noun] A noxious mixture of particulates and gases that is the result of urban air pollution. | [verb] To get a smog check; to check a vehicle or have it checked for emissions. SMOKE (11) [noun] The visible vapor/vapour, gases, and fine particles given off by burning or smoldering material. | [noun] A cigarette. | [noun] Anything to smoke (e.g. cigarettes, marijuana, etc.) | [verb] To inhale and exhale the smoke from a burning cigarette, cigar, pipe, etc. SMOKY (14) [adjective] Filled with smoke. | [adjective] Giving off smoke. | [adjective] Of a colour or colour pattern similar to that of smoke. SMOLT (7) [adjective] Bright; serene. | [adjective] (of weather) Calm; fine; fair. | [adjective] Smooth and shining. | [noun] A young salmon two or three years old, when it has acquired its silvery color. SMOTE (7) [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To strike down or kill with godly force. | [verb] To injure with divine power. SMUTS (7) [noun] Soot. | [noun] A flake of ash or soot. | [noun] Sexually vulgar material; something that is sexual in a dirty way; pornographic material. SODOM (8) SOLUM (7) SOMAS (7) [noun] The whole axial portion of an animal, including the head, neck, trunk, and tail. | [noun] The corporeal body, as distinguished from the psyche or soul and the pneuma or spirit. | [noun] The bulbous part of a neuron, containing the cell nucleus. SPASM (9) [noun] A sudden, involuntary contraction of a muscle, a group of muscles, or a hollow organ. | [noun] A violent, excruciating seizure of pain. | [noun] A sudden and temporary burst of energy, activity, or emotion. SPERM (9) [noun] The reproductive cell or gamete of the male; a spermatozoon. | [noun] Semen; the generative substance of male animals. | [noun] Sperm oil; whale oil from a sperm whale; spermaceti. SPUME (9) [noun] Foam or froth of liquid, particularly that of seawater. | [verb] To froth. SPUMY (12) STAMP (9) [noun] An act of stamping the foot, paw or hoof. | [noun] An indentation, imprint, or mark made by stamping. | [noun] A device for stamping designs. STEAM (7) [noun] The vapor formed when water changes from liquid phase to gas phase. | [noun] Pressurized water vapour used for heating, cooking, or to provide mechanical energy. | [noun] Internal energy for motive power. STEMS (7) [noun] Acronym of science, technology, engineering, (and) mathematics. | [noun] An electron microscope that transmits a very narrow beam of electrons through a sample; it can detect individual large or heavy atoms. | [noun] A gleam of light; a flame. STIME (7) STIMY (10) STOMA (7) [noun] One of the tiny pores in the epidermis of a leaf or stem through which gases and water vapor pass. | [noun] A small opening in a membrane; a surgically constructed opening, especially one in the abdominal wall that permits the passage of waste after a colostomy or ileostomy. | [noun] A mouthlike opening, such as the oral cavity of a nematode. STOMP (9) [noun] A deliberate heavy footfall; a stamp. | [noun] A dance having a heavy, rhythmic step. | [noun] The jazz music for this dance. STORM (7) [noun] Any disturbed state of the atmosphere, especially as affecting the earth's surface, and strongly implying destructive or unpleasant weather. | [noun] A violent agitation of human society; a civil, political, or domestic commotion; violent outbreak. | [noun] A wind scale for very strong wind, stronger than a gale, less than a hurricane (10 or higher on the Beaufort scale). | [verb] (with adverbial of direction) To move quickly and noisily like a storm, usually in a state of uproar or anger. STRUM (7) [noun] The sound made by playing various strings of a stringed instrument simultaneously. | [noun] The act of strumming. | [verb] To play (a guitar or other stringed instrument) using various strings simultaneously. STUMP (9) [noun] The remains of something that has been cut off; especially the remains of a tree, the remains of a limb. | [noun] The place or occasion at which a campaign takes place; the husting. | [noun] A place or occasion at which a person harangues or otherwise addresses a group in a manner suggesting political oration. STUMS (7) [noun] Unfermented grape juice; must. | [noun] Wine revived by new fermentation, resulting from the admixture of must. | [verb] To ferment. STYMY (13) SUMAC (9) [noun] Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus and other genera in Anacardiaceae, particularly the elm-leaved sumac, Sicilian sumac, or tanner's sumac (Rhus coriaria). | [noun] Dried and chopped-up leaves and stems of a plant of the genus Rhus, particularly the tanner's sumac (see sense 1), used for dyeing and tanning leather or for medicinal purposes. | [noun] A sour spice popular in the Eastern Mediterranean, made from the berries of tanner's sumac. SUMMA (9) [noun] A comprehensive summary of, or treatise on a subject, especially theology or philosophy. SUMOS (7) [noun] A stylised Japanese form of wrestling in which a wrestler loses if he is forced from the ring, or if any part of his body except the soles of his feet touches the ground. | [noun] A rikishi (sumo wrestler) SUMPS (9) [noun] A hollow or pit into which liquid drains, such as a cesspool, cesspit or sink. | [noun] The lowest part of a mineshaft into which water drains. | [noun] A completely flooded cave passage, sometimes passable by diving. SWAMI (10) [noun] (used as a title) A Hindu ascetic or religious teacher. SWAMP (12) [noun] A piece of wet, spongy land; low ground saturated with water; soft, wet ground which may have a growth of certain kinds of trees, but is unfit for agricultural or pastoral purposes. | [noun] A type of wetland that stretches for vast distances, and is home to many creatures which have adapted specifically to that environment. | [noun] A place or situation that is foul or where progress is difficult. SWAMY (13) SWARM (10) [noun] A large number of insects, especially when in motion or (for bees) migrating to a new colony. | [noun] A mass of people, animals or things in motion or turmoil. | [noun] A group of nodes sharing the same torrent in a BitTorrent network. SWIMS (10) [noun] An act or instance of swimming. | [noun] The sound, or air bladder, of a fish. | [noun] A part of a stream much frequented by fish. TAMAL (7) TAMED (8) [verb] To make (an animal) tame; to domesticate. | [verb] To become tame or domesticated. | [verb] To make gentle or meek. TAMER (7) [adjective] Not or no longer wild; domesticated | [adjective] (chiefly of animals) Mild and well-behaved; accustomed to human contact | [adjective] Not exciting. TAMES (7) [verb] To make (an animal) tame; to domesticate. | [verb] To become tame or domesticated. | [verb] To make gentle or meek. TAMIS (7) TAMMY (12) [noun] A kind of woolen, or woolen and cotton, cloth, often highly glazed, used for curtains, sieves, strainers, etc. | [noun] A culinary strainer, originally made from worsted cloth | [noun] The cloth itself; tammy. | [noun] A tam o’shanter hat. TAMPS (9) [verb] (blasting) To plug up with clay, earth, dry sand, sod, or other material, as a hole bored in a rock. | [verb] To drive in or pack down by frequent gentle strokes | [verb] To reduce the intensity of. TEAMS (7) [noun] A set of draught animals, such as two horses in front of a carriage. | [noun] Any group of people involved in the same activity, especially sports or work. | [noun] A group of animals moving together, especially young ducks. TEEMS (7) [verb] To be stocked to overflowing. | [verb] To be prolific; to abound; to be rife. | [verb] To bring forth young, as an animal; to produce fruit, as a plant; to bear; to be pregnant; to conceive; to multiply. TEMPI (9) [noun] A frequency or rate. | [noun] A move which is part of one's own plan or strategy and forces, e.g. by means of a check or attacking a piece, the opponent to make a move which is not bad but of no use for him (the player gains a tempo, the opponent loses a tempo), or equivalently a player achieves the same result in fewer moves by one approach rather than another. | [noun] The timing advantage of being on lead, thus being first to initiate a strategy to develop tricks for one's side. TEMPO (9) [noun] A frequency or rate. | [noun] A move which is part of one's own plan or strategy and forces, e.g. by means of a check or attacking a piece, the opponent to make a move which is not bad but of no use for him (the player gains a tempo, the opponent loses a tempo), or equivalently a player achieves the same result in fewer moves by one approach rather than another. | [noun] The timing advantage of being on lead, thus being first to initiate a strategy to develop tricks for one's side. TEMPS (9) [noun] A temporary employee, usually in an office. | [noun] A temporary storage location. | [verb] To work as a temporary employee. TEMPT (9) [verb] To provoke someone to do wrong, especially by promising a reward; to entice. | [verb] To attract; to allure. | [verb] To provoke something; to court. TERMS (7) [noun] That which limits the extent of anything; limit, extremity, bound, boundary. | [noun] A chronological limitation or restriction. | [noun] Any of the binding conditions or promises in a legal contract. THARM (10) THEME (10) [noun] A subject of a talk or an artistic piece; a topic. | [noun] A recurring idea; a motif. | [noun] An essay written for school. THERM (10) [noun] A former unit of heat equal to 100,000 British thermal units. Symbol: thm. THRUM (10) [noun] A thrumming sound; a hum or vibration. | [noun] A spicy taste; a tang. | [verb] To cause a steady rhythmic vibration, usually by plucking. | [noun] The ends of the warp threads in a loom which remain unwoven attached to the loom when the web is cut. THUMB (12) [noun] The short thick digit of the hand that for humans has the most mobility and can be made to oppose (moved to touch) all of the other fingers. | [noun] The part of a slider that may be moved linearly along the slider. | [noun] A thumbnail picture. THUMP (12) [noun] A blow that produces a muffled sound. | [noun] The sound of such a blow; a thud. | [noun] Used to replace the vulgar or blasphemous element in "what the hell" and similar phrases. THYME (13) [noun] Any plant of the labiate genus Thymus, such as the garden thyme, Thymus vulgaris, a warm, pungent aromatic, that is much used to give a relish to seasoning and soups. THYMI (13) [noun] A ductless gland, consisting mainly of lymphatic tissue, located behind the top of the breastbone. It is most active during puberty, after which it shrinks in size. It plays an important role in the development of the immune system and produces lymphocytes. THYMY (16) TIMED (8) [verb] To measure or record the time, duration, or rate of. | [verb] To choose when something begins or how long it lasts. | [verb] To keep or beat time; to proceed or move in time. TIMER (7) [noun] Someone or something which times. | [noun] A device used to measure amounts of time. | [noun] Any electronic function that causes a device to be able to do something automatically after a preset amount of time. TIMES (7) [noun] The inevitable progression into the future with the passing of present and past events. | [noun] A duration of time. | [noun] An instant of time. TIMID (8) [adjective] Lacking in courage or confidence. TOMAN (7) TOMBS (9) [noun] A small building (or "vault") for the remains of the dead, with walls, a roof, and (if it is to be used for more than one corpse) a door. It may be partly or wholly in the ground (except for its entrance) in a cemetery, or it may be inside a church proper or in its crypt. Single tombs may be permanently sealed; those for families (or other groups) have doors for access whenever needed. | [noun] A pit in which the dead body of a human being is deposited; a grave. | [noun] One who keeps secrets. TOMES (7) [noun] One in a series of volumes. | [noun] A large or scholarly book. TOMMY (12) [noun] Bread, generally a penny roll; the supply of food carried by workmen as their daily allowance | [noun] A truck, or barter; the exchange of labour for goods instead of money. | [verb] To pay (employees) according to the truck system, with goods instead of money. TOTEM (7) [noun] Any natural object or living creature that serves as an emblem of a tribe, clan or family. | [noun] The representation of such object or creature. | [noun] The clan whose kinship is defined in reference to such an object or creature. TRAMP (9) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A homeless person; a vagabond. | [noun] A disreputable, promiscuous woman; a slut. | [noun] Any ship which does not have a fixed schedule or published ports of call. TRAMS (7) [noun] A passenger vehicle for public use that runs on tracks in the road (called a streetcar or trolley in North America). | [noun] A similar vehicle for carrying materials. | [noun] A people mover. TRIMS (7) [noun] Decoration; especially, decoration placed along edges or borders. | [noun] A haircut, especially a moderate one to touch up an existing style. | [noun] Dress; gear; ornaments. TROMP (9) [verb] To tread heavily, especially to crush underfoot. | [verb] To utterly defeat an opponent. | [noun] A blowing apparatus in which air, drawn into the upper part of a vertical tube through side holes by a stream of water within, is carried down with the water into a box or chamber below which it is led to a furnace. TRUMP (9) [noun] The suit, in a game of cards, that outranks all others. | [noun] A playing card of that suit. | [noun] Something that gives one an advantage, especially one held in reserve. | [noun] A trumpet. | [noun] A musical instrument consisting of a flexible metal or bamboo “tongue” attached to a frame. This tongue is placed in the performer’s mouth and plucked with the finger to produce a note of constant pitch. Melodies can be created by changing the shape of the mouth and causing different overtones. TRYMA (10) TUMID (8) [adjective] Swollen, enlarged, bulging | [adjective] Cancerous, unhealthy | [adjective] Pompous, bombastic TUMMY (12) [noun] (often childish) Stomach or belly. | [noun] Protruding belly, paunch. TUMOR (7) [noun] An abnormal growth; differential diagnosis includes abscess, metaplasia, and neoplasia. TUMPS (9) [noun] A mound or hillock. | [noun] A tumpline. ULAMA (7) [noun] A (modern) ball game, descended from tlachtli. | [noun] The devil bird (an avian cryptid of Sri Lanka) ULEMA (7) [noun] An educated scholar of Islamic law; a member of the ulema class UMBEL (9) [noun] A flat-topped or rounded flower-cluster (= inflorescence) in which the individual flower stalks arise from the same point, the youngest flowers being at the centre. UMBER (9) [noun] A brown clay, somewhat darker than ochre, which contains iron and manganese oxides. | [noun] A grayling. | [noun] A dusky brown African wading bird (Scopus umbretta) allied to the shoebill and herons; a hamerkop. UMBOS (9) [noun] A boss, or rounded elevation, or a corresponding depression, in a palate, disk, or membrane. For example the umbo in the integument of the larvæ of echinoderms or in the tympanic membrane of the ear. | [noun] One of the lateral prominences just above the hinge of a bivalve shell. | [noun] A bump or protrusion on the top of the cap. UMBRA (9) [noun] The fully shaded inner region of a shadow cast by an opaque object. | [noun] The central region of a sunspot. | [noun] A shadow. UMIAC (9) UMIAK (11) [noun] A large, open boat made of skins stretched over a wooden frame that is propelled by paddles; used by the Eskimos for transportation. UMIAQ (16) UMPED (10) [verb] To act as an umpire. UNARM (7) [verb] To disarm, to remove the armour and weapons from. | [verb] To remove one's armour. UNMAN (7) [verb] To castrate; to remove the manhood of. | [verb] To sap (a person) of the strength, whether physical or emotional, required to deal with a situation. | [verb] To deprive of men. UNMET (7) [adjective] Not met; unfulfilled; not achieved UNMEW (10) UNMIX (14) VAMPS (12) [noun] The top part of a boot or shoe, above the sole and welt and in front of the ankle seam, that covers the instep and toes; the front part of an upper; the analogous part of a stocking. | [noun] Something added to give an old thing a new appearance. | [noun] Something patched up, pieced together, improvised, or refurbished. VELUM (10) [noun] A thin membrane, resembling a veil, such as: | [noun] An accessory cloud resembling a veil extending over a large distance. Normally associated with cumulus and cumulonimbus. VENOM (10) [noun] A poison carried by an animal, usually injected into an enemy or prey by biting or stinging. | [noun] Feeling or speech marked by spite or malice; vitriol. | [verb] To infect with venom; to envenom; to poison. VIMEN (10) VOMER (10) [noun] The vomer bone; the small thin bone that forms part of the septum between the nostrils. VOMIT (10) [noun] The regurgitated former contents of a stomach; vomitus. | [noun] The act of regurgitating. | [noun] That which causes vomiting; an emetic. VROOM (10) [noun] The sound of an engine revving up. | [verb] To move with great speed; to zoom. | [interjection] The sound of an engine revving up. WAMES (10) WAMUS (10) WARMS (10) [noun] The act of warming, or the state of being warmed; a heating. | [verb] To make or keep warm. | [verb] To become warm, to heat up. WHAMO (13) WHAMS (13) [noun] A forceful blow | [noun] The sound of such a blow; a thud | [verb] To strike or smash (into) something with great force or impact WHELM (13) [noun] A surge of water. | [verb] To bury, to cover; to engulf, to submerge. | [verb] To throw (something) over a thing so as to cover it. WHIMS (13) [noun] A fanciful impulse, or whimsical idea | [noun] A large capstan or vertical drum turned by horse power or steam power, for raising ore or water, etc., from mines, or for other purposes | [noun] A bird, the Eurasian wigeon. WHOMP (15) [verb] Hit extremely hard. WHUMP (15) [noun] A thumping sound. | [noun] A genre of fan fiction in which a character endures injury, torture, or other forms of physical and mental suffering. | [verb] To strike something with a whump. WIMPS (12) [noun] Acronym of window, icon, menu, pointer. (a graphical interface paradigm) | [noun] Acronym of window-icon-mouse program. | [noun] A hypothetical class of particle, proposed to explain the dark matter problem. WIMPY (15) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a wimp; feeble, indecisive, cowardly. WOMAN (10) [noun] An adult female human. | [noun] (collective) All females collectively; womankind. | [noun] A female person, usually an adult; a (generally adult) female sentient being, whether human, supernatural, elf, alien, etc. WOMBS (12) [noun] In female mammals, the organ in which the young are conceived and grow until birth; the uterus. | [noun] The abdomen or stomach. | [noun] The stomach of a person or creature. WOMBY (15) WOMEN (10) [noun] An adult female human. | [noun] (collective) All females collectively; womankind. | [noun] A female person, usually an adult; a (generally adult) female sentient being, whether human, supernatural, elf, alien, etc. WORMS (10) [noun] A generally tubular invertebrate of the annelid phylum; an earthworm. | [noun] More loosely, any of various tubular invertebrates resembling annelids but not closely related to them, such as velvet worms, acorn worms, flatworms, or roundworms. | [noun] A type of wingless "dragon", especially a gigantic sea serpent. WORMY (13) [adjective] Of or like a worm or worms; shaped like a worm or worms. | [adjective] Infested with worms. XYLEM (17) [noun] A vascular tissue in land plants primarily responsible for the distribution of water and minerals taken up by the roots; also the primary component of wood. YAMEN (10) YAMUN (10) YLEMS (10) YOMIM (12) YUMMY (15) [adjective] (lighthearted) Delicious. | [noun] A mother who is sexually attractive. ZAMIA (16) [noun] Any of various cycads of the genera Zamia and Macrozamia ZIRAM (16) ZOMBI (18) ZOOMS (16) [verb] To communicate with someone using the Zoom videoconferencing software. | [noun] A humming noise from something moving very fast | [noun] A quick ascent ZYMES (19)

6-Letter Words (2490)

ABAMPS (12) ABLOOM (10) [adjective] Blooming; covered in flowers. | [adjective] Having something growing or grown. | [adjective] Thriving in health, beauty, and vigor; exhibiting youth-like beauty. ABMHOS (13) ABOHMS (13) ABOMAS (10) ABYSMS (13) [noun] Hell; the infernal pit; the great deep; the primal chaos. | [noun] An abyss; a gulf, a chasm, a very deep hole. ACETUM (10) [noun] Vinegar or a sour liquid, especially vinegar used in medicine or cooking. ACUMEN (10) [noun] Quickness of perception or discernment; penetration of mind; the faculty of nice discrimination. | [noun] A sharp, tapering point extending from a plant. | [noun] A bony, often sharp, protuberance, especially that of the ischium. ADEEMS (9) [verb] To revoke or take away a bequest or gift made in a will. | [verb] To fail to give what was promised or expected. ADMASS (9) [noun] That part of society that is influenced by mass media advertising. ADMIRE (9) [verb] To be amazed at; to view with surprise; to marvel at. | [verb] To regard with wonder and delight. | [verb] To look upon with an elevated feeling of pleasure, as something which calls out approbation, esteem, love or reverence. ADMITS (9) [verb] To allow to enter; to grant entrance (to), whether into a place, into the mind, or into consideration | [verb] To allow (someone) to enter a profession or to enjoy a privilege; to recognize as qualified for a franchise. | [verb] To concede as true; to acknowledge or assent to, as an allegation which it is impossible to deny ADMIXT (16) [verb] Past tense and past participle of admix; to mix with something else. ADYTUM (12) [noun] The innermost sanctuary or shrine in a temple, from where oracles were given. | [noun] (by extension) A private chamber; a sanctum. AECIUM (10) [noun] A cup-shaped structure in rust fungi that produces spores, found on the upper surface of infected plant leaves. AFFIRM (14) [verb] To agree, verify or concur; to answer positively. | [verb] To assert positively; to tell with confidence; to aver; to maintain as true. | [verb] To support or encourage. AFLAME (11) [adjective] In flames, on fire, flaming, with flames coming from it | [adjective] Showing anger or contempt AGAMAS (9) [noun] Any of the various small, long-tailed lizards of the subfamily Agaminae of family Agamidae, especially in genera Acanthocercus, Agama, Dendragama, Laudakia, Phrynocephalus, Trapelus and Xenagama. AGAMIC (11) [adjective] Occurring without the union of male and female gametes; asexual AGEISM (9) [noun] The treating of a person or people, especially youth or seniors, differently from others based on assumptions or stereotypes relating to their age. AGISMS (9) [noun] Plural of agism; discrimination or prejudice based on age. | [noun] Plural of agism; prejudiced attitudes or beliefs about people based on their age. AGLEAM (9) [adjective] Glowing with subdued light. AHIMSA (11) [noun] A doctrine of non-violence, concerned with the sacredness of all living things and an effort to avoid causing harm to them. AIDMAN (9) [noun] A medical corpsman or soldier trained to provide first aid and emergency medical treatment on the battlefield. AIDMEN (9) [noun] Plural of aidman; military medical personnel who provide first aid on the battlefield. AIMERS (8) [noun] Plural of aimer, one who aims. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of aim (archaic/dialectal usage). AIMFUL (11) AIMING (9) [verb] To point or direct a missile, or a weapon which propels as missile, towards an object or spot with the intent of hitting it | [verb] To direct the intention or purpose; to attempt the accomplishment of a purpose; to try to gain; to endeavor;—followed by at, or by an infinitive | [verb] To direct or point (e.g. a weapon), at a particular object; to direct, as a missile, an act, or a proceeding, at, to, or against an object AIRMAN (8) [noun] A pilot of an aircraft. | [noun] A member of an air force. | [noun] A person of a rank in the U.S. Air Force above airman basic and below airman first class. AIRMEN (8) [noun] A pilot of an aircraft. | [noun] A member of an air force. | [noun] A person of a rank in the U.S. Air Force above airman basic and below airman first class. AKIMBO (14) [adjective] With a crook or bend; with the hand on the hip and elbow turned outward. | [adverb] Into, in, or of the position where the arms are akimbo. ALAMOS (8) ALARMS (8) [noun] A summons to arms, as on the approach of an enemy. | [noun] Any sound or information intended to give notice of approaching danger; a warning sound to arouse attention; a warning of danger. | [noun] A sudden attack; disturbance. ALARUM (8) [noun] A danger signal or warning. | [noun] A call to arms. | [verb] To sound alarums, to sound an alarm. ALBUMS (10) [noun] A book specially designed to keep photographs, stamps, or autographs. | [noun] A collection, especially of literary items | [noun] A phonograph record that is composed of several tracks ALGUMS (9) ALLIUM (8) [noun] Any of many bulbous plants of the genus Allium, related to onions and garlic. ALMAHS (11) ALMEHS (11) ALMNER (8) ALMOND (9) [noun] A type of tree nut. | [noun] A small deciduous tree in family Rosaceae, Prunus dulcis, that produces predominantly sweet almonds. | [noun] Other plants that produce almond-like nuts: ALMOST (8) [noun] Something or someone that doesn't quite make it. | [adverb] Very close to, not quite. ALMUCE (10) ALMUDE (9) ALMUDS (9) ALMUGS (9) ALUMIN (8) ALUMNA (8) [noun] A female pupil or student (especially of a university or college). | [noun] A female graduate. ALUMNI (8) [noun] An individual alumnus or alumna. | [noun] A male pupil or student. | [noun] A male graduate. AMADOU (9) [noun] A spongy, flammable substance prepared from bracket fungi, formerly used as a styptic and as tinder. AMARNA (8) AMATOL (8) [noun] A high explosive consisting of a mixture of ammonium nitrate and trinitrotoluene. Compare sodatol AMAZED (18) [verb] To fill with wonder and surprise; to astonish, astound, surprise or perplex. | [verb] To undergo amazement; to be astounded. | [verb] To stupefy; to knock unconscious. AMAZES (17) [verb] To fill with wonder and surprise; to astonish, astound, surprise or perplex. | [verb] To undergo amazement; to be astounded. | [verb] To stupefy; to knock unconscious. AMAZON (17) [noun] A tall, strong, athletic woman. AMBAGE (11) AMBARI (10) AMBARY (13) AMBEER (10) AMBERS (10) [noun] Ambergris, the waxy product of the sperm whale. | [noun] A hard, generally yellow to brown translucent fossil resin, used for jewellery. One variety, blue amber, appears blue rather than yellow under direct sunlight. | [noun] A yellow-orange colour. AMBERY (13) AMBITS (10) [noun] The sphere or area of control and influence of something. | [noun] A circuit, or a boundary around a property. | [noun] The extent of actions, thoughts, or the meaning of words, etc. AMBLED (11) [verb] To stroll or walk slowly and leisurely. | [verb] Of a quadruped: to move along by using both legs on one side, and then the other. AMBLER (10) AMBLES (10) [noun] An unhurried leisurely walk or stroll. | [noun] An easy gait, especially that of a horse. | [verb] To stroll or walk slowly and leisurely. AMBUSH (13) [noun] The act of concealing oneself and lying in wait to attack by surprise. | [noun] An attack launched from a concealed position. | [noun] The troops posted in a concealed place, for attacking by surprise; those who lie in wait. AMEBAE (10) [noun] A member of the genus Amoeba of unicellular protozoa that moves by means of temporary projections called pseudopodia. | [noun] The graph of the real part of the logarithms of a polynomial equation in complex numbers. | [noun] An asexual. AMEBAN (10) AMEBAS (10) [noun] A member of the genus Amoeba of unicellular protozoa that moves by means of temporary projections called pseudopodia. | [noun] The graph of the real part of the logarithms of a polynomial equation in complex numbers. | [noun] An asexual. AMEBIC (12) AMEERS (8) AMENDS (9) [noun] (usually in the plural) An act of righting a wrong; compensation. | [verb] To make better; improve. | [verb] To become better. AMENTS (8) [noun] A catkin or amentum. | [noun] A congenital idiot. AMERCE (10) [verb] To impose a fine on; to fine. | [verb] To punish; to make an exaction. AMICES (10) [noun] A hood, or cape with a hood, made of or lined with grey fur, formerly worn by the clergy. AMICUS (10) [noun] Someone not a party to a case who submits a brief and/or presents oral argument in that case. AMIDES (9) [noun] Any derivative of an oxoacid in which the hydroxyl group has been replaced with an amino or substituted amino group; especially such derivatives of a carboxylic acid, the carboxamides or acid amides | [noun] Any ionic derivative of ammonia in which a hydrogen atom has been replaced with a metal cation (R-NH- or R2N-) AMIDIC (11) AMIDIN (9) AMIDOL (9) AMIDST (9) [preposition] In the midst or middle of; surrounded or encompassed by; among. AMIGAS (9) [noun] Plural of amiga; female friends (Spanish word used in English contexts). AMIGOS (9) [noun] Friend | [noun] (chiefly California) Mexican | [noun] A native of the Philippines who was friendly toward the Spanish. AMINES (8) [noun] A functional group formally derived from ammonia by replacing one, two or three hydrogen atoms with hydrocarbon or other radicals. | [noun] Any organic compound containing an amine functional group. AMINIC (10) [adjective] Relating to or containing an amine group; of or pertaining to amines in chemistry. AMMINE (10) [noun] A coordination compound formed by the combination of ammonia with a metal salt or other compound. AMMINO (10) AMMONO (10) AMNION (8) [noun] The innermost membrane of the fetal membranes of reptiles, birds, and mammals; the sac in which the embryo is suspended. AMOEBA (10) [noun] A member of the genus Amoeba of unicellular protozoa that moves by means of temporary projections called pseudopodia. | [noun] The graph of the real part of the logarithms of a polynomial equation in complex numbers. | [noun] An asexual. AMOLES (8) [noun] Any of various parts of the Agave (or similar) plants, when used as soap | [noun] Other Mexican and North American plants used as soap AMORAL (8) [adjective] (of acts) Neither moral nor immoral. | [adjective] (of people) Not believing in or caring for morality and immorality. AMOUNT (8) [noun] The total, aggregate or sum of material (not applicable to discrete numbers or units or items in standard English). | [noun] A quantity or volume. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) The number (the sum) of elements in a set. AMOURS (8) [noun] Love, affection. | [noun] Courtship; flirtation. | [noun] A love affair. AMPERE (10) [noun] A unit of electrical current, the standard base unit in the International System of Units; colloquially amp. Abbreviation: amp, Symbol: A AMPLER (10) [adjective] Large; great in size, extent, capacity, or bulk; for example spacious, roomy or widely extended. | [adjective] Fully sufficient; abundant; plenty | [adjective] Not contracted or brief; not concise; extended; diffusive AMPULE (10) [noun] A small hermetically sealed vial, often used to contain a sterile solution suitable for injection. AMPULS (10) [noun] A small hermetically sealed vial, often used to contain a sterile solution suitable for injection. | [noun] An Ancient Roman two-handled vessel. | [noun] A vessel for containing consecrated wine or oil. AMRITA (8) [noun] In Hindu and Buddhist mythology, the drink of the gods that confers immortality. | [noun] Nectar or elixir in general. AMTRAC (10) [noun] An amphibious vehicle of a class introduced in World War II. AMUCKS (14) [noun] Plural of amuck, meaning a state of violent frenzy or uncontrolled behavior. | [verb] Third person singular of amuck, meaning to rush about in a violent or murderous frenzy. AMULET (8) [noun] A kind of protective charm or ornament, often bearing magical symbols, worn for protection against ill will, negative influences or evil spirits. AMUSED (9) [verb] To entertain or occupy in a pleasant manner; to stir with pleasing emotions. | [verb] To cause laughter or amusement; to be funny. | [verb] To keep in expectation; to beguile; to delude. AMUSER (8) [noun] One who amuses; a person or thing that provides entertainment or causes laughter. AMUSES (8) [verb] To entertain or occupy in a pleasant manner; to stir with pleasing emotions. | [verb] To cause laughter or amusement; to be funny. | [verb] To keep in expectation; to beguile; to delude. AMUSIA (8) [noun] A neurological condition characterized by the inability to perceive, appreciate, or produce music. AMYLIC (13) [adjective] Relating to or derived from starch; of or containing amyl compounds. AMYLUM (13) [noun] Starch, especially when used in medicine or as a thickening agent. ANADEM (9) [noun] A wreath or garland, especially one worn on the head as a crown or decoration. ANEMIA (8) [noun] A medical condition in which the capacity of the blood to transport oxygen to the tissues is reduced, either because of too few red blood cells, or because of too little hemoglobin, resulting in pallor and fatigue. | [noun] A disease or condition that has anemia as a symptom. | [noun] (obsolete) Ischemia. ANEMIC (10) [noun] An individual who has anemia. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or suffering from anemia. | [adjective] (by extension) Weak; listless; lacking power, vigor, vitality, or colorfulness. ANIMAL (8) [noun] In scientific usage, a multicellular organism that is usually mobile, whose cells are not encased in a rigid cell wall (distinguishing it from plants and fungi) and which derives energy solely from the consumption of other organisms (distinguishing it from plants). | [noun] In non-scientific usage, any member of the kingdom Animalia other than a human. | [noun] In non-scientific usage, any land-living vertebrate (i.e. not fishes, insects, etc.). | [adjective] Of or relating to animals. ANIMAS (8) [noun] The soul or animating principle of a living thing, especially as contrasted with the animus. | [noun] (Jungian psychology) The inner self (not the external persona) of a person that is in touch with the unconscious as opposed to the persona. | [noun] (Jungian psychology) The unconscious feminine aspect of a person. ANIMES (8) [noun] Plural of anime; Japanese animated films or television series, typically characterized by colorful graphics and often featuring science fiction or fantasy themes. ANIMIS (8) [noun] Plural of animus; the rational soul or life principle in ancient philosophy. | [noun] Hostile feelings or animosity toward someone. ANIMUS (8) [noun] The basic impulses and instincts which govern one's actions. | [noun] A feeling of enmity, animosity or ill will. | [noun] The masculine aspect of the feminine psyche or personality. ANOMIC (10) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by anomie, a state of normlessness or social instability. | [adjective] Relating to anomia, a condition of being unable to name objects. ANOMIE (8) [noun] Alienation or social instability caused by erosion of standards and values. ANONYM (11) [noun] An anonymous person. | [noun] An assumed or false name; a pseudonym. | [noun] A mere name; a name resting upon no diagnosis or other recognized basis. ANTHEM (11) [noun] Antiphon. | [noun] A choral or vocal composition, often with a religious or political lyric. | [noun] A hymn of praise or loyalty. ANTRUM (8) [noun] A bodily cavity, especially one having bony walls, especially one in the sinuses. APLOMB (12) [noun] Self-confidence; poise; composure. | [noun] The apparent elegance and precision exhibited by a confident, accomplished dancer. | [noun] The perpendicular; perpendicularity. ARAMID (9) [noun] Any of a class of strong, heat-resistant synthetic fibres, used in aerospace and military applications. ARMADA (9) [noun] A fleet of warships, especially with reference to the Spanish Armada. | [noun] Any large army or fleet of military vessels. | [noun] A large flock of anything. ARMERS (8) [noun] Plural of armer; those who arm or equip with weapons. | [noun] Plural of arm; limbs of the body, or devices that extend from a central point. ARMETS (8) [noun] Plural of armet, a type of close helmet worn by soldiers in the 15th and 16th centuries. ARMFUL (11) [noun] The amount an arm or arms can hold. ARMIES (8) [noun] A large, highly organized military force, concerned mainly with ground (rather than air or naval) operations. | [noun] The governmental agency in charge of a state's army. | [noun] A large group of people working toward the same purpose. ARMING (9) [verb] To take by the arm; to take up in one's arms. | [verb] To supply with armour or (later especially) weapons. | [verb] To prepare a tool or a weapon for action; to activate. ARMLET (8) [noun] A band that is worn on the arm that for ornamental or identification purposes. | [noun] A small arm. ARMORS (8) [noun] A protective layer over a body, vehicle, or other object intended to deflect or diffuse damaging forces. | [noun] A natural form of this kind of protection on an animal's body. | [noun] Metal plate, protecting a ship, military vehicle, or aircraft. ARMORY (11) [noun] Heraldry | [noun] A place where arms are kept, an arsenal. | [noun] A collection of weapons and materiel. ARMOUR (8) [noun] A protective layer over a body, vehicle, or other object intended to deflect or diffuse damaging forces. | [noun] A natural form of this kind of protection on an animal's body. | [noun] Metal plate, protecting a ship, military vehicle, or aircraft. ARMPIT (10) [noun] The cavity beneath the junction of the arm and shoulder. | [noun] Somewhere or something considered unpleasant or undesirable. ARMURE (8) AROMAS (8) [noun] A smell; especially a pleasant spicy or fragrant one. ASARUM (8) [noun] A genus of climbing or low-growing plants of the birthwort family, native to Asia and North America, having heart-shaped leaves and small flowers. ASHMAN (11) [noun] A person whose job is to collect and remove ashes, especially from fireplaces or furnaces. ASHMEN (11) [noun] Plural of ashman, a person whose job is to collect and remove ashes. ASHRAM (11) [noun] A secluded religious hermitage inhabited by gurus, or the population of such a hermitage. ASRAMA (8) [noun] One of the four stages of life in Hinduism, comprising studenthood, householdership, forest retirement, and renunciation. ASSUME (8) [verb] To authenticate by means of belief; to surmise; to suppose to be true, especially without proof | [verb] To take on a position, duty or form | [verb] To adopt a feigned quality or manner; to claim without right; to arrogate ASTHMA (11) [noun] A long-term respiratory condition, in which the airways may unexpectedly and suddenly narrow, often in response to an allergen, cold air, exercise, or emotional stress. Symptoms include wheezing, shortness of breath, chest tightness, and coughing. ASWARM (11) [adjective] Filled or overrun (with moving objects or beings). ASYLUM (11) [noun] A place of safety. | [noun] The protection, physical and legal, afforded by such a place. | [noun] A place of protection or restraint for one or more classes of the disadvantaged, especially the mentally ill. ATAMAN (8) [noun] A title of Cossack and haidamak leaders of various kinds. The term was also used for the leader of a fisherman artel and of a band of robbers or thieves. ATMANS (8) [noun] (Vedanta) The true self of an individual beyond identification with worldly phenomena, the essence of an individual, an infinitesimal part of Brahman. ATOMIC (10) [noun] An atomic operation. | [adjective] Of or relating to atoms; composed of atoms; monatomic. | [adjective] Employing or relating to nuclear energy or processes. ATRIUM (8) [noun] A central room or space in ancient Roman homes, open to the sky in the middle; a similar space in other buildings. | [noun] A square hall lit by daylight from above, into which rooms open at one or more levels. | [noun] A cavity, entrance, or passage. AURUMS (8) [noun] Plural of aurum, the Latin name for the chemical element gold. AUTISM (8) [noun] A pervasive neurological disorder that is observable in early childhood and persists throughout the lifespan, characterised by atypical communication, language development, eye contact, and sensory experiences. | [noun] (now medically obsolete) A diagnosis involving a pathological tendency to engage in self-centered fantasy thinking, historically considered a symptom of insanity and/or schizophrenia. | [noun] (4chan) Abnormal and unhealthy focus or persistence, and unhealthy hatred of opposition or criticism. AUTUMN (8) [noun] Traditionally the third of the four seasons, when deciduous trees lose their leaves; typically regarded as being from September 24 to December 22 in parts of the Northern Hemisphere, and the months of March, April and May in the Southern Hemisphere. | [noun] (by extension) The time period when someone or something is past its prime. | [noun] A person with relatively dark hair and a warm skin tone, seen as best suited to certain colours in clothing. AWMOUS (11) AXEMAN (15) [noun] A man who wields an axe. | [noun] A musician who plays a guitar or saxophone. AXEMEN (15) [noun] A man who wields an axe. | [noun] A musician who plays a guitar or saxophone. AXIOMS (15) [noun] A seemingly self-evident or necessary truth which is based on assumption; a principle or proposition which cannot actually be proved or disproved. | [noun] (proof theory) A fundamental assumption that serves as a basis for deduction of theorems; a postulate (sometimes distinguished from postulates as being universally applicable, whereas postulates are particular to a certain science or context). | [noun] An established principle in some artistic practice or science that is universally received. BAALIM (10) [noun] Plural of baal, referring to false gods or idols in biblical and historical contexts. BADMAN (11) [noun] A criminal or violent person, especially in Jamaican English or dancehall culture. | [noun] In gaming contexts, a skilled or formidable player or character. BADMEN (11) [noun] Plural of badman; criminals, gangsters, or tough individuals, particularly in Caribbean English and reggae culture. BAGMAN (11) [noun] A person who collects, transports, or distributes illicit money, especially for the purpose of bribery, extortion, or the making of other improper payments. | [noun] An assistant to a police detective, most commonly in the British police force. | [noun] A bookmaker. BAGMEN (11) [noun] A person who collects, transports, or distributes illicit money, especially for the purpose of bribery, extortion, or the making of other improper payments. | [noun] An assistant to a police detective, most commonly in the British police force. | [noun] A bookmaker. BALSAM (10) [noun] A sweet-smelling oil or resin derived from various plants. | [noun] A plant or tree yielding such substance. | [noun] A soothing ointment. BAMBOO (12) [noun] A grass of the Poaceae family, characterised by its woody, hollow, round, straight, jointed stem, all of which are in the Bambuseae tribe. | [noun] The wood of the bamboo plant as a material or cane. | [noun] A didgeridoo. BAMMED (13) BANTAM (10) [noun] Any of several small chickens, especially of a breed that is a miniature version of another breed. | [noun] A competitor in an age division between peewee and midget. | [adjective] Small or miniature. BARIUM (10) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Ba) with an atomic number of 56. It is a soft, reactive, silvery alkaline earth metal. | [noun] A single atom of this element. | [noun] Barium sulfate suspension. BARMAN (10) [noun] A man who works in a bar. BARMEN (10) [noun] A man who works in a bar. BARMIE (10) [adjective] Infested with barm or yeast; fermenting. | [adjective] British slang for foolish or crazy. BATMAN (10) [noun] A servant or valet to an army officer. | [noun] (by extension) A personal assistant or supporter. | [verb] To act as a batman. | [noun] A unit of weight established in 1931 equal to 10 kg. | [verb] (mountaineering) To climb up or down a rope free hand (i.e. as Batman does). BATMEN (10) [noun] A servant or valet to an army officer. | [noun] (by extension) A personal assistant or supporter. BAYAMO (13) BAYMAN (13) BAYMEN (13) [noun] Plural of bayman; men who work in or around bays, particularly those engaged in fishing or oystering in coastal bay areas. BEAMED (11) [verb] To emit beams of light; shine; radiate. | [verb] To smile broadly or especially cheerfully. | [verb] To furnish or supply with beams BECALM (12) [verb] To make calm or still; make quiet; calm. | [verb] To deprive (a ship) of wind, so that it cannot move (usually in passive). BECAME (12) [verb] To arrive, come (to a place). | [verb] To come about; happen; come into being; arise. | [verb] Begin to be; turn into. BECOME (12) [verb] To arrive, come (to a place). | [verb] To come about; happen; come into being; arise. | [verb] Begin to be; turn into. BEDAMN (11) [verb] To curse or damn; to condemn or express anger at. BEDIMS (11) [verb] To make dim; to obscure or darken. BEDLAM (11) [noun] A place or situation of chaotic uproar, and where confusion prevails. | [noun] An insane person; a lunatic; a madman. | [noun] A lunatic asylum; a madhouse. BEDUMB (13) BEGRIM (11) [verb] To make dirty or grimy; to soil or smudge. BEGUMS (11) [noun] A high-ranking Muslim woman, especially in India and Pakistan | [noun] The form of address for such a woman BELDAM (11) [noun] A grandmother. | [noun] An old woman, particularly an ugly one. BEMATA (10) [noun] A platform from which speakers addressed an assembly. | [noun] Raised area of worship in a synagogue upon which rests the Holy Ark containing Scrolls of Torah. BEMEAN (10) [verb] To degrade, demean, or lower in rank or dignity. BEMIRE (10) [verb] To soil with mud or a similar substance. | [verb] To immerse or trap in mire. BEMIST (10) [verb] To cover or obscure with mist. BEMIXT (17) [verb] Past tense of "bemix," meaning to mix together or mingle. BEMOAN (10) [verb] To moan or complain about (something). | [verb] To be dismayed or worried about (someone), particularly because of their situation or what has happened to them. BEMOCK (16) [verb] To mock or ridicule; to treat with contempt or derision. BEMUSE (10) [verb] To confuse or bewilder. | [verb] To devote to the Muses. BENAME (10) [verb] To name or call by a particular name. | [verb] To suit or befit. BENUMB (12) [verb] To make numb, as by cold or anesthetic. | [verb] To deaden, dull (the mind, faculties, etc.). BERIME (10) BERMES (10) [noun] Plural of berme, a narrow ledge or path at the top or bottom of a slope, embankment, or ditch. | [noun] Strips of land between a canal or fortification and a moat or ditch. BESEEM (10) [verb] To be suitable or appropriate for; to befit. BESMUT (10) BESOMS (10) [noun] A broom made from a bundle of twigs tied onto a shaft. | [noun] A troublesome woman. | [noun] Any cleansing or purifying agent. BETIME (10) BEWORM (13) BIFORM (13) [adjective] Having two forms or shapes. BIGAMY (14) [noun] The state of having two (legal or illegal) spouses simultaneously. | [noun] A second marriage after the death of a spouse. BIMAHS (13) [noun] The raised platform in the front of a synagogue where the Torah is read on a podium. BIMBOS (12) [noun] A physically attractive woman who lacks intelligence. | [noun] A stupid or foolish person. BIOMES (10) [noun] Any major regional biological community such as that of forest or desert | [noun] All the genomes of such a community BIREME (10) [noun] (history) an ancient galley having two banks of oars, one above the other. BLAMED (11) [verb] To censure (someone or something); to criticize. | [verb] To bring into disrepute. | [verb] (usually followed by "for") To assert or consider that someone is the cause of something negative; to place blame, to attribute responsibility (for something negative or for doing something negative). BLAMER (10) [noun] One who blames; a person who assigns fault or responsibility to another. BLAMES (10) [verb] To censure (someone or something); to criticize. | [verb] To bring into disrepute. | [verb] (usually followed by "for") To assert or consider that someone is the cause of something negative; to place blame, to attribute responsibility (for something negative or for doing something negative). BLIMEY (13) [interjection] Used to express anger, excitement, surprise, etc. BLIMPS (12) [noun] An airship constructed with a non-rigid lifting agent container. | [noun] (by extension) Any large airborne inflatable. | [noun] An obese person. BLOOMS (10) [noun] A blossom; the flower of a plant; an expanded bud. | [noun] Flowers, collectively. | [noun] The opening of flowers in general; the state of blossoming or of having the flowers open. BLOOMY (13) [adjective] Covered with or having the appearance of bloom; flowering or blossoming. | [adjective] Having a whitish or grayish powdery coating on the surface. BLUMED (11) BLUMES (10) BOMBAX (19) [noun] A tropical tree of the mallow family, particularly the silk cotton tree, known for its large flowers and seed pods filled with silky fiber. BOMBED (13) [verb] To attack using one or more bombs; to bombard. | [verb] To fail dismally. | [verb] To jump into water in a squatting position, with the arms wrapped around the legs. BOMBER (12) [noun] A military aircraft designed to carry and drop bombs. | [noun] A person who sets bombs, especially as an act of terrorism. | [noun] A bomber jacket. | [adjective] Completely solid and secure, usually referring to some form of protective gear (n.b. the forms "more bomber" or "most bomber" are unusual). BOMBES (12) [noun] A dessert made from ice cream frozen in a (generally spherical or hemispherical) mold. | [noun] (chiefly in German cooking) A small, cylindrical or spherical chocolate-covered confection. (Compare truffle.) | [noun] An electromechanical device used in early cryptanalysis. BOMBYX (22) [noun] A genus of moths that includes the silkworm, producing silk fiber. BOOMED (11) [verb] To make a loud, hollow, resonant sound. | [verb] (of speech) To exclaim with force, to shout, to thunder. | [verb] To make something boom. BOOMER (10) [noun] A person born in the postwar years (generally considered in the United States and other Allied countries as between 1946 and the early 1960s), when there was a marked increase in birthrates throughout the Western world following the return of servicemen at the end of World War II. | [noun] An adult male kangaroo. | [noun] (by extension) A person who does not know how to utilize new technologies well. BOSOMS (10) [noun] (somewhat obsolete) The breast or chest of a human (or sometimes of another animal). | [noun] The seat of one's inner thoughts, feelings etc.; one's secret feelings; desire. | [noun] The protected interior or inner part of something; the area enclosed as by an embrace. BOSOMY (13) [adjective] Full of sheltered hollows or recesses. | [adjective] Having a large bosom. BOTTOM (10) [noun] The lowest part of anything. | [noun] Character, reliability, staying power, dignity, integrity or sound judgment. | [noun] Low-lying land; a valley or hollow. BOWMAN (13) [noun] A man who uses a bow; an archer. | [noun] The person, in a team or among oarsmen, positioned nearest the bow. BOWMEN (13) [noun] A man who uses a bow; an archer. | [noun] The person, in a team or among oarsmen, positioned nearest the bow. BRAHMA (13) [noun] A Hindu deity associated with creation, the first god in the Trimurti. | [noun] A large domesticated chicken breed originating from Asia. BREAMS (10) [noun] A European fresh-water cyprinoid fish of the genus Abramis, little valued as food. Several species are known. | [noun] A species in that genus, Abramis brama. | [noun] An American fresh-water fish, of various species of Lepomis and allied genera, which are also called sunfishes and pondfishes. BREGMA (11) [noun] The point on the skull where the coronal and sagittal sutures meet. BROMAL (10) [noun] A colorless liquid compound (CHBr₃) that is used as a sedative and hypnotic agent. BROMES (10) [noun] Plural of brome, a type of grass in the genus Bromus, commonly found in grasslands and used for forage. | [noun] Bromine compounds or brominated substances. BROMIC (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing bromine. BROMID (11) [noun] A hackneyed or trite saying; a platitude. | [noun] A chemical compound of bromine with another element or radical. BROMIN (10) BROMOS (10) [noun] Plural of bromo, a type of chemical compound containing bromine, or informal short form for bromide photographs used in printing and photography. BROOMS (10) [verb] To clean (e.g. a ship's bottom of clinging shells, seaweed, etc.) by the application of fire and scraping. | [noun] A domestic utensil with fibers bound together at the end of a long handle, used for sweeping. | [noun] An implement with which players sweep the ice to make a stone travel further and curl less; a sweeper. BROOMY (13) [adjective] Resembling or containing broom (a shrubby plant); covered with broom plants. | [adjective] Sweeping or brushing in manner. BRUMAL (10) [adjective] Of or relating to winter; wintry. BRUMBY (15) [noun] A wild or feral horse. BRUMES (10) [noun] Plural of brume; mists or fogs. | [verb] Third person singular of brume; to obscure with mist or fog. BUMBLE (12) [noun] A confusion; a jumble. | [verb] To act in an inept, clumsy or inexpert manner; to make mistakes. | [noun] A bumble-bee. BUMKIN (14) [noun] A projecting beam or spar extending from the side of a ship, used to secure rigging or extend the sail. | [noun] A country person; a rustic or unsophisticated person. BUMMED (13) [verb] To sodomize; to engage in anal sex. | [verb] To ask someone to give one (something) for free; to beg for something. | [verb] To stay idle and unproductive, like a hobo or vagabond; to loiter. BUMMER (12) [noun] A forager, especially in Sherman's March to the Sea of November to December 1864. | [noun] An idle, worthless fellow, without any visible means of support; a dissipated sponger. | [noun] A lamb (typically the smallest of a multiple birth) which has been abandoned by its mother or orphaned, and as a consequence is raised in part or in whole by humans. | [adjective] Of poor quality or highly undesirable. | [noun] A disappointment, a pity, a shame. | [noun] Homosexual male BUMPED (13) [verb] To knock against or run into with a jolt. | [verb] To move up or down by a step; displace. | [verb] To post in an Internet forum thread in order to raise the thread's profile by returning it to the top of the list of active threads. BUMPER (12) [noun] Someone or something that bumps. | [noun] A drinking vessel filled to the brim. | [noun] Anything large or successful. BUMPHS (15) [noun] Plural of bumph; printed materials or documents, especially those considered tedious or superfluous. | [noun] Toilet paper. BUNKUM (14) [noun] Senseless talk; nonsense; a piece of nonsense. | [noun] (Washington, DC) Bombastic political posturing or oratorical display designed only for show or public applause. BUSMAN (10) [noun] A person employed to drive buses. BUSMEN (10) [noun] A person employed to drive buses. BYNAME (13) [noun] A secondary name for a person or thing; a person's surname. | [noun] A nickname. | [noun] A pseudonym; nom-de-plume. CABMAN (12) [noun] The driver of a hackney cab. | [noun] The driver of a taxi. CABMEN (12) [noun] The driver of a hackney cab. | [noun] The driver of a taxi. CADMIC (13) CAECUM (12) [noun] A blind pouch connected to the large intestine between the ileum and the colon. CAEOMA (10) [noun] A fruiting structure of rust fungi that produces aecial spores, representing an early stage in the fungal life cycle. CAIMAN (10) [noun] Any of the relatively small crocodilians of genus Caiman, within family Alligatoridae. | [noun] A semi-aquatic lizard, of the genus Dracaena, found in South America. To differentiate from caimans, they are referred to as caiman lizards. CALAMI (10) [noun] The sweet flag, Acorus calamus. | [noun] A quill; the hard, horny, hollow, and more or less transparent part of the stem or scape of a feather. | [noun] An abnormal connection or passageway between organs or vessels that normally do not connect. CALMED (11) [verb] To make calm. | [verb] To become calm. CALMER (10) [adjective] (of a person) Peaceful, quiet, especially free from anger and anxiety. | [adjective] (of a place or situation) Free of noise and disturbance. | [adjective] (of water) with few or no waves on the surface; not rippled. CALMLY (13) [adverb] In a calm manner. CAMAIL (10) [noun] A piece of chainmail worn to protect the neck and shoulders. | [noun] An ecclesiastical ornament worn by bishops. CAMASS (10) [noun] Any of the North American flowering plants of the genus Camassia. | [noun] (Western US) A small prairie in a forest; a small grassy plain among hills. CAMBER (12) [noun] A slight convexity, arching or curvature of a surface of a road, beam, roof, ship's deck etc., so that liquids will flow off the sides. | [noun] The slope of a curved road created to minimize the effect of centrifugal force. | [noun] An upward concavity in the underside of a beam, girder, or lintel; also, a slight upward concavity in a straight arch. CAMBIA (12) [noun] A layer of cells between the xylem and the phloem that is responsible for the secondary growth of roots and stems. | [noun] Periosteum, a membrane that covers the outer surface of bones | [noun] One of the humours formerly believed to nourish the bodily organs. CAMELS (10) [noun] A beast of burden, much used in desert areas, of the genus Camelus. | [noun] A light brownish color, like that of a camel (also called camel brown). | [noun] Loaded vessels lashed tightly, one on each side of another vessel, and then emptied to reduce the draught of the ship in the middle. CAMEOS (10) [noun] A piece of jewelry, etc., carved in relief. | [noun] A single very brief appearance, especially by a prominent celebrity in a movie or song. CAMERA (10) [noun] A device for taking still or moving pictures or photographs. | [noun] The viewpoint in a three-dimensional game or simulation. | [noun] A vaulted room. CAMION (10) [noun] A large truck or lorry, used for carrying heavy loads. CAMISA (10) [noun] A shirt or chemise, used in English from Spanish contexts or historical texts. CAMISE (10) [noun] A fine linen shirt or tunic, especially one worn in the Middle Ages. CAMLET (10) [noun] A fabric made from camel hair or a mixture of camel hair and wool, or a similar fabric made from other materials. CAMPED (13) [verb] To live in a tent or similar temporary accommodation. | [verb] To set up a camp. | [verb] To afford rest or lodging for. CAMPER (12) [adjective] Theatrical; making exaggerated gestures. | [adjective] (of a man) Ostentatiously effeminate. | [adjective] Intentionally tasteless or vulgar, self-parodying. CAMPOS (12) [noun] A police officer assigned to a university campus. | [noun] A field or plain in a Spanish- or Portuguese-speaking area. CAMPUS (12) [noun] The grounds or property of a school, college, university, business, church, or hospital, often understood to include buildings and other structures. | [noun] An institution of higher education and its ambiance. | [verb] To confine to campus as a punishment. CARMAN (10) [noun] A person who transported goods, usually with a horse and cart. CARMEN (10) [noun] A person who transported goods, usually with a horse and cart. CAROMS (10) [noun] (cue sports, especially billiards) A shot in which the ball struck with the cue comes in contact with two or more balls on the table; a hitting of two or more balls with the player's ball. | [noun] A billiard-like Indian game in which players take turns flicking checker-like pieces into one of four goals on the corners of a (one meter by one meter square) board. | [verb] To make a carom (shot in billiards). CARROM (10) [noun] A board game of Indian origin played on a square board where players use a striker to hit coins into pockets. | [noun] The act of striking a coin against another in this game. CAYMAN (13) [noun] Any of the relatively small crocodilians of genus Caiman, within family Alligatoridae. | [noun] A semi-aquatic lizard, of the genus Dracaena, found in South America. To differentiate from caimans, they are referred to as caiman lizards. CELOMS (10) [noun] A fluid-filled cavity within the body of an animal. The digestive system is suspended within the cavity, which is lined by a tissue called the peritoneum. CEMENT (10) [noun] A powdered substance produced by firing (calcining) calcium carbonate (limestone) and clay that develops strong cohesive properties when mixed with water. The main ingredient of concrete. | [noun] The paste-like substance resulting from mixing such a powder with water, or the rock-like substance that forms when it dries. | [noun] Any material with strong adhesive and cohesive properties such as binding agents, glues, grout. CENTUM (10) [noun] A group or division of one hundred, especially a Roman military unit of about one hundred soldiers. | [noun] In ancient Rome, a political subdivision of citizens organized for voting purposes. CERIUM (10) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Ce) with an atomic number of 58, a very soft, ductile, silvery-white metal that tarnishes when exposed to air. CERMET (10) [noun] A composite material composed of ceramic and metal materials, used in such applications as industrial saws and turbine blades. CESIUM (10) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Cs) with an atomic number of 55. It is a soft, gold-colored, highly reactive alkali metal. CHACMA (15) [noun] A large baboon native to southern Africa, characterized by a dark coat and dog-like snout. CHAMMY (18) [noun] A soft leather made from the skin of sheep, goats, or deer, used for cleaning and polishing. | [noun] A variant spelling of "chamois," referring to a small goat-like mammal found in mountain regions of Europe. CHAMPS (15) [verb] To bite or chew, especially noisily or impatiently. CHAMPY (18) CHARMS (13) [noun] An object, act or words believed to have magic power (usually carries a positive connotation). | [noun] The ability to persuade, delight or arouse admiration; often constructed in the plural. | [noun] A small trinket on a bracelet or chain, etc., traditionally supposed to confer luck upon the wearer. CHASMS (13) [noun] A deep, steep-sided rift, gap or fissure; a gorge or abyss. | [noun] (by extension) A large difference of opinion. CHASMY (16) [adjective] Resembling or having the characteristics of a chasm; marked by a wide gap or opening. CHEMIC (15) [adjective] Of or relating to chemistry or chemical processes. | [noun] A substance used in or produced by a chemical process. CHEMOS (13) [noun] Plural of chemo, informal term for chemotherapy, a medical treatment using chemical substances to treat disease, particularly cancer. CHIASM (13) [noun] The crossing or intersection of two structures, particularly the optic nerves in the brain. | [noun] A cross-shaped anatomical structure or junction. CHIMAR (13) [noun] A type of garment worn by some Muslim women, consisting of a veil or cloak that covers the body and face. CHIMBS (15) [noun] The top of a ridge. | [noun] The spine of an animal. | [noun] A piece of the backbone of an animal, with the adjoining parts, cut for cooking. CHIMED (14) [verb] To make the sound of a chime. | [verb] To cause to sound in harmony; to play a tune, as upon a set of bells; to move or strike in harmony. | [verb] To utter harmoniously; to recite rhythmically. CHIMER (13) CHIMES (13) [noun] A musical instrument producing a sound when struck, similar to a bell (e.g. a tubular metal bar) or actually a bell. Often used in the plural to refer to the set: the chimes. | [noun] An individual ringing component of such a set. | [noun] A small bell or other ringing or tone-making device as a component of some other device. CHIMLA (13) CHIMPS (15) [noun] A species of great ape in the genus Pan, native to Africa, and believed by biologists to be the closest extant relative to humans. CHIRMS (13) [verb] To chirp or to make a mournful cry, as a bird does. CHOMPS (15) [noun] The act of chomping (see below) | [verb] To bite or chew loudly or heavily. | [verb] (Perl) To remove the final character from (a text string) if it is a newline (or, less commonly, some other programmer-specified character). CHRISM (13) [noun] A mixture of oil and balm, consecrated for use as an anointing fluid in certain Christian ceremonies, especially confirmation. CHROMA (13) [noun] The colorfulness relative to the brightness of a similarly illuminated area | [noun] The aspect of a colour's hue that depends on the amount of white or black in it; saturation | [noun] A note in a chromatic scale CHROME (13) [noun] Chromium, when used to plate other metals. | [noun] The basic structural elements used in a graphical user interface, such as window frames and scroll bars, as opposed to the content. | [noun] Handguns (collectively) CHROMO (13) [noun] A color print produced by chromolithography. | [noun] A prostitute. | [adjective] Of or relating to the chromodomain, a protein structural domain associated with chromatin production CHUMMY (18) [noun] A friend; a pal. | [noun] A roommate, especially in a college or university. | [noun] A mixture of (frequently rancid) fish parts and blood, dumped into the water to attract predator fish, such as sharks CHUMPS (15) [noun] An incompetent person, a blockhead; a loser. | [noun] A gullible person; a sucker; someone easily taken advantage of; someone lacking common sense. | [noun] The thick end, especially of a piece of wood or of a joint of meat. CHYMES (16) [noun] Plural of chyme, the semifluid mass of partly digested food and digestive juices formed in the stomach. | [noun] The pulpy mixture of food and gastric juices that passes from the stomach into the small intestine. CHYMIC (18) [adjective] Of or relating to alchemy or chemistry; alchemical. | [noun] An alchemist or chemist. CILIUM (10) [noun] Hairs or similar protrusions along the margin of a plant organ. | [noun] A hairlike organelle projecting from a eukaryotic cell (such as a unicellular organism or one cell of a multicelled organism). These structures serve either for locomotion by moving or as sensors. | [noun] One of the fine hairs along an insect's wing. CINEMA (10) [noun] A movie theatre, a movie house | [noun] Films collectively. | [noun] The film and movie industry. CIVISM (13) CLAIMS (10) [noun] A demand of ownership made for something. | [noun] The thing claimed. | [noun] The right or ground of demanding. CLAMMY (15) [adjective] Cold and damp, usually referring to hands or palms. | [adjective] The quality of normal skin signs, epidermis that is neither diaphoretic nor dry. CLAMOR (10) [noun] A great outcry or vociferation; loud and continued shouting or exclamation. | [noun] Any loud and continued noise. | [noun] A continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction or discontent; a popular outcry. CLAMPS (12) [noun] A brace, band, or clasp for strengthening or holding things together. | [noun] An instrument used to temporarily shut off blood vessels, etc. | [noun] A parking enforcement device used to immobilise a car until it can be towed or a fine is paid; a wheel clamp. CLEOME (10) [noun] Any flowering plant in the genus Cleome. CLIMAX (17) [noun] (originally rhetorical) A rhetorical device in which a series is arranged in ascending order. | [noun] An instance of such an ascending series. | [noun] The culmination of a narrative's rising action, the turning point. CLIMBS (12) [noun] An act of climbing. | [noun] The act of getting to somewhere more elevated. | [noun] An upwards struggle CLIMES (10) [noun] A particular region defined by its weather or climate. | [noun] Climate. CLOMPS (12) [noun] The sound of feet hitting the ground loudly. | [verb] To walk heavily or clumsily, as with clogs. | [verb] To make some object hit something, thereby producing a clomping sound. CLUMPS (12) [noun] A cluster or lump; an unshaped piece or mass. | [noun] A thick group or bunch, especially of bushes or hair. | [noun] A dull thud. CLUMPY (15) [adjective] Forming or tending to form clumps. | [adjective] Resembling a clump. | [adjective] Clompy; with heavy footfalls. CLUMSY (13) [noun] A clumsy person. | [adjective] Awkward, lacking coordination, not graceful, not dextrous. | [adjective] Not elegant or well-planned, lacking tact or subtlety. COELOM (10) [noun] A fluid-filled cavity within the body of an animal. The digestive system is suspended within the cavity, which is lined by a tissue called the peritoneum. COEMPT (12) [verb] To buy or purchase; to acquire by paying a price. COLUMN (10) [noun] A solid upright structure designed usually to support a larger structure above it, such as a roof or horizontal beam, but sometimes for decoration. | [noun] A vertical line of entries in a table, usually read from top to bottom. | [noun] A body of troops or army vehicles, usually strung out along a road. COMADE (11) COMAKE (14) COMATE (10) COMBAT (12) [noun] A battle, a fight (often one in which weapons are used). | [noun] A struggle for victory | [verb] To fight; to struggle against. COMBED (13) [verb] (especially of hair or fur) To groom with a toothed implement; chiefly with a comb. | [verb] To separate choice cotton fibers from worsted cloth fibers. | [verb] To search thoroughly as if raking over an area with a comb. | [adjective] Having a comb or crest COMBER (12) [noun] A person who combs wool, etc. | [noun] A machine that combs wool, etc. | [noun] A long, curving wave breaking on the shore. | [noun] Serranus cabrilla, the gaper, a fish found in European waters. COMBES (12) [noun] A valley, often wooded and often with no river | [noun] A cirque. COMBOS (12) [noun] A small musical group. | [noun] A combination. | [noun] An action composed of a sequence of simpler actions, especially a composite attacking move in a fighting game. COMEDO (11) [noun] A blackhead or whitehead. COMEDY (14) [noun] A choric song of celebration or revel, especially in Ancient Greece. | [noun] A light, amusing play with a happy ending. | [noun] (Medieval Europe) A narrative poem with an agreeable ending (e.g., The Divine Comedy). COMELY (13) [adjective] (of a person) Pleasing or attractive to the eye. | [adjective] Suitable or becoming; proper; agreeable. COMERS (10) [noun] One in a race who is catching up to others and shows promise of winning. | [noun] One who is catching up in some contest and has a likelihood of victory. | [noun] One who arrives. COMETH (13) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "come" in archaic or biblical English usage. COMETS (10) [noun] A celestial body consisting mainly of ice, dust and gas in a (usually very eccentric) orbit around the Sun and having a "tail" of matter blown back from it by the solar wind as it approaches the Sun. | [noun] A celestial phenomenon with the appearance given by the orbiting celestial body. | [noun] Any of several species of hummingbird found in the Andes. COMFIT (13) [noun] A computerised image of a suspect produced for the police force. COMICS (12) [noun] A comedian. | [noun] A story composed of cartoon images arranged in sequence, usually with textual captions; a graphic novel. | [noun] A children's newspaper. COMING (11) [verb] To move from further away to nearer to. | [verb] To arrive. | [verb] To appear, to manifest itself. | [noun] The act of arriving; an arrival COMITY (13) [noun] Courtesy and considerate behaviour towards others; social harmony. | [noun] Friendly understanding and mutual recognition between two entities, especially nations. COMMAS (12) [noun] The punctuation mark ⟨,⟩ used to indicate a set off parts of a sentence or between elements of a list. | [noun] A similar-looking subscript diacritical mark. | [noun] Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the genus Polygonia, having a comma-shaped white mark on the underwings, especially Polygonia c-album and Polygonia c-aureum of North Africa, Europe, and Asia. COMMIE (12) [noun] One who subscribes to anticapitalism. | [noun] A communist; a person with communist sympathies; a supposed communist infiltrator. | [adjective] Communist. | [noun] A Holden Commodore. | [noun] A commercial vehicle. COMMIT (12) [noun] The act of committing (e.g. a database transaction or source code into a source control repository), making it a permanent change. | [verb] To give in trust; to put into charge or keeping; to entrust; to consign; used with to or formerly unto. | [verb] To put in charge of a jailer; to imprison. COMMIX (19) [verb] To mix separate things together. | [verb] To become mixed; to amalgamate. COMMON (12) [noun] Mutual good, shared by more than one. | [noun] A tract of land in common ownership; common land. | [noun] The people; the community. COMOSE (10) [adjective] Having or bearing a coma or tuft of hairs; hairy or tufted. COMOUS (10) [adjective] Having hair or a tuft of hair; hairy or tufted. COMPED (13) [verb] To accompany, in music. | [verb] To compose (a visual design); to make a composite. | [verb] To provide someone with (a complimentary item, such as a ticket). COMPEL (12) [verb] To drive together, round up | [verb] To overpower; to subdue. | [verb] To force, constrain or coerce. COMPLY (15) [verb] To yield assent; to accord; to acquiesce, agree, consent; to adapt oneself, to conform. | [verb] To accomplish, to fulfil. | [verb] To be ceremoniously courteous; to make one's compliments. COMPOS (12) [noun] The act or principle of compensating. | [noun] Something which is regarded as an equivalent; something which compensates for loss. | [noun] The extinction of debts of which two persons are reciprocally debtors by the credits of which they are reciprocally creditors; the payment of a debt by a credit of equal amount. | [adjective] Compos mentis; of sound mind; sane COMPTS (12) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "compt," an archaic or dialectal form meaning to count or reckon. COMTES (10) [noun] Plural of comte, a French title of nobility equivalent to a count. CONDOM (11) [noun] A flexible sleeve made of latex or other impermeable material such as sheepskin, worn over an erect penis during intercourse as a contraceptive or as a way to prevent the spread of STDs. CONIUM (10) [noun] A poisonous plant, also known as hemlock, of the genus Conium with spotted stems and small white flowers. COOMBE (12) [noun] A valley, often wooded and often with no river | [noun] A cirque. COOMBS (12) [noun] A valley, often wooded and often with no river | [noun] A cirque. | [noun] An old English measure of corn (e.g., wheat), equal to half a quarter or 4 bushels. COPALM (12) CORIUM (10) [noun] The inner layer of skin, the dermis. | [noun] The deep layer of mucous membranes beneath the epithelium. | [noun] Armour made of leather, particularly that used by the Romans. | [noun] A lavalike mixture of fissile material created in a nuclear reactor's core during a nuclear meltdown. CORMEL (10) [noun] A small corm that develops at the base of an existing corm. CORYMB (15) [noun] A cluster of flowers with a flat or convex top. COSMIC (12) [adjective] Of or from or pertaining to the cosmos or universe. | [adjective] Characteristic of the cosmos or universe; inconceivably great; vast. | [adjective] Rising or setting with the sun; not acronycal. COSMOS (10) [noun] The universe. | [noun] An ordered, harmonious whole. | [noun] Any of various mostly Mexican herbs of the genus Cosmos having radiate heads of variously coloured flowers and pinnate leaves. | [noun] A cosmopolitan, a cocktail containing vodka, triple sec, lime juice and cranberry juice. COWMAN (13) [noun] Cattle rancher | [noun] Cattleman COWMEN (13) [noun] Cattle rancher | [noun] Cattleman CRAMBE (12) CRAMBO (12) [noun] A guessing game in which players guess words that rhyme with a clue word, seeking a word that is kept secret or concealed. | [noun] A word rhyming with another word. CRAMPS (12) [noun] A painful contraction of a muscle which cannot be controlled. | [noun] That which confines or contracts; a restraint; a shackle; a hindrance. | [noun] A clamp for carpentry or masonry. CREAMS (10) [noun] The butterfat/milkfat part of milk which rises to the top; this part when separated from the remainder. | [noun] A yellowish white colour; the colour of cream. | [noun] Frosting, custard, creamer or another substance similar to the oily part of milk or to whipped cream. CREAMY (13) [noun] A horse with a cream-coloured coat. | [adjective] Containing cream. | [adjective] Of food or drink, having the rich taste or thick, smooth texture of cream, whether or not it actually contains cream. CREMES (10) [noun] A very sugary, fluffy white cream derivative. | [noun] Cream CRIMES (10) [noun] A specific act committed in violation of the law. | [noun] Any great sin or wickedness; iniquity. | [noun] That which occasions crime. CRIMPS (12) [noun] A fastener or a fastening method that secures parts by bending metal around a joint and squeezing it together, often with a tool that adds indentations to capture the parts. | [noun] The natural curliness of wool fibres. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Hair that is shaped so it bends back and forth in many short kinks. CRIMPY (15) CRINUM (10) CRUMBS (12) [noun] A small piece which breaks off from baked food (such as cake, biscuit or bread). | [noun] A small piece of other material, such as rubber. | [noun] A bit, small amount. CRUMBY (15) [adjective] Crumbly; inclined to break into crumbs. | [adjective] Bad; poor. | [adjective] Full of crumb or crumbs. CRUMMY (15) [noun] A small van, bus, or railway car used to transport loggers or other resource workers to and from the worksite. | [noun] A cow with a crumpled horn. | [adjective] Bad; poor. CRUMPS (12) [noun] The sound of a muffled explosion. CUBISM (12) [noun] (often capitalized) An artistic movement in the early 20th Century characterized by the depiction of natural forms as geometric structures of planes. CULMED (11) CUMBER (12) [verb] To slow down; to hinder; to burden; to encumber. CUMINS (10) CUMMER (12) CUMMIN (12) [noun] The flowering plant Cuminum cyminum, in the family Apiaceae. | [noun] Its aromatic long seed, used as a spice, notably in Indian, Middle Eastern, and Mexican cookery. CUMULI (10) [noun] A large white puffy cloud that develops through convection. On a hot, humid day, they can form towers and even become cumulonimbus clouds. | [noun] A mound or heap. CUNDUM (11) CUPRUM (12) CURIUM (10) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Cm) with an atomic number of 96. CUSTOM (10) [noun] Frequent repetition of the same behavior; way of behavior common to many; ordinary manner; habitual practice; method of doing, living or behaving. | [noun] Traditional beliefs or rituals | [noun] Habitual buying of goods; practice of frequenting, as a shop, factory, etc., for making purchases or giving orders; business support. CYMARS (13) CYMBAL (15) [noun] A concave plate of brass or bronze that produces a sharp, ringing sound when struck: played either in pairs, by striking them together, or singly by striking with a drumstick or the like. CYMENE (13) CYMLIN (13) CYMOID (14) CYMOLS (13) CYMOSE (13) CYMOUS (13) DAEMON (9) [noun] An evil supernatural spirit. | [noun] A neutral supernatural spirit. | [noun] Someone with great strength, passion or skill for a particular activity, pursuit etc.; an enthusiast. | [noun] A process (a running program) that does not have a controlling terminal. DAIMEN (9) DAIMIO (9) [noun] A lord during the Japanese feudal period. DAIMON (9) [noun] An evil supernatural spirit. | [noun] A neutral supernatural spirit. | [noun] Someone with great strength, passion or skill for a particular activity, pursuit etc.; an enthusiast. DAIMYO (12) [noun] A lord during the Japanese feudal period. DAMAGE (10) [noun] Injury or harm; the condition or measure of something not being intact. | [noun] Cost or expense. | [verb] To impair the soundness, goodness, or value of; to harm or cause destruction. DAMANS (9) DAMARS (9) DAMASK (13) [noun] An ornate silk fabric originating from Damascus. | [noun] Linen so woven that a pattern is produced by the different directions of the thread, without contrast of colour. | [noun] A heavy woolen or worsted stuff with a pattern woven in the same way as the linen damask; made for furniture covering and hangings. DAMMAR (11) [noun] A large tree of the order Coniferae, indigenous to the East Indies and Australasia, now genus Agathis. | [noun] A clear to yellow resin, obtained in Malaya from trees of the genera Shorea (Dipterocarpaceae family) and Symplocos (Symplocaceae family), used in varnishes and inks | [noun] Any of various hard resins, obtained especially from evergreen trees, notably of the genera Agathis (Araucariaceae family) and Hopea (Dipterocarpaceae family), native to southeast Asia, also used in varnishes and lacquers. DAMMED (12) [verb] To block the flow of water. DAMMER (11) DAMNED (10) [verb] To condemn to hell. | [verb] To condemn; to declare guilty; to doom; to adjudge to punishment. | [verb] To put out of favor; to ruin; to label negatively. DAMNER (9) DAMPED (12) [verb] To dampen; to make moderately wet | [verb] To put out, as fire; to weaken, restrain, or make dull. | [verb] To suppress vibrations (mechanical) or oscillations (electrical) by converting energy to heat (or some other form of energy). DAMPEN (11) [verb] To make damp or moist; to make slightly wet. | [verb] To become damp or moist. | [verb] To depress; to check; to make dull; to lessen. DAMPER (11) [adjective] In a state between dry and wet; moderately wet; moist. | [adjective] Despondent; dispirited, downcast. | [adjective] Permitting the possession of alcoholic beverages, but not their sale. DAMPLY (14) DAMSEL (9) [noun] A young woman (of noble birth). | [noun] A girl; a maiden (without sexual experience). | [noun] A young woman who is not married. DAMSON (9) [noun] A subspecies of plum tree, Prunus domestica subsp. insititia, native to Eurasia. | [noun] The edible fruit of this tree. | [adjective] The color of the fruit of this tree, a very deep purple. DATUMS (9) DECAMP (13) [verb] To break up camp and move on. | [verb] To disappear suddenly and secretly. DEEMED (10) [verb] To judge, to pass judgment on; to doom, to sentence. | [verb] To adjudge, to decree. | [verb] To dispense (justice); to administer (law). DEFAME (12) [noun] Disgrace, dishonour. | [noun] Defamation; slander, libel. | [verb] To disgrace; to bring into disrepute. DEFOAM (12) DEFORM (12) [verb] To change the form of, usually negatively; to give (something) an unusual or abnormal shape. | [verb] To change the looks of, usually negatively; to give something an unusual or abnormal appearance. | [verb] To mar the character of. DEGAME (10) DEGAMI (10) DEGERM (10) DEGUMS (10) DEISMS (9) DELIME (9) DEMAND (10) [noun] The desire to purchase goods and services. | [noun] The amount of a good or service that consumers are willing to buy at a particular price. | [noun] A forceful claim for something. DEMARK (13) [verb] To demarcate. DEMAST (9) DEMEAN (9) [verb] To debase; to lower; to degrade. | [verb] To humble, humble oneself; to humiliate. | [verb] To mortify. | [noun] Management; treatment. | [noun] Demesne. | [verb] To subtract the mean from (a value, or every observation in a dataset). DEMENT (9) [noun] An insane person, or one afflicted with dementia | [verb] To drive mad; to craze | [adjective] Insane, demented DEMIES (9) DEMISE (9) [noun] The conveyance or transfer of an estate, either in fee for life or for years, most commonly the latter. | [noun] Transmission by formal act or conveyance to an heir or successor; transference; especially, the transfer or transmission of the crown or royal authority to a successor. | [noun] Death. DEMITS (9) [verb] To let fall; to depress; to yield. | [verb] To relinquish an office, membership, authority, etc.; to resign, as from a Masonic lodge. DEMOBS (11) [verb] To demobilize; to release someone from military service. DEMODE (10) DEMONS (9) [noun] An evil supernatural spirit. | [noun] A neutral supernatural spirit. | [noun] Someone with great strength, passion or skill for a particular activity, pursuit etc.; an enthusiast. DEMOTE (9) [verb] To lower the rank or status of. | [verb] To relegate. DEMURE (9) [verb] To look demurely. | [adjective] (usually of women) Quiet, modest, reserved, sober, or serious. | [adjective] Affectedly modest, decorous, or serious; making a show of gravity. DEMURS (9) [noun] Stop; pause; hesitation as to proceeding; suspense of decision or action; scruple. | [verb] To linger; to stay; to tarry | [verb] To delay; to pause; to suspend proceedings or judgment in view of a doubt or difficulty; to hesitate; to put off the determination or conclusion of an affair. DENIMS (9) [noun] Jeans made of denim. DEPERM (11) DERMAL (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to skin or integument (or other forms of tissue) DERMAS (9) DERMIC (11) [adjective] Of or relating to the dermis or skin. DERMIS (9) [noun] The tissue of the skin underlying the epidermis. DESMAN (9) [noun] Either of two species, Desmana moschata or Galemys pyrenaicus, of aquatic or semi-aquatic insectivore of the mole family, Talpidae, found in Europe. DESMID (10) [noun] Any of about 5000 species of mostly unicellular freshwater green algae belonging to the order Desmidiales. DEWORM (12) [verb] To cause an animal to excrete any worms in the digestive tract by the administration of drugs. DHARMA (12) [noun] The natural order of the universe; natural law, cosmic order. | [noun] One's obligation in respect to one's position in society, one's duty. | [noun] The teachings of the Buddha as one's personal path to enlightenment. DIADEM (10) [noun] An ornamental headband worn as a badge of royalty. | [noun] A crown. | [noun] Regal power; sovereignty; empire—considered as symbolized by the crown. DIAMIN (9) DIATOM (9) [noun] Any of a group of minute unicellular algae having a siliceous covering of great delicacy, now categorized as class Diatomophyceae or division Bacillariophyta. DICTUM (11) [noun] An authoritative statement; a dogmatic saying; a maxim, an apothegm. | [noun] A judicial opinion expressed by judges on points that do not necessarily arise in the case, and are not involved in it. | [noun] The report of a judgment made by one of the judges who has given it. DIGAMY (13) DIMERS (9) [noun] A molecule consisting of two identical halves, formed by joining two identical molecules, sometimes with a single atom acting as a bridge. DIMITY (12) [noun] A light strong fabric with woven stripes or squares. DIMMED (12) [verb] To make something less bright. | [verb] To become darker. | [verb] To render dim, obscure, or dark; to make less bright or distinct DIMMER (11) [adjective] Not bright or colorful. | [adjective] Not smart or intelligent. | [adjective] Indistinct, hazy or unclear. DIMOUT (9) DIMPLE (11) [noun] A small depression or indentation in a surface. | [noun] Specifically, a small natural depression on the skin, especially on the face near the corners of the mouth. | [verb] To create a dimple in. DIMPLY (14) DIMWIT (12) [noun] A person who is deficient in intelligence. DINKUM (13) [noun] Hard work. | [noun] Truth. | [adjective] Genuine, true, honest, on the level. DIRDUM (10) DIRHAM (12) [noun] A unit of currency used in the Arab world, currently the name of the currency of Morocco and the United Arab Emirates. | [noun] A former small Turkish unit of weight, variously reckoned as 1.5–3.5 g (0.05–0.12 oz.). DISARM (9) [noun] The act of depriving a person of a weapon they carry. | [verb] To deprive of weapons; to deprive of the means of attack or defense; to render defenseless. | [verb] To deprive of the means or the disposition to harm; to render harmless or innocuous DISMAL (9) [adjective] Disappointingly inadequate. | [adjective] Gloomy and bleak. | [adjective] Depressing. DISMAY (12) [noun] A sudden or complete loss of courage and firmness in the face of trouble or danger; overwhelming and disabling terror; a sinking of the spirits | [noun] Condition fitted to dismay; ruin. | [verb] To cause to feel apprehension; great sadness, or fear; to deprive of energy DISMES (9) DODGEM (11) [noun] A bumper car in an amusement park. DOGDOM (11) [noun] The state or essence of being a dog. DOGMAS (10) [noun] An authoritative principle, belief or statement of opinion, especially one considered to be absolutely true and indisputable, regardless of evidence or without evidence to support it. | [noun] A doctrine (or set of doctrines) relating to matters such as morality and faith, set forth authoritatively by a religious organization or leader. DOLMAN (9) [noun] A long, loose garment with narrow sleeves and an opening in the front, generally worn by Turks. | [noun] A short, close-fitting, heavily braided military jacket, usually worn under a pelisse, originally by hussars. | [noun] A woman's garment with wide capelike sleeves. DOLMAS (9) [noun] Any of a family of stuffed vegetable dishes. The filling generally consists of rice, minced meat or grains, together with onion, herbs and spices. DOLMEN (9) [noun] A prehistoric megalithic tomb consisting of a capstone supported by two or more upright stones, most having originally been covered with earth or smaller stones to form a barrow. | [noun] More generally, any megalithic tomb, including passage graves and wedge tombs. DOMAIN (9) [noun] A geographic area owned or controlled by a single person or organization. | [noun] A field or sphere of activity, influence or expertise. | [noun] A group of related items, topics, or subjects. DOMINE (9) DOMING (10) DOMINO (9) [noun] A tile divided into two squares, each having 0 to 6 (or sometimes more) dots or pips (as in dice), used in the game of dominoes. | [noun] A country that is expected to react to events in a neighboring country, according to the domino effect. | [noun] A masquerade costume consisting of a hooded robe and a mask covering the upper part of the face. DOOMED (10) [verb] To pronounce sentence or judgment on; to condemn. | [verb] To destine; to fix irrevocably the ill fate of. | [verb] To judge; to estimate or determine as a judge. DORMER (9) [noun] A room-like, roofed projection from a sloping roof | [noun] Dormer-window | [noun] A resident of a dormitory DORMIE (9) DORMIN (9) DORSUM (9) [noun] The back of the tongue, used for articulating dorsal consonants. | [noun] The top of the foot or the back of the hand. | [noun] The back or dorsal region on the surface of an animal. DOUMAS (9) DRACHM (14) [noun] A small unit of weight, variously: | [noun] The currency of Greece in ancient times and again from 1832 until 2001, with the symbol ₯, since replaced by the euro. | [noun] A coin worth one drachma. DRAMAS (9) [noun] A composition, normally in prose, telling a story and intended to be represented by actors impersonating the characters and speaking the dialogue | [noun] Such a work for television, radio or the cinema (usually one that is not a comedy) | [noun] Theatrical plays in general DREAMS (9) [noun] Imaginary events seen in the mind while sleeping. | [noun] A hope or wish. | [noun] A visionary scheme; a wild conceit; an idle fancy. DREAMT (9) [verb] To see imaginary events in one's mind while sleeping. | [verb] To hope, to wish. | [verb] To daydream. DREAMY (12) [adjective] As in a dream; resembling a dream. | [adjective] Sexy; handsome; attractive | [adjective] Having a pleasant or romantic atmosphere. DROMON (9) DRUMLY (12) DUMBED (12) [verb] To silence. | [verb] To make stupid. | [verb] To represent as stupid. DUMBER (11) [adjective] Unable to speak; lacking power of speech (kept in "deaf, dumb, and blind"). | [adjective] Silent; unaccompanied by words. | [adjective] (especially of a person) Extremely stupid. DUMBLY (14) DUMDUM (12) [noun] A soft-nosed bullet that expands on impact to cause a gaping wound. | [noun] An ignorant person; an idiot. DUMPED (12) [verb] To release, especially in large quantities and chaotic manner. | [verb] To discard; to get rid of something one does not want anymore. | [verb] To sell below cost or very cheaply; to engage in dumping. DUMPER (11) [noun] A small vehicle often used to carry loads and material around, often on building sites. | [noun] A dropper of refuse, particularly not in landfill sites/recycling sites. | [noun] One who dumps a boyfriend or girlfriend; the one of a romantic couple who terminates the relationship. DUNAMS (9) [noun] An Ottoman Turkish unit of surface area nominally equal to 1,600 square (Turkish) paces but actually varied at a provincial and local level according to land quality to accommodate its colloquial sense of the amount of land able to be plowed in a day, roughly equivalent to the Byzantine stremma or English acre. | [noun] A modern Turkish unit of surface area equal to a decare (1000 m2), equivalent to the modern Greek stremma. | [noun] Various other units in other areas of the former Ottoman Empire, usually equated to the decare but sometimes varying (as in Iraq, where it is 2500 m2). DUOMOS (9) [noun] A cathedral, especially one in Italy. DURUMS (9) DYNAMO (12) [noun] An electricity generator, a dynamo-electric machine. | [noun] An energetic person. ECZEMA (19) [noun] A non-contagious acute or chronic inflammation of the skin, characterized by redness, itching, and the outbreak of oozing vesicular lesions which become encrusted and scaly. EDEMAS (9) EGOISM (9) [noun] The tendency to think selfishly with exclusive self-interest in mind. | [noun] The belief that moral behavior should be directed toward one's self-interest only. | [noun] (by confusion of the similar words) Egotism. ELEMIS (8) ELMIER (8) EMBALM (12) [verb] To treat a corpse with preservatives in order to prevent decomposition. | [verb] To perfume or add fragrance to something. EMBANK (14) [verb] To throw up a bank so as to confine or to defend; to protect by a bank of earth or stone EMBARK (14) [verb] To get on a boat or ship or (outside the USA) an aeroplane. | [verb] To start, begin. | [verb] To cause to go on board a vessel or boat; to put on shipboard. EMBARS (10) EMBAYS (13) [verb] To bathe; to steep. | [verb] To shut in, enclose, shelter or trap, such as ships in a bay. EMBEDS (11) [noun] An embedded reporter or journalist, such as a war reporter assigned to and travelling with a military unit, or a political reporter assigned to follow and report on the campaign of a candidate. | [noun] An element of an advertisement, etc. serving as a subliminal message. | [noun] An item embedded in another document. EMBERS (10) [noun] A glowing piece of coal or wood. | [noun] Smoldering ash. | [noun] The smoldering or glowing remains of a fire, smoldering ash. EMBLEM (12) [noun] A representative symbol, such as a trademark or logo. | [noun] Something which represents a larger whole. | [noun] Inlay; inlaid or mosaic work; something ornamental inserted in a surface. EMBODY (14) [verb] To represent in a physical or concrete form; to incarnate or personify. | [verb] To represent in some other form, such as a code of laws. | [verb] To comprise or include as part of a cohesive whole; to be made up of. EMBOLI (10) [noun] An obstruction causing an embolism: a blood clot, air bubble or other matter carried by the bloodstream and causing a blockage or occlusion of a blood vessel. | [noun] The structure on the end of the palp of male arachnids which contains the opening to the ejaculatory duct. EMBOLY (13) EMBOSK (14) EMBOSS (10) [verb] To mark or decorate with a raised design or symbol. | [verb] To raise in relief from a surface, as an ornament, a head on a coin, etc. | [verb] Of a hunted animal: to take shelter in a wood or forest. EMBOWS (13) EMBRUE (10) [verb] To stain (in, with, blood, slaughter, etc.). EMBRYO (13) [noun] In the reproductive cycle, the stage after the fertilization of the egg that precedes the development into a fetus. | [noun] An organism in the earlier stages of development before it emerges from the egg, or before metamorphosis. | [noun] In viviparous animals, the young animal's earliest stages in the mother's body EMCEED (11) [verb] To act as the master of ceremonies (for). | [verb] To rap as part of a hip-hop performance. EMCEES (10) [noun] A rapper. | [noun] Initialism of main colour. | [noun] Initialism of matching colour. EMEERS (8) EMENDS (9) [verb] To correct and revise (text or a document). EMERGE (9) [verb] To come into view. | [verb] To come out of a situation, object or a liquid. | [verb] To become known. EMEROD (9) EMESES (8) EMESIS (8) [noun] The act or process of vomiting. EMETIC (10) [noun] An agent that induces vomiting | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) causing nausea and vomiting EMETIN (8) EMEUTE (8) EMIGRE (9) [noun] One who has departed their native land, often as a refugee. | [noun] An emigrant, one who departs their native land to become an immigrant in another. EMMERS (10) EMMETS (10) [noun] An ant. | [noun] (Cornish dialect) A tourist. EMODIN (9) EMOTED (9) [verb] To display emotions openly, especially while acting. | [verb] To induce an emotion in. | [verb] To perform a virtual action, presented to other users as reported speech, rather than sending a direct message. EMOTER (8) EMOTES (8) [noun] A virtual action, presented to other users as reported speech, rather than a direct message. | [noun] (Twitch-speak) Short for emoticon. | [verb] To display emotions openly, especially while acting. EMPALE (10) EMPERY (13) EMPIRE (10) [adjective] (furniture) Following or imitating a style popular during the First French Empire (1804–1814). | [adjective] (of wine) Produced in a dependency of the British Empire or Commonwealth of Nations. | [noun] A political unit, typically having an extensive territory or comprising a number of territories or nations (especially one comprising one or more kingdoms) and ruled by a single supreme authority. EMPLOY (13) [noun] The state of being an employee; employment. | [noun] The act of employing someone or making use of something; employment. | [verb] To hire (somebody for work or a job). EMYDES (12) ENAMEL (8) [noun] An opaque, glassy coating baked onto metal or ceramic objects. | [noun] A coating that dries to a hard, glossy finish. | [noun] The hard covering on the exposed part of a tooth. | [verb] To coat or decorate with enamel. ENAMOR (8) [verb] (mostly in the passive, followed by "of" or "with") To cause to be in love. | [verb] (mostly in the passive) To captivate. ENCAMP (12) [verb] To establish a camp or temporary shelter. | [verb] To form into a camp. ENEMAS (8) [noun] An injection of fluid into the large intestine by way of the rectum, usually for medical purposes. | [noun] The fluid so injected. | [noun] A device for administering such an injection. ENGRAM (9) [noun] A postulated physical or biochemical change in neural tissue that represents a memory. | [noun] A painful, negative mental image representing a past event. ENIGMA (9) [noun] Something or someone puzzling, mysterious or inexplicable. | [noun] A riddle, or a difficult problem. ENMESH (11) [verb] To mesh; to tangle or interweave in such a manner as not to be easily separated, particularly in a mesh or net like manner. | [verb] To involve in such complications as to render extrication difficult | [verb] To involve in difficulties. ENMITY (11) [noun] The quality of being an enemy; hostile or unfriendly disposition. | [noun] A state or feeling of opposition, hostility, hatred or animosity. ENTOMB (10) [verb] To deposit in a tomb. | [verb] To confine in restrictive surroundings. ENWOMB (13) ENZYME (20) [noun] A globular protein that catalyses a biological chemical reaction. | [noun] Leavened bread, as opposed to azyme ENZYMS (20) EONISM (8) EPIMER (10) [noun] Any diastereoisomer that has the opposite configuration at only one of the stereogenic centres. EPONYM (13) [noun] A real or fictitious person's name that has given rise to the name of a particular item. | [noun] A word formed from a real or fictive person’s name. | [noun] (by extension) A word formed from a real or fictive place or thing. ERBIUM (10) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Er) with atomic number 68: a silvery-white metal, in nature always found in combination with other elements. | [noun] A single atom of this element. ERMINE (8) [noun] A weasel, Mustela erminea, found in northern latitudes; its dark brown fur turns white in winter (apart from the black tip of the tail). | [noun] The white fur of this animal, traditionally seen as a symbol of purity and used for judges' robes. | [noun] (by extension) The office of a judge. ESTEEM (8) [noun] Favourable regard. | [verb] To set a high value on; to regard with respect or reverence. | [verb] To regard something as valuable; to prize. ESTRUM (8) [noun] A biting fly of the genus Oestrus; a botfly. | [noun] A bite or sting. | [noun] A passion or frenzy. ETAMIN (8) ETYMON (11) [noun] The source word, or words, of a given word or expression. EXAMEN (15) [noun] Examination; inquiry EXEMPT (17) [noun] One who has been released from something. | [noun] A type of French police officer. | [noun] One of four officers of the Yeomen of the Royal Guard, having the rank of corporal; an exon. EXHUME (18) [verb] To dig out of the ground; to take out of a place of burial; to disinter. | [verb] To uncover; to bring to light. FAMILY (14) [noun] A group of people who are closely related to one another (by blood, marriage or adoption); kin; for example, a set of parents and their children; an immediate family. | [noun] An extended family; a group of people who are related to one another by blood or marriage. | [noun] A (close-knit) group of people related by blood, friendship, marriage, law, or custom, especially if they live or work together. FAMINE (11) [noun] Extreme shortage of food in a region. | [noun] A period of extreme shortage of food in a region. | [noun] Starvation or malnutrition. FAMING (12) FAMISH (14) [verb] To starve (to death); to kill or destroy with hunger. | [verb] To exhaust the strength or endurance of, by hunger; to distress with hunger. | [verb] To kill, or to cause to suffer extremity, by deprivation or denial of anything necessary. FAMOUS (11) [verb] To make famous; to bring renown to. | [adjective] Well known. | [adjective] In the public eye. FAMULI (11) [noun] A close attendant or assistant, especially of a magician or occult scholar. FANDOM (12) [noun] The fans of a sport, activity, work, person etc., taken as a group. | [noun] The subculture of fans. | [noun] The state, quality, or condition of being a fan. FANTOM (11) FANUMS (11) FARMED (12) [verb] To work on a farm, especially in the growing and harvesting of crops. | [verb] To devote (land) to farming. | [verb] To grow (a particular crop). FARMER (11) [noun] A person who works the land and/or who keeps livestock, especially on a farm. | [noun] Agent noun of farm; someone or something that farms. | [noun] One who takes taxes, customs, excise, or other duties, to collect for a certain rate per cent. FATHOM (14) [noun] Grasp, envelopment, control. | [noun] (now usually nautical) An English unit of length for water depth notionally based upon the width of grown man's outstretched arms but standardized as 6 feet (about 1.8 m). | [noun] Various similar units in other systems. FAVISM (14) FEMALE (11) [noun] One of the female (feminine) sex or gender. | [adjective] Belonging to the sex which typically produces eggs (ova), or to the gender which is typically associated with it. | [adjective] Characteristic of this sex/gender. (Compare feminine, womanly.) FEMMES (13) [noun] A woman, a wife; a young woman or girl. | [noun] A lesbian or other queer woman whose appearance, identity etc. is seen as feminine as opposed to butch. | [noun] A person whose gender is feminine-leaning, such as a feminine non-binary person. FEMORA (11) [noun] A thighbone. | [noun] The middle segment of the leg of an insect, between the trochanter and the tibia. | [noun] A segment of the leg of an arachnid. FEMURS (11) [noun] A thighbone. | [noun] The middle segment of the leg of an insect, between the trochanter and the tibia. | [noun] A segment of the leg of an arachnid. FERBAM (13) FERMIS (11) FERRUM (11) FILMED (12) [verb] To record (activity, or a motion picture) on photographic film. | [verb] To cover or become covered with a thin skin or pellicle. | [adjective] Covered with a film. FILMER (11) FILMIC (13) [adjective] Of or relating to movies; cinematic. FIMBLE (13) FIRMAN (11) [noun] A royal decree issued by a sovereign in certain historical Islamic states, especially by the Sultan of Turkey. FIRMED (12) [verb] To make firm or strong; fix securely. | [verb] To make compact or resistant to pressure; solidify. | [verb] To become firm; stabilise. FIRMER (11) [adjective] Steadfast, secure, solid (in position) | [adjective] Fixed (in opinion) | [adjective] Durable, rigid (material state) FIRMLY (14) [adverb] (manner) In a firm or definite or strong manner. | [adverb] (manner) Securely. FLAMBE (13) [noun] A showy cooking technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. | [noun] A flambéed dish. | [verb] To cook with a showy technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. FLAMED (12) [verb] To produce flames; to burn with a flame or blaze. | [verb] To burst forth like flame; to break out in violence of passion; to be kindled with zeal or ardour. | [verb] To post a destructively critical or abusive message (to somebody). FLAMEN (11) [noun] A priest devoted to the service of a particular god, from whom he received a distinguishing epithet. The most honored were those of Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus, called respectively Flamen Dialis, Flamen Martialis, and Flamen Quirinalis. FLAMER (11) [noun] A very flamboyant ("flaming"), effeminate gay male. | [noun] One who flames, or posts vitriolic criticism. FLAMES (11) [noun] The visible part of fire; a stream of burning vapour or gas, emitting light and heat. | [noun] A romantic partner or lover in a usually short-lived but passionate affair. | [noun] Intentionally insulting criticism or remark meant to incite anger. FLEAMS (11) FLIMSY (14) [noun] Thin typing paper used to make multiple copies. | [noun] A service certificate | [noun] (in the plural) Skimpy underwear. FLUMED (12) FLUMES (11) [noun] A ravine or gorge, usually one with water running through. | [noun] An open channel or trough used to direct or divert liquids. | [verb] To transport (logs of wood) by floating them along a water-filled channel or trough. FLUMPS (13) [noun] The dull sound so produced. | [noun] A type of large marshmallow. | [noun] (by extension) A fat out-of-shape person. FLYMAN (14) [noun] Someone who drives the type of coach called a fly. | [noun] Someone who operates a fly system in a theatre. FLYMEN (14) [noun] Someone who drives the type of coach called a fly. | [noun] Someone who operates a fly system in a theatre. FOAMED (12) [verb] To form or emit foam. | [verb] To spew saliva as foam, to foam at the mouth. FOAMER (11) FOEMAN (11) FOEMEN (11) FOLIUM (11) [noun] A leaf, especially a thin leaf or plate. | [noun] A curve of the third order, consisting of two infinite branches having a common asymptote. The curve has a double point, and a leaf-shaped loop. FOMENT (11) [noun] Fomentation. | [verb] To incite or cause troublesome acts; to encourage; to instigate. | [verb] To apply a poultice to; to bathe with a cloth or sponge. FOMITE (11) [noun] An inanimate object capable of carrying infectious agents (such as bacteria, viruses and parasites), and thus passively enabling their transmission between hosts. FORAMS (11) FORMAL (11) [noun] Formalin. | [noun] An evening gown. | [noun] An event with a formal dress code. FORMAT (11) [noun] The layout of a publication or document. | [noun] (hence) The form of presentation of something. | [noun] The type of programming that a radio station broadcasts; such as a certain genre of music, news, sports, talk, etc. FORMED (12) [verb] To assume (a certain shape or visible structure). | [verb] To give (a shape or visible structure) to a thing or person. | [verb] To take shape. FORMEE (11) FORMER (11) [adjective] Previous. | [adjective] First of aforementioned two items. Used with the, often without a noun. | [noun] Someone who forms something; a maker; a creator or founder. FORMES (11) [noun] (heading, physical) To do with shape. | [noun] (social) To do with structure or procedure. | [noun] A blank document or template to be filled in by the user. FORMIC (13) FORMOL (11) [noun] A 10% solution of formaldehyde in water. FORMYL (14) [noun] The univalent radical -CHO, derived from formaldehyde, that is characteristic of aldehydes FORUMS (11) [noun] A place for discussion. | [noun] A gathering for the purpose of discussion. | [noun] A form of discussion involving a panel of presenters and often participation by members of the audience. FRAMED (12) [verb] To fit, as for a specific end or purpose; make suitable or comfortable; adapt; adjust. | [verb] To construct by fitting or uniting together various parts; fabricate by union of constituent parts. | [verb] To bring or put into form or order; adjust the parts or elements of; compose; contrive; plan; devise. FRAMER (11) [noun] A person who makes frames for paintings. | [noun] A person who assembles the frame of a ship. | [noun] A person who assembles the timbers of a wood-framed building. FRAMES (11) [noun] The structural elements of a building or other constructed object. | [noun] Anything composed of parts fitted and united together; a fabric; a structure. | [noun] The structure of a person's body; the human body. FRENUM (11) [noun] A frenulum. FRUMPS (13) [noun] A frumpy person, somebody who is unattractive, drab or dowdy. | [noun] The clothes that such a person would wear. | [noun] A bad-tempered person. FRUMPY (16) [adjective] Dowdy, unkempt, or unfashionable. | [adjective] Bad-tempered. FULHAM (14) FULLAM (11) FULMAR (11) [noun] Either of two species of pelagic seabird in the genus Fulmarus, Fulmarus glacialis and F. glacialoides, which breed on cliffs. FUMBLE (13) [noun] A ball etc. that has been dropped by accident. | [verb] To handle nervously or awkwardly. | [verb] To grope awkwardly in trying to find something | [noun] A dessert similar to a cross between a fool and a crumble. FUMERS (11) FUMETS (11) [noun] A type of concentrated food stock that is added to sauces to enhance their flavour. Variations are fish fumet and mushroom fumet. | [noun] A ragout of partridge and rabbit braised in wine. | [noun] The stench or high flavour of game or other meat when kept long. FUMIER (11) FUMING (12) [verb] To expose (something) to fumes; specifically, to expose wood, etc., to ammonia in order to produce dark tints. | [verb] To apply or offer incense to. | [verb] To emit fumes. FUMULI (11) GAGMAN (10) GAGMEN (10) GAMAYS (12) [noun] Any of several varieties of red grape used for making Beaujolais and other red wines. GAMBAS (11) [noun] A rank of organ pipes, so called for a supposed resemblance of the sound to that of a viola da gamba. | [noun] A stringed instrument related to the violin family, but held in the lap between the legs like a cello, usually with C-holes, a flat back, a fretted neck and six strings, played with an underhanded bow hold. GAMBES (11) GAMBIA (11) GAMBIR (11) [noun] Uncaria gambir, a plant from Indonesia. | [noun] An astringent substance prepared from the leaves of the plant, used in tanning and dyeing. GAMBIT (11) [noun] An opening in chess, in which a minor piece or a pawn is sacrificed to gain an advantage. | [noun] Any ploy or stratagem. | [noun] A remark intended to open a conversation. GAMBLE (11) [noun] A bet or wager. | [noun] A significant risk, undertaken with a potential gain. | [noun] A risky venture. GAMBOL (11) [noun] An instance of running or skipping about playfully. | [noun] An instance of more general frisking or frolicking. | [verb] To move about playfully; to frolic. GAMELY (12) [adjective] Sportive; lively; joyful. | [adjective] (hunting, fishing, etc.) Of or pertaining to game. | [adverb] In a game or plucky manner; in a willing and spirited fashion. GAMERS (9) [noun] A person who plays any kind of game. | [noun] A person whose hobby is video games. | [noun] A person who games the system. GAMEST (9) [adjective] Willing to participate. | [adjective] (of an animal) That shows a tendency to continue to fight against another animal, despite being wounded, often severely. | [adjective] Persistent, especially in senses similar to the above. GAMETE (9) [noun] A reproductive cell (sperm in males or eggs in females), having only half of a complete set of chromosomes. GAMIER (9) GAMILY (12) GAMINE (9) [noun] A (usually female) street urchin; a homeless girl. | [noun] A mischievous, playful, elfish, pert girl or young woman. | [adjective] (of a girl) Having a boyish, mischievous charm; tomboyish. GAMING (10) [verb] To gamble. | [verb] To play card games, board games, or video games. | [verb] To exploit loopholes in a system or bureaucracy in a way which defeats or nullifies the spirit of the rules in effect, usually to obtain a result which otherwise would be unobtainable. GAMINS (9) [noun] A homeless boy; a male street urchin; also (more generally), a cheeky, street-smart boy. GAMMAS (11) [noun] The third letter of the Greek alphabet (Γ, γ), preceded by beta (Β, β) and followed by delta, (Δ, δ). | [noun] The Gamma function, symbolized by Γ. | [noun] A constant approximately equal to 0.55721566, symbolized by γ (also known as the Euler–Mascheroni constant). GAMMED (12) GAMMER (11) [noun] An old woman. GAMMON (11) [noun] A cut of quick-cured pork leg. | [verb] To cure bacon by salting. | [noun] A victory in backgammon achieved when the opponent has not borne off a single stone. | [noun] A rope fastening a bowsprit to the stem of a ship (usually called a gammoning). | [noun] Chatter, ridiculous nonsense. | [noun] A middle-aged or older right-wing, reactionary white man, or such men collectively. GAMUTS (9) [noun] A (normally) complete range. | [noun] All the notes in the musical scale. | [noun] All the colours available to a device such as a monitor or printer. GASMAN (9) [noun] A worker for a company that supplies gas (in the sense of the gaseous fuel), especially one who visits premises to read the meter, test appliances etc. | [noun] A man employed in the manufacture of gas. | [noun] The man who controls the lights of the stage. GASMEN (9) [noun] A worker for a company that supplies gas (in the sense of the gaseous fuel), especially one who visits premises to read the meter, test appliances etc. | [noun] A man employed in the manufacture of gas. | [noun] The man who controls the lights of the stage. GAUMED (10) GAZUMP (20) [noun] The act of gazumping. | [verb] To swindle; to extort. | [verb] To raise the selling price of something (especially property) after previously agreeing to a lower one. | [noun] An automobile. GEMMAE (11) [noun] A bud; an asexual reproductive structure, as found in liverworts and hydra, able to produce new individuals from a cluster of cells. GEMMED (12) [verb] To adorn with, or as if with, gems. GEMOTE (9) GEMOTS (9) GENOME (9) [noun] The complete genetic information (either DNA or, in some viruses, RNA) of an organism. GENOMS (9) GERMAN (9) [noun] A near relative. | [adjective] Having the same mother and father; a full (brother or sister). | [adjective] Being born to one’s blood aunt or uncle, a first (cousin). | [noun] An elaborate round dance, often with a waltz movement. GERMEN (9) GIMBAL (11) [noun] A device for suspending something, such as a ship's compass, so that it will remain level when its support is tipped. | [verb] To suspend using a gimbal or gimbals. | [verb] To move a reaction engine about on a gimbal so as to obtain pitching and yawing correction moments. GIMELS (9) GIMLET (9) [noun] A small screw-tipped tool for boring holes. | [noun] A cocktail, usually made with gin and lime juice. | [verb] To pierce or bore holes (as if using a gimlet). GIMMAL (11) GIMMES (11) [noun] That which is easily obtained, or certain to occur. GIMMIE (11) GIMPED (12) [verb] (of yarn, cord, thread, etc.) To wrap or wind (surround) with another length of yarn or wire in a tight spiral, often by means of a gimping machine, creating 'gimped yarn', etc. Also, generally, to wrap or twist with string or wire. See gimped. | [verb] To notch or indent; to jag or make jagged; to edge with serrations or grooves. | [verb] To limp; to hobble. GISMOS (9) [noun] Something, generally a device, for which one does not know the proper term. GIZMOS (18) [noun] Something, generally a device, for which one does not know the proper term. GLAMOR (9) [noun] Originally, enchantment; magic charm; especially, the effect of a spell that causes one to see objects in a form that differs from reality, typically to make filthy, ugly, or repulsive things seems beauteous. | [noun] Alluring beauty or charm (often with sex appeal). | [noun] Any excitement, appeal, or attractiveness associated with a person, place, or thing; that which makes something appealing. GLEAMS (9) [noun] A small or indistinct shaft or stream of light. | [noun] A glimpse or hint; an indistinct sign of something. | [noun] Brightness or shininess; splendor. GLEAMY (12) [adjective] Shiny, bright, glowing GLIMED (10) GLIMES (9) GLIOMA (9) [noun] A tumour that arises from glial cells in the brain or spinal cord GLOAMS (9) GLOMUS (9) GLOOMS (9) [noun] Darkness, dimness or obscurity. | [noun] A melancholic, depressing or despondent atmosphere. | [noun] Cloudiness or heaviness of mind; melancholy; aspect of sorrow; low spirits; dullness. GLOOMY (12) [adjective] Not very illuminated; dim because of darkness, especially when appearing depressing or frightening. | [adjective] Suffering from gloom; melancholy; dejected. GLUMES (9) [noun] A basal, membranous, outer sterile husk or bract in the flowers of grasses (Poaceae) and sedges (Cyperaceae). GLUMLY (12) GLUMPY (14) GNOMES (9) [noun] A brief reflection or maxim; a pithy saying. | [noun] (magic, Rosicrucianism) An elemental (spirit or corporeal creature associated with a classical element) associated with earth. | [noun] (fantasy literature) One of a race of imaginary human-like beings, usually depicted as short and typically bearded males, who inhabit the inner parts of the earth and act as guardians of mines, mineral treasure, etc.; in modern fantasy literature, when distinguished from dwarves, gnomes are usually even smaller than dwarves and more focussed on engineering than mining. GNOMIC (11) [adjective] Of, or relating to gnomes (sententious sayings). | [adjective] (of a saying or aphorism) Mysterious and often incomprehensible yet seemingly wise. | [adjective] (grammar) Expressing general truths or aphorisms. GNOMON (9) [noun] An object such as a pillar or a rod that is used to tell time by the shadow it casts when the sun shines on it, especially the pointer on a sundial. | [noun] An object such as a pillar used by an observer to calculate the meridian altitude of the sun (that is, the altitude of the sun when it reaches the observer's meridian), for the purpose of determining the observer's latitude. | [noun] The index of the hour circle of a globe. GODDAM (11) [noun] (Gallicism, chiefly in the plural) An English person, from the perspective of a French person or in the context of French history. | [interjection] An expression of anger, surprise, intense excitment or frustration. GOLEMS (9) [noun] A humanoid creature made from clay, animated by magic. | [noun] (by extension) A humanoid creature made from any previously inanimate matter, such as wood or stone, animated by magic. GOMBOS (11) GOMUTI (9) GONIUM (9) GRAHAM (12) [noun] Flour made by grinding wheat berries including the bran. | [noun] A graham cracker. GRAMAS (9) GRAMME (11) [noun] Gram (unit of mass) GRAMPS (11) [noun] Grandpa, grandfather. | [noun] (by extension) Old man. GRANUM (9) [noun] A stack-like structure in plant chloroplasts that contain chlorophyll; the site of photosynthesis. GREMMY (14) GRIMED (10) [verb] To begrime; to cake with dirt. GRIMES (9) [verb] To begrime; to cake with dirt. GRIMLY (12) [adjective] Grim-looking, grim-natured. | [adverb] In a grim manner. GROOMS (9) [noun] A man who is about to marry. | [noun] A person who cares for horses. | [noun] One of several officers of the English royal household, chiefly in the lord chamberlain's department. GRUMES (9) [noun] A thick semisolid | [noun] A clot (of blood) GRUMPS (11) [noun] A habitually grumpy or complaining person. | [noun] A grumpy mood. | [verb] To complain. GRUMPY (14) [adjective] Dissatisfied and irritable. GUIMPE (11) [noun] Gimp; a narrow flat braid or reinforced cord of fabric used for ornamental trimming. | [noun] A kind of short, high-necked blouse with sleeves of the late Victorian era, designed to be worn under a low-cut dress, jumper, or pinafore dress. | [noun] A kind of short chemisette or yoke insert made of lace, embroidery, or the like, worn with a low-necked dress. GUMBOS (11) [noun] A soup or stew made with okra. | [noun] A fine silty soil that when wet becomes very thick and heavy. | [noun] The edible immature mucilaginous seed pod (properly, capsule) of the Abelmoschus esculentus. GUMMAS (11) [noun] A soft, non-cancerous growth, a form of granuloma, resulting from the tertiary stage of syphilis. GUMMED (12) [verb] To chew, especially of a toothless person or animal. | [verb] To deepen and enlarge the spaces between the teeth of (a worn saw), as with a gummer. | [verb] (sometimes with up) To apply an adhesive or gum to; to make sticky by applying a sticky substance to. GUMMER (11) GUNMAN (9) [noun] A criminal armed with a gun, especially a professional killer. GUNMEN (9) [noun] A criminal armed with a gun, especially a professional killer. GYPSUM (14) [noun] A mineral consisting of hydrated calcium sulphate. When calcined, it forms plaster of Paris. HAEMAL (11) [adjective] Pertaining to the blood or blood vessels. | [adjective] Ventral rather than neural. HAEMIC (13) HAEMIN (11) HAKEEM (15) HAKIMS (15) [noun] A doctor, usually practicing traditional medicine. | [noun] A judge or governor in Islamic India. HALMAS (11) HAMADA (12) HAMALS (11) HAMATE (11) [noun] The hamate bone. | [adjective] Hooked at the end. HAMAUL (11) HAMLET (11) [noun] A small village or a group of houses. | [noun] A village that does not have its own church. | [noun] Any of the fish of the genus Hypoplectrus in the family Serranidae. HAMMAL (13) HAMMED (14) [verb] To overact; to act with exaggerated emotions. HAMMER (13) [noun] A tool with a heavy head and a handle used for pounding. | [noun] The act of using a hammer to hit something}} | [noun] A moving part of a firearm that strikes the firing pin to discharge a gun. HAMPER (13) [noun] A large basket, usually with a cover, used for the packing and carrying of articles or small animals | [noun] (uncommon except in) A wicker or plastic basket specifically for holding laundry (from clothes hamper), as opposed to a covered wicker basket which is a true hamper | [verb] To put into a hamper. | [noun] A shackle; a fetter; anything which impedes. HAMULI (11) [noun] A hook, or hooklike process. | [noun] A hooked barbicel of a feather. HAMZAH (23) HAMZAS (20) [noun] A sign (ء‎ - a stand-alone hamza) used in the written Arabic language representing a glottal stop. Hamza may appear as a stand-alone letter or most commonly diacritically over or under other letters, e.g. أ‎ (over an alif - ا‎), إ‎ (under an alif), ؤ‎ (over a wāw - و‎) or ئ‎ (over a dotless yāʾ - ى‎). The exact seat of hamza is governed by an orthographic rule - "seat of hamza rule". HANSOM (11) [noun] A Hansom cab; a carriage HAREEM (11) HAREMS (11) [noun] The private part of an Arab household, traditionally forbidden to male strangers. | [noun] A group of someone's girlfriends, wives and/or concubines in a polygamous household. | [noun] A group of female animals (cows) herded and controlled by a male animal (bull) of that species for breeding purposes. Such behaviour is exhibited by bovids including cattle and buffalo as well as moose, elephants, seals, sea lions, baboons, and elephant seals. HARMED (12) [verb] To cause injury to another; to hurt; to cause damage to something. HARMER (11) HARMIN (11) HAULMS (11) [noun] The stems of various cultivated plants, left after harvesting the crop to be used as animal litter or for thatching. | [noun] An individual plant stem. | [noun] Part of a harness; a hame. HAULMY (14) HAYMOW (17) [noun] A pile of hay stored in a barn. | [noun] The place in a barn where hay is deposited. HEAUME (11) HELIUM (11) [noun] The second lightest chemical element (symbol He) with an atomic number of 2 and atomic weight of 4.002602, a colorless, odorless and inert noble gas. | [noun] A form or sample of the element. HELMED (12) [verb] To be a helmsman or a member of the helm; to be in charge of steering the boat. | [verb] (by extension) To lead (a project, etc.). | [adjective] Wearing a helm. HELMET (11) [noun] A protective head covering, usually part of armour. | [noun] That which resembles a helmet in form, position, etc. | [verb] To cover with, or as if with, a helmet. HEMINS (11) HEMMED (14) [verb] To make the sound expressed by the word hem; to hesitate in speaking. | [verb] (in sewing) To make a hem. | [verb] : To put hem on an article of clothing, to edge or put a border on something. HEMMER (13) HEMOID (12) HEMPEN (13) [adjective] Made of hemp | [adjective] Related to hempen ropes, i.e., to hanging as capital punishment. HEMPIE (13) HERMAE (11) HERMAI (11) HERMIT (11) [noun] A religious recluse; someone who lives alone for religious reasons; an eremite. | [noun] A recluse; someone who lives alone and shuns human companionship. | [noun] A spiced cookie made with molasses, raisins, and nuts. HETMAN (11) [noun] (history) A Cossack headman or general. | [noun] Title used by the second-highest military commander in Poland and Lithuania (15th to 18th century). HIEMAL (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to winter, wintry. HOKUMS (15) HOLISM (11) [noun] A theory or belief that the whole is greater than the sum of the parts. | [noun] A practice based on such a theory or belief. HOLMIC (13) HOMAGE (12) [noun] A demonstration of respect, such as towards an individual after their retirement or death | [noun] An artistic work imitating another in a flattering style. Recently, the pronunciation /oʊˈmɒːʒ/ has been introduced from French for this usage; see hommage, which preserves the French spelling. | [noun] In feudalism, the formal oath of a vassal to honor his or her lord's rights. HOMBRE (13) [noun] (in Spanish-speaking contexts) A man, a chap, a guy; especially a Hispanic or Spanish man. HOMELY (14) [adjective] Lacking in beauty or elegance, plain in appearance, physically unattractive. | [adjective] Cozy, befitting a home. | [adjective] Characteristic of or belonging to home; domestic. HOMERS (11) [noun] Various former units of volume, particularly: | [noun] A former Hebrew unit of dry volume, about equal to 230 L or 6 1/2 US bushels. | [noun] A four-base hit; a home run HOMIER (11) [adjective] Befitting a home; cozy, intimate. HOMILY (14) [noun] A sermon, especially concerning a practical matter. | [noun] A moralizing lecture. | [noun] A platitude. HOMING (12) [verb] (of animals) To return to its owner. | [verb] (always with "in on") To seek or aim for something. HOMINY (14) [noun] A food made from hulled corn (maize) kernels soaked in lye water, rinsed, then cooked and eaten; or, the rinsed kernels are dried and coarsely ground into hominy grits. HOMMOS (13) HUMANE (11) [adjective] (notcomp) Of or belonging to the species Homo sapiens or its closest relatives. | [adjective] Having the nature or attributes of a human being. | [adjective] Having or showing concern for the pain or suffering of another; compassionate. HUMANS (11) [noun] A human being, whether man, woman or child. HUMATE (11) HUMBLE (13) [noun] (Baltimore) An arrest based on weak evidence intended to demean or punish the subject. | [verb] To defeat or reduce the power, independence, or pride of | [verb] To make humble or lowly; to make less proud or arrogant; to make meek and submissive. | [noun] A stag that has failed to grow antlers; a cow that has not developed horns. HUMBLY (16) [adverb] In a humble manner. HUMBUG (14) [noun] A hoax, jest, or prank. | [noun] A fraud or sham (countable); hypocrisy (uncountable). | [noun] A fraudster, cheat, or hypocrite. HUMERI (11) [noun] The bone of the upper arm. HUMMED (14) [verb] To make a sound from the vocal chords without pronouncing any real words, with one's lips closed. | [verb] To express by humming. | [verb] To drone like certain insects naturally do in motion, or sounding similarly HUMMER (13) [noun] One who hums. | [noun] A Humvee. | [noun] A type of vehicle resembling a jeep but bulkier. | [noun] An arrest on false pretexts. HUMMUS (13) [noun] A Levantine Arab dip made of chickpea paste with various additions, such as olive oil, fresh garlic, lemon juice, and tahini, often eaten with pitta bread, or as a meze. It is mostly eaten in the Levant. HUMORS (11) [noun] The quality of being amusing, comical, funny. | [noun] A mood, especially a bad mood; a temporary state of mind or disposition brought upon by an event; an abrupt illogical inclination or whim. | [noun] Any of the fluids in an animal body, especially the four "cardinal humours" of blood, yellow bile, black bile and phlegm that were believed to control the health and mood of the human body. HUMOUR (11) [noun] The quality of being amusing, comical, funny. | [noun] A mood, especially a bad mood; a temporary state of mind or disposition brought upon by an event; an abrupt illogical inclination or whim. | [noun] Any of the fluids in an animal body, especially the four "cardinal humours" of blood, yellow bile, black bile and phlegm that were believed to control the health and mood of the human body. HUMPED (14) [verb] To bend something into a hump. | [verb] To carry (something), especially with some exertion. | [verb] To rhythmically thrust the pelvis in a manner conducive to sexual intercourse HUMPHS (16) HUMVEE (14) [noun] A diesel-powered, four-wheel drive tactical military vehicle that can carry a wide variety of military hardware HYMENS (14) [noun] A membrane which completely or partially occludes the vaginal opening in human females. | [noun] Marriage. HYMNAL (14) [noun] A collection of hymns; a hymn book. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to hymns. HYMNED (15) [verb] To sing a hymn. | [verb] To praise or extol in hymns. IAMBIC (12) [noun] An iamb; a line or group of lines of iambs. | [adjective] Consisting of iambs (metrical feet with an unstressed-stressed pattern) or characterized by their predominance. IAMBUS (10) [noun] An iamb IBIDEM (11) ICEMAN (10) [noun] A person who trades in ice. | [noun] A man who is skilled in travelling upon ice, as among glaciers. | [noun] An assassin. ICEMEN (10) [noun] A person who trades in ice. | [noun] A man who is skilled in travelling upon ice, as among glaciers. | [noun] An assassin. IDIOMS (9) [noun] A manner of speaking, a mode of expression peculiar to a language, person, or group of people. | [noun] A language or language variety; specifically, a restricted dialect used in a given historical period, context etc. | [noun] An established expression whose meaning is not deducible from the literal meanings of its component words, often peculiar to a given language. IHRAMS (11) ILLUME (8) [verb] To throw or spread light upon; to make light or bright IMAGED (10) [verb] To represent by an image or symbol; to portray. | [verb] To reflect, mirror. | [verb] To create an image of. IMAGER (9) [noun] One who images or forms likenesses; a sculptor. | [noun] A system that creates a digital copy such as a disk image. IMAGES (9) [noun] An optical or other representation of a real object; a graphic; a picture. | [noun] A mental picture of something not real or not present. | [noun] A statue or idol. IMAGOS (9) [noun] The final developmental stage of an insect after undergoing metamorphosis. | [noun] An idealised concept of a loved one, formed in childhood and retained unconsciously into adult life, the basis for the psychological formation of personality archetypes. IMARET (8) IMAUMS (10) IMBALM (12) IMBARK (14) IMBEDS (11) [verb] To lay as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed. | [verb] (by extension) To include in surrounding matter. | [verb] To encapsulate within another document or data file. IMBIBE (12) [verb] To drink (used frequently of alcoholic beverages). | [verb] To take in; absorb. IMBODY (14) IMBRUE (10) [verb] To stain (in, with, blood, slaughter, etc.). IMBUED (11) [verb] To wet or stain an object completely with some physical quality. | [verb] In general, to act in a way which results in an object becoming completely permeated or impregnated by some quality. IMBUES (10) [verb] To wet or stain an object completely with some physical quality. | [verb] In general, to act in a way which results in an object becoming completely permeated or impregnated by some quality. IMIDES (9) IMIDIC (11) IMINES (8) IMMANE (10) IMMESH (13) IMMIES (10) IMMUNE (10) [noun] A person who is not susceptible to infection by a particular disease | [verb] To make immune. | [adjective] (usually with "from") Exempt; not subject to. IMMURE (10) [noun] A wall; an enclosure. | [verb] To cloister, confine, imprison: to lock up behind walls. | [verb] To put or bury within a wall. IMPACT (12) [noun] The striking of one body against another; collision. | [noun] The force or energy of a collision of two objects. | [noun] A forced impinging. IMPAIR (10) [verb] To weaken; to affect negatively; to have a diminishing effect on. | [verb] To grow worse; to deteriorate. | [adjective] Not fit or appropriate; unsuitable. IMPALA (10) [noun] An African antelope, Aepyceros melampus, noted for its leaping ability; the male has ridged, curved horns. IMPALE (10) [verb] To pierce (something) with any long, pointed object. | [verb] To place two coats of arms side by side on the same shield (often those of two spouses upon marriage). | [verb] To pierce with a pale; to put to death by fixing on a sharp stake. IMPARK (14) [verb] To enclose or confine in, or as if in, a park. | [verb] To enclose or fence in (land) to make a park. IMPART (10) [verb] To give or bestow (e.g. a quality or property). | [verb] To give a part or to share. | [verb] To make known; to show (by speech, writing etc.). IMPAWN (13) IMPEDE (11) [verb] To get in the way of; to hinder. IMPELS (10) [verb] To urge a person; to press on; to incite to action or motion via intrinsic motivation. | [verb] To drive forward; to propel an object, to provide an impetus for motion or action. IMPEND (11) [verb] To hang or be suspended over (something); to overhang. | [verb] Figuratively to hang over (someone) as a threat or danger. | [verb] To threaten to happen; to be about to happen, to be imminent. IMPHEE (13) IMPING (11) [verb] To plant or engraft. | [verb] To graft, implant; to set or fix. | [verb] To engraft (feathers) into a bird's wing. IMPISH (13) [adjective] Mischievous; of or befitting an imp. IMPONE (10) IMPORT (10) [noun] Something brought in from an exterior source, especially for sale or trade. | [noun] The practice of importing. | [noun] Significance, importance. | [verb] To be important; to be significant; to be of consequence. IMPOSE (10) [verb] To establish or apply by authority. | [verb] To be an inconvenience (on or upon) | [verb] To enforce: compel to behave in a certain way IMPOST (10) [noun] A tax, tariff or duty that is imposed, especially on merchandise. | [noun] The weight that must be carried by a horse in a race, the handicap. | [noun] The top part of a column, pillar, pier, wall, etc. that supports an arch. IMPROV (13) [noun] Improvisation. | [noun] A form of live entertainment characterized by improvisation and interaction with the audience. | [verb] To perform improv. IMPUGN (11) [verb] To assault, attack. | [verb] To verbally assault, especially to argue against an opinion, motive, or action; to question the truth or validity of. IMPURE (10) [verb] To defile; to pollute | [adjective] Not pure IMPUTE (10) [verb] To attribute or ascribe (responsibility or fault) to a cause or source. | [verb] To ascribe (sin or righteousness) to someone by substitution. | [verb] To take into account. INARMS (8) INCOME (10) [noun] Money one earns by working or by capitalising on the work of others. | [noun] Money coming in to a fund, account, or policy. | [noun] A coming in; arrival; entrance; introduction. INDIUM (9) [noun] A chemical element (symbol In) with an atomic number of 49: a soft silvery-white metal. | [noun] A single atom of this element. INFAMY (14) [noun] The state of being infamous. | [noun] A reputation as being evil. | [noun] A reprehensible occurrence or situation. INFIRM (11) [verb] To contradict, to provide proof that something is not. | [adjective] Weak or ill, not in good health. | [adjective] Irresolute; weak of mind or will. INFORM (11) [verb] To instruct, train (usually in matters of knowledge). | [verb] To communicate knowledge to. | [verb] To impart information or knowledge. | [adjective] Without regular form; shapeless; ugly; deformed. INHUME (11) [verb] To bury in a grave. INMATE (8) [noun] A person confined to an institution such as a prison (as a convict) or hospital (as a patient). | [noun] A person who shares a residence, such as a lodger, a hotel guest, or a student living on campus. INMESH (11) INMOST (8) [noun] That which is innermost; the core. | [adjective] The very deepest within; farthest from the surface or external part; innermost INSEAM (8) [noun] The seam of a trouser up the inside of the leg. | [verb] To impress or mark with a seam or cicatrix. INTIMA (8) [noun] The innermost part of an anatomical structure, particularly a tubular one INTIME (8) INTOMB (10) IODISM (9) [noun] Iodine poisoning IONIUM (8) ISOMER (8) [noun] Any of two or more compounds with the same molecular formula but with different structure. | [noun] Any of two or more atomic nuclei with the same mass number and atomic number but with different radioactive properties. ISTHMI (11) [noun] A narrow strip of land, bordered on both sides by water, and connecting two larger landmasses. | [noun] Any such narrow part connecting two larger structures. | [noun] An edge in a graph whose deletion increases the number of connected components of the graph. ITEMED (9) ITERUM (8) JAMBED (18) JAMBES (17) JAMMED (18) [verb] To get something stuck in a confined space. | [verb] To brusquely force something into a space; cram, squeeze. | [verb] To cause congestion or blockage. Often used with "up" JAMMER (17) [noun] Any device used to jam radio reception. | [noun] A form of swimwear used by athletes. | [noun] A musician who jams. JASMIN (15) JETSAM (15) [noun] Articles thrown overboard from a ship or boat in order to lighten the load of a ship in distress | [noun] (by extension) discarded odds and ends JETSOM (15) JICAMA (17) [noun] The edible root of the yam bean, Pachyrhizus erosus, used in salads in Central America. JIMINY (18) JIMPER (17) JIMPLY (20) JORAMS (15) JORUMS (15) [noun] A large vessel for drinking (usually alcoholic beverages). | [noun] A large quantity. | [noun] The contents, or quantity of the contents, of such a vessel. JUGUMS (16) JUMBAL (17) JUMBLE (17) [noun] A mixture of unrelated things. | [noun] Items for a rummage sale. | [noun] A rummage sale. | [noun] A small, thin, sugared cake, usually ring-shaped. JUMBOS (17) [noun] An especially large or powerful person, animal, or thing. | [noun] A platform-mounted machine for drilling rock. | [noun] Short for mumbo jumbo. JUMPED (18) [verb] To propel oneself rapidly upward, downward and/or in any horizontal direction such that momentum causes the body to become airborne. | [verb] To cause oneself to leave an elevated location and fall downward. | [verb] To pass by a spring or leap; to overleap. JUMPER (17) [noun] Someone or something that jumps, e.g. a participant in a jumping event in track or skiing. | [noun] A person who attempts suicide by jumping from a great height. | [noun] A short length of electrical conductor, to make a temporary connection. Also jump wire. | [noun] A woolen sweater or pullover. KALAMS (12) KALIUM (12) KALMIA (12) [noun] Any plant in the taxonomic genus Kalmia. KAMALA (12) KAMIKS (16) KAMSIN (12) KARMAS (12) KARMIC (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to karma. KELIMS (12) [noun] A flat tapestry-woven carpet or rug. KERMES (12) [noun] Any of several insects of the genus Kermes. | [noun] A crimson dye made from the crushed bodies of these insects. KERMIS (12) [noun] An outdoor festival and fair, usually in a German or Dutch-speaking country | [noun] An indoor entertainment and fair combined. KHOUMS (15) [noun] A subdivision of the Mauritanian ouguiya. 5 khoums equal one ouguiya. KILIMS (12) [noun] A flat tapestry-woven carpet or rug. KIMCHI (17) [noun] A Korean dish made of vegetables, such as cabbage or radishes, that are salted, seasoned, and stored in sealed containers to undergo lactic acid fermentation. | [noun] A Korean person. KIMONO (12) [noun] A traditional Japanese robe-like garment which wraps around the body and is now generally worn only on formal occasions. | [noun] A yukata. | [noun] A long robe-like garment in Western fashion, which may be open at the front, loosely inspired by the Japanese garment. KINEMA (12) KISMAT (12) KISMET (12) [noun] Fate; a predetermined or unavoidable destiny. KOUMIS (12) KOUMYS (15) KUMISS (12) [noun] A fermented drink made from mare's milk, common among peoples of the Central Asian steppes. KUMMEL (14) [noun] A German caraway liqueur. LABIUM (10) [noun] A liplike structure; especially one of the two pairs of folds of skin either side of the vulva. | [noun] The lip of a labiate corolla. | [noun] The lip against which pressured air is driven to produce sound in a recorder and in a pipe organ with flue pipes. LABRUM (10) [noun] The uppermost of the mouthparts (trophi) of a typical insect, such as a cockroach. Typically resembles an upper lip and forms part of the roof of the mouth in such insects. | [noun] Any of several lip-like projections. | [noun] A large basin of warm water, with an overhanging lip, in a Roman bath. LACTAM (10) [noun] Any of a class of cyclic amides that are the nitrogen analogs of lactones, formed by heating amino acids; the tautomeric enol forms are known as lactims. LAMBDA (11) [noun] The eleventh letter of the Classical and Modern Greek alphabet, the twelfth of the Old Greek alphabet. | [noun] Unit representation of wavelength. | [noun] The cosmological constant. LAMBED (11) [verb] Of a sheep, to give birth. | [verb] To assist (sheep) to give birth. LAMBER (10) LAMBIE (10) LAMEDH (12) LAMEDS (9) LAMELY (11) LAMENT (8) [noun] An expression of grief, suffering, sadness or regret. | [noun] A song expressing grief. | [verb] To express grief; to weep or wail; to mourn. LAMEST (8) [adjective] Unable to walk properly because of a problem with one's feet or legs. | [adjective] Moving with pain or difficulty on account of injury, defect or temporary obstruction of a function. | [adjective] (by extension) Hobbling; limping; inefficient; imperfect. LAMIAE (8) [noun] A monster preying upon human beings and who sucked the blood of children, often described as having the head and breasts of a woman and the lower half of a serpent. LAMIAS (8) [noun] A monster preying upon human beings and who sucked the blood of children, often described as having the head and breasts of a woman and the lower half of a serpent. LAMINA (8) [noun] A very thin layer of material. | [noun] A thin plate or scale, such as the arch of a vertebra. | [noun] The flat part of a leaf or leaflet; the blade. LAMING (9) [noun] The act or process of rendering lame | [verb] To cause (a person or animal) to become lame. | [verb] To shine. LAMMED (11) [verb] To beat or thrash. | [verb] To flee or run away. LAMPAD (11) LAMPAS (10) [noun] A type of luxury fabric with a background weft. | [noun] An inflammation and swelling of the soft parts of the palate immediately behind the foreteeth in a horse. LAMPED (11) [verb] To hit, clout, belt, wallop. | [verb] To hunt at night using a lamp; see lamping. | [verb] To hang out or chill; to do nothing in particular. LARUMS (8) LAWMAN (11) [noun] A lawspeaker: a declarer of the law. | [noun] One of 12 magistrates in certain Danish boroughs of England empowered with soc and sac over their own households. | [noun] The presiding justice of the supreme court. LAWMEN (11) [noun] A lawspeaker: a declarer of the law. | [noun] One of 12 magistrates in certain Danish boroughs of England empowered with soc and sac over their own households. | [noun] The presiding justice of the supreme court. LAYMAN (11) [noun] Layperson, someone who is not an ordained cleric or member of the clergy. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who is not a professional in a given field. | [noun] A common person. LAYMEN (11) [noun] Layperson, someone who is not an ordained cleric or member of the clergy. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who is not a professional in a given field. | [noun] A common person. LEGMAN (9) [noun] (originally United States) A person hired to carry out errands or (often) menial tasks, frequently requiring travel from place to place; an errand boy or errand girl, a runner. | [noun] (originally United States) A reporter who frequently travels to conduct research, interview witnesses, etc., and then conveys the information to a rewriteman who writes up the story. LEGMEN (9) [noun] (originally United States) A person hired to carry out errands or (often) menial tasks, frequently requiring travel from place to place; an errand boy or errand girl, a runner. | [noun] (originally United States) A reporter who frequently travels to conduct research, interview witnesses, etc., and then conveys the information to a rewriteman who writes up the story. LEGUME (9) [noun] The fruit or seed of leguminous plants (as peas or beans) used for food. | [noun] Any of a large family (Fabaceae, syn. Leguminosae) of dicotyledonous herbs, shrubs, and trees having fruits that are legumes or loments, bearing nodules on the roots that contain nitrogen-fixing bacteria, and including important food and forage plants (as peas, beans, or clovers). | [noun] A pod dehiscent into two pieces or valves, and having the seed attached at one suture, as that of the pea. LEMANS (8) [noun] One beloved; a lover, a sweetheart of either sex (especially a secret lover, gallant, or mistress). | [noun] (often negative) A paramour. LEMMAS (10) [noun] A proposition proved or accepted for immediate use in the proof of some other proposition. | [noun] The canonical form of an inflected word; i.e., the form usually found as the headword in a dictionary, such as the nominative singular of a noun, the bare infinitive of a verb, etc. | [noun] (psycholinguistics) The theoretical abstract conceptual form of a word, representing a specific meaning, before the creation of a specific phonological form as the sounds of a lexeme, which may find representation in a specific written form as a dictionary or lexicographic word. LEMONS (8) [noun] A yellowish citrus fruit. | [noun] A semitropical evergreen tree, Citrus limon, that bears such fruits. | [noun] A taste or flavour/flavor of lemons. LEMONY (11) LEMURS (8) [noun] Any strepsirrhine primate of the infraorder Lemuriformes, superfamily Lemuroidea, native only to Madagascar and some surrounding islands. | [noun] Any of the genus Lemur, represented by the ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta). | [noun] A loris (Lemur tardigradus, now Loris tardigradus), predating the 10th edition of Systema Naturæ. LEXEME (15) [noun] A unit of lexical meaning, roughly corresponding to the set of inflected forms taken by a single word. | [noun] An individual instance of a continuous character sequence without spaces, used in lexical analysis (see token). LIMANS (8) LIMBAS (10) [noun] A large African tree, Terminalia superba, whose hard wood is used for furniture, table tennis paddles and musical instruments. LIMBED (11) LIMBER (10) [verb] To cause to become limber; to make flexible or pliant. | [adjective] Flexible, pliant, bendable. | [noun] A two-wheeled vehicle to which a wheeled artillery piece or caisson may be attached for transport. LIMBIC (12) LIMBOS (10) [noun] (Roman Catholic theology, since circa 400 A.D.) The place where innocent souls exist temporarily until they can enter heaven, notably those of the saints who died before the advent of Christ (limbus patruum) and those of unbaptized but innocent children (limbus infantum). | [noun] (by extension, since the 16th century) Any in-between place, state or condition of neglect or oblivion which results in an unresolved status, delay or deadlock. LIMBUS (10) [noun] A border of an anatomical part, such as the edge of the cornea. LIMENS (8) [noun] A liminal point; the threshold of a physiological or psychological response. LIMEYS (11) [noun] An Englishman or other Briton, or a person of British descent. LIMIER (8) LIMINA (8) [noun] A liminal point; the threshold of a physiological or psychological response. LIMING (9) [verb] To treat with calcium hydroxide or calcium oxide (lime). | [verb] To smear with birdlime. | [verb] To apply limewash. LIMITS (8) [noun] A restriction; a bound beyond which one may not go. | [noun] A value to which a sequence converges. Equivalently, the common value of the upper limit and the lower limit of a sequence: if the upper and lower limits are different, then the sequence has no limit (i.e., does not converge). | [noun] Any of several abstractions of this concept of limit. LIMMER (10) LIMNED (9) [verb] To draw or paint; to delineate. | [verb] To illuminate, as a manuscript; to decorate with gold or some other bright colour. | [adjective] Described or represented in a lifelike manner LIMNER (8) [noun] Someone who limns. LIMNIC (10) LIMPAS (10) LIMPED (11) [verb] To walk lamely, as if favouring one leg. | [verb] (of a vehicle) To travel with a malfunctioning system of propulsion. | [verb] To move or proceed irregularly. LIMPER (10) [adjective] Flaccid; flabby, like flesh. | [adjective] Lacking stiffness; flimsy | [adjective] (of a penis) not erect LIMPET (10) [noun] A small mollusc, of the family Patellidae with a conical shell found clinging to rocks in the intertidal zones of rocky shores. | [noun] Someone clingy or dependent; someone disregarding or ignorant of another's personal space. LIMPID (11) [adjective] Clear, transparent or bright. LIMPLY (13) LIMPSY (13) LIMULI (8) LINGAM (9) [noun] (Shaivism) The aniconic representation traditionally worshipped as a symbol of or in connection with Shiva. LINUMS (8) LIPOMA (10) [noun] A nonmalignant tumor comprising fat cells. LISSOM (8) [adjective] Flexible and graceful in movement; lithe. LITMUS (8) [noun] A dyestuff extracted from certain lichens, that changes color when exposed to pH levels greater than or less than certain critical levels. | [noun] A simple test of acidity in a liquid using litmus, usually in the form of litmus paper. | [noun] A simple test of any attribute; a litmus test. LLAMAS (8) [noun] A South American mammal of the camel family, Lama glama, used as a domestic beast of burden and a source of wool and meat. LOAMED (9) LOCUMS (10) [noun] Short for locum tenens. LOGJAM (16) [noun] An excess of logs being conveyed on a river, so that their motion halts. | [noun] A clog or such jam or mess that halts or greatly delays progress. LOMEIN (8) LOMENT (8) [noun] A type of modified legume that breaks apart at constrictions occurring between the segments of the seeds. LOOMED (9) [verb] To appear indistinctly, eg. when seen on the horizon or through the murk. | [verb] To appear in an exaggerated or threatening form; to be imminent. | [verb] To rise and to be eminent; to be elevated or ennobled, in a moral sense. LUMBAR (10) [noun] The lumbar region. | [noun] A lumbar vertebra. | [adjective] Related to the lower back or loin, specifically the five vertebrae between the rib cage and the pelvis. LUMBER (10) [noun] Old furniture or other items that take up room, or are stored away. | [noun] Useless or cumbrous material. | [noun] A pawnbroker's shop, or room for storing articles put in pawn; hence, a pledge, or pawn. LUMENS (8) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of luminous flux; the light that is emitted in a solid angle of one steradian from a source of one candela. Symbol: lm. | [noun] The cavity or channel within a tube or tubular organ. | [noun] The cavity bounded by a plant cell wall. LUMINA (8) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of luminous flux; the light that is emitted in a solid angle of one steradian from a source of one candela. Symbol: lm. | [noun] The cavity or channel within a tube or tubular organ. | [noun] The cavity bounded by a plant cell wall. LUMMOX (17) [noun] A clumsy, stupid person; an awkward bungler. LUMPED (11) [verb] To treat as a single unit; to group together in a casual or chaotic manner (as if forming an ill-defined lump of the items). | [verb] To bear a heavy or awkward burden; to carry something unwieldy from one place to another. | [verb] To hit or strike (a person). LUMPEN (10) [adjective] Of or relating to social outcasts. | [adjective] Of or relating to the lumpenproletariat. | [adjective] Plebeian. | [adjective] Lump-like. | [verb] To make or become like lumps; make or become lumpy LUMPER (10) [noun] The viviparous eelpout. | [noun] An extra laborer hired to assist in the loading or unloading of a truck or a ship. | [noun] A scientist in one of various fields who prefers to keep categories such as species or dialects together in larger groups. LUTEUM (8) LYCEUM (13) LYMPHS (16) LYRISM (11) MACACO (12) MACAWS (13) [noun] Any of various parrots of the genera Ara, Anodorhynchus, Cyanopsitta, Orthopsittaca, Primolius and Diopsittaca of Central and South America, including the largest parrots and characterized by long sabre-shaped tails, curved powerful bills, and usually brilliant plumage. MACERS (10) [noun] A mace bearer; specifically, an officer of a court in Scotland. MACHES (13) MACHOS (13) [noun] Exaggerated masculinity MACING (11) [verb] To hit someone or something with a mace. | [verb] To spray in defense or attack with mace (pepper spray or tear gas) using a hand-held device. | [verb] To spray a similar noxious chemical in defense or attack using an available hand-held device such as an aerosol spray can. MACKLE (14) [noun] A spot. | [noun] A blur or an appearance of a double impression, as when the paper slips a little during printing. | [verb] To blur or be blurred; especially to blur or double an impression from type. MACLED (11) MACLES (10) [noun] Chiastolite; so called from the tessellated appearance of a cross-section. | [noun] A crystal having a similar tessellated appearance. | [noun] A twin crystal. MACONS (10) MACRON (10) [noun] A short, straight, horizontal diacritical mark (¯) placed over any of various letters, usually to indicate that the pronunciation of a vowel is long. MACROS (10) [noun] A comparatively human-friendly abbreviation of complex input to a computer program. | [noun] Macro lens | [noun] The study of the entire economy in terms of the total amount of goods and services produced, total income earned, the level of employment of productive resources, and the general behavior of prices. MACULA (10) [noun] An oval yellow spot near the center of the retina of the human eye, histologically defined as having two or more layers of ganglion cells, responsible for detailed central vision. | [noun] A small chamber of the inner ear of certain vertebrates filled with endolymph and containing an otolith. | [noun] A spot, as on the skin, or on the surface of the sun or of some other luminous orb. MACULE (10) [noun] A spot. | [noun] A blur or an appearance of a double impression, as when the paper slips a little during printing. | [verb] To blur or be blurred; especially to blur or double an impression from type. MADAME (11) [noun] A polite form of address for a woman or lady. | [noun] The mistress of a household. | [noun] A conceited or quarrelsome girl. MADAMS (11) [noun] A polite form of address for a woman or lady. | [noun] The mistress of a household. | [noun] A conceited or quarrelsome girl. MADCAP (13) [noun] An impulsive, hasty, capricious person. | [noun] An insane person, a lunatic. | [adjective] Impulsive, hasty or reckless; capricious. MADDED (11) [verb] To be or become mad. | [verb] To madden, to anger, to frustrate. MADDEN (10) [verb] To make angry. | [verb] To make insane; to inflame with passion. | [verb] To become furious. MADDER (10) [noun] A herbaceous plant, Rubia tinctorum, native to Asia, cultivated for a red-purple dye (alizarin) obtained from the root. | [noun] The root of the plant, used as a medicine or a dye. | [noun] A dye made from the plant. | [adjective] Insane; crazy, mentally deranged. | [noun] A communal drinking vessel used in Gaelic times for drinking mead. It had squared sides and one drank from a corner. Also, a trophy in this shape. MADMAN (11) [noun] A male who is insane or mentally disturbed. MADMEN (11) [noun] A male who is insane or mentally disturbed. MADRAS (9) [noun] A brightly colored cotton fabric with a checked or striped pattern. | [noun] A large handkerchief of this fabric, worn on the head in the West Indies. MADRES (9) MADURO (9) MAENAD (9) [noun] A female follower of Dionysus, associated with intense reveling. | [noun] An excessively wild or emotional woman. MAFFIA (14) MAFIAS (11) [noun] A hierarchically structured secret organisation engaged in illegal activities like distribution of narcotics, gambling and extortion. | [noun] A crime syndicate. | [noun] A trusted group of associates, as of a political leader. MAFTIR (11) MAGGOT (10) [noun] A soft, legless larva of a fly or other dipterous insect, that often eats decomposing organic matter. | [noun] A worthless person. | [noun] A whimsy or fancy. MAGIAN (9) MAGICS (11) [noun] The application of rituals or actions, especially those based on occult knowledge, to subdue or manipulate natural or supernatural beings and forces in order to have some benefit from them | [noun] A specific ritual or procedure associated with such magic; a spell. | [noun] The supernatural forces which are drawn on in such a ritual MAGILP (11) [noun] A mixture of linseed oil with turpentine or mastic varnish, used as a thickener for oil paints but later discredited as a source of cracking and yellowing. MAGLEV (12) [noun] A train propelled by magnetic levitation. | [adjective] Describing a train, system, etc, that operates by magnetic levitation. MAGMAS (11) [noun] The molten matter within the earth, the source of the material of lava flows, dikes of eruptive rocks, etc. | [noun] A basic algebraic structure consisting of a set equipped with a single binary operation. | [noun] Any soft doughy mass. MAGNET (9) [noun] A piece of material that attracts some metals by magnetism. | [noun] (preceded by a noun) A person or thing that attracts what is denoted by the preceding noun. MAGNUM (11) [noun] A bottle of wine containing 1.5 liters of fluid, double the volume of a standard bottle. | [noun] A powerful firearm cartridge, often derived from a shorter, less powerful cartridge calibre that uses the same bullet. | [noun] A handgun that fires a cartridge of this calibre; chiefly a revolver, but rarely an autoloader firing an unusually powerful calibre. MAGOTS (9) MAGPIE (11) [noun] One of several kinds of bird in the family Corvidae | [noun] A superficially similar Australian bird, Gymnorhina tibicen or Cracticus tibicen. | [noun] Someone who displays a magpie-like quality such as hoarding or stealing objects. MAGUEY (12) [noun] Any of various large agaves of Mexico and the southern US, especially the American aloe, Agave americana. MAHOES (11) [noun] Any of certain trees in the mallow family, native to the Caribbean. | [noun] Either of two different trees, usually found around the tropics. MAHOUT (11) [noun] An elephant driver and keeper. | [verb] To drive elephants. MAHZOR (20) MAIDEN (9) [noun] One of the triune goddesses of the Lady in Wicca alongside the Crone and Mother representing a girl or a young woman | [noun] A girl or an unmarried young woman. | [noun] A female virgin. MAIGRE (9) [noun] A kind of fish; the meagre. | [adjective] Made without meat (and thus permitted to be eaten on a fast day). | [adjective] Belonging to a fast day or fast. MAIHEM (13) MAILED (9) [verb] (ditransitive) To send (a letter, parcel, etc.) through the mail. | [verb] (ditransitive) To send by electronic mail. | [verb] To contact (a person) by electronic mail. | [verb] (ditransitive) To send (a letter, parcel, etc.) through the mail. MAILER (8) [noun] One who sends mail. | [noun] A computer program that sends electronic mail. | [noun] A packet or container designed for postal use. MAILES (8) MAILLS (8) MAIMED (11) [verb] To wound seriously; to cause permanent loss of function of a limb or part of the body. MAIMER (10) MAINLY (11) [adverb] Forcefully, vigorously. | [adverb] Of the production of a sound: loudly, powerfully. | [adverb] To a great degree; very much. MAISTS (8) MAIZES (17) MAJORS (15) [noun] A military rank between captain and lieutenant colonel. | [noun] The main area of study of a student working toward a degree at a college or university. | [noun] A student at a college or university concentrating on a given area of study. MAKARS (12) [noun] A poet writing in Scots. MAKERS (12) [noun] Someone who makes; a person or thing that makes or produces something. | [noun] (usually capitalized and preceded by the) God. | [noun] A poet. MAKEUP (14) [noun] An item's composition. | [noun] Cosmetics; colorants and other substances applied to the skin to alter its appearance. | [noun] Replacement; material used to make up for the amount that has been used up. MAKING (13) [noun] The act of forming, causing, or constituting; workmanship; construction. | [noun] Process of growth or development. | [verb] To create. MAKUTA (12) [noun] A former unit of currency, one hundredth of a zaïre. MALADY (12) [noun] Any ailment or disease of the body; especially, a lingering or deep-seated disorder. | [noun] A moral or mental defect or disorder. MALARS (8) [noun] The cheekbone, which forms a part of the lower edge of the orbit. MALATE (8) [noun] A salt or ester of malic acid. MALFED (12) MALGRE (9) MALICE (10) [noun] Intention to harm or deprive in an illegal or immoral way. Desire to take pleasure in another's misfortune. | [noun] An intention to do injury to another party, which in many jurisdictions is a distinguishing factor between the crimes of murder and manslaughter. | [verb] To intend to cause harm; to bear malice. MALIGN (9) [verb] To make defamatory statements about; to slander or traduce. | [verb] To treat with malice; to show hatred toward; to abuse; to wrong. | [adjective] Evil or malignant in disposition, nature, intent or influence. MALINE (8) MALKIN (12) MALLED (9) MALLEE (8) [noun] A type of scrubland with low-growing thick eucalypts, characteristic of certain parts of Australia. | [noun] Any semi-desert region of Australia where such scrub is the predominant vegetation. | [noun] Any of several low-growing eucalypts characteristic of such scrubland, especially Eucalyptus dumosa, Eucalyptus oleosa, and Eucalyptus socialis. | [noun] A member of a caste in South Asia whose traditional occupation is gardening; hence, any native gardener. MALLEI (8) [noun] The small hammer-shaped bone of the middle ear. | [noun] The tripus (ossicle in cypriniform fishes). | [noun] One of the paired calcareous structures within the mastax of rotifers. MALLET (8) [noun] A type of hammer with a larger-than-usual head made of wood, rubber or similar non-iron material, used by woodworkers for driving a tool, such as a chisel. A kind of maul. | [noun] A weapon resembling the tool, but typically much larger. | [noun] A small hammer-like tool used for playing certain musical instruments. MALLOW (11) [noun] Any of a group of flowering plants in several genera of the taxonomic family Malvaceae, especially of the genus Malva. Several species are edible by humans. MALOTI (8) [noun] The basic monetary unit of the currency of the Kingdom of Lesotho, introduced in 1980 to replace the South African rand as legal tender. | [noun] A coin or banknote betokening a value in (ma)loti. MALTED (9) [verb] To convert a cereal grain into malt by causing it to sprout (by soaking in water) and then halting germination (by drying with hot air) in order to develop enzymes that can break down starches and proteins in the grain. | [verb] To become malt. | [verb] To drink malt liquor. MALTHA (11) MALTOL (8) MAMBAS (12) [noun] Any of various venomous snakes of the genus Dendroaspis, native to Africa, that live in trees. MAMBOS (12) [noun] A voodoo priestess (in Haiti) | [noun] A Latin-American musical genre, adapted from rumba, originating from Cuba in the 1940s, or a dance or rhythm of this genre. | [verb] To perform this dance. MAMEYS (13) [noun] The evergreen tree Mammea americana, or its edible fruit | [noun] The flowering plant Magnolia guatemalensis | [noun] The tree Pouteria sapota, or its fruit. MAMIES (10) MAMLUK (14) MAMMAE (12) [noun] The milk-secreting organ of female humans and other mammals which includes the mammary gland and the nipple or teat; a breast; an udder. (plural: mammae) | [noun] An accessory cloud like a mammary in appearance, which can form on the underside of most cloud genera MAMMAL (12) [noun] An animal of the class Mammalia, characterized by being warm-blooded, having hair and feeding milk to its young. | [noun] A vertebrate with three bones in the inner ear and one in the jaw. MAMMAS (12) [noun] (hypocoristic, usually childish) Mother, female parent. | [noun] The milk-secreting organ of female humans and other mammals which includes the mammary gland and the nipple or teat; a breast; an udder. (plural: mammae) | [noun] An accessory cloud like a mammary in appearance, which can form on the underside of most cloud genera MAMMEE (12) [noun] An American fruit tree, Mammea americana. | [noun] Its large fragrant fruit, with a thick tough ring surrounding bright yellow pulp. MAMMER (12) MAMMET (12) MAMMEY (15) MAMMIE (12) MAMMON (12) [noun] The desire for wealth personified as an evil spirit or a malign influence. | [noun] Often mammon: wealth, material avarice, profit. MANAGE (9) [noun] The act of managing or controlling something. | [noun] (horseriding) Manège. | [verb] To direct or be in charge of. MANANA (8) [adverb] Tomorrow. | [adverb] Sometime in the future. Usually to say in a satirical sense 'sometime in the unspecified future, despite the fact that we were told tomorrow without fail'. MANCHE (13) MANEGE (9) [noun] The art of training and riding horses; dressage. | [noun] A riding school. | [noun] A riding arena (enclosed, but usually unroofed area, in contradistinction to a riding hall). MANFUL (11) [adjective] Showing the characteristics considered typical of a man; macho or manly | [adjective] (by extension) Courageous; noble; high-minded. MANGEL (9) [noun] The sugar beet, which can be refined to equal cane sugar in all manners save for botanical origin. | [noun] A mangelwurzel, a plant of the beet family raised as cattle feed. MANGER (9) [noun] A trough for animals to eat from. MANGES (9) MANGEY (12) [adjective] Afflicted with mange. | [adjective] (by extension) Worn and squalid-looking; bedraggled or decrepit. MANGLE (9) [verb] To change, mutilate or disfigure by cutting, tearing, rearranging etc. | [verb] To modify (an identifier from source code) so as to produce a unique identifier for internal use by the compiler, etc. | [noun] A hand-operated device with rollers, for wringing laundry. | [noun] Mangrove (tree) MANGOS (9) [noun] A tropical Asian fruit tree, Mangifera indica. | [noun] The fruit of the mango tree. | [noun] A pickled vegetable or fruit with a spicy stuffing; a vegetable or fruit which has been mangoed. MANIAC (10) [noun] An insane person, especially one who suffers from a mania. | [noun] A fanatic, a person with an obsession. MANIAS (8) [noun] Violent derangement of mind; madness; insanity. | [noun] Excessive or unreasonable desire; insane passion affecting one or many people; fanaticism. | [noun] The state of abnormally elevated or irritable mood, arousal, and/or energy levels. MANICS (10) MANILA (8) [noun] Fiber made from abaca (Manila hemp), used to make ropes and manila paper. | [noun] The yellow-brown colour of manila. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to Manila, the capital of the Philippines; made in, or exported from, that city. MANIOC (10) [noun] The tropical plant Manihot esculenta, from which cassava and tapioca are prepared. | [noun] Cassava root, eaten as a food. | [noun] A food starch prepared from the root. MANITO (8) MANITU (8) MANNAN (8) MANNAS (8) MANNED (9) [verb] To supply (something) with staff or crew (of either sex). | [verb] To take up position in order to operate (something). | [verb] (possibly obsolete) To brace (oneself), to fortify or steel (oneself) in a manly way. (Compare man up.) MANNER (8) [noun] Mode of action; way of performing or doing anything | [noun] Characteristic mode of acting or behaving; bearing | [noun] One's customary method of acting; habit. MANORS (8) [noun] A landed estate. | [noun] The main house of such an estate or a similar residence; a mansion. | [noun] A district over which a feudal lord could exercise certain rights and privileges in medieval western Europe. MANQUE (17) [adjective] Unable to fully realise one's ambitions; would-be MANSES (8) [noun] A house inhabited by the minister of a parish. | [noun] A family dwelling, an owner-occupied house. | [noun] A large house, a mansion. MANTAS (8) [noun] A kind of fabric or blanket used in Latin America and southwestern United States. | [noun] Any of several very large pelagic rays of the genus Manta, with winglike pectoral fins, a long tail, and two fins resembling horns that project from the head. MANTEL (8) [noun] The shelf above a fireplace which may be also a structural support for the masonry of the chimney. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. Also called a mantelshelf. | [verb] To surmount a ledge by pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. MANTES (8) MANTIC (10) [noun] A soothsayer, a seer. | [adjective] Relating to divination; prophetic. MANTID (9) [noun] Mantis (insect) MANTIS (8) [noun] Any of various large insects of the order Mantodea that catch insects or other small animals with their powerful forelegs. | [noun] A green colour, like that of many mantises. MANTLE (8) [noun] The shelf above a fireplace which may be also a structural support for the masonry of the chimney. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. Also called a mantelshelf. | [noun] A piece of clothing somewhat like an open robe or cloak, especially that worn by Orthodox bishops. (Compare mantum.) MANTRA (8) [noun] The hymn portions of the Vedas; any passage of these used as a prayer. | [noun] (originally Hinduism) A phrase repeated to assist concentration during meditation. | [noun] (by extension) A slogan or phrase often repeated. MANTUA (8) [noun] An article of loose clothing popular in 17th- and 18th century France. | [noun] A superior kind of rich silk formerly exported from Mantua in Italy. | [noun] A woman's cloak or mantle. MANUAL (8) [noun] A handbook. | [noun] A booklet that instructs on the usage of a particular machine or product. | [noun] A drill in the use of weapons, etc. | [adjective] Performed with the hands (of an activity). | [noun] Mechanical transmission which shifts gears by the action of the driver's hand on the gearstick or gear lever, rather than automatically; a manual gearbox. MANURE (8) [noun] Animal excrement, especially that of common domestic farm animals and when used as fertilizer. Generally speaking, from cows, horses, sheep, pigs and chickens. | [noun] Any fertilizing substance, whether of animal origin or not; fertiliser. | [noun] Rubbish; nonsense; bullshit. MAPLES (10) [noun] A tree of the Acer genus, characterised by its usually palmate leaves and winged seeds. | [noun] The wood of such a tree, prized for its hardness and attractive appearance MAPPED (13) [verb] To create a visual representation of a territory, etc. via cartography. | [verb] (followed by a "to" phrase) To act as a function on something, taking it to something else. | [verb] (followed by a "to" phrase) To have a direct relationship; to correspond. MAPPER (12) MAQUIS (17) [noun] Dense Mediterranean coastal scrub. | [noun] The French resistance movement during World War II, or other similar movements elsewhere. MARACA (10) [noun] A Latin American percussion instrument consisting of a hollow-gourd rattle containing pebbles or beans and often played in pairs, as a rhythm instrument. | [noun] (in the plural) breasts MARAUD (9) [verb] To move about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [verb] To go about aggressively or in a predatory manner. | [verb] To raid and pillage. MARBLE (10) [noun] A rock of crystalline limestone. | [noun] (games) A small ball, usually of glass or ceramic. | [noun] An artwork made from marble. MARBLY (13) MARCEL (10) [noun] A hairstyle characterized by deep waves made by a curling iron. | [noun] A marcel wave. | [verb] To wave (hair) by the marcel method. MARGAY (12) [noun] Leopardus wiedii, a spotted cat native to Central and South America. MARGES (9) [noun] Margin; edge; verge. | [noun] Margarine. MARGIN (9) [noun] The edge of the paper, typically left blank when printing but sometimes used for annotations etc. | [noun] The edge or border of any flat surface. | [noun] The edge defining inclusion in or exclusion from a set or group. MARINA (8) [noun] A harbour for small boats. MARINE (8) [noun] A soldier, normally a member of a marine corps, trained to serve on board or from a ship | [noun] Capitalised in the plural A marine corps. | [noun] A painting representing some marine subject. MARISH (11) MARKED (13) [adjective] Having a visible or identifying mark. | [adjective] Clearly evident; noticeable; conspicuous. | [adjective] (of a word, form, or phoneme) Distinguished by a positive feature. | [verb] To put a mark on (something); to make (something) recognizable by a mark; to label or write on (something). MARKER (12) [noun] An object used to mark a location. | [noun] Someone or something that marks. | [noun] A real or virtual objective, something to be aimed for. MARKET (12) [noun] A gathering of people for the purchase and sale of merchandise at a set time, often periodic. | [noun] City square or other fairly spacious site where traders set up stalls and buyers browse the merchandise. | [noun] A grocery store MARKKA (16) [noun] A (Finnish) mark, the currency used in Finland before the introduction of the euro, consisting of 100 penni. Abbreviation FIM. MARKUP (14) [noun] The notation that is used to indicate the meaning of the elements in an electronic document, or to dictate how text should be displayed. | [noun] The percentage or amount by which a seller hikes up his buy-in price when determining his selling price. | [noun] An increase in price. MARLED (9) [adjective] Mottled, streaked, multicoloured. | [verb] To cover with the earthy substance called marl. | [verb] To cover, as part of a rope, with marline, marking a peculiar hitch at each turn to prevent unwinding. MARLIN (8) [noun] Any species of game fish belonging to either of the genera Tetrapturus or Makaira. Every such species has a pointed, spear-like projection of the upper jaw. MARMOT (10) [noun] Any of several large ground-dwelling rodents of the genera Marmota and Cynomys in the squirrel family. MAROON (8) [noun] An escaped negro slave of the Caribbean and the Americas or a descendant of escaped slaves. | [noun] A castaway; a person who has been marooned. | [verb] To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a desert island. | [noun] A rich dark red, somewhat brownish, color. | [noun] A rocket-propelled firework or skyrocket, often one used as a signal (e.g. to summon the crew of a lifeboat or warn of an air raid). | [noun] An idiot; a fool. MARQUE (17) [noun] A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals; a letter of marque. | [noun] A brand or make of a manufactured product, especially of a motor car (in contradistinction to a model). | [noun] A ship commissioned for making captures. MARRAM (10) [noun] Ammophila arenaria, a coarse grass found on sandy beaches. MARRED (9) [verb] To spoil; to ruin; to scathe; to damage. | [adjective] Of a person, perplexed or troubled | [adjective] Of a child, spoilt, cosseted, overly indulged MARRER (8) [noun] One who mars or injures. MARRON (8) [noun] A sweet chestnut. | [noun] Cherax tenuimanus, a type of freshwater crayfish from Western Australia. MARROW (11) [noun] The substance inside bones which produces blood cells. | [noun] A kind of vegetable like a large courgette/zucchini or squash. | [noun] The pith of certain plants. | [noun] A friend, pal, buddy, mate. MARSES (8) MARSHY (14) [adjective] Of, or resembling a marsh; boggy. | [adjective] Growing in marshy ground. MARTED (9) MARTEN (8) [noun] Any carnivorous mammal of the genus Martes in the family Mustelidae. | [noun] Any of various passerine birds of the family Hirundinidae, which also includes swallows, that catch insects whilst flying. | [noun] A perforated stone-faced runner for grinding. MARTIN (8) [noun] Any of various passerine birds of the family Hirundinidae, which also includes swallows, that catch insects whilst flying. | [noun] A perforated stone-faced runner for grinding. MARTYR (11) [noun] One who willingly accepts being put to death for adhering openly to one's religious beliefs; notably, saints canonized after martyrdom. | [noun] (by extension) One who sacrifices his or her life, station, or something of great personal value, for the sake of principle or to sustain a cause. | [noun] (with a prepositional phrase of cause) One who suffers greatly and/or constantly, even involuntarily. MARVEL (11) [noun] That which causes wonder; a prodigy; a miracle. | [noun] Wonder, astonishment. | [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. MASCON (10) [noun] A region within a solid astronomical body that is of higher density than the surrounding material. | [noun] A lunar mare that has a greater density of rock than the surrounding area. | [noun] Mass concentration MASCOT (10) [noun] Something thought to bring good luck | [noun] Something, especially a person or animal, used to symbolize a sports team, company, organization or other group MASERS (8) [noun] A device for the coherent amplification or generation of electromagnetic radiation (especially of microwave frequency) by the use of excitation energy in resonant atomic or molecular systems | [noun] Any celestial object that generates microwaves using the same method | [noun] The maple tree, or maple wood. MASHED (12) [verb] To convert into a mash; to reduce to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure | [verb] In brewing, to convert (for example malt, or malt and meal) into the mash which makes wort. | [verb] To press down hard (on). MASHER (11) [noun] One who, or that which, mashes. | [noun] A machine for making mash. | [noun] A fashionable man in the late Victorian era. MASHES (11) [verb] To convert into a mash; to reduce to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure | [verb] In brewing, to convert (for example malt, or malt and meal) into the mash which makes wort. | [verb] To press down hard (on). MASHIE (11) [noun] A metal-headed golf club with a moderate loft, the equivalent of a five iron in a modern set of clubs. MASJID (16) [noun] A mosque. MASKED (13) [verb] To cover (the face or something else), in order to conceal the identity or protect against injury; to cover with a mask or visor. | [verb] To disguise; to cover; to hide. | [verb] To conceal; also, to intervene in the line of. MASKEG (13) MASKER (12) [verb] To render giddy or senseless | [verb] To be bewildered. | [verb] To choke; stifle. | [noun] One who wears a mask; one who appears in disguise at a masquerade or wears a mask in a ritual. MASONS (8) [noun] A bricklayer, one whose occupation is to build with stone or brick | [noun] One who prepares stone for building purposes. | [noun] A member of the fraternity of Freemasons. See Freemason. MASQUE (17) MASSAS (8) MASSED (9) [verb] To form or collect into a mass; to form into a collective body; to bring together into masses; to assemble. | [verb] To have a certain mass. | [verb] To celebrate mass. MASSES (8) [noun] (physical) Matter, material. | [noun] A large quantity; a sum. | [verb] To form or collect into a mass; to form into a collective body; to bring together into masses; to assemble. MASSIF (11) [noun] A principal mountain mass. | [noun] A block of the earth's crust bounded by faults or flexures and displaced as a unit without internal change; normally consists of gneisses and schists MASTED (9) [verb] To supply and fit a mast to (a ship). | [verb] (of swine and other animals) To feed on forest seed or fruit. | [verb] (of a population of plants) To vary fruit and seed production in multi-year cycles. MASTER (8) [noun] Someone who has control over something or someone. | [noun] The owner of an animal or slave. | [noun] The captain of a merchant ship; a master mariner. | [noun] (in combination) A vessel having a specified number of masts. MASTIC (10) [noun] An evergreen shrub or small tree, Pistacia lentiscus (mastic tree), native to the Mediterranean. | [noun] A hard, brittle, aromatic and transparent resin produced by this tree and used to make varnishes and chewing gum, and as a flavouring. | [noun] An alcoholic liquor flavoured with this resin. MASTIX (15) MATERS (8) [noun] Tomato. | [noun] Mother. | [noun] A meninx; the dura mater, arachnoid mater, or pia mater of the brain. MATEYS (11) MATING (9) [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. | [verb] (by extension) To place in a losing situation that has no escape. | [verb] To match, fit together without space between. MATINS (8) [noun] Together with lauds, the earliest of the canonical hours; normally at sunrise, but often earlier | [noun] Morning prayers MATRES (8) MATRIX (15) [noun] The womb. | [noun] The material or tissue in which more specialized structures are embedded. | [noun] An extracellular matrix, the material or tissue between the cells of animals or plants. MATRON (8) [noun] A mature or elderly woman. | [noun] A wife or a widow, especially, one who has borne children. | [noun] A woman of staid or motherly manners. MATSAH (11) MATTED (9) [verb] To cover, protect or decorate with mats. | [verb] To form a thick, tangled mess; to interweave into, or like, a mat; to entangle. | [adjective] Forming a thick tangled mess MATTER (8) [noun] Substance, material. | [noun] A condition, subject or affair, especially one of concern. | [noun] An approximate amount or extent. MATTES (8) [noun] A decorative border around a picture used to inset and center the contents of a frame. | [noun] A background, often painted or created with computers | [noun] (pyrometallurgy) The molten metal sulfide phases typically formed during smelting of copper, nickel, and other base metals. MATTIN (8) MATURE (8) [adjective] Fully developed; grown up in terms of physical appearance, behaviour or thinking; ripe. | [adjective] Brought to a state of complete readiness. | [adjective] Profound; careful. | [verb] To proceed toward maturity: full development or completion (either of concrete or of abstract things, e.g. plans, judgments, qualities). MATZAH (20) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MATZAS (17) MATZOH (20) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MATZOS (17) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MATZOT (17) MAUGER (9) MAUGRE (9) MAULED (9) [verb] To handle someone or something in a rough way. | [verb] To savage; to cause serious physical wounds (usually used of an animal). | [verb] To criticise harshly. MAULER (8) [noun] One who mauls. MAUMET (10) MAUNDS (9) [noun] A wicker basket. | [noun] A unit of capacity with various specific local values. | [noun] A handbasket with two lids. MAUNDY (12) [noun] A commandment. | [noun] The sacrament of the Lord's supper. | [noun] The ceremony of washing the feet of poor persons or inferiors, performed as a religious rite on Maundy Thursday in commemoration of Christ's washing the disciples' feet at the Last Supper. MAUVES (11) [noun] A bright purple synthetic dye. | [noun] The colour of this dye; a pale purple or violet colour. MAVENS (11) [noun] An expert in a given field. MAVIES (11) MAVINS (11) MAWING (12) MAXIMA (17) [noun] A music note equal to two (or sometimes three) longæ; in modern notation, this is typically equivalent to eight semibreves. | [noun] The highest limit | [noun] The greatest value of a set or other mathematical structure, especially the global maximum or a local maximum of a function MAXIMS (17) [noun] A self-evident axiom or premise; a pithy expression of a general principle or rule. | [noun] A precept; a succinct statement or observation of a rule of conduct or moral teaching. MAXIXE (22) [noun] A Brazilian dance in a rapid 2/4 time, influenced by the tango and polka. | [noun] A deep blue variety of beryl. MAYBES (13) [noun] Something that is possibly true. | [noun] An answer that shows neither agreement nor disagreement. | [noun] A future event that may or may not happen. MAYDAY (15) [noun] An international distress signal used by shipping and aircraft MAYEST (11) [verb] To be strong; to have power (over). | [verb] (auxiliary) To be able; can. | [verb] To be able to go. MAYFLY (17) [noun] Any of the many fragile insects of the order Ephemeroptera that develop in fresh water and live very briefly as winged adults. MAYHAP (16) [adverb] Maybe, perhaps, possibly, perchance: MAYHEM (16) [noun] A state or situation of great confusion, disorder, trouble or destruction; chaos. | [noun] Infliction of violent injury on a person or thing. | [noun] The maiming of a person by depriving him of the use of any of his limbs which are necessary for defense or protection. MAYING (12) [verb] To gather may, or flowers in general. | [verb] To celebrate May Day. | [noun] The celebrations traditionally held to celebrate May Day. MAYORS (11) [noun] The chief executive of the municipal government of a city, borough, &c., formerly usually appointed as a caretaker by European royal courts but now usually appointed or elected locally. | [noun] Short for mayor of the palace, the royal stewards of the Frankish Empire. | [noun] Synonym of mair, various former officials in the Kingdom of Scotland. MAYPOP (15) [noun] A type of passionflower, purple in color (Passiflora incarnata). MAYVIN (14) MAZARD (18) MAZERS (17) [noun] The maple tree, or maple wood. | [noun] A large drinking bowl made from such wood; a mazer bowl. MAZIER (17) [adjective] Mazelike; like a maze. | [adjective] Not straight; zigzagging. MAZILY (20) MAZING (18) [verb] To amaze, astonish, bewilder | [verb] To daze, stupefy, or confuse MAZUMA (19) [noun] Cash, money. MBIRAS (10) [noun] A thumb piano, a musical instrument having a small sound box fitted with a row of tuned tabs that are plucked with the thumbs, originating among the Shona of southern Africa; any type of plucked lamellophone of the same type as the Shona instrument. MEADOW (12) [noun] A field or pasture; a piece of land covered or cultivated with grass, usually intended to be mown for hay. | [noun] Low land covered with coarse grass or rank herbage near rivers and in marshy places by the sea. MEAGER (9) [verb] To make lean. | [adjective] Having little flesh; lean; thin. | [adjective] Poor, deficient or inferior in amount, quality or extent MEAGRE (9) [noun] Argyrosomus regius, an edible fish of the family Sciaenidae. | [verb] To make lean. | [adjective] Having little flesh; lean; thin. MEALIE (8) [noun] An ear or kernel of maize; in plural as mass noun: maize, corn. MEANER (8) [adjective] Common; general. | [adjective] Of a common or low origin, grade, or quality; common; humble. | [adjective] Low in quality or degree; inferior; poor; shabby. MEANIE (8) [noun] A mean (unkind or miserly) person; a killjoy. | [noun] A villain. MEANLY (11) MEASLE (8) [noun] A leper. | [noun] A tapeworm larva. MEASLY (11) [adjective] Particularly of pigs or pork: infected with larval tapeworms or trichinae (parasitic roundworms). | [adjective] Of a person: infected with measles. | [adjective] Small (especially contemptibly small) in amount. MEATAL (8) MEATED (9) MEATUS (8) [noun] A tubular opening or passage in the body. MECCAS (12) MEDAKA (13) [noun] Oryzias latipes, a small Japanese ricefish, popular for use in aquariums. MEDALS (9) [noun] A stamped metal disc used as a personal ornament, a charm, or a religious object. | [noun] A stamped or cast metal object (usually a disc), particularly one awarded as a prize or reward. | [verb] To win a medal. MEDDLE (10) [verb] To interfere in or with; to concern oneself with unduly. | [verb] To interest or engage oneself; to have to do (with), in a good sense. | [verb] To mix (something) with some other substance; to commingle, combine, blend. MEDFLY (15) [noun] A small fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata, native to the Mediterranean. MEDIAD (10) MEDIAE (9) [noun] The middle layer of the wall of a blood vessel or lymph vessel which is composed of connective and muscular tissue. | [noun] A voiced stop consonant. | [noun] One of the major veins of the insect wing, between the radius and the cubitus MEDIAL (9) [noun] Any of various things that occur in the middle. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a mean or average. | [adjective] In or near the middle; not at either end. MEDIAN (9) [noun] A central vein or nerve, especially the median vein or median nerve running through the forearm and arm. | [noun] A line segment joining the vertex of triangle to the midpoint of the opposing side. | [noun] The number separating the higher half of a data sample, a population, or a probability distribution, from the lower half. The median of a finite list of numbers can be found by arranging all the observations from lowest value to highest value and picking the middle one (e.g., the median of {3, 3, 5, 9, 11} is 5). If there is an even number of observations, then there is no single middle value; the median is then usually defined to be the mean of the two middle values. MEDIAS (9) MEDICK (15) [noun] Any of various European and North African herbs, of the genus Medicago, several of which are grown for fodder etc. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to medicines; medical. MEDICO (11) [noun] A physician or medical doctor; sometimes also a medical student. MEDICS (11) [noun] A doctor. | [noun] A paramedic, someone with special training in first aid, especially in the military. | [noun] A medical student. MEDINA (9) [noun] The traditional, older or non-European area of a North African town. MEDIUM (11) [noun] (plural media or mediums) The chemistry of the surrounding environment, e.g. solid, liquid, gas, vacuum, or a specific substance such as a solvent. | [noun] (plural media or mediums) The materials or empty space through which signals, waves or forces pass. | [noun] (plural media or mediums) A format for communicating or presenting information. MEDIUS (9) MEDLAR (9) [noun] Mespilus germanica, common medlar (now often Crataegus germanica) | [noun] Any tree of the genus Mespilus, now often Crataegus sect. Mespilus, including many species now in other genera. | [noun] Any of several similar trees that bear similar fruit MEDLEY (12) [noun] Combat, fighting; a battle. | [noun] A collection or mixture of miscellaneous things. | [noun] A collection of related songs played or mixed together as a single piece. MEDUSA (9) [noun] A jellyfish; specifically , a non-polyp form of individual cnidarians, consisting of a gelatinous umbrella-shaped bell and trailing tentacles. MEEKER (12) [adjective] Humble, non-boastful, modest, meager, or self-effacing. | [adjective] Submissive, dispirited. | [verb] To break up and smooth soil with a harrow. MEEKLY (15) [adverb] In a meek manner; quietly and humbly. MEETER (8) MEETLY (11) MEGASS (9) MEGILP (11) [noun] A mixture of linseed oil with turpentine or mastic varnish, used as a thickener for oil paints but later discredited as a source of cracking and yellowing. MEGOHM (14) [noun] One million (106) ohms, abbreviated as MΩ. MEGRIM (11) [noun] A headache; a migraine. | [noun] A fancy, a whim, a caprice. | [noun] (in the plural) See megrims. | [noun] A type of European deep water flatfish, Lepidorhombus whiffiagonis; the whiff or sail-fluke. MEIKLE (12) MEINIE (8) MELDED (10) [verb] To combine multiple similar objects into one | [verb] In card games, especially of the rummy family, to announce or display a combination of cards. MELDER (9) MELEES (8) [noun] A battle fought at close range; hand-to-hand combat; brawling. | [noun] A noisy, confused or tumultuous fight, argument or scrap. | [noun] Any any confused, disorganised, disordered or chaotic situation. MELLED (9) MELLOW (11) [noun] A relaxed mood. | [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. MELODY (12) [noun] Tune; sequence of notes that makes up a musical phrase MELOID (9) MELONS (8) [noun] Any of various plants of the family Cucurbitaceae grown for food, generally not including the cucumber. | [noun] The fruit of such plants. | [noun] A light pinkish orange colour, like that of some melon flesh. MELTED (9) [verb] To change (or to be changed) from a solid state to a liquid state, usually by a gradual heat. | [verb] To dissolve, disperse, vanish. | [verb] To soften, as by a warming or kindly influence; to relax; to render gentle or susceptible to mild influences; sometimes, in a bad sense, to take away the firmness of; to weaken. MELTER (8) MELTON (8) [noun] A tough, short-napped material used for making overcoats. MEMBER (12) [noun] One who officially belongs to a group. | [noun] A part of a whole. | [noun] Part of an animal capable of performing a distinct office; an organ; a limb. | [verb] (obsolete outside dialectal) To remember. MEMOIR (10) [noun] An autobiography; a book describing the personal experiences of an author. | [noun] A biography; a book describing the experiences of a subject from personal knowledge of the subject or from sources with personal knowledge of the subject. | [noun] Any form of narrative describing the personal experiences of a writer. MEMORY (13) [noun] The ability of the brain to record information or impressions with the facility of recalling them later at will. | [noun] A record of a thing or an event stored and available for later use by the organism. | [noun] The part of a computer that stores variable executable code or data (RAM) or unalterable executable code or default data (ROM). MENACE (10) [noun] A perceived threat or danger. | [noun] The act of threatening. | [noun] An annoying and bothersome person or thing. | [verb] To make threats against (someone); to intimidate. MENADS (9) MENAGE (9) [noun] A household; a domestic situation. | [noun] A type of cooperative society whereby all members pay a regular sum of savings, or through which goods can be paid for in installments. | [noun] A group of people living together in a sexual relationship. MENDED (10) [verb] To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement. | [verb] To alter for the better; to set right; to reform; hence, to quicken; as, to mend one's manners or pace. | [verb] To help, to advance, to further; to add to. MENDER (9) MENHIR (11) [noun] A single tall standing stone as a monument, especially of prehistoric times. MENIAL (8) [noun] A servant, especially a domestic servant. | [noun] A person who has a subservient nature. | [adjective] Of or relating to work normally performed by a servant. MENINX (15) [noun] A membrane, especially one of the three membranes enclosing the brain and spinal cord in vertebrates MENSAE (8) MENSAL (8) MENSAS (8) MENSCH (13) [noun] A person (chiefly male) of strength, integrity and honor or compassion. | [noun] A gentleman. MENSED (9) MENSES (8) [noun] The discharge of blood mixed with pieces of cellular tissue from the uterus out through the vagina, which occurs roughly every month in uninseminated women; menstrual flow. MENTAL (8) [adjective] Of or relating to the mind or an intellectual process. | [adjective] Insane, mad, crazy. | [adjective] Enjoyable or fun, especially in a frenetic way. | [noun] A plate or scale covering the mentum or chin of a fish or reptile. MENTOR (8) [noun] A wise and trusted counselor or teacher | [verb] To act as someone's mentor MENTUM (10) [noun] The chin. | [noun] A chin-like projection below the mouth of certain mollusks. | [noun] The central part of the labium in insects. MEOUED (9) MEOWED (12) [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MERCER (10) [noun] A merchant dealing in fabrics and textiles, especially silks and other fine cloths. MERDES (9) MERELY (11) [adverb] Wholly, entirely. | [adverb] (focus) Without any other reason etc.; only, just, and nothing more. MEREST (8) [adjective] Pure, unalloyed . | [adjective] Nothing less than; complete, downright . | [adjective] Just, only; no more than , pure and simple, neither more nor better than might be expected. MERGED (10) [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To blend gradually into something else. MERGER (9) [noun] One that merges. | [noun] The act or process of merging two or more parts into a single unit. | [noun] The legal union of two or more corporations into a single entity, typically assets and liabilities being assumed by the buying party. MERGES (9) [noun] The joining together of multiple sources. | [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To combine into a whole. MERINO (8) [noun] A sheep of a Spanish breed with long, fine hair. | [noun] The wool of this sheep. | [noun] The fabric made from this wool (or from any similar yarn). MERITS (8) [noun] A claim to commendation or a reward. | [noun] A mark or token of approbation or to recognize excellence. | [noun] Something deserving or worthy of positive recognition or reward. MERLES (8) [noun] The Eurasian blackbird, Turdus merula. | [noun] Any blackbird. MERLIN (8) [noun] A small falcon, Falco columbarius, that breeds in northern North America, Europe, and Asia. | [noun] A cytoskeletal protein active in the suppression of tumors. MERLON (8) [noun] Any of the upright projections between the embrasures of a battlement, originally for archers to shield behind while shooting arrows over the embrasures, or through loopholes in the merlons. | [noun] A small falcon, Falco columbarius, that breeds in northern North America, Europe, and Asia. MERLOT (8) [noun] A dark-blue variety of wine grape. | [noun] A dry red wine of a certain French type, made from Merlot grapes. MERMAN (10) [noun] A legendary creature, human male from the waist up, fishlike from the waist down. MERMEN (10) [noun] A legendary creature, human male from the waist up, fishlike from the waist down. MESCAL (10) [noun] A Mexican alcoholic drink distilled from the fermented juice of the agave. | [noun] The peyote cactus. MESHED (12) [verb] To connect together by interlocking, as gears do. | [verb] (by extension) To fit in; to come together harmoniously. | [verb] To catch in a mesh. MESHES (11) [noun] A structure made of connected strands of metal, fiber, or other flexible/ductile material, with evenly spaced openings between them. | [noun] The opening or space enclosed by the threads of a net between knot and knot, or the threads enclosing such a space. | [noun] The engagement of the teeth of wheels, or of a wheel and rack. MESIAL (8) [adjective] Pertaining to the midline of the body. | [adjective] Facing the side of a tooth which faces the middle of the jaw. MESIAN (8) MESNES (8) MESONS (8) [noun] (rare outside entomology) The mesial plane dividing the body into similar right and left halves. | [noun] A member of a group of subatomic particles having a mass intermediate between electrons and protons. (The most easily detected mesons fit this definition.) | [noun] (now specifically) An elementary particle that is composed of a quark and an antiquark, such as a kaon or pion. (Mesons composed of rarer quarks are much heavier.) MESSAN (8) MESSED (9) [verb] (transitive, often used with "up") To make untidy or dirty. | [verb] (transitive, often used with "up") To throw into disorder or to ruin. | [verb] To interfere. MESSES (8) [noun] A disagreeable mixture or confusion of things; hence, a situation resulting from blundering or from misunderstanding; disorder. | [noun] A large quantity or number. | [noun] Excrement. MESTEE (8) METAGE (9) [noun] Measurement, especially of coal. | [noun] A fee paid for a measurement. METALS (8) [noun] (heading) Chemical elements or alloys, and the mines where their ores come from. | [noun] A light tincture used in a coat of arms, specifically argent and or. | [noun] Molten glass that is to be blown or moulded to form objects. METATE (8) [noun] A flat stone with a slightly concave surface, used with another stone (a mano) for grinding maize or other grains. METEOR (8) [noun] A fast-moving streak of light in the night sky caused by the entry of extraterrestrial matter into the earth's atmosphere: A shooting star or falling star. | [noun] Any atmospheric phenomenon. (Thus the derivation of meteorology.) These were sometimes classified as aerial or airy meteors (winds), aqueous or watery meteors (hydrometeors: clouds, rain, snow, hail, dew, frost), luminous meteors (rainbows and aurora), and igneous or fiery meteors (lightning and shooting stars). | [noun] A prop similar to poi balls, in that it is twirled at the end of a cord or cable. METEPA (10) METERS (8) [noun] (always meter) A device that measures things. | [noun] (always meter) A parking meter or similar device for collecting payment. | [noun] (always meter) One who metes or measures. METHOD (12) [noun] A process by which a task is completed; a way of doing something (followed by the adposition of, to or for before the purpose of the process): | [noun] (often "the method") A technique for acting based on the ideas articulated by Constantin Stanislavski and focusing on authentically experiencing the inner life of the character being portrayed. | [noun] A subroutine or function belonging to a class or object, synonym of member function | [noun] A trick where the boarder grabs the heel edge of the board with their back hand, between their feet, and then pulls the board towards their back, while arching their back and bending knees. METHYL (14) [noun] The univalent hydrocarbon radical, CH3-, formally derived from methane by the loss of a hydrogen atom; a compound or part of a compound formed by the attachment of such a radical. METIER (8) [noun] Any activity that is pursued as a trade or profession; a calling. | [noun] An activity to which a person is particularly suited; a forte. | [noun] An outstanding or beneficial feature. METING (9) [verb] To measure. | [verb] (usually with “out”) To dispense, measure (out), allot (especially punishment, reward etc.). | [noun] The act of one who metes; a distribution or handing out. METOPE (10) [noun] The architectural element between two triglyphs in a Doric frieze. METRED (9) METRES (8) [verb] To measure with a metering device. | [verb] To imprint a postage mark with a postage meter. | [verb] To regulate the flow of or to deliver in regulated amounts (usually of fluids but sometimes of other things such as anticipation or breath). METRIC (10) [noun] A measure for something; a means of deriving a quantitative measurement or approximation for otherwise qualitative phenomena (especially used in engineering). | [noun] A function for the measurement of the "distance" between two points in some metric space: it is a real-valued function d(x,y) between points x and y satisfying the following properties: (1) "non-negativity": d(x,y) \ge 0 , (2) "identity of indiscernibles": d(x,y) = 0 \mbox{ iff } x=y , (2) "symmetry": d(x,y) = d(y,x) , and (3) "triangle inequality": d(x,y) \le d(x,z) + d(z,y) . | [noun] A metric tensor. METROS (8) [noun] An underground railway. | [noun] A train that runs on such an underground railway. | [noun] An urban rapid transit light railway METTLE (8) [noun] A quality of endurance and courage. | [noun] Good temperament and character. | [noun] Metal; a metallic substance. METUMP (12) MEWING (12) [verb] To shut away, confine, lock up. | [verb] (of a bird) To moult. | [verb] (of a bird) To cause to moult. MEWLED (12) [verb] To cry weakly with a soft, high-pitched sound; to whimper; to whine. MEWLER (11) MEZCAL (19) [noun] A Mexican alcoholic drink distilled from the fermented juice of the agave. | [noun] The peyote cactus. MEZUZA (26) [noun] A piece of parchment inscribed with specific Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21) and attached in a case to the doorpost of a house, in accordance with the mitzvah (Biblical commandment as interpreted in Jewish law) to "write the words of God on the gates and doorposts of your house" (Deuteronomy 6:9). MEZZOS (26) [noun] Mezzo-soprano MIAOUS (8) MIAOWS (11) [noun] The cry of a cat. | [noun] The drug mephedrone. | [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MIASMA (10) [noun] A noxious atmosphere or influence. | [noun] A noxious atmosphere or emanation once thought to originate from swamps and waste, and to cause disease. MIASMS (10) [noun] An unhealthy vapor or atmosphere; a miasma. | [noun] A predisposition to a particular disease, which interferes with subsequent treatment of it. MIAULS (8) [noun] The cry of a cat. MICELL (10) MICHED (14) MICHES (13) MICKEY (17) [noun] A small bottle of liquor, holding 375 ml or 13 oz., typically shaped to fit in one's pocket. | [noun] A Mickey Finn; a beverage, usually alcoholic, that has been drugged. | [noun] American depression era term for a potato as in a "roasted mickey". MICKLE (14) [noun] A great amount. | [noun] (originally erroneous) A small amount. | [noun] Great or important people as a class. MICRON (10) [noun] The thousandth part of one millimeter; the millionth part of a meter. | [noun] A very tiny amount. | [noun] A semicircular diacritical mark (˘) placed above a vowel, commonly used to mark its quantity as short. MICROS (10) [noun] (gaming slang) micromanagement | [noun] A computer designed around a microprocessor, smaller than a minicomputer or a mainframe. | [noun] The field of economics that deals with small-scale economic activities such as those of an individual or company. MIDAIR (9) [noun] A collision between two or more aerospace vehicles in flight. | [adjective] In the act of flight; airborne. MIDDAY (13) [noun] Noon; twelve o'clock during the day MIDDEN (10) [noun] A dungheap. | [noun] A refuse heap usually near a dwelling. | [noun] A prehistoric pile of bones and shells. MIDDLE (10) [noun] A centre, midpoint. | [noun] The part between the beginning and the end. | [noun] The middle stump. MIDGES (10) [noun] Any of various small two-winged flies, for example, from the family Chironomidae or non-biting midges, the family Chaoboridae or phantom midges, and the family Ceratopogonidae or biting midges, all belonging to the order Diptera | [noun] Any bait or lure designed to resemble a midge MIDGET (10) [noun] A little sandfly. | [noun] Any small swarming insect similar to the mosquito; a midge. | [noun] (sometimes offensive) A normally proportioned person with small stature, usually defined as reaching an adult height less than 4'10". MIDGUT (10) [noun] The central loop of the alimentary canal of an embryo between the foregut and the hindgut. MIDLEG (10) MIDRIB (11) [noun] The strengthened vein down the middle of a flower petal or simple leaf or leaflet. | [noun] The continuation of the petiole of a pinnately compound leaf around which the leaflets attach. MIDSTS (9) [noun] A place in the middle of something; may be used of a literal or metaphorical location. MIDWAY (15) [noun] The middle; the midst. | [noun] A middle way or manner; a mean or middle course between extremes. | [noun] The part of a fair or circus where rides, entertainments, and booths are concentrated. MIFFED (15) [verb] (usually used in the passive) To offend slightly. | [verb] To become slightly offended. | [adjective] Somewhat indignant, irritated, angry, put out or annoyed. MIGGLE (10) MIGHTS (12) MIGHTY (15) [noun] A warrior of great strength and courage. | [adjective] Very strong; possessing might. | [adjective] Very heavy and powerful. MIGNON (9) MIHRAB (13) [noun] A niche in a mosque that indicates the qibla (direction of Mecca), and into which the imam prays | [noun] A design in a Muslim prayer mat with the same function MIKADO (13) [noun] (history) A former title of the emperors of Japan during a certain period. | [noun] Any emperor of Japan | [noun] A game of skill, in which identically shaped (but differently colored and valued) wooden sticks must be removed from a pile without disturbing the remaining stack MIKING (13) [verb] To microphone; to place one or more microphones (mikes) on. | [verb] To measure using a micrometer. MIKRON (12) MIKVAH (18) [noun] A ritual bath in which various Jewish purifications are performed. MIKVEH (18) [noun] A ritual bath in which various Jewish purifications are performed. MILADI (9) MILADY (12) [noun] An English noblewoman or gentlewoman; the form of address to such a person; a lady. MILAGE (9) [noun] The total distance travelled in miles or in air miles. | [noun] The number of miles travelled by a vehicle on a certain volume of fuel. | [noun] An allowance for travel expenses at a specified rate per mile. MILDEN (9) MILDER (9) [adjective] Gentle and not easily angered. | [adjective] (of a rule or punishment) Of only moderate severity; not strict. | [adjective] Not overly felt or seriously intended. MILDEW (12) [noun] A growth of minute powdery or webby fungi, whitish or of different colors, found on various diseased or decaying substances. | [verb] To taint with mildew. | [verb] To become tainted with mildew. MILDLY (12) [adverb] In a mild manner. | [adverb] To a mild degree; slightly. MILERS (8) [noun] (often in combination) An athlete or a horse who specializes in running races of one mile, or a specified number of miles. | [noun] (in combination) A race whose length is the specified number of miles. MILIEU (8) [noun] Medium. | [noun] Social setting or environment. MILIUM (10) [noun] A keratin-filled cyst that can appear just under the epidermis or on the roof of the mouth. MILKED (13) [verb] To express milk from (a mammal, especially a cow). | [verb] To draw (milk) from the breasts or udder. | [verb] To express any liquid (from any creature). MILKER (12) [noun] An animal, such as a dairy cow, kept for the milk it produces. | [noun] A person who milks. | [noun] A milking machine. MILLED (9) [verb] To grind or otherwise process in a mill or other machine. | [verb] To shape, polish, dress or finish using a machine. | [verb] To engrave one or more grooves or a pattern around the edge of (a cylindrical object such as a coin). MILLER (8) [noun] A person who owns or operates a mill, especially a flour mill. | [noun] A milling machine. | [noun] Any of several moths that have powdery wings, especially Acronicta leporina and moths of the genus Agrotis. MILLES (8) MILLET (8) [noun] Any of a group of various types of grass or its grains used as food, widely cultivated in the developing world. | [noun] A semi-autonomous confessional community under the Ottoman Empire, especially a non-Muslim one. MILNEB (10) MILORD (9) [noun] An English nobleman, especially one traveling Europe in grand style; a wealthy British gentleman. | [noun] My Lord (used to address peers temporal, judges, etc). MILPAS (10) MILTED (9) MILTER (8) [noun] A male fish during breeding season. MIMBAR (12) [noun] A pulpit in a mosque from which the leader of prayers delivers the khutbah. MIMEOS (10) [noun] A mimeograph. | [noun] An unpublished academic paper. MIMERS (10) MIMICS (12) [noun] A person who practices mimicry, or mime. | [noun] An imitation. | [verb] To imitate, especially in order to ridicule. MIMING (11) [verb] To mimic. | [verb] To act without words. | [verb] To represent an action or object through gesture, without the use of sound. MIMOSA (10) [noun] A plant belonging to the genus Mimosa usually found in tropical climates, their leaves are usually prickly and sensitive to touch or light, and have small white or pink flowers. | [noun] Albizia species (silk tree, pink siris). | [noun] Acacia species. MINCED (11) [adjective] Finely chopped. | [adjective] Minutely subdivided. | [adjective] Weakened, extenuated. | [verb] To make less; make small. MINCER (10) MINCES (10) [noun] Finely chopped meat. | [noun] Finely chopped mixed fruit used in Christmas pies; mincemeat. | [noun] An affected (often dainty or short and precise) gait. MINDED (10) [verb] (originally and chiefly in negative or interrogative constructions) To dislike, to object to; to be bothered by. | [verb] To look after, to take care of, especially for a short period of time. | [verb] (chiefly in the imperative) To make sure, to take care (that). MINDER (9) [noun] One who minds, tends, or watches something such as a child, a machine, or cattle; a keeper | [noun] A personal bodyguard. | [noun] A guide assigned by the authorities to foreign visitors so as to exercise control over their contacts with the populace. MINERS (8) [noun] A person who works in a mine. | [noun] An operator of ordnance mines and similar explosives. | [noun] Any bird of one of four species of Australian endemic honeyeaters in the genus Manorina. MINGLE (9) [noun] A mixture. | [noun] The act of informally meeting numerous people in a group | [verb] To intermix; to combine or join, as an individual or part, with other parts, but commonly so as to be distinguishable in the product MINIFY (14) MINIMA (10) [noun] The lowest limit. | [noun] The smallest amount. | [noun] A period of minimum brightness or energy intensity (of a star). MINIMS (10) [noun] A half note, drawn as a semibreve with a stem. | [noun] A unit of volume, in the Imperial and U.S. customary systems, 1/60 fluid drachm. Approximately equal to 1 drop, 62 μL or 0.9 grain (weight) of water. | [noun] A short vertical stroke used in handwriting. MINING (9) [verb] To remove (ore) from the ground. | [verb] To dig into, for ore or metal. | [verb] To sow mines (the explosive devices) in (an area). MINION (8) [noun] The lowest limit. | [noun] The smallest amount. | [noun] A period of minimum brightness or energy intensity (of a star). MINISH (11) MINIUM (10) MINKES (12) [noun] A minke whale, one of two species of baleen whales within Balaenoptera, the northern-dwelling species of which is often seen in coastal waters. MINNOW (11) [noun] A small freshwater fish of the carp family, Phoxinus phoxinus. | [noun] Any small fish. | [noun] A relatively small and insignificant person or organization. MINORS (8) [noun] A person who is below the age of majority, consent, criminal responsibility or other adult responsibilities and accountabilities. | [noun] A subject area of secondary concentration of a student at a college or university, or the student who has chosen such a secondary concentration. | [noun] Determinant of a square submatrix MINTED (9) [verb] To reproduce (coins), usually en masse, under licence. | [verb] To invent; to forge; to fabricate; to fashion. | [verb] (provincial) To try, attempt; take aim. MINTER (8) [noun] One who mints | [noun] An item in mint condition (especially a motor car) MINUET (8) [noun] A slow graceful dance consisting of a coupé, a high step, and a balance. | [noun] A tune or air to regulate the movements of the minuet dance: it has the dance form, and is commonly in 3/4, sometimes 3/8, measure. | [noun] A complete short musical composition inspired by and conforming to many formal characteristics of the traditional musical accompaniment to the dance of same name. MINUTE (8) [noun] A unit of time equal to sixty seconds (one-sixtieth of an hour). | [noun] A short but unspecified time period. | [noun] A unit of angle equal to one-sixtieth of a degree. | [adjective] Very small. MINXES (15) [noun] A mink. MINYAN (11) [noun] The minimum number of ten (male) adult Jews required for a communal religious service. | [noun] (by extension) A Jewish prayer service. | [noun] A member of the Minyan race of Greek mythology MIOSES (8) MIOSIS (8) [noun] Contraction of the pupil of the eye. MIOTIC (10) MIRAGE (9) [noun] An optical phenomenon in which light is refracted through a layer of hot air close to the ground, giving the appearance of there being refuge in the distance. | [noun] An illusion. | [verb] To cause to appear as or like a mirage. MIRIER (8) MIRING (9) [verb] To cause or permit to become stuck in mud; to plunge or fix in mud. | [verb] To sink into mud. | [verb] To weigh down. MIRKER (12) MIRROR (8) [noun] A smooth surface, usually made of glass with reflective material painted on the underside, that reflects light so as to give an image of what is in front of it. | [noun] An object, person, or event that reflects or gives a picture of another. | [noun] A disk, website or other resource that contains replicated data. MIRTHS (11) MIRZAS (17) MISACT (10) MISADD (10) MISAIM (10) MISATE (8) MISCUE (10) [noun] In a cue sport, an error in hitting the ball with the cue. | [noun] The act of missing one's cue or of responding to a cue intended for another actor. | [noun] A miss of the object one intended to hit. MISCUT (10) MISDID (10) MISEAT (8) MISERS (8) [noun] A person who hoards money rather than spending it; one who is cheap or extremely parsimonious. | [noun] A kind of earth auger, typically large-bored and often hand-operated. MISERY (11) [noun] Great unhappiness; extreme pain of body or mind; wretchedness; distress; woe. | [noun] A bodily ache or pain. | [noun] Cause of misery; calamity; misfortune. MISFIT (11) [noun] An ill-fitting garment. | [noun] A failure to fit well; unsuitability, disparity. | [noun] A badly adjusted person; someone unsuitable or set apart because of their habits, behaviour etc. MISHAP (13) [noun] An accident, mistake, or problem. | [noun] Evil accident; ill luck; misfortune; mischance. | [verb] To happen through misfortune; to mishappen. MISHIT (11) [noun] An incorrect or bad hit. | [verb] To incorrectly or badly hit. MISKAL (12) MISLAY (11) [verb] To leave or lay something in the wrong place and then forget where one put it. MISLED (9) [verb] To lead astray, in a false direction. | [verb] To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. | [verb] To deceptively trick into something wrong. | [verb] To rain in fine drops; to mizzle. MISLIE (8) MISLIT (8) MISMET (10) MISPEN (10) MISSAL (8) [noun] A prayer book | [noun] A book containing the prayers and responses needed when celebrating the Roman Catholic Mass throughout the year MISSAY (11) MISSED (9) [verb] To fail to hit. | [verb] To fail to achieve or attain. | [verb] To avoid; to escape. MISSEL (8) MISSES (8) [noun] A failure to hit. | [noun] A failure to obtain or accomplish. | [noun] An act of avoidance (used with the verb give). MISSET (8) MISSIS (8) [noun] Wife or girlfriend. | [noun] Term of address for a woman. MISSUS (8) [noun] Wife or girlfriend. | [noun] Term of address for a woman. MISTED (9) [verb] To form mist. | [verb] To spray fine droplets on, particularly of water. | [verb] To cover with a mist. MISTER (8) [noun] A title conferred on an adult male, usually when the name is unknown. Also used as a term of address, often by a parent to a young child. | [verb] To address by the title of "mister". | [noun] Someone's business or function; an occupation, employment, trade. | [noun] A device that makes or sprays mist. MISUSE (8) [noun] An incorrect, improper or unlawful use of something. | [verb] To use (something) incorrectly. | [verb] To abuse or mistreat (something or someone). MITERS (8) [verb] To adorn with a mitre. | [verb] To unite at an angle of 45°. MITHER (11) [verb] To make an unnecessary fuss, moan, bother. | [verb] To pester or irritate someone. Usually directed at children. | [noun] Mother MITIER (8) MITRAL (8) [adjective] Pertaining to a mitre; resembling a mitre. | [adjective] Pertaining to the mitral valve. MITRED (9) [adjective] Relating to an abbot's or bishop's mitre; wearing a mitre. | [adjective] Having a mitre joint. MITRES (8) [noun] A covering for the head, worn on solemn occasions by church dignitaries, which has been made in many forms, mostly recently a tall cap with two points or peaks. | [noun] The surface forming the bevelled end or edge of a piece where a miter joint is made; also, a joint formed or a junction effected by two beveled ends or edges; a miter joint. | [noun] A 13th-century coin minted in Europe which circulated in Ireland as a debased counterfeit sterling penny, outlawed under Edward I. MITTEN (8) [noun] A type of glove or garment that covers a hand with a separate sheath for the thumb, but not for other fingers, which are either enclosed in a single section or left uncovered. | [noun] A cat's or dog's paw that is a different colour from the main body. | [noun] (as "the mitten") A romantic rejection; dismissal of a lover. MIXERS (15) [noun] One who, or a device that, mixes or merges things together. | [noun] One who mixes or socializes. | [noun] A machine outfitted with (typically blunt) blades with which it mixes or beats ingredients in a bowl below. MIXING (16) [verb] To stir together. | [verb] To combine (items from two or more sources normally kept separate). | [verb] To form by mingling; to produce by the stirring together of ingredients; to concoct from different parts. MIXUPS (17) [noun] A case of confusion. MIZENS (17) [noun] Mizzenmast. | [noun] A fore-and-aft sail set on a mizzenmast. MIZZEN (26) [noun] Mizzenmast. | [noun] A fore-and-aft sail set on a mizzenmast. | [adjective] Hindmost; nearest the stern. MIZZLE (26) [noun] Misty rain or drizzle. | [verb] To rain in very fine drops. | [verb] To abscond, scram, flee. MIZZLY (29) MOANED (9) [verb] To complain about; to bemoan, to bewail; to mourn. | [verb] To grieve. | [verb] To distress (someone); to sadden. MOANER (8) MOATED (9) [adjective] Surrounded with a moat MOBBED (13) [verb] To crowd around (someone), sometimes with hostility. | [verb] To crowd into or around a place. | [verb] To wrap up in, or cover with, a cowl. MOBBER (12) MOBCAP (14) [noun] A plain cap or headdress for women or girls, especially one tied under the chin by a very broad band. | [noun] (modern-day use) A disposable head covering with an elasticated band, worn for cleanliness in industrial settings. MOBILE (10) [noun] A kinetic sculpture or decorative arrangement made of items hanging so that they can move independently from each other. | [noun] The internet accessed via mobile devices. | [noun] Something that can move. MOBLED (11) MOCHAS (13) [noun] A coffee drink with chocolate syrup added, or a serving thereof; a caffè mocha. | [noun] A coffee and chocolate mixed flavour. | [noun] A dark brown colour, like that of mocha coffee. MOCKED (15) [verb] To mimic, to simulate. | [verb] To create an artistic representation of. | [verb] To make fun of by mimicking, to taunt. MOCKER (14) [noun] A person who mocks. | [noun] A mockingbird. | [noun] A deceiver; an impostor. MOCKUP (16) [noun] A prototype, usually low-fidelity, such as paper illustrations, screenshots, or simple configurations of screens with limited interaction. MODELS (9) [noun] A person who serves as a subject for artwork or fashion, usually in the medium of photography but also for painting or drawing. | [noun] A person, usually an attractive female, hired to show items or goods to the public, such as items given away as prizes on a TV game show. | [noun] A representation of a physical object, usually in miniature. MODEMS (11) [noun] A device that encodes digital computer signals into analog/analogue telephone signals and vice versa and allows computers to communicate over a phone line. | [verb] To transmit by modem. MODERN (9) [noun] Someone who lives in modern times. | [adjective] Pertaining to a current or recent time and style; not ancient. | [adjective] (history) Pertaining to the modern period (c.1800 to contemporary times), particularly in academic historiography. MODEST (9) [adjective] Not bragging or boasting about oneself or one's achievements; unpretentious, humble. | [adjective] Small, moderate in size. | [adjective] Pure and delicate from a sense of propriety. MODICA (11) MODIFY (15) [verb] To change part of. | [verb] To be or become modified. | [verb] To set bounds to; to moderate. MODISH (12) [adjective] Conforming with fashion or style. | [adjective] In the current mode. MODULE (9) [noun] A self-contained component of a system, often interchangeable, which has a well-defined interface to the other components. | [noun] A standard unit of measure used for determining the proportions of a building. | [noun] A section of a program; a subroutine or group of subroutines. MODULI (9) [noun] The base with respect to which a congruence is computed. | [noun] The absolute value of a complex number. | [noun] A coefficient that expresses how much of a certain property is possessed by a certain substance. MODULO (9) [noun] The operation or function that returns the remainder of one number divided by another. | [preposition] Given a specified modulus of. | [preposition] Except for differences accounted for by. MOGGED (11) MOGGIE (10) [noun] A young cow or bull. | [noun] Leather made of the skin of the calf; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding. | [noun] A young deer, elephant, seal, whale or giraffe (also used of some other animals). MOGULS (9) [noun] A rich or powerful person; a magnate. | [noun] A hump or bump on a skiing piste. | [noun] A larger-sized (39 mm diameter) screw base used for large, high-power light bulbs, known as mogul (screw) base light bulbs. MOHAIR (11) [noun] Yarn or fabric made from the hair of the angora goat, often as mixed with cotton or other materials. | [noun] The long, fine hair of the Angora goat. | [noun] An Angora goat. MOHELS (11) [noun] The person who performs the circumcision in a Jewish bris. MOHURS (11) MOIETY (11) [noun] A half. | [noun] A share or portion, especially a smaller share. | [noun] Each descent group in a culture which is divided exactly into two descent groups. MOILED (9) [verb] To toil, to work hard. | [verb] To churn continually; to swirl. | [verb] To defile or dirty. MOILER (8) MOIRAI (8) MOIRES (8) [noun] Originally, a fine textile fabric made of the hair of an Asiatic goat. | [noun] Any textile fabric to which a watered appearance is given. MOJOES (15) MOLARS (8) [noun] A back tooth having a broad surface used for grinding one's food. | [noun] A unit of concentration equal to one mole per litre. MOLDED (10) [verb] To shape in or on a mold; to form into a particular shape; to give shape to. | [verb] To guide or determine the growth or development of; influence | [verb] To fit closely by following the contours of. MOLDER (9) [noun] One who molds something into shape. | [noun] A person who makes molds. | [noun] A tool for making molds. MOLEST (8) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLIES (8) [noun] A magic herb or plant used by Odysseus to overcome Circe. | [noun] Any plant associated with the mythological moly, especially the European allium, Allium moly. MOLINE (8) [noun] The crossed iron that supports the upper millstone by resting on the spindle; a millrind. MOLLAH (11) MOLLIE (8) [noun] Any of many New World fish of the genus Poecilia, formerly called Mollienesia. | [noun] A Molotov cocktail. MOLOCH (13) [noun] Moloch horridus, an Australian lizard thought to be the sole member of the genus Moloch. MOLTED (9) [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. MOLTEN (8) [verb] To change (or to be changed) from a solid state to a liquid state, usually by a gradual heat. | [verb] To dissolve, disperse, vanish. | [verb] To soften, as by a warming or kindly influence; to relax; to render gentle or susceptible to mild influences; sometimes, in a bad sense, to take away the firmness of; to weaken. MOLTER (8) MOMENT (10) [noun] A brief, unspecified amount of time. | [noun] The smallest portion of time; an instant. | [noun] Weight or importance. MOMISM (12) [noun] Finding fault; carping. | [noun] Excessive attachment to one’s mother. | [noun] An utterance, piece of advice, etc. from one's mother. MOMMAS (12) [noun] Mother | [noun] A voluptuous woman. | [noun] One's wife or girlfriend. MOMSER (10) MOMZER (19) MONADS (9) [noun] An ultimate atom, or simple, unextended point; something ultimate and indivisible. | [noun] A single individual (such as a pollen grain) that is free from others, not united in a group. | [noun] A monoid object in the category of endofunctors of a fixed category. MONDES (9) MONDOS (9) MONEYS (11) [noun] A legally or socially binding conceptual contract of entitlement to wealth, void of intrinsic value, payable for all debts and taxes, and regulated in supply. | [noun] A generally accepted means of exchange and measure of value. | [noun] A currency maintained by a state or other entity which can guarantee its value (such as a monetary union). MONGER (9) [noun] (chiefly in combination) A dealer in a specific commodity. | [noun] (in combination) A person promoting something undesirable. | [noun] A small sea vessel. MONGOE (9) MONGOL (9) [noun] A person from Mongolia; a Mongolian. | [noun] A member of any of the various Mongol ethnic groups living in The Mongolian People's Republic, the (former) USSR, Tibet and Nepal. | [noun] (usually mongol) A person with Down's syndrome. MONGOS (9) MONGST (9) MONIED (9) [adjective] Affluent; rich | [adjective] Paid for; funded MONIES (8) [noun] A legally or socially binding conceptual contract of entitlement to wealth, void of intrinsic value, payable for all debts and taxes, and regulated in supply. | [noun] A generally accepted means of exchange and measure of value. | [noun] A currency maintained by a state or other entity which can guarantee its value (such as a monetary union). MONISH (11) MONISM (10) [noun] The doctrine of the oneness and unity of reality, despite the appearance of diversity in the world. MONIST (8) MONKEY (15) [noun] Any member of the clade Simiiformes not also of the clade Hominoidea containing humans and apes, from which they are usually, but not universally, distinguished by smaller size, a tail, and cheek pouches. | [noun] Any nonhuman simian primate, including apes. | [noun] A mischievous child. MONODY (12) [noun] An ode, as in Greek drama, for a single voice, often specifically a mournful song or dirge. | [noun] Any poem mourning the death of someone; an elegy. | [noun] A monotonous or mournful noise. MONTES (8) [noun] One of the fleshy areas at the base of the fingers; a mount. | [noun] The pubic mound or mons pubis. In human anatomy or in mammals in general, the mons pubis (Latin for "pubic mound"), also known as the mons veneris (Latin, mound of Venus) or simply the mons, is the adipose tissue lying above the pubic bone of adult females, anterior to the pubic symphysis. The mons pubis forms the anterior portion of the vulva. | [noun] A mountain or extinct volcano on a planet or a moon. MONTHS (11) [noun] A period into which a year is divided, historically based on the phases of the moon. | [noun] A period of 30 days, 31 days, or some alternation thereof. | [noun] (in the plural) A woman's period; menstrual discharge. MOOING (9) [verb] Of a cow or bull, to make its characteristic lowing sound. | [noun] The action of the verb moo; a mooing sound. | [adjective] (of a steak) very rare MOOLAH (11) [noun] A religious scholar and teacher of sharia law. | [noun] Money, cash. MOOLAS (8) MOOLEY (11) MOONED (9) [verb] To display one's buttocks to, typically as a jest, insult, or protest. | [verb] (usually followed by over or after) To fuss over something adoringly; to be infatuated with someone. | [verb] To spend time idly, absent-mindedly. MOORED (9) [verb] To cast anchor or become fastened. | [verb] To fix or secure (e.g. a vessel) in a particular place by casting anchor, or by fastening with ropes, cables or chains or the like | [verb] To secure or fix firmly. MOOTED (9) [verb] To bring up as a subject for debate, to propose. | [verb] To discuss or debate. | [verb] To make or declare irrelevant. MOOTER (8) MOPEDS (11) [noun] A lightweight, two-wheeled vehicle equipped with a small motor and pedals, designed to go no faster than some specified speed limit. MOPERS (10) MOPERY (13) [noun] Violation of an imaginary or trivial law MOPIER (10) MOPING (11) [verb] To carry oneself in a depressed, lackadaisical manner; to give oneself up to low spirits; to pout, sulk. | [verb] To make spiritless and stupid. | [noun] The act of one who mopes. MOPISH (13) MOPOKE (14) [noun] A morepork. MOPPED (13) [verb] To rub, scrub, clean or wipe with a mop, or as if with a mop. | [verb] To make a wry expression with the mouth. MOPPER (12) MOPPET (12) [noun] A child. Often used lovingly or in an affectionate way. | [noun] A rag baby; a puppet made of cloth. | [noun] A long-haired pet dog. MORALE (8) [noun] The capacity of people to maintain belief in an institution or a goal, or even in oneself and others. MORALS (8) [noun] (of a narrative) The ethical significance or practical lesson. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Moral practices or teachings: modes of conduct. | [noun] A morality play. MORASS (8) [noun] A tract of soft, wet ground; a marsh; a fen. | [noun] Anything that entraps or makes progress difficult. MORAYS (11) [noun] Any of the large cosmopolitan carnivorous eels of the family Muraenidae. MORBID (11) [adjective] Of, or relating to disease. | [adjective] (by extension) Taking an interest in unhealthy or unwholesome subjects such as death, decay, disease. | [adjective] Suggesting the horror of death; macabre or ghoulish MOREEN (8) [noun] A thick woollen fabric, watered or with embossed figures, used in upholstery, for curtains, etc. MORELS (8) [noun] Any of several edible mushrooms, especially the common morel or yellow morel. | [noun] Any of several fungi in the genus Morchella, the upper part of which is covered with a reticulated and pitted hymenium. | [noun] A variety of cultivated cherry, Prunus cerasus 'austera', having a dark skin MORGAN (9) [noun] A unit for expressing the relative distance between genes on a chromosome. MORGEN (9) [noun] A unit of measurement of land in the Netherlands and the Dutch colonies and parts of the United States, where it was equivalent to about two acres; and in Denmark, Norway, and Germany, where it was equivalent to about two-thirds of an acre. Now used informally in Germany to mean one quarter of a hectare. MORGUE (9) [noun] A supercilious or haughty attitude; arrogance. | [noun] A building or room where dead bodies are kept before their proper burial or cremation, particularly in legal and law enforcement contexts. | [noun] The archive and background information division of a newspaper. MORION (8) [noun] A kind of open brimmed helmet used by footsoldiers in the 16th and 17th centuries, having no visor or bever. | [noun] A brown or black variety of quartz. MORONS (8) [noun] A stupid person; an idiot; a fool. | [noun] A person of mild mental subnormality in the former classification of mental retardation, having an intelligence quotient of 50–70. MOROSE (8) [adjective] Sullen, gloomy; showing a brooding ill humour. MORPHO (13) [noun] Any of the genus Morpho of large tropical American butterflies. MORPHS (13) [noun] (grammar) A physical form representing some morpheme in language. It is a recurrent distinctive sound or sequence of sounds. | [noun] An allomorph: one of a set of realizations that a morpheme can have in different contexts. | [noun] Local variety of a species, distinguishable from other populations of the species by morphology or behaviour. MORRIS (8) MORROS (8) MORROW (11) [noun] The next or following day. | [noun] Morning. | [verb] To dawn MORSEL (8) [noun] A small fragment or share of something, commonly applied to food. | [noun] A mouthful of food. | [noun] A very small amount. MORTAL (8) [noun] A human; someone susceptible to death. | [adjective] Susceptible to death by aging, sickness, injury, or wound; not immortal. | [adjective] Causing death; deadly, fatal, killing, lethal (now only of wounds, injuries etc.). MORTAR (8) [noun] A mixture of lime or cement, sand and water used for bonding building blocks. | [noun] A muzzle-loading, indirect fire weapon with a tube length of 10 to 20 calibers and designed to lob shells at very steep trajectories. | [noun] A hollow vessel used to pound, crush, rub, grind or mix ingredients with a pestle. MORULA (8) [noun] A spherical mass of blastomeres that forms following the splitting of a zygote; it becomes the blastula MOSAIC (10) [noun] A piece of artwork created by placing colored squares (usually tiles) in a pattern so as to create a picture. | [noun] An individual composed of two or more cell lines of different genetic or chromosomal constitution, but from the same zygote. | [noun] Any of several viral diseases that cause mosaic-like patterns to appear on leaves. MOSEYS (11) [verb] To set off, get going; to start a journey. | [verb] To go off quickly: to hurry up. | [verb] To amble; to walk or proceed in a leisurely manner. MOSHAV (14) [noun] An Israeli town or settlement: in particular, a type of cooperative agricultural community of individual farms pioneered by the Labour Zionists during the second aliyah. MOSQUE (17) [noun] A place of worship for Muslims, often having at least one minaret; a masjid. MOSSED (9) [verb] To become covered with moss. | [verb] To cover (something) with moss. MOSSER (8) MOSSES (8) [noun] Any of various small, green, seedless plants growing on the ground or on the surfaces of trees, stones, etc.; now specifically, a plant of the phylum Bryophyta (formerly division Musci). | [noun] A kind or species of such plants. | [noun] Any alga, lichen, bryophyte, or other plant of seemingly simple structure. MOSTLY (11) [adverb] Mainly or chiefly; for the most part; usually, generally, on the whole. | [adverb] To the greatest extent; most. MOTELS (8) [noun] A type of hotel or lodging establishment, often located near a major highway, which typically features a series of rooms the entrances of which are immediately adjacent to a parking lot to facilitate convenient access to automobiles parked there. | [noun] A low-cost short-stay hotel, often with hourly rates rather than daily rates, and notorious for permitting illicit sexual activities; love hotel. MOTETS (8) [noun] A composition adapted to sacred words in the elaborate polyphonic church style; an anthem. MOTHER (11) [noun] A (human) female who has given birth to a baby | [noun] A human female who parents an adopted or fostered child | [noun] A human female who donates a fertilized egg or donates a body cell which has resulted in a clone. | [verb] To give birth to or produce (as its female parent) a child. (Compare father.) | [noun] A stringy, mucilaginous or film- or membrane-like substance (consisting of acetobacters) which develops in fermenting alcoholic liquids (such as wine, or cider), and turns the alcohol into acetic acid with the help of oxygen from the air. | [noun] Motherfucker. | [noun] A person (especially an entomologist) or animal that catches moths. MOTIFS (11) [noun] A recurring or dominant element; a theme. | [noun] A short melodic passage that is repeated in several parts of a work. | [noun] A decorative figure that is repeated in a design or pattern. MOTILE (8) [noun] A person whose prevailing mental imagery takes the form of inner feelings of action, such as incipient pronunciation of words, muscular innervations, etc. | [adjective] Having the power to move spontaneously. | [adjective] Producing motion. MOTION (8) [noun] A state of progression from one place to another. | [noun] A change of position with respect to time. | [noun] A change from one place to another. MOTIVE (11) [noun] An idea or communication that makes one want to act, especially from spiritual sources; a divine prompting. | [noun] An incentive to act in a particular way; a reason or emotion that makes one want to do something; anything that prompts a choice of action. | [noun] A limb or other bodily organ that can move. MOTLEY (11) [noun] An incongruous mixture. | [noun] A jester's multicoloured clothes. | [noun] (by extension) A jester; a fool. MOTMOT (10) [noun] Any bird in the taxonomic family Momotidae, endemic to the neotropics. MOTORS (8) [noun] A machine or device that converts other energy forms into mechanical energy, or imparts motion. | [noun] A motor car, or automobile. | [noun] A source of power for something; an inspiration; a driving force. MOTTES (8) [noun] A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot. | [noun] A word or a motto; a device. | [noun] A note or brief strain on a bugle. MOTTLE (8) [noun] A distinguishing blotch of color. | [noun] A mottled coloration or pattern. | [verb] To mark with blotches of different color, or shades of color, as if stained; to spot; to maculate. MOTTOS (8) [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, forming part of an heraldic achievement. | [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, prefixed to an essay, discourse, chapter, canto, or the like, suggestive of its subject matter; a short, suggestive expression of a guiding principle; a maxim. | [noun] A paper packet containing a sweetmeat, cracker, etc., together with a scrap of paper bearing a motto. MOUJIK (19) [noun] A (male) peasant, especially in pre-revolutionary (imperial) Russia. MOULDS (9) [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. | [noun] A frame or model around or on which something is formed or shaped. | [noun] Something that is made in or shaped on a mold. MOULDY (12) [adjective] Covered with mould. | [adjective] Neglected. | [adjective] Worthless; lousy; rotten MOULIN (8) [noun] A cylindrical, vertical shaft that extends through a glacier and is carved by meltwater from the glacier’s surface. MOULTS (8) [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. MOUNDS (9) [noun] An artificial hill or elevation of earth; a raised bank; an embankment thrown up for defense | [noun] A natural elevation appearing as if thrown up artificially; a regular and isolated hill, hillock, or knoll. | [noun] Elevated area of dirt upon which the pitcher stands to pitch. MOUNTS (8) [noun] A hill or mountain. | [noun] Any of seven fleshy prominences in the palm of the hand, taken to represent the influences of various heavenly bodies. | [noun] A bulwark for offence or defence; a mound. MOURNS (8) [verb] To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death). | [verb] To utter in a sorrowful manner. | [verb] To wear mourning. MOUSED (9) [verb] To move cautiously or furtively, in the manner of a mouse (the rodent) (frequently used in the phrasal verb to mouse around). | [verb] To hunt or catch mice (the rodents), usually of cats. | [verb] To close the mouth of a hook by a careful binding of marline or wire. MOUSER (8) [noun] A cat that catches mice, kept specifically for the purpose. | [noun] A moustache. MOUSES (8) [verb] To move cautiously or furtively, in the manner of a mouse (the rodent) (frequently used in the phrasal verb to mouse around). | [verb] To hunt or catch mice (the rodents), usually of cats. | [verb] To close the mouth of a hook by a careful binding of marline or wire. MOUSEY (11) [adjective] Resembling a mouse. | [adjective] Abounding or infested with mice. MOUSSE (8) [noun] An airy pudding served chilled, particularly chocolate mousse. | [noun] A savory dish, of meat or seafood, containing gelatin. | [noun] A styling cream used for hair. MOUTHS (11) [noun] The opening of a creature through which food is ingested. | [noun] The end of a river out of which water flows into a sea or other large body of water. | [noun] An outlet, aperture or orifice. MOUTHY (14) [adjective] Overly talkative, insolent, and loud. MOUTON (8) [noun] A 14th-century French gold coin, weighing about 70 grains. MOVERS (11) [noun] Someone who or something that moves. | [noun] A dancer. | [noun] A person employed to help people move their possessions from one residence to another. MOVIES (11) [noun] A recorded sequence of images displayed on a screen at a rate sufficiently fast to create the appearance of motion. | [noun] (usually plural) A cinema. | [noun] (by extension) The cinema MOVING (12) [verb] To change place or posture; to go, in any manner, from one place or position to another. | [verb] To act; to take action; to begin to act | [verb] To change residence, for example from one house, town, or state, to another; to go and live at another place. See also move out and move in. MOWERS (11) [noun] A lawnmower, a machine used to cut grass. | [noun] A person who cuts grass. MOWING (12) [verb] To cut down grass or crops. | [verb] To cut down or slaughter in great numbers. | [verb] To make grimaces, mock. MOXIES (15) MUCHES (13) MUCHLY (16) [adverb] Very much, very MUCINS (10) [noun] Any of several glycoproteins found in mucus MUCKED (15) [verb] To shovel muck. | [verb] To manure with muck. | [verb] To do a dirty job. MUCKER (14) [noun] (Southern England) friend, acquaintance | [noun] (British army) A comrade; a friendly, low-ranking soldier in the same situation. | [noun] A person who removes muck (waste, debris, broken rock, etc.), especially from a mine, construction site, or stable. MUCKLE (14) [noun] A great amount. | [verb] To latch onto something with the mouth. | [verb] To talk big; to exaggerate. MUCLUC (12) MUCOID (11) [adjective] Pertaining to or resembling mucus; mucous. | [noun] Any of a class of mucin-like substances yielding on decomposition a reducing carbohydrate together with some form of proteinaceous matter. MUCORS (10) MUCOSA (10) [noun] Mucous membrane MUCOSE (10) MUCOUS (10) [adjective] Pertaining to mucus | [adjective] Having the qualities of mucus MUDCAP (13) MUDCAT (11) MUDDED (11) MUDDER (10) [noun] A racehorse that performs well on muddy or wet tracks. | [noun] A participant in a multi-user dungeon. | [noun] A person (especially an entomologist) or animal that catches moths. MUDDLE (10) [noun] A mixture; a confusion; a garble. | [noun] A mixture of crushed ingredients, as prepared with a muddler. | [verb] To mix together, to mix up; to confuse. MUDDLY (13) MUDRAS (9) [noun] Any of several formal symbolic hand postures used in classical dance of India and in Hindu and Buddhist iconography. | [noun] Any of the formal body positions and postures used in yoga and meditation. MUESLI (8) [noun] A breakfast dish based on uncooked rolled oats and fruit. MUFFED (15) [verb] To drop or mishandle (the ball, a catch etc.); to play badly. | [verb] To mishandle; to bungle. | [adjective] Wearing a muff. MUFFIN (14) [noun] A type of flattish bun, usually cut in two horizontally, toasted and spread with butter, etc, before being eaten. | [noun] A type of individual bread such as corn, bran, banana or zucchini bread often sliced and spread with butter, etc before being eaten. | [noun] (especially US) (informally) A cupcake without frosting, but sometimes glazed. MUFFLE (14) [noun] Anything that mutes or deadens sound. | [noun] A warm piece of clothing for the hands. | [noun] A boxing glove. MUFTIS (11) [noun] A Muslim scholar and interpreter of shari’a law, who can deliver a fatwa. | [noun] A civilian dress when worn by a member of the military, or casual dress when worn by a pupil of a school who normally would wear uniform. MUGFUL (12) MUGGAR (10) MUGGED (11) [verb] To strike in the face. | [verb] To assault for the purpose of robbery. | [verb] To exaggerate a facial expression for communicative emphasis; to make a face, to pose, as for photographs or in a performance, in an exaggerated or affected manner. MUGGEE (10) MUGGER (10) [noun] A street robber. | [noun] A person who makes exaggerated faces, as a performance; a gurner. | [noun] A large crocodile, Crocodilus palustris, of southwest Asia, having a very broad wrinkled snout. MUGGUR (10) MUJIKS (19) MUKLUK (16) [noun] A soft knee-high boot of sealskin or reindeer skin, originally worn by Inuit and Yupik. | [noun] A laced winter boot resembling a traditional mukluk, with thick rubber sole and cloth upper. MUKTUK (16) [noun] The skin and blubber of a whale, traditionally used as food by the Inuit. MULCTS (10) [noun] A fine or penalty, especially a pecuniary one. | [verb] To impose such a fine or penalty. | [verb] To swindle (someone) out of money. MULETA (8) [noun] A red flag used by bullfighters. MULEYS (11) [noun] Mule deer MULING (9) MULISH (11) [adjective] Characteristic of a mule; stubborn, obstinate, or intractable MULLAH (11) [noun] A religious scholar and teacher of sharia law. | [verb] To grind up into, or as if into, powder. | [verb] To beat; to thrash (a person). MULLAS (8) [noun] A religious scholar and teacher of sharia law. MULLED (9) [verb] (usually with over) To work (over) mentally; to cogitate; to ruminate. | [verb] To powder; to pulverize. | [verb] To chop marijuana so that it becomes a smokable form. MULLEN (8) MULLER (8) [noun] One who, or that which, mulls. | [noun] A grinding stone, held in the hand, used especially for preparing paints and powders. | [noun] A vessel in which wine, etc., is mulled over a fire. | [noun] A machine that mixes sand and clay for use in metal castings. | [verb] To beat; to thrash (a person). MULLET (8) [noun] A fish of the family Mullidae (order Syngnathiformes), especially the genus Mullus (the red mullets or goatfish). | [noun] A fish of the family Mugilidae (order Mugiliformes) (the grey mullets). | [noun] Any of several species of freshwater fish in the sucker family (especially in the genus Moxostoma, the redhorses) | [noun] A fool | [noun] A hairstyle where the hair is kept short on the top and sides and long at the back. | [noun] A star with straight edges and usually with five or six points. MULLEY (11) MUMBLE (12) [noun] A quiet or unintelligible vocalization; a low tone of voice. | [verb] To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. | [verb] To chew something gently with closed lips. MUMBLY (15) MUMMED (13) [verb] To act in a pantomime or dumb show. MUMMER (12) [noun] A person who dons a disguising costume, as for a parade or a festival. | [noun] An actor in a pantomime; one who communicates entirely through gesture and facial expression. MUMPED (13) MUMPER (12) MUNGOS (9) MUNTIN (8) [noun] One of the separators between panes of glass in a composite window. MUONIC (10) MURALS (8) [noun] A large painting, usually drawn on a wall. MURDER (9) [noun] The crime of deliberately killing another person without justification. | [noun] The act of deliberate killing of another person or other being without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [noun] (in jurisdictions which use the felony murder rule) The commission of an act which abets the commission of a crime the commission of which causes the death of a human. MUREIN (8) MURIDS (9) [noun] Any rodent in the family Muridae. MURINE (8) [noun] Any murine mammal. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of, the mouse, rat or (more generally) any mammal of the family Muridae. MURING (9) [verb] To wall in or fortify | [verb] To enclose or imprison within walls. MURKER (12) MURKLY (15) MURMUR (10) [noun] Any low, indistinct sound, like that of running water. | [noun] Soft indistinct speech. | [noun] The sound made by any condition which produces noisy, or turbulent, flow of blood through the heart. MURPHY (16) [noun] An Irish or white potato. MURRAS (8) MURRES (8) [noun] Any seabird of the genus Uria in the family Alcidae (the auks). MURREY (11) [noun] The mulberry fruit. | [noun] A tincture, the colour of mulberries, between gules and purpure. | [adjective] Of a mulberry colour. MURRHA (11) MUSCAE (10) MUSCAT (10) [noun] A white grape variety; used as table grapes and for making raisins and sweet wine. | [noun] The muscatel wine made from these grapes. | [noun] The vine bearing this fruit. MUSCID (11) [noun] Any fly of the family Muscidae of insects. | [adjective] Pertaining to or related to the Muscidae family of insects. MUSCLE (10) [noun] A contractile form of tissue which animals use to effect movement. | [noun] An organ composed of muscle tissue. | [noun] (usually in the plural) A well-developed physique, in which the muscles are enlarged from exercise. MUSCLY (13) [adjective] Thewy, muscled | [adjective] Strong, powerful MUSERS (8) MUSEUM (10) [noun] A building or institution dedicated to the acquisition, conservation, study, exhibition, and educational interpretation of objects having scientific, historical, cultural or artistic value. MUSHED (12) [verb] To squish so as to break into smaller pieces or to combine with something else. | [verb] To walk, especially across the snow with dogs. | [verb] To drive dogs, usually pulling a sled, across the snow. MUSHER (11) [noun] One who operates a dogsled, traditionally using the verbal command “mush”. | [noun] One who travels by dogsled. | [noun] One who races in a dogsled in a race. MUSHES (11) [noun] A somewhat liquid mess, often of food; a soft or semisolid substance. | [noun] A mixture of noise produced by the harmonics of continuous-wave stations. | [noun] The foam of a breaker. MUSICS (10) MUSING (9) [verb] To become lost in thought, to ponder. | [verb] To say (something) with due consideration or thought. | [verb] To think on; to meditate on. MUSJID (16) MUSKEG (13) [noun] A terrain composed of peat bog with tussocky meadow and woody vegetation including spruce. MUSKET (12) [noun] A kind of firearm formerly carried by the infantry of an army, originally fired by means of a match, or matchlock, for which several mechanical appliances (including the flintlock, and finally the percussion lock) were successively substituted; ultimately superseded by the rifle. | [noun] A male Eurasian sparrowhawk. MUSKIE (12) MUSKIT (12) MUSLIN (8) [noun] Any of several varieties of thin cotton cloth. | [noun] Fabric made of cotton, flax (linen), hemp, or silk, finely or coarsely woven. | [noun] Any of a wide variety of tightly-woven thin fabrics, especially those used for bedlinen. MUSSED (9) [verb] To rumple, tousle or make (something) untidy. MUSSEL (8) [noun] Any of several groups of bivalve shellfish with elongated, asymmetrical shells MUSSES (8) [verb] To rumple, tousle or make (something) untidy. MUSTED (9) MUSTEE (8) MUSTER (8) [noun] Gathering. | [noun] Showing. | [verb] To show, exhibit. | [noun] A person of one-eighth African ancestry. MUSTHS (11) MUTANT (8) [noun] Something which has mutated, which has one or more new characteristics from a mutation. | [noun] Someone or something that seems strange, abnormal, or bizarre. | [adjective] Of, relating to, undergoing (i.e. mutating), or resulting from change or mutation; that has undergone mutation. MUTASE (8) MUTATE (8) [verb] To undergo mutation. | [verb] To cause mutation. MUTELY (11) MUTEST (8) MUTINE (8) MUTING (9) [verb] To silence, to make quiet. | [verb] To turn off the sound of. | [verb] Of a bird: to defecate. MUTINY (11) [noun] An organized rebellion against a legally constituted authority, especially by seamen against their officers. | [noun] Violent commotion; tumult; strife. | [verb] To commit mutiny. MUTISM (10) [noun] A psychological disorder in which the sufferer cannot speak in certain situations. MUTONS (8) [noun] A unit of mutation forming part of a recon. MUTTER (8) [noun] A repressed or obscure utterance; an instance of muttering. | [verb] To utter words, especially complaints or angry expressions, indistinctly or with a low voice and lips partly closed; to say under one's breath. | [verb] To speak softly and incoherently, or with imperfect articulations. | [noun] (Indian cuisine) Peas. MUTTON (8) [noun] The flesh of sheep used as food. | [noun] The flesh of goat used as food. | [noun] A sheep. MUTUAL (8) [noun] A mutual fund. | [noun] A mutual organization. | [noun] Either of a pair of people who follow each other's social media accounts. MUTUEL (8) MUTULE (8) [noun] Any of the rectangular blocks under the soffit of the cornice of the Greek Doric temple, which are studded with guttae. MUUMUU (10) [noun] A long loose-fitting dress made of lightweight fabric printed with bright, stylized Hawaiian themes (such as flowers and palm branches). MUZHIK (24) [noun] A (male) peasant, especially in pre-revolutionary (imperial) Russia. MUZJIK (28) MUZZLE (26) [noun] The protruding part of an animal's head which includes the nose, mouth and jaws; the snout | [noun] The mouth or the end for entrance or discharge of a gun, pistol etc., that the bullet emerges from as opposed to the breech. | [noun] A device used to prevent animal from biting or eating, which is worn on its snout. MYASES (11) MYASIS (11) MYCELE (13) MYELIN (11) [noun] A white, fatty material, composed of lipids and lipoproteins, that surrounds the axons of nerves. MYNAHS (14) [noun] One of the South and East Asian birds of the starling family Sturnidae. MYOMAS (13) MYOPES (13) [noun] One who has myopia. MYOPIA (13) [noun] A disorder of the vision where distant objects appear blurred because the eye focuses their images in front of the retina instead of on it. | [noun] A lack of imagination, discernment or long-range perspective in thinking or planning. MYOPIC (15) [noun] A short-sighted individual. | [adjective] Near-sighted; unable to see distant objects unaided | [adjective] Shortsighted; improvident MYOSES (11) MYOSIN (11) [noun] Any of a large family of motor proteins found in eukaryotic tissues, allowing mobility in muscles. | [noun] An albuminous body present in dead muscle formed in the process of coagulation which takes place in rigor mortis. MYOSIS (11) [noun] Contraction of the pupil of the eye. MYOTIC (13) MYRIAD (12) [noun] Ten thousand; 10,000 | [noun] A countless number or multitude (of specified things) | [adjective] (modifying a singular noun) Multifaceted, having innumerable elements MYRICA (13) MYRRHS (14) [noun] A red-brown resinous material, the dried sap of a tree of the species Commiphora myrrha. | [noun] The herb chervil. MYRTLE (11) [noun] An evergreen shrub or small tree of the genus Myrtus, native to southern Europe and north Africa. MYSELF (14) [pronoun] (reflexive pronoun) Me, as direct or indirect object the speaker as the object of a verb or preposition, when the speaker is also the subject. | [pronoun] Personally, for my part; used in apposition to I, sometimes for simple emphasis and sometimes with implicit exclusion of any others performing the activity described. | [pronoun] In my normal state of body or mind. MYSIDS (12) [noun] Any crustacean of the family Mysidae. MYSOST (11) MYSTIC (13) [noun] Someone who practices mysticism. | [adjective] Of, or relating to mystics, mysticism or occult mysteries; mystical. | [adjective] Mysterious and strange; arcane, obscure or enigmatic. MYTHIC (16) [adjective] Mythical; existing in myth. | [adjective] Larger-than-life. MYTHOI (14) [noun] Anything transmitted by word of mouth, such as a fable, legend, narrative, story, or tale (especially a poetic tale). | [noun] A story or set of stories relevant to or having a significant truth or meaning for a particular culture, religion, society, or other group; a myth, a mythology. | [noun] (by extension) A set of assumptions or beliefs about something. MYTHOS (14) [noun] Anything transmitted by word of mouth, such as a fable, legend, narrative, story, or tale (especially a poetic tale). | [noun] A story or set of stories relevant to or having a significant truth or meaning for a particular culture, religion, society, or other group; a myth, a mythology. | [noun] (by extension) A set of assumptions or beliefs about something. MYXOID (19) MYXOMA (20) [noun] A tumor of primitive connective tissue. NAMELY (11) [adverb] Specifically; that is to say. | [adverb] Especially, above all. NAMERS (8) NAMING (9) [verb] (ditransitive) To give a name to. | [verb] To mention, specify. | [verb] To identify as relevant or important NANISM (8) NAPALM (10) [noun] A highly flammable, viscous substance, designed to stick to the body while burning, used in warfare as an incendiary especially in wooded areas. | [verb] To spray or attack with this substance. NEUMES (8) [noun] Any of a set of signs used in early musical notation. | [noun] A sequence of notes to be sung to one syllable. NEUMIC (10) NIMBLE (10) [adjective] Adept at taking or grasping | [adjective] Quick and light in movement or action. | [adjective] Quick-witted and alert. NIMBLY (13) [adverb] In a nimble manner NIMBUS (10) [noun] A circle of light; a halo. | [noun] A gray rain cloud. NIMMED (11) NIMROD (9) [noun] A foolish person; an idiot. NIZAMS (17) [noun] The hereditary sovereign of Hyderabad, a former state of India. | [noun] The Turkish regular army; a soldier in the Turkish army. NOMADS (9) [noun] A member of a society or class who herd animals from pasture to pasture with no fixed home. | [noun] A person who changes residence frequently. | [noun] A player who changes teams frequently. NOMINA (8) NOMISM (10) NONCOM (10) [noun] A non-commissioned officer, such as a sergeant (army) or petty officer (navy). NONMAN (8) NONMEN (8) NORMAL (8) [noun] A line or vector that is perpendicular to another line, surface, or plane. | [noun] A person who is normal, who fits into mainstream society, as opposed to those who live alternative lifestyles. | [noun] The usual state. NORMED (9) [adjective] Of a mathematical structure, endowed with a norm. | [adjective] Of a data set that has been adjusted to a norm. NUDISM (9) NUMBAT (10) [noun] A small marsupial carnivore, Myrmecobius fasciatus, endemic to western Australia, that eats almost exclusively termites. NUMBED (11) [verb] To cause to become numb (physically or emotionally). | [verb] To cause (a feeling) to be less intense. | [verb] To cause (the mind, faculties, etc.) to be less acute. NUMBER (10) [noun] An abstract entity used to describe quantity. | [noun] A numeral: a symbol for a non-negative integer. | [noun] An element of one of several sets: natural numbers, integers, rational numbers, real numbers, complex numbers, and sometimes extensions such as hypercomplex numbers, etc. | [adjective] Physically unable to feel, not having the power of sensation. NUMBLY (13) NUMINA (8) [noun] A divinity, especially a local or presiding god. | [noun] An influence or phenomenon at once mystical and transcendant. NUTMEG (9) [noun] An evergreen tree (Myristica fragrans) cultivated in the East Indies for its spicy seeds. | [noun] The aromatic seed of this tree, used as a spice. | [noun] A grey-brown colour. NYMPHA (16) NYMPHO (16) [verb] To become obsessed about sex. | [noun] A woman with an excessive libido. NYMPHS (16) [noun] (Greek, Roman) Any female nature spirit associated with water, forests, grotto, wind, etc. | [noun] A young girl, especially one who is attractive, beautiful or graceful. | [noun] The larva of certain insects. OAKUMS (12) OBIISM (10) ODEUMS (9) [noun] An ancient Greek or Roman building used for performances of music and poetry. | [noun] A theatre or concert hall. ODIUMS (9) OEDEMA (9) [noun] An excessive accumulation of serum in tissue spaces or a body cavity | [noun] A similar swelling in plants caused by excessive accumulation of water OGHAMS (12) [noun] A single character in this alphabet. OGRISM (9) OHMAGE (12) OIDIUM (9) [noun] A fragile spore produced by some fungi. | [noun] The fungus Erysiphe necator (= Uncinula necator), which produces powdery mildew in grapes. OILMAN (8) [noun] Somebody involved in the production, refinement or delivery of oil; such as an oil field worker or executive, or the owner of an oil well. | [noun] A retailer who sells vegetable oils, and food preserved in oil OILMEN (8) [noun] Somebody involved in the production, refinement or delivery of oil; such as an oil field worker or executive, or the owner of an oil well. | [noun] A retailer who sells vegetable oils, and food preserved in oil OLEUMS (8) OMASUM (10) [noun] The third part of the stomach of a ruminant. OMBERS (10) OMBRES (10) OMEGAS (9) [noun] The twenty-fourth letter of the Classical and the Modern Greek alphabet, and the twenty-eighth letter of the Old and the Ancient Greek alphabet, i.e. the last letter of every Greek alphabet. Uppercase version: Ω; lowercase: ω. | [noun] (often capitalized) The end; the final, last or ultimate in a sequence. | [noun] Angular velocity; symbol: ω. OMELET (8) [noun] A dish made with beaten eggs cooked in a frying pan without stirring, flipped over to cook on both sides, and sometimes filled or topped with cheese, chives or other foodstuffs. | [noun] A form of shellcode that searches the address space for multiple small blocks of data ("eggs") and recombines them into a larger block to be executed. OMENED (9) OMENTA (8) [noun] Either of two folds of the peritoneum that support the viscera. OOGAMY (12) OOMIAC (10) OOMIAK (12) [noun] A large, open boat made of skins stretched over a wooden frame that is propelled by paddles; used by the Eskimos for transportation. OOMPAH (13) [noun] A genre of Germanic music (especially Bavarian music) typically involving brass instruments. | [noun] A bassline characteristic of such music, alternating lower and higher notes or chords on the beat, or in a mid-high-low-high sequence. | [verb] To produce an oom-pah sound. OOMPHS (13) OPIUMS (10) OPTIMA (10) [noun] The best or most favorable condition, or the greatest amount or degree possible under specific sets of comparable circumstances. OPTIME (10) ORGASM (9) [noun] A spasm or sudden contraction. | [noun] A rush of sexual excitement; now specifically, the climax or peak of sexual pleasure, which occurs during sexual activity and which in males may include ejaculation and in females vaginal contractions. | [noun] A creamy white alcoholic cocktail containing amaretto, Irish cream, and coffee liqueur. ORMERS (8) [noun] An abalone or sea-ear, particularly Haliotis tuberculata, common in the Channel Islands. ORMOLU (8) [noun] Golden or gilded brass or bronze used for decorative purposes. | [verb] To decorate with gilded ormolu articles. | [adjective] Made from golden or gilded brass or bronze. OSMICS (10) OSMIUM (10) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Os) with atomic number 76: a hard, brittle, heavy, bluish-white transition metal found as a trace element in alloys, mostly in platinum ores. | [noun] A single atom of this element. OSMOLE (8) OSMOLS (8) OSMOSE (8) [verb] To diffuse by osmosis. | [verb] To cause to diffuse by osmosis. | [noun] The net movement of solvent molecules, usually water, from a region of lower solute concentration to a region of higher solute concentration through a partially permeable membrane. OSMOUS (8) OSMUND (9) OSTIUM (8) [noun] A small opening or orifice, as in a body organ or passage. | [noun] Any of the small openings or pores in a sponge. | [noun] The mouth of a river. OSTOMY (11) [noun] A surgical procedure to provide an exit point for the waste of an organism. | [noun] An exit point created by such surgical procedure. OUTMAN (8) [verb] To have more people than (one's competitor); to outnumber in men. | [verb] To outdo in manliness. OXIMES (15) PABLUM (12) [noun] Anything overly bland or simplistic, especially speech or writing. | [noun] Nourishment. PAJAMA (17) [noun] A pair of pajamas. | [noun] Clothes for wearing to bed and sleeping in, usually consisting of a loose-fitting shirt and pants/trousers. | [noun] Loose-fitting trousers worn by both sexes in various southern Asian countries including India. PALMAR (10) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the palm of the hand or comparable appendage | [adjective] In the direction of the palm | [adjective] Of or relating to the underside of the wings of birds. PALMED (11) [verb] To hold or conceal something in the palm of the hand, e.g, for an act of sleight of hand or to steal something. | [verb] To hold something without bending the fingers significantly. | [verb] To move something with the palm of the hand. PALMER (10) [noun] A pilgrim who had been to the Holy Land and who brought back a palm branch in signification; a wandering religious votary. | [noun] Any small, terrestrial invertebrate, usually an agricultural pest and having many legs and a hairy body. | [noun] A gelechiid moth, Dichomeris ligulella, destructive to fruit trees. | [noun] A ferule used to punish schoolboys by striking their palms. | [noun] One who palms or cheats, as at cards or dice. PAMPAS (12) [noun] The extensive plains of South America south of the Amazon. PAMPER (12) [verb] To treat with excessive care, attention or indulgence. | [verb] To feed luxuriously. PANAMA (10) PARAMO (10) [noun] A treeless grassland ecosystem covering extensive high areas of equatorial mountains, especially in South America. PASSIM (10) [adverb] Throughout or frequently | [adverb] Here and there PAYNIM (13) [noun] A pagan or heathen, especially a Muslim, or a Jew. PELMET (10) [noun] An interior decorative item that is placed above a window to hide the curtain mechanisms, visually similar to a cornice or valance. PENMAN (10) [noun] A scribe, or person who copies texts | [noun] A journalist or other author PENMEN (10) [noun] A scribe, or person who copies texts | [noun] A journalist or other author PEPLUM (12) [noun] A genre of Italian films based on historical or biblical epics. | [noun] An individual film in this genre. | [noun] A peplos, an Ancient Greek garment formed of a tubular piece of cloth folded back upon itself halfway down so that the top of the tube is worn around the waist, and the bottom covers the legs down to the ankles; the open top is then worn over the shoulders, and draped, in folds, down to the waist. Compare the Roman palla. PERMED (11) [verb] To give hair a perm, using heat, chemicals etc. | [adjective] That has been given a permanent wave PERMIT (10) [noun] An artifact or document rendering something allowed or legal. | [noun] Formal permission. | [verb] To allow (something) to happen, to give permission for. | [noun] A pompano of the species Trachinotus falcatus. PHENOM (13) [noun] Someone or something that is phenomenal, especially a young player in sports like baseball, American football, basketball, tennis, and golf. | [noun] One who is hip and fashionable. PHLEGM (14) [noun] One of the four humors making up the body in ancient and mediaeval medicine; said to be cold and moist, and often identified with mucus. | [noun] Viscid mucus produced by the body, later especially mucus expelled from the bronchial passages by coughing. | [noun] A watery distillation, especially one obtained from plant matter; an aqueous solution. PHLOEM (13) [noun] A vascular tissue in land plants primarily responsible for the distribution of sugars and nutrients manufactured in the shoot PHYLUM (16) [noun] A rank in the classification of organisms, below kingdom and above class; also called a division, especially in describing plants; a taxon at that rank | [noun] A large division of possibly related languages, or a major language family which is not subordinate to another. PILEUM (10) PIMPED (13) [verb] To act as a procurer of prostitutes; to pander. | [verb] To prostitute someone. | [verb] To excessively customize something, especially a vehicle, according to ghetto standards (also pimp out). PIMPLE (12) [noun] An inflamed (raised and colored) spot on the surface of the skin that is usually painful and fills with pus. | [noun] An annoying person. | [noun] Scotch (whisky) PIMPLY (15) PITMAN (10) [noun] (plural "pitmen") One who works in a pit, as in mining, in sawing timber, etc. | [noun] (plural "pitmen" or "pitmans") A connecting rod in machinery, especially in a sawmill. PITMEN (10) [noun] (plural "pitmen") One who works in a pit, as in mining, in sawing timber, etc. | [noun] (plural "pitmen" or "pitmans") A connecting rod in machinery, especially in a sawmill. PLASMA (10) [noun] A state of matter consisting of partially ionized gas and electrons | [noun] A clear component of blood or lymph containing fibrin | [noun] Blood plasma, free of suspended cells, used in transfusions PLASMS (10) PLENUM (10) [noun] A space that is completely filled with matter. | [noun] A state of fullness, a great quantity (of something). | [noun] A legislative meeting (especially of the Communist Party) in which all members are present. PLUMBS (12) [noun] The fruit and its tree. | [noun] Extended senses. | [noun] A little mass of lead, or the like, attached to a line, and used by builders, etc., to indicate a vertical direction. PLUMED (11) [verb] To adorn, cover, or furnish with feathers or plumes, or as if with feathers or plumes. | [verb] Chiefly of a bird: to arrange and preen the feathers of, specifically in preparation for flight; hence , to prepare for (something). | [verb] (by extension) To congratulate (oneself) proudly, especially concerning something unimportant or when taking credit for another person's effort; to self-congratulate. PLUMES (10) [noun] A feather of a bird, especially a large or showy one used as a decoration. | [noun] A cluster of feathers worn as an ornament, especially on a helmet; a hackle. | [noun] A token of honour or prowess; that on which one prides oneself; a prize or reward. PLUMMY (15) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or characteristic of plums | [adjective] Desirable; profitable; advantageous | [adjective] (of a voice) rich, mellow and carefully articulated, especially with an upper-class accent PLUMPS (12) [verb] To grow plump; to swell out. | [verb] To make plump; to fill (out) or support; often with up. | [verb] To cast or let drop all at once, suddenly and heavily. PNEUMA (10) [noun] A neume. | [noun] The spirit or soul. | [noun] One of three levels of a human being, the spirit, along with the body and soul. PODIUM (11) [noun] A platform on which to stand, as when conducting an orchestra or preaching at a pulpit. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) A stand used to hold notes when speaking publicly. | [noun] A steepled platform upon which the three competitors with the best results may stand when being handed their medals or prize. POGROM (11) [noun] A riot aimed at persecution or massacre of a particular ethnic or religious group, usually Jews. | [noun] An antisemitic hate crime with a large death toll, irrespective of the number of perpetrators. | [verb] To persecute or massacre a particular group of people. POMACE (12) [noun] The pulp that remains after a fruit has been pressed to extract the juice (or a nut, etc., has been pressed to extract the oil). | [noun] Fish scrap. POMADE (11) [noun] A greasy or waxy substance that is used to style hair, making it look slick and shiny. | [noun] Any medicinal ointment. | [verb] To anoint with pomade; to use pomade to style (hair). POMELO (10) [noun] The large fruit of the Citrus maxima (syn. C. grandis), native to South Asia and Southeast Asia, with a thick green or yellow rind, a thick white pith, and semi-sweet translucent pale flesh. | [noun] The tree which produces this fruit. | [noun] The grapefruit. POMMEE (12) POMMEL (12) [noun] The upper front brow of a saddle. | [noun] A rounded knob or handle. | [noun] The bat used in the game of knurr and spell or trap ball. POMMIE (12) [noun] (sometimes pejorative) An English immigrant; a pom. | [adjective] (sometimes derogatory) English; British. POMPOM (14) [noun] A decorative ball made of pieces of soft fabric bound at the centre, most notably used in cheerleading. POMPON (12) [noun] A bundle of yarn, string, ribbon, etc. tied in the middle and left loose at the ends, so as to form a puff or ball, as for decoration or a showy prop for cheerleading. | [noun] A hardy garden chrysanthemum with button-like flower heads. | [noun] Any of several dwarf varieties of the Provence rose. PORISM (10) POSSUM (10) [noun] An opossum, a marsupial of the family Didelphidae of the Americas. | [noun] Any of the marsupials in several families of the order Diprotodontia of Australia and neighboring islands. POTMAN (10) [noun] A man employed in a public house to collect empty pots or glasses; a waiter in a similar establishment POTMEN (10) [noun] A man employed in a public house to collect empty pots or glasses; a waiter in a similar establishment PRAAMS (10) [noun] A flat-bottomed barge used on shallow shores to convey cargo to and from ships that cannot enter the harbour. | [noun] A similar barge used as platform for cannons in shallow waters which seagoing warships cannot enter. | [noun] A type of dinghy with a flat bow. PREAMP (12) [noun] Preamplifier | [verb] Preamplify PREARM (10) PRELIM (10) [noun] Something preliminary, such as a trial, report, race, etc. | [adjective] Preliminary PREMAN (10) PREMED (11) [noun] An undergraduate college academic program, typically in biochemistry or related sciences, that prepares a student to pursue graduate or post-graduate studies in medicine. | [noun] A premedication. PREMEN (10) PREMIE (10) PREMIX (17) [noun] A blend of components that has been mixed in advance of use or of further processing. | [noun] A manufactured beverage consisting of alcohol and soft drink, milk or other non-alcoholic drinks; an alcopop. | [verb] To blend in advance. PRIMAL (10) [noun] A primal cut (of meat). | [verb] To take part in primal therapy. | [adjective] Being the first in time or in history. PRIMAS (10) PRIMED (11) [verb] To prepare a mechanism for its main work. | [verb] To apply a coat of primer paint to. | [verb] To be renewed. PRIMER (10) [noun] A prayer or devotional book intended for laity, initially an abridgment of the breviary and manual including the hours of the Virgin Mary, 15 gradual and 7 penitential psalms, the litany, the placebo and dirige forming the office of the dead, and the commendations. | [noun] Similar works issued in England for private prayer in accordance with the Book of Common Prayer. | [noun] A children's book intended to teach literacy: how to read, write, and spell. | [noun] Any substance or device, such as priming wire or blasting cap, used to ignite gunpowder or other explosive. | [adjective] First in time, initial, early. PRIMES (10) [noun] The first hour of daylight; the first canonical hour. | [noun] The religious service appointed to this hour. | [noun] The early morning generally. PRIMLY (13) PRIMOS (10) [noun] The principal part of a duet. PRIMPS (12) [verb] To spend time improving one's appearance, often in front of a mirror. | [verb] To dress in an affected manner. PRIMUS (10) [noun] One of the bishops of the Scottish Episcopal Church, who presides at the meetings of the bishops, and has certain privileges but no metropolitan authority. PRISMS (10) [noun] A polyhedron with parallel ends of the same size and shape, the other faces being parallelogram-shaped sides. | [noun] A transparent block in the shape of a prism (typically with triangular ends), used to split or reflect light. | [noun] A crystal in which the faces are parallel to the vertical axis. PROEMS (10) [noun] An introduction, preface or preamble. PROMOS (10) [noun] An interview or monologue intended to promote a character or an upcoming match. | [noun] An advancement in rank or position. | [noun] Dissemination of information in order to increase its popularity. PROMPT (12) [noun] A reminder or cue. | [noun] A time limit given for payment of an account for produce purchased, this limit varying with different goods. | [noun] A sequence of characters that appears on a monitor to indicate that the computer is ready to receive input. PSALMS (10) [noun] A sacred song; a poetical composition for use in the praise or worship of God. | [noun] One of the hymns by David and others, collected into one book of the Old Testament, or a modern metrical version of such a hymn for public worship. PUMELO (10) PUMICE (12) [noun] A light, porous type of pyroclastic igneous rock, formed during explosive volcanic eruptions when liquid lava is ejected into water or air as a froth containing masses of gas bubbles. As the lava solidifies, the bubbles are frozen into the rock. | [verb] To abrade or roughen with pumice. PUMMEL (12) [noun] The upper front brow of a saddle. | [noun] A rounded knob or handle. | [noun] The bat used in the game of knurr and spell or trap ball. PUMPED (13) [verb] To use a pump to move (liquid or gas). | [verb] (often followed by up) To fill with air. | [verb] To move rhythmically, as the motion of a pump. PUMPER (12) [noun] One who pumps something. | [noun] A steroid or other drug taken to improve blood flow and increase muscular size. PURISM (10) [noun] An insistence on pure or unmixed forms. | [noun] An insistence on the traditionally correct way of doing things. | [noun] An example of purist language etc. PYEMIA (13) [noun] A type of septicemia caused usually by the presence of Staphylococcus bacteria in the bloodstream; characterised by metastatic abscesses and other symptoms associated with septicemia. PYEMIC (15) QUALMS (17) [noun] A feeling of apprehension, doubt, fear etc. | [noun] A sudden sickly feeling; queasiness. | [noun] A prick of the conscience; a moral scruple, a pang of guilt. (Now often in negative constructions.) QUALMY (20) QUORUM (17) [noun] The minimum number of members required for a group to officially conduct business and to cast votes, often but not necessarily a majority or supermajority. | [noun] A selected body of persons. RACEME (10) [noun] An indeterminate inflorescence in which the flowers are arranged along a single central axis. RACISM (10) [noun] Belief that there are distinct human races with inherent differences which determine their abilities, and generally that some are superior and others inferior. | [noun] The policies, practices, or systems (e.g. government or political) promoting this belief or promoting the dominance of one or more races over others. | [noun] Prejudice or discrimination based upon race or ethnicity; an action of such discrimination. RADIUM (9) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Ra) with an atomic number of 88. It is a soft, shiny and silvery radioactive alkaline earth metal. | [noun] A type of cloth woven from silk or synthetic yarn, often with a shiny appearance. | [verb] To treat (a tumour, etc.) with radium. RADOME (9) [noun] A radar dome. RAGMAN (9) [noun] A person who collects and sells unwanted household items such as rags and other refuse for a living, a rag and bone man. | [noun] A statute issued by Edward I in 1276. | [noun] A document having many names or seals, such as a papal bull. RAGMEN (9) [noun] A person who collects and sells unwanted household items such as rags and other refuse for a living, a rag and bone man. RAMATE (8) RAMBLE (10) [noun] A leisurely stroll; a recreational walk in the countryside. | [noun] A rambling; an instance of someone talking at length without direction. | [noun] A bed of shale over the seam of coal. RAMEES (8) RAMETS (8) RAMIES (8) [noun] (usually countable) A tall, tropical Asian perennial herb, Boehmeria nivea, cultivated for its fibrous stems. | [noun] (usually uncountable) fibre extracted from this plant, resembling flax. RAMIFY (14) [verb] To divide into branches or subdivisions. | [verb] To spread or diversify into multiple fields or categories. RAMJET (15) [noun] A jet engine in which forward motion forces air into an inlet, compressing it (as opposed to having a pump type device compressing the air for combustion with fuel), and where combustion is subsonic. RAMMED (11) [verb] To collide with (an object), usually with the intention of damaging it or disabling its function. | [verb] To strike (something) hard, especially with an implement. | [verb] To fill or compact by pounding or driving. RAMMER (10) RAMOSE (8) [adjective] Having branches; branching RAMOUS (8) RAMPED (11) [verb] To behave violently; to rage. | [verb] To spring; to leap; to bound, rear, or prance; to move swiftly or violently. | [verb] To climb, like a plant; to creep up. RAMROD (9) [noun] Device used with muzzleloaders to push the projectile up against the propellant. | [noun] Ranch or trail foreman, usually the first or second person in charge. The person responsible for getting the work done. | [noun] An erect penis. RAMSON (8) RAMTIL (8) RANDOM (9) [noun] A roving motion; course without definite direction; lack of rule or method; chance. | [noun] Speed, full speed; impetuosity, force. | [noun] The full range of a bullet or other projectile; hence, the angle at which a weapon is tilted to allow the greatest range. RANSOM (8) [noun] Money paid for the freeing of a hostage. | [noun] The release of a captive, or of captured property, by payment of a consideration. | [noun] A sum paid for the pardon of some great offence and the discharge of the offender; also, a fine paid in lieu of corporal punishment. REALMS (8) [noun] An abstract sphere of influence, real or imagined. | [noun] The domain of a certain abstraction. | [noun] A scope of operation in networking or security. REAMED (9) [verb] To cream; mantle; foam; froth. | [verb] To enlarge a hole, especially using a reamer; to bore a hole wider. | [verb] To shape or form, especially using a reamer. REAMER (8) [noun] A tool for boring a hole wider. | [noun] A device for rendering citrus juice. | [noun] A tool used to scrape carbon deposit from the bowl of a pipe. REARMS (8) [verb] To replace or restore the weapons or arms of a previously defeated, or disarmed army, country, person or other body. RECOMB (12) RECTUM (10) [noun] The terminal part of the large intestine through which feces pass after exiting the colon. REDEEM (9) [verb] To recover ownership of something by buying it back. | [verb] To liberate by payment of a ransom. | [verb] To set free by force. REEMIT (8) REFILM (11) REFORM (11) [noun] The change of something that is defective, broken, inefficient or otherwise negative, in order to correct or improve it | [verb] To put into a new and improved form or condition; to restore to a former good state, or bring from bad to good; to change from worse to better | [verb] To return to a good state; to amend or correct one's own character or habits REGIME (9) [noun] Mode of rule or management. | [noun] A form of government, or the government in power. | [noun] A period of rule. REGNUM (9) REHEMS (11) RELUME (8) [verb] To rekindle; to relight (literally or figuratively). | [verb] To make clear or bright again. REMADE (9) [verb] To make again. | [verb] To make a new, especially updated, version of (a film, video game, etc.). REMAIL (8) REMAIN (8) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) That which is left; relic; remainder. | [noun] (in the plural) That which is left of a human being after the life is gone; relics; a dead body. | [noun] Posthumous works or productions, especially literary works. REMAKE (12) [noun] A new version of something. | [noun] A new, especially updated, version of a film, video game, etc. | [verb] To make again. REMAND (9) [noun] The act of sending an accused person back into custody whilst awaiting trial. | [noun] The act of an appellate court sending a matter back to a lower court for review or disposal. | [verb] To send a prisoner back to custody. REMANS (8) [verb] To supply with new personnel. REMAPS (10) [verb] To assign differently; to relabel or repurpose. | [verb] To map again. REMARK (12) [noun] An act of pointing out or noticing; notice or observation. | [noun] An expression, in speech or writing, of something remarked or noticed; a mention of something | [noun] A casual observation, comment, or statement | [noun] A mark that replaces another mark. REMATE (8) REMEDY (12) [noun] Something that corrects or counteracts. | [noun] The legal means to recover a right or to prevent or obtain redress for a wrong. | [noun] A medicine, application, or treatment that relieves or cures a disease. REMEET (8) REMELT (8) REMEND (9) REMIND (9) [verb] To cause one to experience a memory (of someone or something); to bring to the notice or consideration (of a person). REMINT (8) REMISE (8) [noun] A return or surrender of a claim, property etc. | [verb] To send or give back. | [verb] To surrender all interest in a property by executing a deed, to quitclaim. | [noun] A house for covered carriages; a chaise house. REMISS (8) [adjective] At fault; failing to fulfill responsibility, duty, or obligations. | [adjective] Not energetic or exact in duty or business; careless; tardy; slack; hence, lacking earnestness or activity; languid; slow. REMITS (8) [noun] Terms of reference; set of responsibilities; scope. | [noun] A communication from a superior court to a subordinate court. REMIXT (15) REMOLD (9) [verb] Mold again, apply a new mold to REMORA (8) [noun] Any of various elongate fish from the family Echeneidae, the dorsal fin of which is in the form of a suction disc that can take a firm hold against the skin of larger marine animals. | [noun] A serpent. | [noun] A delay; a hindrance, an obstacle. REMOTE (8) [noun] An element of broadcast programming originating away from the station's or show's control room. | [verb] To connect to a computer from a remote location. | [adjective] At a distance; disconnected. REMOVE (11) [noun] The act of removing something. | [noun] (archaic) Removing a dish at a meal in order to replace it with the next course, a dish thus replaced, or the replacement. | [noun] (at some public schools) A division of the school, especially the form prior to last REMUDA (9) [noun] A herd of horses from which the horses to be used for a particular purpose are selected. RENAME (8) [noun] An instance of renaming. | [verb] To give a new name to. REPUMP (12) RESUME (8) [verb] To take back possession of (something). | [verb] To summarise. | [verb] To start (something) again that has been stopped or paused from the point at which it was stopped or paused; continue, carry on. | [noun] A summary or synopsis. RETEAM (8) RETEMS (8) RETIME (8) [verb] To reschedule for another time. | [verb] To change the timing or duration of. RETRIM (8) REVAMP (13) [noun] A renovation, revision or improvement. | [verb] To renovate, revise, improve or renew. REWARM (11) RHEUMS (11) RHEUMY (14) [adjective] Of, relating to, or producing rheum from the mucous membranes; watery RHOMBI (13) [noun] A parallelogram having all sides of equal length. | [noun] In early Greek religion, an instrument whirled on the end of a string similar to a bullroarer. | [noun] Any of several flatfishes, including the brill and turbot, once considered part of the genus Rhombus, now in Scophthalmus. RHOMBS (13) [noun] A rhombus. | [noun] A rhombohedron. RHUMBA (13) [noun] A slow-paced Cuban partner dance in 4:4 time. | [verb] To dance the rumba RHUMBS (13) [noun] A line which crosses successive meridians at a constant angle | [noun] One of the 32 points of the compass (compass points) | [noun] A unit of angular measure equal to 1/32 of a circle or 11.25° RHYMED (15) [verb] To compose or treat in verse; versify. | [verb] (followed by with) Of a word, to be pronounced identically with another from the vowel in its stressed syllable to the end. | [verb] Of two or more words, to be pronounced identically from the vowel in the stressed syllable of each to the end of each. RHYMER (14) RHYMES (14) [noun] Rhyming verse (poetic form) | [noun] A thought expressed in verse; a verse; a poem; a tale told in verse. | [noun] A word that rhymes with another. RHYTHM (17) [noun] The variation of strong and weak elements (such as duration, accent) of sounds, notably in speech or music, over time; a beat or meter. | [noun] A specifically defined pattern of such variation. | [noun] A flow, repetition or regularity. RIMERS (8) RIMIER (8) [adjective] Coated in rime. RIMING (9) [verb] To compose or treat in verse; versify. | [verb] (followed by with) Of a word, to be pronounced identically with another from the vowel in its stressed syllable to the end. | [verb] Of two or more words, to be pronounced identically from the vowel in the stressed syllable of each to the end of each. | [adjective] That rimes (i.e., covers with rime or hoar frost) something. | [noun] (done to wool or yarn) The action or process of dying red-brown by steeping in water with alder twigs. | [noun] The process of riming (i.e., covering with rime or hoar frost). RIMMED (11) [verb] To form a rim on. | [verb] To follow the contours, possibly creating a circuit. | [verb] (of a ball) To roll around a rim. RIMMER (10) RIMOSE (8) RIMOUS (8) RIMPLE (10) ROAMED (9) [verb] To wander or travel freely and with no specific destination. | [verb] To use a network or service from different locations or devices. | [verb] To transmit (resources) between different locations or devices, to allow comparable usage from any of them. ROAMER (8) RODMAN (9) RODMEN (9) ROMANO (8) [noun] A hard, sharp cheese served grated as a garnish ROMANS (8) ROMEOS (8) ROMPED (11) [verb] To play about roughly, energetically or boisterously. | [verb] (Often used with down) To press forcefully, to encourage vehemently, to oppress. | [verb] To win easily. ROMPER (10) [noun] Someone who romps or frolics. | [noun] A ship that has moved far ahead of a convoy; see also straggler. | [noun] A onesie. | [verb] To abduct (a victim) to a room where they are tortured and murdered. ROOMED (9) [verb] To reside, especially as a boarder or tenant. | [verb] To assign to a room; to allocate a room to. ROOMER (8) [noun] A person who rents a room. | [noun] (in combination) A residence having the specified number of rooms. | [adverb] At a greater distance; farther off. ROOMIE (8) [noun] A roommate. RUMAKI (12) RUMBAS (10) [noun] A slow-paced Cuban partner dance in 4:4 time. | [verb] To dance the rumba RUMBLE (10) [noun] A low, heavy, continuous sound, such as that of thunder or a hungry stomach. | [noun] A street fight or brawl. | [noun] A rotating cask or box in which small articles are smoothed or polished by friction against each other. RUMBLY (13) RUMENS (8) [noun] The first compartment of the stomach of a cow or other ruminants. RUMINA (8) [noun] The first compartment of the stomach of a cow or other ruminants. RUMMER (10) [noun] A large drinking-glass studded with prunts to ensure a safe grip, popular in the Rhineland and the Netherlands from the 15th century to the 17th century. | [adjective] Fine, excellent, valuable. | [adjective] Strange, peculiar. RUMORS (8) [noun] A statement or claim of questionable accuracy, from no known reliable source, usually spread by word of mouth. | [noun] Information or misinformation of the kind contained in such claims. | [verb] (usually used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip. RUMOUR (8) [noun] A statement or claim of questionable accuracy, from no known reliable source, usually spread by word of mouth. | [noun] Information or misinformation of the kind contained in such claims. | [verb] (usually used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip. RUMPLE (10) [noun] A wrinkle. | [verb] To make wrinkled, particularly fabric. | [verb] To muss; to tousle. RUMPLY (13) RUMPUS (10) [noun] A noisy, sometimes violent disturbance; noise and confusion; a quarrel. | [noun] A rumpus room. SACHEM (13) [noun] The chief of a Native American tribe; a sagamore. | [noun] A leader in the Tammany Hall society. SACRUM (10) [noun] A large triangular bone at the base of the spine, located between the two ilia (wings of the pelvis) and formed from vertebrae that fuse in adulthood. SADISM (9) [noun] The enjoyment of inflicting pain or humiliation without pity. | [noun] Achievement of sexual gratification by inflicting pain or humiliation on others, or watching pain or humiliation inflicted on others. | [noun] (in general) Deliberate cruelty, either mental or physical, to other people, or to animals, regardless of whether for (sexual) gratification. SAIMIN (8) SALAAM (8) [noun] A low bow as a ceremonial act of deference. | [verb] To perform a salaam (to someone). | [interjection] A respectful ceremonial greeting performed mostly in Islamic countries. SALAMI (8) [noun] A large cured meat sausage of Italian origin, served in slices. | [noun] A grand slam. | [noun] A penis. SALMIS (8) [noun] A rich stew or ragout, especially of game. SALMON (8) [noun] One of several species of fish, typically of the Salmoninae subfamily, brownish above with silvery sides and delicate pinkish-orange flesh; they ascend rivers to spawn. | [noun] (plural salmons) A pale pinkish-orange colour, the colour of cooked salmon. | [noun] The upper bricks in a kiln which receive the least heat. SAMARA (8) [noun] The winged indehiscent fruit of trees such as the ash, elm or maple SAMBAR (10) [noun] A Southeast Asian deer, Cervus unicolor. | [noun] A food preparation common in southern India and Sri Lanka, made of vegetables and lentils (usually pigeon peas, also called toor dal) in a spicy tamarind and lentil flour soup base. SAMBAS (10) [noun] A Brazilian ballroom dance or dance style. | [noun] A Brazilian musical genre, to which the aforementioned dance is danced, which has its roots in West Africa via the slave trade. | [verb] To dance the samba. SAMBOS (10) [noun] A sandwich. SAMBUR (10) SAMECH (13) SAMEKH (15) SAMEKS (12) SAMIEL (8) SAMITE (8) [noun] A material of rich silk, sometimes with gold threads, especially prized during the Middle Ages. SAMLET (8) SAMOSA (8) [noun] A snack, of Indian origin, consisting of a deep-fried triangular turnover filled with vegetables (especially potatoes) or meat. SAMPAN (10) [noun] A flat-bottomed Chinese wooden boat propelled by two oars. SAMPLE (10) [noun] A part or snippet of something taken or presented for inspection, or shown as evidence of the quality of the whole; a specimen. | [noun] A subset of a population selected for measurement, observation or questioning, to provide statistical information about the population. | [noun] A small quantity of food for tasting, typically given away for free. SAMSHU (11) SCAMPI (12) [noun] A Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus). | [noun] Any similar species of genus Nephrops or similar prawns. SCAMPS (12) [noun] A rascal, swindler, or rogue; a ne'er-do-well. | [noun] A mischievous person, especially a playful, impish youngster. | [verb] To skimp; to do something in a skimpy or slipshod fashion. SCHEMA (13) [noun] An outline or image universally applicable to a general conception, under which it is likely to be presented to the mind (for example, a body schema). | [noun] A formal description of the structure of a database: the names of the tables, the names of the columns of each table, and the data type and other attributes of each column. | [noun] (markup languages) A formal description of data, data types, and data file structures, such as XML schemas for XML files. SCHEME (13) [noun] A systematic plan of future action. | [noun] A plot or secret, devious plan. | [noun] An orderly combination of related parts. SCHISM (13) [noun] A split or separation within a group or organization, typically caused by discord. | [noun] A formal division or split within a religious body. | [noun] A split within Christianity whereby a group no longer recognizes the Bishop of Rome as the head of the Church, but shares essentially the same beliefs with the Church of Rome. In other words, a political split without the introduction of heresy. SCHMOE (13) SCHMOS (13) SCRAMS (10) [verb] To use the shutdown or safety device of a nuclear reactor. | [verb] (by extension) To use any emergency shutdown. | [verb] Leave in a hurry, go away. SCREAM (10) [noun] A loud, emphatic, exclamation of extreme emotion, especially horror, fear, excitement, or anger; it may comprise a word or a sustained, high-pitched vowel sound. | [noun] A form of singing associated with the metal and screamo styles of music. It is a loud, rough, distorted version of the voice; rather than the normal voice of the singer. | [noun] Used as an intensifier SCRIMP (12) [noun] A pinching miser; a niggard. | [verb] To make too small or short. | [verb] To limit or straiten; to put on short allowance. SCRIMS (10) [noun] A kind of light cotton or linen fabric, often woven in openwork patterns, -- used for curtains, etc,. | [noun] A large military scarf, usually camouflage coloured and used for concealment when not used as a scarf. | [noun] A woven, nonwoven or knitted fabric composed of continuous strands of material used for reinforcing or strengthening membranes. SCRUMS (10) [noun] A tightly-packed and disorderly crowd of people. | [noun] Specifically used in the Canadian media to describe a tightly-packed group of reporters surrounding a member of the Canadian House of Commons while in the Parliament Buildings. | [noun] In rugby union or rugby league, all the forwards joined together in an organised way. Also known as a scrummage. SCUMMY (15) SCUTUM (10) [noun] An oblong shield made of boards or wickerwork covered with leather, with sometimes an iron rim; carried chiefly by the heavy-armed infantry of the Roman army. | [noun] A scute. | [noun] A shield-like protection, such as the scutum protecting the back of a hard tick (cf. alloscutum, conscutum) SEAMAN (8) [noun] A mariner or sailor, one who mans a ship. Opposed to landman or landsman. | [noun] A person of the lowest rank in the Navy, below able seaman. | [noun] An enlisted rate in the United States Navy and United States Coast Guard, ranking below petty officer third class and above seaman apprentice. SEAMED (9) [adjective] Having or furnished with seams. | [verb] To put together with a seam. | [verb] To make the appearance of a seam in, as in knitting a stocking; hence, to knit with a certain stitch, like that in such knitting. | [adjective] (of a hawk) Out of condition; not in good condition. SEAMEN (8) [noun] A mariner or sailor, one who mans a ship. Opposed to landman or landsman. | [noun] A person of the lowest rank in the Navy, below able seaman. | [noun] An enlisted rate in the United States Navy and United States Coast Guard, ranking below petty officer third class and above seaman apprentice. SEAMER (8) [noun] A person who sews seams. | [noun] Part of a sewing machine that creates seams. | [noun] A bowler skilled at making the ball seam. SEBUMS (10) SEDUMS (9) [noun] Any of various succulent plants, of the genus Sedum, native to temperate zones; the stonecrop SEEMED (9) [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. | [verb] To befit; to beseem. SEEMER (8) SEEMLY (11) [adjective] (of behavior) Appropriate; suited to the occasion or purpose; becoming. | [adverb] Appropriately, fittingly. SEISMS (8) SELDOM (9) [adjective] Rare; infrequent. | [adverb] Infrequently, rarely. SEMEME (10) [noun] The smallest unit of meaning; especially the meaning expressed by a morpheme. SEMENS (8) SEMINA (8) SEMPLE (10) SEMPRE (10) [adverb] (as a qualifier) always, still; maintaining the same style SENSUM (8) SEPTUM (10) [noun] A wall separating two cavities; a partition | [noun] A partition that separates the cells of a fruit. | [noun] A partition that separates the cells of a (septated) fungus. SERMON (8) [noun] Religious discourse; a written or spoken address on a religious or moral matter. | [noun] A lengthy speech of reproval. | [verb] To discourse to or of, as in a sermon. SERUMS (8) [noun] The clear yellowish liquid obtained upon separating whole blood into its solid and liquid components after it has been allowed to clot. | [noun] Blood serum from the tissues of immunized animals, containing antibodies and used to transfer immunity to another individual, called antiserum. | [noun] A watery liquid from animal tissue, especially one that moistens the surface of serous membranes or that is exuded by such membranes when they become inflamed, such as in edema or a blister. SESAME (8) [noun] A tropical Asian plant (Sesamum indicum) bearing small flat seeds used as food and as a source of oil. | [noun] The seed of this plant. SEXISM (15) [noun] The belief that people of one sex or gender are inherently superior to others. | [noun] Discrimination or different treatment (e.g. in job opportunities) based on sex or gender. | [noun] Attitudes or actions that are based on or promote the expectation that people adhere to stereotypical social roles (gender roles) based on sex. SHALOM (11) [noun] Peace | [interjection] A traditional Jewish greeting or farewell. SHAMAN (11) [noun] A traditional (prescientific) faith healer. | [noun] A member of certain tribal societies who acts as a religious medium between the concrete and spirit worlds. SHAMAS (11) [noun] Copsychus malabaricus (white-rumped shama), a saxicoline songbird of India, glossy black with a white rump and brown underparts, and six other species in genus Copsychus. SHAMED (12) [verb] To cause to feel shame. | [verb] To cover with reproach or ignominy; to dishonor; to disgrace. | [verb] To drive or compel by shame. SHAMES (11) [noun] Uncomfortable or painful feeling due to recognition or consciousness of one's own impropriety or dishonor or something being exposed that should have been kept private. | [noun] Something to regret. | [noun] Reproach incurred or suffered; dishonour; ignominy; derision. | [noun] A sexton in a synagogue. SHAMMY (16) [noun] Chamois leather. | [noun] A cloth made of this leather. | [verb] To clean with a chamois leather cloth. SHAMOS (11) SHAMOY (14) SHAMUS (11) [noun] A private detective; originally, a policeman or police detective. SHAWMS (14) [noun] A mediaeval double-reed wind instrument with a conical wooden body. SHIMMY (16) [noun] A dance movement involving thrusting the shoulders back and forth alternately. | [noun] A dance that was popular in the 1920s. | [noun] An abnormal vibration, especially in the wheels of a vehicle. SHLUMP (13) [noun] Someone who is lazy, slovenly or dull-looking. SHMEAR (11) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SHMOES (11) [noun] A stupid or obnoxious person. SHMUCK (17) [noun] A jerk; a person who is unlikable, detestable, or contemptible because he or she is stupid, foolish, clumsy, oafish, inept, malicious, or unpleasant. | [noun] A deplorable, pitiful person; often in the form poor schmuck. SHOLOM (11) SHRIMP (13) [noun] Any of many swimming, often edible crustaceans, chiefly of the infraorder Caridea or the suborder Dendrobranchiata, with slender legs, long whiskers and a long abdomen. | [noun] The flesh of such crustaceans. | [noun] A small, puny or unimportant person. SIGMAS (9) [noun] The eighteenth letter of the Classical and Modern Greek alphabets, the twentieth letter of Old and Ancient. | [noun] The symbol Σ, used to indicate summation of a set or series. | [noun] The symbol σ, used to indicate one standard deviation from the mean, particularly in a normal distribution. SIMARS (8) SIMIAN (8) [noun] An ape or monkey, especially an anthropoid. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to apes; apelike. | [adjective] Bearing resemblance to an ape. SIMILE (8) [noun] A figure of speech in which one thing is compared to another, in the case of English generally using like or as. SIMLIN (8) SIMMER (10) [noun] The state or process of simmering. | [verb] To cook or undergo heating slowly at or below the boiling point. | [verb] To cause to cook or to cause to undergo heating slowly at or below the boiling point. | [noun] Someone who plays a sim (a simulation game), particularly The Sims. SIMNEL (8) SIMONY (11) [noun] The buying or selling of spiritual or sacred things, such as ecclesiastical offices, pardons, or consecrated objects. SIMOOM (10) [noun] A hot, dry, suffocating, dust-laden wind of the desert, particularly of Arabia, Syria, and neighboring countries, generated by the extreme heat of the parched deserts or sandy plains. SIMOON (8) [noun] A hot, dry, suffocating, dust-laden wind of the desert, particularly of Arabia, Syria, and neighboring countries, generated by the extreme heat of the parched deserts or sandy plains. SIMPER (10) [noun] A foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, or affected smile; a smirk. | [verb] To smile in a foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, coy, or smug manner. | [verb] To glimmer; to twinkle. SIMPLE (10) [noun] A herbal preparation made from one plant, as opposed to something made from more than one plant. | [noun] (by extension) A physician. | [noun] A simple or atomic proposition. SIMPLY (13) [adverb] (manner) In a simple way or state; considered in or by itself; without addition; alone. | [adverb] (manner) Plainly; without art or subtlety | [adverb] (manner) Weakly; foolishly; stupidly. SITCOM (10) [noun] An episodic comedy television program with a plot or storyline based around a particular humorous situation. | [noun] Acronym of single income, two children, oppressive/outrageous mortgage. SIXMOS (15) SKELMS (12) SKIMOS (12) SKIMPS (14) [verb] To mock, deride, scorn, scold, make fun of. | [verb] To slight; to do carelessly; to scamp. | [verb] To make insufficient allowance for; to scant; to scrimp. SKIMPY (17) [noun] (Western Australia) A barmaid who wears little clothing. | [adjective] Small or inadequate; not generous, or of a garment, very small, light, or revealing. SKYMAN (15) SKYMEN (15) SLALOM (8) [noun] The sport of skiing in a zigzag course through gates. (Often used attributively) | [noun] Any similar activity on other vehicles, including canoes and water skis. | [noun] A course used for the sport of slalom. SLIMED (9) [verb] To coat with slime. | [verb] To besmirch or disparage. | [verb] To carve (fish), removing the offal. SLIMES (8) [noun] Soft, moist earth or clay, having an adhesive quality; viscous mud; any substance of a dirty nature, that is moist, soft, and adhesive; bitumen; mud containing metallic ore, obtained in the preparatory dressing. | [noun] Any mucilaginous substance; or a mucus-like substance which exudes from the bodies of certain animals, such as snails or slugs. | [noun] A sneaky, unethical person; a slimeball. SLIMLY (11) SLIMSY (11) SLUMMY (13) [adjective] Like a slum; run-down, dirty, decrepit. SLUMPS (10) [noun] A heavy or helpless collapse; a slouching or drooping posture; a period of poor activity or performance, especially an extended period. | [noun] A measure of the fluidity of freshly mixed concrete, based on how much the concrete formed in a standard slump cone sags when the cone is removed. | [noun] A boggy place. SMACKS (14) [noun] A distinct flavor, especially if slight. | [noun] A slight trace of something; a smattering. | [noun] Heroin. SMALLS (8) [noun] Underwear. | [noun] Small goods. | [noun] (Oxford University slang) The preliminary examination for a degree. | [noun] Any part of something that is smaller or slimmer than the rest, now usually with anatomical reference to the back. SMALTI (8) SMALTO (8) SMALTS (8) SMARMS (10) [noun] Smarmy language or behavior. | [noun] A style of fan fiction in which characters are warm and caring toward each other but without sexual overtones. | [verb] To fawn, to be unctuous. SMARMY (13) [adjective] Falsely earnest, smug, or ingratiating. | [adjective] Unctuous, greasy, as hair from pomade SMARTS (8) [verb] To hurt or sting. | [verb] To cause a smart or sting in. | [verb] To feel a pungent pain of mind; to feel sharp pain or grief; be punished severely; to feel the sting of evil. SMARTY (11) [noun] An obnoxiously clever or quick-witted person. SMAZES (17) SMEARS (8) [verb] To spread (a substance, especially one that colours or is dirty) across a surface by rubbing. | [verb] To have a substance smeared on (a surface). | [verb] To damage someone's reputation by slandering, misrepresenting, or otherwise making false accusations about an individual, their statements, or their actions. SMEARY (11) SMEEKS (12) SMEGMA (11) [noun] A whitish sebaceous secretion that collects between the glans penis and foreskin or in the vulva. SMELLS (8) [noun] A sensation, pleasant or unpleasant, detected by inhaling air (or, the case of water-breathing animals, water) carrying airborne molecules of a substance. | [noun] The sense that detects odours. | [noun] A conclusion or intuition that a situation is wrong, more complex than it seems, or otherwise inappropriate. SMELLY (11) [adjective] Having a bad smell. | [adjective] Having a quality that arouses suspicion. | [adjective] (in extreme programming) Having signs that suggest a design problem; having a code smell. | [noun] A Short Magazine Lee Enfield rifle or one of its derivatives. SMELTS (8) [noun] Any small anadromous fish of the family Osmeridae, found in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and in lakes in North America and northern part of Europe. | [noun] A fool; a simpleton. | [noun] Production of metal, especially iron, from ore in a process that involves melting and chemical reduction of metal compounds into purified metal. SMERKS (12) SMIDGE (10) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMILAX (15) [noun] Any member of the Smilax genus of greenbriers. SMILED (9) [verb] To have (a smile) on one's face. | [verb] To express by smiling. | [verb] To express amusement, pleasure, or love and kindness. SMILER (8) SMILES (8) [noun] A facial expression comprised by flexing the muscles of both ends of one's mouth, often showing the front teeth, without vocalisation, and in humans is a common involuntary or voluntary expression of happiness, pleasure, amusement or anxiety. | [noun] Favour; propitious regard. | [noun] A drink bought by one person for another. SMILEY (11) [noun] A simplified representation of a smiling face. | [noun] A sequence of keyboard characters used to represent a happy mood, especially :) or :-) or other depiction of smiling. | [noun] An improvised street weapon consisting of a length of chain with padlocks and other heavy objects affixed to one end. SMIRCH (13) [noun] Dirt, or a stain. | [noun] A stain on somebody's reputation. | [verb] To dirty; to make dirty. | [noun] A chirp of radiation power from an astronomical body that has a smeared appearance on its plot in the time-frequency plane (usually associated with massive bodies orbiting supermassive black holes) SMIRKS (12) [noun] An uneven, often crooked smile that is insolent, self-satisfied or scornful | [noun] A forced or affected smile; a simper | [verb] To smile in a way that is affected, smug, insolent or contemptuous. SMIRKY (15) [adjective] Smirking, or as if smirking | [adjective] Smart; spruce. SMITER (8) SMITES (8) [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To strike down or kill with godly force. | [verb] To injure with divine power. SMITHS (11) [noun] A craftsperson who works metal into desired forms using a hammer and other tools, sometimes heating the metal to make it more workable, especially a blacksmith. | [noun] (by extension) One who makes anything; wright. | [noun] An artist. SMITHY (14) [noun] The location where a smith (particularly a blacksmith) works, a forge. | [verb] To forge, especially by hand SMOCKS (14) [noun] A type of undergarment worn by women; a shift or slip. | [noun] A blouse; a smock frock. | [noun] A loose garment worn as protection by a painter, etc. SMOGGY (13) SMOKED (13) [adjective] Of food, preserved by treatment with smoke. | [adjective] Of glass, tinted. | [verb] To inhale and exhale the smoke from a burning cigarette, cigar, pipe, etc. SMOKER (12) [noun] A person who smokes tobacco habitually. | [noun] A smoking car on a train. | [noun] An informal social gathering for men only, at which smoking tobacco is allowed. SMOKES (12) [noun] The visible vapor/vapour, gases, and fine particles given off by burning or smoldering material. | [noun] A cigarette. | [noun] Anything to smoke (e.g. cigarettes, marijuana, etc.) SMOKEY (15) [noun] A state trooper. | [adjective] Filled with smoke. | [adjective] Giving off smoke. SMOLTS (8) [noun] A young salmon two or three years old, when it has acquired its silvery color. SMOOCH (13) [noun] A kiss. | [verb] To kiss. | [verb] To soil, stain or smudge. SMOOTH (11) [noun] Something that is smooth, or that goes smoothly and easily. | [noun] A smoothing action. | [noun] A domestic animal having a smooth coat. SMUDGE (10) [noun] A blemish or smear, especially a dark or sooty one. | [noun] Dense smoke, such as that used for fumigation. | [noun] A heap of damp combustibles partially ignited and burning slowly, placed on the windward side of a house, tent, etc. to keep off mosquitoes or other insects. | [verb] To obscure by blurring; to smear. SMUDGY (13) [adjective] Marked with smudges. | [adjective] Like a thick smoke (such as is emitted by a smudge pot). SMUGLY (12) [adverb] In a self-satisfied manner. SMUTCH (13) SMUTTY (11) [verb] To make dirty; to soil. | [adjective] Soiled with smut; blackened, dirty. | [adjective] Obscene, indecent. SOCMAN (10) SOCMEN (10) SODIUM (9) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Na) with an atomic number of 11 and atomic weight of 22.98977. It is a soft, waxy, silvery, reactive alkali metal that is never found unbound in nature. SODOMS (9) SODOMY (12) [noun] Any of several forms of sexual intercourse held to be unnatural, particularly bestiality or historically homosexuality, but also (sometimes) anal or oral sex. | [noun] (in particular) Anal sex. SOLEMN (8) [adjective] Deeply serious and somber. | [adjective] Somberly impressive. | [adjective] Performed with great ceremony. SOLUMS (8) SOMATA (8) SOMBER (10) [verb] To make sombre or dark; to make shady. | [adjective] Dark; gloomy; shadowy, dimly lit. | [adjective] Dull or dark in colour or brightness. SOMBRE (10) [noun] Gloom; obscurity; duskiness. | [verb] To make sombre or dark; to make shady. | [adjective] Dark; gloomy; shadowy, dimly lit. SOMITE (8) [noun] One of the paired masses of mesoderm distributed along the sides of the neural tube that will eventually become dermis, skeletal muscle, or vertebrae. | [noun] A metamere, one of a series of segments, arranged longitudinally, of which some animals are composed. SPASMS (10) [noun] A sudden, involuntary contraction of a muscle, a group of muscles, or a hollow organ. | [noun] A violent, excruciating seizure of pain. | [noun] A sudden and temporary burst of energy, activity, or emotion. SPERMS (10) [noun] The reproductive cell or gamete of the male; a spermatozoon. | [noun] Semen; the generative substance of male animals. | [noun] Sperm oil; whale oil from a sperm whale; spermaceti. SPIREM (10) SPUMED (11) [verb] To froth. SPUMES (10) [noun] Foam or froth of liquid, particularly that of seawater. | [verb] To froth. SPUTUM (10) [noun] Matter coughed up and expectorated from the mouth, composed of saliva and discharges from the respiratory passages such as mucus, phlegm or pus. SQUAMA (17) SQUIRM (17) [noun] A twisting, snakelike movement of the body. | [verb] To twist one's body with snakelike motions. | [verb] To twist in discomfort, especially from shame or embarrassment. STAMEN (8) [noun] In flowering plants, the structure in a flower that produces pollen, typically consisting of an anther and a filament. STAMPS (10) [noun] An act of stamping the foot, paw or hoof. | [noun] An indentation, imprint, or mark made by stamping. | [noun] A device for stamping designs. STEAMS (8) [noun] The vapor formed when water changes from liquid phase to gas phase. | [noun] Pressurized water vapour used for heating, cooking, or to provide mechanical energy. | [noun] Internal energy for motive power. STEAMY (11) [adjective] Warm and humid; full of steam | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of steam | [adjective] Erotic STEMMA (10) [noun] A family tree or recorded genealogy | [noun] In the study of stemmatics, a diagram showing the relationship of a text to its manuscripts | [noun] One of the types of simple eyes in arthropods STEMMY (13) STIGMA (9) [noun] A mark of infamy or disgrace. | [noun] A scar or birthmark. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural stigmata) A mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion on Jesus' body, and sometimes reported to bleed periodically. | [noun] A ligature of the Greek letters sigma and tau, (Ϛ/ϛ). STIMES (8) STOMAL (8) [adjective] Of, or relating to a stoma. STOMAS (8) [noun] One of the tiny pores in the epidermis of a leaf or stem through which gases and water vapor pass. | [noun] A small opening in a membrane; a surgically constructed opening, especially one in the abdominal wall that permits the passage of waste after a colostomy or ileostomy. | [noun] A mouthlike opening, such as the oral cavity of a nematode. STOMPS (10) [noun] A deliberate heavy footfall; a stamp. | [noun] A dance having a heavy, rhythmic step. | [noun] The jazz music for this dance. STORMS (8) [noun] Any disturbed state of the atmosphere, especially as affecting the earth's surface, and strongly implying destructive or unpleasant weather. | [noun] A violent agitation of human society; a civil, political, or domestic commotion; violent outbreak. | [noun] A wind scale for very strong wind, stronger than a gale, less than a hurricane (10 or higher on the Beaufort scale). STORMY (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to storms. | [adjective] Characterized by, or proceeding from, a storm; subject to storms; agitated with strong winds and heavy rain. | [adjective] Proceeding from violent agitation or fury. STREAM (8) [noun] A small river; a large creek; a body of moving water confined by banks. | [noun] A thin connected passing of a liquid through a lighter gas (e.g. air). | [noun] Any steady flow or succession of material, such as water, air, radio signal or words. STROMA (8) [noun] The tissue structure of an organ, etc., that serves to support it. STRUMA (8) [noun] Scrofula. | [noun] A scrofulous swelling; a tumour or goitre. STRUMS (8) [verb] To play (a guitar or other stringed instrument) using various strings simultaneously. STUMPS (10) [noun] The remains of something that has been cut off; especially the remains of a tree, the remains of a limb. | [noun] The place or occasion at which a campaign takes place; the husting. | [noun] A place or occasion at which a person harangues or otherwise addresses a group in a manner suggesting political oration. STUMPY (13) [noun] An amputee who has lost a leg. | [adjective] Like or resembling a stump; short and cut off. | [adjective] Full of stumps. STYMIE (11) [noun] A situation where an opponent's ball is directly in the way of one's own ball and the hole, on the putting green (abolished 1952). | [noun] (by extension) An obstacle or obstruction. | [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. SUBGUM (11) SUBMIT (10) [verb] To yield or give way to another. | [verb] To yield (something) to another, as when defeated. | [verb] To enter or put forward for approval, consideration, marking etc. SUMACH (13) [noun] Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus and other genera in Anacardiaceae, particularly the elm-leaved sumac, Sicilian sumac, or tanner's sumac (Rhus coriaria). | [noun] Dried and chopped-up leaves and stems of a plant of the genus Rhus, particularly the tanner's sumac (see sense 1), used for dyeing and tanning leather or for medicinal purposes. | [noun] A sour spice popular in the Eastern Mediterranean, made from the berries of tanner's sumac. SUMACS (10) [noun] Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus and other genera in Anacardiaceae, particularly the elm-leaved sumac, Sicilian sumac, or tanner's sumac (Rhus coriaria). | [noun] Dried and chopped-up leaves and stems of a plant of the genus Rhus, particularly the tanner's sumac (see sense 1), used for dyeing and tanning leather or for medicinal purposes. | [noun] A sour spice popular in the Eastern Mediterranean, made from the berries of tanner's sumac. SUMMAE (10) [noun] A comprehensive summary of, or treatise on a subject, especially theology or philosophy. SUMMAS (10) SUMMED (11) [verb] To add together. | [verb] To give a summary of. SUMMER (10) [noun] One of four seasons, traditionally the second, marked by the longest and typically hottest days of the year due to the inclination of the Earth and thermal lag. Typically regarded as being from June 21 to September 22 or 23 in parts of the USA, the months of June, July and August in the United Kingdom and the months of December, January and February in the Southern Hemisphere. | [noun] Year; used to give the age of a person, usually a young one. | [noun] Someone with light, pinkish skin that has a blue undertone, light hair and eyes, seen as best suited to certain colors of clothing. | [noun] A pack-horse. | [noun] A person who sums. SUMMIT (10) [noun] A peak; the topmost point or surface, as of a mountain. | [noun] A gathering or assembly of leaders. | [verb] (hiking) To reach the summit of a mountain. | [pronoun] Something SUMMON (10) [noun] Call, command, order | [verb] To call people together; to convene. | [verb] To ask someone to come; to send for. SURIMI (8) [noun] A white paste, made from ground fish, that is used to make formed and textured food products. SWAMIS (11) [noun] (used as a title) A Hindu ascetic or religious teacher. SWAMPS (13) [noun] A piece of wet, spongy land; low ground saturated with water; soft, wet ground which may have a growth of certain kinds of trees, but is unfit for agricultural or pastoral purposes. | [noun] A type of wetland that stretches for vast distances, and is home to many creatures which have adapted specifically to that environment. | [noun] A place or situation that is foul or where progress is difficult. SWAMPY (16) [adjective] Soggy and marshy; wet like a swamp. | [adjective] Flowing smoothly with no harsh tones but possibly including muddy tones. SWARMS (11) [noun] A large number of insects, especially when in motion or (for bees) migrating to a new colony. | [noun] A mass of people, animals or things in motion or turmoil. | [noun] A group of nodes sharing the same torrent in a BitTorrent network. SWIMMY (16) SYMBOL (13) [noun] A character or glyph representing an idea, concept or object. | [noun] A thing considered the embodiment of a concept or object. | [noun] A type of noun whereby the form refers to the same entity independently of the context; a symbol arbitrarily denotes a referent. See also icon and index. SYNCOM (13) SYSTEM (11) [noun] A collection of organized things; a whole composed of relationships among its members. | [noun] A method or way of organizing or planning. TALCUM (10) [noun] Powdered and perfumed talc for toilet use. | [verb] To perfume with talcum powder. TAMALE (8) [noun] Mexican dish of cornmeal dough shell filled with various ingredients (e.g. chopped beef, pork, sweet filling) then steamed in corn husks. TAMALS (8) TAMARI (8) [noun] A type of soy sauce made without wheat, having a rich flavor. TAMBAC (12) TAMBAK (14) TAMBUR (10) TAMEIN (8) TAMELY (11) TAMERS (8) TAMEST (8) [adjective] Not or no longer wild; domesticated | [adjective] (chiefly of animals) Mild and well-behaved; accustomed to human contact | [adjective] Not exciting. TAMING (9) [verb] To make (an animal) tame; to domesticate. | [verb] To become tame or domesticated. | [verb] To make gentle or meek. TAMMIE (10) TAMPAN (10) TAMPED (11) [verb] (blasting) To plug up with clay, earth, dry sand, sod, or other material, as a hole bored in a rock. | [verb] To drive in or pack down by frequent gentle strokes | [verb] To reduce the intensity of. TAMPER (10) [noun] A person or thing that tamps. | [noun] A tool used to tamp something down, such as tobacco in a pipe. | [noun] A railway vehicle used to tamp down ballast. | [verb] To make unauthorized or improper alterations, sometimes causing deliberate damage; to meddle (with something). TAMPON (10) [noun] A plug of cotton or other absorbent material inserted into a body cavity or wound to absorb fluid, especially one inserted in the vagina during menstruation. | [noun] A double-headed drumstick primarily for the bass drum. | [noun] An inking pad used in lithographic printing. TANDEM (9) [noun] A carriage pulled by two or more draught animals (generally draught horses) harnessed one behind the other, both providing the pulling power but only the animal in front able to steer. | [noun] (transferred sense) A bicycle or tricycle in which two people sit one behind the other, both able to pedal but only the person in front able to steer. | [noun] A group of two or more people, machines etc. working together; close collaboration. TARAMA (8) [noun] Salted cured cod roe, used in making taramosalata TARMAC (10) [noun] Tarmacadam. | [noun] Any bituminous road surfacing material. | [noun] The driveable surface of a road. TATAMI (8) [noun] Straw matting, in a standard size, used as a floor covering in Japanese houses TAXEME (15) TAXMAN (15) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A tax collector. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A tax-collecting organ, personified. TAXMEN (15) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A tax collector. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A tax-collecting organ, personified. TEAMED (9) [verb] To form a group, as for sports or work. | [verb] (by extension) To go together well; to harmonize. | [verb] To convey or haul with a team. TECTUM (10) [noun] The dorsal portion of the midbrain of vertebrates; in mammals, containing the superior colliculus and inferior colliculus | [noun] The interconnected outer surface of a spore. TEDIUM (9) [noun] Boredom or tediousness; ennui. TEEMED (9) [verb] To be stocked to overflowing. | [verb] To be prolific; to abound; to be rife. | [verb] To bring forth young, as an animal; to produce fruit, as a plant; to bear; to be pregnant; to conceive; to multiply. TEEMER (8) TEGMEN (9) [noun] A covering or integument, usually referring to a thin layer or membrane in an organism. | [noun] An integument such as the inner membrane of the coat of a seed. | [noun] A covering such as the thin layer of bone in the roof of the middle ear of mammals. TELIUM (8) TELOME (8) TEMPED (11) [verb] To work as a temporary employee. TEMPEH (13) [noun] An Indonesian food made from partially-cooked fermented soybeans, mixed with a fungus (Rhizopus oligosporus). TEMPER (10) [noun] A tendency to be in a certain type of mood; a habitual way of thinking, behaving or reacting. | [noun] State of mind; mood. | [noun] A tendency to become angry. TEMPLE (10) [noun] A house of worship, especially: | [noun] A meeting house of the Oddfellows fraternity; its members. | [noun] Any place regarded as holding a religious presence. | [noun] The slightly flatter region, on either side of the human head, behind of the eye and forehead, above the zygomatic arch, and forward of the ear. | [noun] A contrivance used in a loom for keeping the web stretched transversely. TEMPOS (10) [noun] A frequency or rate. | [noun] A move which is part of one's own plan or strategy and forces, e.g. by means of a check or attacking a piece, the opponent to make a move which is not bad but of no use for him (the player gains a tempo, the opponent loses a tempo), or equivalently a player achieves the same result in fewer moves by one approach rather than another. | [noun] The timing advantage of being on lead, thus being first to initiate a strategy to develop tricks for one's side. TEMPTS (10) [verb] To provoke someone to do wrong, especially by promising a reward; to entice. | [verb] To attract; to allure. | [verb] To provoke something; to court. TERGUM (9) [noun] The upper or dorsal surface of an articulated animal such as an arthropod. TERMED (9) [verb] To phrase a certain way; to name or call. | [verb] To terminate one's employment TERMER (8) TERMLY (11) [adjective] Occurring every term. | [adverb] Term by term; every term TERMOR (8) THAIRM (11) THARMS (11) THEISM (11) [noun] Belief in the existence of at least one deity. | [noun] (narrowly) Belief in the existence of a personal creator god, goddess, gods and/or goddesses present and active in the governance and organization of the world and the universe. The God may be known by or through revelation. | [noun] A morbid condition resulting from excessive consumption of tea. THEMED (12) [verb] To give a theme to. | [verb] To apply a theme to; to change the visual appearance and/or layout of (software). | [adjective] (often in combination) Having a particular theme or topic THEMES (11) [noun] A subject of a talk or an artistic piece; a topic. | [noun] A recurring idea; a motif. | [noun] An essay written for school. THERME (11) THERMS (11) [noun] A former unit of heat equal to 100,000 British thermal units. Symbol: thm. THIRAM (11) [noun] The fungicide and bird repellent tetramethylthiuram disulfide. THRUMS (11) [noun] A thrumming sound; a hum or vibration. | [noun] A spicy taste; a tang. | [verb] To cause a steady rhythmic vibration, usually by plucking. THUMBS (13) [noun] The short thick digit of the hand that for humans has the most mobility and can be made to oppose (moved to touch) all of the other fingers. | [noun] The part of a slider that may be moved linearly along the slider. | [noun] A thumbnail picture. THUMPS (13) [noun] A blow that produces a muffled sound. | [noun] The sound of such a blow; a thud. | [noun] Used to replace the vulgar or blasphemous element in "what the hell" and similar phrases. THYMES (14) [noun] Any plant of the labiate genus Thymus, such as the garden thyme, Thymus vulgaris, a warm, pungent aromatic, that is much used to give a relish to seasoning and soups. THYMEY (17) THYMIC (16) [adjective] Of or relating to the thymus gland | [adjective] Derived from thymol THYMOL (14) [noun] A monoterpene phenol, C10H13OH, found in the oil extracted from thyme; used as in perfume, as an antiseptic and fungicide, and in embalming THYMUS (14) [noun] A ductless gland, consisting mainly of lymphatic tissue, located behind the top of the breastbone. It is most active during puberty, after which it shrinks in size. It plays an important role in the development of the immune system and produces lymphocytes. TIMBAL (10) [noun] A kettledrum. TIMBER (10) [noun] Trees in a forest regarded as a source of wood. | [noun] (outside North America) Wood that has been pre-cut and is ready for use in construction. | [noun] A heavy wooden beam, generally a whole log that has been squared off and used to provide heavy support for something such as a roof. TIMBRE (10) [noun] The quality of a sound independent of its pitch and volume. | [noun] The pitch of a sound as heard by the ear, described relative to its absolute pitch. | [noun] The crest on a coat of arms. TIMELY (11) [adjective] Done at the proper time or within the proper time limits; prompt. | [adjective] Happening or appearing at the proper time. | [adjective] Keeping time or measure. TIMERS (8) [noun] Someone or something which times. | [noun] A device used to measure amounts of time. | [noun] Any electronic function that causes a device to be able to do something automatically after a preset amount of time. TIMING (9) [verb] To measure or record the time, duration, or rate of. | [verb] To choose when something begins or how long it lasts. | [verb] To keep or beat time; to proceed or move in time. TINMAN (8) TINMEN (8) TITMAN (8) TITMEN (8) TMESES (8) [noun] The insertion of one or more words between the components of a compound word. TMESIS (8) [noun] The insertion of one or more words between the components of a compound word. TOMANS (8) TOMATO (8) [noun] A widely cultivated plant, Solanum lycopersicum, having edible fruit. | [noun] The savory fruit of this plant, red when ripe, treated as a vegetable in horticulture and cooking. | [noun] A shade of red, the colour of a ripe tomato. TOMBAC (12) TOMBAK (14) TOMBAL (10) TOMBED (11) TOMBOY (13) [noun] A girl who behaves in a typically boyish manner. | [noun] A lesbian. TOMCAT (10) [noun] A tom, a male cat. | [verb] To prowl for sexual gratification. TOMCOD (11) [noun] A species of edible cod found in the Atlantic, Microgadus tomcod. | [noun] Microgadus proximus, found in the Pacific. | [noun] A kingfish. TOMMED (11) [verb] (of a black person) To act in an obsequiously servile manner toward white authority. | [verb] To dig out a hole below the hatch cover of a bulker and fill it with cargo or weights to aid stability. TOMTIT (8) [noun] Petroica macrocephala, the miromiro or New Zealand tit, a bird of the Petroicidae (Australasian robin) family. TONEME (8) [noun] A phoneme in a language that uses different tones for different meanings. TOTEMS (8) [noun] Any natural object or living creature that serves as an emblem of a tribe, clan or family. | [noun] The representation of such object or creature. | [noun] The clan whose kinship is defined in reference to such an object or creature. TRAMEL (8) TRAMPS (10) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A homeless person; a vagabond. | [noun] A disreputable, promiscuous woman; a slut. | [noun] Any ship which does not have a fixed schedule or published ports of call. TRAUMA (8) [noun] Any serious injury to the body, often resulting from violence or an accident. | [noun] An emotional wound leading to psychological injury. | [noun] An event that causes great distress. TREMOR (8) [noun] A shake, quiver, or vibration. | [noun] An earthquake. | [verb] To shake or quiver excessively and rapidly or involuntarily; to tremble. TRIMER (8) [noun] A polymer composed of three monomers TRIMLY (11) TROMPE (10) TROMPS (10) [verb] To tread heavily, especially to crush underfoot. | [verb] To utterly defeat an opponent. TRUISM (8) [noun] A self-evident or obvious truth. | [noun] A banality or cliché. TRUMPS (10) [noun] A musical instrument consisting of a flexible metal or bamboo “tongue” attached to a frame. This tongue is placed in the performer’s mouth and plucked with the finger to produce a note of constant pitch. Melodies can be created by changing the shape of the mouth and causing different overtones. | [noun] The suit, in a game of cards, that outranks all others. | [noun] A playing card of that suit. TUMBLE (10) [noun] A fall, especially end over end. | [noun] A disorderly heap. | [noun] An act of sexual intercourse. TUMEFY (14) [verb] To cause to swell. | [verb] To swell; to rise into a tumour. TUMORS (8) [noun] An abnormal growth; differential diagnosis includes abscess, metaplasia, and neoplasia. TUMOUR (8) [noun] An abnormal growth; differential diagnosis includes abscess, metaplasia, and neoplasia. TUMPED (11) TUMULI (8) [noun] A mound of earth, especially one placed over a prehistoric tomb; a barrow. TUMULT (8) [noun] Confused, agitated noise as made by a crowd. | [noun] Violent commotion or agitation, often with confusion of sounds. | [noun] A riot or uprising. TYMBAL (13) [noun] A kettledrum. TYMPAN (13) [noun] A piece of cloth padding placed under the platen of a letterpress to distribute the pressure on the sheet being printed. | [noun] The stretched membrane of a drum. | [noun] A percussion instrument consisting of a hollow cylinder with such a membrane at each end. UGSOME (9) ULAMAS (8) ULEMAS (8) ULTIMA (8) ULTIMO (8) [adjective] On the last day (of a specified month). | [adverb] Of last month. UMBELS (10) [noun] A flat-topped or rounded flower-cluster (= inflorescence) in which the individual flower stalks arise from the same point, the youngest flowers being at the centre. UMBERS (10) [noun] A brown clay, somewhat darker than ochre, which contains iron and manganese oxides. | [noun] A grayling. | [noun] A dusky brown African wading bird (Scopus umbretta) allied to the shoebill and herons; a hamerkop. UMBLES (10) [noun] Animal entrails, especially of a deer. UMBRAE (10) [noun] The fully shaded inner region of a shadow cast by an opaque object. | [noun] The central region of a sunspot. | [noun] A shadow. UMBRAL (10) UMBRAS (10) [noun] The fully shaded inner region of a shadow cast by an opaque object. | [noun] The central region of a sunspot. | [noun] A shadow. UMIACK (14) UMIACS (10) UMIAKS (12) [noun] A large, open boat made of skins stretched over a wooden frame that is propelled by paddles; used by the Eskimos for transportation. UMIAQS (17) UMLAUT (8) [noun] An assimilatory process whereby a vowel is pronounced more like a following vocoid that is separated by one or more consonants. | [noun] The umlaut process (as above) that occurred historically in Germanic languages whereby back vowels became front vowels when followed by syllable containing a front vocoid (e.g. Germanic lūsiz > Old English lȳs(i) > Modern English lice). | [noun] A vowel so assimilated. UMPING (11) [verb] To act as an umpire. UMPIRE (10) [noun] The official who presides over a tennis game sat on a high chair. | [noun] One of the two white-coated officials who preside over a cricket match. | [noun] One of usually 4 officials who preside over a baseball game. UNARMS (8) [verb] To disarm, to remove the armour and weapons from. | [verb] To remove one's armour. UNHELM (11) UNMADE (9) [adjective] Not (yet) made | [adjective] Existing without having been made | [verb] To destroy or take apart; to cause (a made article) to lose its nature. UNMAKE (12) [verb] To destroy or take apart; to cause (a made article) to lose its nature. UNMANS (8) [verb] To castrate; to remove the manhood of. | [verb] To sap (a person) of the strength, whether physical or emotional, required to deal with a situation. | [verb] To deprive of men. UNMASK (12) [verb] To remove a mask from someone. | [verb] To expose, or reveal the true character of someone. | [verb] To remove one's mask. UNMEET (8) UNMESH (11) UNMEWS (11) UNMIXT (15) UNMOLD (9) UNMOOR (8) [verb] To unfix or unsecure (a moored boat). | [verb] To weigh anchor. UNMOWN (11) [adjective] Not mown; unmowed. UNSEAM (8) UNTAME (8) UNTRIM (8) UPMOST (10) [adjective] Uppermost. UPTIME (10) [noun] The period of time a computer has functioned since last requiring a reboot. UREMIA (8) [noun] Blood poisoning resulting from the retention of waste products usually excreted as urine. UREMIC (10) UTMOST (8) [noun] Maximum; greatest possible amount or quantity. | [adjective] Situated at the most distant limit; farthest. | [adjective] The most extreme; ultimate; greatest. VACUUM (13) [noun] A region of space that contains no matter. | [noun] (plural only "vacuums") A vacuum cleaner. | [noun] The condition of rarefaction, or reduction of pressure below that of the atmosphere, in a vessel, such as the condenser of a steam engine, which is nearly exhausted of air or steam, etc. VAGROM (12) VAMOSE (11) VAMPED (14) [verb] To patch, repair, or refurbish. | [verb] Often as vamp up: to fabricate or put together (something) from existing material, or by adding new material to something existing. | [verb] To cobble together, to extemporize, to improvise. VAMPER (13) VANMAN (11) VANMEN (11) VAROOM (11) VELLUM (11) [noun] A type of parchment paper made from the skin of a lamb, baby goat, or calf. | [noun] A writing paper of very high quality. VENOMS (11) [noun] A poison carried by an animal, usually injected into an enemy or prey by biting or stinging. | [noun] Feeling or speech marked by spite or malice; vitriol. | [verb] To infect with venom; to envenom; to poison. VERISM (11) [noun] Presenting common, everyday subjects, specifically eschewing the heroic or legendary. | [noun] An artistic movement, from 19th-century Italian literature and opera, in which rural and everyday people and themes were treated in an often melodramatic manner VERMES (11) [noun] A narrow, worm-like structure found in animal brains between the hemispheres of the cerebellum; it is the site of termination of the spinocerebellar pathways that carry subconscious proprioception. VERMIN (11) [noun] Any one of various common types of small insects or animals which cause harm and annoyance. | [noun] Animals that prey on game, such as foxes or weasels. | [noun] Obnoxious, or mean and offensive person or people. VERMIS (11) [noun] A narrow, worm-like structure found in animal brains between the hemispheres of the cerebellum; it is the site of termination of the spinocerebellar pathways that carry subconscious proprioception. VICTIM (13) [noun] One that is harmed—killed, injured, subjected to oppression, deceived, or otherwise adversely affected—by someone or something, especially another person or event, force, or condition; in particular: | [noun] A living being which is slain and offered as a sacrifice, usually in a religious rite. VIMINA (11) VOLUME (11) [noun] A three-dimensional measure of space that comprises a length, a width and a height. It is measured in units of cubic centimeters in metric, cubic inches or cubic feet in English measurement. | [noun] Strength of sound; loudness. | [noun] The issues of a periodical over a period of one year. VOMERS (11) [noun] The vomer bone; the small thin bone that forms part of the septum between the nostrils. VOMICA (13) VOMITO (11) VOMITS (11) [verb] To regurgitate or eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth; puke. | [verb] To regurgitate and discharge (something swallowed); to spew. | [verb] To eject from any hollow place; to belch forth; to emit. VROOMS (11) [noun] The sound of an engine revving up. | [verb] To move with great speed; to zoom. WADMAL (12) WADMEL (12) WADMOL (12) WAMBLE (13) WAMBLY (16) WAMMUS (13) WAMPUM (15) [noun] Small beads made from polished shells, especially white ones, formerly used as money and jewelry by certain Native American peoples. | [noun] A string of such beads. | [noun] Money. WAMPUS (13) WARMED (12) [verb] To make or keep warm. | [verb] To become warm, to heat up. | [verb] To favour increasingly. WARMER (11) [adjective] Having a temperature slightly higher than usual, but still pleasant; mildly hot. | [adjective] Caring and friendly, of relations to another person. | [adjective] Having a color in the red-orange-yellow part of the visible electromagnetic spectrum. WARMLY (14) [adverb] In a manner that maintains warm temperature. | [adverb] In a warm, friendly manner. WARMTH (14) [noun] A moderate degree of heat; the sensation of being warm. | [noun] Friendliness, kindness or affection. | [noun] Fervor, intensity of emotion or expression. WARMUP (13) [noun] The act of exercising or stretching in preparation for strenuous activity | [noun] Any act of preparation for a performance | [noun] A period of time allocated for performing warm-ups. WHAMMO (16) [noun] An action-packed scene in a film, etc. | [interjection] Used to emphasis the suddenness of an event. WHAMMY (19) [noun] A serious or devastating setback | [noun] An evil spell; a curse or hex | [noun] The vibrato system of an electric guitar, or just its lever (whammy bar) WHELMS (14) [verb] To bury, to cover; to engulf, to submerge. | [verb] To throw (something) over a thing so as to cover it. | [verb] To ruin or destroy. WHILOM (14) [adjective] Former, sometime. | [adverb] While. | [adverb] Once upon a time, formerly. WHIMSY (17) [noun] A quaint and fanciful idea; a whim; playfully odd behaviour. | [noun] An impulsive, illogical or capricious character. | [noun] A whim (capstan or vertical drum). WHOMPS (16) [verb] Hit extremely hard. WHOMSO (14) [pronoun] Whichever person, whomever WHUMPS (16) [noun] A thumping sound. | [noun] A genre of fan fiction in which a character endures injury, torture, or other forms of physical and mental suffering. | [verb] To strike something with a whump. WIGWAM (15) [noun] A dwelling having an arched framework overlaid with bark, hides, or mats, used by Native Americans in the northeastern United States. | [noun] (possibly obsolete) Any more or less similar dwelling used by indigenous people in other parts of the world. | [verb] To dry (flax or straw) by standing it outside in the shape of a wigwam. WIMBLE (13) WIMPLE (13) [noun] A cloth which usually covers the head and is worn around the neck and chin. It was worn by women in medieval Europe and is still worn by nuns in certain orders. | [noun] A fold or pleat in cloth. | [noun] A ripple, as on the surface of water. | [verb] To cover with a wimple. WISDOM (12) [noun] An element of personal character that enables one to distinguish the wise from the unwise. | [noun] A piece of wise advice. | [noun] The discretionary use of knowledge for the greatest good. WOMANS (11) WOMBAT (13) [noun] Any of several herbivorous, burrowing marsupials, of the family Vombatidae, mainly found in southern and eastern Australia. WOMBED (14) WOMERA (11) WORMED (12) [verb] To make (one's way) with a crawling motion. | [verb] To move with one's body dragging the ground. | [verb] To work one's way by artful or devious means. WORMER (11) [noun] Dewormer, medicine used in deworming an animal. | [noun] Vermicide, any substance used to kill worms. WORMIL (11) XYLEMS (18) YAMENS (11) YAMMER (13) [noun] The act or noise of yammering. | [noun] A loud noise. | [noun] One who yammers. YAMUNS (11) YASMAK (15) YEOMAN (11) [noun] An official providing honorable service in a royal or high noble household, ranking between a squire and a page. Especially, a Yeoman of the Guard, a member of a ceremonial bodyguard to the UK monarch (not to be confused with a Yeoman Warder). | [noun] A dependable, diligent, or loyal worker or someone who does a great service. | [noun] A former class of small freeholders who farm their own land; a commoner of good standing. YEOMEN (11) [noun] An official providing honorable service in a royal or high noble household, ranking between a squire and a page. Especially, a Yeoman of the Guard, a member of a ceremonial bodyguard to the UK monarch (not to be confused with a Yeoman Warder). | [noun] A dependable, diligent, or loyal worker or someone who does a great service. | [noun] A former class of small freeholders who farm their own land; a commoner of good standing. ZAMIAS (17) [noun] Any of various cycads of the genera Zamia and Macrozamia ZEUGMA (18) [noun] The act of using a word, particularly an adjective or verb, to apply to more than one noun when its sense is appropriate to only one. | [noun] Syllepsis. ZIRAMS (17) ZOMBIE (19) [noun] A snake god or fetish in religions of West Africa and elsewhere. | [noun] (voodoo, superstition) A person, usually undead, animated by unnatural forces (such as magic), with no soul or will of his/her own. | [noun] A deceased person who becomes reanimate to attack the living. ZOMBIS (19) ZOOMED (18) [verb] To communicate with someone using the Zoom videoconferencing software. | [verb] To move fast with a humming noise | [verb] To fly an airplane straight up ZYGOMA (21) [noun] The cheekbone. ZYMASE (20) [noun] Any of a group of enzymes that catalyze the fermentation of simple carbohydrates to ethanol and carbon dioxide.

7-Letter Words (4157)

ABDOMEN (12) [noun] The fat surrounding the belly. | [noun] The belly, or that part of the body between the thorax and the pelvis, not including the back; or in some lower vertebrates, the portion between the cardiac and caudal regions. | [noun] The cavity of the belly, which is lined by the peritoneum, and contains the viscera; often restricted in humans to the part between the diaphragm and the commencement of the pelvis, the remainder being called the pelvic cavity. ABOMASA (11) [noun] The fourth or digestive compartment of the stomach of a cow or other ruminant, after the omasum. ABOMASI (11) ABYSMAL (14) [adjective] Pertaining to, or resembling an abyss. | [adjective] Extremely bad; terrible. ACADEME (12) [noun] The name of the garden in Athens where the academics met. | [noun] An academy; a place of learning. | [noun] The scholarly life, environment, or community. ACADEMY (15) [noun] (usually capitalized) The garden where Plato taught. | [noun] (usually capitalized) Plato's philosophical system based on skepticism; Plato's followers. | [noun] An institution for the study of higher learning; a college or a university; typically a private school. ACCLAIM (13) [verb] To shout; to call out. | [verb] To express great approval (for). | [verb] To salute or praise with great approval; to compliment; to applaud; to welcome enthusiastically. | [noun] An acclamation; a shout of applause. ACIFORM (14) [adjective] Shaped like a needle or needle-pointed; having the form of an acus or needle. ACMATIC (13) ACROMIA (11) ACRONYM (14) [noun] An abbreviation formed by the initial letters of other words, sometimes exclusively such abbreviations when pronounced as a word (as "laser") rather than as individual letters (initialisms such as "TNT"). | [noun] An abbreviation formed by the beginning letters or syllables of other words (as "Benelux"). | [verb] To form into an acronym. ACUMENS (11) [noun] Plural of acumen; keen insight, shrewdness, or discernment in understanding and dealing with things. ADAMANT (10) [noun] An imaginary rock or mineral of impenetrable hardness; a name given to the diamond and other substances of extreme hardness. | [noun] An embodiment of impregnable hardness. | [noun] A lodestone. ADEEMED (11) [verb] Past tense of "adeem," meaning to revoke or withdraw a specific bequest in a will by disposing of the bequeathed property during the testator's lifetime. | [verb] To take away or remove. ADENOMA (10) [noun] A benign tumour of the epithelium arising from or resembling a gland. ADMIRAL (10) [noun] A naval officer of the highest rank; the commander of a country's naval forces. | [noun] A naval officer of high rank, immediately below Admiral of the Fleet; the commander of a fleet or squadron. | [noun] A flag officer in the United States Navy or Coast Guard of a grade superior to vice admiral and junior to admiral of the fleet (when that grade is used). An admiral is equal in grade or rank to a four-star general. ADMIRED (11) [verb] To be amazed at; to view with surprise; to marvel at. | [verb] To regard with wonder and delight. | [verb] To look upon with an elevated feeling of pleasure, as something which calls out approbation, esteem, love or reverence. ADMIRER (10) [noun] One who admires. ADMIRES (10) [verb] To be amazed at; to view with surprise; to marvel at. | [verb] To regard with wonder and delight. | [verb] To look upon with an elevated feeling of pleasure, as something which calls out approbation, esteem, love or reverence. ADMIXED (18) [verb] To mingle with something else; to mix. ADMIXES (17) [noun] The act of admixing. | [noun] The mixture that results from admixing, especially an alloy. | [verb] To mingle with something else; to mix. AFFIRMS (15) [verb] To agree, verify or concur; to answer positively. | [verb] To assert positively; to tell with confidence; to aver; to maintain as true. | [verb] To support or encourage. AFTMOST (12) AGAMETE (10) [noun] An organism or cell that reproduces asexually without the formation of gametes. AGAMOUS (10) [adjective] Reproducing without sexual union; asexual. | [adjective] Having no visible reproductive organs or sexual characteristics. AGEISMS (10) [noun] Plural of ageism; discriminatory practices or attitudes based on a person's age. AGENDUM (11) [noun] A singular form of agenda; a single item to be considered or discussed at a meeting. AGNOMEN (10) [noun] An additional cognomen given, as an honour, to a Roman citizen. AHIMSAS (12) [noun] Plural of ahimsa, the Hindu and Buddhist principle of nonviolence and abstinence from harming any living creature. AILMENT (9) [noun] Something which ails one; a disease; sickness. AIMLESS (9) [adjective] Without aim, purpose, or direction. AIRMAIL (9) [noun] The system of conveying mail using aircraft. | [noun] The items of mail so carried. | [verb] To send mail by air. AIRTIME (9) [noun] The duration during which a radio or television program (or part of one) is transmitted. | [noun] The chargeable use of a mobile phone, either in minutes or in units dependent on the use or traffic. | [noun] The period during which a person riding a rollercoaster or similar ride experiences a feeling of weightlessness. ALAMEDA (10) [noun] A tree-lined avenue in Spain or Portugal. ALAMODE (10) [adjective] In a fashionable or stylish manner; according to the prevailing fashion. | [noun] A thin silk fabric with a wavy pattern. ALARMED (10) [verb] To call to arms for defense | [verb] To give (someone) notice of approaching danger | [verb] To rouse to vigilance and action; to put on the alert. ALARUMS (9) [noun] A danger signal or warning. | [noun] A call to arms. | [verb] To sound alarums, to sound an alarm. ALBUMEN (11) [noun] The white part of an egg; being mostly the protein albumin and water. ALBUMIN (11) [noun] Any of a class of monomeric proteins that are soluble in water, and are coagulated by heat; they occur in egg white, milk etc; they function as carrier protein for steroids, fatty acids, and thyroid hormones and play a role in stabilizing extracellular fluid volume. ALCHEMY (17) [noun] The ancient search for a universal panacea, and of the philosopher's stone, that eventually developed into chemistry. | [noun] The causing of any sort of mysterious sudden transmutation. | [noun] Any elaborate transformation process or algorithm. ALCHYMY (20) ALEMBIC (13) [noun] An early chemical apparatus, consisting of two retorts connected by a tube, used to purify substances by distillation ALIFORM (12) [adjective] Shaped like a wing | [adjective] (of a building) Having wings ALIMENT (9) [noun] Food. | [noun] Nourishment, sustenance. | [noun] An allowance for maintenance; alimony. ALIMONY (12) [noun] A court-mandated allowance made to a former spouse by a divorced or legally separated person. | [noun] The means to support life. ALLIUMS (9) [noun] Any of many bulbous plants of the genus Allium, related to onions and garlic. ALLONYM (12) ALMANAC (11) [noun] A book or table listing nautical, astronomical, astrological or other events for the year; sometimes, but not essentially, containing historical and statistical information. | [noun] A handbook, typically published annually, containing information on a particular subject | [noun] A GPS signal consisting of coarse orbit and status information for each satellite in the constellation. ALMEMAR (11) ALMNERS (9) ALMONDS (10) [noun] A type of tree nut. | [noun] A small deciduous tree in family Rosaceae, Prunus dulcis, that produces predominantly sweet almonds. | [noun] Other plants that produce almond-like nuts: ALMONER (9) [noun] One who distributes alms, especially the doles and alms of religious houses, almshouses | [noun] One who dispenses alms for another, as the almoner of a prince, bishop | [noun] A title given to a royal officer charged with the duty of distributing alms or bounty on behalf of a monarch ALMONRY (12) [noun] A building in which alms were distributed. ALMSMAN (11) ALMSMEN (11) ALMUCES (11) ALMUDES (10) ALODIUM (10) ALUMINA (9) [noun] Aluminum oxide, especially when used in mining, material sciences or ceramics. ALUMINE (9) ALUMINS (9) ALUMNAE (9) [noun] A female pupil or student (especially of a university or college). | [noun] A female graduate. ALUMNUS (9) [noun] A male pupil or student. | [noun] A male graduate. | [noun] A student of any gender. ALYSSUM (12) [noun] Any of several plants, of the genus Alyssum, mostly of Eurasian origin, that have racemes of white or yellow flowers. AMADOUS (10) AMALGAM (12) [noun] An alloy containing mercury. | [noun] A combination of different things. | [noun] One of the ingredients in an alloy. AMANITA (9) AMASSED (10) [verb] To collect into a mass or heap. | [verb] To gather a great quantity of; to accumulate. | [adjective] Having been gathered or assembled in a large group. AMASSER (9) AMASSES (9) [verb] To collect into a mass or heap. | [verb] To gather a great quantity of; to accumulate. AMATEUR (9) [noun] A lover of something. | [noun] A person attached to a particular pursuit, study, or science as to music or painting; especially one who cultivates any study or art, from taste or attachment, without pursuing it professionally. | [noun] Someone who is unqualified or insufficiently skillful. AMATIVE (12) AMATOLS (9) AMATORY (12) [adjective] Of or relating to love, especially sexual love. AMAZING (19) [verb] To fill with wonder and surprise; to astonish, astound, surprise or perplex. | [verb] To undergo amazement; to be astounded. | [verb] To stupefy; to knock unconscious. AMAZONS (18) [noun] A tall, strong, athletic woman. AMBAGES (12) AMBARIS (11) AMBEERS (11) AMBIENT (11) [noun] Something that surrounds; encompassing material, substance or shape. | [noun] The atmosphere; the surrounding air or sky; atmospheric components collectively such as air, clouds, water vapour, hail, etc. | [noun] A type of modern music that creates a relaxing and peaceful atmosphere. AMBLERS (11) AMBLING (12) [verb] To stroll or walk slowly and leisurely. | [verb] Of a quadruped: to move along by using both legs on one side, and then the other. | [noun] The act of one who ambles. AMBOINA (11) AMBONES (11) [noun] A raised platform in an early Christian church, as well as in the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, and Eastern Catholic churches. | [noun] A stationary podium used for readings and homilies. AMBOYNA (14) [noun] A south-east Asian tree, Pterocarpus indicus. | [noun] The reddish, mottled or striped wood of this tree, used in cabinet-making. AMBRIES (11) [noun] A bookcase; a library or archive. | [noun] A storehouse, especially a niche or recess in a wall used for storage. | [noun] A pantry, or place to store food. AMBROID (12) AMBSACE (13) AMEBEAN (11) AMEBOID (12) [adjective] Resembling, or characteristic of an amoeba AMENDED (11) [verb] To make better; improve. | [verb] To become better. | [verb] To heal (someone sick); to cure (a disease etc.). AMENDER (10) AMENITY (12) [noun] Pleasantness. | [noun] A thing or circumstance that is welcome and makes life a little easier or more pleasant. | [noun] Convenience. AMENTIA (9) [noun] Mental impairment; state of being mentally handicapped. AMERCED (12) [verb] To impose a fine on; to fine. | [verb] To punish; to make an exaction. AMERCER (11) AMERCES (11) [verb] To impose a fine on; to fine. | [verb] To punish; to make an exaction. AMESACE (11) AMIABLE (11) [adjective] Friendly; kind; sweet; gracious | [adjective] Of a pleasant and likeable nature; kind-hearted; easy to like AMIABLY (14) [adverb] In an amiable manner; in a friendly or pleasant manner. AMIDASE (10) AMIDINE (10) AMIDINS (10) AMIDOLS (10) AMIDONE (10) AMINITY (12) AMIRATE (9) AMITIES (9) [noun] Plural of amity; friendly relations or peaceful associations between people or nations. AMMETER (11) [noun] A device that measures the magnitude of an electric current, especially one calibrated in amperes. AMMINES (11) [noun] Organic compounds formed by the reaction of ammonia with aldehydes or ketones, containing a C=N double bond. | [noun] Plural of ammine, a coordination complex formed when ammonia ligands bond to a metal ion. AMMONAL (11) [noun] An explosive mixture of ammonium nitrate and TNT, used in mining and construction. AMMONIA (11) [noun] A gaseous compound of hydrogen and nitrogen, NH3, with a pungent smell and taste. | [noun] A solution of this compound in water used domestically as a cleaning fluid. AMMONIC (13) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing ammonia. AMNESIA (9) [noun] Loss of memory; forgetfulness. | [noun] Forgetfulness. AMNESIC (11) [noun] A person suffering from amnesia | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or suffering from amnesia AMNESTY (12) [noun] Forgetfulness; cessation of remembrance of wrong; oblivion. | [noun] An act of the sovereign power granting oblivion, or a general pardon, for a past offense, as to subjects concerned in an insurrection. | [verb] To grant a pardon (to a group) AMNIONS (9) [noun] The innermost membrane of the fetal membranes of reptiles, birds, and mammals; the sac in which the embryo is suspended. AMNIOTE (9) [noun] Any of the Amniota group of vertebrates having an amnion during the development of the embryo; mammals, birds and reptiles. AMOEBAE (11) [noun] A member of the genus Amoeba of unicellular protozoa that moves by means of temporary projections called pseudopodia. | [noun] The graph of the real part of the logarithms of a polynomial equation in complex numbers. | [noun] An asexual. AMOEBAN (11) AMOEBAS (11) [noun] A member of the genus Amoeba of unicellular protozoa that moves by means of temporary projections called pseudopodia. | [noun] The graph of the real part of the logarithms of a polynomial equation in complex numbers. | [noun] An asexual. AMOEBIC (13) [adjective] Relating to or caused by amoebas, single-celled organisms. | [adjective] Resembling an amoeba in shape or movement. AMONGST (10) [preposition] Denotes a mingling or intermixing with distinct or separable objects. See usage note at amidst. AMORINI (9) [noun] Plural of amorino, a representation of a cupid or cherub in art, particularly in Renaissance and Baroque works. AMORINO (9) [noun] A representation of a naked male child, often depicted as a cherub or cupid in art and decoration. AMORIST (9) [noun] Someone who is in love. | [noun] Someone who writes about love. AMOROSO (9) [noun] A male lover. | [adjective] Tender; loving AMOROUS (9) [adjective] Inclined or having a propensity to love, or to sexual enjoyment. | [adjective] Indicating love or sexual desire. | [adjective] Of or relating to, or produced by, love. AMOSITE (9) [noun] A variety of grunerite asbestos, once used in insulation. AMOTION (9) [noun] The act of removing or taking away, especially the removal of a person from office or position. AMOUNTS (9) [noun] The total, aggregate or sum of material (not applicable to discrete numbers or units or items in standard English). | [noun] A quantity or volume. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) The number (the sum) of elements in a set. AMPERES (11) [noun] A unit of electrical current, the standard base unit in the International System of Units; colloquially amp. Abbreviation: amp, Symbol: A AMPHORA (14) [noun] A two-handled jar with a narrow neck that was used in ancient times to store or carry wine or oil. | [noun] One of various units for measuring liquid or volume during the Roman Empire, measuring between 18.5 and 39 litres depending on the variant. | [noun] Ancient unit of volume, for the measurement of the internal capacity of a ship. AMPLEST (11) [adjective] Large; great in size, extent, capacity, or bulk; for example spacious, roomy or widely extended. | [adjective] Fully sufficient; abundant; plenty | [adjective] Not contracted or brief; not concise; extended; diffusive AMPLIFY (17) [verb] To render larger, more extended, or more intense. | [verb] To enlarge by addition or commenting; to treat copiously by adding particulars, illustrations, etc.; to expand. | [verb] To increase the amplitude of something, especially of an electric current. AMPOULE (11) [noun] A small hermetically sealed vial, often used to contain a sterile solution suitable for injection. AMPULES (11) [noun] A small hermetically sealed vial, often used to contain a sterile solution suitable for injection. AMPULLA (11) [noun] An Ancient Roman two-handled vessel. | [noun] A vessel for containing consecrated wine or oil. | [noun] The dilated end of a duct. AMPUTEE (11) [noun] A person who has had one or more limbs removed. AMREETA (9) AMRITAS (9) [noun] Plural of amrita, a Sanskrit term for the nectar of immortality in Hindu and Buddhist mythology, or a sweet drink offered in religious ceremonies. AMTRACK (15) AMTRACS (11) [noun] An amphibious vehicle of a class introduced in World War II. AMULETS (9) [noun] A kind of protective charm or ornament, often bearing magical symbols, worn for protection against ill will, negative influences or evil spirits. AMUSERS (9) [noun] People or things that amuse; those who provide entertainment or amusement. AMUSIAS (9) [noun] Plural of amusia; a medical condition characterized by the inability to perceive or produce music, or loss of musical ability. AMUSING (10) [verb] To entertain or occupy in a pleasant manner; to stir with pleasing emotions. | [verb] To cause laughter or amusement; to be funny. | [verb] To keep in expectation; to beguile; to delude. AMUSIVE (12) [adjective] Amusing or entertaining in a mildly playful way. AMYLASE (12) [noun] Any of a class of digestive enzymes, present in saliva, that break down complex carbohydrates such as starch into simpler sugars such as glucose. AMYLENE (12) [noun] Any of several isomeric hydrocarbons of the alkene series with five carbon atoms, used as a solvent and in organic synthesis. AMYLOID (13) [noun] A waxy compound of protein and polysaccharides that is found deposited in tissues in amyloidosis. | [noun] Any of various starchlike substances. | [adjective] Containing or resembling starch. AMYLOSE (12) [noun] The soluble form of starch (the insoluble form being amylopectin) that is a linear polymer of glucose. AMYLUMS (14) [noun] Plural of amylum, a starch or starchy substance, especially that obtained from plants. ANADEMS (10) ANAEMIA (9) [noun] A medical condition in which the capacity of the blood to transport oxygen to the tissues is reduced, either because of too few red blood cells, or because of too little hemoglobin, resulting in pallor and fatigue. | [noun] A disease or condition that has anemia as a symptom. | [noun] (obsolete) Ischemia. ANAEMIC (11) [noun] An individual who has anemia. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or suffering from anemia. | [adjective] (by extension) Weak; listless; lacking power, vigor, vitality, or colorfulness. ANAGRAM (10) [noun] (of words) A word or phrase that is created by rearranging the letters of another word or phrase. | [verb] To form anagrams. ANATOMY (12) [noun] The art of studying the different parts of any organized body, to discover their situation, structure, and economy. | [noun] The science that deals with the form and structure of organic bodies; anatomical structure or organization. | [noun] A treatise or book on anatomy. ANEMIAS (9) [noun] Plural of anemia; conditions characterized by a deficiency of red blood cells or hemoglobin in the blood, resulting in reduced oxygen-carrying capacity and symptoms such as fatigue and weakness. ANEMONE (9) [noun] Any plant of the genus Anemone, of the Ranunculaceae (or buttercup) family, such as the windflower. | [noun] A sea anemone. ANGIOMA (10) [noun] A benign tumor made up of small blood vessels or lymph vessels. ANIMALS (9) [noun] In scientific usage, a multicellular organism that is usually mobile, whose cells are not encased in a rigid cell wall (distinguishing it from plants and fungi) and which derives energy solely from the consumption of other organisms (distinguishing it from plants). | [noun] In non-scientific usage, any member of the kingdom Animalia other than a human. | [noun] In non-scientific usage, any land-living vertebrate (i.e. not fishes, insects, etc.). ANIMATE (9) [verb] To impart motion or the appearance of motion to. | [verb] To give spirit or vigour to; to stimulate or enliven; to inspirit. | [adjective] That which lives. ANIMATO (9) [adjective] In a lively or spirited manner, used as a musical direction. | [adverb] With animation or liveliness. ANIMISM (11) [noun] A belief that spirits inhabit some or all classes of natural objects or phenomena. | [noun] A belief that an immaterial force animates the universe. | [noun] A doctrine that animal life is produced by an immaterial spirit. ANIMIST (9) [noun] A person who believes that natural objects, phenomena, and the universe itself possess a spiritual essence or soul. | [noun] A follower of animism, a religious or philosophical belief system that attributes consciousness or divinity to nature and natural phenomena. ANOMALY (12) [noun] A deviation from a rule or from what is regarded as normal; an outlier. | [noun] Something or someone that is strange or unusual. | [noun] Any event or measurement that is out of the ordinary regardless of whether it is exceptional or not. ANOMIES (9) [noun] Plural of anomy; social instability resulting from a breakdown of standards and values. | [noun] Plural of anomie; a state of normlessness or lack of social or moral standards. ANONYMS (12) [noun] An anonymous person. | [noun] An assumed or false name; a pseudonym. | [noun] A mere name; a name resting upon no diagnosis or other recognized basis. ANOSMIA (9) [noun] Inability to smell; the inability to perceive odors. ANOSMIC (11) [adjective] Unable to smell; lacking the sense of smell. ANTHEMS (12) [noun] Antiphon. | [noun] A choral or vocal composition, often with a religious or political lyric. | [noun] A hymn of praise or loyalty. ANTIJAM (16) ANTIMAN (9) ANTONYM (12) [noun] A word which has the opposite meaning of another word. ANTRUMS (9) [noun] Plural of antrum; cavities or chambers within the body, particularly in bones such as the maxilla or mastoid bone. ANYMORE (12) [adverb] (in negative or interrogative constructions) From a given time onwards; longer, again. | [adverb] (in positive constructions) Now, from now on. ANYTIME (12) [adjective] Suitable for any time; not associated with any particular time. | [adverb] At any time | [interjection] "you're welcome" in response to "thank you" or "thanks." APLOMBS (13) [noun] Plural of aplomb; instances of self-assured confidence and composure. | [noun] Vertical lines or measurements in surveying and construction. APOGAMY (15) [noun] A type of asexual reproduction in plants where an embryo develops without fertilization, bypassing the normal sexual process. APOMICT (13) [noun] Any apomictic plant or organism. APOTHEM (14) [noun] The perpendicular distance from the center of a circle to a chord of the same circle. | [noun] The distance from the center of a regular polygon perpendicular to one of its sides (a special case of the above). ARAMIDS (10) [noun] Any of a class of strong, heat-resistant synthetic fibres, used in aerospace and military applications. ARCANUM (11) [noun] A mystery or deep secret. | [noun] An elixir or secret remedy. ARMADAS (10) [noun] A fleet of warships, especially with reference to the Spanish Armada. | [noun] Any large army or fleet of military vessels. | [noun] A large flock of anything. ARMBAND (12) [noun] A band worn around the arm, usually to symbolize protest or mourning. | [noun] A band worn around the arm of the captain of a team. | [noun] An inflatable band worn round the arms to keep afloat in water ARMFULS (12) [noun] The amount an arm or arms can hold. ARMHOLE (12) [noun] A human armpit. | [noun] Similar structures in other animals. | [noun] A hole for an arm in a piece of clothing. ARMIGER (10) [noun] A person entitled to bear a coat of arms. | [noun] A squire carrying the armour of a knight. ARMILLA (9) [noun] A bracelet or armlet, especially one worn as an ornament or badge of rank in ancient times. | [noun] In astronomy, an instrument consisting of rings used to measure celestial coordinates. ARMINGS (10) [noun] The plural of arming, referring to the provision of weapons or military equipment. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of "arm," meaning to equip with weapons or prepare for conflict. ARMLESS (9) [adjective] Without arms or lacking arms. | [adjective] Helpless or defenseless. ARMLETS (9) [noun] A band that is worn on the arm that for ornamental or identification purposes. | [noun] A small arm. ARMLIKE (13) [adjective] Resembling or having the characteristics of an arm; shaped like an arm. ARMLOAD (10) [noun] A quantity of things approaching the maximum that could be held or carried with one arm. ARMLOCK (15) [noun] A wrestling move in which the opponent's arm is held immobile | [noun] Any of several distinct attacks against an opponent’s arm in martial arts | [noun] (by extension) Power to control or heavily influence something or someone. ARMOIRE (9) [noun] A type of cupboard, cabinet, or wardrobe - originally used for storing weapons. ARMORED (10) [verb] To equip something with armor or a protective coating or hardening. | [verb] To provide something with an analogous form of protection. | [adjective] Clad or equipped with arms or armor. ARMORER (9) [noun] A manufacturer of weapons, especially of guns | [noun] A military specialist in charge of the upkeep of small arms etc | [noun] Someone who makes or repairs armor ARMOURS (9) [verb] To equip something with armour or a protective coating or hardening. | [verb] To provide something with an analogous form of protection. ARMOURY (12) [noun] Heraldry | [noun] A place where arms are kept, an arsenal. | [noun] A collection of weapons and materiel. ARMPITS (11) [noun] The cavity beneath the junction of the arm and shoulder. | [noun] Somewhere or something considered unpleasant or undesirable. ARMREST (9) [noun] Part of the seat of a chair that is designed to support the arm. ARMSFUL (12) [noun] Plural of armful; the quantity that can be held in one's arms. ARMURES (9) [noun] Plural of armure, a type of fabric with a small woven pattern or texture, or protective coverings made of metal or other materials. ASARUMS (9) [noun] Plural of asarum, a genus of plants in the birthwort family, commonly known as wild ginger. ASHAMED (13) [verb] To feel shame; to be ashamed. | [verb] To make ashamed; to shame. | [adjective] Feeling shame or guilt. ASHRAMS (12) [noun] A secluded religious hermitage inhabited by gurus, or the population of such a hermitage. ASRAMAS (9) [noun] The four stages of life in Hinduism (student, householder, forest dweller, and renunciate). | [noun] Plural of ashrama, referring to the Hindu concept of life stages or the monasteries/hermitages associated with them. ASSUMED (10) [verb] To authenticate by means of belief; to surmise; to suppose to be true, especially without proof | [verb] To take on a position, duty or form | [verb] To adopt a feigned quality or manner; to claim without right; to arrogate ASSUMER (9) [noun] One who assumes; a person who takes something for granted or adopts a belief without proof. ASSUMES (9) [verb] To authenticate by means of belief; to surmise; to suppose to be true, especially without proof | [verb] To take on a position, duty or form | [verb] To adopt a feigned quality or manner; to claim without right; to arrogate ASTHMAS (12) [noun] Plural of asthma, a chronic respiratory condition characterized by airway inflammation and difficulty breathing. ASYLUMS (12) [noun] A place of safety. | [noun] The protection, physical and legal, afforded by such a place. | [noun] A place of protection or restraint for one or more classes of the disadvantaged, especially the mentally ill. ATAMANS (9) [noun] A title of Cossack and haidamak leaders of various kinds. The term was also used for the leader of a fisherman artel and of a band of robbers or thieves. ATAVISM (12) [noun] The reappearance of an ancestral characteristic in an organism after several generations of absence. | [noun] The recurrence or reversion to a past behaviour, method, characteristic or style after a long period of absence. | [noun] Reversion to past primitive behavior, especially violence. ATEMOYA (12) [noun] A tropical fruit that is a hybrid between a sugar apple and a cherimoya, having a bumpy exterior and creamy white flesh. ATHEISM (12) [noun] (narrowly) Belief that no deities exist (sometimes including rejection of other religious beliefs). | [noun] (broadly) Rejection of belief that any deities exist (with or without a belief that no deities exist). | [noun] (very broadly) Absence of belief that any deities exist (including absence of the concept of deities). ATOMICS (11) [noun] The branch of physics dealing with atoms and atomic energy. | [noun] Plural of atomic, referring to things related to atoms or atomic weapons. ATOMIES (9) [noun] A floating mote or speck of dust. | [noun] An indivisible particle. | [noun] A tiny being; a very small person. ATOMISE (9) [verb] To separate or reduce into atoms | [verb] To make into a fine spray | [verb] To fragment, break into small pieces or concepts ATOMISM (11) [noun] The ancient Greek theory that all matter is composed of very small indestructible and indivisible particles. | [noun] The doctrine that society arises from individuals and that larger structures are unimportant. ATOMIST (9) [noun] A person who believes in or advocates atomism, the philosophical doctrine that all matter consists of atoms. | [noun] A person who supports the use of atomic energy or weapons. ATOMIZE (18) [verb] To separate or reduce into atoms | [verb] To make into a fine spray | [verb] To fragment, break into small pieces or concepts ATRIUMS (9) [noun] A central room or space in ancient Roman homes, open to the sky in the middle; a similar space in other buildings. | [noun] A square hall lit by daylight from above, into which rooms open at one or more levels. | [noun] A cavity, entrance, or passage. ATTEMPT (11) [noun] The action of trying at something. | [noun] An assault or attack, especially an assassination attempt. | [verb] To try. AUGMENT (10) [noun] (grammar) In some Indo-European languages, a prefix e- (a- in Sanskrit) indicating a past tense of a verb. | [noun] (grammar) In some Bantu languages, an additional vowel prepended to the noun prefix. | [noun] An increase. AUSFORM (12) [verb] To shape metal by heating and then working it while hot, or to forge and form metal through a combination of heat and mechanical deformation. AUTISMS (9) [noun] Plural of autism, referring to multiple instances or cases of the autism spectrum disorder. AUTOMAN (9) AUTOMEN (9) AUTUMNS (9) [noun] Traditionally the third of the four seasons, when deciduous trees lose their leaves; typically regarded as being from September 24 to December 22 in parts of the Northern Hemisphere, and the months of March, April and May in the Southern Hemisphere. | [noun] (by extension) The time period when someone or something is past its prime. | [noun] A person with relatively dark hair and a warm skin tone, seen as best suited to certain colours in clothing. AWESOME (12) [noun] Short for awesomeness: the quality, state, or essence of being awesome. | [adjective] Causing awe or terror; inspiring wonder or excitement. | [adjective] Excellent, exciting, remarkable. AXONEME (16) [noun] A bundle of nine microtubules forming the internal scaffolding of a cilium, with two extra central microtubules connecting the others if the cilium is motile AZIMUTH (21) [noun] An arc of the horizon intercepted between the meridian of the place and a vertical circle passing through the center of any object. | [noun] The quadrant of an azimuth circle. BAALISM (11) [noun] The worship of Baal, a deity in ancient Near Eastern religions, or the practice of idolatry associated with false gods. | [noun] In modern usage, devotion to materialism or worldly concerns viewed as a form of false worship. BACULUM (13) [noun] A bone found in the penis of some mammals | [noun] A small rod-like structure found in spores and pollen BAGWORM (15) [noun] A member of the family Psychidae of the Lepidoptera. | [noun] Eastern tent caterpillar. | [noun] Fall webworm. BALMIER (11) [adjective] Producing balm. | [adjective] Soothing or fragrant. | [adjective] Mild and pleasant. BALMILY (14) [adverb] In a balmy manner; with a soft, soothing, or mild quality. BALSAMS (11) [noun] A sweet-smelling oil or resin derived from various plants. | [noun] A plant or tree yielding such substance. | [noun] A soothing ointment. BAMBINI (13) [noun] A child or baby, especially a representation in art of the infant Christ wrapped in swaddling clothes. BAMBINO (13) [noun] A child or baby, especially a representation in art of the infant Christ wrapped in swaddling clothes. BAMBOOS (13) [noun] A grass of the Poaceae family, characterised by its woody, hollow, round, straight, jointed stem, all of which are in the Bambuseae tribe. | [noun] The wood of the bamboo plant as a material or cane. | [noun] A didgeridoo. BAMMING (14) BANTAMS (11) [noun] Any of several small chickens, especially of a breed that is a miniature version of another breed. | [noun] A competitor in an age division between peewee and midget. BAPTISM (13) [noun] A Christian sacrament, by which one is received into a church and sometimes given a name, generally involving the candidate to be anointed with or submerged in water. | [noun] A similar ceremony of initiation, purification or naming. BARIUMS (11) [noun] Plural of barium, a soft silvery-white metallic element used in various industrial and medical applications. BARMAID (12) [noun] A woman who serves in a bar. BARMIER (11) [adjective] Odd, strange, or crazy. | [adjective] Containing barm, i.e. froth from fermented yeast. BARROOM (11) [noun] A room where alcoholic drinks are served over a counter. BASEMAN (11) [noun] A player positioned at or near a base: first baseman, second baseman or third baseman. BASEMEN (11) [noun] A player positioned at or near a base: first baseman, second baseman or third baseman. BASMATI (11) [noun] A variety of long-grain rice, notable for its fragrance. BATHMAT (14) [noun] A small mat used next to a bathtub to absorb water and thus prevent slipping. BATSMAN (11) [noun] A player of the batting side now on the field. | [noun] The player now receiving strike; the striker. | [noun] Any player selected for his or her team principally to bat, as opposed to a bowler. BATSMEN (11) [noun] A player of the batting side now on the field. | [noun] The player now receiving strike; the striker. | [noun] Any player selected for his or her team principally to bat, as opposed to a bowler. BAYAMOS (14) [noun] Plural of bayamo, a type of Cuban folk music and dance. | [noun] The plural form of bayamo, referring to traditional Cuban songs or the people who perform them. BAZOOMS (20) [noun] Plural of bazoom, a slang term for a woman's breast. BEADMAN (12) BEADMEN (12) BEAMIER (11) [adjective] Resembling a beam in size and weight; massy. | [adjective] Having horns or antlers. | [adjective] Having much beam or breadth; wide. BEAMILY (14) BEAMING (12) [verb] To emit beams of light; shine; radiate. | [verb] To smile broadly or especially cheerfully. | [verb] To furnish or supply with beams BEAMISH (14) [adjective] Smiling broadly; beaming with joy or cheerfulness. BECALMS (13) [verb] To make calm or still; make quiet; calm. | [verb] To deprive (a ship) of wind, so that it cannot move (usually in passive). BECHARM (16) [verb] To charm or enchant. | [verb] To put under a charm or spell. BECOMES (13) [verb] To arrive, come (to a place). | [verb] To come about; happen; come into being; arise. | [verb] Begin to be; turn into. BECRIME (13) BEDAMNS (12) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "bedamn," meaning to curse or damn thoroughly. BEDEMAN (12) [noun] A man employed by a church or college to perform various duties, such as summoning members to meetings or maintaining order during services. BEDEMEN (12) BEDLAMP (14) BEDLAMS (12) [noun] A place or situation of chaotic uproar, and where confusion prevails. | [noun] An insane person; a lunatic; a madman. | [noun] A lunatic asylum; a madhouse. BEDMATE (12) [noun] A person with whom one shares a bed. BEDROOM (12) [noun] A room in a house where a bed is kept for sleeping. BEDTIME (12) [noun] The time or hour at which one retires to bed in order to sleep. BEDUMBS (14) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "bedumb," meaning to make dumb or stupid. BEGLOOM (12) BEGRIME (12) [verb] To make something dirty; to soil. BEGRIMS (12) [verb] Third person singular of "begrim," meaning to make dirty or grimy; to soil or blacken with grime. BELDAME (12) [noun] A grandmother. | [noun] An old woman, particularly an ugly one. BELDAMS (12) [noun] A grandmother. | [noun] An old woman, particularly an ugly one. BELLMAN (11) [noun] A town crier | [noun] A bellhop or bellboy BELLMEN (11) [noun] A town crier | [noun] A bellhop or bellboy BEMADAM (14) BEMEANS (11) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "bemean," meaning to degrade, demean, or lower in dignity or respect. BEMIRED (12) [verb] To soil with mud or a similar substance. | [verb] To immerse or trap in mire. BEMIRES (11) [verb] To soil with mud or a similar substance. | [verb] To immerse or trap in mire. BEMISTS (11) [verb] Covers or obscures with mist. BEMIXED (19) BEMIXES (18) [verb] Third person singular simple present indicative form of "bemix," meaning to mix thoroughly or confuse by mixing. BEMOANS (11) [verb] To moan or complain about (something). | [verb] To be dismayed or worried about (someone), particularly because of their situation or what has happened to them. BEMOCKS (17) [verb] Third person singular present of bemock; to mock or ridicule someone or something. BEMUSED (12) [verb] To confuse or bewilder. | [verb] To devote to the Muses. | [adjective] Deeply thoughtful; preoccupied BEMUSES (11) [verb] To confuse or bewilder. | [verb] To devote to the Muses. BENAMED (12) BENAMES (11) [verb] To give a name to; to name. | [verb] To call or address by a particular name. BENEMPT (13) [verb] Past tense and past participle of "bename," meaning to name or call by a particular name. BENOMYL (14) [noun] A fungicide that binds to microtubules, interfering with cell functions such as meiosis and intracellular transportation. BENUMBS (13) [verb] To make numb, as by cold or anesthetic. | [verb] To deaden, dull (the mind, faculties, etc.). BERHYME (17) [verb] To compose or write in rhyme; to put into rhyming verse. BERIMED (12) BERIMES (11) [verb] Third person singular of "berime," meaning to cover or soil with rime (frost or grime). BERSEEM (11) [noun] A clover-like legume plant (Trifolium alexandrinum) native to Egypt, cultivated as a forage crop and green manure in warm regions. BESEEMS (11) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "beseem," meaning to be suitable or appropriate for someone or something. BESHAME (14) BESLIME (11) [verb] To cover or smear with slime. BESMEAR (11) [verb] To smear over; smear all over; sully. BESMILE (11) BESMOKE (15) [verb] To cover or fill with smoke. BESMUTS (11) [verb] Third person singular of "besmut," meaning to soil or cover with smut (soot, dirt, or obscene material). BESWARM (14) [verb] To swarm around or over something in large numbers. BETHUMP (16) [verb] To strike or hit repeatedly; to thump or beat. BETIMES (11) [adverb] In good season or time; early, especially in the morning; seasonably. | [adverb] In a short time, soon; quickly, forthwith. BEVOMIT (14) BEWORMS (14) [verb] To infest or fill with worms. BIMBOES (13) [noun] Plural of bimbo, a derogatory term for an attractive but unintelligent person. BIMETAL (11) [adjective] Made of two different metals bonded together, typically used in thermostats and other applications where different thermal expansion rates are utilized. BIMODAL (12) [adjective] Having two modes or forms | [adjective] (of a distribution) Having two modes (local maxima) BIMORPH (16) [noun] A device consisting of two layers of different materials that bend when heated or cooled, used in sensors and actuators. | [noun] In biology, an organism or structure composed of two distinct parts or forms. BIOHERM (14) [noun] A mound or reef of limestone or other rock formed by the growth of organisms such as corals or algae. | [noun] In geology, a sedimentary structure created by the accumulation of skeletal material from marine organisms. BIOMASS (11) [noun] The total mass of a living thing or part thereof, such as a cell. | [noun] The total mass of all living things within a specific area, habitat etc. | [noun] Vegetation used as a fuel, or source of energy, especially if cultivated for that purpose. BIONOMY (14) [noun] The study of the relationships between organisms and their environment; ecology. | [noun] The laws or principles of life and living organisms. BIRDMAN (12) [noun] A man who works with birds. | [noun] An aviator. | [noun] A mythological creature that is part man and part bird. BIRDMEN (12) [noun] A man who works with birds. | [noun] An aviator. | [noun] A mythological creature that is part man and part bird. BIREMES (11) [noun] (history) an ancient galley having two banks of oars, one above the other. BISMUTH (14) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Bi) with an atomic number of 83: a brittle silvery-white metal. | [noun] A single atom of this element. BITUMEN (11) [noun] Mineral pitch; a black, tarry substance, burning with a bright flame. It occurs as an abundant natural product in many places, as on the shores of the Dead and Caspian Seas. It is used in cements, in the construction of pavements, etc. | [noun] (by extension) Any one of the natural hydrocarbons, including the hard, solid, brittle varieties called asphalt, the semisolid maltha and mineral tars, the oily petrolea, and even the light, volatile naphthas. | [noun] Canadian deposits of extremely heavy crude oil. BLAMERS (11) [noun] Plural of blamer; people who assign fault or responsibility to others. BLAMING (12) [noun] The act of accusing or assigning culpability to | [verb] To censure (someone or something); to criticize. | [verb] To bring into disrepute. BLELLUM (11) [noun] A person who talks excessively or nonsensically; a babbler or blatherer. BLEMISH (14) [noun] A small flaw which spoils the appearance of something, a stain, a spot. | [noun] A moral defect; a character flaw. | [verb] To spoil the appearance of. BLOOMED (12) [verb] To cause to blossom; to make flourish. | [verb] To bestow a bloom upon; to make blooming or radiant. | [verb] Of a plant, to produce blooms; to open its blooms. BLOOMER (11) [noun] An ironworker. | [noun] A minor or embarrassing mistake with minimal results. | [noun] A circular loaf of white bread. | [noun] A costume for women, consisting of a short dress with loose trousers gathered around the ankles, and often a broad-brimmed hat. BLOSSOM (11) [noun] A flower, especially one indicating that a fruit tree is fruiting; a mass of such flowers. | [noun] The state or season of producing such flowers. | [noun] A blooming period or stage of development; something lovely that gives rich promise. BLUEGUM (12) [noun] Any of various eucalyptus trees having blueish leaves, especially Eucalyptus globulus. | [noun] A person of sub-Saharan African origin, alluding to the blue coloring around their gumline BLUMING (12) BOATMAN (11) [noun] A man in charge of a small boat. BOATMEN (11) [noun] A man in charge of a small boat. BOGYISM (15) BOGYMAN (15) [noun] A menacing, ghost-like monster in children's stories. | [noun] (by extension) Any make-believe threat, especially one used to intimidate or distract. BOGYMEN (15) [noun] A menacing, ghost-like monster in children's stories. | [noun] (by extension) Any make-believe threat, especially one used to intimidate or distract. BOHEMIA (14) [noun] A community of bohemians, unconventional artists or writers. BOMBARD (14) [noun] A medieval primitive cannon, used chiefly in sieges for throwing heavy stone balls. | [noun] A bassoon-like medieval instrument | [noun] A large liquor container made of leather, in the form of a jug or a bottle. | [verb] To continuously attack something with bombs, artillery shells or other missiles or projectiles. BOMBAST (13) [noun] Cotton, or cotton wool. | [noun] Cotton, or any soft, fibrous material, used as stuffing for garments; stuffing, padding. | [noun] High-sounding words; language above the dignity of the occasion; a pompous or ostentatious manner of writing or speaking. BOMBERS (13) [noun] A military aircraft designed to carry and drop bombs. | [noun] A person who sets bombs, especially as an act of terrorism. | [noun] A bomber jacket. BOMBING (14) [verb] To attack using one or more bombs; to bombard. | [verb] To fail dismally. | [verb] To jump into water in a squatting position, with the arms wrapped around the legs. BONDMAN (12) [noun] A man bound in servitude; a slave or serf. | [noun] A man bound by a bond or contract. BONDMEN (12) [noun] Plural of bondman; men who are bound in servitude or slavery, or men bound by contract or obligation. BOOKMAN (15) [noun] (Old English law) One who held bookland. | [noun] A studious or learned man; a scholar; a student of books. | [noun] One who sells or publishes books; a bookseller. BOOKMEN (15) [noun] (Old English law) One who held bookland. | [noun] A studious or learned man; a scholar; a student of books. | [noun] One who sells or publishes books; a bookseller. BOOMBOX (20) [noun] A powerful portable audio system for listening collectively to recorded or broadcast sound. BOOMERS (11) [noun] A person born in the postwar years (generally considered in the United States and other Allied countries as between 1946 and the early 1960s), when there was a marked increase in birthrates throughout the Western world following the return of servicemen at the end of World War II. | [noun] An adult male kangaroo. | [noun] (by extension) A person who does not know how to utilize new technologies well. BOOMIER (11) [adjective] Characterized by heavy bass sounds. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a financial boom, resources boom, baby boom, etc. BOOMING (12) [verb] To make a loud, hollow, resonant sound. | [verb] (of speech) To exclaim with force, to shout, to thunder. | [verb] To make something boom. BOOMKIN (15) [noun] A spar or pole that extends outward from the side of a ship to hold rigging or prevent cargo from shifting. | [noun] A projection on a derrick or crane that extends the reach of the lifting mechanism. BOOMLET (11) [noun] A small or minor boom, especially a brief period of increased activity or prosperity in a limited area or sector. BOREDOM (12) [noun] The state of being bored. | [noun] An instance or period of being bored; A bored state. BOSOMED (12) [adjective] Having a bosom of a specified kind, as in "full-bosomed" or "flat-bosomed"; often used in combination with descriptive words to describe the chest or breast area. BOSSDOM (12) BOSSISM (11) [noun] The domination of a political party by a single, powerful person (the boss) BOTTOMS (11) [noun] The lowest part of anything. | [noun] Character, reliability, staying power, dignity, integrity or sound judgment. | [noun] Low-lying land; a valley or hollow. BRAHMAS (14) [noun] Plural of Brahma, a large breed of domestic chicken with feathered legs and feet. | [noun] Plural of Brahma, referring to the Hindu creator god in the Trimurti. BRAMBLE (13) [noun] Any of many closely related thorny plants in the genus Rubus including the blackberry and likely not including the raspberry proper. | [noun] Any thorny shrub. | [noun] A cocktail of gin, lemon juice, and blackberry liqueur. BRAMBLY (16) [adjective] Full of or resembling brambles; prickly or thorny. | [adjective] Difficult to navigate or penetrate; tangled or overgrown. BREAMED (12) [verb] To clean (e.g. a ship's bottom of clinging shells, seaweed, etc.) by the application of fire and scraping. BRECHAM (16) BRIMFUL (14) [adjective] Filled to maximum capacity. | [noun] The maximum amount a container can hold. | [noun] A large amount. BRIMMED (14) [verb] To be full to overflowing. | [verb] To fill to the brim, upper edge, or top. | [verb] Of pigs: to be in heat, to rut. BRIMMER (13) [noun] Something that brims or is full to the brim. | [noun] A drinking cup or glass that is filled to the brim. BROMALS (11) [noun] Plural of bromal, a chemical compound that is a brominated derivative of barbituric acid, formerly used as a sedative or hypnotic drug. BROMATE (11) [noun] The anion BrO3-1, derived from bromic acid; any salt containing this anion | [verb] To treat with bromic acid or a bromate BROMIDE (12) [noun] A binary compound of bromine and some other element or radical. | [noun] A dose of bromide taken as a sedative, or to reduce sexual appetite. | [noun] (by extension) A dull person with conventional thoughts. BROMIDS (12) [noun] Plural of bromide, a chemical compound containing bromine, or a trite and dull remark. | [noun] Sedative drugs or substances containing bromide salts. BROMINE (11) [noun] A nonmetallic chemical element (symbol Br) with an atomic number of 35; one of the halogens, it is a fuming red-brown liquid at room temperature. | [noun] A bromine atom in a molecule BROMINS (11) BROMISM (13) [noun] Poisoning by bromine or bromides BROMIZE (20) BROOMED (12) [verb] Past tense of broom; to sweep with a broom. | [verb] To remove or eliminate completely (as if sweeping away). BRUMOUS (11) [adjective] Foggy or misty; wintry. BRUTISM (11) BRUXISM (18) [noun] The habit or practice of grinding the teeth, as while sleeping, or due to stress or certain drugs. BUCKRAM (17) [noun] A coarse cloth of cotton, linen or hemp, stiffened with size or glue, used in bookbinding to cover and protect the books, in garments to keep them in the form intended, and for wrappers to cover merchandise. | [verb] To stiffen with or as if with buckram. | [noun] A plant, Allium ursinum, also called ramson, wild garlic, or bear garlic. BUDWORM (15) [noun] Any of various moth caterpillars. BULIMIA (11) [noun] A chronic eating disorder characterized by a binge-and-purge cycle - extreme overeating followed by self-induced vomiting. BULIMIC (13) [noun] A person suffering from bulimia nervosa. | [adjective] Suffering from bulimia nervosa. | [adjective] Of, or relating to, bulimia nervosa. BUMBLED (14) [verb] To act in an inept, clumsy or inexpert manner; to make mistakes. | [verb] To boom, as a bittern; to buzz, as a fly. BUMBLER (13) [noun] A person who makes mistakes or acts clumsily. | [noun] A bumblebee. BUMBLES (13) [noun] A confusion; a jumble. | [verb] To act in an inept, clumsy or inexpert manner; to make mistakes. | [noun] A bumble-bee. BUMBOAT (13) [noun] A small boat used for carrying provisions to ships lying at anchor in a harbour. BUMKINS (15) [noun] Plural of bumkin, a nautical term for a short spar or boom extending from the side of a ship, or a variant spelling of bumpkin meaning a country person. BUMMERS (13) [noun] A forager, especially in Sherman's March to the Sea of November to December 1864. | [noun] An idle, worthless fellow, without any visible means of support; a dissipated sponger. | [noun] A lamb (typically the smallest of a multiple birth) which has been abandoned by its mother or orphaned, and as a consequence is raised in part or in whole by humans. BUMMEST (13) [adjective] Superlative form of bummy; most bummy or shabby in appearance or quality. BUMMING (14) [verb] To sodomize; to engage in anal sex. | [verb] To ask someone to give one (something) for free; to beg for something. | [verb] To stay idle and unproductive, like a hobo or vagabond; to loiter. BUMPERS (13) [noun] Someone or something that bumps. | [noun] A drinking vessel filled to the brim. | [noun] Anything large or successful. BUMPIER (13) [adjective] Rough; jumpy; causing or characterized by jolts and irregular movements | [adjective] Covered with or full of bumps BUMPILY (16) [adverb] In a bumpy manner; with many bumps or jolts. BUMPING (14) [verb] To knock against or run into with a jolt. | [verb] To move up or down by a step; displace. | [verb] To post in an Internet forum thread in order to raise the thread's profile by returning it to the top of the list of active threads. BUMPKIN (17) [noun] A clumsy, unsophisticated person; a yokel. | [noun] A short boom or spar used to extend a sail or secure a stay. BUNKUMS (15) [noun] Plural of bunkum; nonsensical or insincere talk; rubbish or foolish statements. BUSHMAN (14) [noun] A man who lives in or has extensive experience of the Australian bush or outback. BUSHMEN (14) [noun] A man who lives in or has extensive experience of the Australian bush or outback. BUXOMER (18) BUXOMLY (21) [adverb] In a buxom manner; with a full-figured or well-endowed appearance or quality. BYNAMES (14) [noun] A secondary name for a person or thing; a person's surname. | [noun] A nickname. | [noun] A pseudonym; nom-de-plume. CABOMBA (15) [noun] An aquatic plant with finely divided leaves, commonly used in aquariums. CADMIUM (14) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Cd) with an atomic number of 48: a soft, silvery-white metal. | [noun] A single atom of this element. CAEOMAS (11) CAESIUM (11) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Cs) with an atomic number of 55. It is a soft, gold-colored, highly reactive alkali metal. CAIMANS (11) [noun] Any of the relatively small crocodilians of genus Caiman, within family Alligatoridae. | [noun] A semi-aquatic lizard, of the genus Dracaena, found in South America. To differentiate from caimans, they are referred to as caiman lizards. CALAMAR (11) CALAMUS (11) [noun] The sweet flag, Acorus calamus. | [noun] A quill; the hard, horny, hollow, and more or less transparent part of the stem or scape of a feather. | [noun] An abnormal connection or passageway between organs or vessels that normally do not connect. CALCIUM (13) [noun] The chemical element (Symbol Ca), with an atomic number 20. It is a soft, silvery-white alkaline earth metal which occurs naturally as carbonate in limestone and as silicate in many rocks. | [noun] An atom of this element. CALMEST (11) [verb] To make calm. | [verb] To become calm. | [adjective] (of a person) Peaceful, quiet, especially free from anger and anxiety. CALMING (12) [verb] To make calm. | [verb] To become calm. CALOMEL (11) [noun] Mercurous chloride Hg2Cl2, formerly used as a laxative and disinfectant and to treat syphilis CALUMET (11) [noun] A clay tobacco-pipe used by American Indians, especially as a symbol of truce or peace. CALUMNY (14) [noun] A false accusation or charge brought to tarnish another's reputation or standing. | [noun] Falsifications or misrepresentations intended to disparage or discredit another. | [verb] To make false accusations or levy false charges against a person with the intent to tarnish that person's reputation or standing; to calumniate. CAMAILS (11) [noun] A piece of chainmail worn to protect the neck and shoulders. | [noun] An ecclesiastical ornament worn by bishops. CAMASES (11) [noun] Any of the North American flowering plants of the genus Camassia. CAMBERS (13) [verb] To curve upwards in the middle. | [verb] To adjust the camber of the wheels of a vehicle. CAMBIAL (13) [adjective] Relating to or involving the cambium, the layer of tissue in plants that produces new growth. CAMBISM (15) CAMBIST (13) [noun] A person who deals in exchange, especially one who trades in bills of exchange or currency. CAMBIUM (15) [noun] A layer of cells between the xylem and the phloem that is responsible for the secondary growth of roots and stems. | [noun] Periosteum, a membrane that covers the outer surface of bones | [noun] One of the humours formerly believed to nourish the bodily organs. CAMBRIC (15) [noun] A finely-woven fabric made originally from linen but often now from cotton. CAMELIA (11) [noun] A flowering evergreen shrub or small tree of the genus Camellia, native to Asia, with glossy leaves and showy flowers. CAMEOED (12) [verb] Made a brief appearance in a film, television show, or other performance. | [verb] Past tense of cameo, referring to creating or appearing in a cameo role. CAMERAE (11) [noun] Plural of camera, referring to multiple devices for taking photographs or recording video. | [noun] Plural of camera, a chamber or vault-like structure in architecture. CAMERAL (11) [adjective] Relating to a chamber or chambers, particularly in anatomy or architecture. | [adjective] Of or relating to a camera obscura or optical chamber. CAMERAS (11) [noun] A device for taking still or moving pictures or photographs. | [noun] The viewpoint in a three-dimensional game or simulation. | [noun] A vaulted room. CAMIONS (11) [noun] Plural of camion, a heavy motor truck or lorry used for transporting goods. | [noun] In some contexts, a low platform without sides used for carrying heavy loads. CAMISAS (11) [noun] Plural of camisa, a shirt or tunic worn in Spanish-speaking countries. | [noun] In some contexts, referring to political shirts or uniforms associated with fascist movements. CAMISES (11) [noun] Plural of camis; sleeveless undershirts or casual garments worn as undergarments or layering pieces. CAMISIA (11) [noun] A long linen shirt or undergarment worn in medieval times, especially by clergy or as an undertunic. CAMLETS (11) [noun] A fabric made from wool or a mixture of wool and silk, typically having a wavy or watered finish. | [noun] Plural of camlet, a garment or item made from this fabric. CAMORRA (11) [noun] A secret society of criminals in Naples, Italy. | [noun] Any organized group of criminals or mafia. CAMPERS (13) [noun] A person who camps, especially in a tent etc. | [noun] A motor vehicle with a rear compartment for living and sleeping in. | [noun] A person who stays in one spot during a first-person shooting game, to guard an item etc. CAMPHOL (16) CAMPHOR (16) [noun] A white transparent waxy crystalline isoprenoid ketone, 1,7,7-trimethylbicyclo[2.2.1]heptan-2-one, with a strong pungent odour, used in pharmacy. CAMPIER (13) [adjective] Characterized by camp or kitsch, especially when deliberate or intentional. CAMPILY (16) [adverb] In a campy manner; affectedly exaggerated or deliberately theatrical and humorous. CAMPING (14) [verb] To live in a tent or similar temporary accommodation. | [verb] To set up a camp. | [verb] To afford rest or lodging for. CAMPION (13) [noun] Some flowering plants of the genus Lychnis. | [noun] Any flowering plant of the genus Silene. CAMPONG (14) [noun] A Malay or Indonesian village or compound, typically consisting of houses built around a central area. CARAMBA (13) [interjection] (non-vulgar) Exclamation of surprise or dismay.; golly! CARAMEL (11) [noun] A smooth, chewy, sticky confection made by heating sugar and other ingredients until the sugars polymerize and become sticky. | [noun] A (sometimes hardened) piece of this confection. | [noun] A yellow-brown color, like that of caramel. CARMINE (11) [noun] A purplish-red pigment, made from dye obtained from the cochineal beetle; carminic acid or any of its derivatives. | [noun] A purplish-red colour, resembling that pigment. | [adjective] Of the purplish red colour shade carmine. CAROMED (12) [verb] To make a carom (shot in billiards). | [verb] To strike and bounce back; to strike (something) and rebound. CARROMS (11) [noun] A board game in which players use a striker to hit coins or discs into pockets. | [verb] Third-person singular or plural form of carrom, meaning to play carrom or to strike and rebound like a carrom piece. CATMINT (11) [noun] Any of the about 250 species of flowering plant of the genus Nepeta, family Lamiaceae, certain of which are said to have medicinal qualities. | [noun] Something that causes excitement or interest. CAVEMAN (14) [noun] An early human or closely related species, popularly held to reside in caves. | [noun] A brutish or savage person. | [noun] A man with old-fashioned or backward opinions, particularly with regard to women. CAVEMEN (14) [noun] An early human or closely related species, popularly held to reside in caves. | [noun] A brutish or savage person. | [noun] A man with old-fashioned or backward opinions, particularly with regard to women. CAYMANS (14) [noun] Any of the relatively small crocodilians of genus Caiman, within family Alligatoridae. | [noun] A semi-aquatic lizard, of the genus Dracaena, found in South America. To differentiate from caimans, they are referred to as caiman lizards. CEMBALI (13) [noun] Plural of cembalo, a harpsichord or similar keyboard instrument used in baroque music. CEMBALO (13) [noun] A harpsichord. CEMENTA (11) CEMENTS (11) [noun] A powdered substance produced by firing (calcining) calcium carbonate (limestone) and clay that develops strong cohesive properties when mixed with water. The main ingredient of concrete. | [noun] The paste-like substance resulting from mixing such a powder with water, or the rock-like substance that forms when it dries. | [noun] Any material with strong adhesive and cohesive properties such as binding agents, glues, grout. CENTIME (11) [noun] A former subunit of currency equal to one-hundredth of the franc. | [noun] A coin having face value of one centime. CENTIMO (11) [noun] A cent, i.e. 1/100, of certain (mainly historic) Iberian and Latin American currencies, and presently of the Euro (coinage version in Spanish), as a coin or theoretic value CENTRUM (11) [noun] A center. | [noun] The central body of a vertebra; the solid piece to which the arches and some other parts are or may be attached. | [noun] The basis or fundamental portion of one of the cranial segments, regarded as analogous to vertebrae. CENTUMS (11) [noun] Plural of centum, a monetary unit formerly used in various countries, or a group of one hundred in historical Roman military organization. CERAMAL (11) CERAMIC (13) [noun] A hard, brittle, inorganic, nonmetallic material, usually made from a materal, such as clay, then firing it at a high tempature. | [noun] An object made of this material | [adjective] Made of material produced by the high-temperature firing of inorganic, nonmetallic rocks and minerals. CERIUMS (11) [noun] Plural of cerium, a chemical element (Ce) with atomic number 58, a silvery-white rare earth metal. CERMETS (11) [noun] A composite material composed of ceramic and metal materials, used in such applications as industrial saws and turbine blades. CERUMEN (11) [noun] Earwax CESIUMS (11) [noun] Plural of cesium, a soft, silvery-white alkali metal element with atomic number 55. CHACMAS (16) [noun] Plural of chacma, a large baboon found in southern Africa. CHAMADE (15) [noun] A signal made by drum or trumpet to indicate a request for a parley or surrender. CHAMBER (16) [noun] A room or set of rooms, particularly: | [noun] A chamberpot. | [noun] The legislature or division of the legislature itself. CHAMFER (17) [noun] An obtuse-angled relief or cut at an edge added for a finished appearance and to break sharp edges. | [verb] To cut off the edge or corner of something. | [verb] To cut a groove in something. CHAMISE (14) [noun] An evergreen shrub native to California, Adenostoma fasciculatum in the botanical family Rosaceae CHAMISO (14) [noun] An evergreen shrub, Atriplex canescens, found in the southwestern United States. | [noun] An evergreen shrub native to California, Adenostoma fasciculatum. CHAMOIS (14) [noun] A short-horned goat antelope native to mountainous terrain in southern Europe; Rupicapra rupicapra. | [noun] Usually as chamois leather: soft pliable leather originally made from the skin of chamois (nowadays the hides of deer, sheep, and other species of goat are alternatively used). | [noun] The traditional colour of chamois leather. CHAMOIX (21) CHAMPAC (18) [noun] A tropical Asian tree (Magnolia champaca) valued for its fragrant flowers and timber. CHAMPAK (20) [noun] A type of Asian tree with fragrant blossoms, Magnolia champaca CHAMPED (17) [verb] To bite or chew, especially noisily or impatiently. CHAMPER (16) [noun] Champagne, especially cheap or sparkling wine. | [verb] To champ or bite eagerly. CHAPMAN (16) [noun] A dealer or merchant, especially an itinerant one. | [noun] A purchaser. CHAPMEN (16) [noun] A dealer or merchant, especially an itinerant one. | [noun] A purchaser. CHARISM (14) [noun] A power or authority, generally of a spiritual nature, believed to be a freely given gift by the grace of God. CHARMED (15) [verb] To seduce, persuade or fascinate someone or something. | [verb] To use a magical charm upon; to subdue, control, or summon by incantation or supernatural influence. | [verb] To protect with, or make invulnerable by, spells, charms, or supernatural influences. CHARMER (14) [noun] A charming person; one who charms or seduces; a smoothie. | [noun] An enchanter or magician. CHASMAL (14) [adjective] Of, relating to, or resembling a chasm; having the characteristics of a deep fissure or abyss. CHASMED (15) [verb] Past tense of chasm, meaning to form or create a chasm or deep opening. CHASMIC (16) [adjective] Like a chasm. CHEFDOM (18) CHEMICS (16) CHEMISE (14) [noun] A loose shirtlike undergarment, especially for women. | [noun] A short nightdress, or similar piece of lingerie. | [noun] A woman's dress that fits loosely; a chemise dress. CHEMISM (16) [noun] The branch of science dealing with chemical properties and reactions, or the chemical composition or properties of something. | [noun] An obsolete term for chemistry or alchemical processes. CHEMIST (14) [noun] A person who specializes in the science of chemistry, especially at a professional level. | [noun] A pharmacist. | [noun] A pharmacy. CHETRUM (14) [noun] A subdivision of currency, equal to one hundredth of a Bhutanese ngultrum CHIASMA (14) [noun] A crossing of two nerves, ligaments etc. | [noun] The contact point between the two chromatids of a chromosome during meiosis. CHIASMI (14) [noun] An inversion of the relationship between the elements of phrases. CHIASMS (14) [noun] Plural of chiasm, an anatomical crossing or intersection of two structures, particularly the optic chiasm where the optic nerves cross in the brain. | [noun] In rhetoric or linguistics, a reversal of grammatical structures in successive phrases. CHILLUM (14) [noun] A conical pipe used for smoking marijuana, usually made of fired clay, porcelain, soapstone, glass or, more rarely, wood. | [noun] The part of such a pipe that contains the tobacco and charcoal balls. CHIMARS (14) CHIMBLY (19) CHIMERA (14) [noun] Alternative letter-case form of Chimera (a flame-spewing monster often represented as having two heads, one of a goat and the other of a lion; the body of a goat; and a serpent as a tail). | [noun] Any fantastic creature with parts from different animals. | [noun] Anything composed of very disparate parts. CHIMERE (14) [noun] A sleeveless robe or vestment worn by bishops and archbishops in the Church of England. CHIMERS (14) CHIMING (15) [verb] To make the sound of a chime. | [verb] To cause to sound in harmony; to play a tune, as upon a set of bells; to move or strike in harmony. | [verb] To utter harmoniously; to recite rhythmically. CHIMLAS (14) CHIMLEY (17) [noun] A vertical tube or hollow column used to emit environmentally polluting gaseous and solid matter (including but not limited to by-products of burning carbon or hydrocarbon based fuels); a flue. | [noun] The glass flue surrounding the flame of an oil lamp. | [noun] The smokestack of a steam locomotive. CHIMNEY (17) [noun] A vertical tube or hollow column used to emit environmentally polluting gaseous and solid matter (including but not limited to by-products of burning carbon or hydrocarbon based fuels); a flue. | [noun] The glass flue surrounding the flame of an oil lamp. | [noun] The smokestack of a steam locomotive. CHIRMED (15) CHLAMYS (17) [noun] A short poncho-like cloak caught up on the shoulder, worn by hunters, soldiers, and horsemen in Ancient Greece. CHOMPED (17) [verb] To bite or chew loudly or heavily. | [verb] (Perl) To remove the final character from (a text string) if it is a newline (or, less commonly, some other programmer-specified character). CHOMPER (16) [noun] A person or animal that champs or bites vigorously. | [noun] A horse with a tendency to chomp its bit. CHRISMA (14) CHRISMS (14) [noun] Plural of chrism; consecrated oil used in religious ceremonies, particularly in Christian rites such as baptism and confirmation. CHRISOM (14) [noun] A white cloth, anointed with chrism, or a white mantle thrown over a child when baptized or christened. | [noun] A child that died within a month after its baptism; so called from the chrisom cloth used as a shroud for it. CHROMAS (14) [noun] Plural of chroma, referring to the purity or saturation of a color; the attribute of a color by which we identify it as red, green, blue, etc., independent of brightness. | [noun] In music, a chromatic progression or the use of notes outside a key signature. CHROMED (15) [verb] To plate with chrome. | [verb] To treat with a solution of potassium bichromate, as in dyeing. CHROMES (14) [noun] Plural of chrome; shiny metallic coating or plating, typically chromium. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of chrome; to coat or plate with chromium. CHROMIC (16) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing chromium, especially in oxidation state 3 CHROMOS (14) [noun] A color print produced by chromolithography. | [noun] A prostitute. CHROMYL (17) [adjective] Relating to or containing the chromyl group, a divalent radical (CrO2) used in organic chemistry. CHUMMED (17) [verb] To share rooms with someone; to live together. | [verb] To lodge (somebody) with another person or people. | [verb] To make friends; to socialize. CHUMPED (17) [verb] Past tense of chump; to treat someone as a fool or to trick someone. | [verb] To bite or chew noisily or vigorously. CHYMICS (19) [noun] Practitioners or students of alchemy or early chemistry; those who practice chymistry (an archaic term for chemistry). CHYMIST (17) [noun] An archaic or alternative spelling of chemist, referring to a person who practices chemistry or prepares medicines. CHYMOUS (17) [adjective] Of or relating to chyme, the semifluid mass of partially digested food that passes from the stomach into the small intestine. CIMICES (13) [noun] Plural of cimex; a genus of parasitic bugs, particularly bedbugs. CINEMAS (11) [noun] A movie theatre, a movie house | [noun] Films collectively. | [noun] The film and movie industry. CIVISMS (14) CLAIMED (12) [verb] To demand ownership of. | [verb] To state a new fact, typically without providing evidence to prove it is true. | [verb] To demand ownership or right to use for land. CLAIMER (11) [noun] A person who makes a claim; a claimant. | [noun] A pretender to a royal title. | [noun] A racehorse offered for sale before a race and delivered to the buyer afterwards. CLAMANT (11) [adjective] Urgent. | [adjective] Crying earnestly; beseeching clamorously. CLAMBER (13) [noun] The act of clambering; a difficult or haphazard climb. | [verb] To climb (something) with some difficulty, or in a haphazard fashion. CLAMMED (14) [verb] To dig for clams. | [verb] To produce, in bellringing, a clam or clangor; to cause to clang. | [verb] To be moist or glutinous; to stick; to adhere. CLAMMER (13) [noun] One who clams; a person who digs for or harvests clams. | [noun] A clam digger tool or device used to extract clams from the ground. CLAMORS (11) [noun] A great outcry or vociferation; loud and continued shouting or exclamation. | [noun] Any loud and continued noise. | [noun] A continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction or discontent; a popular outcry. CLAMOUR (11) [noun] A great outcry or vociferation; loud and continued shouting or exclamation. | [noun] Any loud and continued noise. | [noun] A continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction or discontent; a popular outcry. CLAMPED (14) [verb] To fasten in place or together with (or as if with) a clamp. | [verb] To hold or grip tightly. | [verb] To modify (a numeric value) so it lies within a specific range. CLAMPER (13) [noun] A device or tool used to hold or secure something firmly in place. | [noun] A member of a clamping organization or group. CLEMENT (11) [adjective] Lenient or merciful; charitable. | [adjective] Mild (said of weather and similar circumstances). CLEOMES (11) [noun] Any flowering plant in the genus Cleome. CLIMATE (11) [noun] An area of the earth's surface between two parallels of latitude. | [noun] A region of the Earth. | [noun] The long-term manifestations of weather and other atmospheric conditions in a given area or country, now usually represented by the statistical summary of its weather conditions during a period long enough to ensure that representative values are obtained (generally 30 years). CLIMBED (14) [verb] To ascend; rise; to go up. | [verb] To mount; to move upwards on. | [verb] To scale; to get to the top of something. CLIMBER (13) [noun] One who climbs. | [noun] A plant that climbs, such as a vine. | [noun] A bird that climbs, such as a woodpecker or a parrot. | [verb] To climb; to mount with effort; to clamber. CLOMPED (14) [verb] To walk heavily or clumsily, as with clogs. | [verb] To make some object hit something, thereby producing a clomping sound. CLONISM (11) CLUBMAN (13) [noun] A man who attends a social club. | [noun] A warrior who uses a club as a weapon. CLUBMEN (13) [noun] A man who attends a social club. | [noun] A warrior who uses a club as a weapon. CLUMBER (13) [noun] A breed of spaniel dog with a long, silky coat, originally bred for hunting in heavy cover. CLUMPED (14) [verb] To form clusters or lumps. | [verb] To gather in dense groups. | [verb] To walk with heavy footfalls. COADMIT (12) [verb] To admit jointly or together with another person or party. COAMING (12) [noun] On a boat, the vertical side of above-deck structures, such as the coach roof, hatch, and cockpit. | [noun] A raised frame, designed to deflect or prevent entry of water, around an opening (e.g., a hatch or skylight) in a flat surface, such as a roof or deck. COCOMAT (13) COCOYAM (16) [noun] New cocoyam: Xanthosoma, particularly Xanthosoma sagittifolium, or the edible root of that plant; malanga. | [noun] Old cocoyam: Colocasia esculenta; taro. COELOME (11) [noun] A body cavity in animals that is lined with mesoderm and contains the internal organs; also spelled coelom. COELOMS (11) [noun] A fluid-filled cavity within the body of an animal. The digestive system is suspended within the cavity, which is lined by a tissue called the peritoneum. COEMPTS (13) [verb] Third person singular of "coempt," an archaic legal term meaning to purchase jointly or to buy up the entire stock of something. COLUMEL (11) [noun] A small column or columnlike structure, especially the bony or cartilaginous partition between the nostrils in vertebrates. COLUMNS (11) [noun] A solid upright structure designed usually to support a larger structure above it, such as a roof or horizontal beam, but sometimes for decoration. | [noun] A vertical line of entries in a table, usually read from top to bottom. | [noun] A body of troops or army vehicles, usually strung out along a road. COMAKER (15) [noun] A person who makes something jointly with another person. | [noun] A person who signs a promissory note or other document along with another person, making themselves liable for the debt. COMAKES (15) COMATES (11) [noun] Plural of comate; persons who share the same table or eat together. | [noun] Companions or associates, especially in a group or organization. COMATIC (13) [adjective] Relating to or affected by coma; in a state of coma or unconsciousness. COMATIK (15) COMBATS (13) [noun] A battle, a fight (often one in which weapons are used). | [noun] A struggle for victory | [verb] To fight; to struggle against. COMBERS (13) [noun] A person who combs wool, etc. | [noun] A machine that combs wool, etc. | [noun] A long, curving wave breaking on the shore. COMBINE (13) [noun] A combine harvester | [noun] A combination | [verb] To bring (two or more things or activities) together; to unite. COMBING (14) [verb] (especially of hair or fur) To groom with a toothed implement; chiefly with a comb. | [verb] To separate choice cotton fibers from worsted cloth fibers. | [verb] To search thoroughly as if raking over an area with a comb. COMBUST (13) [noun] That which undergoes burning. | [verb] To burn; to catch fire. | [verb] To erupt with enthusiasm or boisterousness. COMEDIC (14) [adjective] Relating to comedy. COMEDOS (12) [noun] Plural of comedo; blackheads or whiteheads formed by clogged pores in the skin. COMETIC (13) COMFIER (14) [adjective] Comfortable. COMFITS (14) [noun] A computerised image of a suspect produced for the police force. COMFORT (14) [noun] Contentment, ease. | [noun] Something that offers comfort. | [noun] A consolation; something relieving suffering or worry. COMFREY (17) [noun] Any of several species of perennial herbs of the genus Symphytum, often specifically Symphytum officinale. COMICAL (13) [adjective] Originally, relating to comedy. | [adjective] Funny, whimsically amusing. | [adjective] Laughable; ridiculous. COMINGS (12) [noun] The act of arriving; an arrival COMITIA (11) [noun] A public assembly or gathering in ancient Rome. | [noun] The plural of comitium, referring to the place where such assemblies were held. COMMAND (14) [noun] An order to do something. | [noun] The right or authority to order, control or dispose of; the right to be obeyed or to compel obedience. | [noun] Power of control, direction or disposal; mastery. COMMATA (13) [noun] Plural of comma, referring to multiple punctuation marks or pauses in speech or music. COMMEND (14) [noun] Commendation; praise. | [noun] (in the plural) Compliments; greetings. | [verb] To congratulate or reward. COMMENT (13) [noun] A spoken or written remark. | [noun] A remark embedded in source code in such a way that it will be ignored by the compiler or interpreter, typically to help people to understand the code. | [verb] To remark. COMMIES (13) [noun] One who subscribes to anticapitalism. | [noun] A communist; a person with communist sympathies; a supposed communist infiltrator. | [noun] A Holden Commodore. COMMITS (13) [noun] The act of committing (e.g. a database transaction or source code into a source control repository), making it a permanent change. | [verb] To give in trust; to put into charge or keeping; to entrust; to consign; used with to or formerly unto. | [verb] To put in charge of a jailer; to imprison. COMMIXT (20) [adjective] Mixed together; blended or combined with other things. COMMODE (14) [noun] A low chest of drawers on short legs. | [noun] A stand for a washbowl and jug. | [noun] A chair containing a chamber pot. COMMONS (13) [noun] Mutual good, shared by more than one. | [noun] A tract of land in common ownership; common land. | [noun] The people; the community. COMMOVE (16) [verb] To disturb or agitate emotionally; to move or stir up. COMMUNE (13) [noun] A small community, often rural, whose members share in the ownership of property, and in the division of labour; the members of such a community. | [noun] A local political division in many European countries. | [noun] The commonalty; the common people. | [verb] To converse together with sympathy and confidence; to interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel. COMMUTE (13) [verb] To exchange substantially; to abate but not abolish completely, a penalty, obligation, or payment in return for a great, single thing or an aggregate; to cash in; to lessen | [verb] Of an operation, to be commutative, i.e. to have the property that changing the order of the operands does not change the result. | [noun] A regular journey to or from a place of employment, such as work or school. COMPACT (15) [noun] An agreement or contract. | [noun] A small, slim folding case, often featuring a mirror, powder and a powderpuff; that fits into a woman's purse or handbag, or that slips into one's pocket. | [noun] A broadsheet newspaper published in the size of a tabloid but keeping its non-sensational style. COMPANY (16) [noun] A team; a group of people who work together professionally. | [noun] A small group of birds or animals. | [noun] An entity having legal personality, and thus able to own property and to sue and be sued in its own name; a corporation. COMPARE (13) [noun] Comparison. | [noun] An instruction or command that compares two values. | [noun] Illustration by comparison; simile. COMPART (13) COMPASS (13) [noun] A magnetic or electronic device used to determine the cardinal directions (usually magnetic or true north). | [noun] A pair of compasses (a device used to draw an arc or circle). | [noun] The range of notes of a musical instrument or voice. | [verb] To surround; to encircle; to environ; to stretch round. COMPEER (13) [noun] The equal or peer of someone else; a close companion or associate. | [verb] To be equal with; to match. COMPELS (13) [verb] To drive together, round up | [verb] To overpower; to subdue. | [verb] To force, constrain or coerce. COMPEND (14) [noun] A brief summary or abridgment of a larger work; a compendium. | [verb] To make a compend of; to abridge or summarize. COMPERE (13) [noun] A master of ceremonies, especially for a television, variety, or quiz show. | [verb] To emcee, to act as compere. COMPETE (13) [verb] To be in battle or in a rivalry with another for the same thing, position, or reward; to contend | [verb] To be in a position in which it is possible to win or triumph. | [verb] To take part in a contest, game or similar event COMPILE (13) [noun] An act of compiling code. | [verb] To put together; to assemble; to make by gathering things from various sources. | [verb] To construct, build. COMPING (14) [verb] To accompany, in music. | [verb] To compose (a visual design); to make a composite. | [verb] To provide someone with (a complimentary item, such as a ticket). COMPLEX (20) [noun] A network of interconnected systems. | [noun] A collection of buildings with a common purpose, such as a university or military base. | [noun] An assemblage of related things; a collection. COMPLIN (13) [noun] The final church service of the day, traditionally said in the evening before retiring to bed. COMPLOT (13) [noun] A plot (involving more than one person), conspiracy | [verb] To plot together; conspire. COMPONE (13) [adjective] (Heraldry) Divided into a row of squares of alternating tinctures. | [verb] To divide into squares of alternating colors in heraldry. COMPONY (16) [adjective] Divided into a line of squares of alternating tinctures COMPORT (13) [noun] Manner of acting; conduct; deportment. | [verb] To tolerate, bear, put up (with). | [verb] To be in agreement (with); to be of an accord. COMPOSE (13) [verb] To make something by merging parts. | [verb] To make up the whole; to constitute. | [verb] To comprise. COMPOST (13) [noun] The decayed remains of organic matter that has rotted into a natural fertilizer. | [noun] A mixture; a compound. | [verb] To produce compost, let organic matter decay into fertilizer. COMPOTE (13) [noun] A dessert made of fruit cooked in sugary syrup. | [noun] A dish used for serving fruit. COMPTED (14) COMPUTE (13) [noun] Computational power | [verb] To reckon or calculate. | [verb] To make sense. COMRADE (12) [noun] A mate, companion, or associate. | [noun] A companion in battle; fellow soldier. | [noun] A fellow socialist, communist or other similarly politically aligned person. COMSYMP (18) CONDEMN (12) [verb] To strongly criticise or denounce; to excoriate the perpetrators of. | [verb] To judicially pronounce (someone) guilty. | [verb] To confer eternal divine punishment upon. CONDOMS (12) [noun] A flexible sleeve made of latex or other impermeable material such as sheepskin, worn over an erect penis during intercourse as a contraceptive or as a way to prevent the spread of STDs. CONFIRM (14) [verb] To strengthen; to make firm or resolute. | [verb] To administer the sacrament of confirmation on (someone). | [verb] To assure the accuracy of previous statements. CONFORM (14) [verb] (of persons, often followed by to) To act in accordance with expectations; to behave in the manner of others, especially as a result of social pressure. | [verb] (of things, situations, etc.) To be in accordance with a set of specifications or regulations, or with a policy or guideline. | [verb] To make similar in form or nature; to make suitable for a purpose; to adapt. CONIUMS (11) [noun] Plural of conium, a genus of poisonous plants commonly known as hemlock, particularly the common hemlock (Conium maculatum). CONSUME (11) [verb] To use up. | [verb] To eat. | [verb] To completely occupy the thoughts or attention of. CONTEMN (11) [verb] To disdain; to value at little or nothing; to treat or regard with contempt. | [verb] To commit an offence of contempt, such as contempt of court; to unlawfully flout (e.g. a ruling). COOMBES (13) [noun] A valley, often wooded and often with no river | [noun] A cirque. COPALMS (13) COREMIA (11) CORMELS (11) [noun] A small corm that develops at the base of an existing corm. CORMOID (12) CORMOUS (11) [adjective] Relating to or resembling a corm, a short, thick underground plant stem used for storage and reproduction. CORYMBS (16) [noun] A cluster of flowers with a flat or convex top. COSMISM (13) COSMIST (11) COSTUME (11) [noun] A style of dress, including garments, accessories and hairstyle, especially as characteristic of a particular country, period or people. | [noun] An outfit or a disguise worn as fancy dress etc. | [noun] A set of clothes appropriate for a particular occasion or season. COULOMB (13) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of electric charge; the amount of electric charge carried by a current of 1 ampere flowing for 1 second. Symbol: C COXCOMB (22) [noun] The cap of a court jester, adorned with a red stripe. | [noun] The fleshy red pate of a rooster. | [noun] (by extension) A foolish or conceited person; a dandy. CRAMBES (13) CRAMBOS (13) CRAMMED (14) [verb] To press, force, or drive, particularly in filling, or in thrusting one thing into another; to stuff; to fill to superfluity. | [verb] To fill with food to satiety; to stuff. | [verb] To put hastily through an extensive course of memorizing or study, as in preparation for an examination. CRAMMER (13) [noun] One who crams or stuffs. | [noun] A book used for accelerated study in preparation for an examination. | [noun] A student who studies hard for an examination. CRAMPED (14) [verb] (of a muscle) To contract painfully and uncontrollably. | [verb] To affect with cramps or spasms. | [verb] To prohibit movement or expression of. CRAMPIT (13) CRAMPON (13) [noun] An attachment to a shoe or boot that provides traction by means of spikes. Used for climbing or walking on slippery surfaces, especially ice. | [noun] An aerial rootlet for support in climbing, as of ivy. | [noun] A heraldic figure in the form of a bar bent at the ends into the form of a hook. CRANIUM (11) [noun] The braincase or neurocranium; that part of the skull consisting of the bones enclosing the brain, but not including the bones of the face or jaw. | [noun] The upper portion of the skull, including the neurocranium and facial bones, but not including the jawbone (mandible). | [noun] The skull. CREAMED (12) [verb] To puree, to blend with a liquifying process. | [verb] To turn a yellowish white colour; to give something the color of cream. | [verb] To obliterate, to defeat decisively. CREAMER (11) [noun] A jug for holding cream. | [noun] A separator for removing cream from milk to leave skimmed milk. | [noun] A nondairy product that adds a creamy texture to coffee. CREMATE (11) [verb] To burn something to ashes. | [verb] To incinerate a dead body (as an alternative to burial). CREWMAN (14) [noun] A member of a crew, especially the crew of a ship. | [noun] Synonym of armoured crewman CREWMEN (14) [noun] A member of a crew, especially the crew of a ship. | [noun] Synonym of armoured crewman CRIMMER (13) CRIMPED (14) [verb] To press into small ridges or folds, to pleat, to corrugate. | [verb] To fasten by bending metal so that it squeezes around the parts to be fastened. | [verb] To pinch and hold; to seize. CRIMPER (13) [noun] A small climbing hold that can only be held with the tips of a person's fingers. | [noun] A hairdresser. | [noun] A device for giving hair a wavy appearance. CRIMPLE (13) CRIMSON (11) [noun] A deep, slightly bluish red. | [verb] To become crimson or deep red; to blush. | [verb] To dye with crimson or deep red; to redden. CRINUMS (11) CRISSUM (11) CRUMBED (14) [verb] To cover with crumbs. | [verb] To break into crumbs or small pieces with the fingers; to crumble. CRUMBER (13) CRUMBLE (13) [noun] A dessert of British origin containing stewed fruit topped with a crumbly mixture of fat, flour, and sugar. | [verb] To fall apart; to disintegrate. | [verb] To break into crumbs. CRUMBLY (16) [noun] A decrepit old person. | [adjective] Easy to break into small fragments; brittle or friable. CRUMBUM (15) CRUMMIE (13) CRUMPED (14) [verb] To produce such a sound. | [verb] For one's health to decline rapidly (but not as rapidly as crash). CRUMPET (13) [noun] A type of savoury cake, typically flat and round, made from batter and yeast, containing many small holes and served toasted, usually with butter. | [noun] A person (or, collectively, persons), usually female, considered sexually desirable. CRUMPLE (13) [noun] A crease, wrinkle, or irregular fold. | [verb] To rumple; to press into wrinkles by crushing together. | [verb] To cause to collapse. CRUMPLY (16) CUBISMS (13) CULMING (12) CULTISM (11) CUMARIN (11) CUMBERS (13) [verb] To slow down; to hinder; to burden; to encumber. CUMMERS (13) CUMMINS (13) CUMQUAT (20) [noun] A small, orange citrus-like fruit which is native to Asia (Citrus japonica, syn. Fortunella japonica). CUMSHAW (17) CUMULUS (11) [noun] A large white puffy cloud that develops through convection. On a hot, humid day, they can form towers and even become cumulonimbus clouds. | [noun] A mound or heap. CUNDUMS (12) CUPRUMS (13) CURCUMA (13) CURIUMS (11) CUSTOMS (11) [noun] (in the plural) The duties or taxes imposed on imported or exported goods. | [noun] (in the singular) The government department or agency that is authorised to collect the taxes imposed on imported goods. | [noun] Frequent repetition of the same behavior; way of behavior common to many; ordinary manner; habitual practice; method of doing, living or behaving. CUTWORM (14) [noun] The larva of any of many moths of the family Noctuidae; it is an agricultural pest. CYMATIA (14) CYMBALS (16) [noun] A concave plate of brass or bronze that produces a sharp, ringing sound when struck: played either in pairs, by striking them together, or singly by striking with a drumstick or the like. CYMENES (14) CYMLING (15) CYMLINS (14) CZARDOM (21) CZARISM (20) DADAISM (11) DAEMONS (10) [noun] A process (a running program) that does not have a controlling terminal. | [noun] An evil supernatural spirit. | [noun] A neutral supernatural spirit. DAIMIOS (10) [noun] A lord during the Japanese feudal period. DAIMONS (10) [noun] An evil supernatural spirit. | [noun] A neutral supernatural spirit. | [noun] Someone with great strength, passion or skill for a particular activity, pursuit etc.; an enthusiast. DAIMYOS (13) [noun] A lord during the Japanese feudal period. DAMAGED (12) [verb] To impair the soundness, goodness, or value of; to harm or cause destruction. | [verb] To undergo damage. | [adjective] Suffered a damage. DAMAGER (11) DAMAGES (11) [verb] To impair the soundness, goodness, or value of; to harm or cause destruction. | [verb] To undergo damage. | [noun] The money paid or awarded to a claimant (in England), a pursuer (in Scotland) or a plaintiff (in the US) in a civil action as compensation for a loss suffered by the same. DAMASKS (14) [noun] An ornate silk fabric originating from Damascus. | [noun] Linen so woven that a pattern is produced by the different directions of the thread, without contrast of colour. | [noun] A heavy woolen or worsted stuff with a pattern woven in the same way as the linen damask; made for furniture covering and hangings. DAMMARS (12) DAMMERS (12) DAMMING (13) [verb] To block the flow of water. DAMNERS (10) DAMNIFY (16) [verb] To damage physically; to injure. | [verb] To cause injuries or loss to. DAMNING (11) [verb] To condemn to hell. | [verb] To condemn; to declare guilty; to doom; to adjudge to punishment. | [verb] To put out of favor; to ruin; to label negatively. DAMOSEL (10) DAMOZEL (19) DAMPENS (12) [verb] To make damp or moist; to make slightly wet. | [verb] To become damp or moist. | [verb] To depress; to check; to make dull; to lessen. DAMPERS (12) [noun] Something that damps or checks: | [noun] Bread made from a basic recipe of flour, water, milk, and salt, but without yeast. DAMPEST (12) [adjective] In a state between dry and wet; moderately wet; moist. | [adjective] Despondent; dispirited, downcast. | [adjective] Permitting the possession of alcoholic beverages, but not their sale. DAMPING (13) [verb] To dampen; to make moderately wet | [verb] To put out, as fire; to weaken, restrain, or make dull. | [verb] To suppress vibrations (mechanical) or oscillations (electrical) by converting energy to heat (or some other form of energy). DAMPISH (15) DAMSELS (10) [noun] A young woman (of noble birth). | [noun] A girl; a maiden (without sexual experience). | [noun] A young woman who is not married. DAMSONS (10) [noun] A subspecies of plum tree, Prunus domestica subsp. insititia, native to Eurasia. | [noun] The edible fruit of this tree. DAYMARE (13) [noun] A vivid, unpleasant mental image, having the characteristics of a nightmare, during wakefulness. DAYROOM (13) [noun] A common room in a barracks or dormitory where the inhabitants can mingle and socialize. DAYSMAN (13) DAYSMEN (13) DAYTIME (13) [noun] The time of daylight; the time between sunrise and sunset. | [adjective] Pertaining to daytime; appropriate to the day. | [adjective] Happening during the day. DECAMPS (14) [verb] To break up camp and move on. | [verb] To disappear suddenly and secretly. DECIMAL (12) [noun] A number expressed in the base-ten system, a fractional numeral written in this system. | [noun] The decimal system itself. | [noun] A decimal place. DECLAIM (12) [verb] To object to something vociferously; to rail against in speech. | [verb] To recite, e.g., poetry, in a theatrical way; to speak for rhetorical display; to speak pompously, noisily, or theatrically; bemouth; to make an empty speech; to rehearse trite arguments in debate; to rant. | [verb] To speak rhetorically; to make a formal speech or oration; specifically, to recite a speech, poem, etc., in public as a rhetorical exercise; to practice public speaking. DECORUM (12) [noun] Appropriate social behavior. | [noun] A convention of social behavior. DECUMAN (12) DEEMING (11) [verb] To judge, to pass judgment on; to doom, to sentence. | [verb] To adjudge, to decree. | [verb] To dispense (justice); to administer (law). DEFAMED (14) [verb] To disgrace; to bring into disrepute. | [verb] To charge; to accuse (someone) of an offence. | [verb] To harm or diminish the reputation of; to disparage. DEFAMER (13) DEFAMES (13) [verb] To disgrace; to bring into disrepute. | [verb] To charge; to accuse (someone) of an offence. | [verb] To harm or diminish the reputation of; to disparage. DEFOAMS (13) DEFORMS (13) [verb] To change the form of, usually negatively; to give (something) an unusual or abnormal shape. | [verb] To change the looks of, usually negatively; to give something an unusual or abnormal appearance. | [verb] To mar the character of. DEGAMES (11) DEGAMIS (11) DEGERMS (11) DEIFORM (13) [adjective] Godlike | [adjective] Conformable to the will of God DELIMED (11) DELIMES (10) DELIMIT (10) [verb] To mark or fix the limits of. | [verb] To demarcate. DEMAGOG (12) DEMANDS (11) [noun] The desire to purchase goods and services. | [noun] The amount of a good or service that consumers are willing to buy at a particular price. | [noun] A forceful claim for something. DEMARKS (14) [verb] To demarcate. DEMASTS (10) DEMEANS (10) [verb] To debase; to lower; to degrade. | [verb] To humble, humble oneself; to humiliate. | [verb] To mortify. DEMENTS (10) [verb] To drive mad; to craze DEMERGE (11) [verb] To separate companies that were formerly combined; to reverse a merger. | [verb] To plunge down into; to sink; to immerse. DEMERIT (10) [noun] A quality of being inadequate; a fault; a disadvantage | [noun] A mark given for bad conduct to a person attending an educational institution or serving in the army. | [noun] That which one merits or deserves, either of good or ill; desert. DEMESNE (10) [noun] A lord’s chief manor place, with that part of the lands belonging thereto which has not been granted out in tenancy; a house, and the land adjoining, kept for the proprietor’s own use. | [noun] A region or area; a domain. DEMETON (10) DEMIGOD (12) [noun] A half-god or hero; the offspring of a deity and a mortal. | [noun] A lesser deity. DEMIREP (12) [noun] A woman of doubtful reputation or suspected character; an adventuress. DEMISED (11) [verb] To give. | [verb] To convey, as by will or lease. | [verb] To transmit by inheritance. DEMISES (10) [noun] The conveyance or transfer of an estate, either in fee for life or for years, most commonly the latter. | [noun] Transmission by formal act or conveyance to an heir or successor; transference; especially, the transfer or transmission of the crown or royal authority to a successor. | [noun] Death. DEMODED (12) DEMONIC (12) [adjective] Pertaining to demons or evil spirits; demoniac. | [adjective] Pertaining to dæmons in ancient Greek thought; concerning supernatural ‘genius’. DEMOSES (10) DEMOTED (11) [verb] To lower the rank or status of. | [verb] To relegate. DEMOTES (10) [verb] To lower the rank or status of. | [verb] To relegate. DEMOTIC (12) [noun] Language as spoken or written by the common people. | [adjective] Of or for the common people. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or written in the vulgar form of ancient Egyptian hieratic writing, with simplified, cursive hieroglyphs. DEMOUNT (10) [verb] To remove from its mounting; to take down from a mounted position. | [verb] To dismount. DEMURER (10) [adjective] (usually of women) Quiet, modest, reserved, sober, or serious. | [adjective] Affectedly modest, decorous, or serious; making a show of gravity. DEPERMS (12) DEPLUME (12) [verb] To strip of feathers or plumage. | [verb] To lay bare; to expose. DERMOID (11) [adjective] Resembling skin DESKMAN (14) DESKMEN (14) DESMANS (10) [noun] Either of two species, Desmana moschata or Galemys pyrenaicus, of aquatic or semi-aquatic insectivore of the mole family, Talpidae, found in Europe. DESMIDS (11) [noun] Any of about 5000 species of mostly unicellular freshwater green algae belonging to the order Desmidiales. DESMOID (11) [noun] A fibrous tumour. | [adjective] Pertaining to a bundle. | [adjective] Fibrous; having closely interwoven fibres in bundles. DEWORMS (13) [verb] To cause an animal to excrete any worms in the digestive tract by the administration of drugs. DHARMAS (13) DHARMIC (15) DIADEMS (11) [noun] An ornamental headband worn as a badge of royalty. | [noun] A crown. | [noun] Regal power; sovereignty; empire—considered as symbolized by the crown. DIAGRAM (11) [noun] A plan, drawing, sketch or outline to show how something works, or show the relationships between the parts of a whole. | [noun] A graph or chart. | [noun] A functor from an index category to another category. The objects and morphisms of the index category need not have any internal substance, but rather merely outline the connective structure of at least some part of the diagram's codomain. If the index category is J and the codomain is C, then the diagram is said to be "of type J in C". DIAMIDE (11) DIAMINE (10) [noun] Any compound containing two amino functional groups. DIAMINS (10) DIAMOND (11) [noun] A glimmering glass-like mineral that is an allotrope of carbon in which each atom is surrounded by four others in the form of a tetrahedron. | [noun] A gemstone made from this mineral. | [noun] A ring containing a diamond. | [noun] The size of type between brilliant and pearl, standardized as 4 1/2-point. DIASTEM (10) DIATOMS (10) [noun] Any of a group of minute unicellular algae having a siliceous covering of great delicacy, now categorized as class Diatomophyceae or division Bacillariophyta. DICTUMS (12) [noun] An authoritative statement; a dogmatic saying; a maxim, an apothegm. | [noun] A judicial opinion expressed by judges on points that do not necessarily arise in the case, and are not involved in it. | [noun] The report of a judgment made by one of the judges who has given it. DIGAMMA (13) [noun] Letter of the Old Greek alphabet: Ϝ, ϝ DILEMMA (12) [noun] A circumstance in which a choice must be made between two or more alternatives that seem equally undesirable. | [noun] A difficult circumstance or problem. | [noun] A type of syllogism of the form "if A is true then B is true; if C is true then D is true; either A or C is true; therefore either B or D is true". DIMERIC (12) DIMETER (10) [noun] A line in a poem having two metrical feet. | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has two feet. DIMMERS (12) [noun] A rheostat that is used to vary the intensity of a domestic electric light | [noun] A switch used to select between the low and high headlamp beam on a road vehicle. (usually as "dimmer switch", primarily in North America; elsewhere "dipswitch" or "dipper switch") DIMMEST (12) [adjective] Not bright or colorful. | [adjective] Not smart or intelligent. | [adjective] Indistinct, hazy or unclear. DIMMING (13) [verb] To make something less bright. | [verb] To become darker. | [verb] To render dim, obscure, or dark; to make less bright or distinct DIMNESS (10) DIMORPH (15) DIMOUTS (10) DIMPLED (13) [verb] To create a dimple in. | [verb] To create a dimple in one's face by smiling. | [verb] To form dimples; to sink into depressions or little inequalities. DIMPLES (12) [noun] A small depression or indentation in a surface. | [noun] Specifically, a small natural depression on the skin, especially on the face near the corners of the mouth. | [verb] To create a dimple in. DIMWITS (13) [noun] A person who is deficient in intelligence. DINKUMS (14) DIORAMA (10) [noun] A three-dimensional display of a scenery, often having a painted background in front of which models are arranged, e.g. in a museum where stuffed animals are presented against a painted landscape. DIPLOMA (12) [noun] A document issued by an educational institution testifying that the recipient has earned a degree or has successfully completed a particular course of study. DIRDUMS (11) DIRHAMS (13) [noun] A unit of currency used in the Arab world, currently the name of the currency of Morocco and the United Arab Emirates. | [noun] A former small Turkish unit of weight, variously reckoned as 1.5–3.5 g (0.05–0.12 oz.). DISARMS (10) [noun] The act of depriving a person of a weapon they carry. | [verb] To deprive of weapons; to deprive of the means of attack or defense; to render defenseless. | [verb] To deprive of the means or the disposition to harm; to render harmless or innocuous DISHELM (13) DISLIMN (10) DISMALS (10) DISMAST (10) [verb] To break off the mast (of a ship), especially by gunfire. DISMAYS (13) [verb] To cause to feel apprehension; great sadness, or fear; to deprive of energy | [verb] To render lifeless; to subdue; to disquiet. | [verb] To take dismay or fright; to be filled with dismay. DISMISS (10) [verb] To discharge; to end the employment or service of. | [verb] To order to leave. | [verb] To dispel; to rid one’s mind of. DISOMIC (12) DISTOME (10) DODGEMS (12) [noun] A bumper car in an amusement park. DODOISM (11) DOGDOMS (12) DOGEDOM (12) DOGMATA (11) DOLMANS (10) [noun] A long, loose garment with narrow sleeves and an opening in the front, generally worn by Turks. | [noun] A short, close-fitting, heavily braided military jacket, usually worn under a pelisse, originally by hussars. | [noun] A woman's garment with wide capelike sleeves. DOLMENS (10) [noun] A prehistoric megalithic tomb consisting of a capstone supported by two or more upright stones, most having originally been covered with earth or smaller stones to form a barrow. | [noun] More generally, any megalithic tomb, including passage graves and wedge tombs. DOMAINS (10) [noun] A geographic area owned or controlled by a single person or organization. | [noun] A field or sphere of activity, influence or expertise. | [noun] A group of related items, topics, or subjects. DOMICAL (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, resembling or having a dome DOMICIL (12) [noun] A home or residence. | [noun] A residence at a particular place accompanied with an intention to remain there for an unlimited time; a residence accepted as a final abode. DOMINES (10) DOMINIE (10) [noun] A schoolmaster, teacher. | [noun] A pastor of the Dutch Reformed Church. DOMINOS (10) DOOMFUL (13) DOOMILY (13) DOOMING (11) [verb] To pronounce sentence or judgment on; to condemn. | [verb] To destine; to fix irrevocably the ill fate of. | [verb] To judge; to estimate or determine as a judge. DOORMAN (10) [noun] A person who holds open the door at the entrance to a building, summons taxicabs, and provides an element of security; in apartment buildings, he also accepts deliveries and may perform certain concierge type services. DOORMAT (10) [noun] A coarse mat at the entrance to a house, upon which one wipes one's shoes. | [noun] Someone who is overly submissive to others' wishes. DOORMEN (10) [noun] A person who holds open the door at the entrance to a building, summons taxicabs, and provides an element of security; in apartment buildings, he also accepts deliveries and may perform certain concierge type services. DORMANT (10) [noun] A crossbeam or joist. | [adjective] Inactive, sleeping, asleep, suspended. | [adjective] In a sleeping posture; distinguished from couchant. DORMERS (10) [noun] A room-like, roofed projection from a sloping roof | [noun] Dormer-window | [noun] A resident of a dormitory DORMICE (12) [noun] Any of several species of small, mostly European rodents of the family Gliridae; also called Myoxidae or Muscardinidae by some taxonomists. | [noun] Glis glis, the edible dormouse | [noun] Muscardinus avellanarius, the hazel dormouse. DORMINS (10) DRACHMA (15) [noun] The currency of Greece in ancient times and again from 1832 until 2001, with the symbol ₯, since replaced by the euro. | [noun] A coin worth one drachma. | [noun] An Ancient Greek weight of about 66.5 grains, or 4.3 grams. DRACHMS (15) [noun] A small unit of weight, variously: | [noun] The currency of Greece in ancient times and again from 1832 until 2001, with the symbol ₯, since replaced by the euro. | [noun] A coin worth one drachma. DRAMEDY (14) [noun] A genre of film or television that lies somewhere between drama and comedy. | [noun] A film or television programme belonging to this genre. DRAMMED (13) DRAYMAN (13) [noun] A man who drives drays. | [noun] A deliveryman for a brewery. DRAYMEN (13) [noun] A man who drives drays. | [noun] A deliveryman for a brewery. DREAMED (11) [verb] To see imaginary events in one's mind while sleeping. | [verb] To hope, to wish. | [verb] To daydream. DREAMER (10) [noun] One who dreams. | [noun] Someone whose beliefs are far from realistic. | [noun] Any anglerfish of the family Oneirodidae. DROMOND (11) [noun] A Byzantine bireme, similar to the chelandion, but used primarily for naval combat. DROMONS (10) DRUMBLE (12) DRUMLIN (10) [noun] An elongated hill or ridge of glacial drift. DRUMMED (13) DRUMMER (12) [noun] One who plays the drums. | [noun] Travelling salesman | [noun] A drumstick (the lower part of a chicken or turkey leg). DUALISM (10) [noun] Duality; the condition of being double. | [noun] The view that the world consists of, or is explicable in terms of, two fundamental principles, such as mind and matter or good and evil. | [noun] The belief that the world is ruled by a pair of antagonistic forces, such as good and evil; the belief that man has two basic natures, the physical and the spiritual. DUKEDOM (15) [noun] A region ruled by a duke or duchess; a duchy. | [noun] The rank or title of a duke. DUMBEST (12) [adjective] Unable to speak; lacking power of speech (kept in "deaf, dumb, and blind"). | [adjective] Silent; unaccompanied by words. | [adjective] (especially of a person) Extremely stupid. DUMBING (13) [verb] To silence. | [verb] To make stupid. | [verb] To represent as stupid. DUMDUMS (13) [noun] A soft-nosed bullet that expands on impact to cause a gaping wound. | [noun] An ignorant person; an idiot. DUMMIED (13) [verb] To make a mock-up or prototype version of something, without some or all off its intended functionality. | [verb] To feint. DUMMIES (12) [noun] A silent person; a person who does not talk. | [noun] An unintelligent person. | [noun] A figure of a person or animal used by a ventriloquist; a puppet. DUMPERS (12) [noun] A small vehicle often used to carry loads and material around, often on building sites. | [noun] A dropper of refuse, particularly not in landfill sites/recycling sites. | [noun] One who dumps a boyfriend or girlfriend; the one of a romantic couple who terminates the relationship. DUMPIER (12) [adjective] Short and thick; stout or stocky DUMPILY (15) DUMPING (13) [verb] To release, especially in large quantities and chaotic manner. | [verb] To discard; to get rid of something one does not want anymore. | [verb] To sell below cost or very cheaply; to engage in dumping. DUMPISH (15) DURAMEN (10) [noun] Heartwood DURMAST (10) DUSTMAN (10) [noun] A person employed to collect refuse from people's homes and take it to be processed. DUSTMEN (10) [noun] A person employed to collect refuse from people's homes and take it to be processed. DUUMVIR (13) [noun] One of two persons jointly exercising the same office in Republican Rome. DYNAMIC (15) [noun] A characteristic or manner of an interaction; a behavior. | [noun] A moving force. | [noun] The varying loudness or volume of a song or the markings that indicate the loudness. DYNAMOS (13) [noun] An electricity generator, a dynamo-electric machine. | [noun] An energetic person. EARDRUM (10) [noun] A thin membrane that separates the outer ear from the middle ear and transmits sound from the air to the malleus. EARLDOM (10) [noun] The rank of being an earl. | [noun] The territory controlled by an earl. EARMARK (13) [noun] A mark or deformation of the ear of an animal, intended to indicate ownership. | [noun] The designation of specific projects in appropriations of funding for general programs. | [noun] A mark for identification; a distinguishing mark. EARMUFF (15) [noun] A garment to keep the ears warm. | [noun] A garment or part worn over a single ear. | [noun] A sound-deadening cup or a pair of such cups worn over the ear or ears. EARWORM (12) [noun] A tune that keeps replaying in one's head or that one keeps thinking about, especially if unwanted. | [noun] (originally United States) Short for corn earworm (“larva of the moths Helicoverpa zea (syn. Heliothis zea) and Helicoverpa armigera, which are agricultural pests”). | [noun] An earwig. ECHOISM (14) ECONOMY (14) [noun] Effective management of a community or system, or especially its resources. | [noun] The study of money, currency and trade, and the efficient use of resources. | [noun] Frugal use of resources. ECTHYMA (17) ECZEMAS (20) EDEMATA (10) EELWORM (12) [noun] A nematode, or roundworm, especially any that resemble small eels. EGOISMS (10) EGOTISM (10) [noun] A tendency to talk excessively about oneself. | [noun] A belief that one is superior to or more important than others. | [noun] The result or product of being egoistic. ELEMENT (9) [noun] One of the simplest or essential parts or principles of which anything consists, or upon which the constitution or fundamental powers of anything are based. | [noun] A small part of the whole. | [noun] The sky. ELITISM (9) [noun] The belief that a society or system should be run by an elite. | [noun] The superior attitude or behaviour associated with an elite. ELMIEST (9) ELUVIUM (12) ELYTRUM (12) EMANATE (9) [verb] To come from a source; issue from. | [verb] To send or give out; manifest. EMBALMS (13) [verb] To treat a corpse with preservatives in order to prevent decomposition. | [verb] To perfume or add fragrance to something. EMBANKS (15) [verb] To throw up a bank so as to confine or to defend; to protect by a bank of earth or stone EMBARGO (12) [noun] An order by the government prohibiting ships from leaving port. | [noun] A ban on trade with another country. | [noun] A temporary ban on making certain information public. EMBARKS (15) [verb] To get on a boat or ship or (outside the USA) an aeroplane. | [verb] To start, begin. | [verb] To cause to go on board a vessel or boat; to put on shipboard. EMBASSY (14) [noun] The function or duty of an ambassador. | [noun] An organization or group of officials who permanently represent a sovereign state in a second sovereign state or with respect to an international organization such as the United Nations. | [noun] A temporary mission representing a sovereign state. EMBAYED (15) [verb] To bathe; to steep. | [verb] To shut in, enclose, shelter or trap, such as ships in a bay. | [adjective] Enclosed in (or as though in) a bay; harboured. EMBLAZE (20) EMBLEMS (13) [noun] A representative symbol, such as a trademark or logo. | [noun] Something which represents a larger whole. | [noun] Inlay; inlaid or mosaic work; something ornamental inserted in a surface. EMBOLIC (13) EMBOLUS (11) [noun] An obstruction causing an embolism: a blood clot, air bubble or other matter carried by the bloodstream and causing a blockage or occlusion of a blood vessel. | [noun] The structure on the end of the palp of male arachnids which contains the opening to the ejaculatory duct. EMBOSKS (15) EMBOSOM (13) [verb] To draw to or into one's bosom; to treasure. | [verb] To enclose, surround, or protect. EMBOWED (15) [verb] To bend like a bow; to curve. | [adjective] Bent, curved or arched like a bow. EMBOWEL (14) [verb] To enclose or bury. | [verb] To remove the bowels; disembowel. EMBOWER (14) [verb] To enclose something or someone as if in a bower; shelter with foliage. | [verb] To lodge or rest in or as in a bower. | [verb] To form a bower. EMBRACE (13) [noun] An act of putting arms around someone and bringing the person close to the chest; a hug. | [noun] An enclosure partially or fully surrounding someone or something. | [noun] Full acceptance (of something). EMBROIL (11) [verb] To draw into a situation; to cause to be involved. | [verb] To implicate in confusion; to complicate; to jumble. EMBROWN (14) EMBRUED (12) [verb] To stain (in, with, blood, slaughter, etc.). EMBRUES (11) [verb] To stain (in, with, blood, slaughter, etc.). EMBRUTE (11) EMBRYON (14) EMBRYOS (14) [noun] In the reproductive cycle, the stage after the fertilization of the egg that precedes the development into a fetus. | [noun] An organism in the earlier stages of development before it emerges from the egg, or before metamorphosis. | [noun] In viviparous animals, the young animal's earliest stages in the mother's body EMENDED (11) [verb] To correct and revise (text or a document). EMENDER (10) EMERALD (10) [noun] Any of various green gemstones, especially a green transparent form of beryl, highly valued as a precious stone. | [noun] Emerald green, a colour. | [noun] Any hummingbird in the genera Chlorostilbon and Elvira; and some in the genus Amazilia EMERGED (11) [verb] To come into view. | [verb] To come out of a situation, object or a liquid. | [verb] To become known. EMERGES (10) [verb] To come into view. | [verb] To come out of a situation, object or a liquid. | [verb] To become known. EMERIES (9) EMERITA (9) EMERITI (9) EMERODS (10) EMEROID (10) EMERSED (10) [adjective] (of an aquatic plant) That rises above the surface EMETICS (11) [noun] An agent that induces vomiting EMETINE (9) [noun] A white crystalline bitter alkaloid, chemical formula C29H40N2O4, extracted from ipecacuanha root, and regarded as its peculiar emetic principle. EMETINS (9) EMEUTES (9) EMIGRES (10) [noun] One who has departed their native land, often as a refugee. | [noun] An emigrant, one who departs their native land to become an immigrant in another. EMINENT (9) [adjective] High, lofty. | [adjective] Noteworthy, remarkable, great. | [adjective] (of a person) distinguished, important, noteworthy. EMIRATE (9) [noun] A country ruled by an emir. | [noun] The office of an emir. EMITTED (10) [verb] To send out or give off EMITTER (9) [noun] That which emits something. | [noun] One terminal of a bipolar transistor (BJT). EMODINS (10) EMOTERS (9) EMOTING (10) [verb] To display emotions openly, especially while acting. | [verb] To induce an emotion in. | [verb] To perform a virtual action, presented to other users as reported speech, rather than sending a direct message. EMOTION (9) [noun] A person's internal state of being and involuntary physiological response to an object or a situation, based on or tied to physical state and sensory data. | [noun] A reaction by a non-human organism with behavioral and physiological elements similar to a person's response. EMOTIVE (12) [noun] (grammar) A word or construct that expresses an emotion. | [adjective] Of or relating to emotion. | [adjective] Appealing to the emotions. EMPALED (12) EMPALER (11) EMPALES (11) EMPANEL (11) [noun] A list of jurors; a panel. | [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. EMPATHY (17) [noun] Identification with or understanding of the thoughts, feelings, or emotional state of another person. | [noun] Capacity to understand another person's point of view or the result of such understanding. | [noun] A paranormal ability to psychically read another person's emotions. EMPEROR (11) [noun] The male monarch or ruler of an empire. | [noun] Any monarch ruling an empire, irrespective of gender, with "empress" contrasting to mean when consort to emperor | [noun] (political theory) Specifically, the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire; the world-monarch. EMPIRES (11) [noun] A political unit, typically having an extensive territory or comprising a number of territories or nations (especially one comprising one or more kingdoms) and ruled by a single supreme authority. | [noun] A political unit ruled by an emperor or empress. | [noun] A group of states or other territories that owe allegiance to a foreign power. EMPIRIC (13) [noun] A member of a sect of ancient physicians who based their theories solely on experience. | [noun] Someone who is guided by empiricism; an empiricist. | [noun] Any unqualified or dishonest practitioner; a charlatan; a quack. EMPLACE (13) EMPLANE (11) [verb] To board an airplane EMPLOYE (14) EMPLOYS (14) [verb] To hire (somebody for work or a job). | [verb] To use (somebody for a job, or something for a task). | [verb] To make busy. EMPORIA (11) [noun] A city or region which is a major trading centre; also, a place within a city for commerce and trading; a marketplace. | [noun] A shop that offers a wide variety of goods for sale; a department store; (with a descriptive word) a shop specializing in particular goods. | [noun] A business set up to enable foreign traders to engage in commerce in a country; a factory (now the more common term). EMPOWER (14) [verb] To give permission, power, or the legal right to do something. | [verb] To give someone more confidence and/or strength to do something, often by enabling them to increase their control over their own life or situation. EMPRESS (11) [noun] The female monarch (ruler) of an empire. | [noun] The wife or widow of an emperor or equated ruler. | [noun] The third trump or major arcana card of most tarot decks. | [verb] To affect (someone) strongly and often favourably. EMPRISE (11) EMPRIZE (20) EMPTIED (12) [verb] To make empty; to void; to remove the contents of. | [verb] Of a river, duct, etc: to drain or flow toward an ultimate destination. EMPTIER (11) [noun] A person who, or device which empties | [adjective] Devoid of content; containing nothing or nobody; vacant. | [adjective] Containing no elements (as of a string, array, or set), opposed to being null (having no valid value). EMPTIES (11) [noun] (usually plural) A container, especially a bottle, whose contents have been used up, leaving it empty. | [verb] To make empty; to void; to remove the contents of. | [verb] Of a river, duct, etc: to drain or flow toward an ultimate destination. EMPTILY (14) EMPTINS (11) EMPYEMA (16) [noun] A collection of pus within a naturally existing anatomical cavity (as opposed to an abscess, which occurs in a newly formed cavity). EMULATE (9) [verb] To attempt to equal or be the same as. | [verb] To copy or imitate, especially a person. | [verb] To feel a rivalry with; to be jealous of, to envy. EMULOUS (9) [adjective] Ambitious or competitive. ENAMELS (9) [noun] An opaque, glassy coating baked onto metal or ceramic objects. | [noun] A coating that dries to a hard, glossy finish. | [noun] The hard covering on the exposed part of a tooth. ENAMINE (9) ENAMORS (9) [verb] (mostly in the passive, followed by "of" or "with") To cause to be in love. | [verb] (mostly in the passive) To captivate. ENAMOUR (9) [verb] (mostly in the passive, followed by "of" or "with") To cause to be in love. | [verb] (mostly in the passive) To captivate. ENCAMPS (13) [verb] To establish a camp or temporary shelter. | [verb] To form into a camp. ENCOMIA (11) [noun] Warm praise, especially a formal expression of such praise; a tribute. | [noun] A general category of oratory. | [noun] A method within rhetorical pedagogy. ENDEMIC (12) [noun] An individual or species that is endemic to a region. | [noun] A disease affecting a number of people simultaneously, so as to show a distinct connection with certain localities. | [adjective] Native to a particular area or culture; originating where it occurs. ENDGAME (11) [noun] The final stage of a game of chess, when there are few pieces left. | [noun] The final stage of a game of bridge, when there are few cards left. | [noun] The final stage of an extended process or course of events, especially with the implication of the imminent realization of a masterful strategy or plan. ENDMOST (10) [adjective] Last in a series, furthest away ENEMATA (9) [noun] An injection of fluid into the large intestine by way of the rectum, usually for medical purposes. | [noun] The fluid so injected. | [noun] A device for administering such an injection. ENEMIES (9) [noun] Someone who is hostile to, feels hatred towards, opposes the interests of, or intends injury to someone else. | [noun] A hostile force or nation; a fighting member of such a force or nation. | [noun] Something harmful or threatening to another ENFLAME (12) ENFRAME (12) ENGRAMS (10) [noun] A postulated physical or biochemical change in neural tissue that represents a memory. | [noun] A painful, negative mental image representing a past event. ENIGMAS (10) [noun] Something or someone puzzling, mysterious or inexplicable. | [noun] A riddle, or a difficult problem. ENTOMBS (11) [verb] To deposit in a tomb. | [verb] To confine in restrictive surroundings. ENVENOM (12) [verb] To poison, to put or inject venom onto or into. | [verb] To acerbate. ENWOMBS (14) ENZYMES (21) [noun] A globular protein that catalyses a biological chemical reaction. | [noun] Leavened bread, as opposed to azyme ENZYMIC (23) EONISMS (9) EPIDERM (12) EPIGRAM (12) [noun] An inscription in stone. | [noun] A brief but witty saying. | [noun] A short, witty or pithy poem. EPIMERE (11) EPIMERS (11) [noun] Any diastereoisomer that has the opposite configuration at only one of the stereogenic centres. EPISOME (11) [noun] A segment of DNA that can exist and replicate either autonomously in the cytoplasm or as part of a chromosome, mainly found in bacteria | [noun] The upper half of the theca of a thecate protist such as a diatom or dinoflagellate. EPITOME (11) [noun] The embodiment or encapsulation of a class of items. | [noun] A representative example. | [noun] The height; the best. EPONYMS (14) [noun] A real or fictitious person's name that has given rise to the name of a particular item. | [noun] A word formed from a real or fictive person’s name. | [noun] (by extension) A word formed from a real or fictive place or thing. EPONYMY (17) ERBIUMS (11) EREMITE (9) [noun] A hermit; a religious recluse, someone who lives alone. EREMURI (9) ERMINED (10) ERMINES (9) [noun] A weasel, Mustela erminea, found in northern latitudes; its dark brown fur turns white in winter (apart from the black tip of the tail). | [noun] The white fur of this animal, traditionally seen as a symbol of purity and used for judges' robes. | [noun] (by extension) The office of a judge. EROTISM (9) [noun] Eroticism ERRATUM (9) [noun] An error, especially one in a printed work. ESTEEMS (9) [verb] To set a high value on; to regard with respect or reverence. | [verb] To regard something as valuable; to prize. | [verb] To look upon something in a particular way. ESTRUMS (9) ETAMINE (9) ETAMINS (9) ETATISM (9) ETHMOID (13) [noun] (bone) A square bone at the root of the nose, forming part of the cranium, and having many perforations through which the olfactory nerves pass to the nose. | [adjective] (bone) Of or relating to the ethmoid bone. ETYMONS (12) [noun] The source word, or words, of a given word or expression. EUDEMON (10) EXAMENS (16) [noun] Examination; inquiry EXAMINE (16) [verb] To observe or inspect carefully or critically | [verb] To check the health or condition of something or someone | [verb] To determine the aptitude, skills or qualifications of someone by subjecting them to an examination EXAMPLE (18) [noun] Something that is representative of all such things in a group. | [noun] Something that serves to illustrate or explain a rule. | [noun] Something that serves as a pattern of behaviour to be imitated (a good example) or not to be imitated (a bad example). EXCIMER (18) [noun] Any diatomic exciplex EXCLAIM (18) [noun] Exclamation; outcry, clamor. | [verb] To cry out suddenly, from some strong emotion. | [verb] To say suddenly and with strong emotion. EXEMPLA (18) [noun] An example. | [noun] A story demonstrating a moral point; a parable. EXEMPTS (18) [noun] One who has been released from something. | [noun] A type of French police officer. | [noun] One of four officers of the Yeomen of the Royal Guard, having the rank of corporal; an exon. EXHUMED (20) [verb] To dig out of the ground; to take out of a place of burial; to disinter. | [verb] To uncover; to bring to light. EXHUMER (19) EXHUMES (19) [verb] To dig out of the ground; to take out of a place of burial; to disinter. | [verb] To uncover; to bring to light. EXODERM (17) EXOGAMY (20) [noun] Marriage to a person belonging to a tribe or group other than one's own as required by custom or law | [noun] The fusion of two unrelated gametes EXOSMIC (18) EXOTISM (16) EXTREMA (16) [noun] A point, or value, which is a maximum or a minimum EXTREME (16) [noun] The greatest or utmost point, degree or condition. | [noun] Each of the things at opposite ends of a range or scale. | [noun] A drastic expedient. EXUVIUM (19) EYEBEAM (14) EYESOME (12) FADDISM (14) FAMINES (12) [noun] Extreme shortage of food in a region. | [noun] A period of extreme shortage of food in a region. | [noun] Starvation or malnutrition. FAMULUS (12) [noun] A close attendant or assistant, especially of a magician or occult scholar. FANDOMS (13) [noun] The fans of a sport, activity, work, person etc., taken as a group. | [noun] The subculture of fans. | [noun] The state, quality, or condition of being a fan. FANTASM (12) FANTOMS (12) FARMERS (12) [noun] A person who works the land and/or who keeps livestock, especially on a farm. | [noun] Agent noun of farm; someone or something that farms. | [noun] One who takes taxes, customs, excise, or other duties, to collect for a certain rate per cent. FARMING (13) [verb] To work on a farm, especially in the growing and harvesting of crops. | [verb] To devote (land) to farming. | [verb] To grow (a particular crop). FASCISM (14) FATHOMS (15) [noun] Grasp, envelopment, control. | [noun] (now usually nautical) An English unit of length for water depth notionally based upon the width of grown man's outstretched arms but standardized as 6 feet (about 1.8 m). | [noun] Various similar units in other systems. FAUVISM (15) [noun] An artistic movement of the last part of the 19th century which emphasized spontaneity and the use of extremely bright colors. FAVISMS (15) FEMALES (12) [noun] One of the female (feminine) sex or gender. FEMINIE (12) FEMORAL (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or near the femur or thigh. FERBAMS (14) FERMATA (12) [noun] The holding of a note or rest for longer than its usual duration; also the notation of such a prolongation, usually represented as a dot with a semi-circle above or below it, written above or below the prolonged note or rest. FERMATE (12) FERMENT (12) [noun] Something, such as a yeast or barm, that causes fermentation. | [noun] A state of agitation or of turbulent change. | [noun] A gentle internal motion of the constituent parts of a fluid; fermentation. FERMION (12) [noun] (Standard Model) Any elementary or composite particle that has half-integer spin and thus obeys Fermi–Dirac statistics and the Pauli exclusion principle (equivalently, a particle for which the wavefunction of any system of identical such particles changes sign whenever two are swapped); a baryon, a lepton or a quark; (slightly more loosely) any such particle or any composite particle composed of fermions. FERMIUM (14) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Fm) with an atomic number of 100. FERRUMS (12) FIBROMA (14) [noun] A benign tumour of fibrous connective tissue. FIDEISM (13) [noun] The doctrine that faith is the basis of all knowledge FIEFDOM (16) [noun] The estate controlled by a feudal lord; a fief. | [noun] (by extension) Any organization in the control of a dominant individual. FIGMENT (13) [noun] A fabrication, fantasy, invention; something fictitious. FILEMOT (12) FILMDOM (15) FILMERS (12) FILMIER (12) [adjective] Resembling or made of a thin film; gauzy | [adjective] Covered by (or as if by) a film; hazy FILMILY (15) FILMING (13) [verb] To record (activity, or a motion picture) on photographic film. | [verb] To cover or become covered with a thin skin or pellicle. | [noun] The action of the verb to film. FILMSET (12) [noun] The enclosure in which a film scene is shot; includes scenery and props | [verb] To typeset by exposing type characters onto photographic film, which is then used to generate printing plates. | [adjective] Created using a process of filmsetting. FIMBLES (14) FIMBRIA (14) [noun] Any anatomical structure in the form of a fringe, but especially that around the ovarian end of the Fallopian tube. | [noun] Hairlike appendage found on the cell surface of many bacteria; used by the bacteria to adhere to one another, to animal cells and to some inanimate objects. FINMARK (16) FIREARM (12) [noun] A personal weapon that uses explosive powder to propel a projectile often made of lead. FIREMAN (12) [noun] Someone (especially one who is male) who is skilled in the work of fighting fire. | [noun] A person (originally a man) who keeps the fire going underneath a steam boiler (originally, shoveling coal by hand), particularly on a railroad locomotive or steamship. | [noun] By extension of the above, an assistant on any locomotive, whether steam-powered or not. FIREMEN (12) [noun] Someone (especially one who is male) who is skilled in the work of fighting fire. | [noun] A person (originally a man) who keeps the fire going underneath a steam boiler (originally, shoveling coal by hand), particularly on a railroad locomotive or steamship. | [noun] By extension of the above, an assistant on any locomotive, whether steam-powered or not. FIRMANS (12) [noun] A royal decree issued by a sovereign in certain historical Islamic states, especially by the Sultan of Turkey. FIRMERS (12) FIRMEST (12) [adjective] Steadfast, secure, solid (in position) | [adjective] Fixed (in opinion) | [adjective] Durable, rigid (material state) FIRMING (13) [verb] To make firm or strong; fix securely. | [verb] To make compact or resistant to pressure; solidify. | [verb] To become firm; stabilise. FITMENT (12) [noun] Something that suits or fits. | [noun] A thing fitted to another in order to accomplish a specific purpose. | [noun] An item of permanent furniture or equipment. FLAGMAN (13) [noun] A man who carries a flag, especially one used for signalling. FLAGMEN (13) [noun] A man who carries a flag, especially one used for signalling. FLAMBEE (14) FLAMBES (14) [noun] A showy cooking technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. | [noun] A flambéed dish. FLAMENS (12) [noun] A priest devoted to the service of a particular god, from whom he received a distinguishing epithet. The most honored were those of Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus, called respectively Flamen Dialis, Flamen Martialis, and Flamen Quirinalis. FLAMERS (12) [noun] A very flamboyant ("flaming"), effeminate gay male. | [noun] One who flames, or posts vitriolic criticism. FLAMIER (12) FLAMING (13) [verb] To produce flames; to burn with a flame or blaze. | [verb] To burst forth like flame; to break out in violence of passion; to be kindled with zeal or ardour. | [verb] To post a destructively critical or abusive message (to somebody). FLAMMED (15) FLEMISH (15) [noun] A rope that has been coiled into a neat mat; a flemish coil. | [verb] To coil a rope into a neat pattern on the deck of a ship. FLOTSAM (12) [noun] Debris floating in a river or sea, in particular fragments from a shipwreck. FLUMING (13) FLUMMOX (21) [verb] To confuse; to fluster; to flabbergast. FLUMPED (15) [verb] To move or fall heavily, or with a dull sound. | [verb] To drop something heavily or with a dull sound. FOAMERS (12) FOAMIER (12) [adjective] Full of foam. FOAMILY (15) FOAMING (13) [verb] To form or emit foam. | [verb] To spew saliva as foam, to foam at the mouth. | [noun] A process that forms foam. FOGYISM (16) FOLIUMS (12) FOLKMOT (16) FOMENTS (12) [verb] To incite or cause troublesome acts; to encourage; to instigate. | [verb] To apply a poultice to; to bathe with a cloth or sponge. FOMITES (12) [noun] The morbid matter created by a disease. | [noun] Anything which similarly facilitates the spread of something similarly deleterious. | [noun] An inanimate object capable of carrying infectious agents (such as bacteria, viruses and parasites), and thus passively enabling their transmission between hosts. FOOTMAN (12) [noun] A soldier who marches and fights on foot; a foot soldier. | [noun] A man in waiting; a male servant whose duties are to attend the door, the carriage, the table, etc. | [noun] A servant who runs in front of his master's carriage. FOOTMEN (12) [noun] A soldier who marches and fights on foot; a foot soldier. | [noun] A man in waiting; a male servant whose duties are to attend the door, the carriage, the table, etc. | [noun] A servant who runs in front of his master's carriage. FORAMEN (12) [noun] An opening, an orifice; a short passage. FOREARM (12) [noun] The part of the arm between the wrist and the elbow. | [noun] A section of the weapon between the receiver and the muzzle, used to hold the firearm steady. | [verb] (sometimes figurative) To arm in preparation. FOREMAN (12) [noun] The leader of a work crew. | [noun] The member of a jury who presides over it and speaks on its behalf. | [noun] (during the era of slavery) A black (slave) assistant to the white overseer who managed field hands. FOREMEN (12) [noun] The leader of a work crew. | [noun] The member of a jury who presides over it and speaks on its behalf. | [noun] (during the era of slavery) A black (slave) assistant to the white overseer who managed field hands. FORMALS (12) [noun] Formalin. | [noun] An evening gown. | [noun] An event with a formal dress code. FORMANT (12) [noun] A band of frequencies, in a sound spectrum, that have a greater intensity; they determine the quality of a sound; especially the characteristic sounds of the consonants. | [noun] A morpheme occurring as an affix to a root or stem, forming an extended root or stem. FORMATE (12) [noun] Any salt or ester of formic acid. | [verb] To assemble flying aircraft into formation; to fly in formation. FORMATS (12) [noun] The layout of a publication or document. | [noun] (hence) The form of presentation of something. | [noun] The type of programming that a radio station broadcasts; such as a certain genre of music, news, sports, talk, etc. FORMERS (12) [noun] Someone who forms something; a maker; a creator or founder. | [noun] An object used to form something, such as a template, gauge, or cutting die. | [noun] (used in combinations) Someone in, or of, a certain form (class). FORMFUL (15) FORMING (13) [verb] To assume (a certain shape or visible structure). | [verb] To give (a shape or visible structure) to a thing or person. | [verb] To take shape. FORMOLS (12) FORMULA (12) [noun] Any mathematical rule expressed symbolically. | [noun] A symbolic expression of the structure of a compound. | [noun] A plan or method for dealing with a problem or for achieving a result. FORMYLS (15) FRAENUM (12) [noun] A frenulum. FRAMERS (12) [noun] A person who makes frames for paintings. | [noun] A person who assembles the frame of a ship. | [noun] A person who assembles the timbers of a wood-framed building. FRAMING (13) [verb] To fit, as for a specific end or purpose; make suitable or comfortable; adapt; adjust. | [verb] To construct by fitting or uniting together various parts; fabricate by union of constituent parts. | [verb] To bring or put into form or order; adjust the parts or elements of; compose; contrive; plan; devise. FREEDOM (13) [noun] The state of being free, of not being imprisoned or enslaved. | [noun] The lack of a specific constraint, or of constraints in general; a state of being free, unconstrained. | [noun] Frankness; openness; unreservedness. FREEMAN (12) [noun] A free person, particularly: FREEMEN (12) [noun] A free person, particularly: FRENUMS (12) [noun] A frenulum. FROGMAN (13) [noun] A diver, especially one in a diving suit (as opposed to one in scuba gear). | [noun] A military diver, e.g. a US Navy SEAL. FROGMEN (13) [noun] A diver, especially one in a diving suit (as opposed to one in scuba gear). | [noun] A military diver, e.g. a US Navy SEAL. FROMAGE (13) FRUSTUM (12) [noun] A cone or pyramid whose tip has been truncated by a plane parallel to its base. | [noun] A portion of a sphere, or in general any solid, delimited by two parallel planes. FULCRUM (14) [noun] The support about which a lever pivots. | [noun] A crux or pivot; a central point. FULHAMS (15) FULLAMS (12) FULMARS (12) [noun] Either of two species of pelagic seabird in the genus Fulmarus, Fulmarus glacialis and F. glacialoides, which breed on cliffs. FULMINE (12) FULSOME (12) [adjective] Offensive to good taste, tactless, overzealous, excessive. | [adjective] Excessively flattering (connoting insincerity). | [adjective] Marked by fullness; abundant, copious. FUMARIC (14) FUMBLED (15) [verb] To handle nervously or awkwardly. | [verb] To grope awkwardly in trying to find something | [verb] To blunder uncertainly. FUMBLER (14) FUMBLES (14) [noun] A ball etc. that has been dropped by accident. | [noun] A dessert similar to a cross between a fool and a crumble. FUMETTE (12) FUMIEST (12) FUMULUS (12) FURMETY (15) [noun] A porridge made by boiling hulled wheat, typically with additional ingredients such as milk, egg yolks, and/or almond milk, traditionally served with venison or porpoise. FURMITY (15) GALLIUM (10) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Ga) with an atomic number of 31; a soft bluish metal. GALUMPH (15) [verb] To move heavily and clumsily, or with a sense of prancing and triumph. GAMBADE (13) [noun] The leap of a horse | [noun] A prank or frolic GAMBADO (13) [noun] (usually plural) Either of a pair of protective leather gaiters on a saddle. | [noun] (in the plural) gamashes; spatterdashes | [noun] A gambade (leaping movement). GAMBIAS (12) GAMBIER (12) [noun] Uncaria gambir, a plant from Indonesia. | [noun] An astringent substance prepared from the leaves of the plant, used in tanning and dyeing. GAMBIRS (12) GAMBITS (12) [noun] An opening in chess, in which a minor piece or a pawn is sacrificed to gain an advantage. | [noun] Any ploy or stratagem. | [noun] A remark intended to open a conversation. GAMBLED (13) [verb] To take a risk, with the potential of a positive outcome. | [verb] To play risky games, especially casino games, for monetary gain. | [verb] To risk (something) for potential gain. GAMBLER (12) [noun] One who plays at a game of chance, who gambles. | [noun] One who takes significant risks. GAMBLES (12) [noun] A bet or wager. | [noun] A significant risk, undertaken with a potential gain. | [noun] A risky venture. GAMBOGE (13) [noun] One of several species of trees of the genus Garcinia found in South and Southeastern Asia, especially Garcinia xanthochymus. | [noun] The resin of the gamboge tree; a preparation of the resin used as a pigment or for medicinal purposes. | [noun] A deep yellow colour. GAMBOLS (12) [noun] An instance of running or skipping about playfully. | [noun] An instance of more general frisking or frolicking. GAMBREL (12) [noun] The hind leg of a horse. | [noun] (chiefly historical and obsolete outside dialectal) A bar, usually metal, with a central loop and a hook at each end, used to hang a carcass for butchering. | [noun] A gambrel roof. GAMELAN (10) [noun] A genre of music of Indonesian origin typically featuring metallophones, xylophones, drums, gongs and a bamboo flute (called a siuling). | [noun] The name of the ensemble performing this style of music. GAMETES (10) [noun] A reproductive cell (sperm in males or eggs in females), having only half of a complete set of chromosomes. GAMETIC (12) GAMIEST (10) GAMINES (10) [noun] A (usually female) street urchin; a homeless girl. | [noun] A mischievous, playful, elfish, pert girl or young woman. GAMINGS (11) GAMMERS (12) [noun] An old woman. GAMMIER (12) [adjective] Injured, or not functioning properly (with respect to legs). GAMMING (13) GAMMONS (12) [noun] A cut of quick-cured pork leg. | [noun] A victory in backgammon achieved when the opponent has not borne off a single stone. | [noun] Backgammon (the game itself). GARMENT (10) [noun] A single item of clothing. | [noun] Short for temple garment. | [verb] To clothe in a garment. GATEMAN (10) [noun] A gatekeeper; a person who guards a gate. GATEMEN (10) [noun] A gatekeeper; a person who guards a gate. GAUMING (11) GAZUMPS (21) [noun] The act of gazumping. | [verb] To swindle; to extort. | [verb] To raise the selling price of something (especially property) after previously agreeing to a lower one. GEMINAL (10) [adjective] Describing identical atoms or groups attached to the same atom in a molecule GEMLIKE (14) GEMMATE (12) GEMMIER (12) GEMMILY (15) GEMMING (13) [verb] To adorn with, or as if with, gems. GEMMULE (12) [noun] A small gemma or bud of dormant embryonic cells produced by some freshwater sponges. | [noun] A hypothetical particle once thought to be the basis of heredity according to pangenesis theory. GEMOTES (10) GEMSBOK (16) [noun] A large African antelope (Oryx gazella). GENOMES (10) [noun] The complete genetic information (either DNA or, in some viruses, RNA) of an organism. GENOMIC (12) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a genome. GERMANE (10) [adjective] Related to the topic being discussed or considered. | [noun] Germanium tetrahydride, GeH4 | [noun] (especially in combination) Any organic derivative of this compound. GERMANS (10) [noun] A near relative. | [noun] An elaborate round dance, often with a waltz movement. | [noun] A social party at which the german is danced. GERMENS (10) GERMIER (10) [adjective] That carries germs. GERMINA (10) GIMBALS (12) [noun] A device for suspending something, such as a ship's compass, so that it will remain level when its support is tipped. GIMLETS (10) [noun] A small screw-tipped tool for boring holes. | [noun] A cocktail, usually made with gin and lime juice. | [verb] To pierce or bore holes (as if using a gimlet). GIMMALS (12) GIMMICK (18) [noun] A trick or device used to attain some end. | [noun] A clever ploy or strategy. | [noun] A gimmick capacitor. GIMMIES (12) GIMPIER (12) GIMPING (13) [verb] (of yarn, cord, thread, etc.) To wrap or wind (surround) with another length of yarn or wire in a tight spiral, often by means of a gimping machine, creating 'gimped yarn', etc. Also, generally, to wrap or twist with string or wire. See gimped. | [verb] To notch or indent; to jag or make jagged; to edge with serrations or grooves. | [verb] To limp; to hobble. GINGHAM (14) [noun] A cotton fabric made from dyed and white yarn woven in checks GISARME (10) GLAMORS (10) GLAMOUR (10) [noun] Originally, enchantment; magic charm; especially, the effect of a spell that causes one to see objects in a form that differs from reality, typically to make filthy, ugly, or repulsive things seems beauteous. | [noun] Alluring beauty or charm (often with sex appeal). | [noun] Any excitement, appeal, or attractiveness associated with a person, place, or thing; that which makes something appealing. GLEAMED (11) [verb] To shine; to glitter; to glisten. | [verb] To be briefly but strongly apparent. | [verb] To disgorge filth, as a hawk. GLEAMER (10) GLEEMAN (10) [noun] A professional singer, bard, or other entertainer. GLEEMEN (10) [noun] A professional singer, bard, or other entertainer. GLIMING (11) GLIMMER (12) [noun] A faint light; a dim glow. | [noun] A flash of light. | [noun] A faint or remote possibility. GLIMPSE (12) [noun] A brief look, glance, or peek. | [noun] A sudden flash. | [noun] A faint idea; an inkling. GLIOMAS (10) [noun] A tumour that arises from glial cells in the brain or spinal cord GLOMERA (10) GLOMMED (13) [verb] To steal, to grab. | [verb] To stare. | [verb] To attach. GLOOMED (11) [verb] To be dark or gloomy. | [verb] To look or feel sad, sullen or despondent. | [verb] To render gloomy or dark; to obscure; to darken. GLUMMER (12) [adjective] Despondent; moody; sullen GNOMISH (13) GNOMIST (10) GNOMONS (10) [noun] An object such as a pillar or a rod that is used to tell time by the shadow it casts when the sun shines on it, especially the pointer on a sundial. | [noun] An object such as a pillar used by an observer to calculate the meridian altitude of the sun (that is, the altitude of the sun when it reaches the observer's meridian), for the purpose of determining the observer's latitude. | [noun] The index of the hour circle of a globe. GODDAMN (12) [adjective] Damned by God. | [adjective] Used as an intensifier. | [interjection] An expression of anger, surprise, intense excitment or frustration. GODDAMS (12) GOMERAL (10) GOMEREL (10) GOMERIL (10) GOMUTIS (10) GOODMAN (11) [noun] A familiar appellation of civility. | [noun] A husband; the master of a house or family. GOODMEN (11) [noun] A familiar appellation of civility. | [noun] A husband; the master of a house or family. GOOMBAH (15) [noun] A person of Italian descent. | [noun] A companion, pal, close friend, or associate, used especially among Italian-American men. It sometimes has the connotation of an older friend who acts as a patron, protector or adviser. | [noun] A style of music from Guinea-Bissau which is primarily vocal and percussive. GOOMBAY (15) [noun] (Bahamas) A type of traditional Bahamian drum. | [noun] (Bahamas) A genre of folk music played with this drum. | [noun] (Bahamas) A dance associated with this music genre. GORMAND (11) GOURAMI (10) [noun] An edible freshwater fish of the family Osphronemidae. GOURMET (10) [noun] A connoisseur in eating and drinking; someone who takes their food seriously. | [adjective] (of food and drink) Fine; of superior quality. GRAHAMS (13) GRAMARY (13) GRAMMAR (12) [noun] A system of rules and principles for speaking and writing a language. | [noun] The study of the internal structure of words (morphology) and the use of words in the construction of phrases and sentences (syntax). | [noun] A book describing the rules of grammar of a language. GRAMMES (12) [noun] Gram (unit of mass) GRAMPUS (12) [noun] The killer whale, Orcinus orca. | [noun] Risso's dolphin, Grampus griseus, with a blunt nose. | [noun] The hellbender salamander, Cryptobranchus alleganiensis. GRANDAM (11) [noun] Grandmother | [noun] Old lady, elderly woman GRANDMA (11) [noun] Grandmother GREMIAL (10) GREMLIN (10) [noun] A mythical creature reputed to be mischievously inclined to damage or dismantle machinery. | [noun] (by extension) Any mysterious, unknown source of trouble or mischief. | [noun] A young inexperienced surfer. GREMMIE (12) GRIMACE (12) [noun] A contorted facial expression, often expressing contempt or pain. | [noun] Affectation, pretence. | [verb] To make grimaces; to distort one's face; to make faces. GRIMIER (10) [adjective] Stained or covered with grime. | [adjective] From the urban musical genre called grime. GRIMILY (13) GRIMING (11) [verb] To begrime; to cake with dirt. GRIMMER (12) [adjective] Dismal and gloomy, cold and forbidding | [adjective] Rigid and unrelenting | [adjective] Ghastly or sinister GRIPMAN (12) GRIPMEN (12) GROGRAM (11) [noun] A strong, rough fabric made up of a mixture of silk, and mohair or wool. | [noun] A garment made from this fabric. GROMMET (12) [noun] A reinforced eyelet, or a small metal or plastic ring used to reinforce an eyelet. | [noun] A ring formed of a single strand of rope, laid in three times round, fastening the upper edge of a sail to its stay. | [noun] (flags) An eyelet at the hoist end of a flag, used to fasten the flag to its halyard. GROOMED (11) [verb] To attend to one's appearance and clothing. | [verb] To care for (horses or other animals) by brushing and cleaning them. | [verb] To prepare (someone) for election or appointment. GROOMER (10) GRUMBLE (12) [noun] A low thundering, rumbling or growling sound. | [noun] The sound made by a hungry stomach. | [noun] A surly complaint. GRUMBLY (15) [adjective] Given to grumbling GRUMMER (12) GRUMMET (12) GRUMOSE (10) GRUMOUS (10) GRUMPED (13) [verb] To complain. | [verb] To be grumpy. GRUMPHY (18) GUIMPES (12) [noun] Gimp; a narrow flat braid or reinforced cord of fabric used for ornamental trimming. | [noun] A kind of short, high-necked blouse with sleeves of the late Victorian era, designed to be worn under a low-cut dress, jumper, or pinafore dress. | [noun] A kind of short chemisette or yoke insert made of lace, embroidery, or the like, worn with a low-necked dress. GUMBOIL (12) [noun] A small suppurating inflamed spot on the gum. GUMBOOT (12) [noun] A type of boot made of rubber. | [noun] A style of popular music traditionally associated with gold miners. | [noun] Generic black tea. GUMDROP (13) [noun] A small chewy candy made with corn syrup, gelatin and some flavouring oils or powders. GUMLESS (10) GUMLIKE (14) GUMMATA (12) [noun] A soft, non-cancerous growth, a form of granuloma, resulting from the tertiary stage of syphilis. GUMMERS (12) GUMMIER (12) [adjective] Showing the gums. | [adjective] Resembling gum (the substance). | [adjective] Covered with gum or a substance resembling gum. GUMMING (13) [verb] To chew, especially of a toothless person or animal. | [verb] To deepen and enlarge the spaces between the teeth of (a worn saw), as with a gummer. | [verb] (sometimes with up) To apply an adhesive or gum to; to make sticky by applying a sticky substance to. GUMMITE (12) GUMMOSE (12) GUMMOUS (12) GUMSHOE (13) [noun] A sneaker or rubber overshoe. | [noun] A detective. | [verb] To act as a detective. GUMTREE (10) [noun] A eucalyptus tree. GUMWEED (14) GUMWOOD (14) GUNROOM (10) [noun] A room where guns are stored. | [noun] Living quarters for junior officers and midshipmen on a warship (hence gunroom officers). In the past it was usually set in the forecastle. GYMNAST (13) [noun] One who performs gymnastics GYPSUMS (15) HACKMAN (18) HACKMEN (18) HADARIM (13) HAEMINS (12) HAEMOID (13) HAFNIUM (15) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Hf) with an atomic number of 72: a lustrous, silvery-grey tetravalent transition metal. HAHNIUM (15) [noun] A rejected name for dubnium. HAKEEMS (16) HALIDOM (13) HAMADAS (13) HAMATES (12) [noun] The hamate bone. HAMAULS (12) HAMBONE (14) [noun] The bone at the center of a ham | [noun] A ham; an eager or inferior performer | [noun] A certain type of dance that involves making noise with the body, especially by slapping parts of the body with one's hands HAMBURG (15) [noun] (Midwestern US) hamburger (food) | [verb] (Grenada) To annoy. HAMLETS (12) [noun] A small village or a group of houses. | [noun] A village that does not have its own church. | [noun] Any of the fish of the genus Hypoplectrus in the family Serranidae. HAMMADA (15) HAMMALS (14) HAMMERS (14) [noun] A tool with a heavy head and a handle used for pounding. | [noun] The act of using a hammer to hit something}} | [noun] A moving part of a firearm that strikes the firing pin to discharge a gun. HAMMIER (14) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of ham. | [adjective] Amateurish; characterized by overacting. HAMMILY (17) HAMMING (15) [verb] To overact; to act with exaggerated emotions. HAMMOCK (20) [noun] A swinging couch or bed, usually made of netting or canvas about six feet wide, suspended by clews or cords at the ends. | [noun] (obsolete outside dialectal) A piece of land thickly wooded, and usually covered with bushes and vines. | [verb] To lie in a hammock. HAMPERS (14) [noun] A large basket, usually with a cover, used for the packing and carrying of articles or small animals | [noun] (uncommon except in) A wicker or plastic basket specifically for holding laundry (from clothes hamper), as opposed to a covered wicker basket which is a true hamper | [verb] To put into a hamper. HAMSTER (12) [noun] Any of various Old-World rodent species belonging to the subfamily Cricetinae. | [noun] Other rodents of similar appearance, such as the maned hamster or crested hamster, Lophiomys imhausi, mouse-like hamsters of genus Calomyscus, and the white-tailed rat (Mystromys albicaudatus). | [verb] To secrete or store privately, as a hamster does with food in its cheek pouches. HAMULAR (12) HAMULUS (12) [noun] A hook, or hooklike process. | [noun] A hooked barbicel of a feather. HAMZAHS (24) HANGMAN (13) [noun] An executioner responsible for hanging criminals. | [noun] (games) A guessing game where one has to guess the word an opponent is thinking of by guessing one letter at a time, and involving the gradual drawing of a stick figure hanging from the gallows. HANGMEN (13) [noun] An executioner responsible for hanging criminals. | [noun] (games) A guessing game where one has to guess the word an opponent is thinking of by guessing one letter at a time, and involving the gradual drawing of a stick figure hanging from the gallows. HANSOMS (12) [noun] A Hansom cab; a carriage HANUMAN (12) [noun] The entellus (Semnopithecus entellus, syn. Presbytis entellus) HAREEMS (12) HARMERS (12) HARMFUL (15) [adjective] Of a kind likely to be damaging; injurious HARMINE (12) HARMING (13) [verb] To cause injury to another; to hurt; to cause damage to something. HARMINS (12) HARMONY (15) [noun] Agreement or accord. | [noun] A pleasing combination of elements, or arrangement of sounds. | [noun] The academic study of chords. HARUMPH (17) HAYMOWS (18) [noun] A pile of hay stored in a barn. | [noun] The place in a barn where hay is deposited. HAZANIM (21) HEADMAN (13) [noun] The person in charge of an organization, clan, tribe, or other group. | [noun] The leader of a village. | [noun] Headmaster HEADMEN (13) [noun] The person in charge of an organization, clan, tribe, or other group. | [noun] The leader of a village. | [noun] Headmaster HEAUMES (12) HEGUMEN (13) HEIMISH (15) HEIRDOM (13) HELIUMS (12) HELMETS (12) [noun] A protective head covering, usually part of armour. | [noun] That which resembles a helmet in form, position, etc. HELMING (13) [verb] To be a helmsman or a member of the helm; to be in charge of steering the boat. | [verb] (by extension) To lead (a project, etc.). HEMAGOG (14) HEMATAL (12) HEMATIC (14) [noun] Hematinic | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, affecting or containing blood HEMATIN (12) [noun] Hemoglobin with iron in ferric state. | [noun] Hemin. HEMIOLA (12) [noun] The articulation of two bars in triple time as if they were three bars in duple time. HEMLINE (12) [noun] The line formed by the bottom edge of a skirt, dress, or coat; hem. | [noun] The height of this line, measured from the floor. HEMLOCK (18) [noun] Any of the poisonous umbelliferous plants, of the genera | [noun] The poison obtained from these Conium and Cicuta plants. | [noun] Any of several coniferous trees, of the genus Tsuga, that grow in North America; the wood of such trees. HEMMERS (14) HEMMING (15) [verb] To make the sound expressed by the word hem; to hesitate in speaking. | [verb] (in sewing) To make a hem. | [verb] : To put hem on an article of clothing, to edge or put a border on something. HEMPIER (14) HERDMAN (13) HERDMEN (13) HERMITS (12) [noun] A religious recluse; someone who lives alone for religious reasons; an eremite. | [noun] A recluse; someone who lives alone and shuns human companionship. | [noun] A spiced cookie made with molasses, raisins, and nuts. HEROISM (12) [noun] The qualities characteristic of a hero, such as courage, bravery, fortitude, unselfishness, etc.; the display of such qualities. HETMANS (12) HIMATIA (12) HIMSELF (15) [pronoun] (reflexive pronoun) Him; the male object of a verb or preposition that also appears as the subject | [pronoun] He; used as an intensifier, often to emphasize that the referent is the exclusive participant in the predicate | [pronoun] The subject or non-reflexive object of a predicate; he himself. HOBOISM (14) HOGMANE (13) HOLISMS (12) HOLMIUM (14) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Ho) with atomic number 67: a soft and malleable silvery-white metal, too reactive to be found uncombined in nature. | [noun] A single atom of this element. HOMAGED (14) HOMAGER (13) HOMAGES (13) [noun] A demonstration of respect, such as towards an individual after their retirement or death | [noun] An artistic work imitating another in a flattering style. Recently, the pronunciation /oʊˈmɒːʒ/ has been introduced from French for this usage; see hommage, which preserves the French spelling. | [noun] In feudalism, the formal oath of a vassal to honor his or her lord's rights. HOMBRES (14) [noun] (in Spanish-speaking contexts) A man, a chap, a guy; especially a Hispanic or Spanish man. HOMBURG (15) [noun] A type of men's felt fedora; a stiff felt hat similar to a trilby. HOMEBOY (17) [noun] Someone, particularly a male acquaintance, from one’s hometown. | [noun] A close friend or fellow member of a youth gang. | [noun] A person. HOMERED (13) [verb] To hit a homer; to hit a home run. HOMIEST (12) [adjective] Befitting a home; cozy, intimate. HOMINES (12) HOMINID (13) [noun] Any primate of the taxonomic family Hominidae. All the great apes (chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans and humans). | [adjective] Of the Hominidae HOMMOCK (20) HOMOLOG (13) [noun] Something homologous; a homologous organ or part, chemical compound or chromosome. | [noun] A word shared by two languages or dialects. | [noun] One of a group of similar DNA sequences that share a common ancestry. HOMONYM (17) [noun] (strict sense) A word that both sounds and is spelled the same as another word. | [noun] A word that sounds or is spelled the same as another word, technically called a homophone (same sound) or a homograph (same spelling). | [noun] A name for a taxon that is identical in spelling to another name that belongs to a different taxon. HOMOSEX (19) HOODLUM (13) [noun] A gangster; a hired thug. | [noun] A rough or violent youth. HORMONE (12) [noun] Any substance produced by one tissue and conveyed by the bloodstream to another to effect physiological activity. | [noun] A synthetic compound with the same activity. | [noun] Any similar substance in plants. HUMANER (12) [adjective] (notcomp) Of or belonging to the species Homo sapiens or its closest relatives. | [adjective] Having the nature or attributes of a human being. | [adjective] Having or showing concern for the pain or suffering of another; compassionate. HUMANLY (15) [adverb] In a human manner. HUMATES (12) HUMBLED (15) [verb] To defeat or reduce the power, independence, or pride of | [verb] To make humble or lowly; to make less proud or arrogant; to make meek and submissive. | [adjective] (usually qualifying a first-person pronoun) Grateful for the support of others, touched; honored, flattered. HUMBLER (14) [adjective] Not pretentious or magnificent; unpretending; unassuming. | [adjective] Having a low opinion of oneself; not proud, arrogant, or assuming; modest. | [adjective] Near the ground. HUMBLES (14) [noun] (Baltimore) An arrest based on weak evidence intended to demean or punish the subject. | [verb] To defeat or reduce the power, independence, or pride of | [verb] To make humble or lowly; to make less proud or arrogant; to make meek and submissive. | [noun] Entrails of a deer. HUMBUGS (15) [noun] A hoax, jest, or prank. | [noun] A fraud or sham (countable); hypocrisy (uncountable). | [noun] A fraudster, cheat, or hypocrite. HUMDRUM (15) [noun] The quality of lacking variety or excitement. | [noun] A stupid fellow. | [adjective] Lacking variety or excitement; dull; boring. HUMERAL (12) [noun] An oblong scarf worn round the priest's shoulders at certain parts of the Mass and of Benediction. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or near the humerus or shoulder HUMERUS (12) [noun] The bone of the upper arm. HUMIDLY (16) HUMIDOR (13) [noun] A container designed to keep its contents at a constant humidity; especially such a box for storing cigars. HUMMERS (14) [noun] One who hums. | [noun] A Humvee. | [noun] A type of vehicle resembling a jeep but bulkier. HUMMING (15) [verb] To make a sound from the vocal chords without pronouncing any real words, with one's lips closed. | [verb] To express by humming. | [verb] To drone like certain insects naturally do in motion, or sounding similarly | [noun] The sound of something that hums; a hum. HUMMOCK (20) [noun] A small hill; a hillock; a knoll. | [noun] A ridge or hill of ice in an ice field. | [noun] A fistful. HUMORAL (12) [adjective] Relating to the body fluids or humours HUMORED (13) [adjective] (only in combination with good, bad or ill) Having a particular disposition or mood. See good humor, bad humor, ill humor. | [verb] To pacify by indulging. HUMOURS (12) [noun] The quality of being amusing, comical, funny. | [noun] A mood, especially a bad mood; a temporary state of mind or disposition brought upon by an event; an abrupt illogical inclination or whim. | [noun] Any of the fluids in an animal body, especially the four "cardinal humours" of blood, yellow bile, black bile and phlegm that were believed to control the health and mood of the human body. HUMPHED (18) HUMPIER (14) HUMPING (15) [verb] To bend something into a hump. | [verb] To carry (something), especially with some exertion. | [verb] To rhythmically thrust the pelvis in a manner conducive to sexual intercourse HUMUSES (12) HUMVEES (15) [noun] A diesel-powered, four-wheel drive tactical military vehicle that can carry a wide variety of military hardware HUTMENT (12) [noun] An encampment of huts HYMENAL (15) HYMENIA (15) [noun] The sporebearing surface of a fungus. HYMNALS (15) [noun] A collection of hymns; a hymn book. HYMNARY (18) [noun] A book of hymns. HYMNING (16) [verb] To sing a hymn. | [verb] To praise or extol in hymns. | [noun] A singing of hymns. HYMNIST (15) HYMNODY (19) [noun] The writing, composing, or singing of hymns or psalms. | [noun] The hymns of a particular church or of a particular time. IAMBICS (13) [noun] An iamb; a line or group of lines of iambs. IDOLISM (10) ILLUMED (10) [verb] To throw or spread light upon; to make light or bright ILLUMES (9) [verb] To throw or spread light upon; to make light or bright IMAGERS (10) [noun] One who images or forms likenesses; a sculptor. | [noun] A system that creates a digital copy such as a disk image. IMAGERY (13) [noun] The work of one who makes images or visible representation of objects. | [noun] Imitation work. | [noun] Images in general, or en masse. IMAGINE (10) [noun] A short fanfic or prompt placing a reader insert in a novel scenario with a character or celebrity. | [verb] To form a mental image of something; to envision or create something in one's mind. | [verb] To believe in something created by one's own mind. IMAGING (11) [verb] To represent by an image or symbol; to portray. | [verb] To reflect, mirror. | [verb] To create an image of. IMAGISM (12) [noun] A form of poetry utilising precise imagery and clear language. | [noun] The theory that thinking is based on the formation of images in the mind. IMAGIST (10) IMAGOES (10) IMAMATE (11) IMARETS (9) IMBALMS (13) IMBARKS (15) IMBIBED (14) [verb] To drink (used frequently of alcoholic beverages). | [verb] To take in; absorb. IMBIBER (13) IMBIBES (13) [verb] To drink (used frequently of alcoholic beverages). | [verb] To take in; absorb. IMBLAZE (20) IMBOSOM (13) IMBOWER (14) IMBROWN (14) IMBRUED (12) [verb] To stain (in, with, blood, slaughter, etc.). | [adjective] Stained with blood; wounded, bloody. | [adjective] Stained with blood. IMBRUES (11) [verb] To stain (in, with, blood, slaughter, etc.). IMBRUTE (11) IMBUING (12) [verb] To wet or stain an object completely with some physical quality. | [verb] In general, to act in a way which results in an object becoming completely permeated or impregnated by some quality. IMITATE (9) [verb] To follow as a model or a pattern; to make a copy, counterpart or semblance of. IMMENSE (11) [noun] Immense extent or expanse; immensity | [adjective] Huge, gigantic, very large. | [adjective] Supremely good. IMMERGE (12) IMMERSE (11) [verb] To put under the surface of a liquid; to dunk. | [verb] To involve or engage deeply. | [verb] To map into an immersion. IMMIXED (19) IMMIXES (18) IMMORAL (11) [adjective] Not moral; inconsistent with rectitude, purity, or good morals; contrary to conscience or the divine law. IMMUNES (11) IMMURED (12) [verb] To cloister, confine, imprison: to lock up behind walls. | [verb] To put or bury within a wall. | [verb] (of a growing crystal) To trap or capture (an impurity); chiefly in the participial adjective immured and gerund or gerundial noun immuring. IMMURES (11) [verb] To cloister, confine, imprison: to lock up behind walls. | [verb] To put or bury within a wall. | [verb] (of a growing crystal) To trap or capture (an impurity); chiefly in the participial adjective immured and gerund or gerundial noun immuring. IMPACTS (13) [noun] The striking of one body against another; collision. | [noun] The force or energy of a collision of two objects. | [noun] A forced impinging. IMPAINT (11) IMPAIRS (11) [verb] To weaken; to affect negatively; to have a diminishing effect on. | [verb] To grow worse; to deteriorate. IMPALAS (11) [noun] An African antelope, Aepyceros melampus, noted for its leaping ability; the male has ridged, curved horns. IMPALED (12) [verb] To pierce (something) with any long, pointed object. | [verb] To place two coats of arms side by side on the same shield (often those of two spouses upon marriage). | [verb] To pierce with a pale; to put to death by fixing on a sharp stake. IMPALER (11) IMPALES (11) [verb] To pierce (something) with any long, pointed object. | [verb] To place two coats of arms side by side on the same shield (often those of two spouses upon marriage). | [verb] To pierce with a pale; to put to death by fixing on a sharp stake. IMPANEL (11) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. IMPARKS (15) [verb] To enclose or confine in, or as if in, a park. | [verb] To enclose or fence in (land) to make a park. IMPARTS (11) [verb] To give or bestow (e.g. a quality or property). | [verb] To give a part or to share. | [verb] To make known; to show (by speech, writing etc.). IMPASSE (11) [noun] A road with no exit; a cul-de-sac | [noun] A deadlock or stalemate situation in which no progress can be made IMPASTE (11) IMPASTO (11) [noun] The use of a thick-bodied paint to create sizable peaks and crests in an image. | [verb] To paint in thick-bodied paint; to paint in impasto style IMPAVID (15) IMPAWNS (14) IMPEACH (16) [verb] To hinder, impede, or prevent. | [verb] To bring a legal proceeding against a public official. | [verb] To charge with impropriety; to discredit; to call into question. IMPEARL (11) IMPEDED (13) [verb] To get in the way of; to hinder. IMPEDER (12) IMPEDES (12) [verb] To get in the way of; to hinder. IMPENDS (12) [verb] To hang or be suspended over (something); to overhang. | [verb] Figuratively to hang over (someone) as a threat or danger. | [verb] To threaten to happen; to be about to happen, to be imminent. IMPERIA (11) IMPERIL (11) [verb] To put into peril; to place in danger. | [verb] To risk or hazard. IMPETUS (11) [noun] Something that impels; a stimulating factor. | [noun] A force, either internal or external, that impels; an impulse. | [noun] The force or energy associated with a moving body; a stimulus. IMPHEES (14) IMPIETY (14) [noun] The state of being impious. | [noun] An impious act. | [noun] The lack of respect for a god or something sacred. IMPINGE (12) [verb] To make a physical impact on. | [verb] To interfere with. | [verb] To have an effect upon, especially a negative one. IMPINGS (12) IMPIOUS (11) [adjective] Not pious. | [adjective] Lacking reverence or respect, especially towards God or a god. IMPLANT (11) [noun] Anything surgically implanted in the body, such as a tissue graft or prosthesis, particularly breast implants. | [noun] (travel) A representative of a travel company, working within the office of a large client and exclusively dealing with that client. | [verb] To fix firmly or set securely or deeply. IMPLEAD (12) [verb] To sue in court, raise an action against a defendant IMPLIED (12) [adjective] Suggested without being stated directly; implicated or hinted at. | [verb] (of a proposition) to have as a necessary consequence | [verb] (of a person) to suggest by logical inference IMPLIES (11) [verb] (of a proposition) to have as a necessary consequence | [verb] (of a person) to suggest by logical inference | [verb] (of a person or proposition) to hint; to insinuate; to suggest tacitly and avoid a direct statement IMPLODE (12) [verb] To collapse or burst inward violently. | [verb] To compress (data) with a particular algorithm. IMPLORE (11) [verb] To beg urgently or earnestly. | [verb] To call upon or pray to earnestly; to entreat. IMPONED (12) IMPONES (11) IMPORTS (11) [noun] Something brought in from an exterior source, especially for sale or trade. | [noun] The practice of importing. | [noun] Significance, importance. IMPOSED (12) [verb] To establish or apply by authority. | [verb] To be an inconvenience (on or upon) | [verb] To enforce: compel to behave in a certain way IMPOSER (11) IMPOSES (11) [verb] To establish or apply by authority. | [verb] To be an inconvenience (on or upon) | [verb] To enforce: compel to behave in a certain way IMPOSTS (11) [noun] A tax, tariff or duty that is imposed, especially on merchandise. | [noun] The weight that must be carried by a horse in a race, the handicap. | [noun] The top part of a column, pillar, pier, wall, etc. that supports an arch. IMPOUND (12) [noun] A place in which things are impounded | [noun] A state of being impounded | [noun] That which has been impounded IMPOWER (14) IMPREGN (12) IMPRESA (11) IMPRESE (11) IMPRESS (11) [noun] The act of impressing. | [noun] An impression; an impressed image or copy of something. | [noun] A stamp or seal used to make an impression. IMPREST (11) [noun] An advance of funds, especially to a government service or employee. | [verb] To advance funds on loan. IMPRINT (11) [noun] An impression; the mark left behind by printing something. | [noun] The name and details of a publisher or printer, as printed in a book etc.; a publishing house. | [noun] A distinctive marking, symbol or logo. | [verb] To leave a print, impression, image, etc. IMPROVE (14) [verb] To make (something) better; to increase the value or productivity (of something). | [verb] To become better. | [verb] To disprove or make void; to refute. IMPROVS (14) [noun] Improvisation. | [noun] A form of live entertainment characterized by improvisation and interaction with the audience. | [verb] To perform improv. IMPUGNS (12) [verb] To assault, attack. | [verb] To verbally assault, especially to argue against an opinion, motive, or action; to question the truth or validity of. IMPULSE (11) [noun] A thrust; a push; a sudden force that impels. | [noun] A wish or urge, particularly a sudden one prompting action. | [noun] The integral of force over time. IMPUTED (12) [verb] To attribute or ascribe (responsibility or fault) to a cause or source. | [verb] To ascribe (sin or righteousness) to someone by substitution. | [verb] To take into account. IMPUTER (11) IMPUTES (11) [verb] To attribute or ascribe (responsibility or fault) to a cause or source. | [verb] To ascribe (sin or righteousness) to someone by substitution. | [verb] To take into account. INARMED (10) INCOMER (11) [noun] One who comes in. | [noun] An outsider who moves to a community or a place; (used by those who consider themselves to be its original inhabitants). INCOMES (11) [noun] Money one earns by working or by capitalising on the work of others. | [noun] Money coming in to a fund, account, or policy. | [noun] A coming in; arrival; entrance; introduction. INDAMIN (10) INDIUMS (10) INFIRMS (12) INFLAME (12) [verb] To set on fire; to kindle; to cause to burn, flame, or glow. | [verb] To kindle or intensify (a feeling, as passion or appetite); to excite to an excessive or unnatural action or heat. | [verb] To provoke (a person) to anger or rage; to exasperate; to irritate; to incense; to enrage. INFORMS (12) [verb] To instruct, train (usually in matters of knowledge). | [verb] To communicate knowledge to. | [verb] To impart information or knowledge. INHUMAN (12) [adjective] Of or pertaining to inhumanity and the indifferently cruel, sadistic or barbaric behavior it brings. INHUMED (13) [verb] To bury in a grave. INHUMER (12) INHUMES (12) [verb] To bury in a grave. INMATES (9) [noun] A person confined to an institution such as a prison (as a convict) or hospital (as a patient). | [noun] A person who shares a residence, such as a lodger, a hotel guest, or a student living on campus. INSEAMS (9) [noun] The seam of a trouser up the inside of the leg. INTERIM (9) [noun] A transitional or temporary period between other events. | [adjective] Transitional. | [adjective] Temporary. INTIMAE (9) [noun] The innermost part of an anatomical structure, particularly a tubular one INTIMAL (9) INTIMAS (9) INTOMBS (11) IODISMS (10) IONIUMS (9) IONOMER (9) [noun] A polymer, or a biological macromolecule (such as a protein) in which a small but significant proportion of the constituent monomers have ionic groups IPOMOEA (11) [noun] Any of the genus Ipomoea of twining plants with showy monopetalous flowers, including the morning glory, the sweet potato, and the cypress vine. IRIDIUM (10) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Ir) with an atomic number of 77: a very hard, brittle, silvery-white transition metal of the platinum group. | [noun] A single atom of this element. IRKSOME (13) [adjective] Marked by irritation or annoyance; disagreeable; troublesome by reason of long continuance or repetition ISCHIUM (14) [noun] The lowest of the three bones that make up each side of the pelvis. ISOGAMY (13) [noun] A form of sexual reproduction involving gametes of similar morphology. ISOGRAM (10) ISOMERS (9) [noun] Any of two or more compounds with the same molecular formula but with different structure. | [noun] Any of two or more atomic nuclei with the same mass number and atomic number but with different radioactive properties. ISONOMY (12) ISOZYME (21) [noun] An isoenzyme ISTHMIC (14) ISTHMUS (12) [noun] A narrow strip of land, bordered on both sides by water, and connecting two larger landmasses. | [noun] Any such narrow part connecting two larger structures. | [noun] An edge in a graph whose deletion increases the number of connected components of the graph. ITEMING (10) ITEMISE (9) [verb] To state in items, or by particulars ITEMIZE (18) [verb] To state in items, or by particulars JACAMAR (18) [noun] Any of various insectivorous tropical birds, of the family Galbulidae, having iridescent plumage and a long, sharp bill. JAMBEAU (18) [noun] A piece of armour for the leg. JAMBING (19) JAMMERS (18) [noun] Any device used to jam radio reception. | [noun] A form of swimwear used by athletes. | [noun] A musician who jams. | [adjective] Of a place or room: full. JAMMIER (18) [adjective] Resembling jam in taste, texture, etc. | [adjective] Covered in jam. | [adjective] (of a person) Lucky, especially undeservedly so. JAMMIES (18) [noun] Pajamas/pyjamas | [noun] A gun. JAMMING (19) [verb] To get something stuck in a confined space. | [verb] To brusquely force something into a space; cram, squeeze. | [verb] To cause congestion or blockage. Often used with "up" JARLDOM (17) JASMINE (16) [noun] Any of several plants, of the genus Jasminum, mostly native to Asia, having fragrant white or yellow flowers. | [noun] The perfume obtained from these plants. | [noun] Any of several unrelated plants having a similar perfume. JASMINS (16) JAZZMAN (34) [noun] A male member of a jazz band. JAZZMEN (34) [noun] A male member of a jazz band. JEJUNUM (23) [noun] The central of the three divisions of the small intestine which lies between the duodenum and the ileum JEMADAR (17) [noun] A former rank in the British Indian Army, the lowest rank for a viceroy's commissioned officer. JEMIDAR (17) JEMMIED (19) [verb] To shoehorn, to cram. | [verb] To pry (something, especially a lock) open with or as if with a crowbar. JEMMIES (18) [noun] A baked sheep's head. | [noun] An immigrant. | [noun] A greatcoat. JETSAMS (16) JETSOMS (16) JIBBOOM (20) JICAMAS (18) JIMJAMS (25) [noun] Placeholder word for a thing or person nonspecific, unknown or forgotten; thingamabob. | [noun] Nonsense; rigmarole. | [noun] Chaotic activity; uproar; craziness. JIMMIED (19) [verb] To pry (something, especially a lock) open with or as if with a crowbar. JIMMIES (18) [noun] (especially New England and Philadelphia) Chocolate sprinkles used as a topping for ice cream, cookies, or cupcakes. | [noun] (especially New England and Philadelphia) Chocolate sprinkles used as a topping for ice cream, cookies, or cupcakes. | [noun] A marijuana cigarette. JIMMINY (21) JIMPEST (18) JOBNAME (18) JUGULUM (17) JUJUISM (23) JUMBALS (18) JUMBLED (19) [verb] To mix or confuse. | [verb] To meet or unite in a confused way. | [adjective] In disarray, mixed up. JUMBLER (18) JUMBLES (18) [noun] A mixture of unrelated things. | [noun] Items for a rummage sale. | [noun] A rummage sale. JUMBUCK (24) [noun] A sheep. JUMPERS (18) [noun] Someone or something that jumps, e.g. a participant in a jumping event in track or skiing. | [noun] A person who attempts suicide by jumping from a great height. | [noun] A short length of electrical conductor, to make a temporary connection. Also jump wire. JUMPIER (18) [adjective] Nervous and excited. JUMPILY (21) JUMPING (19) [verb] To propel oneself rapidly upward, downward and/or in any horizontal direction such that momentum causes the body to become airborne. | [verb] To cause oneself to leave an elevated location and fall downward. | [verb] To pass by a spring or leap; to overleap. JUMPOFF (24) JUNKMAN (20) [noun] A seller of junk. JUNKMEN (20) [noun] A seller of junk. JURYMAN (19) [noun] One who is impaneled on a jury, or who serves as a juror. JURYMEN (19) [noun] One who is impaneled on a jury, or who serves as a juror. KALIMBA (15) [noun] A type of thumb piano, similar to a mbira. KALIUMS (13) KALMIAS (13) [noun] Any plant in the taxonomic genus Kalmia. KAMALAS (13) KAMPONG (16) [noun] (Cambodia) A landing, a port; a river town. | [noun] (Brunei) A traditional Malay village. | [noun] A district or suburb where a former kampung stood. KAMSEEN (13) KAMSINS (13) KASHMIR (16) KERAMIC (15) KERMESS (13) KERYGMA (17) [noun] The Apostolic proclamation of religious truths; the core teachings of Christianity taught by the early Church. KHAMSIN (16) [noun] A hot wind in Egypt which blows (for about 50 days) from the desert, bringing with it sand. KIMCHEE (18) [noun] A Korean dish made of vegetables, such as cabbage or radishes, that are salted, seasoned, and stored in sealed containers to undergo lactic acid fermentation. | [noun] A Korean person. KIMCHIS (18) KIMONOS (13) [noun] A traditional Japanese robe-like garment which wraps around the body and is now generally worn only on formal occasions. | [noun] A yukata. | [noun] A long robe-like garment in Western fashion, which may be open at the front, loosely inspired by the Japanese garment. KINEMAS (13) KINGDOM (15) [noun] A realm having a king and/or queen as its actual or nominal sovereign. | [noun] A realm, region, or conceptual space where something is dominant. | [noun] A rank in the classification of organisms, below domain and above phylum; a taxon at that rank (e.g. the plant kingdom, the animal kingdom). KINSMAN (13) [noun] A male relative. KINSMEN (13) [noun] A male relative. KIRKMAN (17) [noun] A clergyman or officer in a kirk. | [noun] A member of the Church of Scotland. KIRKMEN (17) [noun] A clergyman or officer in a kirk. | [noun] A member of the Church of Scotland. KIRMESS (13) KISMATS (13) KISMETS (13) KLEZMER (22) [noun] A Jewish folk musician. | [noun] A type of popular Jewish folk music especially associated with Ashkenazi cultures. KOMATIK (17) [noun] A rawhide-lashed sledge with wooden crossbars and runners, first invented and used by the Inuit of Northern Canada, but since used also by non-Inuit people. KOUMISS (13) [noun] A fermented drink made from mare's milk, common among peoples of the Central Asian steppes. KOUMYSS (16) KREMLIN (13) [noun] (Russian architecture) A fortified, central complex found in various Russian cities. KRIMMER (15) KUMMELS (15) [noun] A German caraway liqueur. KUMQUAT (22) [noun] A small, orange citrus-like fruit which is native to Asia (Citrus japonica, syn. Fortunella japonica). KUMYSES (16) LABARUM (11) [noun] The Roman military standard adopted by Constantine I. The banner was known for its Christian chi-rho sign - ☧. LABRUMS (11) LACTAMS (11) [noun] Any of a class of cyclic amides that are the nitrogen analogs of lactones, formed by heating amino acids; the tautomeric enol forms are known as lactims. LADANUM (10) [noun] A sticky brown resin obtained from species of rockrose, used mainly in perfume. LAICISM (11) LAMBAST (11) [verb] To scold, reprimand or criticize harshly. | [verb] (dated in UK English but not US English) To give a thrashing to; to beat severely. LAMBDAS (12) [noun] The eleventh letter of the Classical and Modern Greek alphabet, the twelfth of the Old Greek alphabet. | [noun] Unit representation of wavelength. | [noun] The cosmological constant. LAMBENT (11) [adjective] Brushing or flickering gently over a surface. | [adjective] Glowing or luminous, but lacking heat. | [adjective] Exhibiting lightness or brilliance of wit; clever or witty without unkindness. LAMBERS (11) LAMBERT (11) [noun] A cgs unit of luminance; the brightness of a surface that emits one lumen per square centimetre LAMBIER (11) LAMBIES (11) LAMBING (12) [verb] Of a sheep, to give birth. | [verb] To assist (sheep) to give birth. | [noun] The act of a ewe giving birth to a lamb LAMBKIN (15) [noun] A young lamb, a very young sheep. | [noun] A term of endearment. LAMEDHS (13) LAMELLA (9) [noun] A thin, plate-like structure. | [noun] The gill of a mushroom. LAMENTS (9) [noun] An expression of grief, suffering, sadness or regret. | [noun] A song expressing grief. LAMINAE (9) [noun] A very thin layer of material. | [noun] A thin plate or scale, such as the arch of a vertebra. | [noun] The flat part of a leaf or leaflet; the blade. LAMINAL (9) [noun] Such a sound | [adjective] Laminar | [adjective] (of a sound) Produced with the blade of the tongue LAMINAR (9) [adjective] Of fluid motion, smooth and regular, flowing as though in different layers. | [adjective] In, or consisting of, thin plates or layers. LAMINAS (9) LAMMING (12) [verb] To beat or thrash. | [verb] To flee or run away. | [noun] A beating. LAMPADS (12) LAMPERS (11) [noun] An inflammation and swelling of the soft parts of the palate immediately behind the foreteeth in a horse. LAMPING (12) [verb] To hit, clout, belt, wallop. | [verb] To hunt at night using a lamp; see lamping. | [verb] To hang out or chill; to do nothing in particular. LAMPION (11) LAMPOON (11) [noun] A written attack or other work ridiculing a person, group, or institution. | [verb] To satirize or poke fun at. LAMPREY (14) [noun] Any long slender primitive eel-like freshwater and saltwater fish of the order Petromyzontiformes, having a sucking mouth with rasping teeth but no jaw. LAMSTER (9) LANDMAN (10) [noun] Someone who lives or works on land, as opposed to a seaman. | [noun] In the United States, a person involved in determining, transferring, or managing mineral rights, to include oil (petroleum) and natural gas exploration, development, and production. LANDMEN (10) [noun] Someone who lives or works on land, as opposed to a seaman. | [noun] In the United States, a person involved in determining, transferring, or managing mineral rights, to include oil (petroleum) and natural gas exploration, development, and production. LEADMAN (10) LEADMEN (10) LEFTISM (12) [noun] Belief in the principles of left-wing politics. LEGROOM (10) [noun] Space to stretch the legs while seated. | [noun] Space to move in. LEGUMES (10) [noun] The fruit or seed of leguminous plants (as peas or beans) used for food. | [noun] Any of a large family (Fabaceae, syn. Leguminosae) of dicotyledonous herbs, shrubs, and trees having fruits that are legumes or loments, bearing nodules on the roots that contain nitrogen-fixing bacteria, and including important food and forage plants (as peas, beans, or clovers). | [noun] A pod dehiscent into two pieces or valves, and having the seed attached at one suture, as that of the pea. LEGUMIN (10) LEHAYIM (15) LEMMATA (11) [noun] A proposition proved or accepted for immediate use in the proof of some other proposition. | [noun] The canonical form of an inflected word; i.e., the form usually found as the headword in a dictionary, such as the nominative singular of a noun, the bare infinitive of a verb, etc. | [noun] (psycholinguistics) The theoretical abstract conceptual form of a word, representing a specific meaning, before the creation of a specific phonological form as the sounds of a lexeme, which may find representation in a specific written form as a dictionary or lexicographic word. LEMMING (12) [noun] A small Arctic and Subarctic rodent from any of six genera of similar rodents. | [noun] Any member of a group given to conformity or groupthink, especially a group poised to follow a leader off a cliff. LEMPIRA (11) [noun] The currency of Honduras, divided into 100 centavos. LEMURES (9) [noun] The spirits or ghosts of the dead in the Roman mythology, considered as troublesome unless exorcised or appeased. LENSMAN (9) [noun] A male photographer LENSMEN (9) [noun] A male photographer LEUCOMA (11) [noun] An opaque area or scar on the cornea of an eye LEUKOMA (13) [noun] An opaque area or scar on the cornea of an eye LEXEMES (16) [noun] A unit of lexical meaning, roughly corresponding to the set of inflected forms taken by a single word. | [noun] An individual instance of a continuous character sequence without spaces, used in lexical analysis (see token). LEXEMIC (18) LIFTMAN (12) LIFTMEN (12) LIMACON (11) LIMBATE (11) LIMBECK (17) LIMBERS (11) [verb] To cause to become limber; to make flexible or pliant. | [noun] A two-wheeled vehicle to which a wheeled artillery piece or caisson may be attached for transport. | [noun] (in the plural) The shafts or thills of a wagon or carriage. LIMBIER (11) LIMBING (12) LIMEADE (10) [noun] A citrus drink made from water, sugar, and the juice of limes. | [noun] A glass of this drink. | [noun] A variety of this drink. LIMIEST (9) LIMINAL (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to an entrance or threshold. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a beginning or first stage of a process. LIMITED (10) [verb] To restrict; not to allow to go beyond a certain bound, to set boundaries. | [verb] To have a limit in a particular set. | [verb] To beg, or to exercise functions, within a certain limited region. LIMITER (9) [noun] That which limits or confines. | [noun] A circuit that allows signals below a specified input threshold to pass unaffected while attenuating the peaks of stronger signals. | [noun] A friar who had a license to beg within certain bounds. LIMITES (9) LIMMERS (11) LIMNERS (9) [noun] Someone who limns. LIMNING (10) [verb] To draw or paint; to delineate. | [verb] To illuminate, as a manuscript; to decorate with gold or some other bright colour. | [noun] A depiction. LIMPERS (11) LIMPEST (11) [verb] To walk lamely, as if favouring one leg. | [verb] (of a vehicle) To travel with a malfunctioning system of propulsion. | [verb] To move or proceed irregularly. LIMPETS (11) [noun] A small mollusc, of the family Patellidae with a conical shell found clinging to rocks in the intertidal zones of rocky shores. | [noun] Someone clingy or dependent; someone disregarding or ignorant of another's personal space. LIMPING (12) [verb] To walk lamely, as if favouring one leg. | [verb] (of a vehicle) To travel with a malfunctioning system of propulsion. | [verb] To move or proceed irregularly. LIMPKIN (15) [noun] A large bird, Aramus guarauna, found in marshes in the Caribbean, Central America and southern Florida. LIMPSEY (14) LIMULUS (9) LINEMAN (9) [noun] A person who installs and repairs overhead cables (either power or telephone); a linesman | [noun] A player who specializes in play at the line of scrimmage LINEMEN (9) [noun] A person who installs and repairs overhead cables (either power or telephone); a linesman | [noun] A player who specializes in play at the line of scrimmage LINGAMS (10) [noun] (Shaivism) The aniconic representation traditionally worshipped as a symbol of or in connection with Shiva. LINKMAN (13) [noun] An adult linkboy; one bearing a torch or light. | [noun] A player who uses speed and dexterity to keep an attacking team's downfield progress fluid. | [noun] A man who acts as a link or connection. LINKMEN (13) [noun] An adult linkboy; one bearing a torch or light. | [noun] A player who uses speed and dexterity to keep an attacking team's downfield progress fluid. | [noun] A man who acts as a link or connection. LIPOMAS (11) [noun] A nonmalignant tumor comprising fat cells. LISSOME (9) [adjective] Flexible and graceful in movement; lithe. LITHIUM (12) [noun] The simplest alkali metal, the lightest solid element, and the third lightest chemical element (symbol Li) with an atomic number of 3. It is a soft, silvery metal. | [noun] A single atom of this element. | [noun] Lithium carbonate or other preparations of lithium metal used to treat manic depression and bipolar disorders. LOAMIER (9) [adjective] Consisting of loam; partaking of the nature of loam; resembling loam. LOAMING (10) LOBWORM (14) [noun] The lugworm. LOCKRAM (15) LOCOISM (11) LOGJAMS (17) [noun] An excess of logs being conveyed on a river, so that their motion halts. | [noun] A clog or such jam or mess that halts or greatly delays progress. LOMEINS (9) LOMENTA (9) [noun] A type of modified legume that breaks apart at constrictions occurring between the segments of the seeds. LOMENTS (9) [noun] A type of modified legume that breaks apart at constrictions occurring between the segments of the seeds. LOOMING (10) [verb] To appear indistinctly, eg. when seen on the horizon or through the murk. | [verb] To appear in an exaggerated or threatening form; to be imminent. | [verb] To rise and to be eminent; to be elevated or ennobled, in a moral sense. LORDOMA (10) LORIMER (9) [noun] A person who makes the bits and other metal parts of a horse's bridle, and other small metal pieces. LUGWORM (13) [noun] Any of several species of large marine annelid worm of the genus Arenicola LUMBAGO (12) [noun] Backache of the lumbar region or lower back, which can be caused by muscle strain or a slipped disk. LUMBARS (11) LUMBERS (11) [verb] To move clumsily and heavily; to move slowly. | [verb] (with with) To load down with things, to fill, to encumber, to impose an unwanted burden on | [verb] To heap together in disorder. LUMENAL (9) LUMINAL (9) LUMPENS (11) LUMPERS (11) [noun] The viviparous eelpout. | [noun] An extra laborer hired to assist in the loading or unloading of a truck or a ship. | [noun] A scientist in one of various fields who prefers to keep categories such as species or dialects together in larger groups. LUMPIER (11) [adjective] Full of lumps, not smooth. | [adjective] Of a water surface: covered in many small waves as a result of wind; choppy. LUMPILY (14) LUMPING (12) [verb] To treat as a single unit; to group together in a casual or chaotic manner (as if forming an ill-defined lump of the items). | [verb] To bear a heavy or awkward burden; to carry something unwieldy from one place to another. | [verb] To hit or strike (a person). LUMPISH (14) [adjective] Shaped like a lump, lumpy, ill-defined in shape. | [adjective] Like lumps, lumpy, composed of unshaped or mismatched pieces. | [adjective] Like a lump, cloddish, dull, slow-witted. LUSTRUM (9) [noun] A ceremonial purification of all the people, performed every five years after the taking of the census; a lustration. | [noun] (by extension) A period of five years. LYCEUMS (14) LYRISMS (12) MACABER (13) MACABRE (13) [adjective] Representing or personifying death. | [adjective] Obsessed with death or the gruesome. | [adjective] Ghastly, shocking, terrifying. MACACOS (13) MACADAM (14) [noun] The surface of a road consisting of layers of crushed stone (usually tar-coated for modern traffic). | [noun] Any road or street. | [verb] To cover or surface with macadam. MACAQUE (20) [noun] Any of a group of Old World monkeys of the subfamily Cercopithecinae, especially genus Macaca. MACCHIA (16) MACCHIE (16) MACHETE (14) [noun] A sword-like tool used for cutting large plants with a chopping motion, or as a weapon. The blade is usually 50 to 65 centimeters long, and up to three millimeters thick. | [verb] To cut or chop with a machete. | [verb] To hack or chop crudely with a blade other than a machete. MACHINE (14) [noun] A device that directs and controls energy, often in the form of movement or electricity, to produce a certain effect. | [noun] A vehicle operated mechanically, such as an automobile or an airplane. | [noun] (abbreviation) An answering machine or, by extension, voice mail. MACHREE (14) MACHZOR (23) [noun] A prayerbook for a Jewish holiday. MACKLED (16) MACKLES (15) [noun] A spot. | [noun] A blur or an appearance of a double impression, as when the paper slips a little during printing. | [verb] To blur or be blurred; especially to blur or double an impression from type. MACRAME (13) [noun] A form of decorative textile made by knotting and weaving. | [verb] To create textiles using the macramé technique. MACRONS (11) [noun] A short, straight, horizontal diacritical mark (¯) placed over any of various letters, usually to indicate that the pronunciation of a vowel is long. MACULAE (11) [noun] An oval yellow spot near the center of the retina of the human eye, histologically defined as having two or more layers of ganglion cells, responsible for detailed central vision. | [noun] A small chamber of the inner ear of certain vertebrates filled with endolymph and containing an otolith. | [noun] A spot, as on the skin, or on the surface of the sun or of some other luminous orb. MACULAR (11) [adjective] Relating to the macula, the area of the retina responsible for detailed central vision. MACULAS (11) MACULED (12) MACULES (11) [noun] A spot. | [noun] A blur or an appearance of a double impression, as when the paper slips a little during printing. MACUMBA (15) [noun] A religious cult, having elements of sorcery, ritual dance and fetishes, from Brazil MADAMES (12) MADCAPS (14) [noun] An impulsive, hasty, capricious person. | [noun] An insane person, a lunatic. MADDENS (11) [verb] To make angry. | [verb] To make insane; to inflame with passion. | [verb] To become furious. MADDERS (11) [noun] A herbaceous plant, Rubia tinctorum, native to Asia, cultivated for a red-purple dye (alizarin) obtained from the root. | [noun] The root of the plant, used as a medicine or a dye. | [noun] A dye made from the plant. MADDEST (11) [adjective] Insane; crazy, mentally deranged. | [adjective] (chiefly US; informal in UK) Angry, annoyed. | [adjective] Bizarre; incredible. MADDING (12) [verb] To be or become mad. | [verb] To madden, to anger, to frustrate. | [adjective] Affected with madness; raging; furious. MADDISH (14) MADEIRA (10) [noun] Madeira (wine) MADNESS (10) [noun] The state of being mad; insanity; mental disease. | [noun] Rash folly MADONNA (10) [noun] A one-footed lien-to-tail trick, where the front foot is taken off and kicked out straight down behind the board. MADRONA (10) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADRONE (10) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADRONO (10) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADUROS (10) MADWORT (13) MADZOON (19) MAENADS (10) [noun] A female follower of Dionysus, associated with intense reveling. | [noun] An excessively wild or emotional woman. MAESTRI (9) MAESTRO (9) [noun] A master in some art, especially a composer or conductor. | [noun] A gang elder in prison. MAFFIAS (15) MAFFICK (21) MAFIOSI (12) [noun] A member of the Mafia. MAFIOSO (12) [noun] A member of the Mafia. MAFTIRS (12) MAGENTA (10) [noun] A vibrant light purple, purplish-red, reddish-purple, or pinkish purple colour obtained by mixing red and blue light (thus a secondary colour), but primary in the CMYK colour system used in printing. | [adjective] Having the colour of fuchsia, fuchsine, light purple. MAGGOTS (11) [noun] A soft, legless larva of a fly or other dipterous insect, that often eats decomposing organic matter. | [noun] A worthless person. | [noun] A whimsy or fancy. MAGGOTY (14) [adjective] Infested with and/or partially eaten by maggots; flyblown. | [adjective] Full of whims; capricious. MAGIANS (10) MAGICAL (12) [adjective] Of or relating to magic. | [adjective] Enchanting. MAGILPS (12) MAGLEVS (13) [noun] A train propelled by magnetic levitation. MAGMATA (12) [noun] The molten matter within the earth, the source of the material of lava flows, dikes of eruptive rocks, etc. | [noun] A basic algebraic structure consisting of a set equipped with a single binary operation. | [noun] Any soft doughy mass. MAGNATE (10) [noun] Powerful industrialist; captain of industry. | [noun] A person of rank, influence or distinction in any sphere. MAGNETO (10) [noun] A small magnetic dynamo, especially one that provides power to the spark plugs of a small internal combustion engine. MAGNETS (10) [noun] A piece of material that attracts some metals by magnetism. | [noun] (preceded by a noun) A person or thing that attracts what is denoted by the preceding noun. MAGNIFY (16) [verb] To praise, glorify (someone or something, especially God). | [verb] To make (something) larger or more important. | [verb] To make (someone or something) appear greater or more important than it is; to intensify, exaggerate. MAGNUMS (12) [noun] A bottle of wine containing 1.5 liters of fluid, double the volume of a standard bottle. | [noun] A powerful firearm cartridge, often derived from a shorter, less powerful cartridge calibre that uses the same bullet. | [noun] A handgun that fires a cartridge of this calibre; chiefly a revolver, but rarely an autoloader firing an unusually powerful calibre. MAGPIES (12) [noun] One of several kinds of bird in the family Corvidae | [noun] A superficially similar Australian bird, Gymnorhina tibicen or Cracticus tibicen. | [noun] Someone who displays a magpie-like quality such as hoarding or stealing objects. MAGUEYS (13) [noun] Any of various large agaves of Mexico and the southern US, especially the American aloe, Agave americana. MAHATMA (14) [noun] An epithet granted in India and Tibet to people thought to have great knowledge and love of humanity | [noun] Such a person. MAHJONG (20) [noun] A game (originally Chinese) for four players, using a collection of tiles divided into five or six suits. | [noun] A solitaire game using the same tiles, where the player wins by removing pairs of matching exposed tiles until none remain. MAHONIA (12) [noun] Any of the genus Mahonia (now often included in Berberis) of evergreen shrubs. MAHOUTS (12) [noun] An elephant driver and keeper. MAHUANG (13) MAHZORS (21) MAIDENS (10) [noun] One of the triune goddesses of the Lady in Wicca alongside the Crone and Mother representing a girl or a young woman | [noun] A girl or an unmarried young woman. | [noun] A female virgin. MAIDISH (13) MAIHEMS (14) MAILBAG (12) [noun] A strong canvas bag used for the transportation of mail | [noun] A smaller bag, slung from the shoulders, used for the delivery of mail MAILBOX (18) [noun] A box into which mail is put | [noun] A folder or account for the storage of e-mail; an electronic in-box or mailstore. MAILERS (9) [noun] One who sends mail. | [noun] A computer program that sends electronic mail. | [noun] A packet or container designed for postal use. MAILING (10) [verb] (ditransitive) To send (a letter, parcel, etc.) through the mail. | [verb] (ditransitive) To send by electronic mail. | [verb] To contact (a person) by electronic mail. | [noun] A farm. MAILLOT (9) [noun] A one-piece swimsuit (for women) | [noun] A leotard or tights of stretchable jersey fabric, generally worn by dancers and gymnasts. MAILMAN (11) [noun] Someone (implied male) who delivers mail to, and/or collects mail from, residential or commercial addresses, or from public mailboxes MAILMEN (11) [noun] Someone (implied male) who delivers mail to, and/or collects mail from, residential or commercial addresses, or from public mailboxes MAIMERS (11) MAIMING (12) [verb] To wound seriously; to cause permanent loss of function of a limb or part of the body. | [noun] The act by which somebody is maimed. MAINTOP (11) [noun] A platform at the top of a square-rigged vessel's mainmast; used for observation and for the attachment of rigging. MAJAGUA (17) MAJESTY (19) [noun] The quality of being impressive and great. MAJORED (17) [verb] To concentrate on a particular area of study as a student in a college or university MAJORLY (19) [adverb] Significantly; very, very much | [adverb] Mostly, primarily MAKABLE (15) MAKEUPS (15) [noun] An item's composition. | [noun] Cosmetics; colorants and other substances applied to the skin to alter its appearance. | [noun] Replacement; material used to make up for the amount that has been used up. MAKINGS (14) [noun] The act of forming, causing, or constituting; workmanship; construction. | [noun] Process of growth or development. | [noun] That which is needed for something: necessary ingredients. MALACCA (13) MALAISE (9) [noun] A feeling of general bodily discomfort, fatigue or unpleasantness, often at the onset of illness. | [noun] An ambiguous feeling of mental or moral depression. | [noun] Ill will or hurtful feelings for others or someone. MALANGA (10) [noun] Any of several Central and South American plants, of the genus Xanthosoma; yautia. | [noun] Taro (Colocasia esculenta) | [noun] The edible tuber of these plants, some of which have medicinal value. MALARIA (9) [noun] A disease spread by mosquito, in which a protozoan, Plasmodium, multiplies in blood every few days. | [noun] Supposed poisonous air arising from marshy districts, once thought to cause fever. MALARKY (16) MALATES (9) [noun] A salt or ester of malic acid. MALEATE (9) [noun] Any salt or ester of maleic acid MALEFIC (14) [noun] A malefic planet | [adjective] Having an evil or harmful influence; baleful. MALICES (11) MALIGNS (10) [verb] To make defamatory statements about; to slander or traduce. | [verb] To treat with malice; to show hatred toward; to abuse; to wrong. MALINES (9) MALISON (9) [noun] A curse, a malediction. MALKINS (13) MALLARD (10) [noun] A common and widespread dabbling duck, Anas platyrhynchos, whose male has a distinctive dark green head. MALLEES (9) [noun] A member of a caste in South Asia whose traditional occupation is gardening; hence, any native gardener. | [noun] Money, cash. | [noun] A type of scrubland with low-growing thick eucalypts, characteristic of certain parts of Australia. MALLETS (9) [noun] A type of hammer with a larger-than-usual head made of wood, rubber or similar non-iron material, used by woodworkers for driving a tool, such as a chisel. A kind of maul. | [noun] A weapon resembling the tool, but typically much larger. | [noun] A small hammer-like tool used for playing certain musical instruments. MALLEUS (9) [noun] The small hammer-shaped bone of the middle ear. | [noun] The tripus (ossicle in cypriniform fishes). | [noun] One of the paired calcareous structures within the mastax of rotifers. MALLING (10) [noun] The transformation of a district by building shopping malls. MALLOWS (12) [noun] Any of a group of flowering plants in several genera of the taxonomic family Malvaceae, especially of the genus Malva. Several species are edible by humans. MALMIER (11) MALMSEY (14) [noun] A sweet fortified wine made in Madeira, originally from the malvasia grape. MALODOR (10) [noun] An offensive odor. MALTASE (9) [noun] An enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of maltose to glucose; often associated with amylase. MALTEDS (10) MALTHAS (12) MALTIER (9) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or characteristic of malt MALTING (10) [verb] To convert a cereal grain into malt by causing it to sprout (by soaking in water) and then halting germination (by drying with hot air) in order to develop enzymes that can break down starches and proteins in the grain. | [verb] To become malt. | [verb] To drink malt liquor. MALTOLS (9) MALTOSE (9) [noun] A disaccharide, C12H22O11 formed from the digestion of starch by amylase; is converted to glucose by maltase; it is an isomer of trehalose MAMBOED (14) [verb] To perform this dance. MAMBOES (13) [noun] A voodoo priestess (in Haiti) | [noun] A Latin-American musical genre, adapted from rumba, originating from Cuba in the 1940s, or a dance or rhythm of this genre. MAMEYES (14) MAMLUKS (15) MAMMALS (13) [noun] An animal of the class Mammalia, characterized by being warm-blooded, having hair and feeding milk to its young. | [noun] A vertebrate with three bones in the inner ear and one in the jaw. MAMMARY (16) [noun] A mamma (milk-secreting organ of a woman or a female animal). | [adjective] Of or relating to mamma or breast (of a woman or a female animal). MAMMATE (13) MAMMATI (13) MAMMEES (13) [noun] An American fruit tree, Mammea americana. | [noun] Its large fragrant fruit, with a thick tough ring surrounding bright yellow pulp. MAMMERS (13) MAMMETS (13) MAMMEYS (16) MAMMIES (13) [noun] Mamma; mother | [noun] (historical, often pejorative) In the southern United States, a black nanny employed to look after white children; or in the antebellum South, a female slave who was close to the household and looked after the children. MAMMOCK (19) MAMMONS (13) MAMMOTH (16) [noun] Any species of the extinct genus Mammuthus, of large, usually hairy, elephant-like mammals with long curved tusks and an inclined back, which became extinct with the last retreat of ice age glaciers during the late Pleistocene period, and are known from fossils, frozen carcasses, and Paleolithic cave paintings found in North America and Eurasia. | [noun] A mastodon. | [noun] Something very large of its kind. MANACLE (11) [noun] A shackle for the wrist, usually consisting of a pair of joined rings; a handcuff; (by extension) a similar device put around an ankle to restrict free movement. | [noun] A fetter, a restriction. | [verb] To confine with manacles. MANAGED (11) [verb] To direct or be in charge of. | [verb] To handle or control (a situation, job). | [verb] To handle with skill, wield (a tool, weapon etc.). MANAGER (10) [noun] A person whose job is to manage something, such as a business, a restaurant, or a sports team. | [noun] The head coach. | [noun] An administrator, for a singer or group. MANAGES (10) [verb] To direct or be in charge of. | [verb] To handle or control (a situation, job). | [verb] To handle with skill, wield (a tool, weapon etc.). MANAKIN (13) [noun] Any of several small South American passerine birds of the family Pipridae. | [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. MANANAS (9) MANATEE (9) [noun] Any of several plant-eating marine mammals, of family Trichechidae, found in tropical regions. MANCHES (14) MANCHET (14) [noun] A type of high-quality bread made from flour. MANDALA (10) [noun] A graphic depiction of the spiritual universe and its myriad realms and deities. | [noun] Any ritualistic geometric design, symbolic of the Universe, used as an aid to meditation. | [noun] A division or book of the Rigveda (of which there are 10). MANDATE (10) [noun] An official or authoritative command; an order or injunction; a commission; a judicial precept. | [noun] The authority to do something, as granted to a politician by the electorate. | [noun] A papal rescript. MANDOLA (10) [noun] A stringed musical instrument resembling the mandolin, but of larger size and tuned lower. MANDREL (10) [noun] A round object used as an aid for shaping a material, e.g. shaping or enlarging a ring, or bending or enlarging a pipe without creasing or kinking it. | [noun] A tool or component of a tool that guides, grips or clamps something, such as a workpiece to be machined, a machining tool or a part while it is moved. MANDRIL (10) MANEGES (10) MANGABY (15) MANGELS (10) [noun] The sugar beet, which can be refined to equal cane sugar in all manners save for botanical origin. | [noun] A mangelwurzel, a plant of the beet family raised as cattle feed. MANGERS (10) [noun] A trough for animals to eat from. MANGIER (10) [adjective] Afflicted with mange. | [adjective] (by extension) Worn and squalid-looking; bedraggled or decrepit. MANGILY (13) MANGLED (11) [verb] To change, mutilate or disfigure by cutting, tearing, rearranging etc. | [verb] To modify (an identifier from source code) so as to produce a unique identifier for internal use by the compiler, etc. | [verb] To wring laundry. MANGLER (10) MANGLES (10) [noun] A hand-operated device with rollers, for wringing laundry. | [noun] The mangle attached to wringer washing machines, often called the wringer. | [noun] Mangrove (tree) MANGOES (10) [noun] A tropical Asian fruit tree, Mangifera indica. | [noun] The fruit of the mango tree. | [noun] A pickled vegetable or fruit with a spicy stuffing; a vegetable or fruit which has been mangoed. MANGOLD (11) [noun] Mangelwurzel MANHOLE (12) [noun] A hole in the ground used to access the sewers or other underground vaults and installations. | [noun] A hole providing access to the inside of a boiler, tank etc. | [noun] A man's anus, in a sexual context. MANHOOD (13) [noun] The state or condition of being a human being | [noun] The state or condition of being an adult male human being, as distinguished from a child or a woman. Compare adulthood. Contrast womanhood and childhood. | [noun] All of the adult male human beingss of a given locality, region, district, country, nation or state, or all of the adult male humans pertaining to a given human subgroup (culture, race, ethnicity, lineage, family, etc.), regarded collectively MANHUNT (12) [noun] An organized search for a criminal or enemy. MANIACS (11) [noun] An insane person, especially one who suffers from a mania. | [noun] A fanatic, a person with an obsession. MANIHOT (12) MANIKIN (13) [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. | [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes MANILAS (9) MANILLA (9) [noun] A penannular armlet, mostly in bronze, copper or gold, which served as a form of money or barter coinage amongst certain West African peoples. MANILLE (9) [noun] The second-highest trump in certain card games. | [noun] A card game played with a deck of 32, in which the ten (or ‘manille’) is the highest in each suit. MANIOCA (11) MANIOCS (11) [noun] The tropical plant Manihot esculenta, from which cassava and tapioca are prepared. | [noun] Cassava root, eaten as a food. | [noun] A food starch prepared from the root. MANIPLE (11) [noun] A division of the Roman army numbering 120 (or sometimes 60) soldiers exclusive of officers; (generally) any small body of soldiers. | [noun] In Western Christianity, an ornamental band or scarf worn upon the left arm as a part of the vestments of a priest in the Roman Catholic Church, and sometimes the Church of England. | [noun] A hand; a fist. | [noun] A handful. MANITOS (9) MANITOU (9) [noun] A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians. MANITUS (9) MANKIND (14) [noun] The human race in its entirety. | [noun] Men collectively, as opposed to all women. | [noun] Human feelings; humanity. MANLESS (9) MANLIER (9) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a man. | [adjective] Having qualities befitting a man; courageous, resolute, noble. MANLIKE (13) [adjective] Of or characteristic of grown men, as opposed to women or children; macho, mannish, virile. | [adjective] Of or relating to a human being; anthropoid, anthropomorphous. MANLILY (12) MANMADE (12) [adjective] Created by people, as opposed to occurring in nature; artificial or synthetic. MANNANS (9) MANNERS (9) [noun] Mode of action; way of performing or doing anything | [noun] Characteristic mode of acting or behaving; bearing | [noun] One's customary method of acting; habit. MANNING (10) [verb] To supply (something) with staff or crew (of either sex). | [verb] To take up position in order to operate (something). | [verb] (possibly obsolete) To brace (oneself), to fortify or steel (oneself) in a manly way. (Compare man up.) MANNISH (12) [adjective] (of a woman) Resembling or characteristic of a man, masculine. | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a grown man (as opposed to a boy); mature, adult. | [adjective] Impertinent; assertive. MANNITE (9) MANNOSE (9) [noun] A monosaccharide aldohexose found in manna and other legumes. MANPACK (17) [noun] (usually attributive) An object meant to be carried by a single person. MANROPE (11) [noun] Each of the side ropes to a gangway or ladder of a ship. MANSARD (10) [noun] A mansard roof | [noun] The upper storey of a building, surrounded by such a roof | [adjective] (of a roof) having two slopes on each side, the lower being steeper than the upper MANSION (9) [noun] A large house or building, usually built for the wealthy. | [noun] A luxurious flat (apartment). | [noun] A house provided for a clergyman; a manse. MANTEAU (9) [noun] A cloak or gown, especially of a kind popular with women in the 17th and 18th centuries. MANTELS (9) [noun] The shelf above a fireplace which may be also a structural support for the masonry of the chimney. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. Also called a mantelshelf. MANTIDS (10) [noun] Mantis (insect) MANTLED (10) [verb] To cover or conceal (something); to cloak; to disguise. | [verb] To become covered or concealed. | [verb] To spread like a mantle (especially of blood in the face and cheeks when a person flushes). MANTLES (9) [noun] The shelf above a fireplace which may be also a structural support for the masonry of the chimney. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. Also called a mantelshelf. | [noun] A piece of clothing somewhat like an open robe or cloak, especially that worn by Orthodox bishops. (Compare mantum.) MANTLET (9) [noun] A short sleeveless cloak or cape. | [noun] A portable screen or other covering, especially as used to protect the approach of soldiers engaged in a siege. | [noun] A mantelletta. MANTRAP (11) [noun] A mechanical device for catching trespassers. | [noun] A small space with two sets of interlocking doors, such that the first set of doors must close before the second set opens, used to restrict access. | [noun] A woman who is dangerously seductive to men. MANTRAS (9) [noun] The hymn portions of the Vedas; any passage of these used as a prayer. | [noun] (originally Hinduism) A phrase repeated to assist concentration during meditation. | [noun] (by extension) A slogan or phrase often repeated. MANTRIC (11) MANTUAS (9) [noun] An article of loose clothing popular in 17th- and 18th century France. | [noun] A superior kind of rich silk formerly exported from Mantua in Italy. | [noun] A woman's cloak or mantle. MANUALS (9) [noun] A handbook. | [noun] A booklet that instructs on the usage of a particular machine or product. | [noun] A drill in the use of weapons, etc. MANUARY (12) MANUMIT (11) [verb] To release from slavery, to free. MANURED (10) [verb] To cultivate by manual labor; to till; hence, to develop by culture. | [verb] To apply manure (as fertilizer or soil improver). MANURER (9) MANURES (9) [verb] To cultivate by manual labor; to till; hence, to develop by culture. | [verb] To apply manure (as fertilizer or soil improver). MANWARD (13) MANWISE (12) MAPLIKE (15) MAPPERS (13) MAPPING (14) [verb] To create a visual representation of a territory, etc. via cartography. | [verb] (followed by a "to" phrase) To act as a function on something, taking it to something else. | [verb] (followed by a "to" phrase) To have a direct relationship; to correspond. MARABOU (11) [noun] Leptoptilos crumeniferus, a large wading bird native to Africa, with a naked head and neck adapted for scavenging. | [noun] A person, five-eighths of whose ancestry is black; the offspring of a mulatto and a griffe. | [noun] A kind of thrown raw silk, naturally nearly white, but capable of being dyed without scouring. MARACAS (11) [noun] A Latin American percussion instrument consisting of a hollow-gourd rattle containing pebbles or beans and often played in pairs, as a rhythm instrument. | [noun] (in the plural) breasts MARANTA (9) MARASCA (11) MARAUDS (10) [verb] To move about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [verb] To go about aggressively or in a predatory manner. | [verb] To raid and pillage. MARBLED (12) [verb] To cause (something to have) the streaked or swirled appearance of certain types of marble, for example by mixing viscous ingredients incompletely, or by applying paint or other colorants unevenly. | [verb] To get or have the streaked or swirled appearance of certain types of marble, for example due to the incomplete mixing of viscous ingredients, or the uneven application of paint or other colorants. | [verb] To cause meat, usually beef, pork, or lamb, to be interlaced with fat so that its appearance resembles that of marble. MARBLER (11) MARBLES (11) [noun] A rock of crystalline limestone. | [noun] (games) A small ball, usually of glass or ceramic. | [noun] An artwork made from marble. MARCATO (11) [adverb] Stressed; pronounced. MARCELS (11) [noun] A hairstyle characterized by deep waves made by a curling iron. | [noun] A marcel wave. MARCHED (15) [verb] To walk with long, regular strides, as a soldier does. | [verb] To cause someone to walk somewhere. | [verb] To go to war; to make military advances. MARCHEN (14) MARCHER (14) [noun] An inhabitant of a march (border country); specifically, a marcher lord. | [noun] A border territory, a march (now only in (attributive) use). | [noun] One who marches; one who participates in a march. MARCHES (14) [noun] A formal, rhythmic way of walking, used especially by soldiers, bands and in ceremonies. | [noun] A political rally or parade | [noun] Any song in the genre of music written for marching (see Wikipedia's article on this type of music) MAREMMA (13) MAREMME (13) MARENGO (10) MARGAYS (13) [noun] Leopardus wiedii, a spotted cat native to Central and South America. MARGENT (10) MARGINS (10) [noun] The edge of the paper, typically left blank when printing but sometimes used for annotations etc. | [noun] The edge or border of any flat surface. | [noun] The edge defining inclusion in or exclusion from a set or group. MARIMBA (13) [noun] A musical instrument similar to a xylophone but clearer in pitch. MARINAS (9) [noun] A harbour for small boats. MARINER (9) [noun] A sailor. MARINES (9) [noun] A soldier, normally a member of a marine corps, trained to serve on board or from a ship | [noun] Capitalised in the plural A marine corps. | [noun] A painting representing some marine subject. MARITAL (9) [adjective] Pertaining to marriage. | [adjective] Pertaining to a husband. MARKERS (13) [noun] An object used to mark a location. | [noun] Someone or something that marks. | [noun] A real or virtual objective, something to be aimed for. MARKETS (13) [noun] A gathering of people for the purchase and sale of merchandise at a set time, often periodic. | [noun] City square or other fairly spacious site where traders set up stalls and buyers browse the merchandise. | [noun] A grocery store MARKHOR (16) [noun] A large wild goat, Capra falconeri, especially (Capra falconeri megaceros, syn. Capra megaceros), having huge flattened spiral horns., found in the western Himalayas. MARKING (14) [verb] To put a mark on (something); to make (something) recognizable by a mark; to label or write on (something). | [verb] To leave a mark (often an undesirable or unwanted one) on (something). | [verb] To have a long-lasting negative impact on (someone or something). MARKKAA (17) MARKKAS (17) [noun] A (Finnish) mark, the currency used in Finland before the introduction of the euro, consisting of 100 penni. Abbreviation FIM. MARKUPS (15) [noun] The notation that is used to indicate the meaning of the elements in an electronic document, or to dictate how text should be displayed. | [noun] The percentage or amount by which a seller hikes up his buy-in price when determining his selling price. | [noun] An increase in price. MARLIER (9) MARLINE (9) [noun] A light cord or rope used to bind the end of a larger rope, to prevent fraying. | [noun] Twine used similarly. | [verb] To wind marline around. MARLING (10) [verb] To cover with the earthy substance called marl. | [verb] To cover, as part of a rope, with marline, marking a peculiar hitch at each turn to prevent unwinding. | [noun] An application of marl to the soil, to aid agriculture. MARLINS (9) [noun] Any species of game fish belonging to either of the genera Tetrapturus or Makaira. Every such species has a pointed, spear-like projection of the upper jaw. MARLITE (9) MARMITE (11) [noun] A rounded earthenware cooking pot. MARMOTS (11) [noun] Any of several large ground-dwelling rodents of the genera Marmota and Cynomys in the squirrel family. MAROONS (9) [noun] An escaped negro slave of the Caribbean and the Americas or a descendant of escaped slaves. | [noun] A castaway; a person who has been marooned. | [verb] To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a desert island. MARPLOT (11) MARQUEE (18) [noun] A large tent with open sides, used for outdoors entertainment. | [noun] A projecting canopy over an entrance, especially one with a sign that displays the name of the establishment or other information of it. | [noun] (by generalization) Lights that turn on and off in sequence, or scrolling text, as these are common elements on a marquee. MARQUES (18) [noun] A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals; a letter of marque. | [noun] A brand or make of a manufactured product, especially of a motor car (in contradistinction to a model). | [noun] A ship commissioned for making captures. MARQUIS (18) [noun] A nobleman in England, France, and Germany, of a rank next below that of duke, but above a count. Originally, the marquis was an officer whose duty was to guard the marches or frontiers of the kingdom. The office has ceased, and the name is now a mere title conferred by letters patent or letters close. | [noun] Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the Asian genus Bassarona. MARRAMS (11) [noun] Ammophila arenaria, a coarse grass found on sandy beaches. MARRANO (9) [noun] A Jew who converted to Catholicism under threat or force. MARRERS (9) [noun] One who mars or injures. MARRIED (10) [noun] A married person. | [adjective] In a state of marriage; having a wife or a husband. | [adjective] Showing commitment or devotion normally reserved for a spouse MARRIER (9) MARRIES (9) [verb] To enter into the conjugal or connubial state; to take a husband or a wife. | [verb] (in passive) To be joined to (someone) as spouse according to law or custom. | [verb] To arrange for the marriage of; to give away as wife or husband. MARRING (10) [verb] To spoil; to ruin; to scathe; to damage. | [noun] Something that mars or spoils; a blemish. MARRONS (9) [noun] A sweet chestnut. | [noun] Cherax tenuimanus, a type of freshwater crayfish from Western Australia. MARROWS (12) [noun] The substance inside bones which produces blood cells. | [noun] A kind of vegetable like a large courgette/zucchini or squash. | [noun] The pith of certain plants. MARROWY (15) MARSALA (9) [noun] A fortified wine from Sicily. | [noun] A sauce made from Marsala wine. MARSHAL (12) [noun] A high-ranking officer in the household of a medieval prince or lord, who was originally in charge of the cavalry and later the military forces in general. | [noun] A military officer of the highest rank in several countries, including France and the former Soviet Union; equivalent to a general of the army in the United States. See also field marshal. | [noun] A person in charge of the ceremonial arrangement and management of a gathering. MARSHES (12) [noun] An area of low, wet land, often with tall grass. MARTENS (9) [noun] Any carnivorous mammal of the genus Martes in the family Mustelidae. | [noun] Any of various passerine birds of the family Hirundinidae, which also includes swallows, that catch insects whilst flying. | [noun] A perforated stone-faced runner for grinding. MARTIAL (9) [noun] A person under the astrological influence of the planet Mars. | [noun] An inhabitant of the planet Mars. | [noun] A soldier, a warrior. MARTIAN (9) [adjective] Of or relating to the planet Mars, or its imagined inhabitants. | [adjective] Pertaining to the astrological influence of the planet Mars; aggressive, bellicose. | [adjective] Pertaining to battle or war; martial, military. MARTING (10) MARTINI (9) [noun] A cocktail made with gin or vodka and vermouth. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) Any cocktail served in a cocktail glass, often sweet or fruity and aimed at women. MARTINS (9) [noun] Any of various passerine birds of the family Hirundinidae, which also includes swallows, that catch insects whilst flying. | [noun] A perforated stone-faced runner for grinding. MARTLET (9) [noun] A bird, the martin. | [noun] A depiction of a bird similar to a house martin or swallow with stylized feet. MARTYRS (12) [noun] One who willingly accepts being put to death for adhering openly to one's religious beliefs; notably, saints canonized after martyrdom. | [noun] (by extension) One who sacrifices his or her life, station, or something of great personal value, for the sake of principle or to sustain a cause. | [noun] (with a prepositional phrase of cause) One who suffers greatly and/or constantly, even involuntarily. MARTYRY (15) [noun] A shrine in honor of a (usually religious, notably Christian) martyr, possibly at his grave. I | [noun] A shrine at a site which "bears witness" to a crucial religious event not related to a tomb. MARVELS (12) [noun] That which causes wonder; a prodigy; a miracle. | [noun] Wonder, astonishment. | [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. MASCARA (11) [noun] A cosmetic used to darken and thicken the eyelashes. | [verb] To apply mascara to the eyelashes MASCONS (11) [noun] A region within a solid astronomical body that is of higher density than the surrounding material. | [noun] A lunar mare that has a greater density of rock than the surrounding area. | [noun] Mass concentration MASCOTS (11) [noun] Something thought to bring good luck | [noun] Something, especially a person or animal, used to symbolize a sports team, company, organization or other group MASHERS (12) [noun] One who, or that which, mashes. | [noun] A machine for making mash. | [noun] A fashionable man in the late Victorian era. MASHIES (12) [noun] A metal-headed golf club with a moderate loft, the equivalent of a five iron in a modern set of clubs. MASHING (13) [verb] To convert into a mash; to reduce to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure | [verb] In brewing, to convert (for example malt, or malt and meal) into the mash which makes wort. | [verb] To press down hard (on). MASJIDS (17) [noun] A mosque. MASKEGS (14) MASKERS (13) [noun] One who wears a mask; one who appears in disguise at a masquerade or wears a mask in a ritual. | [noun] That which masks (noise in a signal, etc.). MASKING (14) [verb] To cover (the face or something else), in order to conceal the identity or protect against injury; to cover with a mask or visor. | [verb] To disguise; to cover; to hide. | [verb] To conceal; also, to intervene in the line of. MASONED (10) [verb] (normally with a preposition) To build stonework or brickwork about, under, in, over, etc.; to construct by masons | [adjective] (of a building) Having the mortar and bricks of different tinctures. MASONIC (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to stonemasons or masonry. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to freemasonry. MASONRY (12) [noun] The art or occupation of a mason. | [noun] The work or performance of a mason | [noun] That which is built by a mason; anything constructed of the materials used by masons, such as stone, brick, tiles, or the like. Dry masonry is applied to structures made without mortar. MASQUER (18) [noun] One who appears in disguise at a masquerade. MASQUES (18) MASSAGE (10) [noun] The action of rubbing, kneading or hitting someone's body, to help the person relax, prepare for muscular action (as in contact sports) or to relieve aches. | [verb] To rub and knead (someone's body or a part of a body), to perform a massage on (somebody). | [verb] To manipulate (data, a document etc.) to make it more presentable or more convenient to work with. MASSEUR (9) [noun] (massage) A person (especially male) who performs massage. | [noun] An instrument used in the performance of massage. MASSIER (9) MASSIFS (12) [noun] A principal mountain mass. | [noun] A block of the earth's crust bounded by faults or flexures and displaced as a unit without internal change; normally consists of gneisses and schists MASSING (10) [verb] To form or collect into a mass; to form into a collective body; to bring together into masses; to assemble. | [verb] To have a certain mass. | [verb] To celebrate mass. MASSIVE (12) [noun] A homogeneous mass of rock, not layered and without an obvious crystal structure. | [noun] A group of people from a locality, or sharing a collective aim, interest, etc. | [adjective] Very large in size or extent MASTABA (11) [noun] A wide stone bench built into the wall of a house, shop etc. in the Middle East. | [noun] A rectangular structure with a flat top and slightly sloping sides, built during Ancient Egyptian times above tombs that were situated on flat land. Mastabas were made of wood, mud bricks, stone, or a combination of these materials. Some are solid structures, while others can contain one or more rooms, sometimes decorated with paintings or inscriptions. MASTERS (9) [noun] Someone who has control over something or someone. | [noun] The owner of an animal or slave. | [noun] The captain of a merchant ship; a master mariner. MASTERY (12) [noun] The position or authority of a master; dominion; command; supremacy; superiority. | [noun] Superiority in war or competition; victory; triumph; preeminence. | [noun] Contest for superiority. MASTICS (11) [noun] An evergreen shrub or small tree, Pistacia lentiscus (mastic tree), native to the Mediterranean. | [noun] A hard, brittle, aromatic and transparent resin produced by this tree and used to make varnishes and chewing gum, and as a flavouring. | [noun] An alcoholic liquor flavoured with this resin. MASTIFF (15) [noun] One of an old breed of powerful, deep-chested, and smooth-coated dogs, used chiefly as watchdogs and guard dogs. MASTING (10) [verb] To supply and fit a mast to (a ship). | [verb] (of swine and other animals) To feed on forest seed or fruit. | [verb] (of a population of plants) To vary fruit and seed production in multi-year cycles. MASTOID (10) [noun] The mastoid process. | [adjective] Of or relating to the mastoid process of the temporal bone. | [adjective] Shaped like a breast or nipple. MATADOR (10) [noun] The person whose aim is to kill the bull in a bullfight. | [noun] A certain game of dominoes in which four dominoes (the 4-3, 5-2, 6-1, and double blank), called matadors, may be played at any time in any way. | [noun] The jack of clubs, or any other trump held in sequence with it, in the game of skat. MATCHED (15) [verb] To agree; to be equal; to correspond. | [verb] To agree with; to be equal to; to correspond to. | [verb] To make a successful match or pairing. MATCHER (14) MATCHES (14) [noun] A competitive sporting event such as a boxing meet, a baseball game, or a cricket match. | [noun] Any contest or trial of strength or skill, or to determine superiority. | [noun] Someone with a measure of an attribute equaling or exceeding the object of comparison. MATCHUP (16) [noun] A pairing of two things, people or teams, especially for a competition MATELOT (9) [noun] Sailor; also "mate;" boon companion MATILDA (10) [noun] A bundle of possessions, often tied up in a sack; a swag. MATINAL (9) [adjective] In the morning, relating to the morning. MATINEE (9) [noun] A showing of a movie, sporting event, or theatrical performance in the morning or afternoon. | [noun] A woman's dress to be worn in the morning or before dinner. | [verb] To put on a matinee performance (of). MATINGS (10) [noun] Pairing of organisms for copulation. | [noun] Sexual union; copulation. MATLESS (9) MATRASS (9) MATRONS (9) [noun] A mature or elderly woman. | [noun] A wife or a widow, especially, one who has borne children. | [noun] A woman of staid or motherly manners. MATSAHS (12) MATTERS (9) [noun] Substance, material. | [noun] A condition, subject or affair, especially one of concern. | [noun] An approximate amount or extent. MATTERY (12) MATTING (10) [verb] To cover, protect or decorate with mats. | [verb] To form a thick, tangled mess; to interweave into, or like, a mat; to entangle. | [noun] Mats, a collection of ground coverings. MATTINS (9) [noun] Together with lauds, the earliest of the canonical hours; normally at sunrise, but often earlier | [noun] Morning prayers MATTOCK (15) [noun] An agricultural tool whose blades are at right angles to the body, similar to a pickaxe. | [verb] To cut or dig with a mattock. MATTOID (10) MATURED (10) [verb] To proceed toward maturity: full development or completion (either of concrete or of abstract things, e.g. plans, judgments, qualities). | [verb] (of food, especially fruit) To attain maturity, to become mature or ripe. | [verb] To bring (something) to maturity, full development or completion. MATURER (9) [adjective] Fully developed; grown up in terms of physical appearance, behaviour or thinking; ripe. | [adjective] Brought to a state of complete readiness. | [adjective] Profound; careful. MATURES (9) [verb] To proceed toward maturity: full development or completion (either of concrete or of abstract things, e.g. plans, judgments, qualities). | [verb] (of food, especially fruit) To attain maturity, to become mature or ripe. | [verb] To bring (something) to maturity, full development or completion. MATZAHS (21) MATZOHS (21) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MATZOON (18) MATZOTH (21) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MAUDLIN (10) [noun] The Magdalene; Mary Magdalene. | [noun] Either of two aromatic plants, costmary or sweet yarrow. | [noun] A Magdalene house; a brothel. MAULERS (9) [noun] One who mauls. MAULING (10) [verb] To handle someone or something in a rough way. | [verb] To savage; to cause serious physical wounds (usually used of an animal). | [verb] To criticise harshly. MAUMETS (11) MAUNDER (10) [noun] A beggar. | [verb] To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle. | [verb] To wander or walk aimlessly. MAVISES (12) [noun] Song thrush. MAWKISH (19) [adjective] Feeling sick, queasy. | [adjective] Sickening or insipid in taste or smell. | [adjective] Excessively or falsely sentimental; showing a sickly excess of sentiment; maudlin. MAXILLA (16) [noun] Either of the two bones that together form the upper jaw. | [noun] (arthropodology) One of a set of paired mouthparts found in many arthropods and used for tasting and manipulating food. MAXIMAL (18) [noun] The element of a set with the greatest magnitude. | [noun] Said of an ideal of a ring or a filter of a lattice: that it is as large as it can be without being trivial (improper). | [noun] Said of a set of well-formed formulas: that it is as large as it can be without being inconsistent; i.e. that for any well-formed formula φ, the set contains either φ or ~φ. MAXIMIN (18) [noun] In decision theory and game theory etc, a rule to identify the worst outcome of each possible option to find one's best (maximum payoff) play. | [verb] To employ a maximin algorithm. MAXIMUM (20) [noun] The highest limit | [noun] The greatest value of a set or other mathematical structure, especially the global maximum or a local maximum of a function | [noun] An upper bound of a set which is also an element of that set MAXIXES (23) [noun] A Brazilian dance in a rapid 2/4 time, influenced by the tango and polka. | [noun] A deep blue variety of beryl. MAXWELL (19) [noun] A unit of magnetic flux that produces one abvolt per turn per second. MAYBUSH (17) MAYDAYS (16) MAYHEMS (17) MAYINGS (13) MAYORAL (12) [adjective] Relating to a mayor (or the office of the mayor). MAYPOLE (14) [noun] A pole, garlanded with streamers held by people who dance around it to celebrate May Day. | [noun] A maypole-like structure of sticks placed about a sapling in the bowers of certain species of bowerbird. | [noun] A penis, especially a large one. MAYPOPS (16) [noun] A type of passionflower, purple in color (Passiflora incarnata). MAYVINS (15) MAYWEED (16) [noun] Stinking chamomile, Anthemis cotula. | [noun] Corn chamomile, field chamomile, Anthemis arvensis. | [noun] Plants of the genera Matricaria and Tripleurospermum. MAZARDS (19) MAZEDLY (22) MAZIEST (18) [adjective] Mazelike; like a maze. | [adjective] Not straight; zigzagging. MAZUMAS (20) MAZURKA (22) [noun] A Polish folk dance in triple time, usually moderately fast, containing a heavy accent on the third beat and occasionally the second beat. | [noun] A classical musical composition inspired by the folk dance and conforming in some respects to its form, particularly as popularized by Chopin. | [noun] A figure skating move that combines elements of the toe loop and bunny-hop. MAZZARD (28) [noun] A sweet cherry, Prunus avium MEADOWS (13) [noun] A field or pasture; a piece of land covered or cultivated with grass, usually intended to be mown for hay. | [noun] Low land covered with coarse grass or rank herbage near rivers and in marshy places by the sea. MEADOWY (16) MEALIER (9) [adjective] Resembling meal (the foodstuff). MEALIES (9) [noun] An ear or kernel of maize; in plural as mass noun: maize, corn. MEANDER (10) [noun] A decorative border constructed from a continuous line, shaped into a repeated motif, that is commonly found in Greek art. | [noun] A structural motif in proteins consisting of four adjacent antiparallel strands and their linking loops. | [noun] One of the turns of a winding, crooked, or involved course. MEANERS (9) MEANEST (9) [verb] To lament. | [verb] To intend. | [verb] To convey (a meaning). MEANIES (9) [noun] A mean (unkind or miserly) person; a killjoy. | [noun] A villain. MEANING (10) [noun] (of words or symbols) The entity, perception, feeling or concept thereby represented or evoked. | [noun] The value, purpose, importance, point or significance (of something beyond the fact of that thing's existence). | [noun] The object or concept that a word or phrase denotes, or that which a sentence says. | [verb] To lament. MEASLED (10) MEASLES (9) [noun] Rubeola, an acute highly contagious disease, often of childhood, caused by Measles virus, of genus Morbillivirus, featuring a spreading red skin rash, fever, runny nose, cough and red eyes | [noun] Any of several other similar diseases, such as German measles. | [noun] A disease of pigs and cattle, caused by larval tapeworms. | [noun] A leper. MEASURE (9) [noun] A prescribed quantity or extent. | [noun] The act or result of measuring. | [noun] Metrical rhythm. MEATIER (9) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing meat. | [adjective] Resembling meat in flavour, etc. | [adjective] Of a person or a body part, large and solid. MEATILY (12) MEATMAN (11) MEATMEN (11) MEDAKAS (14) [noun] Oryzias latipes, a small Japanese ricefish, popular for use in aquariums. MEDALED (11) [verb] To win a medal. | [verb] To award a medal to. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to one who has received a medal. MEDDLED (12) [verb] To interfere in or with; to concern oneself with unduly. | [verb] To interest or engage oneself; to have to do (with), in a good sense. | [verb] To mix (something) with some other substance; to commingle, combine, blend. MEDDLER (11) MEDDLES (11) [verb] To interfere in or with; to concern oneself with unduly. | [verb] To interest or engage oneself; to have to do (with), in a good sense. | [verb] To mix (something) with some other substance; to commingle, combine, blend. MEDEVAC (15) [noun] The emergency transportation, usually by air, of patients to a medical facility. | [noun] A vehicle, typically aircraft, used for emergency transportation of patients to a medical facility. | [noun] Trained personnel who care for patients during emergency transportation to a medical facility. MEDIACY (15) [noun] Mediation; presence of an intermediary. | [noun] The facility to work with words and numbers. | [noun] The facility to work with media. MEDIALS (10) MEDIANS (10) [noun] A central vein or nerve, especially the median vein or median nerve running through the forearm and arm. | [noun] A line segment joining the vertex of triangle to the midpoint of the opposing side. | [noun] The number separating the higher half of a data sample, a population, or a probability distribution, from the lower half. The median of a finite list of numbers can be found by arranging all the observations from lowest value to highest value and picking the middle one (e.g., the median of {3, 3, 5, 9, 11} is 5). If there is an even number of observations, then there is no single middle value; the median is then usually defined to be the mean of the two middle values. MEDIANT (10) [noun] The third degree of the diatonic scale. | [noun] A rational number whose numerator is the sum of the numerators of two other given rational numbers and whose denominator is the sum of the denominators of those same two other rational numbers. MEDIATE (10) [verb] To resolve differences, or to bring about a settlement, between conflicting parties. | [verb] To intervene between conflicting parties in order to resolve differences or bring about a settlement. | [verb] To divide into two equal parts. MEDICAL (12) [noun] A medical examination. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the practice of medicine. | [adjective] Intended to have a therapeutic effect; medicinal. MEDICKS (16) [noun] Any of various European and North African herbs, of the genus Medicago, several of which are grown for fodder etc. | [noun] The science of medicine. MEDICOS (12) [noun] A physician or medical doctor; sometimes also a medical student. MEDINAS (10) [noun] The traditional, older or non-European area of a North African town. MEDIUMS (12) [noun] (plural media or mediums) The chemistry of the surrounding environment, e.g. solid, liquid, gas, vacuum, or a specific substance such as a solvent. | [noun] (plural media or mediums) The materials or empty space through which signals, waves or forces pass. | [noun] (plural media or mediums) A format for communicating or presenting information. MEDLARS (10) [noun] Mespilus germanica, common medlar (now often Crataegus germanica) | [noun] Any tree of the genus Mespilus, now often Crataegus sect. Mespilus, including many species now in other genera. | [noun] Any of several similar trees that bear similar fruit MEDLEYS (13) [noun] Combat, fighting; a battle. | [noun] A collection or mixture of miscellaneous things. | [noun] A collection of related songs played or mixed together as a single piece. MEDULLA (10) [noun] The soft inner part of something, especially the pith of a fruit. | [noun] The inner substance of various organs and structures, especially the marrow of bones. | [noun] The medulla oblongata. MEDUSAE (10) [noun] A jellyfish; specifically , a non-polyp form of individual cnidarians, consisting of a gelatinous umbrella-shaped bell and trailing tentacles. MEDUSAL (10) MEDUSAN (10) MEDUSAS (10) [noun] A jellyfish; specifically , a non-polyp form of individual cnidarians, consisting of a gelatinous umbrella-shaped bell and trailing tentacles. MEEKEST (13) [adjective] Humble, non-boastful, modest, meager, or self-effacing. | [adjective] Submissive, dispirited. MEERKAT (13) [noun] Suricata suricatta, a small carnivorous mammal of the mongoose family, from the Kalahari Desert, known for its habit of standing on its hind legs. MEETERS (9) MEETING (10) [noun] (gerund) The act of persons or things that meet. | [noun] A gathering of persons for a purpose; an assembly. | [noun] (collective) The people at such a gathering. | [verb] To make contact (with) while in proximity. MEGABAR (12) MEGABIT (12) [noun] 106 = 1,000,000 bits or 125,000 bytes (125 kilobytes) | [noun] 220 = 1,048,576 bits; a mebibit | [noun] One megabit per second MEGAHIT (13) MEGAPOD (13) MEGASSE (10) MEGATON (10) [noun] A measure of the strength of an explosion or a bomb based on how many million tons of TNT would be needed to produce the same energy. MEGILPH (15) MEGILPS (12) MEGOHMS (15) [noun] One million (106) ohms, abbreviated as MΩ. MEGRIMS (12) [noun] A headache; a migraine. | [noun] A fancy, a whim, a caprice. | [noun] (in the plural) See megrims. MEINIES (9) MEIOSES (9) [noun] A figure of speech whereby something is made to seem smaller or less important than it actually is; understatement. | [noun] Cell division of a diploid cell into four haploid cells, which develop to produce gametes. MEIOSIS (9) [noun] A figure of speech whereby something is made to seem smaller or less important than it actually is; understatement. | [noun] Cell division of a diploid cell into four haploid cells, which develop to produce gametes. MEIOTIC (11) MELAMED (12) MELANGE (10) [noun] A mixture of different things; a disordered mixture. | [noun] A Viennese coffee speciality, half steamed milk and half coffee. | [noun] A large-scale breccia formed in the accretionary wedge over a subductional environment. MELANIC (11) MELANIN (9) [noun] Any of a group of naturally occurring dark pigments, especially the pigment found in skin, hair, fur, and feathers. MELDERS (10) MELDING (11) [verb] To combine multiple similar objects into one | [verb] In card games, especially of the rummy family, to announce or display a combination of cards. | [noun] A composite or hybrid, the result of being melded. MELILOT (9) [noun] A fragrant plant of the genus Melilotus, often having small yellow or white flowers. MELISMA (11) [noun] A passage of several notes sung to one syllable of text, as in Gregorian chant. MELLING (10) MELLOWS (12) [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. MELODIA (10) MELODIC (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, or having melody. | [adjective] Melodious, tuneful. MELOIDS (10) MELTAGE (10) MELTERS (9) MELTING (10) [verb] To change (or to be changed) from a solid state to a liquid state, usually by a gradual heat. | [verb] To dissolve, disperse, vanish. | [verb] To soften, as by a warming or kindly influence; to relax; to render gentle or susceptible to mild influences; sometimes, in a bad sense, to take away the firmness of; to weaken. MELTONS (9) MEMBERS (13) [noun] One who officially belongs to a group. | [noun] A part of a whole. | [noun] Part of an animal capable of performing a distinct office; an organ; a limb. MEMENTO (11) [noun] A keepsake; an object kept as a reminder of a place or event. MEMOIRS (11) [noun] An autobiography; a book describing the personal experiences of an author. | [noun] A biography; a book describing the experiences of a subject from personal knowledge of the subject or from sources with personal knowledge of the subject. | [noun] Any form of narrative describing the personal experiences of a writer. MENACED (12) [verb] To make threats against (someone); to intimidate. | [verb] To threaten (an evil to be inflicted). | [verb] To endanger (someone or something); to imperil or jeopardize. MENACER (11) MENACES (11) [noun] A perceived threat or danger. | [noun] The act of threatening. | [noun] An annoying and bothersome person or thing. MENAGES (10) [noun] A household; a domestic situation. | [noun] A type of cooperative society whereby all members pay a regular sum of savings, or through which goods can be paid for in installments. | [noun] A group of people living together in a sexual relationship. MENAZON (18) MENDERS (10) MENDIGO (11) MENDING (11) [verb] To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement. | [verb] To alter for the better; to set right; to reform; hence, to quicken; as, to mend one's manners or pace. | [verb] To help, to advance, to further; to add to. MENFOLK (16) [noun] The male members of a group. | [noun] Male people in general. MENHIRS (12) [noun] A single tall standing stone as a monument, especially of prehistoric times. MENIALS (9) [noun] A servant, especially a domestic servant. | [noun] A person who has a subservient nature. MENISCI (11) [noun] A crescent moon, or an object shaped like it. | [noun] A lens which is convex on one side and concave on the other, being crescent-shaped in cross-section. | [noun] The curved surface of liquids in tubes, whether concave or convex, caused by the surface tension of the liquid. MENORAH (12) [noun] A holy candelabrum with seven branches used in the Temple of Jerusalem. | [noun] A candelabrum (hanukkiah) with nine branches used in Jewish worship on Hanukkah. MENSING (10) MENTHOL (12) [noun] A cyclic monoterpene alcohol; the major component of the essential oil of peppermint; used in pharmaceutical preparations as an antitussive and antipruritic agent, as a nasal decongestant, and in menthol cigarettes | [noun] A menthol cigarette. MENTION (9) [noun] A speaking or notice of anything, usually in a brief or cursory manner. Used especially in the phrase make mention of. | [noun] A social media feed, a list of replies or posts mentioning a person. | [verb] To make a short reference to something. MENTORS (9) [noun] A wise and trusted counselor or teacher | [verb] To act as someone's mentor MEOUING (10) MEOWING (13) [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. | [noun] The act of uttering a meow. MERCERS (11) [noun] A merchant dealing in fabrics and textiles, especially silks and other fine cloths. MERCERY (14) MERCIES (11) [noun] Relenting; forbearance to cause or allow harm to another. | [noun] Forgiveness or compassion, especially toward those less fortunate. | [noun] A tendency toward forgiveness, pity, or compassion. MERCURY (14) [noun] A metal. | [noun] Any of several types of plant. MERGERS (10) [noun] One that merges. | [noun] The act or process of merging two or more parts into a single unit. | [noun] The legal union of two or more corporations into a single entity, typically assets and liabilities being assumed by the buying party. MERGING (11) [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To blend gradually into something else. MERINOS (9) [noun] A sheep of a Spanish breed with long, fine hair. | [noun] The wool of this sheep. | [noun] The fabric made from this wool (or from any similar yarn). MERISES (9) MERISIS (9) MERITED (10) [verb] To deserve, to earn. | [verb] To be deserving or worthy. | [verb] To reward. MERLINS (9) [noun] A small falcon, Falco columbarius, that breeds in northern North America, Europe, and Asia. MERLONS (9) [noun] A small falcon, Falco columbarius, that breeds in northern North America, Europe, and Asia. | [noun] Any of the upright projections between the embrasures of a battlement, originally for archers to shield behind while shooting arrows over the embrasures, or through loopholes in the merlons. MERLOTS (9) [noun] A dark-blue variety of wine grape. | [noun] A dry red wine of a certain French type, made from Merlot grapes. MERMAID (12) [noun] A mythological creature with a woman's head and upper body, and a tail of a fish. | [noun] (as a modifier) Coloured a brilliant turquoise. | [noun] A prostitute. MEROPIA (11) MEROPIC (13) MERRIER (9) [adjective] Jolly and full of high spirits. | [adjective] Festive and full of fun and laughter. | [adjective] Brisk MERRILY (12) [adverb] In a cheerful or merry way. MESALLY (12) MESARCH (14) MESCALS (11) [noun] A Mexican alcoholic drink distilled from the fermented juice of the agave. | [noun] The peyote cactus. MESEEMS (11) MESHIER (12) MESHING (13) [verb] To connect together by interlocking, as gears do. | [verb] (by extension) To fit in; to come together harmoniously. | [verb] To catch in a mesh. MESHUGA (13) [adjective] Crazy, mad, senseless, insane MESONIC (11) MESQUIT (18) MESSAGE (10) [noun] A communication, or what is communicated; any concept or information conveyed. | [noun] An underlying theme or conclusion to be drawn from something. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) An errand. MESSANS (9) MESSIAH (12) [noun] (Abrahamic tradition) The one who is ordained by God to lead the people of Israel, believed by Christians and Muslims to be Jesus Christ. | [noun] A similar religious figure or awaited divine ruler, such as the Islamic Mahdi. | [noun] An extremely powerful figure. MESSIER (9) [adjective] (of a place, situation, person, etc) In a disorderly state; chaotic; disorderly. | [adjective] (of a person) Prone to causing mess. | [adjective] (of a situation) Difficult or unpleasant to deal with. MESSILY (12) MESSING (10) [verb] (transitive, often used with "up") To make untidy or dirty. | [verb] (transitive, often used with "up") To throw into disorder or to ruin. | [verb] To interfere. MESSMAN (11) MESSMEN (11) MESTEES (9) MESTESO (9) MESTINO (9) MESTIZA (18) [noun] A female mestizo. MESTIZO (18) [noun] A person of mixed ancestry, especially one of Spanish and Native American heritage. METAGES (10) METALED (10) [adjective] (of a road) Surfaced, tarred, covered in stone or crushed rock (usually tar-coated). | [adjective] (of any object) Made of metal or having metal fittings or plating. METAMER (11) METATES (9) [noun] A flat stone with a slightly concave surface, used with another stone (a mano) for grinding maize or other grains. METAZOA (18) [noun] The multicellular animals of the subkingdom Metazoa considered collectively. METEORS (9) [noun] A fast-moving streak of light in the night sky caused by the entry of extraterrestrial matter into the earth's atmosphere: A shooting star or falling star. | [noun] Any atmospheric phenomenon. (Thus the derivation of meteorology.) These were sometimes classified as aerial or airy meteors (winds), aqueous or watery meteors (hydrometeors: clouds, rain, snow, hail, dew, frost), luminous meteors (rainbows and aurora), and igneous or fiery meteors (lightning and shooting stars). | [noun] A prop similar to poi balls, in that it is twirled at the end of a cord or cable. METEPAS (11) METERED (10) [verb] To measure with a metering device. | [verb] To imprint a postage mark with a postage meter. | [verb] To regulate the flow of or to deliver in regulated amounts (usually of fluids but sometimes of other things such as anticipation or breath). METHANE (12) [noun] The simplest aliphatic hydrocarbon, CH₄, being a constituent of natural gas, and one of the most abundant greenhouse gases. | [noun] Any of very many derivatives of methane. METHODS (13) [noun] A process by which a task is completed; a way of doing something (followed by the adposition of, to or for before the purpose of the process): | [noun] (often "the method") A technique for acting based on the ideas articulated by Constantin Stanislavski and focusing on authentically experiencing the inner life of the character being portrayed. | [noun] A subroutine or function belonging to a class or object, synonym of member function METHOXY (22) METHYLS (15) METICAL (11) [noun] The currency of Mozambique, divided into 100 centavos METIERS (9) [noun] Any activity that is pursued as a trade or profession; a calling. | [noun] An activity to which a person is particularly suited; a forte. | [noun] An outstanding or beneficial feature. METISSE (9) METONYM (14) [noun] (grammar) A word that names an object from a single characteristic of it or of a closely related object; a word used in metonymy. | [noun] (by extension) A concept, idea, or word used to represent, typify, or stand in for a broader set of ideas. METOPAE (11) METOPES (11) [noun] The architectural element between two triglyphs in a Doric frieze. METOPIC (13) METOPON (11) METRICS (11) [noun] A measure for something; a means of deriving a quantitative measurement or approximation for otherwise qualitative phenomena (especially used in engineering). | [noun] A function for the measurement of the "distance" between two points in some metric space: it is a real-valued function d(x,y) between points x and y satisfying the following properties: (1) "non-negativity": d(x,y) \ge 0 , (2) "identity of indiscernibles": d(x,y) = 0 \mbox{ iff } x=y , (2) "symmetry": d(x,y) = d(y,x) , and (3) "triangle inequality": d(x,y) \le d(x,z) + d(z,y) . | [noun] A metric tensor. METRIFY (15) METRING (10) METRIST (9) METTLED (10) METTLES (9) [noun] A quality of endurance and courage. | [noun] Good temperament and character. | [noun] Metal; a metallic substance. METUMPS (13) MEWLERS (12) MEWLING (13) [noun] A sound that mewls. | [verb] To cry weakly with a soft, high-pitched sound; to whimper; to whine. MEZCALS (20) [noun] A Mexican alcoholic drink distilled from the fermented juice of the agave. | [noun] The peyote cactus. MEZQUIT (27) MEZUZAH (30) [noun] A piece of parchment inscribed with specific Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21) and attached in a case to the doorpost of a house, in accordance with the mitzvah (Biblical commandment as interpreted in Jewish law) to "write the words of God on the gates and doorposts of your house" (Deuteronomy 6:9). MEZUZAS (27) [noun] A piece of parchment inscribed with specific Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21) and attached in a case to the doorpost of a house, in accordance with the mitzvah (Biblical commandment as interpreted in Jewish law) to "write the words of God on the gates and doorposts of your house" (Deuteronomy 6:9). MEZUZOT (27) MIAOUED (10) MIAOWED (13) [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MIASMAL (11) MIASMAS (11) [noun] A noxious atmosphere or influence. | [noun] A noxious atmosphere or emanation once thought to originate from swamps and waste, and to cause disease. MIASMIC (13) [adjective] Filled with miasma; containing noxious vapors. | [adjective] Composed of or resembling vapors. MIAULED (10) [verb] To give the cry of a cat. MICELLA (11) MICELLE (11) [noun] A colloidal aggregate, in a simple geometric form, of a specific number of amphipathic molecules which forms at a well-defined concentration, called the critical micelle concentration MICELLS (11) MICHING (15) MICKEYS (18) [noun] A small bottle of liquor, holding 375 ml or 13 oz., typically shaped to fit in one's pocket. | [noun] A Mickey Finn; a beverage, usually alcoholic, that has been drugged. | [noun] American depression era term for a potato as in a "roasted mickey". MICKLER (15) MICKLES (15) [noun] A great amount. | [noun] (originally erroneous) A small amount. | [noun] Great or important people as a class. MICRIFY (17) MICROBE (13) [noun] Any microorganism, but especially a harmful bacterium. MICROHM (16) MICRONS (11) [noun] A semicircular diacritical mark (˘) placed above a vowel, commonly used to mark its quantity as short. | [noun] A double whole note. | [noun] Any writ or precept under seal, issued out of any court. MIDAIRS (10) [noun] A collision between two or more aerospace vehicles in flight. MIDCULT (12) MIDDAYS (14) [noun] Noon; twelve o'clock during the day MIDDENS (11) [noun] A dungheap. | [noun] A refuse heap usually near a dwelling. | [noun] A prehistoric pile of bones and shells. MIDDIES (11) [noun] A midshipman | [noun] A measure of 285 ml (10 fl oz) of beer; a pot. | [noun] Middle-grade marijuana. MIDDLED (12) [verb] To take a middle view of. | [verb] To double (a rope) into two equal portions; to fold in the middle. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified kind of middle. MIDDLER (11) MIDDLES (11) [noun] A centre, midpoint. | [noun] The part between the beginning and the end. | [noun] The middle stump. MIDGETS (11) [noun] A little sandfly. | [noun] Any small swarming insect similar to the mosquito; a midge. | [noun] (sometimes offensive) A normally proportioned person with small stature, usually defined as reaching an adult height less than 4'10". MIDGUTS (11) [noun] The central loop of the alimentary canal of an embryo between the foregut and the hindgut. MIDIRON (10) [noun] An iron golf club with more lift than a driver. MIDLAND (11) [noun] The region of a country not near the borders; the interior. | [adjective] Resembling or relating to the interior region of a country. MIDLEGS (11) MIDLIFE (13) [noun] The middle period of one's life. | [adjective] Occurring in the middle point of one's life, usually considered about 45. MIDLINE (10) [noun] The medial line (or plane) of the body, which divides the body into halves that are mirror-images of each other. | [noun] The level of the top of the x-height of a typeface. MIDMOST (12) [adjective] In the exact middle, or nearest to the exact middle; middlemost MIDNOON (10) MIDRASH (13) MIDRIBS (12) [noun] The strengthened vein down the middle of a flower petal or simple leaf or leaflet. | [noun] The continuation of the petiole of a pinnately compound leaf around which the leaflets attach. MIDRIFF (16) [noun] The middle section of the human torso, from below the chest to above the waist MIDSHIP (15) [noun] The middle of a ship or a boat. | [adjective] Pertaining to the middle of a ship or a boat. MIDSIZE (19) [noun] A car of intermediate size. | [adjective] Of intermediate size. MIDSOLE (10) [noun] The layer of a shoe in between the outsole and insole, typically there for shock absorption. MIDTERM (12) [noun] A midterm school exam (i.e., halfway through the term). | [noun] A midterm election | [adjective] Halfway through a term, or roughly so. MIDTOWN (13) [noun] The part of a city between uptown and downtown MIDWAYS (16) [noun] The middle; the midst. | [noun] A middle way or manner; a mean or middle course between extremes. | [noun] The part of a fair or circus where rides, entertainments, and booths are concentrated. MIDWEEK (17) [noun] The middle of the week. | [adjective] That happens in the middle of the week | [adverb] In the middle of the week. MIDWIFE (16) [noun] A person, usually a woman, who is trained to assist women in childbirth, but who is not a physician. | [noun] Someone who assists in bringing about some result or project. | [verb] To act as a midwife MIDYEAR (13) [noun] The middle part of a year. | [noun] An examination taken in the middle part of an academic year. MIFFIER (15) MIFFING (16) [verb] (usually used in the passive) To offend slightly. | [verb] To become slightly offended. MIGGLES (11) MIGNONS (10) MIGRANT (10) [noun] A migratory bird or other animal. | [noun] Traveller or worker who moves from one region or country to another. | [noun] An immigrant or refugee. MIGRATE (10) [verb] To relocate periodically from one region to another, usually according to the seasons. | [verb] To change one's geographic pattern of habitation. | [verb] To change habitations across a border; to move from one country or political region to another. MIHRABS (14) [noun] A niche in a mosque that indicates the qibla (direction of Mecca), and into which the imam prays | [noun] A design in a Muslim prayer mat with the same function MIKADOS (14) [noun] (history) A former title of the emperors of Japan during a certain period. | [noun] Any emperor of Japan | [noun] A game of skill, in which identically shaped (but differently colored and valued) wooden sticks must be removed from a pile without disturbing the remaining stack MIKRONS (13) MIKVAHS (19) [noun] A ritual bath in which various Jewish purifications are performed. MIKVEHS (19) [noun] A ritual bath in which various Jewish purifications are performed. MIKVOTH (19) MILADIS (10) MILAGES (10) [noun] The total distance travelled in miles or in air miles. | [noun] The number of miles travelled by a vehicle on a certain volume of fuel. | [noun] An allowance for travel expenses at a specified rate per mile. MILCHIG (15) MILDENS (10) MILDEST (10) [adjective] Gentle and not easily angered. | [adjective] (of a rule or punishment) Of only moderate severity; not strict. | [adjective] Not overly felt or seriously intended. MILDEWS (13) [verb] To taint with mildew. | [verb] To become tainted with mildew. MILDEWY (16) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or affected with mildew MILEAGE (10) [noun] The total distance travelled in miles or in air miles. | [noun] The number of miles travelled by a vehicle on a certain volume of fuel. | [noun] An allowance for travel expenses at a specified rate per mile. MILFOIL (12) [noun] Common yarrow, Achillea millefolium. | [noun] Any of several similar pungent Eurasian herbs, of the genus Achillea | [noun] Any plants of the genus Myriophyllum; water milfoil. MILIARY (12) [noun] One of the small tubercles of Echinus sea urchins. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to millet seeds. | [adjective] Having small lesions that are the shape and size of millet seeds. MILIEUS (9) [noun] Medium. | [noun] Social setting or environment. MILIEUX (16) [noun] Medium. | [noun] Social setting or environment. MILITIA (9) [noun] An army of trained civilians, which may be an official reserve army, called upon in time of need, the entire able-bodied population of a state which may also be called upon, or a private force not under government control. | [noun] The police in the Soviet Union and some related or successor states (e.g. modern Belarus). MILKERS (13) [noun] An animal, such as a dairy cow, kept for the milk it produces. | [noun] A person who milks. | [noun] A milking machine. MILKIER (13) [adjective] Resembling milk in color, consistency, smell, etc.; consisting of milk. | [adjective] (color science) Of the black in an image, appearing as dark gray rather than black. | [adjective] (of a drink) Containing (an especially large amount of) milk. MILKILY (16) MILKING (14) [verb] To express milk from (a mammal, especially a cow). | [verb] To draw (milk) from the breasts or udder. | [verb] To express any liquid (from any creature). | [noun] The act by which a cow, etc. is milked MILKMAN (15) [noun] A man who delivers milk to households and sometimes businesses early in the morning. MILKMEN (15) [noun] A man who delivers milk to households and sometimes businesses early in the morning. MILKSOP (15) [noun] A piece of bread sopped in milk. | [noun] Bread pieces in a bowl, sprinkled with sugar, & covered in hot milk. | [noun] (by extension) A weak, easily frightened or ineffectual person. MILLAGE (10) MILLDAM (12) [noun] A dam constructed across a river or stream to raise the water level so that it can turn a millwheel; also, the millpond so created. MILLERS (9) [noun] A person who owns or operates a mill, especially a flour mill. | [noun] A milling machine. | [noun] Any of several moths that have powdery wings, especially Acronicta leporina and moths of the genus Agrotis. MILLETS (9) MILLIER (9) MILLIME (11) MILLINE (9) MILLING (10) [verb] To grind or otherwise process in a mill or other machine. | [verb] To shape, polish, dress or finish using a machine. | [verb] To engrave one or more grooves or a pattern around the edge of (a cylindrical object such as a coin). MILLION (9) [numeral] (long and short scales) The cardinal number 1,000,000: 106; a thousand thousand. | [numeral] An unspecified very large number. MILLRUN (9) MILNEBS (11) MILORDS (10) [noun] My Lord (used to address peers temporal, judges, etc). | [noun] An English nobleman, especially one traveling Europe in grand style; a wealthy British gentleman. MILREIS (9) [noun] A former currency of Portugal. | [noun] A former currency of Brazil. MILTERS (9) [noun] A male fish during breeding season. MILTIER (9) MILTING (10) MIMBARS (13) [noun] A pulpit in a mosque from which the leader of prayers delivers the khutbah. MIMEOED (12) MIMESIS (11) [noun] The representation of aspects of the real world, especially human actions, in literature and art. | [noun] Mimicry. | [noun] The appearance of symptoms of a disease not actually present. MIMETIC (13) [noun] Something mimetic or imitative. | [noun] A type of mnemonic in the form of a picture. | [noun] (pharmaceutical effect) A substance with similar pharmacological effects to another substance. MIMICAL (13) MIMICRY (16) [noun] The act or ability to simulate the appearance of someone or something else. MIMOSAS (11) [noun] A plant belonging to the genus Mimosa usually found in tropical climates, their leaves are usually prickly and sensitive to touch or light, and have small white or pink flowers. | [noun] Albizia species (silk tree, pink siris). | [noun] Acacia species. MINABLE (11) MINARET (9) [noun] The tall slender tower of an Islamic mosque, from which the muezzin recites the adhan (call to prayer). MINCERS (11) MINCIER (11) MINCING (12) [verb] To make less; make small. | [verb] To lessen; diminish; to diminish in speaking; speak of lightly or slightingly; minimise. | [verb] To effect mincingly. MINDERS (10) [noun] One who minds, tends, or watches something such as a child, a machine, or cattle; a keeper | [noun] A personal bodyguard. | [noun] A guide assigned by the authorities to foreign visitors so as to exercise control over their contacts with the populace. MINDFUL (13) [adjective] Being aware (of something); attentive, heedful. | [adjective] Inclined (to do something). | [noun] As much as can be held in one's mind at a time. MINDING (11) [noun] The act of taking heed of something. | [verb] (originally and chiefly in negative or interrogative constructions) To dislike, to object to; to be bothered by. | [verb] To look after, to take care of, especially for a short period of time. MINDSET (10) [noun] A way of thinking; an attitude or opinion, especially a habitual one. MINERAL (9) [noun] Any naturally occurring inorganic material that has a (more or less) definite chemical composition and characteristic physical properties. | [noun] Any inorganic material (as distinguished from animal or vegetable). | [noun] (nutrition) Any inorganic element that is essential to nutrition; a dietary mineral. MINGIER (10) [adjective] Mean, miserly, stingy. MINGLED (11) [verb] To intermix; to combine or join, as an individual or part, with other parts, but commonly so as to be distinguishable in the product | [verb] To associate or unite in a figurative way, or by ties of relationship | [verb] To cause or allow to intermarry MINGLER (10) [noun] One who, or that which, mingles. MINGLES (10) [verb] To intermix; to combine or join, as an individual or part, with other parts, but commonly so as to be distinguishable in the product | [verb] To associate or unite in a figurative way, or by ties of relationship | [verb] To cause or allow to intermarry MINIBUS (11) [noun] A small bus, especially one used as transport for small groups. | [noun] A-sixteen seater vehicle used as a taxi. A kombi. | [noun] A small four-wheeled carriage. MINICAB (13) [noun] A small car used as a taxi (rather than a traditional black cab). | [noun] An unlicensed taxi. | [verb] To drive a minicab. MINICAR (11) MINIKIN (13) [noun] A young person, especially a young woman. | [noun] A small or insignificant person, thing or amount. | [noun] A little pin. MINILAB (11) MINIMAL (11) [adjective] The smallest possible amount, quantity, or degree. | [adjective] Characterised by the use of simple form or structures. | [adjective] Characterised by the repetition and gradual alteration of short phrases. MINIMAX (18) [noun] In decision theory, game theory, etc. a decision rule used for minimizing the maximum possible loss, or maximizing the minimum gain. | [verb] To find the optimum play, or decision, to achieve minimizing the maximum loss. MINIMUM (13) [noun] The lowest limit. | [noun] The smallest amount. | [noun] A period of minimum brightness or energy intensity (of a star). MININGS (10) MINIONS (9) [noun] The lowest limit. | [noun] The smallest amount. | [noun] A period of minimum brightness or energy intensity (of a star). MINISKI (13) MINIUMS (11) MINIVAN (12) [noun] A small van. MINIVER (12) [noun] A light gray or white fur used to trim the robes of judges or state executives, also used in medieval times. MINNIES (9) MINNOWS (12) [noun] A small freshwater fish of the carp family, Phoxinus phoxinus. | [noun] Any small fish. | [noun] A relatively small and insignificant person or organization. MINORCA (11) MINORED (10) [verb] To choose or have an area of secondary concentration as a student in a college or university. MINSTER (9) [noun] A monastic church. | [noun] A cathedral church without any monastic connection. MINTAGE (10) [noun] The process of minting coins | [noun] The batch of coins minted at one time | [noun] Coins collectively; specie MINTERS (9) [noun] One who mints | [noun] An item in mint condition (especially a motor car) MINTIER (9) MINTING (10) [verb] To reproduce (coins), usually en masse, under licence. | [verb] To invent; to forge; to fabricate; to fashion. | [verb] (provincial) To try, attempt; take aim. MINUEND (10) [noun] A number or quantity from which another is to be subtracted. MINUETS (9) [noun] A slow graceful dance consisting of a coupé, a high step, and a balance. | [noun] A tune or air to regulate the movements of the minuet dance: it has the dance form, and is commonly in 3/4, sometimes 3/8, measure. | [noun] A complete short musical composition inspired by and conforming to many formal characteristics of the traditional musical accompaniment to the dance of same name. MINUSES (9) [noun] The minus sign (−). | [noun] A negative quantity. | [noun] A downside or disadvantage. MINUTED (10) [verb] Of an event, to write in a memo or the minutes of a meeting. | [verb] To set down a short sketch or note of; to jot down; to make a minute or a brief summary of. MINUTER (9) MINUTES (9) [noun] A unit of time equal to sixty seconds (one-sixtieth of an hour). | [noun] A short but unspecified time period. | [noun] A unit of angle equal to one-sixtieth of a degree. MINUTIA (9) [noun] A minor detail, often of negligible importance. | [noun] (biometrics, forensics) Any of the point features on fingerprints used for matching, usually endings and bifurcations of ridges. MINXISH (19) MINYANS (12) MIOTICS (11) MIRACLE (11) [noun] An event that appears inexplicable by the laws of nature and so is held to be supernatural in origin. | [noun] A fortunate outcome that prevails despite overwhelming odds against it. | [noun] An awesome and exceptional example of something MIRADOR (10) [noun] A tower that offers a panoramic view MIRAGES (10) [noun] An optical phenomenon in which light is refracted through a layer of hot air close to the ground, giving the appearance of there being refuge in the distance. | [noun] An illusion. | [verb] To cause to appear as or like a mirage. MIREXES (16) MIRIEST (9) MIRKEST (13) MIRKIER (13) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MIRKILY (16) MIRRORS (9) [noun] A smooth surface, usually made of glass with reflective material painted on the underside, that reflects light so as to give an image of what is in front of it. | [noun] An object, person, or event that reflects or gives a picture of another. | [noun] A disk, website or other resource that contains replicated data. MISACTS (11) MISADDS (11) MISAIMS (11) MISALLY (12) MISAVER (12) MISBIAS (11) MISBILL (11) MISBIND (12) MISCALL (11) [verb] To call (someone) bad names; to insult, abuse. | [verb] To call (something) by the wrong name. | [verb] To make a wrong call; to announce (one's hand of cards) incorrectly. MISCAST (11) [noun] An erroneous cast or reckoning. | [verb] To cast or reckon incorrectly. | [verb] To cast or direct erroneously or improperly. MISCITE (11) MISCODE (12) MISCOIN (11) MISCOOK (15) MISCOPY (16) [noun] An imperfect copy. | [verb] To copy incorrectly; to copy with mistakes. MISCUED (12) [verb] To give an incorrect cue. | [verb] To mishit, strike incorrectly. MISCUES (11) [noun] In a cue sport, an error in hitting the ball with the cue. | [noun] The act of missing one's cue or of responding to a cue intended for another actor. | [noun] A miss of the object one intended to hit. MISCUTS (11) MISDATE (10) [noun] A wrong date. | [verb] To date incorrectly; to mark with the wrong date. MISDEAL (10) [noun] Incorrect dealing or distribution. | [verb] To deal or distribute wrongly. MISDEED (11) [noun] That which was done that should not have been, ranging from any sin or moral offense to various degrees of crime. MISDEEM (12) MISDIAL (10) [noun] An instance of misdialling. | [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDOER (10) MISDOES (10) MISDONE (10) MISDRAW (13) MISDREW (13) MISEASE (9) MISEATS (9) MISEDIT (10) MISERLY (12) [adjective] Like a miser; very covetous; cautious with money MISFILE (12) [verb] To file incorrectly; to file in the wrong place or the wrong way. MISFIRE (12) [noun] An act of misfiring. | [verb] To fail to discharge properly. | [verb] (of an engine) To fail to ignite in the proper sequence. MISFITS (12) [noun] An ill-fitting garment. | [noun] A failure to fit well; unsuitability, disparity. | [noun] A badly adjusted person; someone unsuitable or set apart because of their habits, behaviour etc. MISFORM (14) MISGAVE (13) [verb] (of the mind, heart, etc.) To give fear or doubt to; to make irresolute. | [verb] To suspect; to dread. | [verb] To give wrongly; to give or grant amiss. MISGIVE (13) [verb] (of the mind, heart, etc.) To give fear or doubt to; to make irresolute. | [verb] To suspect; to dread. | [verb] To give wrongly; to give or grant amiss. MISGREW (13) MISGROW (13) MISHAPS (14) [noun] An accident, mistake, or problem. | [noun] Evil accident; ill luck; misfortune; mischance. MISHEAR (12) [verb] To hear wrongly. | [verb] To misunderstand. MISHITS (12) [noun] An incorrect or bad hit. | [verb] To incorrectly or badly hit. MISJOIN (16) MISKALS (13) MISKEEP (15) MISKEPT (15) MISKICK (19) [noun] A bad kick. | [verb] To kick incorrectly or badly. MISKNEW (16) MISKNOW (16) MISLAID (10) [adjective] Cannot be currently found, put in an obscure place, lost - often temporarily. | [verb] To leave or lay something in the wrong place and then forget where one put it. MISLAIN (9) MISLAYS (12) [verb] To leave or lay something in the wrong place and then forget where one put it. MISLEAD (10) [verb] To lead astray, in a false direction. | [verb] To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. | [verb] To deceptively trick into something wrong. MISLIES (9) MISLIKE (13) [verb] To displease. | [verb] To dislike; to disapprove of; to have aversion to. MISLIVE (12) MISMADE (12) MISMAKE (15) MISMARK (15) MISMATE (11) [verb] To mate or match wrongly or unsuitably; mismatch. MISMEET (11) MISMOVE (14) MISNAME (11) [noun] A wrong, unsuitable, misleading, or injurious name or designation; misnomer. | [verb] To call by a wrong name. | [verb] To give an unsuitable or injurious name to; name incorrectly. MISPAGE (12) MISPART (11) MISPENS (11) MISPLAN (11) MISPLAY (14) [noun] A wrong play. | [verb] To play incorrectly or poorly. MISPLED (12) MISRATE (9) MISREAD (10) [noun] An instance of reading wrongly. | [verb] To read wrongly, normally by accident; misconstrue; misinterpret; mistake the sense or significance of. MISRELY (12) MISRULE (9) [noun] The state of being ruled badly; disorder, lawlessness, anarchy. | [noun] Misgovernment; bad or unjust government. | [verb] Of a trial judge, to make a bad decision in court. MISSAID (10) MISSALS (9) [noun] A prayer book | [noun] A book containing the prayers and responses needed when celebrating the Roman Catholic Mass throughout the year MISSAYS (12) MISSEAT (9) MISSELS (9) MISSEND (10) MISSENT (9) MISSETS (9) MISSHOD (13) MISSIES (9) [noun] A young woman; miss. | [noun] A young female, or miss; as a term of mild disparagement, typically used jokingly or rebukingly. MISSILE (9) [noun] Any object used as a weapon by being thrown or fired through the air, such as stone, arrow or bullet. | [noun] A self-propelled projectile whose trajectory can be adjusted after it is launched. MISSING (10) [verb] To fail to hit. | [verb] To fail to achieve or attain. | [verb] To avoid; to escape. MISSION (9) [noun] A set of tasks that fulfills a purpose or duty; an assignment set by an employer, or by oneself. | [noun] Religious evangelism. | [noun] (in the plural, "the missions") third world charities, particularly those which preach as well as provide aid. MISSIVE (12) [noun] A written message; a letter, note or memo. | [noun] (in the plural) Letters sent between two parties in which one makes an offer and the other accepts it. | [noun] One who is sent; a messenger. MISSORT (9) MISSOUT (9) MISSTEP (11) [noun] A step that is wrong, a false step. | [noun] An error or mistake. | [verb] To step badly or incorrectly. MISSTOP (11) MISSUIT (9) MISTAKE (13) [noun] An error; a blunder. | [noun] A pitch which was intended to be pitched in a hard-to-hit location, but instead ends up in an easy-to-hit place. | [verb] To understand wrongly, taking one thing or person for another. MISTBOW (14) MISTEND (10) MISTERM (11) MISTERS (9) [noun] A title conferred on an adult male, usually when the name is unknown. Also used as a term of address, often by a parent to a young child. | [noun] Someone's business or function; an occupation, employment, trade. | [noun] A kind, type of. MISTEUK (13) MISTIER (9) [adjective] Covered in mist; foggy. | [adjective] Dim; vague; obscure. | [adjective] With tears in the eyes; dewy-eyed. MISTILY (12) MISTIME (11) [verb] To do at the wrong time; especially to misjudge the timing of coordinated events. MISTING (10) [verb] To form mist. | [verb] To spray fine droplets on, particularly of water. | [verb] To cover with a mist. MISTOOK (13) [verb] To understand wrongly, taking one thing or person for another. | [verb] To misunderstand (someone). | [verb] To commit an unintentional error; to do or think something wrong. MISTRAL (9) [noun] A strong cold north-west wind in southern France and the Mediterranean. MISTUNE (9) MISTYPE (14) [verb] To type incorrectly, introducing spelling mistakes or other errors. | [verb] To categorize incorrectly. MISUSED (10) [verb] To use (something) incorrectly. | [verb] To abuse or mistreat (something or someone). | [verb] To rape (a woman); later more generally, to sexually abuse (someone). MISUSER (9) MISUSES (9) [noun] An incorrect, improper or unlawful use of something. | [verb] To use (something) incorrectly. | [verb] To abuse or mistreat (something or someone). MISWORD (13) MISWRIT (12) MISYOKE (16) MITERED (10) [verb] To adorn with a mitre. | [verb] To unite at an angle of 45°. MITERER (9) MITHERS (12) [verb] To make an unnecessary fuss, moan, bother. | [verb] To pester or irritate someone. Usually directed at children. | [noun] Mother MITIEST (9) MITISES (9) MITOGEN (10) [noun] Any substance that stimulates mitosis MITOSES (9) [noun] The division of a cell nucleus in which the genome is copied and separated into two identical halves. It is normally followed by cell division. MITOSIS (9) [noun] The division of a cell nucleus in which the genome is copied and separated into two identical halves. It is normally followed by cell division. MITOTIC (11) MITRING (10) [verb] To adorn with a mitre. | [verb] To unite at an angle of 45°. MITSVAH (15) MITTENS (9) [noun] A type of glove or garment that covers a hand with a separate sheath for the thumb, but not for other fingers, which are either enclosed in a single section or left uncovered. | [noun] A cat's or dog's paw that is a different colour from the main body. | [noun] (as "the mitten") A romantic rejection; dismissal of a lover. MITZVAH (24) [noun] Any of the 613 commandments of Jewish law | [noun] An act of kindness, a good deed. MIXABLE (18) MIXIBLE (18) MIXTURE (16) [noun] The act of mixing. | [noun] Something produced by mixing. | [noun] Something that consists of diverse elements. MIZZENS (27) [noun] Mizzenmast. | [noun] A fore-and-aft sail set on a mizzenmast. MIZZLED (28) [verb] To rain in very fine drops. | [verb] To abscond, scram, flee. | [verb] To yield. MIZZLES (27) [verb] To rain in very fine drops. | [verb] To abscond, scram, flee. | [verb] To yield. MOANERS (9) MOANFUL (12) MOANING (10) [verb] To complain about; to bemoan, to bewail; to mourn. | [verb] To grieve. | [verb] To distress (someone); to sadden. MOATING (10) [verb] To surround with a moat. MOBBERS (13) MOBBING (14) [verb] To crowd around (someone), sometimes with hostility. | [verb] To crowd into or around a place. | [verb] To wrap up in, or cover with, a cowl. MOBBISH (16) MOBCAPS (15) [noun] A plain cap or headdress for women or girls, especially one tied under the chin by a very broad band. | [noun] (modern-day use) A disposable head covering with an elasticated band, worn for cleanliness in industrial settings. MOBILES (11) [noun] A kinetic sculpture or decorative arrangement made of items hanging so that they can move independently from each other. | [noun] The internet accessed via mobile devices. | [noun] Something that can move. MOBSTER (11) [noun] A member of a mob or Mafia MOCHILA (14) MOCKERS (15) [noun] A person who mocks. | [noun] A mockingbird. | [noun] A deceiver; an impostor. MOCKERY (18) [noun] The action of mocking; ridicule, derision. | [noun] Something so lacking in necessary qualities as to inspire ridicule; a laughing-stock. | [noun] Something insultingly imitative; an offensively futile action, gesture etc. MOCKING (16) [verb] To mimic, to simulate. | [verb] To create an artistic representation of. | [verb] To make fun of by mimicking, to taunt. MOCKUPS (17) [noun] A prototype, usually low-fidelity, such as paper illustrations, screenshots, or simple configurations of screens with limited interaction. MODALLY (13) MODELED (11) [verb] To display for others to see, especially in regard to wearing clothing while performing the role of a fashion model | [verb] To use as an object in the creation of a forecast or model | [verb] To make a miniature model of MODELER (10) MODERNE (10) MODERNS (10) [noun] Someone who lives in modern times. MODESTY (13) [noun] The quality of being modest; having a limited and not overly high opinion of oneself and one's abilities. | [noun] Moderate behaviour; reserve. | [noun] (specifically) Pudency, avoidance of sexual explicitness. MODICUM (14) [noun] A modest, small, or trifling amount. MODIOLI (10) [noun] The central core of the cochlea | [noun] A chiasma of facial muscles held together by fibrous tissue MODISTE (10) [noun] A person who makes or sells fashionable women's clothing, especially dresses or hats. MODULAR (10) [adjective] Consisting of separate modules; especially where each module performs or fulfills some specified function and could be replaced by a similar module for the same function, independently of the other modules. | [adjective] Of or relating to a module or modules. | [adjective] Relating to mode or modulation. MODULES (10) [noun] A self-contained component of a system, often interchangeable, which has a well-defined interface to the other components. | [noun] A standard unit of measure used for determining the proportions of a building. | [noun] A section of a program; a subroutine or group of subroutines. MODULUS (10) [noun] The base with respect to which a congruence is computed. | [noun] The absolute value of a complex number. | [noun] A coefficient that expresses how much of a certain property is possessed by a certain substance. MOFETTE (12) [noun] A volcanic discharge of carbon dioxide together with other, mostly smelly, gases MOGGIES (11) [noun] A young cow or bull. | [noun] Leather made of the skin of the calf; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding. | [noun] A young deer, elephant, seal, whale or giraffe (also used of some other animals). MOGGING (12) MOHAIRS (12) MOHALIM (14) [noun] The person who performs the circumcision in a Jewish bris. MOHELIM (14) [noun] The person who performs the circumcision in a Jewish bris. MOIDORE (10) [noun] An old Portuguese gold coin, minted from 1640 to 1732. MOILERS (9) MOILING (10) [verb] To toil, to work hard. | [verb] To churn continually; to swirl. | [verb] To defile or dirty. MOISTEN (9) [verb] To make moist or moister. | [verb] To become moist or moister. MOISTER (9) [adjective] Slightly wet; characterised by the presence of moisture, not dry; damp. | [adjective] Of eyes: tearful, wet with tears. | [adjective] Of weather, climate etc.: rainy, damp. MOISTLY (12) MOJARRA (16) [noun] A perciform fish in the family Gerreidae, often used as bait. MOLDERS (10) [noun] One who molds something into shape. | [noun] A person who makes molds. | [noun] A tool for making molds. MOLDIER (10) [adjective] Covered with mold. | [adjective] Stale or musty. MOLDING (11) [verb] To shape in or on a mold; to form into a particular shape; to give shape to. | [verb] To guide or determine the growth or development of; influence | [verb] To fit closely by following the contours of. MOLESTS (9) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLLAHS (12) MOLLIES (9) [noun] Any of many New World fish of the genus Poecilia, formerly called Mollienesia. | [noun] A Molotov cocktail. | [noun] A woman or girl, especially of low status. MOLLIFY (15) [verb] To ease a burden, particularly worry; make less painful; to comfort. | [verb] To appease (anger), pacify, gain the good will of. | [verb] To soften; to make tender MOLLUSC (11) [noun] A soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically with a hard shell of one or more pieces. | [noun] A weak-willed person. MOLLUSK (13) [noun] A soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically with a hard shell of one or more pieces. | [noun] A weak-willed person. MOLOCHS (14) [noun] Moloch horridus, an Australian lizard thought to be the sole member of the genus Moloch. MOLTERS (9) MOLTING (10) [noun] A molt; the shedding of skin, feathers, etc. | [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. MOMENTA (11) [noun] Of a body in motion: the tendency of a body to maintain its inertial motion; the product of its mass and velocity. | [noun] The impetus, either of a body in motion, or of an idea or course of events; a moment. MOMENTO (11) MOMENTS (11) [noun] A brief, unspecified amount of time. | [noun] The smallest portion of time; an instant. | [noun] Weight or importance. MOMISMS (13) MOMMIES (13) [noun] (usually childish) Mother. | [verb] To treat someone like a mother would; to mother someone. MOMSERS (11) MOMUSES (11) MOMZERS (20) MONACID (12) MONADAL (10) MONADES (10) MONADIC (12) MONARCH (14) [noun] The ruler of an absolute monarchy or the head of state of a constitutional monarchy. | [noun] The monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus, and others of genus Danaus, found primarily in North America, so called because of the designs on its wings. | [noun] (Aboriginal English) A police officer. MONARDA (10) MONAXON (16) MONERAN (9) MONEYED (13) [adjective] Affluent; rich | [adjective] Paid for; funded MONEYER (12) [noun] A moneylender. | [noun] Someone who makes coins; an official minter. MONGERS (10) MONGOES (10) MONGOLS (10) [noun] A person from Mongolia; a Mongolian. | [noun] A member of any of the various Mongol ethnic groups living in The Mongolian People's Republic, the (former) USSR, Tibet and Nepal. | [noun] (usually mongol) A person with Down's syndrome. MONGREL (10) [noun] Someone or something of mixed kind or uncertain origin, especially a dog. | [noun] A thuggish, obnoxious, or contemptible person; (often preceded by "poor") a pitiable person. MONIKER (13) [noun] A personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute. | [noun] A signature. | [noun] An object (structured item of data) used to associate the name of an object with its location. MONISMS (11) [noun] The doctrine of the oneness and unity of reality, despite the appearance of diversity in the world. MONISTS (9) MONITOR (9) [noun] Someone who watches over something; a person in charge of something or someone. | [noun] A device that detects and informs on the presence, quantity, etc., of something. | [noun] A device similar to a television set used as to give a graphical display of the output from a computer. MONKERY (16) [noun] The practices of monks; the way of life, behavior, etc. characteristic of monks; monastic life. | [noun] Monasticism. | [noun] A monastery. MONKEYS (16) [noun] Any member of the clade Simiiformes not also of the clade Hominoidea containing humans and apes, from which they are usually, but not universally, distinguished by smaller size, a tail, and cheek pouches. | [noun] Any nonhuman simian primate, including apes. | [noun] A mischievous child. MONKISH (16) [adjective] Pertaining to, or resembling, a monk or monasticism. | [adjective] Tending to self-denial; ascetic. MONOCLE (11) [noun] A single lens, usually in a wire frame, and used to correct vision for only one eye. | [noun] A one-eyed animal. MONOCOT (11) [noun] Any plant whose seedlings typically have one cotyledon (seed leaf) (in contrast to the two cotyledons typical of dicots), thereby belonging to the taxonomic monocots, formerly variously known as Monocotyledones, Monocotyledonae, or Liliopsida, a class in the angiosperms (Angiospermae), the flowering plants. MONODIC (12) MONOECY (14) MONOFIL (12) [noun] A monofilament yarn. MONOLOG (10) [noun] (authorship) A long speech by one person in a play; sometimes a soliloquy; other times spoken to other characters. | [noun] A long series of comic stories and jokes as an entertainment. | [noun] A long, uninterrupted utterance that monopolizes a conversation. MONOMER (11) [noun] A relatively small molecule which can be covalently bonded to other monomers to form a polymer. MONSOON (9) [noun] Any of a number of winds associated with regions where most rain falls during a particular season. | [noun] Tropical rainy season when the rain lasts for several months with few interruptions. | [noun] The rains themselves. MONSTER (9) [noun] A terrifying and dangerous creature. | [noun] A bizarre or whimsical creature. | [noun] A cruel or antisocial person, especially a criminal. MONTAGE (10) [noun] A composite work, particularly an artwork, created by assembling or putting together other elements such as pieces of music, pictures, texts, videos, etc. | [noun] The art or process of doing this. | [verb] To combine into, or depict as, a montage. MONTANE (9) [noun] Flora and fauna of a montane habitat. | [adjective] Of, inhabiting, or growing in mountain areas; specifically, the cool, moist upland slopes below the timberline. MONTERO (9) MONTHLY (15) [noun] A publication that is published once a month. | [noun] The menstrual period. | [adjective] Occurring every month. MONURON (9) MOOCHED (15) [verb] To wander around aimlessly, often causing irritation to others. | [verb] To beg, cadge, or sponge; to exploit or take advantage of others for personal gain. | [verb] To steal or filch. MOOCHER (14) [noun] A person having a tendency to take advantage of the help of others, especially if making little effort to help themselves. MOOCHES (14) [noun] An aimless stroll. | [noun] One who mooches; a moocher. | [noun] A unit of time comprising ten days, used to measure how long someone holds a job. MOODIER (10) [adjective] Given to sudden or frequent changes of mind; temperamental. | [adjective] Sulky or depressed. | [adjective] Dour, gloomy or brooding. MOODILY (13) MOOLAHS (12) MOOLEYS (12) MOONBOW (14) MOONEYE (12) [noun] A primitive ray-finned fish of the family Hiodontidae. MOONIER (9) [adjective] Resembling the moon. | [adjective] Moonlit. | [adjective] Absent-minded. MOONILY (12) MOONING (10) [verb] To display one's buttocks to, typically as a jest, insult, or protest. | [verb] (usually followed by over or after) To fuss over something adoringly; to be infatuated with someone. | [verb] To spend time idly, absent-mindedly. MOONISH (12) MOONLET (9) [noun] A very small body orbiting a planet, often as part of a ring. MOONLIT (9) [adjective] Lit by moonlight. MOONSET (9) [noun] The setting of the moon below the horizon MOORAGE (10) [noun] The act of mooring. | [noun] A place where a ship or an aircraft may be moored. | [noun] The fee for mooring. MOORHEN (12) [noun] Any of various medium-sized water birds of the genus Gallinula, of the rail family, that feed in open water margins. | [noun] A female red grouse, Lagopus lagopus scotica. MOORIER (9) MOORING (10) [verb] To cast anchor or become fastened. | [verb] To fix or secure (e.g. a vessel) in a particular place by casting anchor, or by fastening with ropes, cables or chains or the like | [verb] To secure or fix firmly. MOORISH (12) [adjective] Boggy, marshy; like a moor. MOOTERS (9) MOOTING (10) [noun] The activity of taking part in a moot court. | [verb] To bring up as a subject for debate, to propose. | [verb] To discuss or debate. MOPIEST (11) MOPOKES (15) [noun] A morepork. MOPPERS (13) MOPPETS (13) [noun] A child. Often used lovingly or in an affectionate way. | [noun] A rag baby; a puppet made of cloth. | [noun] A long-haired pet dog. MOPPING (14) [verb] To rub, scrub, clean or wipe with a mop, or as if with a mop. | [verb] To make a wry expression with the mouth. | [noun] The process of cleaning with a mop. MORAINE (9) [noun] An accumulation of rocks and debris carried and deposited by a glacier. MORALES (9) MORALLY (12) [adverb] In terms of morals or ethics. | [adverb] In keeping of requirements of morality. | [adverb] To all intents and purposes; practically. MORASSY (12) MORCEAU (11) [noun] A bit; a morsel. MORDANT (10) [noun] Any substance used to facilitate the fixing of a dye to a fibre; usually a metallic compound which reacts with the dye using chelation. | [noun] Any corrosive substance used in etching. | [noun] A glutinous size used as a ground for gilding, to make the gold leaf adhere. MORDENT (10) [noun] An ornament consisting of a single alternation between a given pitch and the one immediately below it. MOREENS (9) MORELLE (9) MORELLO (9) [noun] A variety of cultivated cherry, Prunus cerasus 'austera', having a dark skin MORGANS (10) [noun] A unit for expressing the relative distance between genes on a chromosome. MORGENS (10) [noun] A unit of measurement of land in the Netherlands and the Dutch colonies and parts of the United States, where it was equivalent to about two acres; and in Denmark, Norway, and Germany, where it was equivalent to about two-thirds of an acre. Now used informally in Germany to mean one quarter of a hectare. MORGUES (10) [noun] A supercilious or haughty attitude; arrogance. | [noun] A building or room where dead bodies are kept before their proper burial or cremation, particularly in legal and law enforcement contexts. | [noun] The archive and background information division of a newspaper. MORIONS (9) [noun] A kind of open brimmed helmet used by footsoldiers in the 16th and 17th centuries, having no visor or bever. | [noun] A brown or black variety of quartz. MORNING (10) [noun] The part of the day from dawn to noon. | [noun] The part of the day between midnight and noon. | [noun] The early part of anything. MOROCCO (13) [noun] A soft leather, made from goatskin, used especially in bookbinding. | [noun] A sheepskin leather in imitation of this. | [noun] A very strong ale, anciently brewed in Cumberland. MORONIC (11) [adjective] Having a mental age of between seven and twelve years | [adjective] Behaving in the manner of a moron; idiotic; stupid MORPHIA (14) [noun] Morphine MORPHIC (16) MORPHIN (14) MORPHOS (14) [noun] Any of the genus Morpho of large tropical American butterflies. MORRION (9) MORROWS (12) MORSELS (9) [noun] A small fragment or share of something, commonly applied to food. | [noun] A mouthful of food. | [noun] A very small amount. MORTALS (9) [noun] A human; someone susceptible to death. MORTARS (9) [noun] A mixture of lime or cement, sand and water used for bonding building blocks. | [noun] A muzzle-loading, indirect fire weapon with a tube length of 10 to 20 calibers and designed to lob shells at very steep trajectories. | [noun] A hollow vessel used to pound, crush, rub, grind or mix ingredients with a pestle. MORTARY (12) MORTICE (11) [noun] A hole that is made to receive a tenon so as to form a joint. | [noun] Stability; power of adhesion. | [verb] To cut a mortise in. MORTIFY (15) [verb] To discipline (one's body, appetites etc.) by suppressing desires; to practise abstinence on. | [verb] (usually used passively) To embarrass, to humiliate. To injure one's dignity. | [verb] To kill. MORTISE (9) [noun] A hole that is made to receive a tenon so as to form a joint. | [noun] Stability; power of adhesion. | [verb] To cut a mortise in. MORULAE (9) [noun] A spherical mass of blastomeres that forms following the splitting of a zygote; it becomes the blastula MORULAR (9) MORULAS (9) MOSAICS (11) [noun] A piece of artwork created by placing colored squares (usually tiles) in a pattern so as to create a picture. | [noun] An individual composed of two or more cell lines of different genetic or chromosomal constitution, but from the same zygote. | [noun] Any of several viral diseases that cause mosaic-like patterns to appear on leaves. MOSEYED (13) [verb] To set off, get going; to start a journey. | [verb] To go off quickly: to hurry up. | [verb] To amble; to walk or proceed in a leisurely manner. MOSQUES (18) [noun] A place of worship for Muslims, often having at least one minaret; a masjid. MOSSERS (9) MOSSIER (9) [adjective] Covered in or overgrown with moss. MOSSING (10) [verb] To become covered with moss. | [verb] To cover (something) with moss. MOSTEST (9) MOTHERS (12) [noun] A person (especially an entomologist) or animal that catches moths. | [noun] A (human) female who has given birth to a baby | [noun] A human female who parents an adopted or fostered child MOTHERY (15) MOTHIER (12) [adjective] Infested with moths | [adjective] Moth-eaten MOTIFIC (14) MOTILES (9) MOTIONS (9) [noun] A state of progression from one place to another. | [noun] A change of position with respect to time. | [noun] A change from one place to another. MOTIVED (13) MOTIVES (12) [noun] An idea or communication that makes one want to act, especially from spiritual sources; a divine prompting. | [noun] An incentive to act in a particular way; a reason or emotion that makes one want to do something; anything that prompts a choice of action. | [noun] A limb or other bodily organ that can move. MOTIVIC (14) [adjective] Used as, or relating to, a motif. MOTLEYS (12) MOTLIER (9) MOTMOTS (11) [noun] Any bird in the taxonomic family Momotidae, endemic to the neotropics. MOTORED (10) [verb] To make a journey by motor vehicle; to drive. | [verb] To move at a brisk pace. | [verb] To leave. MOTORIC (11) [adjective] Relating to the motor faculties. | [adjective] (of a rhythm) Based on repetition of a single note length. MOTTLED (10) [verb] To mark with blotches of different color, or shades of color, as if stained; to spot; to maculate. | [adjective] Colored in patches; spotted MOTTLER (9) MOTTLES (9) [verb] To mark with blotches of different color, or shades of color, as if stained; to spot; to maculate. MOTTOES (9) [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, forming part of an heraldic achievement. | [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, prefixed to an essay, discourse, chapter, canto, or the like, suggestive of its subject matter; a short, suggestive expression of a guiding principle; a maxim. | [noun] A paper packet containing a sweetmeat, cracker, etc., together with a scrap of paper bearing a motto. MOUCHED (15) MOUCHES (14) MOUFLON (12) [noun] A species of wild sheep, Ovis orientalis musimon, syn. Ovis aries musimon, endemic to Sardinia and Corsica. MOUILLE (9) MOUJIKS (20) [noun] A (male) peasant, especially in pre-revolutionary (imperial) Russia. MOULAGE (10) MOULDED (11) [verb] To shape in or on a mold; to form into a particular shape; to give shape to. | [verb] To guide or determine the growth or development of; influence | [verb] To fit closely by following the contours of. MOULDER (10) [noun] A person who moulds dough into loaves. | [noun] Anyone who moulds or shapes things. | [noun] A machine used for moulding. MOULINS (9) [noun] A cylindrical, vertical shaft that extends through a glacier and is carved by meltwater from the glacier’s surface. MOULTED (10) [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. MOULTER (9) MOUNDED (11) [verb] To fortify with a mound; add a barrier, rampart, etc. to. | [verb] To force or pile into a mound or mounds. MOUNTED (10) [verb] To get upon; to ascend; to climb. | [verb] To place oneself on (a horse, a bicycle, etc.); to bestride. | [verb] To cause to mount; to put on horseback; to furnish with animals for riding. MOUNTER (9) MOURNED (10) [verb] To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death). | [verb] To utter in a sorrowful manner. | [verb] To wear mourning. MOURNER (9) [noun] Someone filled with or expressing grief or sadness, especially over a death; someone who mourns. MOUSERS (9) [noun] A cat that catches mice, kept specifically for the purpose. | [noun] A moustache. MOUSIER (9) [adjective] Resembling a mouse. | [adjective] Abounding or infested with mice. MOUSILY (12) MOUSING (10) [verb] To move cautiously or furtively, in the manner of a mouse (the rodent) (frequently used in the phrasal verb to mouse around). | [verb] To hunt or catch mice (the rodents), usually of cats. | [verb] To close the mouth of a hook by a careful binding of marline or wire. MOUSSED (10) [verb] To apply mousse (styling cream). MOUSSES (9) [noun] An airy pudding served chilled, particularly chocolate mousse. | [noun] A savory dish, of meat or seafood, containing gelatin. | [noun] A styling cream used for hair. MOUTHED (13) [verb] To speak; to utter. | [verb] To make the actions of speech, without producing sound. | [verb] To utter with a voice that is overly loud or swelling. MOUTHER (12) MOUTONS (9) MOVABLE (14) [noun] Something which is movable; an article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of property not fixed, or not a part of real estate; generally, in the plural, goods; wares; furniture. | [adjective] Capable of being moved, lifted, carried, drawn, turned, or conveyed, or in any way made to change place or posture; not fixed or stationary | [adjective] Changing from one time to another MOVABLY (17) MOVIOLA (12) MOWINGS (13) [noun] The activity by which something is mown. | [noun] Land from which grass is cut. MOZETTA (18) [noun] A short cape worn by some Catholic clergy. MOZETTE (18) [noun] A short cape worn by some Catholic clergy. MUCKERS (15) [noun] (Southern England) friend, acquaintance | [noun] (British army) A comrade; a friendly, low-ranking soldier in the same situation. | [noun] A person who removes muck (waste, debris, broken rock, etc.), especially from a mine, construction site, or stable. MUCKIER (15) [adjective] Covered in muck. | [adjective] Obscene, pornographic. MUCKILY (18) MUCKING (16) [verb] To shovel muck. | [verb] To manure with muck. | [verb] To do a dirty job. MUCKLES (15) [verb] To latch onto something with the mouth. | [verb] To talk big; to exaggerate. MUCLUCS (13) MUCOIDS (12) MUCOSAE (11) [noun] Mucous membrane MUCOSAL (11) MUCOSAS (11) MUCUSES (11) MUDCAPS (14) MUDCATS (12) MUDDERS (11) [noun] A person (especially an entomologist) or animal that catches moths. | [noun] A (human) female who has given birth to a baby | [noun] A human female who parents an adopted or fostered child MUDDIED (12) [adjective] Made dirty with mud. | [adjective] Made unclear, obfuscated (generally as part of the phrase muddied the water) | [adjective] Made muted of color. MUDDIER (11) [adjective] Covered with or full of mud or wet soil. | [adjective] With mud or other sediment brought into suspension, turbid. | [adjective] Not clear; mixed up or blurry. | [noun] One who muddies or obscures something. MUDDIES (11) [verb] To get mud on (something). | [verb] To make a mess of, or create confusion with regard to; to muddle. MUDDILY (14) MUDDING (12) MUDDLED (12) [verb] To mix together, to mix up; to confuse. | [verb] To mash slightly for use in a cocktail. | [verb] To dabble in mud. MUDDLER (11) [noun] A person or thing that muddles. | [noun] A tool used in muddling, used to mash and mix. MUDDLES (11) [noun] A mixture; a confusion; a garble. | [noun] A mixture of crushed ingredients, as prepared with a muddler. | [verb] To mix together, to mix up; to confuse. MUDFISH (16) [noun] Any of many fish that frequent muddy water or burrow in mud, including: MUDFLAT (13) [noun] A muddy expanse of flat land, especially such land as a river bed exposed at low tide. MUDFLOW (16) [noun] A type of landslide characterized by large flows of mud and water. | [noun] The dried-out product of such a flow. MUDHOLE (13) MUDLARK (14) [noun] A pig; pork. | [noun] One who scavenges in river or harbor mud for items of value, especially in London. | [noun] A child who plays in the mud; a child that spends most of its time in the streets, a street urchin. MUDPACK (18) [noun] A paste of earth or clay, applied to the face for therapeutic or cosmetic purposes. MUDROCK (16) MUDROOM (12) [noun] A room used as a barrier between outdoors and indoors. MUDSILL (10) MUEDDIN (11) MUESLIS (9) [noun] A breakfast dish based on uncooked rolled oats and fruit. MUEZZIN (27) [noun] The person who issues the call to prayer from one of the minarets of a mosque. MUFFING (16) [verb] To drop or mishandle (the ball, a catch etc.); to play badly. | [verb] To mishandle; to bungle. | [noun] Penetration of the inguinal canal (e.g. with a finger, or by pushing the testicle back inside it) as a form of sexual activity among trans women. MUFFINS (15) [noun] A type of flattish bun, usually cut in two horizontally, toasted and spread with butter, etc, before being eaten. | [noun] A type of individual bread such as corn, bran, banana or zucchini bread often sliced and spread with butter, etc before being eaten. | [noun] (especially US) (informally) A cupcake without frosting, but sometimes glazed. MUFFLED (16) [verb] To wrap (a person, face etc.) in fabric or another covering, for warmth or protection; often with up. | [verb] To wrap up or cover (a source of noise) in order to deaden the sound. | [verb] To mute or deaden (a sound etc.). MUFFLER (15) [noun] Part of the exhaust pipe of a car that dampens the noise the engine produces. | [noun] A silencer or suppressor fitted to a gun. | [noun] A type of scarf. MUFFLES (15) [noun] Anything that mutes or deadens sound. | [noun] A warm piece of clothing for the hands. | [noun] A boxing glove. MUGFULS (13) MUGGARS (11) MUGGEES (11) MUGGERS (11) [noun] A street robber. | [noun] A person who makes exaggerated faces, as a performance; a gurner. | [noun] A large crocodile, Crocodilus palustris, of southwest Asia, having a very broad wrinkled snout. MUGGIER (11) [adjective] (Of the weather, air, etc) humid, or hot and humid. | [adjective] Wet or mouldy MUGGILY (14) MUGGING (12) [verb] To strike in the face. | [verb] To assault for the purpose of robbery. | [verb] To exaggerate a facial expression for communicative emphasis; to make a face, to pose, as for photographs or in a performance, in an exaggerated or affected manner. MUGGINS (11) [noun] A fool or idiot (especially as an ironic way of referring to oneself). | [noun] The act of stealing another player's points because they either mis-pegged or counted up incorrectly. | [noun] A game of dominoes in which the object is to make the sum of the two ends of the line some multiple of five. MUGGURS (11) MUGWORT (13) [noun] Any of several aromatic plants of the genus Artemisia native to Europe and Asia. | [noun] Artemisia vulgaris, traditionally used medicinally. MUGWUMP (17) [noun] An independent neutral politician, especially in reference to the 1884 U.S. presidential election. | [noun] An aloof or self-important but inconsequential person. MUHLIES (12) MUKLUKS (17) [noun] A soft knee-high boot of sealskin or reindeer skin, originally worn by Inuit and Yupik. | [noun] A laced winter boot resembling a traditional mukluk, with thick rubber sole and cloth upper. MUKTUKS (17) MULATTO (9) [noun] A person of mixed black and white descent, especially a person with one black and one white parent. MULCHED (15) [verb] To apply mulch. | [verb] To turn into mulch. MULCHES (14) [noun] Any material used to cover the top layer of soil to protect, insulate, or decorate it, or to discourage weeds or retain moisture. | [noun] A material used as mulch, as a decorative redwood bark mulch. | [verb] To apply mulch. MULCTED (12) [verb] To impose such a fine or penalty. | [verb] To swindle (someone) out of money. MULETAS (9) [noun] A red flag used by bullfighters. MULLAHS (12) [noun] A religious scholar and teacher of sharia law. MULLEIN (9) [noun] Any of several European and Asian plants, of the genus Verbascum, that have yellow flowers and downy leaves; the velvet plant. MULLENS (9) MULLERS (9) [noun] One who, or that which, mulls. | [noun] A grinding stone, held in the hand, used especially for preparing paints and powders. | [noun] A vessel in which wine, etc., is mulled over a fire. MULLETS (9) [noun] A fish of the family Mullidae (order Syngnathiformes), especially the genus Mullus (the red mullets or goatfish). | [noun] A fish of the family Mugilidae (order Mugiliformes) (the grey mullets). | [noun] Any of several species of freshwater fish in the sucker family (especially in the genus Moxostoma, the redhorses) MULLEYS (12) MULLING (10) [verb] (usually with over) To work (over) mentally; to cogitate; to ruminate. | [verb] To powder; to pulverize. | [verb] To chop marijuana so that it becomes a smokable form. MULLION (9) [noun] A vertical bar between the panes of glass or casements of a window or the panels of a screen. | [verb] To shape into divisions by means of mullions. MULLITE (9) MULLOCK (15) [noun] Rubbish, waste matter. | [noun] Waste rock from which the wanted gold, minerals, opal, etc., has been extracted; waste material generated while searching for minerals or while mining, such as when sinking a shaft. | [noun] Nonsense, rubbish. MULTURE (9) [noun] A grinding of grain, or the grain that is ground. | [noun] A toll paid to a miller, mill-owner etc., generally in kind, for grinding corn or pulverizing ore. MUMBLED (14) [verb] To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. | [verb] To chew something gently with closed lips. MUMBLER (13) MUMBLES (13) [noun] A quiet or unintelligible vocalization; a low tone of voice. MUMMERS (13) [noun] A person who dons a disguising costume, as for a parade or a festival. | [noun] An actor in a pantomime; one who communicates entirely through gesture and facial expression. MUMMERY (16) [noun] Mumming; disguising oneself to perform as a mummer, or to take part in some other festivities or performance. | [noun] A ridiculous or ostentatious ceremony, formerly especially of a religious nature; extravagant or hypocritical performance. MUMMIED (14) MUMMIES (13) [noun] An embalmed human or animal corpse wrapped in linen bandages for burial, especially as practised by the ancient Egyptians and some Native American tribes. | [noun] (by extension) A reanimated embalmed human corpse, as a typical character in horror films. | [noun] (by extension) Any naturally preserved human or animal body. MUMMIFY (19) [verb] To make into a mummy, by preserving a dead body. | [verb] To become a mummy. MUMMING (14) [verb] To act in a pantomime or dumb show. | [noun] A pantomime or dumb show. MUMPERS (13) MUMPING (14) MUNCHED (15) [verb] To chew with a grinding, crunching sound, and with the mouth closed — often used with on. | [verb] To eat vigorously or with excitement. MUNCHER (14) MUNCHES (14) [noun] A location or restaurant where good eating can be expected. | [noun] An act of eating. | [noun] Food. MUNDANE (10) [noun] An unremarkable, ordinary human being. | [noun] (in various subcultures) A person considered to be "normal", part of the mainstream culture, outside the subculture, not part of the elite group. | [noun] The world outside fandom; the normal, mainstream world. MUNNION (9) MUNSTER (9) MUNTING (10) MUNTINS (9) [noun] One of the separators between panes of glass in a composite window. MUNTJAC (18) [noun] Any of various species of east Asian deer of the genus Muntiacus, having short antlers and a barking call. MUNTJAK (20) MUONIUM (11) MURDERS (10) [noun] The crime of deliberately killing another person without justification. | [noun] The act of deliberate killing of another person or other being without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [noun] (in jurisdictions which use the felony murder rule) The commission of an act which abets the commission of a crime the commission of which causes the death of a human. MUREINS (9) MUREXES (16) [noun] Any of the genus Murex of marine gastropods. MURIATE (9) [noun] Chloride MURICES (11) [noun] Any of the genus Murex of marine gastropods. MURINES (9) MURKEST (13) MURKIER (13) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MURKILY (16) MURMURS (11) [noun] Any low, indistinct sound, like that of running water. | [noun] Soft indistinct speech. | [noun] The sound made by any condition which produces noisy, or turbulent, flow of blood through the heart. MURRAIN (9) [noun] Plague, infectious disease, pestilence. | [noun] Any of several highly infectious diseases of cattle such as anthrax. MURREYS (12) MURRHAS (12) MURRIES (9) MURRINE (9) MURTHER (12) [noun] The crime of deliberately killing another person without justification. | [noun] The act of deliberate killing of another person or other being without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [noun] (in jurisdictions which use the felony murder rule) The commission of an act which abets the commission of a crime the commission of which causes the death of a human. MUSCATS (11) [noun] A white grape variety; used as table grapes and for making raisins and sweet wine. | [noun] The muscatel wine made from these grapes. | [noun] The vine bearing this fruit. MUSCIDS (12) [noun] Any fly of the family Muscidae of insects. MUSCLED (12) [verb] To use force to make progress, especially physical force. | [adjective] Bearing muscles or muscle tissue. | [adjective] Having large muscles. MUSCLES (11) [noun] A contractile form of tissue which animals use to effect movement. | [noun] An organ composed of muscle tissue. | [noun] (usually in the plural) A well-developed physique, in which the muscles are enlarged from exercise. MUSEFUL (12) MUSETTE (9) [noun] Any of various form of small bagpipe, especially with a bellows, having a soft sound, and once popular in France. | [noun] A dance tune or pastoral air that imitates this instrument. | [noun] A small instrument similar to an oboe or shawm. MUSEUMS (11) [noun] A building or institution dedicated to the acquisition, conservation, study, exhibition, and educational interpretation of objects having scientific, historical, cultural or artistic value. MUSHERS (12) [noun] One who operates a dogsled, traditionally using the verbal command “mush”. | [noun] One who travels by dogsled. | [noun] One who races in a dogsled in a race. MUSHIER (12) [adjective] Resembling or having the consistency of mush; semiliquid, pasty, or granular. | [adjective] Soft; squishy. | [adjective] Overly sappy, corny, or cheesy; maudlin. MUSHILY (15) MUSHING (13) [verb] To squish so as to break into smaller pieces or to combine with something else. | [verb] To walk, especially across the snow with dogs. | [verb] To drive dogs, usually pulling a sled, across the snow. MUSICAL (11) [noun] A stage performance, show or film that involves singing, dancing and musical numbers performed by the cast as well as acting. | [noun] A meeting or a party for a musical entertainment; a musicale. | [adjective] Of, belonging or relating to music, or to its performance or notation. MUSINGS (10) [noun] Thought, meditation, contemplation MUSJIDS (17) MUSKEGS (14) [noun] A terrain composed of peat bog with tussocky meadow and woody vegetation including spruce. MUSKETS (13) [noun] A kind of firearm formerly carried by the infantry of an army, originally fired by means of a match, or matchlock, for which several mechanical appliances (including the flintlock, and finally the percussion lock) were successively substituted; ultimately superseded by the rifle. | [noun] A male Eurasian sparrowhawk. MUSKIER (13) [adjective] Having the scent of musk MUSKIES (13) MUSKILY (16) MUSKITS (13) MUSKRAT (13) [noun] A large aquatic rodent (Ondatra zibethicus). | [noun] Any of several species of shrews in the family Soricidae, especially the Asian house shrew, Suncus murinus MUSLINS (9) [noun] Any of several varieties of thin cotton cloth. | [noun] Fabric made of cotton, flax (linen), hemp, or silk, finely or coarsely woven. | [noun] Any of a wide variety of tightly-woven thin fabrics, especially those used for bedlinen. MUSPIKE (15) MUSSELS (9) [noun] Any of several groups of bivalve shellfish with elongated, asymmetrical shells MUSSIER (9) MUSSILY (12) MUSSING (10) [verb] To rumple, tousle or make (something) untidy. MUSTANG (10) [noun] A small, hardy, naturalized (feral) horse of the North American west. | [noun] A merchant marine who joined the U.S. Navy as a commissioned officer during the American Civil War. | [noun] (generalized) A commissioned officer who started military service as an enlisted person. MUSTARD (10) [noun] A plant of certain species of the genus Brassica, or of related genera (especially Sinapis alba, in the family Brassicaceae, with yellow flowers, and linear seed pods). | [noun] Powder or paste made from seeds of the mustard plant, and used as a condiment or a spice. | [noun] The leaves of the mustard plant, used as a salad. MUSTEES (9) MUSTERS (9) [noun] A person of one-eighth African ancestry. | [noun] Gathering. | [noun] Showing. MUSTIER (9) [adjective] Having a stale odor. MUSTILY (12) MUSTING (10) MUTABLE (11) [noun] Something mutable; a variable or value that can change. | [adjective] Changeable, dynamic, evolutive; inclined to change, evolve, mutate. | [adjective] (of a variable) Having a value that is changeable during program execution. MUTABLY (14) MUTAGEN (10) [noun] Any agent or substance that can cause genetic mutation. MUTANTS (9) [noun] Something which has mutated, which has one or more new characteristics from a mutation. | [noun] Someone or something that seems strange, abnormal, or bizarre. | [noun] An object in a program that serves as a lock, used to negotiate mutual exclusion among threads. MUTASES (9) MUTATED (10) [verb] To undergo mutation. | [verb] To cause mutation. | [adjective] Possessing a mutation. MUTATES (9) [verb] To undergo mutation. | [verb] To cause mutation. MUTCHES (14) [noun] A nightcap (hat worn to bed). | [noun] A linen or muslin hat, especially one of a type once commonly worn by elderly women and young children. MUTEDLY (13) MUTINED (10) MUTINES (9) MUTISMS (11) MUTTERS (9) [noun] A repressed or obscure utterance; an instance of muttering. | [verb] To utter words, especially complaints or angry expressions, indistinctly or with a low voice and lips partly closed; to say under one's breath. | [verb] To speak softly and incoherently, or with imperfect articulations. MUTTONS (9) MUTTONY (12) MUTUELS (9) MUTULAR (9) MUTULES (9) [noun] Any of the rectangular blocks under the soffit of the cornice of the Greek Doric temple, which are studded with guttae. MUUMUUS (11) [noun] A long loose-fitting dress made of lightweight fabric printed with bright, stylized Hawaiian themes (such as flowers and palm branches). MUZHIKS (25) [noun] A (male) peasant, especially in pre-revolutionary (imperial) Russia. MUZJIKS (29) MUZZIER (27) [adjective] Hazy, indistinct, blurred, unfocussed. | [adjective] Dazed; bewildered; tipsy. MUZZILY (30) MUZZLED (28) [verb] To bind or confine an animal's mouth by putting a muzzle, as to prevent it from eating or biting. | [verb] To restrain (from speaking, expressing opinion or acting); gag, silence, censor. | [verb] To veil, mask, muffle. MUZZLER (27) MUZZLES (27) [noun] The protruding part of an animal's head which includes the nose, mouth and jaws; the snout | [noun] The mouth or the end for entrance or discharge of a gun, pistol etc., that the bullet emerges from as opposed to the breech. | [noun] A device used to prevent animal from biting or eating, which is worn on its snout. MYALGIA (13) [noun] Muscular pain or tenderness. MYALGIC (15) MYCELES (14) MYCELIA (14) [noun] The vegetative part of any fungus, consisting of a mass of branching, threadlike hyphae, often underground. MYCOSES (14) [noun] An infection caused by a fungus. MYCOSIS (14) [noun] An infection caused by a fungus. MYCOTIC (16) MYELINE (12) MYELINS (12) MYELOID (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to bone marrow. | [adjective] (less commonly used) Of or pertaining to the spinal cord. MYELOMA (14) [noun] A malignant tumour arising from cells of the bone marrow, specifically plasma cells. MYIASES (12) MYIASIS (12) MYNHEER (15) MYOLOGY (16) [noun] The physiological study of muscles. MYOMATA (14) MYOPIAS (14) MYOPIES (14) MYOSINS (12) MYOSOTE (12) [noun] (botany) Myosotis. MYOTICS (14) MYOTOME (14) [noun] In vertebrate embryonic development, a group of tissues formed from somites that develop into the body wall muscle. MYRIADS (13) [noun] Ten thousand; 10,000 | [noun] A countless number or multitude (of specified things) MYRICAS (14) MYRRHIC (17) MYRTLES (12) [noun] An evergreen shrub or small tree of the genus Myrtus, native to southern Europe and north Africa. MYSOSTS (12) MYSTERY (15) [noun] Something secret or unexplainable; an unknown. | [noun] Someone or something with an obscure or puzzling nature. | [noun] A secret or mystical meaning. MYSTICS (14) [noun] Someone who practices mysticism. MYSTIFY (18) [verb] To thoroughly confuse, befuddle, or bewilder. MYTHIER (15) MYXOMAS (21) [noun] A tumor of primitive connective tissue. NAMABLE (11) NAMETAG (10) [noun] A tag with one's name inscribed on it. NANISMS (9) NAPALMS (11) [noun] A highly flammable, viscous substance, designed to stick to the body while burning, used in warfare as an incendiary especially in wooded areas. | [verb] To spray or attack with this substance. NARCISM (11) NATRIUM (9) NELUMBO (11) NEMATIC (11) [noun] A liquid crystal whose molecules align in loose parallel lines. | [adjective] (of certain liquid crystals) Whose molecules align in loose parallel lines. NEMESES (9) [noun] An archenemy | [noun] (chiefly non-North American usage) A person or character who specifically brings about the downfall of another person or character. | [noun] The principle of retributive justice. NEMESIS (9) [noun] An archenemy | [noun] (chiefly non-North American usage) A person or character who specifically brings about the downfall of another person or character. | [noun] The principle of retributive justice. NEUROMA (9) [noun] A tumour composed of nerve cells. NEWMOWN (15) NEWSMAN (12) [noun] A reporter; a person in the profession of providing news. NEWSMEN (12) [noun] A reporter; a person in the profession of providing news. NIMBLER (11) [adjective] Adept at taking or grasping | [adjective] Quick and light in movement or action. | [adjective] Quick-witted and alert. NIMIETY (12) [noun] State of being in excess, more than is needed. NIMIOUS (9) NIMMING (12) NIMRODS (10) [noun] A foolish person; an idiot. NIOBIUM (11) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Nb) with an atomic number of 41: a light grey, crystalline, ductile transition metal used in superconducting materials. | [noun] A single atom of this element. NOISOME (9) [adjective] Morally hurtful or noxious. | [adjective] Hurtful or noxious to health; unwholesome, insalubrious. | [adjective] Offensive to the senses; disgusting, unpleasant, nauseous, especially having an undesirable smell NOMADIC (12) [adjective] Of or relating to nomads, whether NOMARCH (14) [noun] Chief administrator or magistrate of a nome or nomarchy NOMBLES (11) NOMBRIL (11) [noun] A point halfway between the fess point and the middle base point of an escutcheon. NOMINAL (9) [noun] (grammar) A noun or word group that functions as part of a noun phrase. | [noun] (grammar) A part of speech that shares features with nouns and adjectives. (Depending on the language, it may comprise nouns, adjectives, possibly numerals, pronouns, and participles.) | [noun] A number (usually natural) used like a name; a numeric code or identifier. (See nominal number on Wikipedia.) NOMINEE (9) [noun] A person named, or designated, by another, to any office, duty, or position; one nominated, or proposed, by others for office or for election to office. | [noun] A person or organisation in whose name a security is registered though true ownership is held by another party, called nominator, especially for the purpose of concealing the identity of the nominator. | [noun] A person to whom the holder of a copyhold estate surrenders their interest. NOMISMS (11) NONCOMS (11) [noun] A non-commissioned officer, such as a sergeant (army) or petty officer (navy). NONFARM (12) NONGAME (10) NONHEME (12) NONHOME (12) NONMEAT (9) NORMALS (9) [noun] A line or vector that is perpendicular to another line, surface, or plane. | [noun] A person who is normal, who fits into mainstream society, as opposed to those who live alternative lifestyles. | [noun] The usual state. NOSTRUM (9) [noun] A medicine or remedy in conventional use which has not been proven to have any desirable medical effects. | [noun] An ineffective but favorite remedy for a problem, usually involving political action. NOUMENA (9) [noun] A thing as it is independent of any conceptualization or perception by the human mind, postulated by practical reason but existing in a condition which is in principle unknowable and unexperienceable. NUDISMS (10) NUMBATS (11) [noun] A small marsupial carnivore, Myrmecobius fasciatus, endemic to western Australia, that eats almost exclusively termites. NUMBERS (11) [noun] An abstract entity used to describe quantity. | [noun] A numeral: a symbol for a non-negative integer. | [noun] An element of one of several sets: natural numbers, integers, rational numbers, real numbers, complex numbers, and sometimes extensions such as hypercomplex numbers, etc. NUMBEST (11) NUMBING (12) [verb] To cause to become numb (physically or emotionally). | [verb] To cause (a feeling) to be less intense. | [verb] To cause (the mind, faculties, etc.) to be less acute. NUMBLES (11) [noun] The entrails of a deer or other animal, used for food. NUMERAL (9) [noun] A symbol that is not a word and represents a number, such as the Arabic numerals 1, 2, 3 and the Roman numerals I, V, X, L. | [noun] A word representing a number. | [noun] A card whose rank is a number (usually including the ace as 1). NUMERIC (11) [noun] Any number, proper or improper fraction, or incommensurable ratio. | [adjective] Of or relating to numbers, especially the characters 0 to 9. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to numbers NUMMARY (14) NUTMEAT (9) NUTMEGS (10) [noun] An evergreen tree (Myristica fragrans) cultivated in the East Indies for its spicy seeds. | [noun] The aromatic seed of this tree, used as a spice. | [noun] A grey-brown colour. NYMPHAE (17) NYMPHAL (17) NYMPHET (17) [noun] A small nymph. | [noun] A sexually attractive girl or young woman. NYMPHOS (17) [noun] A woman with an excessive libido. OAKMOSS (13) OARSMAN (9) [noun] A man who rows a boat, either alone or with others. OARSMEN (9) [noun] A man who rows a boat, either alone or with others. OATMEAL (9) [noun] Meal made from rolled or round oats. | [noun] A breakfast cereal made from rolled oats, cooked in milk and/or water. | [noun] A light greyish brown colour, like that of oatmeal. OBELISM (11) OBIISMS (11) ODDMENT (11) [noun] A part of something that is left over, such as a piece of cloth. | [noun] Something that does not match the things it is with or cannot easily be categorized; a miscellaneous item. | [noun] An item that was originally part of a set but is sold individually; an excess item of stock. OEDEMAS (10) OENOMEL (9) OESTRUM (9) [noun] A biting fly of the genus Oestrus; a botfly. | [noun] A bite or sting. | [noun] A passion or frenzy. OFFRAMP (17) [noun] A segment of roadway that directs vehicular traffic from a freeway onto local roads OGHAMIC (15) OGREISM (10) OGRISMS (10) OHMAGES (13) OILCAMP (13) OINOMEL (9) OMELETS (9) [noun] A dish made with beaten eggs cooked in a frying pan without stirring, flipped over to cook on both sides, and sometimes filled or topped with cheese, chives or other foodstuffs. | [noun] A form of shellcode that searches the address space for multiple small blocks of data ("eggs") and recombines them into a larger block to be executed. OMENING (10) OMENTAL (9) OMENTUM (11) [noun] Either of two folds of the peritoneum that support the viscera. OMICRON (11) [noun] The 15th letter of Classical and Modern Greek, and the 16th in Ancient and Old Greek. OMIKRON (13) OMINOUS (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to an omen or to omens; being or exhibiting an omen; significant. | [adjective] Specifically, giving indication of a coming ill; being an evil omen OMITTED (10) [verb] To leave out or exclude. | [verb] To fail to perform. | [verb] To neglect or take no notice of. OMITTER (9) OMNIBUS (11) [noun] A vehicle set up to carry many people (now usually called a bus). | [noun] An anthology of previously released material linked together by theme or author, especially in book form. | [noun] A broadcast programme consisting of all of the episodes of a serial that have been shown in the previous week. OMNIFIC (14) OMPHALI (14) ONANISM (9) [noun] Masturbation. | [noun] Ejaculating outside the vagina during intercourse; (the performing of) coitus interruptus. ONETIME (9) [adjective] (principally US) Former. | [adjective] (principally US) Occurring or used in a single instance and then never again. OOMIACK (15) OOMIACS (11) OOMIAKS (13) [noun] A large, open boat made of skins stretched over a wooden frame that is propelled by paddles; used by the Eskimos for transportation. OOMPAHS (14) [verb] To produce an oom-pah sound. OOSPERM (11) OPOSSUM (11) [noun] Any American marsupial of the family Didelphidae. The common species of the United States is Didelphis virginiana. OPTIMAL (11) [noun] The best of its kind | [adjective] The best, most favourable or desirable, especially under some restriction. | [adjective] Describing a search algorithm that always returns the best result. OPTIMES (11) OPTIMUM (13) [noun] The best or most favorable condition, or the greatest amount or degree possible under specific sets of comparable circumstances. | [adjective] The best or most advantageous; surpassing all others. ORALISM (9) [noun] A philosophy of education for the deaf, opposed to manualism, that uses spoken language consisting of lipreading, speech, the process of watching mouth movements, and mastering breathing techniques. ORGANUM (10) [noun] A type of medieval polyphony which builds upon an existing plainsong. | [noun] A method by which philosophical or scientific investigation may be conducted. ORGASMS (10) [noun] A spasm or sudden contraction. | [noun] A rush of sexual excitement; now specifically, the climax or peak of sexual pleasure, which occurs during sexual activity and which in males may include ejaculation and in females vaginal contractions. | [noun] A creamy white alcoholic cocktail containing amaretto, Irish cream, and coffee liqueur. ORIGAMI (10) [noun] The Japanese art of paper folding. | [noun] A piece of art made by folding paper. | [noun] The materials science technology that applies the art of origami to products. ORMOLUS (9) OSCULUM (11) [noun] A small opening or orifice. | [noun] One of the suckers on the head of a tapeworm. | [noun] The main opening in a sponge from which water is expelled. OSMATIC (11) OSMIOUS (9) OSMIUMS (11) OSMOLAL (9) OSMOLAR (9) OSMOLES (9) OSMOSED (10) [verb] To diffuse by osmosis. | [verb] To cause to diffuse by osmosis. OSMOSES (9) [verb] To diffuse by osmosis. | [verb] To cause to diffuse by osmosis. | [noun] The net movement of solvent molecules, usually water, from a region of lower solute concentration to a region of higher solute concentration through a partially permeable membrane. OSMOSIS (9) [noun] The net movement of solvent molecules, usually water, from a region of lower solute concentration to a region of higher solute concentration through a partially permeable membrane. | [noun] Picking up knowledge accidentally, without actually seeking that particular knowledge. OSMOTIC (11) OSMUNDA (10) [noun] Royal fern, osmund (of genus Osmunda) OSMUNDS (10) OSTEOMA (9) OSTMARK (13) [noun] The currency unit of the former German Democratic Republic (aka GDR, DDR, East Germany) until 1990, abbreviated DDM. OTTOMAN (9) [noun] An upholstered sofa, without arms or a back, sometimes with a compartment for storing linen, etc. | [noun] A low stool or thick cushion used to rest the feet or as a seat. | [noun] A fabric with a pronounced ribbed or corded effect, often made of silk or a mixture of cotton and silk-like yarns. OUTBEAM (11) OUTCOME (11) [noun] That which is produced or occurs as a result of an event or process. | [noun] The result of a random trial. An element of a sample space. | [noun] The anticipated or desired results or evidence of a learning experience (often used in the phrase learning outcomes). OUTJUMP (18) [verb] To jump better than; particularly higher than, or further than. OUTMANS (9) [verb] To have more people than (one's competitor); to outnumber in men. | [verb] To outdo in manliness. OUTMODE (10) OUTMOST (9) [noun] That which is outmost; the surface; the outside. OUTMOVE (12) OUTSWAM (12) OUTSWIM (12) OUTSWUM (12) OVERARM (12) [noun] A style of swimming of extending the arms alternatively - now usually termed freestyle. | [verb] To provide with more weaponry than necessary. | [adjective] Throwing while having the hand above the elbow OVERMAN (12) [noun] A person who supervises others; a supervisor, especially in a mine. | [noun] A person with great powers; a superman. | [verb] To provide with too many personnel; overstaff. OVERMEN (12) [noun] A person who supervises others; a supervisor, especially in a mine. | [noun] A person with great powers; a superman. OVERMIX (19) OVIFORM (15) [adjective] Egg-shaped OXYMORA (19) OXYSOME (19) PABLUMS (13) PABULUM (13) [noun] Food or fodder, particularly that taken in by plants or animals. | [noun] Material that feeds a fire. | [noun] Food for thought. PACKMAN (17) [noun] Someone who travels with a pack, especially a travelling salesman. PACKMEN (17) [noun] Someone who travels with a pack, especially a travelling salesman. PAJAMAS (18) [noun] Clothes for wearing to bed and sleeping in, usually consisting of a loose-fitting shirt and pants/trousers. | [noun] Loose-fitting trousers worn by both sexes in various southern Asian countries including India. PALLIUM (11) [noun] A large cloak worn by Greek philosophers and teachers. | [noun] A woolen liturgical vestment resembling a collar and worn over the chasuble in the Western Christian liturgical tradition, conferred on archbishops by the Pope, equivalent to the Eastern Christian omophorion. | [noun] The mantle of a mollusc. PALMARY (14) PALMATE (11) [noun] A salt or ester of ricinoleic acid (formerly called palmic acid); a ricinoleate. | [adjective] Having three or more lobes or veins arising from a common point. | [adjective] (leaves) Having more than three leaflets arising from a common point, often in the form of a fan. PALMERS (11) [noun] A pilgrim who had been to the Holy Land and who brought back a palm branch in signification; a wandering religious votary. | [noun] A ferule used to punish schoolboys by striking their palms. | [noun] One who palms or cheats, as at cards or dice. PALMIER (11) [noun] A type of puff pastry biscuit made in the shape of a palm leaf and rolled in sugar. PALMING (12) [verb] To hold or conceal something in the palm of the hand, e.g, for an act of sleight of hand or to steal something. | [verb] To hold something without bending the fingers significantly. | [verb] To move something with the palm of the hand. PALMIST (11) [noun] A fortuneteller who uses palmistry. PALMYRA (14) [noun] A palm, Borassus flabelliformis, with straight black upright trunk and palmate leaves, whose wood, fruit, and roots can be used for many purposes. PAMPEAN (13) PAMPERO (13) [noun] A violent wind from the west or southwest, which sweeps over the pampas of South America and the adjacent seas, often doing great damage. PAMPERS (13) [verb] To treat with excessive care, attention or indulgence. | [verb] To feed luxuriously. PANAMAS (11) PANICUM (13) PANTOUM (11) [noun] A poem, similar to a villanelle, that comprises a series of quatrains, the second and fourth lines of each stanza repeated as the first and third lines of the next. PARAMOS (11) [noun] A treeless grassland ecosystem covering extensive high areas of equatorial mountains, especially in South America. PARONYM (14) [noun] A word derived from the same root or stem as another word. | [noun] A near-homophone, a word that sounds like another word. PASTIME (11) [noun] Something which amuses, and serves to make time pass agreeably. | [verb] To sport; to amuse oneself PATAMAR (11) PAYMENT (14) [noun] The act of paying. | [noun] A sum of money paid in exchange for goods or services. PAYNIMS (14) [noun] A pagan or heathen, especially a Muslim, or a Jew. PELMETS (11) [noun] An interior decorative item that is placed above a window to hide the curtain mechanisms, visually similar to a cornice or valance. PEMBINA (13) PEMICAN (13) PEMPHIX (23) PENNAME (11) [noun] A fictitious name used by an author in place of their actual name; a writer's pseudonym. PEONISM (11) PEPLUMS (13) [noun] A genre of Italian films based on historical or biblical epics. | [noun] An individual film in this genre. | [noun] A peplos, an Ancient Greek garment formed of a tubular piece of cloth folded back upon itself halfway down so that the top of the tube is worn around the waist, and the bottom covers the legs down to the ankles; the open top is then worn over the shoulders, and draped, in folds, down to the waist. Compare the Roman palla. PERFORM (14) [verb] To do something; to execute. | [verb] To do (something) in front of an audience, such as acting or music, often in order to entertain. PERFUME (14) [noun] A pleasant smell; the scent, odor, or odoriferous particles emitted from a sweet-smelling substance; a pleasant odor | [noun] A substance created to provide a pleasant smell or one which emits an agreeable odor. | [verb] To apply perfume to; to fill or impregnate with a perfume; to scent. PERMING (12) [verb] To give hair a perm, using heat, chemicals etc. PERMITS (11) [noun] An artifact or document rendering something allowed or legal. | [noun] Formal permission. | [verb] To allow (something) to happen, to give permission for. PERMUTE (11) [verb] Change the order of | [verb] Make a permutation of PHANTOM (14) [noun] A ghost or apparition. | [noun] Something apparently seen, heard, or sensed, but having no physical reality; an image that appears only in the mind; an illusion or delusion. | [noun] A placeholder for a pair of players when there are an odd number of pairs playing. PHASMID (15) PHELLEM (14) PHENOMS (14) [noun] Someone or something that is phenomenal, especially a young player in sports like baseball, American football, basketball, tennis, and golf. | [noun] One who is hip and fashionable. PHLEGMS (15) PHLEGMY (18) PHLOEMS (14) PHONEME (14) [noun] An indivisible unit of sound in a given language. A phoneme is an abstraction of the physical speech sounds (phones) and may encompass several different phones. PIANISM (11) [noun] One's way of playing the piano PIETISM (11) [noun] (often capitalized) A movement in the Lutheran church in the 17th and 18th centuries, calling for a return to practical and devout Christianity. PIGMENT (12) [noun] Any color in plant or animal cells | [noun] A dry colorant, usually an insoluble powder | [noun] Wine flavoured with spices and honey. PIGMIES (12) [noun] (often capitalized) A member of one of various Ancient Equatorial African tribal peoples, notable for their very short stature. | [noun] A member of a race of dwarfs. | [noun] Any dwarfish person or thing. PIKEMAN (15) [noun] A soldier armed with a pike. | [noun] A person who operates a turnpike. | [noun] A miner who works with a pick. PIKEMEN (15) [noun] A soldier armed with a pike. | [noun] A person who operates a turnpike. | [noun] A miner who works with a pick. PILGRIM (12) [noun] One who travels, especially on a journey to visit sites of religious significance. | [noun] A newcomer. | [noun] A silk screen formerly attached to the back of a woman's bonnet to protect the neck. PIMENTO (11) [noun] A red sweet pepper, a cultivar of Capsicum annuum, used to make relish, stuffed into olives, or used as spice. | [noun] A tropical berry used to make allspice. | [noun] The tree on which it grows. PIMPING (14) [verb] To act as a procurer of prostitutes; to pander. | [verb] To prostitute someone. | [verb] To excessively customize something, especially a vehicle, according to ghetto standards (also pimp out). PIMPLED (14) PIMPLES (13) [noun] An inflamed (raised and colored) spot on the surface of the skin that is usually painful and fills with pus. | [noun] An annoying person. | [noun] Scotch (whisky) PINETUM (11) [noun] An arboretum, or part of an arboretum or garden, devoted to growing conifers PINWORM (14) [noun] Any of several nematode worms, of the family Oxyuridae, that are parasitic to mammals PISMIRE (11) [noun] An ant. PITMANS (11) [noun] (plural "pitmen") One who works in a pit, as in mining, in sawing timber, etc. | [noun] (plural "pitmen" or "pitmans") A connecting rod in machinery, especially in a sawmill. PLASMAS (11) PLASMIC (13) PLASMID (12) [noun] A loop of double-stranded DNA that is separate from and replicates independently of the chromosomes, most commonly found in bacteria, but also in archaeans and eukaryotic cells, and used in genetic engineering as a vector for gene transfer. PLASMIN (11) [noun] A proteolytic enzyme that dissolves the fibrin in blood clots. PLASMON (11) [noun] All the genetic material in an organism. | [noun] The quantum of waves produced by the collective effects of large numbers of electrons when disturbed from equilibrium. PLENISM (11) PLENUMS (11) [noun] A space that is completely filled with matter. | [noun] A state of fullness, a great quantity (of something). | [noun] A legislative meeting (especially of the Communist Party) in which all members are present. PLIMSOL (11) PLOWMAN (14) [noun] A man who plows land with a plough. PLOWMEN (14) [noun] A man who plows land with a plough. PLUMAGE (12) [noun] Layer or collection of feathers covering a bird’s body; feathers used ornamentally. | [noun] Finery or elaborate dress. PLUMATE (11) PLUMBED (14) [verb] To determine the depth, generally of a liquid; to sound. | [verb] To attach to a water supply and drain. | [verb] To think about or explore in depth, to get to the bottom of, especially to plumb the depths of. PLUMBER (13) [noun] One who works in or with lead. | [noun] One who furnishes, fits, and repairs pipes and other apparatus for the conveyance of water, gas, or drainage. | [noun] A person who investigates or prevents leaks of information PLUMBIC (15) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, resembling or containing lead. | [adjective] Specifically, of compounds in which it has a higher valence as contrasted with plumbous compounds. PLUMBUM (15) PLUMIER (11) PLUMING (12) [verb] To adorn, cover, or furnish with feathers or plumes, or as if with feathers or plumes. | [verb] Chiefly of a bird: to arrange and preen the feathers of, specifically in preparation for flight; hence , to prepare for (something). | [verb] (by extension) To congratulate (oneself) proudly, especially concerning something unimportant or when taking credit for another person's effort; to self-congratulate. PLUMMET (13) [noun] A piece of lead attached to a line, used in sounding the depth of water, a plumb bob or a plumb line | [noun] Hence, any weight | [noun] A piece of lead formerly used by school children to rule paper for writing (that is, to mark with rules, with lines) PLUMOSE (11) [adjective] Having feathers or plumes. | [adjective] Having hairs, or other parts, arranged along an axis like a feather. PLUMPED (14) [verb] To grow plump; to swell out. | [verb] To make plump; to fill (out) or support; often with up. | [verb] To cast or let drop all at once, suddenly and heavily. PLUMPEN (13) PLUMPER (13) [adjective] Having a full and rounded shape; chubby, somewhat overweight. | [adjective] Fat. | [adjective] Sudden and without reservation; blunt; direct; downright. PLUMPLY (16) PLUMULE (11) [noun] The first bud, or gemmule, of a young plant; the bud, or growing point, of the embryo, above the cotyledons. | [noun] A down feather. | [noun] The aftershaft of a feather. PNEUMAS (11) [noun] A neume. | [noun] The spirit or soul. | [noun] One of three levels of a human being, the spirit, along with the body and soul. PODIUMS (12) [noun] A platform on which to stand, as when conducting an orchestra or preaching at a pulpit. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) A stand used to hold notes when speaking publicly. | [noun] A steepled platform upon which the three competitors with the best results may stand when being handed their medals or prize. POGROMS (12) [noun] A riot aimed at persecution or massacre of a particular ethnic or religious group, usually Jews. | [noun] An antisemitic hate crime with a large death toll, irrespective of the number of perpetrators. POLEMIC (13) [noun] A person who writes in support of one opinion, doctrine, or system, in opposition to another; one skilled in polemics; a controversialist; a disputant. | [noun] An argument or controversy. | [noun] A strong verbal or written attack on someone or something. POLYMER (14) [noun] A long or larger molecule consisting of a chain or network of many repeating units, formed by chemically bonding together many identical or similar small molecules called monomers. A polymer is formed by polymerization, the joining of many monomer molecules. | [noun] A material consisting of such polymer molecules. POLYOMA (14) POMACES (13) POMADED (13) [verb] To anoint with pomade; to use pomade to style (hair). POMADES (12) [noun] A greasy or waxy substance that is used to style hair, making it look slick and shiny. | [noun] Any medicinal ointment. | [verb] To anoint with pomade; to use pomade to style (hair). POMATUM (13) [noun] Pomade. | [verb] To dress with pomatum. POMELOS (11) [noun] The large fruit of the Citrus maxima (syn. C. grandis), native to South Asia and Southeast Asia, with a thick green or yellow rind, a thick white pith, and semi-sweet translucent pale flesh. | [noun] The tree which produces this fruit. | [noun] The grapefruit. POMFRET (14) [noun] A fish of family Bramidae, consisting of eight genera and some twenty species. | [noun] Several species of butterfishes in the genus Pampus. POMMELS (13) [noun] The upper front brow of a saddle. | [noun] A rounded knob or handle. | [noun] The bat used in the game of knurr and spell or trap ball. POMMIES (13) [noun] (sometimes pejorative) An English immigrant; a pom. | [noun] A pom; a person of British descent, a Briton; an Englishman. POMPANO (13) [noun] Any of various carangid fish, of the genus Trachinotus or species Alectis ciliaris, the African pompano, from coastal parts of the North Atlantic. | [noun] An edible butterfish, Peprilus simillimus, the Pacific pompano. POMPOMS (15) [noun] A decorative ball made of pieces of soft fabric bound at the centre, most notably used in cheerleading. POMPONS (13) [noun] A bundle of yarn, string, ribbon, etc. tied in the middle and left loose at the ends, so as to form a puff or ball, as for decoration or a showy prop for cheerleading. | [noun] A hardy garden chrysanthemum with button-like flower heads. | [noun] Any of several dwarf varieties of the Provence rose. POMPOUS (13) [adjective] Affectedly grand, solemn or self-important. POPEDOM (14) PORISMS (11) POSSUMS (11) [noun] An opossum, a marsupial of the family Didelphidae of the Americas. | [noun] Any of the marsupials in several families of the order Diprotodontia of Australia and neighboring islands. POSTMAN (11) [noun] Someone (implied male) who delivers the post (mail) to, and/or collects the post from, residential or commercial addresses, or from public mailboxes. | [noun] One of the two most experienced barristers in the Court of Exchequer, who have precedence in motions, so called from the place where he sits, the other of the two being the tubman. POSTMEN (11) [noun] Someone (implied male) who delivers the post (mail) to, and/or collects the post from, residential or commercial addresses, or from public mailboxes. | [noun] One of the two most experienced barristers in the Court of Exchequer, who have precedence in motions, so called from the place where he sits, the other of the two being the tubman. POTAMIC (13) PREAMPS (13) [noun] Preamplifier PREARMS (11) PREBOOM (13) PREEMIE (11) [noun] A baby that has been born prematurely PREEMPT (13) [noun] A preemptive bid. | [verb] To appropriate something (before someone else does). | [verb] To displace something, or take precedence over something. PREFORM (14) [noun] An object that has undergone preliminary shaping but is not yet in its final form. | [noun] The rough, incomplete and unused basic form of a stone tool. | [noun] A word that is no longer in use, but has been reconstructed from current ones. PREGAME (12) [noun] A social gathering of several friends who get together to drink before going out to a party or a sports game. The goal of pre-gaming is to "get a buzz" before going out for the night. | [noun] A television show preceding a sports game wherein commentators discuss that game. | [verb] To consume alcohol prior to an event. PRELIMS (11) [noun] Something preliminary, such as a trial, report, race, etc. PREMADE (12) [adjective] Made in advance | [verb] To make in advance PREMEAL (11) PREMEDS (12) [noun] An undergraduate college academic program, typically in biochemistry or related sciences, that prepares a student to pursue graduate or post-graduate studies in medicine. | [noun] A premedication. PREMEET (11) PREMIER (11) [noun] (Westminster system) The head of government in parliament and leader of the cabinet. | [noun] (non-Westminster) The government leader in a legislative congress or leader of a government-level administrative body; the head of government. | [noun] The first lieutenant or other second-in-command officer of a ship. PREMIES (11) PREMISE (11) [noun] A proposition antecedently supposed or proved; something previously stated or assumed as the basis of further argument; a condition; a supposition. | [noun] Any of the first propositions of a syllogism, from which the conclusion is deduced. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Matters previously stated or set forth; especially, that part in the beginning of a deed, the office of which is to express the grantor and grantee, and the land or thing granted or conveyed, and all that precedes the habendum; the thing demised or granted. PREMISS (11) [noun] A proposition antecedently supposed or proved; something previously stated or assumed as the basis of further argument; a condition; a supposition. | [noun] Any of the first propositions of a syllogism, from which the conclusion is deduced. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Matters previously stated or set forth; especially, that part in the beginning of a deed, the office of which is to express the grantor and grantee, and the land or thing granted or conveyed, and all that precedes the habendum; the thing demised or granted. PREMIUM (13) [noun] A prize or award. | [noun] Something offered at a reduced price as an inducement to buy something else. | [noun] A bonus paid in addition to normal payments. PREMIXT (18) PREMOLD (12) PREMOLT (11) PREMUNE (11) PRENAME (11) PRESUME (11) [verb] With infinitive object: to be so presumptuous as (to do something) without proper authority or permission. | [verb] To perform, do (something) without authority; to lay claim to without permission. | [verb] To assume or suggest to be true (without proof); to take for granted, to suppose. PRETERM (11) [noun] A premature birth or baby. | [adjective] Of a premature birth or baby. PRETRIM (11) PREWARM (14) PRIMACY (16) [noun] The state or condition of being prime or first, as in time, place, rank, etc. | [noun] Excellence; supremacy. | [noun] The office, rank, or character of a primate, it being the chief ecclesiastical station or dignity in a national church PRIMAGE (12) PRIMARY (14) [noun] A primary election; a preliminary election to select a political candidate of a political party. | [noun] The first year of grade school. | [noun] A base or fundamental component; something that is irreducible. PRIMATE (11) [noun] A mammal of the order Primates, including simians and prosimians. | [noun] A simian anthropoid; an ape, human or monkey. | [noun] In the Catholic Church, a rare title conferred to or claimed by the sees of certain archbishops, or the highest-ranking bishop of a present or historical, usually political circumscription. PRIMELY (14) PRIMERO (11) PRIMERS (11) [noun] A prayer or devotional book intended for laity, initially an abridgment of the breviary and manual including the hours of the Virgin Mary, 15 gradual and 7 penitential psalms, the litany, the placebo and dirige forming the office of the dead, and the commendations. | [noun] Similar works issued in England for private prayer in accordance with the Book of Common Prayer. | [noun] A children's book intended to teach literacy: how to read, write, and spell. PRIMINE (11) PRIMING (12) [verb] To prepare a mechanism for its main work. | [verb] To apply a coat of primer paint to. | [verb] To be renewed. PRIMMED (14) [verb] To make affectedly precise or proper. | [verb] To dress or act smartly. PRIMMER (13) [adjective] Prudish, straight-laced | [adjective] Formal; precise; affectedly neat or nice PRIMPED (14) [verb] To spend time improving one's appearance, often in front of a mirror. | [verb] To dress in an affected manner. PRIMSIE (11) PRIMULA (11) [noun] Any plant of the genus Primula; the primroses. PROBLEM (13) [noun] A difficulty that has to be resolved or dealt with. | [noun] A question to be answered, schoolwork exercise. | [noun] A puzzling circumstance. PROGRAM (12) [noun] A set of structured activities. | [noun] A leaflet listing information about a play, game or other activity. | [noun] A performance of a show or other broadcast on radio or television. PROMINE (11) PROMISE (11) [noun] An oath or affirmation; a vow | [noun] A transaction between two persons whereby the first person undertakes in the future to render some service or gift to the second person or devotes something valuable now and here to his use | [noun] Reason to expect improvement or success; potential PROMOTE (11) [verb] To raise (someone) to a more important, responsible, or remunerative job or rank. | [verb] To advocate or urge on behalf of (something or someone); to attempt to popularize or sell by means of advertising or publicity. | [verb] To encourage, urge or incite. PROMPTS (13) [noun] A reminder or cue. | [noun] A time limit given for payment of an account for produce purchased, this limit varying with different goods. | [noun] A sequence of characters that appears on a monitor to indicate that the computer is ready to receive input. PROPMAN (13) PROPMEN (13) PROSOMA (11) [noun] The front segment of a body which is divided into two or more segments, especially the cephalothorax of an arachnid or crustacean. PROTIUM (11) [noun] An atom of this isotope. PROXIMO (18) [adverb] Of next month. PSALMED (12) PSALMIC (13) PSAMMON (13) PTOMAIN (11) PUGMARK (16) PULLMAN (11) PUMELOS (11) PUMICED (14) [verb] To abrade or roughen with pumice. PUMICER (13) PUMICES (13) [verb] To abrade or roughen with pumice. PUMMELO (13) [noun] The large fruit of the Citrus maxima (syn. C. grandis), native to South Asia and Southeast Asia, with a thick green or yellow rind, a thick white pith, and semi-sweet translucent pale flesh. | [noun] The tree which produces this fruit. | [noun] The grapefruit. PUMMELS (13) [noun] The upper front brow of a saddle. | [noun] A rounded knob or handle. | [noun] The bat used in the game of knurr and spell or trap ball. PUMPERS (13) [noun] One who pumps something. | [noun] A steroid or other drug taken to improve blood flow and increase muscular size. PUMPING (14) [verb] To use a pump to move (liquid or gas). | [verb] (often followed by up) To fill with air. | [verb] To move rhythmically, as the motion of a pump. PUMPKIN (17) [noun] A domesticated plant, in species Cucurbita pepo, similar in growth pattern, foliage, flower, and fruit to the squash or melon. | [noun] The round yellow or orange fruit of this plant. | [noun] The color of the fruit of the pumpkin plant. PURISMS (11) PUTAMEN (11) [noun] A round structure located at the base of the forebrain, regulating movement and learning. | [noun] A hard, shell-like covering. | [noun] The shell of a nut; the stone of a drupe fruit; endocarp. PYAEMIA (14) [noun] A type of septicemia caused usually by the presence of Staphylococcus bacteria in the bloodstream; characterised by metastatic abscesses and other symptoms associated with septicemia. PYAEMIC (16) PYEMIAS (14) PYGMEAN (15) [adjective] Like a pygmy; very small. PYGMIES (15) [noun] (often capitalized) A member of one of various Ancient Equatorial African tribal peoples, notable for their very short stature. | [noun] A member of a race of dwarfs. | [noun] Any dwarfish person or thing. PYGMOID (16) PYJAMAS (21) [noun] Clothes for wearing to bed and sleeping in, usually consisting of a loose-fitting shirt and pants/trousers. | [noun] Loose-fitting trousers worn by both sexes in various southern Asian countries including India. PYRAMID (15) [noun] An ancient massive construction with a square or rectangular base and four triangular sides meeting in an apex, such as those built as tombs in Egypt or as bases for temples in Mesoamerica. | [noun] A construction in the shape of a pyramid, usually with a square or rectangular base. | [noun] A solid with triangular lateral faces and a polygonal (often square or rectangular) base. QUAMASH (21) [noun] Any of the North American flowering plants of the genus Camassia. QUANTUM (18) [noun] The total amount of something; quantity. | [noun] The amount or quantity observably present, or available. | [noun] The smallest possible, and therefore indivisible, unit of a given quantity or quantifiable phenomenon. QUOMODO (19) QUONDAM (19) [adjective] Former; once; at one time. QUORUMS (18) [noun] The minimum number of members required for a group to officially conduct business and to cast votes, often but not necessarily a majority or supermajority. | [noun] A selected body of persons. RACEMED (12) RACEMES (11) [noun] An indeterminate inflorescence in which the flowers are arranged along a single central axis. RACEMIC (13) [adjective] Containing equal amounts of dextrorotatory (D) and levorotatory (L) stereoisomers and therefore not being optically active RACISMS (11) RADIUMS (10) RADOMES (10) [noun] A radar dome. RAGTIME (10) [noun] A musical form having a rhythm characterized by strong syncopation in the melody with a regularly accented accompaniment. | [noun] A piece of music in this style. RAIMENT (9) [noun] Clothing, garments, dress, material. RAMBLED (12) [verb] To move about aimlessly, or on a winding course | [verb] To walk for pleasure; to amble or saunter. | [verb] To talk or write incessantly, unclearly, or incoherently, with many digressions. RAMBLER (11) [noun] A recreational walker, a hiker. | [noun] One who rambles. | [noun] A ranch-style house. RAMBLES (11) [noun] A leisurely stroll; a recreational walk in the countryside. | [noun] A rambling; an instance of someone talking at length without direction. | [noun] A bed of shale over the seam of coal. RAMEKIN (13) [noun] A small glass or earthenware dish, often white and circular, in which food is baked and served. | [noun] A cheese- or meat-based dish baked in a small mold. RAMENTA (9) RAMILIE (9) RAMJETS (16) [noun] A jet engine in which forward motion forces air into an inlet, compressing it (as opposed to having a pump type device compressing the air for combustion with fuel), and where combustion is subsonic. RAMMERS (11) RAMMIER (11) RAMMING (12) [verb] To collide with (an object), usually with the intention of damaging it or disabling its function. | [verb] To strike (something) hard, especially with an implement. | [verb] To fill or compact by pounding or driving. RAMMISH (14) RAMPAGE (12) [noun] A course of violent, frenzied action. | [verb] To move about wildly or violently. RAMPANT (11) [adjective] Rearing on both hind legs with the forelegs extended. | [adjective] Rearing up, especially on its hind leg(s), with a foreleg raised and in profile. | [adjective] Tilted, said of an arch with one side higher than the other, or a vault whose two abutments are located on an inclined plane. RAMPART (11) [noun] A defensive mound of earth or a wall with a broad top and usually a stone parapet; a wall-like ridge of earth, stones or debris; an embankment for defensive purpose. | [noun] A defensive structure; a protective barrier; a bulwark. | [noun] That which defends against intrusion from outside; a protection. RAMPIKE (15) RAMPING (12) [verb] To behave violently; to rage. | [verb] To spring; to leap; to bound, rear, or prance; to move swiftly or violently. | [verb] To climb, like a plant; to creep up. RAMPION (11) [noun] A species of bellflower with roots and leaves formerly used in salads, Campanula rapunculus | [noun] Any of several flowering plants of the genus Phyteuma, within the family Campanulaceae. RAMPOLE (11) RAMRODS (10) [noun] Device used with muzzleloaders to push the projectile up against the propellant. | [noun] Ranch or trail foreman, usually the first or second person in charge. The person responsible for getting the work done. | [noun] An erect penis. RAMSONS (9) [noun] A wild relative of chives, Allium ursinum, having edible leaves and roots. RAMTILS (9) RANDOMS (10) [noun] A roving motion; course without definite direction; lack of rule or method; chance. | [noun] Speed, full speed; impetuosity, force. | [noun] The full range of a bullet or other projectile; hence, the angle at which a weapon is tilted to allow the greatest range. RANSOMS (9) [verb] (14th century) To deliver, especially in context of sin or relevant penalties. | [verb] To pay a price to set someone free from captivity or punishment. | [verb] To exact a ransom for, or a payment on. READMIT (10) [verb] To admit, or allow to enter, again. REALISM (9) [noun] A concern for fact or reality and rejection of the impractical and visionary. | [noun] An artistic representation of reality as it is. | [noun] The viewpoint that an external reality exists independent of observation. REAMERS (9) [noun] A tool for boring a hole wider. | [noun] A device for rendering citrus juice. | [noun] A tool used to scrape carbon deposit from the bowl of a pipe. REAMING (10) [verb] To cream; mantle; foam; froth. | [verb] To enlarge a hole, especially using a reamer; to bore a hole wider. | [verb] To shape or form, especially using a reamer. REARMED (10) [verb] To replace or restore the weapons or arms of a previously defeated, or disarmed army, country, person or other body. REBLOOM (11) RECLAIM (11) [noun] The calling back of a hawk. | [noun] The bringing back or recalling of a person; the fetching of someone back. | [noun] An effort to take something back, to reclaim something. RECLAME (11) RECOMBS (13) RECTUMS (11) [noun] The terminal part of the large intestine through which feces pass after exiting the colon. REDEEMS (10) [verb] To recover ownership of something by buying it back. | [verb] To liberate by payment of a ransom. | [verb] To set free by force. REDREAM (10) REEDMAN (10) REEDMEN (10) REEMITS (9) REFILMS (12) REFORMS (12) [noun] The change of something that is defective, broken, inefficient or otherwise negative, in order to correct or improve it | [verb] To put into a new and improved form or condition; to restore to a former good state, or bring from bad to good; to change from worse to better | [verb] To return to a good state; to amend or correct one's own character or habits REFRAME (12) [noun] An instance of reframing. | [verb] To frame again. | [verb] To redescribe, from a different perspective; to relabel. REGIMEN (10) [noun] Orderly government; system of order; administration. | [noun] Any regulation or remedy which is intended to produce beneficial effects by gradual operation. | [noun] (grammar) object REGIMES (10) [noun] Mode of rule or management. | [noun] A form of government, or the government in power. | [noun] A period of rule. REGMATA (10) REGROOM (10) REIMAGE (10) RELUMED (10) [verb] To rekindle; to relight (literally or figuratively). | [verb] To make clear or bright again. RELUMES (9) [verb] To rekindle; to relight (literally or figuratively). | [verb] To make clear or bright again. REMAILS (9) REMAINS (9) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) That which is left; relic; remainder. | [noun] (in the plural) That which is left of a human being after the life is gone; relics; a dead body. | [noun] Posthumous works or productions, especially literary works. REMAKER (13) REMAKES (13) [noun] A new version of something. | [noun] A new, especially updated, version of a film, video game, etc. | [verb] To make again. REMANDS (10) [verb] To send a prisoner back to custody. | [verb] To send a case back to a lower court for further consideration. | [verb] To send back. REMARKS (13) [noun] A mark that replaces another mark. | [verb] To mark again. | [noun] An act of pointing out or noticing; notice or observation. REMARRY (12) [verb] To marry a second or subsequent time. REMATCH (14) [noun] A repeated contest staged between the same opponents or teams which played a previous contest. | [verb] To bring opponents together for such a contest. | [verb] To stage such a contest. REMATED (10) REMATES (9) REMEETS (9) REMELTS (9) REMENDS (10) REMERGE (10) REMIGES (10) [noun] Quill | [noun] The flight feather of a bird. REMINDS (10) [verb] To cause one to experience a memory (of someone or something); to bring to the notice or consideration (of a person). REMINTS (9) REMISED (10) [verb] To send or give back. | [verb] To surrender all interest in a property by executing a deed, to quitclaim. REMISES (9) [noun] A return or surrender of a claim, property etc. | [verb] To send or give back. | [verb] To surrender all interest in a property by executing a deed, to quitclaim. REMIXED (17) [verb] To mix again. | [verb] To create a remix. | [verb] To rearrange or radically alter (a particular piece of music). REMIXES (16) [noun] A rearrangement of an older piece of music, possibly including various cosmetic changes. | [noun] A piece of music formed by combining existing pieces of music together, possibly including various other cosmetic changes | [verb] To mix again. REMNANT (9) [noun] The small portion remaining of a larger thing or group. | [noun] The remaining fabric at the end of the bolt. | [noun] An unsold end of piece goods, as cloth, ribbons, carpets, etc. REMODEL (10) [verb] To change the appearance, layout, or furnishings of. | [noun] An instance of modification or redecorating. REMOLDS (10) [verb] Mold again, apply a new mold to REMORAS (9) [noun] Any of various elongate fish from the family Echeneidae, the dorsal fin of which is in the form of a suction disc that can take a firm hold against the skin of larger marine animals. | [noun] A serpent. | [noun] A delay; a hindrance, an obstacle. REMORID (10) REMORSE (9) [noun] A feeling of regret or sadness for doing wrong or sinning. | [noun] Sorrow; pity; compassion. REMOTER (9) [adjective] At a distance; disconnected. | [adjective] Distant or otherwise inaccessible. | [adjective] (especially with respect to likelihood) Slight. REMOTES (9) [noun] An element of broadcast programming originating away from the station's or show's control room. | [verb] To connect to a computer from a remote location. | [noun] A device used to operate an appliance (such as a television), vehicle or mechanical toy from a short distance away. REMOUNT (9) [noun] The opportunity of, or things necessary for, remounting; specifically, a fresh horse, with its equipment. | [noun] The process of mounting a drive or volume again. | [noun] The restaging of a play or film. REMOVAL (12) [noun] The process of moving, or the fact of being removed. | [noun] The relocation of a business etc. | [noun] The dismissal of someone from office. REMOVED (13) [verb] To move something from one place to another, especially to take away. | [verb] To murder. | [verb] To dismiss a batsman. REMOVER (12) REMOVES (12) [noun] The act of removing something. | [noun] (archaic) Removing a dish at a meal in order to replace it with the next course, a dish thus replaced, or the replacement. | [noun] (at some public schools) A division of the school, especially the form prior to last REMUDAS (10) [noun] A herd of horses from which the horses to be used for a particular purpose are selected. RENAMED (10) [verb] To give a new name to. RENAMES (9) [verb] To give a new name to. REPLUMB (13) REPUMPS (13) REQUIEM (18) [noun] A mass (especially Catholic) to honor and remember a dead person. | [noun] A musical composition for such a mass. | [noun] A piece of music composed to honor a dead person. | [noun] A large or dangerous shark, specifically, a member of the family Carcharhinidae. RESMELT (9) RESTAMP (11) RESUMED (10) [verb] To take back possession of (something). | [verb] To summarise. | [verb] To start (something) again that has been stopped or paused from the point at which it was stopped or paused; continue, carry on. RESUMER (9) RESUMES (9) [verb] To take back possession of (something). | [verb] To summarise. | [verb] To start (something) again that has been stopped or paused from the point at which it was stopped or paused; continue, carry on. RETEAMS (9) RETIMED (10) [verb] To reschedule for another time. | [verb] To change the timing or duration of. RETIMES (9) [verb] To reschedule for another time. | [verb] To change the timing or duration of. RETRIMS (9) REVAMPS (14) [verb] To renovate, revise, improve or renew. REWARMS (12) RHABDOM (15) [noun] Any of the rods that support each ommatidium in the compound eye of arthropods RHAMNUS (12) RHENIUM (12) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Re) with an atomic number of 75: a heavy, silvery-gray transition metal. | [noun] A single atom of this element. RHEUMIC (14) RHIZOMA (21) RHIZOME (21) [noun] A horizontal, underground stem of some plants that sends out roots and shoots from its nodes. | [noun] A so-called "image of thought" that apprehends multiplicities. See Rhizome (philosophy). RHODIUM (13) [noun] A rare, hard, silvery-white, inert metallic chemical element (symbol Rh) with an atomic number of 45. | [noun] A single atom of this element. RHOMBIC (16) RHOMBUS (14) [noun] A parallelogram having all sides of equal length. | [noun] In early Greek religion, an instrument whirled on the end of a string similar to a bullroarer. | [noun] Any of several flatfishes, including the brill and turbot, once considered part of the genus Rhombus, now in Scophthalmus. RHUMBAS (14) [noun] A slow-paced Cuban partner dance in 4:4 time. | [verb] To dance the rumba RHYMERS (15) RHYMING (16) [verb] To compose or treat in verse; versify. | [verb] (followed by with) Of a word, to be pronounced identically with another from the vowel in its stressed syllable to the end. | [verb] Of two or more words, to be pronounced identically from the vowel in the stressed syllable of each to the end of each. RHYTHMS (18) [noun] The variation of strong and weak elements (such as duration, accent) of sounds, notably in speech or music, over time; a beat or meter. | [noun] A specifically defined pattern of such variation. | [noun] A flow, repetition or regularity. RIMFIRE (12) [noun] A type of firearm cartridge where the primer is in the back rim, rather than a central primer cap. They are cheap to produce but cannot be reloaded with powder. RIMIEST (9) [adjective] Coated in rime. RIMLAND (10) [noun] A land or region at the periphery of a heartland RIMLESS (9) RIMMERS (11) RIMMING (12) [verb] To form a rim on. | [verb] To follow the contours, possibly creating a circuit. | [verb] (of a ball) To roll around a rim. RIMPLED (12) RIMPLES (11) RIMROCK (15) [noun] An outcrop of hard rock, often in the form of a cliff at the edge of a plateau, that forms the margin of a gravel deposit | [verb] To drive (animals) over a cliff edge. ROAMERS (9) ROAMING (10) [verb] To wander or travel freely and with no specific destination. | [verb] To use a network or service from different locations or devices. | [verb] To transmit (resources) between different locations or devices, to allow comparable usage from any of them. RODSMAN (10) RODSMEN (10) ROLLMOP (11) [noun] A fillet of herring, rolled and flavoured with sliced onion and spices then pickled in brine ROMAINE (9) [noun] Lactuca sativa var. longifolia, a type of lettuce having long crisp leaves forming a slender head. ROMANCE (11) [noun] A story relating to chivalry; a story involving knights, heroes, adventures, quests, etc. | [noun] An intimate relationship between two people; a love affair. | [noun] A strong obsession or attachment for something or someone. ROMANOS (9) ROMAUNT (9) ROMPERS (11) [noun] Someone who romps or frolics. | [noun] A ship that has moved far ahead of a convoy; see also straggler. | [noun] A onesie. ROMPING (12) [verb] To play about roughly, energetically or boisterously. | [verb] (Often used with down) To press forcefully, to encourage vehemently, to oppress. | [verb] To win easily. ROMPISH (14) ROOMERS (9) [noun] A person who rents a room. | [noun] (in combination) A residence having the specified number of rooms. ROOMFUL (12) [noun] The amount that a room can hold, especially the number of people that can fit into a room. | [noun] The people in a room, considered as a group. | [adjective] Abounding with room or rooms; roomy. ROOMIER (9) [adjective] Spacious, expansive, comfortable. ROOMIES (9) [noun] A roommate. ROOMILY (12) ROOMING (10) [verb] To reside, especially as a boarder or tenant. | [verb] To assign to a room; to allocate a room to. ROSTRUM (9) [noun] A dais, pulpit, or similar platform for a speaker, conductor, or other performer. | [noun] A platform for a film or television camera. | [noun] The projecting prow of a rowed warship, such as a trireme. RUMAKIS (13) RUMBAED (12) [verb] To dance the rumba RUMBLED (12) [verb] To make a low, heavy, continuous sound. | [verb] To discover deceitful or underhanded behaviour. | [verb] To move while making a rumbling noise. RUMBLER (11) [noun] One who, or that which, rumbles. RUMBLES (11) [noun] A low, heavy, continuous sound, such as that of thunder or a hungry stomach. | [noun] A street fight or brawl. | [noun] A rotating cask or box in which small articles are smoothed or polished by friction against each other. RUMINAL (9) [adjective] Of, relating to, or situated inside the rumen. | [adjective] That chews the cud. RUMMAGE (12) [noun] A thorough search, usually resulting in disorder. | [noun] Commotion; disturbance. | [noun] A disorganized collection of miscellaneous objects; a jumble. RUMMERS (11) [noun] A large drinking-glass studded with prunts to ensure a safe grip, popular in the Rhineland and the Netherlands from the 15th century to the 17th century. RUMMEST (11) [adjective] Fine, excellent, valuable. | [adjective] Strange, peculiar. RUMMIER (11) [adjective] Resembling or tasting of rum. | [adjective] Peculiar; odd. RUMMIES (11) RUMORED (10) [verb] (usually used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip. | [adjective] Widely reported without strong evidence. RUMOURS (9) [noun] A statement or claim of questionable accuracy, from no known reliable source, usually spread by word of mouth. | [noun] Information or misinformation of the kind contained in such claims. | [verb] (usually used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip. RUMPLED (12) [verb] To make wrinkled, particularly fabric. | [verb] To muss; to tousle. | [adjective] Wrinkled or crumpled RUMPLES (11) [noun] A wrinkle. | [verb] To make wrinkled, particularly fabric. | [verb] To muss; to tousle. SACHEMS (14) [noun] The chief of a Native American tribe; a sagamore. | [noun] A leader in the Tammany Hall society. SACRUMS (11) [noun] A large triangular bone at the base of the spine, located between the two ilia (wings of the pelvis) and formed from vertebrae that fuse in adulthood. SADISMS (10) SAGAMAN (10) SAGAMEN (10) SAIMINS (9) SALAAMS (9) [noun] A low bow as a ceremonial act of deference. | [verb] To perform a salaam (to someone). SALAMIS (9) [noun] A large cured meat sausage of Italian origin, served in slices. | [noun] A grand slam. | [noun] A penis. SALMONS (9) SAMARAS (9) [noun] The winged indehiscent fruit of trees such as the ash, elm or maple SAMBAED (12) [verb] To dance the samba. SAMBARS (11) [noun] A Southeast Asian deer, Cervus unicolor. SAMBHAR (14) [noun] A Southeast Asian deer, Cervus unicolor. SAMBHUR (14) SAMBUCA (13) [noun] An Italian liqueur made from elderberries and flavoured with licorice, traditionally served with 3 coffee beans that represent health, wealth and fortune (or past, present and future). | [noun] An ancient form of triangular harp having a very sharp, shrill tone. SAMBUKE (15) SAMBURS (11) SAMECHS (14) SAMEKHS (16) SAMIELS (9) SAMISEN (9) [noun] A kind of three-stringed Japanese fretless lute. SAMITES (9) [noun] A material of rich silk, sometimes with gold threads, especially prized during the Middle Ages. SAMLETS (9) SAMOSAS (9) [noun] A snack, of Indian origin, consisting of a deep-fried triangular turnover filled with vegetables (especially potatoes) or meat. SAMOVAR (12) [noun] A metal urn with a spigot, for boiling water for making tea. Traditionally, the water is heated by hot coals or charcoal in a chimney-like tube which runs through the center of the urn. Today, it is more likely that the water is heated by an electric coil. SAMPANS (11) [noun] A flat-bottomed Chinese wooden boat propelled by two oars. SAMPLED (12) [verb] To take or to test a sample or samples of. | [verb] To reduce a continuous signal (such as a sound wave) to a discrete signal. | [verb] To reuse a portion of (an existing sound recording) in a new piece of music. SAMPLER (11) [noun] A piece of needlework embroidered with a variety of designs. | [noun] Someone whose job is to take samples. | [noun] A device that takes samples. SAMPLES (11) [noun] A part or snippet of something taken or presented for inspection, or shown as evidence of the quality of the whole; a specimen. | [noun] A subset of a population selected for measurement, observation or questioning, to provide statistical information about the population. | [noun] A small quantity of food for tasting, typically given away for free. SAMSARA (9) [noun] In Jainism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and some other eastern religions, the ongoing cycle of birth, death, and rebirth endured by human beings and all other mortal beings, and from which release is obtained by achieving the highest enlightenment. SAMSHUS (12) SAMURAI (9) [noun] In feudal Japan, a soldier who served a daimyo. SANCTUM (11) [noun] A place set apart, as with a sanctum sanctorum; a sacred or private place; a private retreat or workroom. SANDMAN (10) [noun] A legendary figure who is said to bring good sleep and dreams by sprinkling magical sand into people's eyes. | [noun] Used as a symbol of the passage of time toward death. SANDMEN (10) SANTIMI (9) SANTIMS (9) [noun] A subunit of Latvian currency. 100 santims equal a lat. | [noun] A subunit of Ethiopian currency. 100 santims equal a birr. SARCASM (11) [noun] Use of acerbic language to mock or convey contempt, often using irony and (in speech) often marked by overemphasis and a sneering tone of voice. | [noun] An act of sarcasm. SARCOMA (11) [noun] A type of malignant tumor of the bone, cartilage, fat, muscle, blood vessels, or other connective or supportive tissue. SARMENT (9) SASHIMI (12) [noun] A dish consisting of thin slices or pieces of raw fish or meat. SATSUMA (9) [noun] A seedless and easy-peeling cultivar of mandarin orange of Japanese origin; Citrus unshiu. SAWMILL (12) [noun] A machine, building or company used for cutting (milling) lumber. | [verb] To process (lumber) in a sawmill. SCAMMED (14) [verb] To defraud or embezzle. SCAMPED (14) [verb] To skimp; to do something in a skimpy or slipshod fashion. SCAMPER (13) [noun] A quick, light run. | [verb] To run quickly and lightly, especially in a playful or undignified manner. | [noun] One who skimps or does slipshod work. SCHEMAS (14) [noun] An outline or image universally applicable to a general conception, under which it is likely to be presented to the mind (for example, a body schema). | [noun] A formal description of the structure of a database: the names of the tables, the names of the columns of each table, and the data type and other attributes of each column. | [noun] (markup languages) A formal description of data, data types, and data file structures, such as XML schemas for XML files. SCHEMED (15) [verb] To plot, or contrive a plan. | [verb] To plan; to contrive. SCHEMER (14) [noun] One who plots or schemes, who formulates plans. | [noun] One who is given to scheming. SCHEMES (14) [noun] A systematic plan of future action. | [noun] A plot or secret, devious plan. | [noun] An orderly combination of related parts. SCHISMS (14) [noun] A split or separation within a group or organization, typically caused by discord. | [noun] A formal division or split within a religious body. | [noun] A split within Christianity whereby a group no longer recognizes the Bishop of Rome as the head of the Church, but shares essentially the same beliefs with the Church of Rome. In other words, a political split without the introduction of heresy. SCHLUMP (16) [noun] Someone who is lazy, slovenly or dull-looking. | [verb] To move in a heavy, lazy or slovenly way. SCHMALZ (23) [noun] Liquid chicken fat. | [noun] Excessively sentimental art or music. SCHMEAR (14) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SCHMEER (14) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SCHMOES (14) [noun] A stupid or obnoxious person SCHMOOS (14) SCHMUCK (20) [noun] A jerk; a person who is unlikable, detestable, or contemptible because he or she is stupid, foolish, clumsy, oafish, inept, malicious, or unpleasant. | [noun] A deplorable, pitiful person; often in the form poor schmuck. SCOTOMA (11) [noun] An area of impaired or lost vision within a field of vision otherwise in a good (or at least healthy) state. SCREAMS (11) [noun] A loud, emphatic, exclamation of extreme emotion, especially horror, fear, excitement, or anger; it may comprise a word or a sustained, high-pitched vowel sound. | [noun] A form of singing associated with the metal and screamo styles of music. It is a loud, rough, distorted version of the voice; rather than the normal voice of the singer. | [noun] Used as an intensifier SCRIMPS (13) [noun] A pinching miser; a niggard. | [verb] To make too small or short. | [verb] To limit or straiten; to put on short allowance. SCRIMPY (16) SCROTUM (11) [noun] The bag of skin and muscle that contains the testicles in mammals. SCUMBAG (14) [noun] Condom | [noun] (mildly) sleazy, disreputable or despicable person; lowlife SCUMBLE (13) [noun] An opaque kind of glaze (layer of paint). | [verb] To apply an opaque glaze to an area of a painting to make it softer or duller. SCUMMED (14) [verb] To remove the layer of scum from (a liquid etc.). | [verb] To remove (something) as scum. | [verb] To become covered with scum. SCUMMER (13) [noun] An instrument for taking off scum | [noun] A supporter of Southampton F.C.. | [noun] One who engages in scumming. | [noun] Excrement, scumber SEAMARK (13) [noun] Any elevated object on land which serves as a guide to mariners, such as a hill or steeple. | [noun] A beacon, buoy, etc. placed in the sea to aid navigation. SEAMERS (9) [noun] A person who sews seams. | [noun] Part of a sewing machine that creates seams. | [noun] A bowler skilled at making the ball seam. SEAMIER (9) [adjective] Sordid, squalid or corrupt. | [adjective] Having or showing a seam. SEAMING (10) [verb] To put together with a seam. | [verb] To make the appearance of a seam in, as in knitting a stocking; hence, to knit with a certain stitch, like that in such knitting. | [verb] To mark with a seam or line; to scar. SEDARIM (10) SEEDMAN (10) SEEDMEN (10) SEEMERS (9) SEEMING (10) [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. | [verb] To befit; to beseem. | [noun] Outward appearance. SEGMENT (10) [noun] A length of some object. | [noun] One of the parts into which any body naturally separates or is divided; a part divided or cut off; a section; a portion. | [noun] A portion. SEISMAL (9) SEISMIC (11) [adjective] Related to, or caused by an earthquake or other vibration of the Earth. | [adjective] Of very large or widespread effect. SELFDOM (13) SEMATIC (11) SEMEMES (11) [noun] The smallest unit of meaning; especially the meaning expressed by a morpheme. SEMEMIC (13) SEMIDRY (13) SEMIFIT (12) SEMILOG (10) SEMIMAT (11) SEMINAL (9) [noun] A seed. | [adjective] Of or relating to seed or semen. | [adjective] Creative or having the power to originate. SEMINAR (9) [noun] A class held for advanced studies in which students meet regularly to discuss original research, under the guidance of a professor. | [noun] A meeting held for the exchange of useful information by members of a common business community. SEMIPRO (11) [noun] Semiprofessional. | [adjective] Semiprofessional. SEMIRAW (12) SEMISES (9) SENTIMO (9) SEPTIME (11) [noun] The seventh defensive position, with the sword hand held at waist height, and the tip of the sword at knee level. SEPTUMS (11) SERFDOM (13) [noun] The state of being a serf. | [noun] The feudal system that includes serfs. SERIEMA (9) [noun] Either of two species of bird in the family Cariamidae, endemic to South America. SERMONS (9) [noun] Religious discourse; a written or spoken address on a religious or moral matter. | [noun] A lengthy speech of reproval. SERUMAL (9) SESAMES (9) SEXISMS (16) SFUMATO (12) [noun] In painting, the application of subtle layers of translucent paint so that there is no visible transition between colors, tones and often objects. SHAHDOM (16) SHALOMS (12) SHAMANS (12) [noun] A traditional (prescientific) faith healer. | [noun] A member of certain tribal societies who acts as a religious medium between the concrete and spirit worlds. SHAMBLE (14) [noun] One of a succession of niches or platforms, one above another, to hold ore which is thrown successively from platform to platform, and thus raised to a higher level. | [verb] To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet. SHAMING (13) [verb] To cause to feel shame. | [verb] To cover with reproach or ignominy; to dishonor; to disgrace. | [verb] To drive or compel by shame. SHAMMAS (14) SHAMMED (15) [verb] To deceive, cheat, lie. | [verb] To obtrude by fraud or imposition. | [verb] To assume the manner and character of; to imitate; to ape; to feign. SHAMMER (14) SHAMMES (14) SHAMMOS (14) SHAMOIS (12) SHAMOYS (15) SHAMPOO (14) [noun] A traditional Indian and Persian body massage given after pouring warm water over the body and rubbing it with extracts from herbs. | [noun] A commercial liquid soap product for washing hair or other fibres/fibers, such as carpets. | [noun] An instance of washing the hair or other fibres with shampoo. SHIMMED (15) [verb] To fit one or more shims to a piece of machinery. | [verb] To adjust something by using shims. | [verb] To intercept and modify calls to (an API), usually for compatibility purposes. SHIMMER (14) [noun] A faint or veiled and tremulous gleam or shining. | [noun] A measure of the irregularities in the loudness of a particular pitch over time. | [verb] To shine with a veiled, tremulous, or intermittent light; to gleam faintly. SHIPMAN (14) SHIPMEN (14) SHITTIM (12) SHLUMPS (14) [noun] Someone who is lazy, slovenly or dull-looking. SHLUMPY (17) SHMALTZ (21) SHMEARS (12) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SHMOOZE (21) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SHMUCKS (18) [noun] A jerk; a person who is unlikable, detestable, or contemptible because he or she is stupid, foolish, clumsy, oafish, inept, malicious, or unpleasant. | [noun] A deplorable, pitiful person; often in the form poor schmuck. SHOLOMS (12) SHOPMAN (14) [noun] The proprietor, manager or operator of a small store. SHOPMEN (14) [noun] The proprietor, manager or operator of a small store. SHOWMAN (15) [noun] A person who produces or presents shows as a profession, especially the proprietor, manager, or MC of a circus or variety show. | [noun] A person skilled in dramatic or entertaining presentation, performance, or publicity. SHOWMEN (15) [noun] A person who produces or presents shows as a profession, especially the proprietor, manager, or MC of a circus or variety show. | [noun] A person skilled in dramatic or entertaining presentation, performance, or publicity. SHRIMPS (14) [noun] Any of many swimming, often edible crustaceans, chiefly of the infraorder Caridea or the suborder Dendrobranchiata, with slender legs, long whiskers and a long abdomen. | [noun] The flesh of such crustaceans. | [noun] A small, puny or unimportant person. SHRIMPY (17) SIAMANG (10) [noun] A large black gibbon, Symphalangus syndactylus, from Sumatra SIAMESE (9) SIDEARM (10) [noun] A personal weapon, such as a handgun or sword, carried on the hip in a belt, sheath, holster, etc for rapid access. | [verb] To throw a ball with one's arm roughly parallel to the ground. | [adverb] With one's arm roughly parallel to the ground. SIDEMAN (10) [noun] A soloist playing with a band or group of which he is not a regular member. | [noun] Somebody who is unimportant or irrelevant. SIDEMEN (10) [noun] A soloist playing with a band or group of which he is not a regular member. | [noun] Somebody who is unimportant or irrelevant. SIEMENS (9) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of electrical conductance; the electric conductance in a body that has a resistance of one ohm. Symbol: S SIGMATE (10) [adjective] Shaped like the Greek letter sigma SIGMOID (11) [noun] A function having a graph whose shape is sigmoid.. | [adjective] Curved in two directions, like the letter "S", or the Greek ς (sigma). | [adjective] Semi-circular, like the lunar sigma (similar to English C). SIMIANS (9) [noun] An ape or monkey, especially an anthropoid. SIMILAR (9) [noun] That which is similar to, or resembles, something else, as in quality, form, etc. | [noun] A material that produces an effect that resembles the symptoms of a particular disease. | [adjective] Having traits or characteristics in common; alike, comparable. SIMILES (9) [noun] A figure of speech in which one thing is compared to another, in the case of English generally using like or as. SIMIOID (10) SIMIOUS (9) SIMITAR (9) SIMLINS (9) SIMMERS (11) [verb] To cook or undergo heating slowly at or below the boiling point. | [verb] To cause to cook or to cause to undergo heating slowly at or below the boiling point. | [verb] To be on the point of breaking out into anger; to be agitated. SIMNELS (9) SIMOOMS (11) [noun] A hot, dry, suffocating, dust-laden wind of the desert, particularly of Arabia, Syria, and neighboring countries, generated by the extreme heat of the parched deserts or sandy plains. SIMOONS (9) [noun] A hot, dry, suffocating, dust-laden wind of the desert, particularly of Arabia, Syria, and neighboring countries, generated by the extreme heat of the parched deserts or sandy plains. SIMPERS (11) [noun] A foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, or affected smile; a smirk. | [verb] To smile in a foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, coy, or smug manner. | [verb] To glimmer; to twinkle. SIMPLER (11) [adjective] Uncomplicated; taken by itself, with nothing added. | [adjective] Without ornamentation; plain. | [adjective] Free from duplicity; guileless, innocent, straightforward. SIMPLES (11) [noun] A herbal preparation made from one plant, as opposed to something made from more than one plant. | [noun] (by extension) A physician. | [noun] A simple or atomic proposition. SIMPLEX (18) [noun] An analogue in any dimension of the triangle or tetrahedron: the convex hull of n+1 points in n-dimensional space. | [noun] A simple word, one without affixes. | [adjective] Single, simple; not complex. SIMULAR (9) SISTRUM (9) [noun] An ancient Egyptian musical instrument, to be shaken, consisting of a metal frame holding percussive metal beads. SITCOMS (11) [noun] Acronym of single income, two children, oppressive/outrageous mortgage. | [noun] An episodic comedy television program with a plot or storyline based around a particular humorous situation. SJAMBOK (22) [noun] A stout whip, especially made of rhinoceros or hippopotamus hide. | [verb] To whip with a sjambok; to horsewhip. SKELLUM (13) SKIMMED (16) [verb] To pass lightly; to glide along in an even, smooth course; to glide along near the surface. | [verb] To pass near the surface of; to brush the surface of; to glide swiftly along the surface of. | [verb] To hasten along with superficial attention. SKIMMER (15) [noun] A device that skims. | [noun] A person who skims. | [noun] Any of three species of bird in the genus Rynchops of the family Laridae, that feed by skimming the surface of water bodies with their bills in flight. | [verb] To shimmer. SKIMPED (16) [verb] To mock, deride, scorn, scold, make fun of. | [verb] To slight; to do carelessly; to scamp. | [verb] To make insufficient allowance for; to scant; to scrimp. SKOOKUM (17) [noun] (chiefly among Northwest Coast Aboriginal people) An evil spirit or woodland monster or giant. | [noun] A type of doll based on the mythical woodland monster. | [adjective] (Northwest US) Excellent, impressive. SLALOMS (9) [verb] To race in a slalom. | [verb] To move in a slalom-like manner. SLAMMED (12) [verb] To shut with sudden force so as to produce a shock and noise. | [verb] To put in or on a particular place with force and loud noise. (Often followed by a preposition such as down, against or into.) | [verb] To strike forcefully with some implement. SLAMMER (11) [noun] One who, or that which, slams. | [noun] (usually "the slammer") Jail, prison. | [noun] A tequila cocktail. SLIMIER (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to slime | [adjective] Resembling, of the nature of, covered or daubed with, or abounding in slime | [adjective] Friendly in a false, calculating way; underhanded; sneaky; slick; smarmy. SLIMILY (12) SLIMING (10) [verb] To coat with slime. | [verb] To besmirch or disparage. | [verb] To carve (fish), removing the offal. SLIMMED (12) [verb] To lose weight in order to achieve slimness. | [verb] To make slimmer; to reduce in size. SLIMMER (11) [adjective] Slender, thin. | [adjective] (of something abstract like a chance or margin) Very small, tiny. | [adjective] (rural) Bad, of questionable quality; not strongly built, flimsy. SLIMPSY (14) SLUMBER (11) [noun] A very light state of sleep, almost awake. | [noun] A state of ignorance or inaction. | [verb] To be in a very light state of sleep, almost awake. SLUMGUM (12) SLUMISM (11) SLUMMED (12) [verb] To visit a neighborhood of a status below one's own. SLUMMER (11) SLUMPED (12) [verb] To collapse heavily or helplessly. | [verb] To decline or fall off in activity or performance. | [verb] To slouch or droop. SMACKED (16) [verb] To get the flavor of. | [verb] To indicate or suggest something; used with of. | [verb] To have a particular taste; used with of. SMACKER (15) [noun] One who smacks or spanks. | [noun] One who makes a smacking noise, especially while eating. | [noun] A kiss. SMALLER (9) [adjective] Not large or big; insignificant; few in number. | [adjective] Young, as a child. | [adjective] (writing, incomparable) Minuscule or lowercase, referring to written or printed letters. SMALTOS (9) SMARAGD (11) SMARTED (10) [verb] To hurt or sting. | [verb] To cause a smart or sting in. | [verb] To feel a pungent pain of mind; to feel sharp pain or grief; be punished severely; to feel the sting of evil. SMARTEN (9) [verb] To make smarter in appearance; to refurbish or spruce up. | [verb] To increase the speed of (one's travel on foot, etc.). | [verb] To augment with computer technology. SMARTER (9) [adjective] Exhibiting social ability or cleverness. | [adjective] Exhibiting intellectual knowledge, such as that found in books. | [adjective] (often in combination) Equipped with intelligent behaviour (digital/computer technology). SMARTIE (9) SMARTLY (12) [adverb] In a smart manner. | [adverb] Quickly. | [adverb] Intelligently. SMASHED (13) [verb] To break (something brittle) violently. | [verb] To be destroyed by being smashed. | [verb] To hit extremely hard. SMASHER (12) [noun] Something that, or someone who, smashes. | [noun] An attractive person (see also smashing). | [noun] Anything very large or extraordinary; a whopper. SMASHES (12) [noun] The sound of a violent impact; a violent striking together. | [noun] A traffic collision. | [noun] Something very successful or popular (as music, food, fashion, etc); a hit. SMASHUP (14) [noun] An abrupt, damaging breakdown or failure. | [noun] A violent collision involving one or more vehicles. SMATTER (9) [noun] A smattering (small number or amount). | [noun] A smattering (superficial knowledge). | [verb] To talk superficially; to babble, chatter. SMEARED (10) [verb] To spread (a substance, especially one that colours or is dirty) across a surface by rubbing. | [verb] To have a substance smeared on (a surface). | [verb] To damage someone's reputation by slandering, misrepresenting, or otherwise making false accusations about an individual, their statements, or their actions. SMEARER (9) SMECTIC (13) [noun] A liquid crystal having the molecules aligned in this way. | [adjective] Cleansing. | [adjective] Astringent; detergent. SMEDDUM (13) SMEEKED (14) SMEGMAS (12) SMELLED (10) [verb] To sense a smell or smells. | [verb] Followed by like or of if descriptive: to have a particular smell, whether good or bad. | [verb] (without a modifier) To smell bad; to stink. SMELLER (9) SMELTED (10) [verb] To fuse or melt two things into one, especially in order to extract metal from ore; to meld SMELTER (9) [noun] A person employed to do smelting. | [noun] A machine used to smelt metal. | [noun] A place where smelting is done. SMERKED (14) SMIDGEN (11) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMIDGES (11) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMIDGIN (11) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMILERS (9) SMILING (10) [verb] To have (a smile) on one's face. | [verb] To express by smiling. | [verb] To express amusement, pleasure, or love and kindness. SMIRKED (14) [verb] To smile in a way that is affected, smug, insolent or contemptuous. SMIRKER (13) SMITERS (9) SMITING (10) [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To strike down or kill with godly force. | [verb] To injure with divine power. | [noun] The act of one who smites. SMITTEN (9) [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To strike down or kill with godly force. | [verb] To injure with divine power. SMOCKED (16) [verb] To provide with, or clothe in, a smock or a smock frock. | [verb] To apply smocking. SMOKERS (13) [noun] A person who smokes tobacco habitually. | [noun] A smoking car on a train. | [noun] An informal social gathering for men only, at which smoking tobacco is allowed. SMOKIER (13) [adjective] Filled with smoke. | [adjective] Giving off smoke. | [adjective] Of a colour or colour pattern similar to that of smoke. SMOKILY (16) SMOKING (14) [verb] To inhale and exhale the smoke from a burning cigarette, cigar, pipe, etc. | [verb] To inhale and exhale tobacco smoke. | [verb] To give off smoke. | [noun] The act or process of emitting smoke. SMOLDER (10) [verb] To burn with no flame and little smoke. | [verb] To show signs of repressed anger or suppressed mental turmoil or other strong emotion, such as passion. | [verb] To exist in a suppressed or hidden state. SMOOCHY (17) SMOOTHS (12) [noun] Something that is smooth, or that goes smoothly and easily. | [noun] A smoothing action. | [noun] A domestic animal having a smooth coat. SMOOTHY (15) SMOTHER (12) [verb] To suffocate; stifle; obstruct, more or less completely, the respiration of something or someone. | [verb] To extinguish or deaden, as fire, by covering, overlaying, or otherwise excluding the air. | [verb] To reduce to a low degree of vigor or activity; suppress or do away with; extinguish | [noun] That which smothers or appears to smother, particularly SMUDGED (12) [verb] To obscure by blurring; to smear. | [verb] To soil or smear with dirt. | [verb] To use dense smoke to protect from insects. SMUDGES (11) [noun] A blemish or smear, especially a dark or sooty one. | [noun] Dense smoke, such as that used for fumigation. | [noun] A heap of damp combustibles partially ignited and burning slowly, placed on the windward side of a house, tent, etc. to keep off mosquitoes or other insects. SMUGGER (11) [adjective] Irritatingly pleased with oneself, offensively self-complacent, self-satisfied. | [adjective] Studiously neat or nice, especially in dress; spruce; affectedly precise; smooth and prim. SMUGGLE (11) [verb] To import or export, illicitly or by stealth, without paying lawful customs charges or duties | [verb] To bring in surreptitiously | [verb] To fondle or cuddle. SMUTCHY (17) SMUTTED (10) [verb] To stain (or be stained) with soot or other dirt. | [verb] To taint (grain, etc.) with the smut fungus. | [verb] To become tainted by the smut fungus. SNOWMAN (12) [noun] A humanoid figure made with large snowballs stacked on each other. Human traits like a face and arms may be fashioned with sticks (arms), a carrot (nose), and stones or coal (eyes, mouth). | [noun] A score of eight, especially within one inning (in baseball) or on one hole (in golf, where it is also known as dogballs). | [noun] A playing card with the rank of eight. SNOWMEN (12) [noun] A humanoid figure made with large snowballs stacked on each other. Human traits like a face and arms may be fashioned with sticks (arms), a carrot (nose), and stones or coal (eyes, mouth). | [noun] A score of eight, especially within one inning (in baseball) or on one hole (in golf, where it is also known as dogballs). | [noun] A playing card with the rank of eight. SOCKMAN (15) SOCKMEN (15) SODIUMS (10) SOKEMAN (13) SOKEMEN (13) SOLANUM (9) [noun] Any plant in the genus Solanum. | [noun] A traditional green vegetable in the genus Solanum, specifically Solanum nigrum, and sometimes Solanum macrocarpon, Solanum scabrun, and Solanum villosum. SOMATIC (11) [adjective] Part of, or relating to the body of an organism. | [adjective] Pertaining, and restricted, to an individual; not inheritable. | [adjective] Of or relating to the wall of the body; somatopleuric; parietal. SOMEDAY (13) [adverb] Sometime; at some unspecified time in the future. SOMEHOW (15) [adverb] In one way or another; in a way not yet known or explained; by some means SOMEONE (9) [noun] A partially specified but unnamed person. | [noun] An important person | [pronoun] Some person. SOMEWAY (15) [adverb] Somehow. SOMITAL (9) SOMITES (9) [noun] One of the paired masses of mesoderm distributed along the sides of the neural tube that will eventually become dermis, skeletal muscle, or vertebrae. | [noun] A metamere, one of a series of segments, arranged longitudinally, of which some animals are composed. SOMITIC (11) SOPHISM (14) [noun] A method of teaching using the techniques of philosophy and rhetoric. | [noun] A flawed argument, superficially correct in its reasoning, usually designed to deceive. | [noun] An intentional fallacy. | [noun] A denomination in Islam emphasizing mysticism, asceticism and music. SORGHUM (13) [noun] A cereal, Sorghum bicolor (syn. Sorghum vulgare) the grains of which are used to make flour and as cattle feed. | [noun] Sorghum syrup. SOYMILK (16) [noun] A milky liquid made from soy beans and used as a beverage, cooking ingredient or substitute for dairy milk. | [noun] An individual serving of such a beverage. SPERMIC (13) SPIREME (11) SPIREMS (11) SPUMIER (11) SPUMING (12) [verb] To froth. SPUMONE (11) SPUMONI (11) [noun] An Italian style of ice cream dessert made with layers of different colors and flavors (typically cherry, pistachio, and vanilla or chocolate) and usually containing candied fruits and nuts. SPUMOUS (11) SQUAMAE (18) SQUIRMS (18) [verb] To twist one's body with snakelike motions. | [verb] To twist in discomfort, especially from shame or embarrassment. | [verb] To evade a question, an interviewer etc. SQUIRMY (21) STADIUM (10) [noun] A venue where sporting events are held. | [noun] An Ancient Greek racecourse, especially, the Olympic course for foot races. | [noun] A Greek measure of length, being the chief one used for itinerary distances, also adopted by the Romans for nautical and astronomical measurements, equal to 600 Greek or 625 Roman feet, or 125 Roman paces, or to 606 feet, 9 inches. STAMENS (9) [noun] In flowering plants, the structure in a flower that produces pollen, typically consisting of an anther and a filament. STAMINA (9) [noun] The energy and strength for continuing to do something over a long period of time; power of sustained exertion, or resistance to hardship, illness etc. | [noun] The basic elements of a thing; rudimentary structures or qualities. | [noun] In flowering plants, the structure in a flower that produces pollen, typically consisting of an anther and a filament. STAMMEL (11) STAMMER (11) [noun] The involuntary repetition of a sound in speech. | [verb] To keep repeating a particular sound involuntarily during speech. | [verb] To utter with a stammer, or with timid hesitancy. STAMPED (12) [verb] To step quickly and heavily, once or repeatedly. | [verb] To move (the foot or feet) quickly and heavily, once or repeatedly. | [verb] To strike, beat, or press forcibly with the bottom of the foot, or by thrusting the foot downward. STAMPER (11) STANNUM (9) STARDOM (10) [noun] The status or position of a performer acknowledged to be a star; fame; celebrity. STASIMA (9) STATISM (9) [noun] The belief that the centralization of power in a state (sovereign polity) is the ideal or best way to organize humanity. STEAMED (10) [verb] To cook with steam. | [verb] To expose to the action of steam; to apply steam to for softening, dressing, or preparing. | [verb] To produce or vent steam. STEAMER (9) [noun] A device or object that works by the operation of steam. | [noun] A mode of transportation propelled by steam. | [noun] A babycino (frothy milk drink). | [noun] A mug. STEMMAS (11) STEMMED (12) [verb] To remove the stem from. | [verb] To be caused or derived; to originate. | [verb] To descend in a family line. STEMMER (11) STEMSON (9) STERNUM (9) [noun] The breastbone | [noun] The sclerotized plate of spiders, between the coxae, marking the floor of the cephalothorax STEWBUM (14) [noun] A homeless alcoholic. STIBIUM (11) STICKUM (15) [noun] Any adhesive, adhesive residue; any sticky or gummy substance. STIGMAL (10) STIGMAS (10) [noun] A mark of infamy or disgrace. | [noun] A scar or birthmark. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural stigmata) A mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion on Jesus' body, and sometimes reported to bleed periodically. STIMIED (10) [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. | [verb] To bring into the position of, or impede by, a stymie. STIMIES (9) [noun] A situation where an opponent's ball is directly in the way of one's own ball and the hole, on the putting green (abolished 1952). | [noun] (by extension) An obstacle or obstruction. | [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. STIMULI (9) [noun] Any external phenomenon that has an influence on a system, by triggering or modifying an internal phenomenon. | [noun] Something external that elicits or influences a physiological or psychological activity or response. | [noun] Anything effectively impinging upon any of the sensory apparatuses of a living organism, including physical phenomena both internal and external to the body. STOMACH (14) [noun] An organ in animals that stores food in the process of digestion. | [noun] The belly. | [noun] Pride, haughtiness. STOMATA (9) [noun] One of the tiny pores in the epidermis of a leaf or stem through which gases and water vapor pass. | [noun] A small opening in a membrane; a surgically constructed opening, especially one in the abdominal wall that permits the passage of waste after a colostomy or ileostomy. | [noun] A mouthlike opening, such as the oral cavity of a nematode. STOMATE (9) [noun] Stoma STOMPED (12) [verb] To trample heavily. | [verb] To severely beat someone physically or figuratively. STOMPER (11) STORMED (10) [verb] (with adverbial of direction) To move quickly and noisily like a storm, usually in a state of uproar or anger. | [verb] To rage or fume; to be in a violent temper. | [verb] To assault (a stronghold or fortification) with military forces. STRATUM (9) [noun] One of several parallel horizontal layers of material arranged one on top of another. | [noun] A layer of sedimentary rock having approximately the same composition throughout. | [noun] Any of the regions of the atmosphere, such as the stratosphere, that occur as layers. STREAMS (9) [noun] A small river; a large creek; a body of moving water confined by banks. | [noun] A thin connected passing of a liquid through a lighter gas (e.g. air). | [noun] Any steady flow or succession of material, such as water, air, radio signal or words. STREAMY (12) STROMAL (9) [adjective] Relating to a stroma | [adjective] Relating to sister chromatid cohesion STRUMAE (9) [noun] Scrofula. | [noun] A scrofulous swelling; a tumour or goitre. STRUMAS (9) STUMBLE (11) [noun] A fall, trip or substantial misstep. | [noun] An error or blunder. | [noun] A clumsy walk. STUMMED (12) [verb] To ferment. | [verb] To renew (wine etc.) by mixing must with it and raising a new fermentation. | [verb] To fume, as a cask of liquor, with burning sulphur. STUMPED (12) [verb] To stop, confuse, or puzzle. | [verb] To baffle; to make unable to find an answer to a question or problem. | [verb] To campaign. STUMPER (11) [noun] One who stumps, or speaks, or orates, as a politician. | [noun] A difficult puzzle or problem. | [noun] A boastful person. STYMIED (13) [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. | [verb] To bring into the position of, or impede by, a stymie. STYMIES (12) [noun] A situation where an opponent's ball is directly in the way of one's own ball and the hole, on the putting green (abolished 1952). | [noun] (by extension) An obstacle or obstruction. | [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. SUBATOM (11) SUBGUMS (12) SUBITEM (11) SUBLIME (11) [verb] To sublimate. | [verb] To raise on high. | [verb] To exalt; to heighten; to improve; to purify. | [noun] Something sublime. SUBMENU (11) [noun] A secondary menu available through another menu, especially one that branches off the first. SUBMISS (11) SUBMITS (11) [verb] To yield or give way to another. | [verb] To yield (something) to another, as when defeated. | [verb] To enter or put forward for approval, consideration, marking etc. SUBSUME (11) [verb] To place (any one cognition) under another as belonging to it; to include or contain something else. | [verb] To consider an occurrence as part of a principle or rule; to colligate SUCCUMB (15) [verb] To yield to an overpowering force or overwhelming desire. | [verb] To give up, or give in. | [verb] To die. SUMACHS (14) [noun] Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus and other genera in Anacardiaceae, particularly the elm-leaved sumac, Sicilian sumac, or tanner's sumac (Rhus coriaria). | [noun] Dried and chopped-up leaves and stems of a plant of the genus Rhus, particularly the tanner's sumac (see sense 1), used for dyeing and tanning leather or for medicinal purposes. | [noun] A sour spice popular in the Eastern Mediterranean, made from the berries of tanner's sumac. SUMLESS (9) SUMMAND (12) [noun] Something which is added or summed. SUMMARY (14) [noun] An abstract or a condensed presentation of the substance of a body of material. | [adjective] Concise, brief or presented in a condensed form | [adjective] Performed speedily and without formal ceremony. SUMMATE (11) SUMMERS (11) [noun] One of four seasons, traditionally the second, marked by the longest and typically hottest days of the year due to the inclination of the Earth and thermal lag. Typically regarded as being from June 21 to September 22 or 23 in parts of the USA, the months of June, July and August in the United Kingdom and the months of December, January and February in the Southern Hemisphere. | [noun] Year; used to give the age of a person, usually a young one. | [noun] Someone with light, pinkish skin that has a blue undertone, light hair and eyes, seen as best suited to certain colors of clothing. SUMMERY (14) [adjective] Relating to the summer. | [adjective] Of weather, typical of summer. SUMMING (12) [verb] To add together. | [verb] To give a summary of. | [noun] The act or result of addition; a sum. SUMMITS (11) [noun] A peak; the topmost point or surface, as of a mountain. | [noun] A gathering or assembly of leaders. SUMMONS (11) [noun] A call to do something, especially to come. | [noun] A notice summoning someone to appear in court, as a defendant, juror or witness. | [noun] A demand for surrender. | [verb] To call people together; to convene. SUMPTER (11) [noun] The driver of a packhorse. | [noun] A packhorse; a beast of burden. | [noun] A pack; a burden. SUNBEAM (11) [noun] A visible, narrow, and intense (relative to ambient light) ray of sunlight. | [noun] An item of cutlery or crockery laid out on a table, but not used, and which can be returned to the drawer without being washed. | [noun] Any of various lycaenid butterflies of the genus Curetis. SUNLAMP (11) [noun] A lamp that produces ultraviolet radiation; used for therapeutic or cosmetic purposes. | [noun] A high-intensity lamp, used to produce an illusion of daylight. SUNROOM (9) [noun] A room in a residence with numerous large windows admitting sunlight. | [noun] Solarium SUPREME (11) [noun] The highest point. | [noun] A pizza having a large number of the most common toppings, such as pepperoni, bell peppers, onions, mushrooms, olives, etc. | [noun] A breast of chicken or duck with the wing bone attached. SUPREMO (11) [noun] The most important person in an organization. SURMISE (9) [noun] Thought, imagination, or conjecture, which may be based upon feeble or scanty evidence; suspicion; guess. | [noun] Reflection; thought; posit. | [verb] To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises. SURNAME (9) [noun] An additional name, particularly those derived from a birthplace, quality, or achievement; an epithet. | [noun] An additional name given to a person, place, or thing; a byname or nickname. | [noun] The name a person shares with other members of that person's family, distinguished from that person's given name or names; a family name. SWAGMAN (13) [noun] An itinerant person who walks from farm to farm carrying a swag and seeking work, often in exchange for food and lodging. | [noun] A fence, a middleman for transactions of stolen goods. SWAGMEN (13) [noun] An itinerant person who walks from farm to farm carrying a swag and seeking work, often in exchange for food and lodging. | [noun] A fence, a middleman for transactions of stolen goods. SWAMIES (12) SWAMPED (15) [verb] To drench or fill with water. | [verb] To overwhelm; to make too busy, or overrun the capacity of. | [verb] To plunge into difficulties and perils; to overwhelm; to ruin; to wreck. SWAMPER (14) [noun] A person who lives in a swampy area. | [noun] A person who clears a road for lumberers in a forest or swamp. | [noun] Someone or something that swamps or overwhelms. SWARMED (13) [verb] To move as a swarm. | [verb] To teem, or be overrun with insects, people, etc. | [verb] To fill a place as a swarm. SWARMER (12) [noun] Something that swarms. SWIMMER (14) [noun] One who swims. | [noun] A protuberance on the leg of a horse. | [noun] A webfooted aquatic bird. SYMBION (14) SYMBIOT (14) SYMBOLS (14) [noun] A character or glyph representing an idea, concept or object. | [noun] A thing considered the embodiment of a concept or object. | [noun] A type of noun whereby the form refers to the same entity independently of the context; a symbol arbitrarily denotes a referent. See also icon and index. SYMPTOM (16) [noun] A perceived change in some function, sensation or appearance of a person that indicates a disease or disorder, such as fever, headache or rash. | [noun] A signal; anything that indicates, or is characteristic of, the presence of something else, especially of something undesirable. SYNCOMS (14) SYNGAMY (16) [noun] The fusion of two gametes to form a zygote. SYNONYM (15) [noun] (strictly) A word whose meaning is the same as that of another word. | [noun] A word or phrase with a meaning that is the same as, or very similar to, another word or phrase. | [noun] Any of the formal names for a taxon, including the valid name (i.e. the senior synonym). SYSTEMS (12) [noun] A collection of organized things; a whole composed of relationships among its members. | [noun] A method or way of organizing or planning. TACHISM (14) [noun] A French style of abstract painting popular in the 1940s and 1950s. TAGMEME (12) [noun] (grammar, tagmemics) The smallest functional element in the grammatical structure of a sentence. TALCUMS (11) [noun] Powdered and perfumed talc for toilet use. | [verb] To perfume with talcum powder. TAMABLE (11) TAMALES (9) [noun] Mexican dish of cornmeal dough shell filled with various ingredients (e.g. chopped beef, pork, sweet filling) then steamed in corn husks. TAMANDU (10) TAMARAO (9) TAMARAU (9) [noun] A small, dark brown, hoofed buffalo, Bubalus mindorensis, found only on Mindoro in the Philippines. TAMARIN (9) [noun] One of a family of squirrel-sized South American monkeys. TAMARIS (9) TAMASHA (12) [noun] A visual art form from Maharashtra, India, involving singing and dancing. | [noun] (colonial India) Any traditional indigenous public ceremony. TAMBACS (13) TAMBAKS (15) TAMBALA (11) [noun] Malawi's minor currency unit, a hundredth of a kwacha. TAMBOUR (11) [noun] A percussive musical instrument spanned with a thin covering on at least one end for striking, forming an acoustic chamber, affecting what materials are used to make it; a membranophone. | [noun] Any similar hollow, cylindrical object. | [noun] A barrel or large cylindrical container for liquid transport and storage. TAMBURA (11) [noun] A type of long-necked lute-like stringed instrument found throughout the world but originating in the traditional music of India. TAMBURS (11) TAMEINS (9) TAMISES (9) TAMMIES (11) [noun] A culinary strainer, originally made from worsted cloth | [noun] The cloth itself; tammy. | [noun] A kind of woolen, or woolen and cotton, cloth, often highly glazed, used for curtains, sieves, strainers, etc. TAMPALA (11) TAMPANS (11) TAMPERS (11) [noun] A person or thing that tamps. | [noun] A tool used to tamp something down, such as tobacco in a pipe. | [noun] A railway vehicle used to tamp down ballast. TAMPING (12) [verb] (blasting) To plug up with clay, earth, dry sand, sod, or other material, as a hole bored in a rock. | [verb] To drive in or pack down by frequent gentle strokes | [verb] To reduce the intensity of. TAMPION (11) [noun] A wooden plug, or a metal or canvas cover for the muzzle of a gun, a cannon or other piece of ordnance when not in use; a stopper; a bung. | [noun] A plug for the upper end of an organ pipe. TAMPONS (11) [noun] A plug of cotton or other absorbent material inserted into a body cavity or wound to absorb fluid, especially one inserted in the vagina during menstruation. | [noun] A double-headed drumstick primarily for the bass drum. | [noun] An inking pad used in lithographic printing. TANDEMS (10) [noun] A carriage pulled by two or more draught animals (generally draught horses) harnessed one behind the other, both providing the pulling power but only the animal in front able to steer. | [noun] (transferred sense) A bicycle or tricycle in which two people sit one behind the other, both able to pedal but only the person in front able to steer. | [noun] A group of two or more people, machines etc. working together; close collaboration. TANGRAM (10) [noun] A Chinese puzzle made of a square that is cut up into different triangular pieces which can then be reassembled to make designs. TANTRUM (9) [noun] An often childish display or fit of bad temper. | [verb] To throw a tantrum. TAPETUM (11) [noun] A membranous layer of tissue. | [noun] The pigmentary layer of the retina. | [noun] The cells on the outside of an archesporium. TAPROOM (11) [noun] A bar or barroom; a room where alcoholic beverages are served on tap. TARAMAS (9) TARMACS (11) [noun] Tarmacadam. | [noun] Any bituminous road surfacing material. | [noun] The driveable surface of a road. TATAMIS (9) [noun] Straw matting, in a standard size, used as a floor covering in Japanese houses TAXEMES (16) TAXEMIC (18) TAXIMAN (16) TAXIMEN (16) TEAMING (10) [verb] To form a group, as for sports or work. | [verb] (by extension) To go together well; to harmonize. | [verb] To convey or haul with a team. TEAROOM (9) [noun] A café which serves tea, usually with light food. | [noun] A public lavatory, particularly as a meeting place for homosexual men. | [noun] A room in a workplace set aside for tea breaks, lunch breaks, snacking, etc.; a break room. TEATIME (9) [noun] The traditional time, in the late afternoon, for serving tea (the meal). TEDIUMS (10) TEEMERS (9) TEEMING (10) [verb] To be stocked to overflowing. | [verb] To be prolific; to abound; to be rife. | [verb] To bring forth young, as an animal; to produce fruit, as a plant; to bear; to be pregnant; to conceive; to multiply. TEGMINA (10) [noun] A covering or integument, usually referring to a thin layer or membrane in an organism. | [noun] An integument such as the inner membrane of the coat of a seed. | [noun] A covering such as the thin layer of bone in the roof of the middle ear of mammals. TEGUMEN (10) TELAMON (9) [noun] A figure of a man (often Atlas) used as a pillar for support. TELEMAN (9) TELEMEN (9) TELOMES (9) TELOMIC (11) TEMBLOR (11) [noun] An earthquake. TEMPEHS (14) TEMPERA (11) [noun] A medium used to bind pigments in painting, as well as the associated artistic techniques. | [noun] A painting done in this medium. TEMPERS (11) [noun] A tendency to be in a certain type of mood; a habitual way of thinking, behaving or reacting. | [noun] State of mind; mood. | [noun] A tendency to become angry. TEMPEST (11) [noun] A storm, especially one with severe winds. | [noun] Any violent tumult or commotion. | [noun] A fashionable social gathering; a drum. TEMPING (12) [verb] To work as a temporary employee. TEMPLAR (11) [noun] A barrister having chambers in the Inner Temple or Middle Temple. | [adjective] Of or relating to a temple. TEMPLED (12) TEMPLES (11) [noun] A house of worship, especially: | [noun] A meeting house of the Oddfellows fraternity; its members. | [noun] Any place regarded as holding a religious presence. TEMPLET (11) TEMPTED (12) [verb] To provoke someone to do wrong, especially by promising a reward; to entice. | [verb] To attract; to allure. | [verb] To provoke something; to court. TEMPTER (11) [noun] Someone or something that tempts. | [noun] A seducer, especially a man who seduces. TEMPURA (11) [noun] A Japanese dish made by deep-frying vegetables, seafood, or other foods in a light batter. TERAOHM (12) TERBIUM (11) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Tb) with an atomic number of 65: a soft, silvery-white, rare earth metal that is malleable and ductile. TERMERS (9) TERMING (10) [verb] To phrase a certain way; to name or call. | [verb] To terminate one's employment TERMINI (9) [noun] The end or final point of something. | [noun] The end point of a transportation system, or the town or city in which it is located. | [noun] A boundary or border, or a post or stone marking such a boundary. TERMITE (9) [noun] A white-bodied, wood-consuming insect of the infraorder Isoptera, in the order Blattodea. | [verb] Of a chimpanzee: to catch termites by inserting a stick or vine into their nest and waiting for them to climb up it. TERMORS (9) TETOTUM (9) THAIRMS (12) THALAMI (12) [noun] Either of two large, ovoid structures of grey matter within the forebrain that relay sensory impulses to the cerebral cortex. | [noun] The receptacle of a flower; a torus. | [noun] A thallus. THEISMS (12) THEMING (13) [verb] To give a theme to. | [verb] To apply a theme to; to change the visual appearance and/or layout of (software). THEOREM (12) [noun] A mathematical statement of some importance that has been proven to be true. Minor theorems are often called propositions. Theorems which are not very interesting in themselves but are an essential part of a bigger theorem's proof are called lemmas. | [noun] A mathematical statement that is expected to be true | [noun] A syntactically correct expression that is deducible from the given axioms of a deductive system. THERMAE (12) [noun] Springs or baths of warm or hot water. THERMAL (12) [noun] A column of rising air in the lower atmosphere created by uneven heating of Earth's surface. | [verb] (stone) To create a rough finish on stone by treating it with a high-temperature blow-torch. | [verb] (gliding, often in the present participle) To fly an unpowered aircraft in a (thermal) column of rising air. THERMEL (12) THERMES (12) THERMIC (14) [adjective] Of, related to, or associated with heat; thermal. THERMOS (12) [noun] A bottle, flask or similar vessel having a vacuum between its inner and outer silvered walls; designed to maintain the temperature of its contents THIAMIN (12) [noun] One of the constituents of vitamin B complex, found in meat, yeast and bran, that is necessary for the metabolism of carbohydrates. THIMBLE (14) [noun] A pitted, now usually metal, cap for the fingers, used in sewing to push the needle. | [noun] A similarly shaped socket in machinery. | [noun] A thimbleful. THIRAMS (12) THORIUM (12) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Th) with atomic number 90: a weakly radioactive, malleable, moderately hard silvery metal that tarnishes black when exposed to air. THROMBI (14) [noun] A blood clot formed from platelets and other elements that forms in a blood vessel in a living organism, and causes thrombosis or obstruction of the vessel at its point of formation or travel to other areas of the body. THRUMMY (17) THULIUM (12) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Tm) with atomic number 69: a fairly soft, easily workable metal with a bright silvery-gray lustre. THUMBED (15) [verb] To touch or cover with the thumb. | [verb] (with through) To turn the pages of (a book) in order to read it cursorily. | [verb] (travel) To hitchhike THUMPED (15) [verb] To hit (someone or something) as if to make a thump. | [verb] To cause to make a thumping sound. | [verb] To thud or pound. THUMPER (14) THYMIER (15) THYMINE (15) [noun] A heterocyclic base, 5-methylpyrimidine-2,4(1H,3H)-dione; it pairs with adenine in DNA. THYMOLS (15) TIMARAU (9) TIMBALE (11) [noun] A drum-shaped mould used to cook food. | [noun] An individual serving of food so cooked. TIMBALS (11) [noun] A kettledrum. TIMBERS (11) [noun] Trees in a forest regarded as a source of wood. | [noun] (outside North America) Wood that has been pre-cut and is ready for use in construction. | [noun] A heavy wooden beam, generally a whole log that has been squared off and used to provide heavy support for something such as a roof. TIMBRAL (11) TIMBREL (11) [noun] An ancient percussion instrument rather like a simple tambourine. | [verb] To play the timbrel. | [verb] To accompany with the sound of the timbrel. TIMBRES (11) [noun] The quality of a sound independent of its pitch and volume. | [noun] The pitch of a sound as heard by the ear, described relative to its absolute pitch. | [noun] The crest on a coat of arms. TIMEOUS (9) [adjective] In sufficient time; timely TIMEOUT (9) [noun] A short break in the action of a sport, for substitution, consultation, etc. | [noun] A break from a tense, heated or stressful situation (often enforced, sometimes as a disciplinary measure); a cooling-off period. | [noun] (communication) The intentional ending of an incomplete task after a time limit considered long enough for it to end normally. TIMIDER (10) [adjective] Lacking in courage or confidence. TIMIDLY (13) [adverb] In a timid manner. TIMINGS (10) [noun] An occurrence or event. | [noun] The regulation of the pace of e.g. an athletic race, the speed of an engine, the delivery of a joke, or the occurrence of a series of events. | [noun] The time when something happens. TIMOLOL (9) [noun] A synthetic compound which acts as a beta blocker and is used to treat hypertension, migraine, and glaucoma. TIMOTHY (15) [noun] Phleum pratense, timothy-grass, native to Europe, but introduced widely and naturalized in US. | [noun] Phleum alpinum, mountain timothy, native to North America. | [noun] Other species of genus Phleum. TIMPANA (11) TIMPANI (11) [noun] The set of precision kettledrums in an orchestra. TIMPANO (11) TINAMOU (9) [noun] Any of the birds belonging to the South American family Tinamidae, the only family in the order Tinamiformes. They are related to the ratites, together with which they form the superorder Paleognathae. TITMICE (11) [noun] Any small passerine bird of the family Paridae, which are found in the woods of the Northern Hemisphere and of Africa. TOKAMAK (17) [noun] A torus-shaped chamber used in nuclear fusion research in which a plasma is magnetically confined. TOKOMAK (17) TOLLMAN (9) TOLLMEN (9) TOMBACK (17) TOMBACS (13) TOMBAKS (15) TOMBING (12) TOMBOLA (11) [noun] A lottery in which winning tickets are drawn from a revolving drum. TOMBOLO (11) [noun] A spit of sand linking an island to the mainland (or to another island), formed by longshore drift. TOMBOYS (14) [noun] A girl who behaves in a typically boyish manner. | [noun] A lesbian. TOMCATS (11) [noun] A tom, a male cat. TOMCODS (12) [noun] A species of edible cod found in the Atlantic, Microgadus tomcod. | [noun] Microgadus proximus, found in the Pacific. | [noun] A kingfish. TOMENTA (9) [noun] A mass of filamentous hairs on the leaf of a plant. | [noun] A covering of fine, soft hairs; a pubescence. | [noun] A network of fine blood vessels between the pia mater and the cerebral cortex. TOMFOOL (12) [noun] A silly or stupid person, especially a boy or man. | [noun] Any of various tyrant flycatchers viewed as foolishly confiding. | [verb] To act foolishly. TOMMIES (11) [verb] To pay (employees) according to the truck system, with goods instead of money. TOMMING (12) [verb] (of a black person) To act in an obsequiously servile manner toward white authority. | [verb] To dig out a hole below the hatch cover of a bulker and fill it with cargo or weights to aid stability. TOMPION (11) [noun] A wooden plug, or a metal or canvas cover for the muzzle of a gun, a cannon or other piece of ordnance when not in use; a stopper; a bung. | [noun] A plug for the upper end of an organ pipe. TOMTITS (9) [noun] Petroica macrocephala, the miromiro or New Zealand tit, a bird of the Petroicidae (Australasian robin) family. TONEARM (9) [noun] The pivoting bar that holds the pickup of a record player and conducts the resulting signal to the amplifier. TONEMES (9) [noun] A phoneme in a language that uses different tones for different meanings. TONEMIC (11) TONGMAN (10) TONGMEN (10) TOPMAST (11) [noun] The highest mast in a fore-and-aft-rigged ship. | [noun] The mast below the topgallant mast in a square-rigged ship. TOPMOST (11) [adjective] At or nearest to the top; uppermost; being the very highest. TOPONYM (14) [noun] A placename. | [noun] A word derived from the name of a place. | [noun] The technical designation of any region of an animal. TORMENT (9) [noun] A catapult or other kind of war-engine. | [noun] Torture, originally as inflicted by an instrument of torture. | [noun] Any extreme pain, anguish or misery, either physical or mental. TOTEMIC (11) [adjective] Serving as, or relating to, a totem. TOURISM (9) [noun] The act of travelling or sightseeing, particularly away from one's home. | [noun] The industry in which such travels and sightseeing are organized. | [noun] Collectively, the tourists visiting a place or landmark. TOWMOND (13) TOWMONT (12) TOXEMIA (16) [noun] Blood poisoning; adverse reaction to toxic byproducts of systemic infection. TOXEMIC (18) TRAMCAR (11) [noun] A streetcar. | [noun] A rail vehicle for carrying loads in a mine; a tram. TRAMELL (9) TRAMELS (9) TRAMMED (12) TRAMMEL (11) [noun] Whatever impedes activity, progress, or freedom, such as a net or shackle. | [noun] A fishing net that has large mesh at the edges and smaller mesh in the middle | [noun] A kind of net for catching birds, fishes, or other prey. TRAMPED (12) [verb] To walk with heavy footsteps. | [verb] To walk for a long time (usually through difficult terrain). | [verb] To hitchhike. TRAMPER (11) [noun] One who tramps. | [noun] A recreational hiker. | [noun] A mechanism which pounds material into a more compact form for further processing; found for example in cotton gins and trash processors. TRAMPLE (11) [noun] A heavy stepping. | [noun] The sound of heavy footsteps. | [verb] To crush something by walking on it. TRAMWAY (15) [noun] The track on which a tram (streetcar) runs. | [noun] The system of cables that supports a cable car. TRANGAM (10) TRANSOM (9) [noun] A crosspiece over a door; a lintel. | [noun] A horizontal dividing bar in a window. | [noun] A transom window. TRAUMAS (9) [noun] Any serious injury to the body, often resulting from violence or an accident. | [noun] An emotional wound leading to psychological injury. | [noun] An event that causes great distress. TREMBLE (11) [noun] A shake, quiver, or vibration. | [verb] To shake, quiver, or vibrate. | [verb] To fear; to be afraid. TREMBLY (14) [adjective] In a trembling or shaking state TREMOLO (9) [noun] A rapid repetition of the same note, or an alternation between two or more notes. It can also be intended to mean a rapid and repetitive variation in pitch for the duration of a note. It is notated by a strong diagonal bar across the note stem, or a detached bar for a set of notes (or stemless notes). | [noun] A variation in the volume of a note or a chord, evoking a tremor or quiver. | [noun] The device in an organ that produces a tremolo effect. TREMORS (9) [noun] A shake, quiver, or vibration. | [noun] An earthquake. | [verb] To shake or quiver excessively and rapidly or involuntarily; to tremble. TRIDUUM (10) [noun] A period of three days (especially in Roman Catholic liturgy). TRIFORM (12) [adjective] Having three different forms TRIGRAM (10) [noun] Any of the eight combinations of three complete or broken lines forming half of a hexagram in Chinese system of divination I Ching. | [noun] A trigraph. | [noun] A special case of the n-gram where n is 3, used in natural language processing for doing statistical analysis of texts TRIMERS (9) [noun] A polymer composed of three monomers TRIMMED (12) [verb] To reduce slightly; to cut; especially, to remove excess. | [verb] To decorate or adorn; especially of a Christmas tree. | [verb] (of an aircraft) To adjust pitch using trim tabs. TRIMMER (11) [adjective] Physically fit. | [adjective] Slender, lean. | [adjective] Neat or smart in appearance. TRIREME (9) [noun] (history) A galley with three banks of oars, one above the other, used mainly as a warship. TRISEME (9) TRISMIC (11) TRISMUS (9) [noun] The inability to open the mouth normally, typically as a result of disease. TRISOME (9) TRISOMY (12) [noun] The presence of three copies, instead of the normal two, of a particular chromosome of an organism. TRITIUM (9) [noun] An atom of this isotope. TRITOMA (9) TRIUMPH (14) [noun] A conclusive success following an effort, conflict, or confrontation of obstacles; victory; conquest. | [noun] A magnificent and imposing ceremonial performed in honor of a victor. | [noun] Any triumphal procession; a pompous exhibition; a stately show or pageant. | [verb] To celebrate victory with pomp; to rejoice over success; to exult in an advantage gained; to exhibit exultation. TRIVIUM (12) [noun] (in medieval universities) The lower division of the liberal arts; grammar, logic and rhetoric. | [noun] The three anterior ambulacra of echinoderms, collectively. TROMMEL (11) [noun] A revolving buddle or sieve for separating, or sizing, ores. | [noun] A rotating drum for sorting items, such as waste for recycling. TROMPED (12) [verb] To tread heavily, especially to crush underfoot. | [verb] To utterly defeat an opponent. TROMPES (11) TROPISM (11) [noun] The turning of an organism in response to a stimulus, either towards or away from the stimulus. | [noun] Which type of tissue supports a certain virus. TRUISMS (9) [noun] A self-evident or obvious truth. | [noun] A banality or cliché. TRUMEAU (9) [noun] The pillar or center post supporting the lintel in the middle of a doorway or window opening, especially in a church. | [noun] A trumeau mirror. TRUMPED (12) [verb] To play on (a card of another suit) with a trump. | [verb] To play a trump, or to take a trick with a trump. | [verb] To get the better of, or finesse, a competitor. TRUMPET (11) [noun] A musical instrument of the brass family, generally tuned to the key of B-flat; by extension, any type of lip-vibrated aerophone, most often valveless and not chromatic. | [noun] Someone who plays the trumpet; a trumpeter. | [noun] The cry of an elephant, or any similar loud cry. TRYMATA (12) TSARDOM (10) TSARISM (9) TSIMMES (11) [noun] A stew of fruit or vegetables traditionally served on Rosh Hashanah. TSUNAMI (9) [noun] A very large and destructive wave, generally caused by a tremendous disturbance in the ocean, such as an undersea earthquake or volcanic eruption. Tsunami are usually a series of waves, or wave train. | [noun] A large and generally unstoppable surge. TUMBLED (12) [verb] To fall end over end; to roll over and over. | [verb] To perform gymnastics such as somersaults, rolls, and handsprings. | [verb] To drop rapidly. TUMBLER (11) [noun] One who tumbles; one who plays tricks by various motions of the body; an acrobat. | [noun] A movable obstruction in a lock, consisting of a lever, latch, wheel, slide, or the like, which must be adjusted to a particular position by a key or other means before the bolt can be thrown in locking or unlocking. | [noun] A rotating device for smoothing and polishing rough objects, placed inside it, on relatively small parts. TUMBLES (11) [verb] To fall end over end; to roll over and over. | [verb] To perform gymnastics such as somersaults, rolls, and handsprings. | [verb] To drop rapidly. TUMBREL (11) [noun] A kind of medieval torture device, later associated with a cucking stool. | [noun] A cart which opens at the back to release its load. | [noun] A cart used to carry condemned prisoners to their death, especially to the guillotine during the French Revolution. TUMBRIL (11) [noun] A kind of medieval torture device, later associated with a cucking stool. | [noun] A cart which opens at the back to release its load. | [noun] A cart used to carry condemned prisoners to their death, especially to the guillotine during the French Revolution. TUMIDLY (13) TUMMIES (11) [noun] (often childish) Stomach or belly. | [noun] Protruding belly, paunch. TUMMLER (11) [noun] An employee - usually male - of a Borscht Belt resort charged with the duty of entertaining guests throughout the day by providing any number of services, from comedian to master of ceremonies. | [noun] A lively, mischievous man. | [noun] (by extension) a person with an official role which involves facilitating social interaction. TUMORAL (9) TUMOURS (9) [noun] An abnormal growth; differential diagnosis includes abscess, metaplasia, and neoplasia. TUMPING (12) TUMULAR (9) TUMULTS (9) [noun] Confused, agitated noise as made by a crowd. | [noun] Violent commotion or agitation, often with confusion of sounds. | [noun] A riot or uprising. TUMULUS (9) [noun] A mound of earth, especially one placed over a prehistoric tomb; a barrow. TURFMAN (12) [noun] A person who goes horse racing, or who owns racehorses TURFMEN (12) [noun] A person who goes horse racing, or who owns racehorses TURMOIL (9) [noun] A state of great disorder or uncertainty. | [noun] Harassing labour; trouble; disturbance. | [verb] To be disquieted or confused; to be in commotion. TWASOME (12) TWOSOME (12) [noun] A group of two; a pair; a couple; a group of two distinct individuals or components. | [noun] A dance for two people. | [adjective] Being or constituting a pair; two. TYMBALS (14) [noun] A kettledrum. TYMPANA (14) [noun] A triangular space between the sides of a pediment. | [noun] The space within an arch, and above a lintel or a subordinate arch, spanning the opening below the arch. | [noun] The middle ear. TYMPANI (14) [noun] The set of precision kettledrums in an orchestra. TYMPANO (14) TYMPANS (14) [noun] A piece of cloth padding placed under the platen of a letterpress to distribute the pressure on the sheet being printed. | [noun] The stretched membrane of a drum. | [noun] A percussion instrument consisting of a hollow cylinder with such a membrane at each end. TYMPANY (17) [noun] The sound made by beating a drum. | [noun] Tympanites (distention of the abdomen). | [noun] Inflation; conceit; bombast; turgidness. TZARDOM (19) TZARISM (18) TZIMMES (20) [noun] A stew of fruit or vegetables traditionally served on Rosh Hashanah. ULPANIM (11) ULTIMAS (9) UMBELED (12) UMBERED (12) UMBONAL (11) UMBONES (11) [noun] A boss, or rounded elevation, or a corresponding depression, in a palate, disk, or membrane. For example the umbo in the integument of the larvæ of echinoderms or in the tympanic membrane of the ear. | [noun] One of the lateral prominences just above the hinge of a bivalve shell. | [noun] A bump or protrusion on the top of the cap. UMBONIC (13) UMBRAGE (12) [noun] A feeling of anger or annoyance caused by something offensive. | [noun] A feeling of doubt. | [noun] Leaves that provide shade, as the foliage of trees. UMIACKS (15) UMLAUTS (9) [noun] An assimilatory process whereby a vowel is pronounced more like a following vocoid that is separated by one or more consonants. | [noun] The umlaut process (as above) that occurred historically in Germanic languages whereby back vowels became front vowels when followed by syllable containing a front vocoid (e.g. Germanic lūsiz > Old English lȳs(i) > Modern English lice). | [noun] A vowel so assimilated. UMPIRED (12) [verb] To act as an umpire in a game. | [verb] To decide as an umpire. UMPIRES (11) [noun] The official who presides over a tennis game sat on a high chair. | [noun] One of the two white-coated officials who preside over a cricket match. | [noun] One of usually 4 officials who preside over a baseball game. UMPTEEN (11) UNAIMED (10) UNARMED (10) [adjective] Defenceless and lacking weapons or armour. | [adjective] Not carrying arms. | [adjective] Not having thorns or claws etc. UNBOSOM (11) [verb] To tell someone about (one's troubles), and thus obtain relief. | [verb] To free (oneself) of the burden of one's troubles by telling of them. | [verb] To confess a misdeed. UNCLAMP (13) [verb] To remove a clamp from. UNCOMIC (13) UNHELMS (12) UNHUMAN (12) [adjective] Not resembling or having the qualities of a human being. UNIFORM (12) [noun] A distinctive outfit that serves to identify members of a group. | [noun] Phonetic equivalent for the letter U in the ICAO spelling alphabet, informally known as the NATO phonetic alphabet. | [noun] A uniformed police officer (as opposed to a detective). UNKEMPT (15) [adjective] (of hair) Uncombed; dishevelled. | [adjective] (by extension) Disorderly; untidy; messy; not kept up. | [adjective] Rough; unpolished UNMACHO (14) UNMAKER (13) UNMAKES (13) [verb] To destroy or take apart; to cause (a made article) to lose its nature. UNMANLY (12) [adjective] (of a person) Showing characteristics that are not manly, such as being immature, effeminate or cowardly, which might be construed as an indicator of weakness or of baseness of character. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to something not human. | [adjective] (of a behaviour or action) Cowardly, base. UNMASKS (13) [verb] To remove a mask from someone. | [verb] To expose, or reveal the true character of someone. | [verb] To remove one's mask. UNMATED (10) UNMEANT (9) [adjective] Not meant UNMERRY (12) UNMEWED (13) UNMINED (10) UNMITER (9) UNMITRE (9) UNMIXED (17) [adjective] Pure, not mixed or combined. UNMIXES (16) UNMOLDS (10) UNMOORS (9) [verb] To unfix or unsecure (a moored boat). | [verb] To weigh anchor. UNMORAL (9) [adjective] Not applicable for moral consideration. | [adjective] Not moral. UNMOVED (13) [adjective] Not physically moved. | [adjective] Not affected emotionally, or not showing emotion. | [adjective] Not sympathetic; uncaring. UNNAMED (10) [adjective] Not having a name. UNRIMED (10) UNSEAMS (9) UNSMART (9) UNTAMED (10) [adjective] Wild, uncontrolled, especially of animals not domesticated or trained to human contact. UNTRIMS (9) UPCLIMB (15) UPTIMES (11) URAEMIA (9) [noun] Blood poisoning resulting from the retention of waste products usually excreted as urine. URAEMIC (11) URANISM (9) URANIUM (9) [noun] The element with atomic number 92 and symbol U: a radioactive silvery-grey metal in the actinide series. UREDIUM (10) UREMIAS (9) UTMOSTS (9) UTOPISM (11) VACUUMS (14) [noun] A region of space that contains no matter. | [noun] (plural only "vacuums") A vacuum cleaner. | [noun] The condition of rarefaction, or reduction of pressure below that of the atmosphere, in a vessel, such as the condenser of a steam engine, which is nearly exhausted of air or steam, etc. VAMOOSE (12) [verb] To run away (from); to flee. | [verb] To hurry. | [verb] To be expelled. VAMOSED (13) VAMOSES (12) VAMPERS (14) VAMPING (15) [verb] To patch, repair, or refurbish. | [verb] Often as vamp up: to fabricate or put together (something) from existing material, or by adding new material to something existing. | [verb] To cobble together, to extemporize, to improvise. VAMPIRE (14) [noun] A mythological undead creature said to feed on the blood of the living. | [noun] A person with the medical condition systemic lupus erythematosus, colloquially known as vampirism, with effects such as photosensitivity and brownish-red stained teeth. | [noun] A blood-sucking bat; vampire bat (Desmodus rotundus) VAMPISH (17) [adjective] Like a vamp (flirtatious woman). VARMENT (12) VARMINT (12) [noun] A pestering animal such as one that kills or harasses a farmer's livestock or crops. | [noun] (by extension) An obnoxious person or troublemaker. VAROOMS (12) VELAMEN (12) [noun] A covering membrane or velum | [noun] A spongy, usually pale, multiseriate epidermis (i.e. consisting of multiple layers of cells) covering the roots of some kinds of plants, especially plant species with an epiphytic or semi-epiphytic habit. Examples include various orchid and Clivia species VELLUMS (12) [noun] A type of parchment paper made from the skin of a lamb, baby goat, or calf. | [noun] A writing paper of very high quality. VENOMED (13) VENOMER (12) VERISMO (12) [noun] An artistic movement, from 19th-century Italian literature and opera, in which rural and everyday people and themes were treated in an often melodramatic manner VERISMS (12) VERMEIL (12) [noun] Vermilion; bright red. | [noun] Silver gilt or gilt bronze. | [noun] A liquid composition applied to a gilded surface to give luster to the gold. VERMIAN (12) [adjective] Of or relating to worms. | [adjective] Of or relating to the vermis. VERMUTH (15) VICOMTE (14) [noun] A French viscount. VICTIMS (14) [noun] One that is harmed—killed, injured, subjected to oppression, deceived, or otherwise adversely affected—by someone or something, especially another person or event, force, or condition; in particular: | [noun] A living being which is slain and offered as a sacrifice, usually in a religious rite. VIMINAL (12) VIREMIA (12) [noun] The condition or disease of having a virus in the bloodstream. VIREMIC (14) VITAMER (12) VITAMIN (12) [noun] Any of a specific group of organic compounds essential in small quantities for healthy human growth, metabolism, development, and body function; found in minute amounts in plant and animal foods or sometimes produced synthetically; deficiencies of specific vitamins produce specific disorders. VOLUMED (13) VOLUMES (12) [noun] A three-dimensional measure of space that comprises a length, a width and a height. It is measured in units of cubic centimeters in metric, cubic inches or cubic feet in English measurement. | [noun] Strength of sound; loudness. | [noun] The issues of a periodical over a period of one year. VOMICAE (14) VOMITED (13) [verb] To regurgitate or eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth; puke. | [verb] To regurgitate and discharge (something swallowed); to spew. | [verb] To eject from any hollow place; to belch forth; to emit. VOMITER (12) VOMITOS (12) VOMITUS (12) [noun] Vomit, the product of an emesis. VROOMED (13) [verb] To move with great speed; to zoom. WADMAAL (13) WADMALS (13) WADMELS (13) WADMOLL (13) WADMOLS (13) WAGSOME (13) WAMBLED (15) WAMBLES (14) WAMEFOU (15) WAMEFUL (15) WAMPISH (17) WAMPUMS (16) WAMUSES (12) WARMERS (12) [noun] Something that warms, such as a heater or a soup. | [noun] A piece of clothing for warmth, such as a bodywarmer or leg warmer. | [noun] An introductory activity, for example in a lesson, to stimulate interest in a topic. WARMEST (12) [adjective] Having a temperature slightly higher than usual, but still pleasant; mildly hot. | [adjective] Caring and friendly, of relations to another person. | [adjective] Having a color in the red-orange-yellow part of the visible electromagnetic spectrum. WARMING (13) [verb] To make or keep warm. | [verb] To become warm, to heat up. | [verb] To favour increasingly. | [noun] A small rise in temperature. WARMISH (15) WARMTHS (15) WARMUPS (14) [noun] The act of exercising or stretching in preparation for strenuous activity | [noun] Any act of preparation for a performance | [noun] A period of time allocated for performing warm-ups. WARTIME (12) [noun] A period during which a war is in progress in a particular place. WAXWORM (22) WEBWORM (17) [noun] Any of various caterpillars, of diverse moth families, that spin a web; the moth species of such a caterpillar. WELCOME (14) [noun] The act of greeting someone’s arrival, especially by saying "Welcome!"; reception. | [noun] The utterance of such a greeting. | [noun] Kind reception of a guest or newcomer. WHAMMED (18) [verb] To strike or smash (into) something with great force or impact WHELMED (16) [verb] To bury, to cover; to engulf, to submerge. | [verb] To throw (something) over a thing so as to cover it. | [verb] To ruin or destroy. WHIMPER (17) [noun] A low intermittent sob. | [verb] To cry or sob softly and intermittently. | [verb] To cry with a low, whining, broken voice; to whine; to complain. WHIMSEY (18) [noun] A quaint and fanciful idea; a whim; playfully odd behaviour. | [noun] An impulsive, illogical or capricious character. | [noun] A whim (capstan or vertical drum). WHOLISM (15) [noun] A theory or belief that the whole is greater than the sum of the parts. | [noun] A practice based on such a theory or belief. WHOMPED (18) [verb] Hit extremely hard. WHUMPED (18) [verb] To strike something with a whump. WIFEDOM (16) WIGWAMS (16) [noun] A dwelling having an arched framework overlaid with bark, hides, or mats, used by Native Americans in the northeastern United States. | [noun] (possibly obsolete) Any more or less similar dwelling used by indigenous people in other parts of the world. WIMBLED (15) WIMBLES (14) WIMPIER (14) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a wimp; feeble, indecisive, cowardly. WIMPISH (17) [adjective] Characteristic of a wimp. WIMPLED (15) WIMPLES (14) [noun] A cloth which usually covers the head and is worn around the neck and chin. It was worn by women in medieval Europe and is still worn by nuns in certain orders. | [noun] A fold or pleat in cloth. | [noun] A ripple, as on the surface of water. WINGMAN (13) [noun] A pilot partner of another, a pilot who flies in the same wing or squadron. | [noun] (by extension) a friend who accompanies one to offer (or receive) support, especially in flirting with love interests WINGMEN (13) [noun] A pilot partner of another, a pilot who flies in the same wing or squadron. | [noun] (by extension) a friend who accompanies one to offer (or receive) support, especially in flirting with love interests WINSOME (12) [adjective] Charming, engaging, winning; inspiring approval and trust, especially if in an innocent manner. WIREMAN (12) [noun] Someone who works with wire; primarily someone who connects electric wiring. | [noun] A person who sets up electronic surveillance. WIREMEN (12) [noun] Someone who works with wire; primarily someone who connects electric wiring. | [noun] A person who sets up electronic surveillance. WISDOMS (13) [noun] An element of personal character that enables one to distinguish the wise from the unwise. | [noun] A piece of wise advice. | [noun] The discretionary use of knowledge for the greatest good. WOESOME (12) WOLFRAM (15) [noun] Wolframite | [noun] Tungsten WOMANED (13) WOMANLY (15) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a woman; feminine, female. | [adverb] In the manner of a woman. WOMBATS (14) [noun] Any of several herbivorous, burrowing marsupials, of the family Vombatidae, mainly found in southern and eastern Australia. WOMBIER (14) WOMERAS (12) WOMMERA (14) WOODMAN (13) [noun] Someone who hunts animals in a wood, hunter, huntsman. | [noun] Someone who cuts down trees or cuts and sells wood, lumberjack, woodcutter. | [noun] Someone who lives in the wood and manages it; a woodsman; (by extension) someone who spends time in the woods and has a strong familiarity with that environment. WOODMEN (13) [noun] Someone who hunts animals in a wood, hunter, huntsman. | [noun] Someone who cuts down trees or cuts and sells wood, lumberjack, woodcutter. | [noun] Someone who lives in the wood and manages it; a woodsman; (by extension) someone who spends time in the woods and has a strong familiarity with that environment. WOOLMAN (12) [noun] A man who deals in wool. WOOLMEN (12) [noun] A man who deals in wool. WOOMERA (12) [noun] An Australian spearthrower consisting of a stick with a hooked end. WORKMAN (16) [noun] A man who labours for wages. | [noun] An artisan or craftsman. WORKMEN (16) [noun] A man who labours for wages. | [noun] An artisan or craftsman. WORMERS (12) [noun] Dewormer, medicine used in deworming an animal. | [noun] Vermicide, any substance used to kill worms. WORMIER (12) [adjective] Of or like a worm or worms; shaped like a worm or worms. | [adjective] Infested with worms. WORMILS (12) WORMING (13) [verb] To make (one's way) with a crawling motion. | [verb] To move with one's body dragging the ground. | [verb] To work one's way by artful or devious means. WORMISH (15) YAMALKA (16) YAMMERS (14) [verb] To complain peevishly. | [verb] To talk loudly and persistently. | [verb] To repeat on and on, usually loudly or in complaint. YAMULKA (16) YARDARM (13) [noun] The outer end of a yard, often equipped with blocks for reeving signal halyards. YARDMAN (13) [noun] A worker in a railway yard. | [noun] A laborer hired to do outdoor work. YARDMEN (13) [noun] A worker in a railway yard. | [noun] A laborer hired to do outdoor work. YASHMAC (17) YASHMAK (19) [noun] A veil worn by Muslim women to cover parts of the face when they are in public. YASMAKS (16) YEGGMAN (14) YEGGMEN (14) YTTRIUM (12) [noun] A silvery metallic chemical element (symbol Y) with an atomic number of 39, mainly found in combination with lanthanide elements in rare-earth minerals. YUMMIER (14) [adjective] (lighthearted) Delicious. YUMMIES (14) [noun] Delicious foods ZAMARRA (18) ZAMARRO (18) ZEMSTVA (21) ZEMSTVO (21) ZEUGMAS (19) [noun] The act of using a word, particularly an adjective or verb, to apply to more than one noun when its sense is appropriate to only one. | [noun] Syllepsis. ZOARIUM (18) ZOECIUM (20) ZOMBIES (20) [noun] A snake god or fetish in religions of West Africa and elsewhere. | [noun] (voodoo, superstition) A person, usually undead, animated by unnatural forces (such as magic), with no soul or will of his/her own. | [noun] A deceased person who becomes reanimate to attack the living. ZOMBIFY (26) [verb] (fictional) To turn into a zombie (a member of the living dead or undead). | [verb] To take control of (a computer) in order to use it covertly and illicitly. ZOOMING (19) [verb] To communicate with someone using the Zoom videoconferencing software. | [verb] To move fast with a humming noise | [verb] To fly an airplane straight up ZOOTOMY (21) [noun] The dissection or anatomy of animals. ZYGOMAS (22) ZYMASES (21) ZYMOGEN (22) [noun] A proenzyme, or enzyme precursor, which requires a biochemical change (i.e. hydrolysis) to become an active form of the enzyme. ZYMOSAN (21) ZYMOSES (21) ZYMOSIS (21) ZYMOTIC (23) [adjective] Infectious, contagious, of diseases originally regarded as being caused by a process similar to fermentation. | [adjective] Of or causing fermentation. ZYMURGY (25) [noun] The chemistry of fermentation with yeasts, especially the science involved in beer and winemaking.

8-Letter Words (5752)

ABAMPERE (14) ABDOMENS (13) [noun] The fat surrounding the belly. | [noun] The belly, or that part of the body between the thorax and the pelvis, not including the back; or in some lower vertebrates, the portion between the cardiac and caudal regions. | [noun] The cavity of the belly, which is lined by the peritoneum, and contains the viscera; often restricted in humans to the part between the diaphragm and the commencement of the pelvis, the remainder being called the pelvic cavity. ABDOMINA (13) ABELMOSK (16) ABETMENT (12) ABNORMAL (12) [noun] A person or object that is not normal. | [adjective] Not conforming to rule or system; deviating from the usual or normal type. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to that which is irregular, in particular, behaviour that deviates from norms of social propriety or accepted standards of mental health. ABOMASAL (12) ABOMASUM (14) [noun] The fourth or digestive compartment of the stomach of a cow or other ruminant, after the omasum. ABOMASUS (12) ABUTMENT (12) [noun] The point of junction between two things, in particular a support, that abuts. | [noun] The solid portion of a structure that supports the lateral pressure of an arch or vault. | [noun] A construction that supports the ends of a bridge; a structure that anchors the cables on a suspension bridge. ACADEMES (13) [noun] Plural of academe; institutions of learning or academic communities. | [noun] Academic scholars or members of the academic world collectively. ACADEMIA (13) [noun] (collective) The scientific and cultural community engaged in higher education and research, taken as a whole. | [noun] Continuous study at higher education institutions; scholarship. ACADEMIC (15) [noun] (usually capitalized) A follower of Plato, a Platonist. | [noun] A senior member of an academy, college, or university; a person who attends an academy; a person engaged in scholarly pursuits; one who is academic in practice. | [noun] A member of the Academy; an academician. ACCLAIMS (14) [verb] To shout; to call out. | [verb] To express great approval (for). | [verb] To salute or praise with great approval; to compliment; to applaud; to welcome enthusiastically. ACCUSTOM (14) [verb] To make familiar through repeated exposure or practice. | [verb] To adapt or adjust oneself to something new or unfamiliar. ACELDAMA (13) [noun] A field of blood; a place of slaughter or carnage, specifically referring to the field purchased with Judas's thirty pieces of silver according to biblical tradition. ACETAMID (13) [noun] A colorless crystalline compound, CH₃CONH₂, derived from acetic acid and used in organic synthesis and as a solvent. ACHROMAT (15) [noun] A lens that imparts little color; a lens that is achromatic. ACHROMIC (17) [adjective] Uncoloured; not pigmented; lacking in colour. ACICULUM (14) [noun] A small needle-like structure or bristle found in certain invertebrates, particularly in annelid worms. | [noun] A small sharp-pointed anatomical process or projection. ACIDEMIA (13) [noun] A condition characterized by excessive acidity in the blood, typically indicated by a pH below 7.35. ACONITUM (12) [noun] A genus of poisonous plants of the buttercup family, commonly known as monkshood or wolfsbane, with helmet-shaped flowers. ACRIMONY (15) [noun] A sharp and bitter hatred. ACROMIAL (12) [adjective] Relating to or denoting the acromion, the bony process at the top of the shoulder blade. ACROMION (12) [noun] The outermost bony process of the shoulder blade that forms the highest point of the shoulder. ACRONYMS (15) [noun] An abbreviation formed by the initial letters of other words, sometimes exclusively such abbreviations when pronounced as a word (as "laser") rather than as individual letters (initialisms such as "TNT"). | [noun] An abbreviation formed by the beginning letters or syllables of other words (as "Benelux"). | [verb] To form into an acronym. ACROSOME (12) [noun] A structure on the head of a sperm cell that contains enzymes enabling the sperm to penetrate and fertilize an egg. ACROTISM (12) [noun] The absence or imperceptibility of the pulse; a condition characterized by lack of a detectable pulse. ACTINISM (12) [noun] The property of radiation, especially ultraviolet light, to produce chemical changes or photochemical effects. ACTINIUM (12) [noun] A radioactive, metallic chemical element (symbol: Ac) with an atomic number of 89; found in uranium ores ACTIVISM (15) [noun] The practice of using action to achieve a result, such as political demonstration or a strike in support of or in opposition to an issue. ADAMANCE (13) ADAMANCY (16) [noun] Unshakeable or inflexible adherence to a belief or position; adamant quality or state. | [noun] In mineralogy, a hard crystalline substance or diamond. ADAMANTS (11) [noun] Plural of adamant; extremely hard or unyielding substances, or people who are inflexible and uncompromising. | [noun] In historical usage, a legendary hard stone or diamond-like material. ADAMSITE (11) [noun] A toxic chemical compound, diphenylaminechloroarsine, formerly used as a riot control agent and tear gas. ADDENDUM (13) [noun] Something to be added; especially text added as an appendix or supplement to a document. | [noun] A postscript. | [noun] The height by which the tooth of a gear projects beyond (outside for external, or inside for internal) the standard pitch circle or pitch line. ADEEMING (12) [verb] Present participle of "adeem," meaning to revoke or take away a specific bequest or gift made in a will. ADENOMAS (11) [noun] A benign tumour of the epithelium arising from or resembling a gland. ADMIRALS (11) [noun] A naval officer of the highest rank; the commander of a country's naval forces. | [noun] A naval officer of high rank, immediately below Admiral of the Fleet; the commander of a fleet or squadron. | [noun] A flag officer in the United States Navy or Coast Guard of a grade superior to vice admiral and junior to admiral of the fleet (when that grade is used). An admiral is equal in grade or rank to a four-star general. ADMIRERS (11) [noun] One who admires. ADMIRING (12) [verb] To be amazed at; to view with surprise; to marvel at. | [verb] To regard with wonder and delight. | [verb] To look upon with an elevated feeling of pleasure, as something which calls out approbation, esteem, love or reverence. ADMITTED (12) [verb] To allow to enter; to grant entrance (to), whether into a place, into the mind, or into consideration | [verb] To allow (someone) to enter a profession or to enjoy a privilege; to recognize as qualified for a franchise. | [verb] To concede as true; to acknowledge or assent to, as an allegation which it is impossible to deny ADMITTER (11) [noun] One who admits; a person who allows entry or acknowledgment. | [noun] In law, a person who makes an admission. ADMIXING (19) [verb] To mingle with something else; to mix. ADMONISH (14) [verb] To warn or notify of a fault; to reprove gently or kindly, but seriously; to exhort. | [verb] To counsel against wrong practices; to caution or advise; to warn against danger or an offense; — followed by of, against, or a subordinate clause. | [verb] To instruct or direct; to inform; to notify. ADUMBRAL (13) ADYNAMIA (14) [noun] Lack of physical strength or energy; weakness or debility. ADYNAMIC (16) [adjective] Lacking energy, vigor, or power; characterized by weakness or lack of dynamism. AECIDIUM (13) [noun] A cup-shaped fruiting structure of rust fungi that produces spores, representing one stage in the fungal life cycle. AERIFORM (13) [adjective] Having the form or nature of air; gaseous. AEROBIUM (12) AEROGRAM (11) [noun] A wireless message. | [noun] A telegram whose transmission included at least one segment sent via airplane. | [noun] A thin piece of foldable and gummed paper for writing a letter and serving as its own envelope for transit via airmail. AERONOMY (13) [noun] A branch of science that deals with the upper atmosphere of the Earth and the other planets with reference to their chemical composition, physical properties, relative motion, and responses to radiation from space. AFFIRMED (17) [verb] To agree, verify or concur; to answer positively. | [verb] To assert positively; to tell with confidence; to aver; to maintain as true. | [verb] To support or encourage. AFFIRMER (16) [noun] One who affirms or asserts something to be true. | [noun] In legal contexts, a party that affirms a lower court's decision on appeal. AGAMETES (11) [noun] Plural of agamete; asexual reproductive cells or spores produced without the fusion of gametes, particularly in fungi and algae. AGENDUMS (12) AGERATUM (11) [noun] A tropical plant with clusters of small, typically blue or purple flowers, commonly grown as an ornamental in gardens. AGLIMMER (13) [adjective] Shimmering or glimmering with a faint light. AGMINATE (11) [verb] To heap up or accumulate. | [verb] To repeat a word or sound in succession. AGNOMENS (11) [noun] An additional cognomen given, as an honour, to a Roman citizen. AGNOMINA (11) [noun] Plural of agnomen, a fourth name given to Roman emperors or generals to commemorate a victory or achievement. AGRIMONY (14) [noun] Any of several perennial herbaceous plants, of the genus Agrimonia, that have spikes of yellow flowers. | [noun] Any of several unrelated plants of a similar appearance. AGRONOMY (14) [noun] The science of utilizing plants, animals and soils for food, fuel, feed, and fiber and more. To do this effectively and sustainably, agronomy encompasses work in the areas of plant genetics, plant physiology, meteorology, animal sciences and soil science. AILMENTS (10) [noun] Something which ails one; a disease; sickness. AIMFULLY (16) AIRDROME (11) [noun] A location where aircraft are operated, usually having a runway and maintenance facilities. AIRFRAME (13) [noun] The main body and structure of an aircraft (without the powerplant). AIRMAILS (10) [verb] To send mail by air. | [verb] To (unintentionally) throw the ball well over a fielder's head where that fielder is unable to make a play on the ball. | [noun] The items of mail conveyed using aircraft. AIRTIMES (10) [noun] The plural of airtime; the time allocated for broadcasting on radio or television. | [noun] The amount of time remaining on a prepaid mobile phone account. AIRWOMAN (13) [noun] A woman who flies in an aircraft; a female aviator. AIRWOMEN (13) [noun] A woman who flies in an aircraft; a female aviator. ALAMEDAS (11) [noun] A tree-lined avenue in Spain or Portugal. ALAMODES (11) ALARMING (11) [verb] To call to arms for defense | [verb] To give (someone) notice of approaching danger | [verb] To rouse to vigilance and action; to put on the alert. ALARMISM (12) ALARMIST (10) [noun] One who causes others to become alarmed without cause. | [adjective] Of or relating to causing others to become alarmed without cause. ALARUMED (11) ALBINISM (12) [noun] Congenital lack of melanin pigmentation in the skin, eyes, and hair or feathers (or more rarely only in the eyes); the condition of being albino. ALBUMENS (12) [noun] Plural of albumen, the white of an egg or a protein substance found in plant and animal tissues. ALBUMINS (12) [noun] Any of a class of monomeric proteins that are soluble in water, and are coagulated by heat; they occur in egg white, milk etc; they function as carrier protein for steroids, fatty acids, and thyroid hormones and play a role in stabilizing extracellular fluid volume. ALBUMOSE (12) [noun] A type of protein or proteose produced during the digestion of proteins, intermediate between native proteins and peptones. ALBURNUM (12) [noun] Sapwood; the soft, newer wood in the trunk of a tree found between the bark and the hardened heartwood. ALCHEMIC (17) [adjective] Alchemical ALDERMAN (11) [noun] A member of a municipal legislative body in a city or town. | [noun] A half-crown coin; its value, 30 pence. | [noun] A long pipe for smoking. ALDERMEN (11) [noun] A member of a municipal legislative body in a city or town. | [noun] A half-crown coin; its value, 30 pence. | [noun] A long pipe for smoking. ALEMBICS (14) [noun] An early chemical apparatus, consisting of two retorts connected by a tube, used to purify substances by distillation ALGORISM (11) ALIENISM (10) ALIMENTS (10) [noun] Food. | [noun] Nourishment, sustenance. | [noun] An allowance for maintenance; alimony. ALLELISM (10) ALLODIUM (11) [noun] Freehold land or property ALLOGAMY (14) [noun] The fertilization of an ovum from one individual with the spermatozoa of another; cross-fertilization ALLONYMS (13) ALLUVIUM (13) [noun] Soil, clay, silt or gravel deposited by flowing water, as it slows, in a river bed, delta, estuary or flood plain ALMAGEST (11) [noun] A comprehensive treatise on astronomy, alchemy, geography and/or mathematics (originally compiled by Ptolemy circa 150 C.E.). ALMANACS (12) [noun] A book or table listing nautical, astronomical, astrological or other events for the year; sometimes, but not essentially, containing historical and statistical information. | [noun] A handbook, typically published annually, containing information on a particular subject | [noun] A GPS signal consisting of coarse orbit and status information for each satellite in the constellation. ALMEMARS (12) ALMIGHTY (17) [adjective] (sometimes postpositive) Unlimited in might; omnipotent; all-powerful | [adjective] Great; extreme; terrible. | [adjective] (by extension) Having very great power, influence, etc. ALMONERS (10) [noun] One who distributes alms, especially the doles and alms of religious houses, almshouses | [noun] One who dispenses alms for another, as the almoner of a prince, bishop | [noun] A title given to a royal officer charged with the duty of distributing alms or bounty on behalf of a monarch ALPINISM (12) ALTRUISM (10) [noun] Regard for others, both natural and moral without regard for oneself; devotion to the interests of others; brotherly kindness. | [noun] (sociobiology) Action or behaviour that benefits another or others at some cost to the performer. ALUMINAS (10) ALUMINES (10) ALUMINIC (12) ALUMINUM (12) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Al) with an atomic number of 13. | [noun] A single atom of this element. | [noun] Aircraft or other machinery made partially or wholly of aluminum. ALUMROOT (10) [noun] Any of several perennial herbs, of the genus Heuchera, native to North America. | [noun] Flowering plants of genus Geranium, also called wild geraniums or cranesbills. ALYSSUMS (13) [noun] Any of several plants, of the genus Alyssum, mostly of Eurasian origin, that have racemes of white or yellow flowers. AMADAVAT (14) [noun] An estrildid finch, Amandava amandava, of India and Southeast Asia, commonly kept and bred as a cagebird. AMALGAMS (13) [noun] An alloy containing mercury. | [noun] A combination of different things. | [noun] One of the ingredients in an alloy. AMANDINE (11) AMANITAS (10) AMANITIN (10) AMARANTH (13) [noun] An imaginary flower that does not wither. | [noun] Any of various herbs of the genus Amaranthus. | [noun] The characteristic purplish-red colour of the flowers or leaves of these plants. AMARELLE (10) AMARETTI (10) [noun] A sweet-bitter liqueur originating from Italy (but also produced in Turkey), flavored with almonds and a secret blend-specific mix of some 200 ingredients such as the pits from apricots, peaches, cherries or other stone fruits. | [noun] A glass of that liqueur. | [noun] A light Italian cookie made with almonds. AMARETTO (10) [noun] A sweet-bitter liqueur originating from Italy (but also produced in Turkey), flavored with almonds and a secret blend-specific mix of some 200 ingredients such as the pits from apricots, peaches, cherries or other stone fruits. | [noun] A glass of that liqueur. | [noun] A light Italian cookie made with almonds. AMASSERS (10) AMASSING (11) [verb] To collect into a mass or heap. | [verb] To gather a great quantity of; to accumulate. AMATEURS (10) [noun] A lover of something. | [noun] A person attached to a particular pursuit, study, or science as to music or painting; especially one who cultivates any study or art, from taste or attachment, without pursuing it professionally. | [noun] Someone who is unqualified or insufficiently skillful. AMAZEDLY (23) AMBARIES (12) AMBERIES (12) AMBERINA (12) AMBEROID (13) AMBIANCE (14) [noun] A particular mood or atmosphere of an environment or surrounding influence. | [noun] (3D models) A secondary color of a polygon that becomes more pronounced with shading. AMBIENCE (14) [noun] A particular mood or atmosphere of an environment or surrounding influence. | [noun] (3D models) A secondary color of a polygon that becomes more pronounced with shading. AMBIENTS (12) AMBITION (12) [noun] Eager or inordinate desire for some object that confers distinction, as preferment, honor, superiority, political power, or literary fame; desire to distinguish one's self from other people. | [noun] An object of an ardent desire. | [noun] A desire, as in (sense 1), for another person to achieve these things. AMBIVERT (15) [noun] A person who is neither clearly extroverted nor introverted, but has characteristics of each. AMBOINAS (12) AMBOYNAS (15) AMBROIDS (13) AMBROSIA (12) [noun] The food of the gods, thought to confer immortality. | [noun] The anointing-oil of the gods. | [noun] Any food with an especially delicious flavour or fragrance. AMBSACES (14) AMBULANT (12) [adjective] Able to walk. | [adjective] Designed for use by somebody with a disability that impairs, but does not prevent, walking. AMBULATE (12) [verb] To walk; to relocate oneself under the power of one's own legs. AMBUSHED (16) [verb] To station in ambush with a view to surprise an enemy. | [verb] To attack by ambush; to waylay. | [adjective] Having been the target of an ambush. AMBUSHER (15) AMBUSHES (15) [noun] The act of concealing oneself and lying in wait to attack by surprise. | [noun] An attack launched from a concealed position. | [noun] The troops posted in a concealed place, for attacking by surprise; those who lie in wait. AMEERATE (10) AMELCORN (12) AMENABLE (12) [adjective] Willing to respond to persuasion or suggestions. | [adjective] Willing to comply; easily led. | [adjective] Liable to be brought to account; responsible; accountable. AMENABLY (15) AMENDERS (11) AMENDING (12) [verb] To make better; improve. | [verb] To become better. | [verb] To heal (someone sick); to cure (a disease etc.). AMENTIAS (10) AMERCERS (12) AMERCING (13) [verb] To impose a fine on; to fine. | [verb] To punish; to make an exaction. AMESACES (12) AMETHYST (16) [noun] A transparent purple variety of quartz, used as a gemstone. | [noun] A purple colour. | [noun] The purple tincture when emblazoning the arms of the English nobility. AMIANTUS (10) AMICABLE (14) [adjective] Showing friendliness or goodwill. AMICABLY (17) [adverb] Friendly; in an amicable manner. | [adverb] Characterized by an absence of antagonism, especially in commonly difficult situations | [adverb] Out-of-court AMIDASES (11) AMIDINES (11) AMIDOGEN (12) AMIDONES (11) [noun] Plural of amidone, a synthetic opioid drug also known as methadone. AMIDSHIP (16) [adverb] In the middle of a ship (as opposed to bow or stern). AMIRATES (10) AMITOSES (10) [noun] Plural of amitosis, a form of cell division in which the nucleus divides by constriction without the formation of chromosomes or a spindle apparatus. AMITOSIS (10) [noun] A form of cell division in which the nucleus divides without the formation of chromosomes or a spindle apparatus, occurring in some lower organisms and pathological cells. AMITOTIC (12) [adjective] Of or pertaining to amitosis AMITROLE (10) [noun] A herbicide used to kill weeds, particularly effective against perennial plants and woody vegetation. AMMETERS (12) [noun] A device that measures the magnitude of an electric current, especially one calibrated in amperes. AMMOCETE (14) [noun] The larval stage of a lamprey, characterized by a small mouth and lack of teeth. AMMONALS (12) [noun] Explosive mixtures containing ammonium nitrate and other compounds, used in mining and construction. AMMONIAC (14) [noun] A pungent volatile alkaline compound (ammonia) or a gum resin obtained from an Asian plant, historically used in medicine and as a seasoning. AMMONIAS (12) [noun] Plural of ammonia, a colorless gas with a pungent odor (NH₃) or solutions containing this gas. AMMONIFY (18) [verb] To convert organic nitrogen compounds into ammonia or ammonium salts, typically through bacterial decomposition. AMMONITE (12) [noun] Any of an extinct group of cephalopods of the subclass Ammonoidea; a fossil shell of such an animal. | [noun] An explosive prepared from a mixture of TNT and ammonium nitrate; a form of amatol, popular in Eastern Europe and China. AMMONIUM (14) [noun] The univalent NH4+ cation, derived by the protonation of ammonia | [noun] (especially in combination) Any similar cation formed by replacing one or more hydrogen atoms with alkyl or aryl radicals AMMONOID (13) [noun] An extinct cephalopod of the subclass Ammonoidea (including ammonites). | [adjective] Characteristic of an ammonite AMNESIAC (12) [noun] Person who suffers from loss of memory (amnesia). AMNESIAS (10) [noun] Plural of amnesia; conditions characterized by partial or total loss of memory. AMNESICS (12) [noun] A person suffering from amnesia AMNESTIC (12) [adjective] Relating to or affected by amnesia; characterized by loss of memory. AMNIONIC (12) [adjective] Relating to or concerning the amnion, the innermost membrane that envelops the embryo in mammals, birds, and reptiles. AMNIOTES (10) [noun] Any of the Amniota group of vertebrates having an amnion during the development of the embryo; mammals, birds and reptiles. AMNIOTIC (12) [adjective] Pertaining to the amnion. AMOEBEAN (12) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by amoebean verse, which is a form of responsive or alternating song or recitation between two speakers or groups. AMOEBOID (13) [adjective] Resembling, or characteristic of an amoeba | [noun] Single‐celled organism that moves or feeds by means of temporary projections, called pseudopods. They are taxonomically classified in a sub‐phylum called Sarcodina. AMORALLY (13) [adverb] In a manner that is not concerned with morality or moral principles; without regard to what is right or wrong. AMORETTI (10) [noun] (in art) A cupid or putto (representation of a naked baby or small child, often with wings). | [noun] A love poem. | [noun] A male sweetheart, lover. AMORETTO (10) [noun] (in art) A cupid or putto (representation of a naked baby or small child, often with wings). | [noun] A love poem. | [noun] A male sweetheart, lover. AMORISTS (10) [noun] Someone who is in love. | [noun] Someone who writes about love. AMORTISE (10) [verb] To alienate (property) in mortmain. | [verb] To wipe out (a debt, liability etc.) gradually or in installments. | [verb] To even out the costs of running an algorithm over many iterations, so that high-cost iterations are much less frequent than low-cost iterations, which lowers the average running time. AMORTIZE (19) [verb] To alienate (property) in mortmain. | [verb] To wipe out (a debt, liability etc.) gradually or in installments. | [verb] To even out the costs of running an algorithm over many iterations, so that high-cost iterations are much less frequent than low-cost iterations, which lowers the average running time. AMOSITES (10) [noun] Plural of amosite, a type of asbestos mineral with long, straight fibers. AMOTIONS (10) AMOUNTED (11) [verb] (followed by to) To total or evaluate. | [verb] (followed by to) To be the same as or equivalent to. | [verb] To go up; to ascend. AMPERAGE (13) [noun] The electric current; charge transmitted per unit time, measured in amperes. AMPHIBIA (17) [noun] A class of cold-blooded vertebrate animals that live part of their life in water and part on land, including frogs, toads, and salamanders. AMPHIOXI (22) [noun] Plural of amphioxus, a small marine chordate with a fish-like body, considered a primitive ancestor of vertebrates. AMPHIPOD (18) [noun] A member of taxonomic order Amphipoda of small, shrimp-like crustaceans. AMPHORAE (15) [noun] A two-handled jar with a narrow neck that was used in ancient times to store or carry wine or oil. | [noun] One of various units for measuring liquid or volume during the Roman Empire, measuring between 18.5 and 39 litres depending on the variant. | [noun] Ancient unit of volume, for the measurement of the internal capacity of a ship. AMPHORAL (15) [adjective] Relating to or resembling the sound produced by blowing across the mouth of a bottle, used in medical terminology to describe certain lung sounds heard through a stethoscope. AMPHORAS (15) [noun] A two-handled jar with a narrow neck that was used in ancient times to store or carry wine or oil. | [noun] One of various units for measuring liquid or volume during the Roman Empire, measuring between 18.5 and 39 litres depending on the variant. | [noun] Ancient unit of volume, for the measurement of the internal capacity of a ship. AMPLEXUS (19) [noun] A form of pseudocopulation, found chiefly in amphibians and horseshoe crabs, in which a male grasps a female with his front legs as part of the mating process. AMPOULES (12) [noun] A small hermetically sealed vial, often used to contain a sterile solution suitable for injection. AMPULLAE (12) [noun] An Ancient Roman two-handled vessel. | [noun] A vessel for containing consecrated wine or oil. | [noun] The dilated end of a duct. AMPULLAR (12) [adjective] Relating to or resembling an ampulla; having the form of a flask or bottle. AMPUTATE (12) [verb] To surgically remove a part of the body, especially a limb AMPUTEES (12) [noun] A person who has had one or more limbs removed. AMREETAS (10) AMTRACKS (16) AMUSABLE (12) [adjective] Capable of being amused; susceptible to amusement. AMUSEDLY (14) [adverb] In an amused manner AMYGDALA (15) [noun] The region of the brain, located in the medial temporal lobe, believed to play a key role in the emotions, such as fear and pleasure, in both animals and humans. AMYGDALE (15) [noun] An almond-shaped inclusion in igneous rock or lava AMYGDULE (15) [noun] A small cavity in igneous rock filled with minerals that crystallized later than the surrounding rock. AMYLASES (13) [noun] Plural of amylase, enzymes that break down starch into sugars. AMYLENES (13) [noun] Plural of amylene, a hydrocarbon compound of the alkene series with five carbon atoms, used in organic synthesis and industrial applications. AMYLOGEN (14) AMYLOIDS (14) [noun] Insoluble protein fibers that accumulate in tissues and organs, associated with various diseases including Alzheimer's disease and prion disorders. | [noun] Plural of amyloid, a starch-like substance found in plant and animal tissues. AMYLOSES (13) [noun] Plural of amylose, a polysaccharide that is a component of starch, consisting of glucose units linked in a linear chain. ANAEMIAS (10) [noun] Plural of anaemia; conditions characterized by a deficiency of red blood cells or hemoglobin in the blood. | [noun] A pathological state in which the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood is reduced. ANAGRAMS (11) [noun] (of words) A word or phrase that is created by rearranging the letters of another word or phrase. | [verb] To form anagrams. ANALCIME (12) [noun] A white or colorless zeolite mineral, a hydrated sodium aluminum silicate, commonly found in volcanic rocks. ANALEMMA (12) [noun] An egg-shaped or figure-eight curve that results when the Sun's position in the sky is plotted out over the year at the same hour of mean solar time every day. ANATHEMA (13) [noun] A ban or curse pronounced with religious solemnity by ecclesiastical authority, often accompanied by excommunication; something denounced as accursed. | [noun] (by extension) Something which is vehemently disliked by somebody. | [noun] An imprecation; a curse; a malediction. ANATOMIC (12) [adjective] Relating to the structure of the body or organisms; of or pertaining to anatomy. ANEMONES (10) [noun] Any plant of the genus Anemone, of the Ranunculaceae (or buttercup) family, such as the windflower. | [noun] A sea anemone. ANEMOSES (10) ANEMOSIS (10) ANEURISM (10) [noun] An abnormal blood-filled swelling of an artery or vein, resulting from a localized weakness in the wall of the vessel. ANEURYSM (13) [noun] An abnormal blood-filled swelling of an artery or vein, resulting from a localized weakness in the wall of the vessel. ANGIOMAS (11) [noun] A benign tumor made up of small blood vessels or lymph vessels. ANGSTROM (11) [noun] A unit of length equal to 10−10 meters (that is, one ten-billionth of a meter), approximately the size of an atom, and denoted by the symbol Å, used especially to measure the wavelength of electromagnetic radiation or distances between atoms. ANIMALIC (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, or characteristic of animals; having the qualities of an animal. ANIMALLY (13) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of animals; in a brutal or instinctive way. ANIMATED (11) [verb] To impart motion or the appearance of motion to. | [verb] To give spirit or vigour to; to stimulate or enliven; to inspirit. | [adjective] Full of life or spirit; lively; vigorous; spritely. ANIMATER (10) [noun] One who animates or brings to life, especially in animation; a person who creates animated films or sequences. ANIMATES (10) [verb] To impart motion or the appearance of motion to. | [verb] To give spirit or vigour to; to stimulate or enliven; to inspirit. ANIMATOR (10) [noun] One who animates something; one who brings something to life or the appearance of life. | [noun] One who creates an animation or cartoon; a cartoonist. ANIMISMS (12) [noun] Plural of animism, the belief that natural objects, phenomena, and the universe possess a spiritual essence or consciousness. ANIMISTS (10) [noun] Believers in animism, the attribution of a spiritual essence to natural objects and phenomena. ANIMUSES (10) [noun] Plural of animus; a feeling of strong dislike or hostility. | [noun] In Jungian psychology, the masculine aspect of a female psyche. ANOSMIAS (10) [noun] Plural of anosmia; the loss or absence of the sense of smell. ANOXEMIA (17) [noun] A deficiency of oxygen in the blood. | [noun] A condition characterized by insufficient oxygen content in the arterial blood. ANOXEMIC (19) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by anoxemia, a condition of insufficient oxygen in the blood. ANTEROOM (10) [noun] A room before, or forming an entrance to, another; a waiting room. ANTHEMED (14) ANTHEMIA (13) [noun] An ornamental design consisting of palmettes or lotus flowers. ANTIATOM (10) ANTIFOAM (13) [noun] A substance used to prevent or reduce the formation of foam in liquids, commonly used in industrial processes and manufacturing. ANTIMALE (10) ANTIMASK (14) ANTIMERE (10) [noun] One of the segments or parts of an organism that are arranged symmetrically about an axis, particularly in radially symmetrical animals. ANTIMONY (13) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Sb, from Latin stibium) with an atomic number of 51: a lustrous gray metalloid. | [noun] The alloy stibnite. ANTINOMY (13) [noun] An apparent contradiction between valid conclusions; a paradox ANTISMOG (11) ANTISMUT (10) ANTONYMS (13) [noun] A word which has the opposite meaning of another word. ANTONYMY (16) [noun] The relation between words with opposite meanings, such as "hot" and "cold." | [noun] A word that has the opposite meaning of another word; an opposite. APHORISM (15) [noun] An original, laconic phrase conveying some principle or concept of thought. | [verb] To speak or write aphorisms. APIMANIA (12) APOGAMIC (15) [adjective] Relating to or reproducing by apogamy, a form of asexual reproduction in plants where an embryo develops without fertilization. APOMICTS (14) [noun] Any apomictic plant or organism. APOMIXES (19) [noun] Plant reproduction without fertilization. | [noun] Plant reproduction without fertilization, meiosis, or the production of gametes. | [noun] Animal reproduction in which the egg cell does not undergo meiosis or fertilization. APOMIXIS (19) [noun] Plant reproduction without fertilization. | [noun] Plant reproduction without fertilization, meiosis, or the production of gametes. | [noun] Animal reproduction in which the egg cell does not undergo meiosis or fertilization. APOTHEGM (16) [noun] A short, witty, instructive saying; an aphorism or maxim. APOTHEMS (15) [noun] The perpendicular distance from the center of a circle to a chord of the same circle. | [noun] The distance from the center of a regular polygon perpendicular to one of its sides (a special case of the above). APTERIUM (12) [noun] An area of skin on a bird's body that is not covered by feathers. AQUARIUM (19) [noun] A tank, often made of glass, for keeping live fish or other aquatic animals. | [noun] A public place where live fish and other aquatic animals are exhibited. ARAPAIMA (12) [noun] A large carnivorous predatory South American tropical freshwater fish, Arapaima gigas. ARCANUMS (12) [noun] Plural of arcanum; mysterious or secret things, especially secret remedies or elixirs. ARCHAISM (15) [noun] The adoption or imitation of archaic words or style. | [noun] An archaic word, style, etc. ARCIFORM (15) [adjective] Having the form of an arch; curved like an arch. ARGENTUM (11) [noun] The Latin name for silver, used in chemistry and alchemy. | [noun] Silver or a silver-colored metal. ARGUMENT (11) [noun] A fact or statement used to support a proposition; a reason. | [noun] A verbal dispute; a quarrel. | [noun] A process of reasoning. ARMAGNAC (13) [noun] A brandy made in the region of Armagnac. ARMAMENT (12) [noun] A body of forces equipped for war. | [noun] All the cannon and small arms collectively, with their equipments, belonging to a ship or a fortification. | [noun] Any equipment for resistance. ARMATURE (10) [noun] The rotating part of an electric motor or dynamo, which mostly consists of coils of wire around a metal core. | [noun] The moving part in an electromechanical device like a loudspeaker or a buzzer. | [noun] A piece of soft steel or iron that connects the poles of a magnet ARMBANDS (13) [noun] A band worn around the arm, usually to symbolize protest or mourning. | [noun] A band worn around the arm of the captain of a team. | [noun] An inflatable band worn round the arms to keep afloat in water ARMCHAIR (15) [noun] A chair with supports for the arms or elbows. | [verb] To create based on theory or general knowledge rather than data. | [verb] To theorize based on analysis of data that was gathered previously; to reflect. ARMHOLES (13) [noun] A human armpit. | [noun] Similar structures in other animals. | [noun] A hole for an arm in a piece of clothing. ARMIGERO (11) ARMIGERS (11) [noun] A person entitled to bear a coat of arms. | [noun] A squire carrying the armour of a knight. ARMILLAE (10) [noun] Plural of armilla; circular bands or rings, especially those used in astronomy or as ornamental bracelets in ancient Rome. ARMILLAS (10) [noun] Plural of armilla; ornamental bracelets or rings worn on the arm, especially in ancient Rome. | [noun] In astronomy, rings or circles used in armillary spheres to represent celestial coordinates. ARMLOADS (11) [noun] A quantity of things approaching the maximum that could be held or carried with one arm. ARMLOCKS (16) [noun] A wrestling move in which the opponent's arm is held immobile | [noun] Any of several distinct attacks against an opponent’s arm in martial arts | [noun] (by extension) Power to control or heavily influence something or someone. ARMOIRES (10) [noun] A type of cupboard, cabinet, or wardrobe - originally used for storing weapons. ARMONICA (12) [noun] A musical instrument consisting of a series of glass bowls of graduated sizes that produce sound when rubbed with wet fingers, invented by Benjamin Franklin in the 18th century. ARMORERS (10) [noun] A manufacturer of weapons, especially of guns | [noun] A military specialist in charge of the upkeep of small arms etc | [noun] Someone who makes or repairs armor ARMORIAL (10) [noun] A book etc concerning heraldry, especially a collection of coats of arms. | [adjective] Of, or relating to heraldry, or to heraldic arms. | [adjective] In, or pertaining to, armor. ARMORIES (10) [noun] Heraldry | [noun] A place where arms are kept, an arsenal. | [noun] A collection of weapons and materiel. ARMORING (11) [verb] To equip something with armor or a protective coating or hardening. | [verb] To provide something with an analogous form of protection. | [noun] Armour or shielding. ARMOURED (11) [verb] To equip something with armour or a protective coating or hardening. | [verb] To provide something with an analogous form of protection. | [adjective] Possessing, wearing, or fitted out with armour. ARMOURER (10) [noun] A manufacturer of weapons, especially of guns | [noun] A military specialist in charge of the upkeep of small arms etc | [noun] Someone who makes or repairs armor ARMRESTS (10) [noun] Part of the seat of a chair that is designed to support the arm. ARMYWORM (18) [noun] The larva of any of the Spodoptera and Mythimna genera of noctuid moths, which typically feed in large, destructive groups. AROMATIC (12) [noun] A fragrant plant or spice added to a dish to flavour it. | [noun] Any aromatic compound. | [adjective] Fragrant or spicy. ARYTHMIA (16) [noun] An abnormal heart rhythm; a cardiac condition characterized by irregular heartbeats. | [noun] Loss or absence of rhythm. ARYTHMIC (18) ASCIDIUM (13) [noun] A pitcher-shaped or tubular structure in certain plants, such as pitcher plants, that functions in trapping and digesting insects. | [noun] In zoology, a pouch-like structure found in some marine animals, particularly tunicates. ASSEMBLE (12) [verb] To put together. | [verb] To gather as a group. | [verb] To translate from assembly language to machine code ASSEMBLY (15) [noun] A set of pieces that work together in unison as a mechanism or device. | [noun] The act of putting together a set of pieces, fragments, or elements. | [noun] A congregation of people in one place for a purpose. ASSUMERS (10) [noun] Plural of assumer; people who take something for granted or accept something as true without proof. ASSUMING (11) [verb] To authenticate by means of belief; to surmise; to suppose to be true, especially without proof | [verb] To take on a position, duty or form | [verb] To adopt a feigned quality or manner; to claim without right; to arrogate ASTERISM (10) [noun] (constellation) An unofficial constellation (small group of stars that forms a visible pattern). | [noun] A rarely used typographical symbol (⁂, three asterisks arranged in a triangle), used to call attention to a passage or to separate subchapters in a book. | [noun] A star-shaped figure exhibited by some crystals by reflected light (as in a star sapphire) or by transmitted light (as in some mica). ASTIGMIA (11) [noun] A refractive error of the eye in which the cornea or lens has different curvatures in different meridians, causing blurred vision at all distances. ASTOMOUS (10) ATAMASCO (12) [noun] A spring-flowering plant of the lily family with white or pink flowers, native to the southeastern United States. ATAVISMS (13) [noun] The reappearance of an ancestral characteristic in an organism after several generations of absence. | [noun] The recurrence or reversion to a past behaviour, method, characteristic or style after a long period of absence. | [noun] Reversion to past primitive behavior, especially violence. ATEMOYAS (13) [noun] A tropical fruit that is a hybrid between a sugar apple and a cherimoya, having a creamy flesh and sweet flavor. ATHEISMS (13) [noun] Plural of atheism; the belief or practice of disbelief in the existence of deities. ATHENEUM (13) [noun] A literary or scientific institution, club, or reading room. | [noun] A building dedicated to learning and the promotion of literature and science. ATHEROMA (13) [noun] An abnormal fatty deposit which develops within the walls of arteries. | [noun] A kind of cyst on the scalp. ATOMICAL (12) ATOMISED (11) [verb] To separate or reduce into atoms | [verb] To make into a fine spray | [verb] To fragment, break into small pieces or concepts ATOMISER (10) [noun] An instrument for reducing a liquid to spray or vapor for disinfecting, cooling, medical use or perfume spraying. ATOMISES (10) [verb] To separate or reduce into atoms | [verb] To make into a fine spray | [verb] To fragment, break into small pieces or concepts ATOMISMS (12) [noun] Plural of atomism, the philosophical doctrine that all matter consists of tiny, indivisible particles called atoms. | [noun] Plural of atomism, the theory that complex phenomena can be reduced to the properties and interactions of atoms. ATOMISTS (10) [noun] Philosophers or scientists who believe that all matter is composed of atoms. | [noun] In ancient philosophy, followers of Leucippus and Democritus who theorized that reality consists of indivisible particles moving in void. ATOMIZED (20) [verb] To separate or reduce into atoms | [verb] To make into a fine spray | [verb] To fragment, break into small pieces or concepts ATOMIZER (19) [noun] An instrument for reducing a liquid to spray or vapor for disinfecting, cooling, medical use or perfume spraying. ATOMIZES (19) [verb] To separate or reduce into atoms | [verb] To make into a fine spray | [verb] To fragment, break into small pieces or concepts ATREMBLE (12) [adjective] Trembling. ATROPISM (12) ATTEMPER (12) [verb] To moderate or temper; to adjust or regulate to the proper degree. | [verb] To mix or combine in proper proportions. ATTEMPTS (12) [noun] The action of trying at something. | [noun] An assault or attack, especially an assassination attempt. | [verb] To try. ATTICISM (12) [noun] A style of Greek architecture and ornamentation characteristic of ancient Attica, featuring refined simplicity and elegant proportions. | [noun] Refined and elegant style or taste in language, art, or behavior, particularly as exemplified in ancient Greek culture. AUGMENTS (11) [noun] (grammar) In some Indo-European languages, a prefix e- (a- in Sanskrit) indicating a past tense of a verb. | [noun] (grammar) In some Bantu languages, an additional vowel prepended to the noun prefix. | [noun] An increase. AURIFORM (13) [adjective] Shaped like or resembling an ear. AUSFORMS (13) AUTECISM (12) [noun] A condition in which a parasitic fungus completes its entire life cycle on a single host plant species. | [noun] In ecology, the occurrence of a species that is self-sufficient and does not require other species for reproduction or survival. AUTOGAMY (14) [noun] Self-fertilization, the fertilizing pollen being derived from the same blossom as the pistil acted upon. AUTOMATA (10) [noun] A machine or robot designed to follow a precise sequence of instructions. | [noun] A person who acts like a machine or robot, often defined as having a monotonous lifestyle and lacking in emotion. | [noun] A formal system, such as finite automaton. AUTOMATE (10) [verb] To replace or enhance human labor with machines. AUTONOMY (13) [noun] Self-government; freedom to act or function independently. | [noun] The capacity to make an informed, uncoerced decision. | [noun] The capacity of a system to make a decision about its actions without the involvement of another system or operator. AUTOSOME (10) [noun] Any chromosome other than sex chromosomes. AUTOTOMY (13) [noun] The spontaneous removal of a limb, tail etc, especially by some invertebrates as a self-defense mechanism. AUTUMNAL (10) [adjective] Of or relating to autumn. | [adjective] Past the middle of life; in the third stage. AVERMENT (13) [noun] The act of averring, or that which is averred; positive assertion. | [noun] Verification; establishment by evidence. | [noun] A positive statement of facts; an allegation; an offer to justify or prove what is alleged. AXONEMAL (17) [adjective] Relating to or resembling an axoneme, the core structure of cilia and flagella containing microtubules. AXONEMES (17) [noun] A bundle of nine microtubules forming the internal scaffolding of a cilium, with two extra central microtubules connecting the others if the cilium is motile AXOPLASM (19) [noun] The cytoplasm of an axon AZIMUTHS (22) [noun] An arc of the horizon intercepted between the meridian of the place and a vertical circle passing through the center of any object. | [noun] The quadrant of an azimuth circle. AZOTEMIA (19) [noun] An abnormal increase of urea or other nitrogenous compounds in the blood, typically resulting from kidney disease or failure. AZOTEMIC (21) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by azotemia, a condition of excess nitrogenous waste in the blood. BAALISMS (12) [noun] Plural of baalisms; religious practices or worship associated with Baal, an ancient Semitic deity, or more broadly, false religious systems or idolatries. BACKMOST (18) [adjective] Farthest back BACKROOM (18) [noun] A room near the rear of a premises, especially one that is only accessible to a privileged few and can be used as an inconspicuous meeting place. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or happening in a backroom | [adjective] Characterized by secrecy or anonymity BACULUMS (14) [noun] The plural of baculum, a bone found in the penis of many mammals. BADMOUTH (16) [verb] To criticize or malign, especially unfairly or spitefully. BAGWORMS (16) [noun] A member of the family Psychidae of the Lepidoptera. | [noun] Eastern tent caterpillar. | [noun] Fall webworm. BAILMENT (12) [noun] Bail. | [noun] The handing over of control over, or possession of, personal property by one person, the bailor, to another, the bailee, for a specific purpose upon which the parties have agreed. BAILSMAN (12) [noun] A person who provides bail or acts as a surety for another person's release from custody. BAILSMEN (12) [noun] Plural of bailsman; persons who provide bail or security for another person's release from custody. BAKEMEAT (16) [noun] A dish of meat baked in a pastry crust, or a meat pie. | [noun] Archaic term for baked meat or meat dishes prepared for feasting. BALLGAME (13) [noun] Any game played with a ball. | [noun] A specific contest or match between teams playing such a game, in particular a baseball game. | [noun] A sport played in the Aztec and Mayan civilizations; Mesoamerican ballgame. BALLROOM (12) [noun] A large room used for dancing and banquets. | [noun] A type of elegant dance. | [verb] To take part in ballroom dancing. BALMIEST (12) [adjective] Producing balm. | [adjective] Soothing or fragrant. | [adjective] Mild and pleasant. BALMLIKE (16) [adjective] Resembling or having the qualities of balm; soothing, mild, or fragrant. BALMORAL (12) [noun] A Scottish cap with a flat top and a plume but no brim; a blue bonnet. | [noun] A heavy walking shoe. | [noun] An Oxford shoe. BALSAMED (13) [verb] Past tense of balm; treated with balm or a soothing substance. | [adjective] Having been treated with balm; soothed or mitigated. BALSAMIC (14) [noun] A balsamic vinegar. | [adjective] Producing balsam. | [adjective] Having the health-giving properties of balsam; soothing, restorative. BAMBINOS (14) [noun] A child or baby, especially a representation in art of the infant Christ wrapped in swaddling clothes. BANDSMAN (13) [noun] A player in a musical band, especially a military or brass band. | [noun] A labourer (loader) working with a band of men. BANDSMEN (13) [noun] A player in a musical band, especially a military or brass band. | [noun] A labourer (loader) working with a band of men. BAPTISMS (14) [noun] A Christian sacrament, by which one is received into a church and sometimes given a name, generally involving the candidate to be anointed with or submerged in water. | [noun] A similar ceremony of initiation, purification or naming. BARGEMAN (13) [noun] A member of the crew of a barge. | [noun] A barge owner, maintainer, or captain of a barge. | [noun] A large white maggot that frequently infested ship's biscuits; most likely a larva of the cadelle beetle, Tenebroides mauritanicus. BARGEMEN (13) [noun] A member of the crew of a barge. | [noun] A barge owner, maintainer, or captain of a barge. | [noun] A large white maggot that frequently infested ship's biscuits; most likely a larva of the cadelle beetle, Tenebroides mauritanicus. BARMAIDS (13) [noun] A woman who serves in a bar. BARMIEST (12) [adjective] Odd, strange, or crazy. | [adjective] Containing barm, i.e. froth from fermented yeast. BAROGRAM (13) [noun] A chart or record produced by a barograph, showing atmospheric pressure variations over time. BARROOMS (12) [noun] A room where alcoholic drinks are served over a counter. BASEMENT (12) [noun] A floor of a building below ground level. | [noun] A mass of igneous or metamorphic rock forming the foundation over which a platform of sedimentary rocks is laid. | [noun] Last place in a sports conference standings. BASIDIUM (13) [noun] A small structure, shaped like a club, found in the Basidiomycota division of fungi, that bears four spores at the tips of small projections. BASMATIS (12) [noun] Plural of basmati, a type of long-grain aromatic rice commonly used in Indian and South Asian cuisine. BATHMATS (15) [noun] A small mat used next to a bathtub to absorb water and thus prevent slipping. BATHROOM (15) [noun] A room containing a shower and/or bathtub, and (typically but not necessarily) a toilet. | [noun] A lavatory: a room containing a toilet and (typically but not necessarily) a bathtub. BDELLIUM (13) [noun] Probably an aromatic gum like balsam that was exuded from a tree, probably one of several species in the genus Commiphora. BEADSMAN (13) [noun] A petitioner; someone who seeks some type of favour from another, usually from a superior. | [noun] A man employed in praying; especially one who prays for another. | [noun] A poor man, supported in a beadhouse, and required to pray for the soul of its founder; an almsman. BEADSMEN (13) [noun] A petitioner; someone who seeks some type of favour from another, usually from a superior. | [noun] A man employed in praying; especially one who prays for another. | [noun] A poor man, supported in a beadhouse, and required to pray for the soul of its founder; an almsman. BEAMIEST (12) [adjective] Resembling a beam in size and weight; massy. | [adjective] Having horns or antlers. | [adjective] Having much beam or breadth; wide. BEAMLESS (12) [adjective] Without a beam or beams; lacking a beam structure. BEAMLIKE (16) [adjective] Resembling or having the characteristics of a beam; straight and rigid like a beam. BECALMED (15) [verb] To make calm or still; make quiet; calm. | [verb] To deprive (a ship) of wind, so that it cannot move (usually in passive). | [adjective] (of a sailing ship) Unable to move due to lack of wind. BECHAMEL (17) [noun] A simple white sauce made from a roux of butter and flour to which is added hot milk. BECHARMS (17) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "becharm," meaning to charm or enchant. BECLAMOR (14) BECOMING (15) [verb] To arrive, come (to a place). | [verb] To come about; happen; come into being; arise. | [verb] Begin to be; turn into. BECRIMED (15) BECRIMES (14) BEDAMNED (14) [verb] Past tense of bedamn; to curse or damn. BEDESMAN (13) [noun] A person who prays for another, especially one supported by a charitable institution or endowment to do so. | [noun] A poor person supported by a charity or almshouse. BEDESMEN (13) [noun] Plural of bedesman; men supported by charitable endowments or alms, historically often required to pray for their benefactors. BEDFRAME (16) [noun] The framework or structure that supports a mattress and forms the base of a bed. BEDIMMED (16) [verb] To make dim; to obscure or darken. BEDIMPLE (15) BEDLAMPS (15) [noun] Plural of bedlamp; lamps designed to be placed on or near a bed for reading or ambient lighting. BEDMAKER (17) [noun] Someone who manufactures beds | [noun] (Cantab) a domestic servant employed by a University for the benefit of its students BEDMATES (13) [noun] A person with whom one shares a bed. BEDROOMS (13) [noun] A room in a house where a bed is kept for sleeping. BEDTIMES (13) [noun] The time or hour at which one retires to bed in order to sleep. BEDUMBED (16) [verb] Past tense of bedumb; to make dumb or stupid. BEGLAMOR (13) BEGLOOMS (13) BEGRIMED (14) [verb] To make something dirty; to soil. | [adjective] Dirty, soiled, grimy. BEGRIMES (13) [verb] To make something dirty; to soil. BEHEMOTH (18) [noun] A great and mighty beast God shows Job in Job 40:15–24. | [noun] (by extension) Any great and mighty monster. | [noun] Something which has the qualities of great power and might, and monstrous proportions. BEJUMBLE (21) BELDAMES (13) [noun] A grandmother. | [noun] An old woman, particularly an ugly one. BEMADAMS (15) BEMADDEN (14) [verb] To make mad or angry; to drive to madness. BEMEANED (13) [verb] Past tense of bemean; to demean or lower in dignity or respect. BEMINGLE (13) BEMIRING (13) [verb] To soil with mud or a similar substance. | [verb] To immerse or trap in mire. BEMISTED (13) [verb] Covered or obscured with mist. | [adjective] Obscured by or filled with mist. BEMIXING (20) BEMOANED (13) [verb] To moan or complain about (something). | [verb] To be dismayed or worried about (someone), particularly because of their situation or what has happened to them. BEMOCKED (19) [verb] Past tense of bemock; to mock or ridicule someone or something. BEMUDDLE (14) [verb] To confuse or bewilder someone; to muddle or perplex. BEMURMUR (14) BEMUSING (13) [verb] To confuse or bewilder. | [verb] To devote to the Muses. BEMUZZLE (30) [verb] To put a muzzle on; to silence or restrain from speaking. BENAMING (13) BENJAMIN (19) BENOMYLS (15) [noun] Plural of benomyl, a fungicide used to treat plant diseases. BENUMBED (15) [verb] To make numb, as by cold or anesthetic. | [verb] To deaden, dull (the mind, faculties, etc.). | [adjective] Lacking sensation; numb. BEPIMPLE (16) BERGAMOT (13) [noun] A tree of the orange family (Citrus × limon, syn. Citrus bergamia), having a roundish or pear-shaped fruit, from the rind of which an essential oil of delicious odor is extracted, much prized as a perfume. | [noun] The fruit from the bergamot tree | [noun] The essence or perfume made from the fruit. | [noun] A coarse tapestry, manufactured from flock of cotton or hemp, mixed with ox's or goat's hair. BERHYMED (19) BERHYMES (18) [verb] To compose or write something in rhyme. | [verb] To supply rhyming words or verses for something. BERIMING (13) BERMUDAS (13) [noun] Bermuda shorts, a style of knee-length shorts. | [noun] Plural of Bermuda, referring to multiple things from or related to Bermuda. BERSEEMS (12) [noun] A clover-like plant (Trifolium alexandrinum) native to Egypt, cultivated as fodder for livestock. BESEEMED (13) [verb] Past tense of beseem; to be suitable or appropriate for; to befit. BESHAMED (16) BESHAMES (15) BESLIMED (13) [verb] Past tense of beslime; covered or coated with slime. BESLIMES (12) [verb] Third person singular present tense of beslime; to cover or smear with slime. BESMEARS (12) [verb] To smear over; smear all over; sully. BESMILED (13) BESMILES (12) BESMIRCH (17) [verb] To make dirty. | [verb] To tarnish something, especially someone's reputation. BESMOKED (17) [adjective] Filled with or darkened by smoke; smoky. BESMOKES (16) [verb] Fills or covers with smoke. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of besmoke, meaning to darken or obscure with smoke. BESMOOTH (15) BESMUDGE (14) [verb] To smudge or soil with dirt or grime. BESWARMS (15) [verb] Swarms over or around in large numbers; covers or fills by swarming. BETHUMPS (17) [verb] To beat or strike heavily and repeatedly; to pummel. BEVOMITS (15) BEWORMED (16) BICHROME (17) [adjective] Having or involving two colors. | [noun] A work of art or design executed in two colors. BIENNIUM (12) [noun] A period of two years. BIFORMED (16) BIGAMIES (13) [noun] Plural of bigamy; the practice or state of being married to more than one person at the same time. BIGAMIST (13) [noun] A person who is married to two people at the same time, or who has been married more than once. BIGAMOUS (13) [adjective] Relating to or guilty of bigamy; married to two people at the same time. BIGEMINY (16) [noun] A cardiac arrhythmia in which every other heartbeat is premature or irregular. | [noun] The occurrence of two things in pairs or alternate succession. BIGMOUTH (16) [noun] One who talks too much or says things which should not be said. | [adjective] Applied to various creatures that have a large mouth. BIMANOUS (12) [adjective] Having two hands or hand-like appendages. BIMANUAL (12) [adjective] Involving or using both hands BIMENSAL (12) [adjective] Occurring twice a month or every two months. BIMESTER (12) [noun] A period of two months. | [noun] One of two terms in an academic year, particularly in some Latin American educational systems. BIMETALS (12) [noun] Plural of bimetal; composite materials made of two different metals bonded together, often used in thermostats and temperature-sensitive devices. BIMETHYL (18) BIMORPHS (17) [noun] Plural of bimorph, a device consisting of two layers of piezoelectric material that bends when an electric field is applied, used in actuators and sensors. | [noun] In biology, organisms or structures that have two distinct forms or shapes. BINOMIAL (12) [noun] A polynomial with two terms. | [noun] A quantity expressed as the sum or difference of two terms. | [noun] A scientific name at the rank of species, with two terms: a generic name and a specific name. BIOHERMS (15) [noun] Rounded or mound-like masses of rock formed by the accumulation of skeletal remains of sedentary organisms, especially corals and mollusks, in their original position of growth. BIOMETRY (15) [noun] The measurement of biological data. | [noun] The analysis of biological statistics; biostatistics. | [noun] The application of biostatistics to security; biometrics. BIONOMIC (14) [adjective] Relating to bionomics, the study of organisms in relation to their environment; ecological. BIOPLASM (14) [noun] The living substance of cells; protoplasm. BIRAMOSE (12) [adjective] Having two branches or parts; specifically, describing appendages in crustaceans that have a double-branched structure. BIRAMOUS (12) [adjective] Branching in two, composed of two branches. BIRDFARM (16) BIRDLIME (13) [noun] A sticky substance smeared on branches to catch birds. | [noun] (rhyming slang) Time; a jail term, the serving of a prison sentence. | [verb] To add birdlime to. BISMUTHS (15) [noun] Plural of bismuth, a brittle crystalline metallic element with atomic number 83, used in alloys and pharmaceuticals. BITUMENS (12) [noun] Plural of bitumen; dark, sticky, petroleum-based substances used in road construction and waterproofing. BLACKGUM (19) [noun] A tupelo tree (Nyssa sylvatica) native to southeastern North America, having dark wood and small black fruits. BLAMABLE (14) [adjective] Deserving blame BLAMABLY (17) [adverb] In a manner deserving of blame; culpably. BLAMEFUL (15) [adjective] Deserving blame; culpable or at fault. BLASTEMA (12) [noun] A mass of undifferentiated cells from which an organ or part develops, especially in embryonic development or regeneration in some animals. BLASTOMA (12) [noun] A tumor or cancer that arises from embryonic tissue or immature cells. BLELLUMS (12) BLIMPISH (17) [adjective] Characteristic of or resembling a blimp; resembling the pompous, reactionary attitudes stereotypically associated with the British upper class (as in Colonel Blimp). BLOOMERS (12) [noun] An ironworker. | [noun] A minor or embarrassing mistake with minimal results. | [noun] A circular loaf of white bread. | [noun] Any of several forms of women’s divided garment for the lower body BLOOMERY (15) [noun] A forge in which wrought iron is made straight from ore. BLOOMIER (12) [adjective] More bloomy; having more of a whitish powdery coating or appearance characteristic of certain fruits like grapes or plums. BLOOMING (13) [verb] To cause to blossom; to make flourish. | [verb] To bestow a bloom upon; to make blooming or radiant. | [verb] Of a plant, to produce blooms; to open its blooms. BLOSSOMS (12) [noun] A flower, especially one indicating that a fruit tree is fruiting; a mass of such flowers. | [noun] The state or season of producing such flowers. | [noun] A blooming period or stage of development; something lovely that gives rich promise. BLOSSOMY (15) BLUEGUMS (13) [noun] Any of various eucalyptus trees having blueish leaves, especially Eucalyptus globulus. | [noun] A person of sub-Saharan African origin, alluding to the blue coloring around their gumline BLUESMAN (12) [noun] A male blues musician BLUESMEN (12) [noun] A male blues musician BLUESTEM (12) [noun] A tall perennial grass native to North America, characterized by blue-purple coloring at the base of the stem, commonly found in prairie grasslands. | [noun] Any of several grasses of the genus Andropogon, valued for forage and prairie restoration. BOARDMAN (13) BOARDMEN (13) BOATSMAN (12) BOATSMEN (12) [noun] Plural of boatsman; men who operate or work on boats. BODEMENT (13) [noun] An omen or portent; a sign of something to come. BOEHMITE (15) [noun] A mineral form of aluminum oxide hydroxide, AlO(OH), that is a precursor to aluminum oxide and is used in the production of alumina. BOGEYMAN (16) [noun] A menacing, ghost-like monster in children's stories. | [noun] (by extension) Any make-believe threat, especially one used to intimidate or distract. BOGEYMEN (16) [noun] A menacing, ghost-like monster in children's stories. | [noun] (by extension) Any make-believe threat, especially one used to intimidate or distract. BOGYISMS (16) BOHEMIAN (15) [noun] An unconventional or nonconformist artist or writer. | [adjective] Unconventional, especially in habit or dress. BOHEMIAS (15) [noun] Plural of Bohemia, referring to regions or communities associated with unconventional artistic or bohemian lifestyles. | [noun] Plural of bohemia, meaning communities of bohemians or bohemian quarters in cities. BOLLWORM (15) [noun] The larvae of any of various species of moth that are pests to cotton. BOMBARDS (15) [noun] A medieval primitive cannon, used chiefly in sieges for throwing heavy stone balls. | [noun] A bassoon-like medieval instrument | [noun] A large liquor container made of leather, in the form of a jug or a bottle. BOMBASTS (14) [noun] Plural of bombast; pompous or pretentious speech or writing. | [verb] Third person singular of bombast; to speak in a pompous or grandiose manner. BOMBESIN (14) BOMBINGS (15) [noun] The action of dropping bombs from the air. | [noun] The action of placing and detonating bombs. BOMBLOAD (15) BOMBYCID (20) [noun] A moth of the family Bombycidae, which includes the silkworm moth. BOMBYXES (24) [noun] Plural of bombyx, a genus of moths that includes the silkworm moth. BONDMAID (14) [noun] A female slave or a woman bound to servitude; a maidservant in bondage. BONDSMAN (13) [noun] A male slave. | [noun] A male indentured servant. | [noun] Someone who signs a bond that states that they have taken responsibility for someone else's obligations. BONDSMEN (13) [noun] A male slave. | [noun] A male indentured servant. | [noun] Someone who signs a bond that states that they have taken responsibility for someone else's obligations. BONEMEAL (12) [noun] Ground bones used as a slow-release fertilizer, especially for bulbs. BONHOMIE (15) [noun] A pleasant, friendly, good-natured manner; an affable and approachable disposition; good-heartedness. | [noun] Friendly atmosphere; an atmosphere of good cheer. | [noun] A cheerful remark. BOOGYMAN (16) [noun] A menacing, ghost-like monster in children's stories. | [noun] (by extension) Any make-believe threat, especially one used to intimidate or distract. BOOGYMEN (16) [noun] A menacing, ghost-like monster in children's stories. | [noun] (by extension) Any make-believe threat, especially one used to intimidate or distract. BOOKMARK (20) [noun] A strip of material used to mark a place in a book. | [noun] A record of the address of a file or Internet page serving as a shortcut to it. | [noun] A pointer found in a nonclustered index to a row in a clustered index or a table heap BOOKWORM (19) [noun] Any of various insects that infest books. | [noun] An avid book reader. BOOMIEST (12) [adjective] Characterized by heavy bass sounds. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a financial boom, resources boom, baby boom, etc. BOOMKINS (16) [noun] A spar or beam projecting from the side of a ship, used to extend rigging or to hold cargo away from the hull. | [noun] Plural of boomkin, a small boom or projection on a vessel. BOOMLETS (12) [noun] Small booms or sudden increases in activity, prosperity, or popularity. | [noun] Plural of boomlet, a minor or localized economic boom. BOOMTOWN (15) [noun] A town that experiences sudden and rapid growth, typically due to the discovery of natural resources or other economic opportunities. BOREDOMS (13) [noun] Plural of boredom; instances or states of being bored or tedious situations. BORESOME (12) BOSOMING (13) [verb] The present participle of "bosom," meaning to embrace or hold closely to one's chest, or to hide or conceal something in one's bosom. BOSSDOMS (13) [noun] The plural of bossdom; the state, condition, or domain of being a boss or the collective authority of bosses. BOSSISMS (12) BOTHRIUM (15) [noun] A groove or slit-like opening on the scolex (head) of certain tapeworms used for attachment to the host's intestinal wall. BOTTOMED (13) [verb] To furnish (something) with a bottom. | [verb] To wind (like a ball of thread etc.). | [verb] To establish or found (something) on or upon. BOTTOMER (12) BOTTOMRY (15) [noun] An early form of maritime contract in which owner of a ship could borrow money using the ship as collateral. BOTULISM (12) [noun] Poisoning caused by the toxin from Clostridium botulinum, a type of anaerobic bacteria that grows in improperly prepared food. BOYARISM (15) BRACHIUM (17) [noun] The upper arm or a corresponding part in other animals. | [noun] An arm-like anatomical structure or appendage. BRAKEMAN (16) [noun] A railroad employee responsible for a train's brakes, couplings etc. | [noun] A person employed to work the steam engine or other machinery that raises the coal from the mine. | [noun] A person who pulls the brake lever in the sport of bobsleigh. BRAKEMEN (16) [noun] A railroad employee responsible for a train's brakes, couplings etc. | [noun] A person employed to work the steam engine or other machinery that raises the coal from the mine. | [noun] A person who pulls the brake lever in the sport of bobsleigh. BRAMBLED (15) [adjective] Overgrown with brambles. BRAMBLES (14) [noun] Any of many closely related thorny plants in the genus Rubus including the blackberry and likely not including the raspberry proper. | [noun] Any thorny shrub. | [noun] A cocktail of gin, lemon juice, and blackberry liqueur. BREAMING (13) [verb] To clean (e.g. a ship's bottom of clinging shells, seaweed, etc.) by the application of fire and scraping. BRECHAMS (17) BREGMATA (13) [noun] The plural of bregma, which is the junction point on the skull where the coronal and sagittal sutures meet. BREGMATE (13) BRIMFULL (15) [adjective] Filled to the brim; completely full. | [adjective] (archaic spelling of brimful) Overflowing or abundant. BRIMLESS (12) [adjective] Without a brim; having no projecting edge or rim, especially referring to a hat or cap. BRIMMERS (14) [noun] Plural of brimmer; things or people that are full to the brim. | [noun] Large drinking vessels filled to the brim, typically used for toasts. BRIMMING (15) [verb] To be full to overflowing. | [verb] To fill to the brim, upper edge, or top. | [verb] Of pigs: to be in heat, to rut. BROMATED (13) [verb] Past tense of bromate; treated or combined with bromine or a bromide compound. BROMATES (12) [noun] The anion BrO3-1, derived from bromic acid; any salt containing this anion BROMELIN (12) [noun] An enzyme found in pineapple juice that breaks down proteins and is used in medicine and industry. BROMIDES (13) [noun] A binary compound of bromine and some other element or radical. | [noun] A dose of bromide taken as a sedative, or to reduce sexual appetite. | [noun] (by extension) A dull person with conventional thoughts. BROMIDIC (15) [adjective] Dull, trite, or lacking originality; commonplace. | [adjective] Of or relating to bromine or bromides. BROMINES (12) [noun] Plural of bromine, a chemical element that is a reddish-brown liquid at room temperature with an atomic number of 35. BROMISMS (14) [noun] Plural of bromism, a condition caused by excessive use or ingestion of bromine or bromine compounds, characterized by symptoms such as skin rashes, headaches, and mental disturbances. BROMIZED (22) BROMIZES (21) BROOMIER (12) [adjective] More resembling or characteristic of a broom; more bushy or brush-like in appearance. BROOMING (13) [verb] The act of sweeping with a broom. | [verb] In curling, the action of sweeping the ice in front of a stone to reduce friction and increase its distance. BROUGHAM (16) [noun] A four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage, designed in 1839. It had an open seat for the driver in front of the closed cabin for two or four passengers. | [noun] An automobile, a sedan without a roof over the driver's seat. BRUMBIES (14) [noun] A wild or feral horse. BRUNIZEM (21) [noun] A dark soil rich in organic matter and bases, formed in grasslands with moderate to high rainfall. BRUTISMS (12) BRUXISMS (19) [noun] Plural of bruxism, the involuntary grinding or clenching of the teeth, typically occurring during sleep. BUCKRAMS (18) [noun] A stiff fabric made of cotton or linen, used for interfacing in garments and bookbinding. | [verb] To stiffen with buckram. BUDWORMS (16) [noun] Any of various moth caterpillars. BULIMIAC (14) BULIMIAS (12) [noun] Plural of bulimia, an eating disorder characterized by binge eating followed by purging. BULIMICS (14) [noun] A person suffering from bulimia nervosa. BUMBLERS (14) [noun] People who act in a clumsy or incompetent manner. | [noun] Plural of bumbler, someone who makes mistakes or blunders. BUMBLING (15) [verb] To act in an inept, clumsy or inexpert manner; to make mistakes. | [verb] To boom, as a bittern; to buzz, as a fly. | [noun] The act of one who bumbles; a mistake or error, especially through clumsiness. BUMBOATS (14) [noun] A small boat used for carrying provisions to ships lying at anchor in a harbour. BUMPERED (15) [verb] Past tense of bumper, meaning to equip with a bumper or to bump against something repeatedly. | [adjective] Unusually large or abundant (as in "a bumpered crop"). BUMPIEST (14) [adjective] Rough; jumpy; causing or characterized by jolts and irregular movements | [adjective] Covered with or full of bumps BUMPKINS (18) [noun] A clumsy, unsophisticated person; a yokel. | [noun] A short boom or spar used to extend a sail or secure a stay. BUNCOMBE (16) [noun] Senseless talk; nonsense; a piece of nonsense. | [noun] (Washington, DC) Bombastic political posturing or oratorical display designed only for show or public applause. BUNKMATE (16) [noun] A person who shares a bunk or sleeping quarters with another person, typically in military, prison, or institutional settings. BUXOMEST (19) [adjective] Superlative form of buxom; most full-figured or full-bosomed, typically said of a woman. CABALISM (14) [noun] A system of esoteric or mystical interpretation of sacred texts, particularly Jewish scriptures. | [noun] The practice of secret or occult arts; mysticism or esotericism. CABOMBAS (16) [noun] Plural of cabomba, an aquatic plant with delicate, feathery leaves commonly used in aquariums. CACOMIXL (21) CADMIUMS (15) [noun] Plural of cadmium, a soft bluish-white metallic element used in batteries, pigments, and alloys. CAESIUMS (12) [noun] Plural of caesium, a soft, silvery-white alkali metal element with atomic number 55. CALADIUM (13) [noun] Any of the genus Caladium of flowering plants, especially an ornamental cultivar of Caladium bicolor. CALAMARI (12) [noun] Squid as food, especially cooked in the form of calamari rings | [noun] Squid, the mollusk, in general CALAMARS (12) [noun] Plural of calamar, a squid or squid-like cephalopod. | [noun] Plural of calamar, a dish of fried squid rings. CALAMARY (15) CALAMINE (12) [noun] A pale pink powdered form of zinc oxide used in skin lotions. | [noun] The zinc silicate mineral hemimorphite. | [verb] To coat or treat with calamine. CALAMINT (12) [noun] Any species of aromatic garden herb of the genus Calamintha. CALAMITE (12) [noun] An extinct genus of treelike horsetails, Calamites. CALAMITY (15) [noun] An event resulting in great loss. | [noun] The distress that results from some disaster. CALCIUMS (14) [noun] Plural of calcium, a chemical element and mineral essential for bone health and bodily functions. CALMNESS (12) [noun] The state of being calm; tranquillity; silence. | [noun] The product of being calm. CALOMELS (12) [noun] Plural of calomel, a white crystalline compound of mercury and chloride formerly used as a purgative and fungicide. CALUMETS (12) [noun] A clay tobacco-pipe used by American Indians, especially as a symbol of truce or peace. CAMAILED (13) [verb] Past tense of camail, meaning to cover or furnish with a camail (a piece of armor for the neck and shoulders). CAMASSES (12) [noun] Plural of camas, a bulbous plant with blue or purple flowers, native to North America, whose bulbs were traditionally eaten by Native Americans. CAMBERED (15) [adjective] Having a slight convex curve or arch, as in a road or aircraft wing. | [verb] Past tense of camber; to curve or arch slightly. CAMBISMS (16) CAMBISTS (14) [noun] People who deal in foreign currency exchange or bills of exchange. CAMBIUMS (16) [noun] A layer of cells between the xylem and the phloem that is responsible for the secondary growth of roots and stems. | [noun] Periosteum, a membrane that covers the outer surface of bones | [noun] One of the humours formerly believed to nourish the bodily organs. CAMBOGIA (15) CAMBRICS (16) [noun] A finely-woven fabric made originally from linen but often now from cotton. CAMELEER (12) [noun] Camel driver or camel rider, one who travels by camel. CAMELIAS (12) [noun] Plural of camelia, an ornamental flowering shrub with waxy flowers, typically pink, red, or white. CAMELLIA (12) [noun] Any plant of the genus Camellia, shrubs and small trees native to Asia; Camellia japonica is the most popular as a garden plant; Camellia sinensis is the tea plant. CAMEOING (13) [verb] Making a brief appearance or cameo, typically used to describe an actor or celebrity appearing in a small role in a film, TV show, or other production. CAMISADE (13) [noun] A night attack or surprise assault on an enemy position. | [noun] A shirt or garment worn over armor. CAMISADO (13) [noun] A night attack or surprise assault, especially one made by soldiers wearing shirts over their armor to identify themselves. | [noun] A shirt or garment worn over armor for identification purposes during such an attack. CAMISIAS (12) [noun] Plural of camisia, a loose shirt or tunic worn in medieval times. CAMISOLE (12) [noun] A short, sleeveless undergarment worn by women underneath a blouse, or as a form of short négligée. | [noun] A straitjacket. | [noun] A light jacket with sleeves. CAMOMILE (14) [noun] Composite plant with a fragrance reminiscent of apples: | [noun] Any of several other similar plants. (See below) | [noun] Short for camomile tea. CAMORRAS (12) [noun] Plural of camorra; a secret society or criminal organization, particularly referring to the Neapolitan mafia. | [noun] Extortion or racketeering practices associated with such organizations. CAMPAGNA (15) CAMPAGNE (15) CAMPAIGN (15) [noun] A series of operations undertaken to achieve a set goal. | [noun] The period during which a blast furnace is continuously in operation. | [noun] An open field; a large, open plain without considerable hills; a champaign. CAMPFIRE (17) [noun] A fire at a campground or on a camping trip, often used for cooking, to provide light and heat, to drive away bugs, and as a focal point for sitting around in the evening and talking, telling stories, and singing. CAMPHENE (17) [noun] A colorless hydrocarbon found in camphor oil and other essential oils, used in organic synthesis and perfumery. CAMPHINE (17) [noun] A volatile flammable liquid formerly used as a fuel for lamps, consisting of a mixture of turpentine and alcohol. CAMPHIRE (17) [noun] An archaic or variant spelling of camphor, a volatile aromatic compound obtained from the camphor tree, used in medicine and as an insect repellent. CAMPHOLS (17) [noun] Plural of camphol, a chemical compound derived from camphor or related to camphoraceous substances. CAMPHORS (17) [noun] Plural of camphor, a white crystalline substance with a strong aromatic smell derived from the camphor tree, used in mothballs, liniments, and other products. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of the verb camphor, meaning to treat or impregnate with camphor. CAMPIEST (14) [adjective] Characterized by camp or kitsch, especially when deliberate or intentional. CAMPINGS (15) [noun] Plural of camping; instances or sites of temporary outdoor accommodation, typically in tents or recreational vehicles. | [noun] The activity of staying outdoors in a camp or tent, engaged in multiple times or by multiple people. CAMPIONS (14) [noun] Some flowering plants of the genus Lychnis. | [noun] Any flowering plant of the genus Silene. CAMPONGS (15) [noun] Malay or Indonesian villages or compounds, typically consisting of a cluster of houses surrounded by a fence or stockade. CAMPOREE (14) [noun] A gathering of Scouts in which accommodation is in tents CAMPSITE (14) [noun] A place where a tent may be or is pitched. CAMPUSED (15) [verb] Past tense of campus, meaning to restrict or confine a student to campus as a punishment. CAMPUSES (14) [noun] The grounds or property of a school, college, university, business, church, or hospital, often understood to include buildings and other structures. | [noun] An institution of higher education and its ambiance. | [verb] To confine to campus as a punishment. CAMSHAFT (18) [noun] A shaft fitted with cams; especially one in a piston engine that activates the valves. CAPMAKER (18) CAPSICUM (16) [noun] Any of several tropical American plants, of the genus Capsicum, principally the species Capsicum annuum and Capsicum frutescens, that are cultivated as edible peppers. | [noun] The spicy fruit of the above plants, the bell peppers. CAPSOMER (14) [noun] A protein subunit that is a structural component of a viral capsid. CARAMELS (12) [noun] A smooth, chewy, sticky confection made by heating sugar and other ingredients until the sugars polymerize and become sticky. | [noun] A (sometimes hardened) piece of this confection. | [noun] A yellow-brown color, like that of caramel. CARBAMIC (16) [adjective] Of or relating to carbamic acid or its derivatives, particularly in chemistry contexts such as carbamate compounds. CARBAMYL (17) [adjective] Relating to or containing the carbamoyl group, a chemical radical (NH2CO-) used in organic chemistry. CARDAMOM (15) [noun] The Elettaria cardamomum, an Indian herb. | [noun] The seed of E. cardamomum, used as a medicine and spice, especially in curry powder. | [noun] The seeds or seed capsules of the Aframomum melegueta, used as a medicine and spice, especially as a substitute for black pepper and in flavoring alcoholic beverages. CARDAMON (13) [noun] The Elettaria cardamomum, an Indian herb. | [noun] The seed of E. cardamomum, used as a medicine and spice, especially in curry powder. | [noun] The seeds or seed capsules of the Aframomum melegueta, used as a medicine and spice, especially as a substitute for black pepper and in flavoring alcoholic beverages. CARDAMUM (15) [noun] A spice made from the seeds of a plant in the ginger family, used in cooking and flavoring. | [noun] The plant itself (Elettaria cardamomum) native to India. CARMAKER (16) [noun] A company that manufactures automobiles. CARMINES (12) [noun] A purplish-red pigment, made from dye obtained from the cochineal beetle; carminic acid or any of its derivatives. | [noun] A purplish-red colour, resembling that pigment. CAROMING (13) [verb] To make a carom (shot in billiards). | [verb] To strike and bounce back; to strike (something) and rebound. CARROMED (13) [verb] Past tense of carrom, meaning to strike and rebound; to collide and bounce off at an angle, especially in billiards or pool. CASEMATE (12) [noun] A bombproof chamber, usually of masonry, in which cannon may be placed, to be fired through embrasures; or one capable of being used as a magazine, or for quartering troops. | [noun] A hollow molding, chiefly in cornices. CASEMENT (12) [noun] A window sash that is hinged on the side. | [noun] A window having such sashes; a casement window.Wp | [noun] Occasionally seen as a usage error due to the similarity of the words: A casemate. CASEWORM (15) [noun] The larva of a caddisfly, which constructs a protective case around its body from sand, pebbles, or plant material. CASHMERE (15) [noun] Fine, downy wool from beneath the outer hair of the Cashmere goat. | [noun] A soft fabric made of this wool. | [noun] A rich kind of shawl made from this wool. CASIMERE (12) [noun] A fine, soft woolen fabric, typically twilled and used for clothing. CASIMIRE (12) CASTEISM (12) [noun] Discrimination based on a person's caste CATACOMB (16) [noun] (often plural) An underground system of tunnels and chambers with recesses for graves, used (in former times) as a cemetery; a tunnel system used for burying the dead, as in Paris or Ancient Rome. CATAMITE (12) [noun] A boy or younger man in a homoerotic relationship with an older man. CATMINTS (12) [noun] Any of the about 250 species of flowering plant of the genus Nepeta, family Lamiaceae, certain of which are said to have medicinal qualities. | [noun] Something that causes excitement or interest. CELLMATE (12) [noun] A person with whom one shares a prison cell. CELOMATA (12) [noun] Plural of coeloma; animals possessing a true body cavity (coelom) lined with mesoderm. CEMBALOS (14) [noun] A harpsichord. CEMENTED (13) [verb] To affix with cement. | [verb] To overlay or coat with cement. | [verb] To unite firmly or closely. CEMENTER (12) [noun] One who cements; a person or machine that applies cement. CEMENTUM (14) [noun] A bony substance that covers the root of a tooth; cement. CEMETERY (15) [noun] A place where the dead are buried; a graveyard or memorial park. CENTIMES (12) [noun] A former subunit of currency equal to one-hundredth of the franc. | [noun] A coin having face value of one centime. CENTIMOS (12) [noun] A cent, i.e. 1/100, of certain (mainly historic) Iberian and Latin American currencies, and presently of the Euro (coinage version in Spanish), as a coin or theoretic value CENTRISM (12) [noun] A political ideology that advocates moderate policies and positions that are equidistant from the extremes of the political spectrum. CENTRUMS (12) [noun] Plural of centrum, the central body of a vertebra. | [noun] Plural of centrum, a central point or core of something. CERAMALS (12) CERAMICS (14) [noun] A hard, brittle, inorganic, nonmetallic material, usually made from a materal, such as clay, then firing it at a high tempature. | [noun] An object made of this material | [noun] The art or science of making ceramic objects CERAMIST (12) [noun] A person who makes or works with ceramics. CEREBRUM (14) [noun] The upper part of the brain, which is divided into the two cerebral hemispheres. In humans it is the largest part of the brain and is the seat of motor and sensory functions, and the higher mental functions such as consciousness, thought, reason, emotion, and memory. CEREMENT (12) [noun] A burial shroud or garment. | [noun] Cerecloth. CEREMONY (15) [noun] A ritual, with religious or cultural significance. | [noun] An official gathering to celebrate, commemorate, or otherwise mark some event. | [noun] A formal socially established behaviour, often in relation to people of different ranks; formality. CERUMENS (12) [noun] Plural of cerumen; a waxy secretion in the ear canal. CHADARIM (16) [noun] Plural of cheder, a Jewish elementary school for teaching Hebrew and religious texts. CHAINMAN (15) [noun] A surveyor's assistant who holds and manages the measuring chain during land surveys. CHAINMEN (15) [noun] Plural of chainman; workers who assist a surveyor by holding and managing the surveying chain or tape measure. CHAIRMAN (15) [noun] A person presiding over a meeting. | [noun] The head of a corporate or governmental board of directors, a committee, or other formal entity. | [noun] Someone whose job is to carry people in a portable chair, sedan chair, or similar conveyance. CHAIRMEN (15) [noun] A person presiding over a meeting. | [noun] The head of a corporate or governmental board of directors, a committee, or other formal entity. | [noun] Someone whose job is to carry people in a portable chair, sedan chair, or similar conveyance. CHAMADES (16) [noun] A signal made by drum or trumpet to request a parley or negotiate a surrender. CHAMBERS (17) [noun] A room or set of rooms, particularly: | [noun] A chamberpot. | [noun] The legislature or division of the legislature itself. CHAMBRAY (20) [noun] A soft fabric woven with a white weft and coloured warp. CHAMFERS (18) [noun] An obtuse-angled relief or cut at an edge added for a finished appearance and to break sharp edges. | [verb] To cut off the edge or corner of something. | [verb] To cut a groove in something. CHAMFRON (18) [noun] A piece of armor for a horse's face, typically made of metal and worn in medieval times. CHAMISES (15) [noun] An evergreen shrub native to California, Adenostoma fasciculatum in the botanical family Rosaceae CHAMISOS (15) [noun] An evergreen shrub, Atriplex canescens, found in the southwestern United States. | [noun] An evergreen shrub native to California, Adenostoma fasciculatum. CHAMMIED (18) [verb] Past tense of chammy, meaning to treat leather with oil to make it soft and pliable. CHAMMIES (17) [noun] Plural of chammy, which is a soft leather made from the skin of sheep or goats, used for polishing and cleaning. | [noun] Plural of chamois, an alternative spelling referring to the same soft leather or the small goat-like animal native to European mountains. CHAMPACS (19) CHAMPAKS (21) [noun] A type of Asian tree with fragrant blossoms, Magnolia champaca CHAMPERS (17) [noun] Champagne (wine). CHAMPING (18) [verb] To bite or chew, especially noisily or impatiently. | [noun] The sound or action of one who champs. CHAMPION (17) [noun] An ongoing winner in a game or contest. | [noun] Someone who is chosen to represent a group of people in a contest. | [noun] Someone who fights for a cause or status. CHARISMA (15) [noun] Personal charm or magnetism | [noun] An extraordinary power granted by the Holy Spirit | [noun] The ability to influence without the use of logic. CHARISMS (15) [noun] A power or authority, generally of a spiritual nature, believed to be a freely given gift by the grace of God. CHARMERS (15) [noun] A charming person; one who charms or seduces; a smoothie. | [noun] An enchanter or magician. CHARMING (16) [verb] To seduce, persuade or fascinate someone or something. | [verb] To use a magical charm upon; to subdue, control, or summon by incantation or supernatural influence. | [verb] To protect with, or make invulnerable by, spells, charms, or supernatural influences. CHAZANIM (24) [noun] Plural of hazzan; Jewish cantors who lead liturgical singing in synagogues. CHEFDOMS (19) [noun] Plural of chiefdom; territories or domains ruled by a chief or leader. CHEMICAL (17) [noun] Any specific chemical element or chemical compound or alloy. | [noun] An artificial chemical compound. | [noun] An addictive drug. CHEMISES (15) [noun] A loose shirtlike undergarment, especially for women. | [noun] A short nightdress, or similar piece of lingerie. | [noun] A woman's dress that fits loosely; a chemise dress. CHEMISMS (17) [noun] The plural of chemism; chemical action or processes, or the principles of chemistry applied to explain phenomena. CHEMISTS (15) [noun] A person who specializes in the science of chemistry, especially at a professional level. | [noun] A pharmacist. | [noun] A pharmacy. CHEMURGY (19) [noun] A branch of applied chemistry that is concerned with preparing industrial products from agricultural raw materials. CHERUBIM (17) [noun] A winged creature attending God, described by Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite (c. 5th–6th century) as the second highest order of angels, ranked above thrones and below seraphim; similar to a lamassu in the pre-exilic texts of the Hebrew Bible, more humanoid in later texts. | [noun] An artistic depiction of such a being, typically in the form of a winged child or a child's head with wings but no body. | [noun] A person, especially a child, seen as being particularly angelic or innocent. CHESSMAN (15) [noun] A chess piece. CHESSMEN (15) [noun] A chess piece. CHETRUMS (15) [noun] A subdivision of currency, equal to one hundredth of a Bhutanese ngultrum CHIASMAL (15) [adjective] Relating to or involving a chiasma, particularly the crossing of nerve fibers or chromosomes during meiosis. CHIASMAS (15) [noun] Plural of chiasma, an anatomical term for the crossing or intersection of two structures, especially the optic chiasma where optic nerves cross in the brain. | [noun] In genetics, the point where homologous chromosomes cross over during meiosis. CHIASMIC (17) [adjective] Relating to or resembling a chiasm, particularly the crossing of nerve fibers or anatomical structures. CHIASMUS (15) [noun] An inversion of the relationship between the elements of phrases. CHIEFDOM (19) [noun] An area or region governed by a chief. | [noun] A society larger than a tribe but smaller or simpler than a state. CHILIASM (15) [noun] A belief in or doctrine of a coming millennium, especially the Christian belief in Christ's reign on earth for a thousand years. CHILLUMS (15) [noun] A conical pipe used for smoking marijuana, usually made of fired clay, porcelain, soapstone, glass or, more rarely, wood. | [noun] The part of such a pipe that contains the tobacco and charcoal balls. CHIMAERA (15) [noun] A cartilaginous marine fish in the subclass Holocephali and especially the order Chimaeriformes, with a blunt snout, long tail, and a spine before the first dorsal fin | [noun] Alternative letter-case form of Chimera (a flame-spewing monster often represented as having two heads, one of a goat and the other of a lion; the body of a goat; and a serpent as a tail). | [noun] Any fantastic creature with parts from different animals. CHIMBLEY (20) [noun] A vertical tube or hollow column used to emit environmentally polluting gaseous and solid matter (including but not limited to by-products of burning carbon or hydrocarbon based fuels); a flue. | [noun] The glass flue surrounding the flame of an oil lamp. | [noun] The smokestack of a steam locomotive. CHIMERAS (15) [noun] Alternative letter-case form of Chimera (a flame-spewing monster often represented as having two heads, one of a goat and the other of a lion; the body of a goat; and a serpent as a tail). | [noun] Any fantastic creature with parts from different animals. | [noun] Anything composed of very disparate parts. CHIMERES (15) [noun] Plural of chimere, a sleeveless robe or vestment worn by bishops and other clergy in the Christian church. CHIMERIC (17) [adjective] Like a chimera. | [adjective] Imaginary, fanciful. | [adjective] Pertaining to a genetic chimera. CHIMLEYS (18) [noun] A vertical tube or hollow column used to emit environmentally polluting gaseous and solid matter (including but not limited to by-products of burning carbon or hydrocarbon based fuels); a flue. | [noun] The glass flue surrounding the flame of an oil lamp. | [noun] The smokestack of a steam locomotive. CHIMNEYS (18) [noun] A vertical tube or hollow column used to emit environmentally polluting gaseous and solid matter (including but not limited to by-products of burning carbon or hydrocarbon based fuels); a flue. | [noun] The glass flue surrounding the flame of an oil lamp. | [noun] The smokestack of a steam locomotive. CHIPMUCK (23) CHIPMUNK (21) [noun] A squirrel-like rodent of the genus Tamias, native mainly to North America. | [verb] To speed up an audio recording, especially a song, to make the voices high-pitched. | [verb] In competitive eating, to stuff food in one's mouth during the final moments of a contest. CHIRMING (16) CHLOASMA (15) [noun] Melasma; a cutaneous condition with yellow or yellowish-brown pigmented spots CHOMPERS (17) [noun] Teeth, especially large or prominent ones. | [noun] The jaws or mouth of an animal. | [noun] Things that chomp or bite. CHOMPING (18) [verb] To bite or chew loudly or heavily. | [verb] (Perl) To remove the final character from (a text string) if it is a newline (or, less commonly, some other programmer-specified character). | [noun] The sound or action of one who chomps. CHOREMAN (15) [noun] A man employed to do chores or manual labor; a person who performs routine household or farm tasks. CHOREMEN (15) [noun] Plural of choreman; men who do chores or routine work tasks. CHORIAMB (17) [noun] A choriambus. CHOWTIME (18) CHRISMAL (15) [adjective] Relating to or containing chrism, a consecrated oil used in religious ceremonies. CHRISMON (15) [noun] A symbolic monogram or design representing Christ, often used as a Christmas decoration in Christian churches and homes. CHRISOMS (15) [noun] A white cloth, anointed with chrism, or a white mantle thrown over a child when baptized or christened. | [noun] A child that died within a month after its baptism; so called from the chrisom cloth used as a shroud for it. CHROMATE (15) [noun] Any salt of chromic acid; in solution the yellow chromate anion (CrO42-) is in equilibrium with the orange dichromate anion (Cr2O72-), the relative amount of each ion depending on the pH; they are both very powerful oxidizing agents CHROMIDE (16) [noun] Any of various cichlid fishes found in Asia. CHROMING (16) [verb] To plate with chrome. | [verb] To treat with a solution of potassium bichromate, as in dyeing. | [noun] The act of inhaling the fumes of substances such as glue or paint, usually by sniffing them from a paper bag or bottle, with the aim of getting intoxicated. CHROMITE (15) [noun] A dark brown mineral species with the formula FeCr2O4. | [noun] Any member of the chromite-magnesiochromite series that is a mixed oxide of iron, magnesium and chromium with the formula (Fe,Mg)Cr2O4. It is a commercial source of chromium. CHROMIUM (17) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Cr) with an atomic number of 24: a steely-grey, lustrous, hard and brittle transition metal. CHROMIZE (24) [verb] To treat or coat with chromium or a chromium compound. CHROMOUS (15) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing chromium, especially in oxidation state 2 CHROMYLS (18) [noun] Plural of chromyl, relating to compounds containing chromium in a higher oxidation state, particularly chromyl chloride and similar chemical compounds. CHUMMIER (17) [adjective] Friendly; on, or trying to be on, intimate terms. CHUMMILY (20) [adverb] In a chummy (friendly and familiar) manner; in a way that suggests close friendship or familiarity. CHUMMING (18) [verb] To share rooms with someone; to live together. | [verb] To lodge (somebody) with another person or people. | [verb] To make friends; to socialize. CHUMPING (18) CHUMSHIP (20) CHYMISTS (18) [noun] Plural of chymist, an archaic spelling of chemist, referring to practitioners of alchemy or early chemistry. CHYMOSIN (18) [noun] An enzyme found in the stomach of mammals that curdles milk by coagulating casein, used in cheese-making. CIBORIUM (14) [noun] A fixed vaulted canopy over a Christian altar, supported on four columns. | [noun] A covered receptacle for holding the consecrated wafers of the Eucharist. CIMBALOM (16) [noun] A type of concert hammered dulcimer used primarily in the music of Eastern Europe. CINGULUM (13) [noun] The girdle of an alb. | [noun] A collection of white matter fibers projecting from the cingulate gyrus to the entorhinal cortex in the brain, allowing for communication between components of the limbic system. | [noun] A ridge that girdles the base of an upper molar tooth. CINNAMIC (14) [adjective] Of, relating to, or derived from cinnamon or cinnamic acid, a compound found in cinnamon and other plants. CINNAMON (12) [noun] A small evergreen tree native to Sri Lanka and southern India, Cinnamomum verum or Cinnamomum zeylanicum, belonging to the family Lauraceae. | [noun] Several related trees, notably the Indonesian cinnamon (Cinnamomum burmanni) and Chinese cinnamon or cassia (Cinnamomum aromaticum or Cinnamomum cassia). | [noun] A spice from the dried aromatic bark of the cinnamon tree, either rolled into strips or ground into a powder. The word is commonly used as trade name for spices made of any of the species above. CINNAMYL (15) [adjective] Of or relating to cinnamon, or derived from cinnamon; specifically denoting the allyl group (C₆H₅-CH=CH-CH₂-) found in cinnamon and related compounds. CIVICISM (17) CLAIMANT (12) [noun] One who claims; one who makes a claim. | [noun] A person receiving money from the government, in a form of unemployment benefits, disability benefits or similar. | [noun] The party who initiates a lawsuit before a court. CLAIMERS (12) [noun] A person who makes a claim; a claimant. | [noun] A pretender to a royal title. | [noun] A racehorse offered for sale before a race and delivered to the buyer afterwards. CLAIMING (13) [verb] To demand ownership of. | [verb] To state a new fact, typically without providing evidence to prove it is true. | [verb] To demand ownership or right to use for land. CLAMBAKE (18) [noun] An informal beach party in which food, usually seafood, is cooked in a pit dug in the sand, filled with hot coals. | [noun] An instance of smoking (usually marijuana) in an enclosed space. | [noun] A meeting of predominantly females. CLAMBERS (14) [verb] To climb (something) with some difficulty, or in a haphazard fashion. CLAMMERS (14) [noun] People who dig for or harvest clams. | [noun] People who are clammy or sweaty. CLAMMIER (14) [adjective] Cold and damp, usually referring to hands or palms. | [adjective] The quality of normal skin signs, epidermis that is neither diaphoretic nor dry. CLAMMILY (17) [adverb] In a clammy manner; in a way that is cold, damp, and sticky to the touch. CLAMMING (15) [verb] To dig for clams. | [verb] To produce, in bellringing, a clam or clangor; to cause to clang. | [verb] To be moist or glutinous; to stick; to adhere. CLAMORED (13) [verb] To cry out and/or demand. | [verb] To demand by outcry. | [verb] To become noisy insistently. CLAMORER (12) [noun] One who clamors; a person who makes loud and insistent demands or complaints. CLAMOURS (12) [noun] A great outcry or vociferation; loud and continued shouting or exclamation. | [noun] Any loud and continued noise. | [noun] A continued public expression, often of dissatisfaction or discontent; a popular outcry. CLAMPERS (14) [noun] Plural of clamp, devices used to hold or compress things together. | [noun] Members of a motorcycle club or organization, particularly those who engage in charitable work. CLAMPING (15) [verb] To fasten in place or together with (or as if with) a clamp. | [verb] To hold or grip tightly. | [verb] To modify (a numeric value) so it lies within a specific range. CLAMWORM (17) [noun] A marine worm of the family Nereididae, commonly used as bait for fishing. CLANSMAN (12) [noun] A male member of a clan. CLANSMEN (12) [noun] A male member of a clan. CLASSISM (12) [noun] Discrimination or prejudice that is based on social class, especially against those of lower social class. CLAYMORE (15) [noun] A large two-handed sword historically used by the Scottish Highlanders. | [noun] Alternative letter-case form of Claymore (antipersonnel mine) CLEMATIS (12) [noun] Any plant of the genus Clematis, vigorous climbing lianas found throughout the temperate zones. CLEMENCY (17) [noun] The gentle or kind exercise of power; leniency, mercy; compassion in judging or punishing. | [noun] A pardon, commutation, or similar reduction, removal, or postponement of legal penalties by an executive officer of a state. | [noun] Mildness of weather. CLERKDOM (17) [noun] The office, position, or domain of a clerk or clerks. | [noun] Clerks collectively as a group or class. CLIMATAL (12) CLIMATES (12) [noun] An area of the earth's surface between two parallels of latitude. | [noun] A region of the Earth. | [noun] The long-term manifestations of weather and other atmospheric conditions in a given area or country, now usually represented by the statistical summary of its weather conditions during a period long enough to ensure that representative values are obtained (generally 30 years). CLIMATIC (14) [adjective] Of, relating to or influenced by climate. CLIMAXED (20) [verb] To reach or bring to a climax. | [verb] To orgasm; to reach orgasm. CLIMAXES (19) [noun] (originally rhetorical) A rhetorical device in which a series is arranged in ascending order. | [noun] An instance of such an ascending series. | [noun] The culmination of a narrative's rising action, the turning point. CLIMBERS (14) [noun] One who climbs. | [noun] A plant that climbs, such as a vine. | [noun] A bird that climbs, such as a woodpecker or a parrot. CLIMBING (15) [verb] To ascend; rise; to go up. | [verb] To mount; to move upwards on. | [verb] To scale; to get to the top of something. CLOMPING (15) [verb] To walk heavily or clumsily, as with clogs. | [verb] To make some object hit something, thereby producing a clomping sound. | [noun] The sound of walking with heavy footfalls. CLONISMS (12) CLUBROOM (14) [noun] A room in a club building used by members for meetings, socializing, or recreational activities. CLUMBERS (14) [noun] Plural of clumber, a type of spaniel dog breed with a long, low body and silky coat. CLUMPIER (14) [adjective] Forming or tending to form clumps. | [adjective] Resembling a clump. | [adjective] Clompy; with heavy footfalls. CLUMPING (15) [verb] To form clusters or lumps. | [verb] To gather in dense groups. | [verb] To walk with heavy footfalls. CLUMPISH (17) [adjective] Lumpy, thick, or having a clumsy, ungainly form or appearance. | [adjective] Dull or stupid in manner or behavior. CLUMSIER (12) [adjective] Awkward, lacking coordination, not graceful, not dextrous. | [adjective] Not elegant or well-planned, lacking tact or subtlety. | [adjective] Awkward or inefficient in use or construction, difficult to handle or manage especially because of shape. CLUMSILY (15) [adverb] In a clumsy manner or way; without care or finesse, often hurriedly or awkwardly. COACHMAN (17) [noun] A man who drives a horse-drawn coach, a male coach driver. COACHMEN (17) [noun] A man who drives a horse-drawn coach, a male coach driver. COADMIRE (13) COADMITS (13) [verb] Admits jointly or together with another person or entity. COAGULUM (13) [noun] A mass of coagulated material; a clot or curd COAMINGS (13) [noun] On a boat, the vertical side of above-deck structures, such as the coach roof, hatch, and cockpit. | [noun] A raised frame, designed to deflect or prevent entry of water, around an opening (e.g., a hatch or skylight) in a flat surface, such as a roof or deck. COASSUME (12) COATROOM (12) [noun] A room intended for holding guests' coats and other heavy outerwear, as at a theater; a cloakroom. COCOMATS (14) COCOYAMS (17) [noun] New cocoyam: Xanthosoma, particularly Xanthosoma sagittifolium, or the edible root of that plant; malanga. | [noun] Old cocoyam: Colocasia esculenta; taro. COELOMES (12) [noun] Plural of coelom, the body cavity in animals that contains the internal organs. COELOMIC (14) [adjective] Relating to or involving the coelom, a body cavity in animals that contains internal organs. COEMBODY (18) COEMPLOY (17) COEMPTED (15) [verb] Past tense of coempt, meaning to buy up or purchase entirely, especially to buy grain or other commodities before they reach the market. COENAMOR (12) COENZYME (24) [noun] Any small molecule that is necessary for the functioning of an enzyme. COGNOMEN (13) [noun] Surname. | [noun] The third part of the name of a citizen of Ancient Rome. | [noun] A nickname or epithet by which someone is identified. COINMATE (12) COLIFORM (15) [noun] Such a bacterium | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the bacteria that inhabit the intestines (especially the colon) of mammals COLISEUM (12) [noun] A large theatre, cinema, or stadium. | [noun] A large, often circular building, for indoor sporting events, exhibitions, concerts, etc.; arena. COLOBOMA (14) [noun] An abnormal hole present from birth in one of the structures of the eye, such as the lens, eyelid, or retina. COLORISM (12) [noun] Prejudice or bias against persons on the basis of their skin color or complexion, often among persons of the same racial identification. | [noun] A style of painting characterised by the use of intense color. COLORMAN (12) COLORMEN (12) [noun] Plural of colorman; people who apply color or work with colors, such as in printing, dyeing, or painting trades. COLOTOMY (15) [noun] A surgical operation in which an opening is made into the colon to allow discharge of feces. COLUMBIC (16) COLUMELS (12) [noun] Plural of columella, a small column-like structure, especially the central axis of a spiral shell or a rod-like anatomical part in certain organisms. COLUMNAL (12) COLUMNAR (12) [adjective] Having the shape of a column. | [adjective] Constructed with columns. COLUMNED (13) [adjective] Having columns or arranged in columns. | [verb] Past tense of column (to arrange in columns). COMAKERS (16) [noun] Plural of comaker; persons who jointly make or create something, or joint signers of a promissory note or other financial instrument. COMAKING (17) COMANAGE (13) COMATIKS (16) COMATOSE (12) [adjective] In a coma: unconscious. | [adjective] Drowsy or lethargic. | [adjective] Fast asleep. COMATULA (12) [noun] A genus of crinoids (sea lilies) that are free-swimming feather stars lacking a stalk in their adult form. COMBATED (15) [verb] To fight; to struggle against. | [verb] To fight (with); to struggle for victory (against). COMBATER (14) COMBINED (15) [noun] An event in alpine skiing which combines runs on a downhill skiing course and a slalom course, for individual skiers. | [verb] To bring (two or more things or activities) together; to unite. | [verb] To have two or more things or properties that function together. COMBINER (14) [noun] A person who or a thing that combines. COMBINES (14) [noun] A combine harvester | [noun] A combination | [verb] To bring (two or more things or activities) together; to unite. COMBINGS (15) [noun] Fragments of hair etc. removed with a comb. COMBLIKE (18) [adjective] Resembling or having the structure of a comb; having teeth or projections arranged like a comb. COMBUSTS (14) [verb] To burn; to catch fire. | [verb] To erupt with enthusiasm or boisterousness. COMEBACK (20) [noun] A return (e.g. to popularity, success, etc.) after an extended period of obscurity. | [noun] A retort or answer, particularly a quick or clever one. | [noun] An occurrence of an athlete or sports team in a competition overcoming a substantial disadvantage in points to win or draw. COMEDIAN (13) [noun] An entertainer who performs in a humorous manner, especially by telling jokes. | [noun] (by extension) Any person who is humorous or amusing, either characteristically or on a particular occasion. | [noun] A person who performs in theatrical plays. COMEDIES (13) [noun] A choric song of celebration or revel, especially in Ancient Greece. | [noun] A light, amusing play with a happy ending. | [noun] (Medieval Europe) A narrative poem with an agreeable ending (e.g., The Divine Comedy). COMEDOWN (16) [noun] A sudden drop to a lower status, condition or level; a disappointment or letdown | [noun] A calm, mellow period experienced after the initial high from taking drugs COMELIER (12) [adjective] (of a person) Pleasing or attractive to the eye. | [adjective] Suitable or becoming; proper; agreeable. COMELILY (15) COMEMBER (16) COMETARY (15) [adjective] Relating to or resembling a comet; of or pertaining to a comet. COMETHER (15) [noun] A call or summons to come; an invitation. | [noun] In Scottish dialect, an inducement or persuasion to do something. COMFIEST (15) [adjective] Comfortable. COMFORTS (15) [noun] Contentment, ease. | [noun] Something that offers comfort. | [noun] A consolation; something relieving suffering or worry. COMFREYS (18) [noun] Any of several species of perennial herbs of the genus Symphytum, often specifically Symphytum officinale. COMINGLE (13) [verb] To mix together; to blend or combine into one mass or group. COMITIAL (12) [adjective] Of or relating to the comitia, the assemblies of the Roman people for voting on laws and electing officials. COMITIES (12) [noun] Courtesy and considerate behaviour towards others; social harmony. | [noun] Friendly understanding and mutual recognition between two entities, especially nations. COMMANDO (15) [noun] A small fighting force specially trained for making quick destructive raids against enemy-held areas. | [noun] A commando trooper | [noun] An organized force of Boer troops in South Africa; a raid by such troops COMMANDS (15) [noun] An order to do something. | [noun] The right or authority to order, control or dispose of; the right to be obeyed or to compel obedience. | [noun] Power of control, direction or disposal; mastery. COMMENCE (16) [verb] To begin, start. | [verb] To begin to be, or to act as. | [verb] To take a degree at a university. COMMENDS (15) [verb] To congratulate or reward. | [verb] To praise or acclaim. | [verb] To entrust or commit to the care of someone else. COMMENTS (14) [noun] A spoken or written remark. | [noun] A remark embedded in source code in such a way that it will be ignored by the compiler or interpreter, typically to help people to understand the code. | [verb] To remark. COMMERCE (16) [noun] The exchange or buying and selling of commodities; especially the exchange of merchandise, on a large scale, between different places or communities; extended trade or traffic. | [noun] Social intercourse; the dealings of one person or class in society with another; familiarity. | [noun] Sexual intercourse. COMMIXED (22) [verb] To mix separate things together. | [verb] To become mixed; to amalgamate. COMMIXES (21) [verb] To mix separate things together. | [verb] To become mixed; to amalgamate. COMMODES (15) [noun] A low chest of drawers on short legs. | [noun] A stand for a washbowl and jug. | [noun] A chair containing a chamber pot. COMMONER (14) [adjective] Mutual; shared by more than one. | [adjective] Occurring or happening regularly or frequently; usual. | [adjective] Found in large numbers or in a large quantity; usual. | [noun] A member of the common people who holds no title or rank. COMMONLY (17) [adverb] As a rule; frequently; usually | [adverb] In common; familiarly COMMOVED (18) [verb] Past tense of commove; to agitate, disturb, or excite emotionally. COMMOVES (17) [verb] To disturb or agitate emotionally; to move or affect deeply. COMMUNAL (14) [adjective] Pertaining to a community | [adjective] Shared by a community; public | [adjective] Defined by religious ideas; based on religion COMMUNED (15) [verb] To converse together with sympathy and confidence; to interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel. | [verb] (followed by with) To communicate (with) spiritually; to be together (with); to contemplate or absorb. | [verb] To receive the communion. COMMUNES (14) [noun] A small community, often rural, whose members share in the ownership of property, and in the division of labour; the members of such a community. | [noun] A local political division in many European countries. | [noun] The commonalty; the common people. COMMUTED (15) [verb] To exchange substantially; to abate but not abolish completely, a penalty, obligation, or payment in return for a great, single thing or an aggregate; to cash in; to lessen | [verb] Of an operation, to be commutative, i.e. to have the property that changing the order of the operands does not change the result. | [verb] To regularly travel from one's home to one's workplace or school, or vice versa. COMMUTER (14) [noun] One who commutes (etymology 1). | [noun] A person who regularly travels from one place to another, typically to work. | [noun] A piece of transportation equipment used for the transportation of such persons. COMMUTES (14) [verb] To exchange substantially; to abate but not abolish completely, a penalty, obligation, or payment in return for a great, single thing or an aggregate; to cash in; to lessen | [verb] Of an operation, to be commutative, i.e. to have the property that changing the order of the operands does not change the result. | [noun] A regular journey to or from a place of employment, such as work or school. COMPACTS (16) [noun] An agreement or contract. | [noun] A small, slim folding case, often featuring a mirror, powder and a powderpuff; that fits into a woman's purse or handbag, or that slips into one's pocket. | [noun] A broadsheet newspaper published in the size of a tabloid but keeping its non-sensational style. COMPADRE (15) [noun] A friend or companion. COMPARED (15) [verb] To assess the similarities and differences between two or more things ["to compare X with Y"]. Having made the comparison of X with Y, one might have found it similar to Y or different from Y. | [verb] To declare two things to be similar in some respect ["to compare X to Y"]. | [verb] (grammar) To form the three degrees of comparison of (an adjective). COMPARER (14) [noun] One who compares; a person or device that makes comparisons. | [noun] In electronics, a device that compares two signals or voltages. COMPARES (14) [noun] Comparison. | [noun] An instruction or command that compares two values. | [noun] Illustration by comparison; simile. COMPARTS (14) [verb] Third-person singular present tense of "compart," meaning to divide into compartments or sections. | [noun] Plural of "compart," referring to compartments or separate divisions. COMPEERS (14) [noun] The equal or peer of someone else; a close companion or associate. COMPENDS (15) [verb] Third person singular of compend, meaning to summarize or condense into a brief form. | [noun] Plural of compend, meaning summaries or abridgments of larger works. COMPERED (15) [verb] To emcee, to act as compere. COMPERES (14) [noun] A master of ceremonies, especially for a television, variety, or quiz show. COMPETED (15) [verb] To be in battle or in a rivalry with another for the same thing, position, or reward; to contend | [verb] To be in a position in which it is possible to win or triumph. | [verb] To take part in a contest, game or similar event COMPETES (14) [verb] To be in battle or in a rivalry with another for the same thing, position, or reward; to contend | [verb] To be in a position in which it is possible to win or triumph. | [verb] To take part in a contest, game or similar event COMPILED (15) [verb] To put together; to assemble; to make by gathering things from various sources. | [verb] To construct, build. | [verb] To use a compiler to process source code and produce executable code. COMPILER (14) [noun] One who compiles. | [noun] A computer program which transforms source code into object code. COMPILES (14) [verb] To put together; to assemble; to make by gathering things from various sources. | [verb] To construct, build. | [verb] To use a compiler to process source code and produce executable code. COMPLAIN (14) [verb] To express feelings of pain, dissatisfaction, or resentment. | [verb] To make a formal accusation or bring a formal charge. | [verb] To creak or squeak, as a timber or wheel. COMPLEAT (14) [verb] To finish; to make done; to reach the end. | [verb] To make whole or entire. | [verb] To call from the small blind in an unraised pot. COMPLECT (16) [verb] To braid or weave together; to intertwine. | [verb] To complete or finish. COMPLETE (14) [noun] A completed survey. | [verb] To finish; to make done; to reach the end. | [verb] To make whole or entire. COMPLICE (16) COMPLIED (15) [verb] To yield assent; to accord; to acquiesce, agree, consent; to adapt oneself, to conform. | [verb] To accomplish, to fulfil. | [verb] To be ceremoniously courteous; to make one's compliments. COMPLIER (14) [noun] One who complies; a person who obeys or follows rules, requests, or demands. COMPLIES (14) [verb] To yield assent; to accord; to acquiesce, agree, consent; to adapt oneself, to conform. | [verb] To accomplish, to fulfil. | [verb] To be ceremoniously courteous; to make one's compliments. COMPLINE (14) [noun] The last of the canonical hours, sung just before retiring COMPLINS (14) [noun] The final church service of the day, traditionally sung or recited in the evening as part of the canonical hours in Christian liturgy. COMPLOTS (14) [verb] To plot together; conspire. COMPORTS (14) [verb] To tolerate, bear, put up (with). | [verb] To be in agreement (with); to be of an accord. | [verb] To behave (in a given manner). COMPOSED (15) [verb] To make something by merging parts. | [verb] To make up the whole; to constitute. | [verb] To comprise. COMPOSER (14) [noun] One who composes; an author. | [noun] One who, or that which, quiets or calms. COMPOSES (14) [verb] To make something by merging parts. | [verb] To make up the whole; to constitute. | [verb] To comprise. COMPOSTS (14) [verb] To produce compost, let organic matter decay into fertilizer. COMPOTES (14) [noun] A dessert made of fruit cooked in sugary syrup. | [noun] A dish used for serving fruit. COMPOUND (15) [noun] An enclosure within which workers, prisoners, or soldiers are confined | [noun] A group of buildings situated close together, e.g. for a school or block of offices | [noun] Anything made by combining several things. COMPRESS (14) [verb] To make smaller; to press or squeeze together, or to make something occupy a smaller space or volume. | [verb] To be pressed together or folded by compression into a more economic, easier format. | [verb] To condense into a more economic, easier format. | [noun] A multiply folded piece of cloth, a pouch of ice etc., used to apply to a patient's skin, cover the dressing of wounds, and placed with the aid of a bandage to apply pressure on an injury. COMPRISE (14) [verb] To be made up of; to consist of (especially a comprehensive list of parts). | [verb] To contain or embrace. | [verb] (sometimes proscribed, usually in the passive) To compose, to constitute. See usage note below. COMPRIZE (23) [verb] To comprise or constitute; to include or contain. | [verb] An archaic or variant spelling of "comprise." COMPTING (15) COMPUTED (15) [verb] To reckon or calculate. | [verb] To make sense. | [adjective] Calculated, determined by computation. COMPUTER (14) [noun] A person employed to perform computations; one who computes. | [noun] (by restriction) A male computer, where the female computer is called a computress. | [noun] A programmable electronic device that performs mathematical calculations and logical operations, especially one that can process, store and retrieve large amounts of data very quickly; now especially, a small one for personal or home use employed for manipulating text or graphics, accessing the Internet, or playing games or media. COMPUTES (14) [verb] To reckon or calculate. | [verb] To make sense. COMRADES (13) [noun] A mate, companion, or associate. | [noun] A companion in battle; fellow soldier. | [noun] A fellow socialist, communist or other similarly politically aligned person. COMSYMPS (19) CONDEMNS (13) [verb] To strongly criticise or denounce; to excoriate the perpetrators of. | [verb] To judicially pronounce (someone) guilty. | [verb] To confer eternal divine punishment upon. CONFIRMS (15) [verb] To strengthen; to make firm or resolute. | [verb] To administer the sacrament of confirmation on (someone). | [verb] To assure the accuracy of previous statements. CONFORMS (15) [verb] (of persons, often followed by to) To act in accordance with expectations; to behave in the manner of others, especially as a result of social pressure. | [verb] (of things, situations, etc.) To be in accordance with a set of specifications or regulations, or with a policy or guideline. | [verb] To make similar in form or nature; to make suitable for a purpose; to adapt. CONIDIUM (13) [noun] A fungal spore produced asexually in a conidiophore. CONSOMME (14) [noun] A clear broth made from reduced meat or vegetable stock, served either hot as a soup or chilled as a jelly CONSUMED (13) [verb] To use up. | [verb] To eat. | [verb] To completely occupy the thoughts or attention of. CONSUMER (12) [noun] One who, or that which, consumes. | [noun] Someone who trades money for goods or services as an individual. | [noun] (by extension) The consumer base of a product, service or business. CONSUMES (12) [verb] To use up. | [verb] To eat. | [verb] To completely occupy the thoughts or attention of. CONTEMNS (12) [verb] To disdain; to value at little or nothing; to treat or regard with contempt. | [verb] To commit an offence of contempt, such as contempt of court; to unlawfully flout (e.g. a ruling). CONTEMPT (14) [noun] The state or act of contemning; the feeling or attitude of regarding someone or something as inferior, base, or worthless; scorn, disdain. | [noun] The state of being despised or dishonored; disgrace. | [noun] Open disrespect or willful disobedience of the authority of a court of law or legislative body. COPEMATE (14) COPREMIA (14) [noun] Plural of copremium, a payment or premium paid jointly by multiple parties. | [noun] In insurance, additional premiums charged for specific coverage options or risk factors. COPREMIC (16) COREDEEM (13) COREMIUM (14) CORMLIKE (16) CORNMEAL (12) [noun] Dried corn (maize) milled (ground) to a coarse meal. CORPSMAN (14) [noun] A medical specialist in the U.S. Navy or Marine Corps who provides first aid and medical care to personnel. CORPSMEN (14) [noun] Plural of corpsman; a medical specialist in the U.S. Navy or Marine Corps who provides emergency medical treatment and care to service members. CORUNDUM (13) [noun] An extremely hard mineral, a form of aluminum oxide with the chemical formula Al2O3, that occurs in the form of the gemstones sapphire and ruby; it is used as an abrasive. CORYMBED (18) COSMETIC (14) [noun] Any substances applied to enhance the external color or texture of the skin, e.g. lipstick, eyeshadow, eyeliner; makeup. | [noun] A feature existing only on the surface. | [adjective] Imparting or improving beauty, particularly the beauty of the complexion. COSMICAL (14) COSMISMS (14) COSMISTS (12) COSMOSES (12) [noun] The universe. | [noun] An ordered, harmonious whole. COSTMARY (15) [noun] An aromatic plant, Tanacetum balsamita, once used to flavour ale (prior to the use of hops) COSTUMED (13) [verb] To dress or adorn with a costume or appropriate garb. | [adjective] Wearing a costume; disguised. COSTUMER (12) [noun] A person who designs, makes or supplies theatrical costumes; a costumier. | [noun] A person who wears a costume or takes part in cosplay. | [noun] A costume drama. COSTUMES (12) [noun] A style of dress, including garments, accessories and hairstyle, especially as characteristic of a particular country, period or people. | [noun] An outfit or a disguise worn as fancy dress etc. | [noun] A set of clothes appropriate for a particular occasion or season. COSTUMEY (15) COULOMBS (14) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of electric charge; the amount of electric charge carried by a current of 1 ampere flowing for 1 second. Symbol: C COUMARIC (14) COUMARIN (12) [noun] The bicyclic aromatic compound 1,2-benzopyrone or any of its derivatives COUMAROU (12) COXCOMBS (23) [noun] The cap of a court jester, adorned with a red stripe. | [noun] The fleshy red pate of a rooster. | [noun] (by extension) A foolish or conceited person; a dandy. CRABMEAT (14) [noun] The meat of a crab. CRAGSMAN (13) [noun] A climber of crags. CRAGSMEN (13) [noun] A climber of crags. CRAMBOES (14) CRAMMERS (14) [noun] One who crams or stuffs. | [noun] A book used for accelerated study in preparation for an examination. | [noun] A student who studies hard for an examination. CRAMMING (15) [verb] To press, force, or drive, particularly in filling, or in thrusting one thing into another; to stuff; to fill to superfluity. | [verb] To fill with food to satiety; to stuff. | [verb] To put hastily through an extensive course of memorizing or study, as in preparation for an examination. CRAMOISY (15) CRAMPING (15) [verb] (of a muscle) To contract painfully and uncontrollably. | [verb] To affect with cramps or spasms. | [verb] To prohibit movement or expression of. CRAMPITS (14) CRAMPONS (14) [noun] An attachment to a shoe or boot that provides traction by means of spikes. Used for climbing or walking on slippery surfaces, especially ice. | [noun] An aerial rootlet for support in climbing, as of ivy. | [noun] A heraldic figure in the form of a bar bent at the ends into the form of a hook. CRAMPOON (14) CRANIUMS (12) [noun] The braincase or neurocranium; that part of the skull consisting of the bones enclosing the brain, but not including the bones of the face or jaw. | [noun] The upper portion of the skull, including the neurocranium and facial bones, but not including the jawbone (mandible). | [noun] The skull. CREAMERS (12) [noun] A jug for holding cream. | [noun] A separator for removing cream from milk to leave skimmed milk. | [noun] A nondairy product that adds a creamy texture to coffee. CREAMERY (15) [noun] A place where dairy products are prepared or sold. | [noun] An ice cream parlour. CREAMIER (12) [adjective] Containing cream. | [adjective] Of food or drink, having the rich taste or thick, smooth texture of cream, whether or not it actually contains cream. | [adjective] Of any liquid, having the thick texture of cream. CREAMILY (15) CREAMING (13) [verb] To puree, to blend with a liquifying process. | [verb] To turn a yellowish white colour; to give something the color of cream. | [verb] To obliterate, to defeat decisively. CREMAINS (12) CREMATED (13) [verb] To burn something to ashes. | [verb] To incinerate a dead body (as an alternative to burial). CREMATES (12) [verb] To burn something to ashes. | [verb] To incinerate a dead body (as an alternative to burial). CREMATOR (12) CREWMATE (15) CRIMINAL (12) [noun] A person who is guilty of a crime, notably breaking the law. | [adjective] Against the law; forbidden by law. | [adjective] Guilty of breaking the law. CRIMMERS (14) CRIMPERS (14) [noun] A small climbing hold that can only be held with the tips of a person's fingers. | [noun] A hairdresser. | [noun] A device for giving hair a wavy appearance. CRIMPIER (14) CRIMPING (15) [verb] To press into small ridges or folds, to pleat, to corrugate. | [verb] To fasten by bending metal so that it squeezes around the parts to be fastened. | [verb] To pinch and hold; to seize. CRIMPLED (15) CRIMPLES (14) CRIMSONS (12) [noun] A deep, slightly bluish red. | [verb] To become crimson or deep red; to blush. | [verb] To dye with crimson or deep red; to redden. CROMLECH (17) [noun] A dolmen or ancient underground tomb in Wales, usually made with stones disposed in a circular shape. CRONYISM (15) [noun] Favoritism to friends without regard for their qualifications, especially by appointing them to political positions. CROSSARM (12) CRUMBERS (14) CRUMBIER (14) [adjective] Crumbly; inclined to break into crumbs. | [adjective] Bad; poor. | [adjective] Full of crumb or crumbs. CRUMBING (15) [verb] To cover with crumbs. | [verb] To break into crumbs or small pieces with the fingers; to crumble. CRUMBLED (15) [verb] To fall apart; to disintegrate. | [verb] To break into crumbs. | [verb] To mix (ingredients such as flour and butter) in such a way as to form crumbs. CRUMBLES (14) [noun] A dessert of British origin containing stewed fruit topped with a crumbly mixture of fat, flour, and sugar. | [verb] To fall apart; to disintegrate. | [verb] To break into crumbs. CRUMBUMS (16) CRUMHORN (15) [noun] Any of several related simple woodwind instruments having a bent horn CRUMMIER (14) [adjective] Bad; poor. | [adjective] Full of crumb or crumbs. | [adjective] Soft, like the crumb of bread; not crusty. CRUMMIES (14) [noun] A small van, bus, or railway car used to transport loggers or other resource workers to and from the worksite. | [noun] A cow with a crumpled horn. CRUMPETS (14) [noun] A type of savoury cake, typically flat and round, made from batter and yeast, containing many small holes and served toasted, usually with butter. | [noun] A person (or, collectively, persons), usually female, considered sexually desirable. CRUMPING (15) [verb] To produce such a sound. | [verb] For one's health to decline rapidly (but not as rapidly as crash). CRUMPLED (15) [verb] To rumple; to press into wrinkles by crushing together. | [verb] To cause to collapse. | [verb] To become wrinkled. CRUMPLES (14) [noun] A crease, wrinkle, or irregular fold. CUBIFORM (17) [adjective] Having the shape of a cube CUCUMBER (16) [noun] A vine in the gourd family, Cucumis sativus. | [noun] The edible fruit of this plant, having a green rind and crisp white flesh. CULTISMS (12) CUMARINS (12) CUMBERED (15) [verb] To slow down; to hinder; to burden; to encumber. | [adjective] Hampered; encumbered. CUMBERER (14) CUMBROUS (14) [adjective] Unwieldy because of its weight; cumbersome. | [adjective] Giving trouble; vexatious. CUMQUATS (21) [noun] A small, orange citrus-like fruit which is native to Asia (Citrus japonica, syn. Fortunella japonica). CUMSHAWS (18) CUMULATE (12) [noun] An igneous rock formed by the accumulation of crystals from a magma either by settling or floating. | [verb] To accumulate; to amass. | [verb] To be accumulated. CUMULOUS (12) CUNIFORM (15) CURCUMAS (14) CUSTOMER (12) [noun] A patron, a client; one who purchases or receives a product or service from a business or merchant, or intends to do so. | [noun] A person, especially one engaging in some sort of interaction with others. CUSTUMAL (12) [noun] A survey of a medieval English manor, listing each tenant and the customs under which the tenancy was held. CUTWORMS (15) [noun] The larva of any of many moths of the family Noctuidae; it is an agricultural pest. CYANAMID (16) CYCLAMEN (17) [noun] Any of various flowering plants, of the genus Cyclamen, widely cultivated as a houseplant, having decorative leaves and solitary flowers. CYMATIUM (17) CYMBALER (17) CYMBALOM (19) [noun] A type of concert hammered dulcimer used primarily in the music of Eastern Europe. CYMBIDIA (18) CYMBLING (18) CYMLINGS (16) CYMOGENE (16) CYMOSELY (18) CYNICISM (17) [noun] A distrustful attitude. | [noun] An emotion of jaded negativity, or a general distrust of the integrity or professed motives of other people. Cynicism can manifest itself by frustration, disillusionment and distrust in regard to organizations, authorities and other aspects of society, often due to previous bad experience. Cynics often view others as motivated solely by disguised self-interest. | [noun] A skeptical, scornful or pessimistic comment or act. CZARDOMS (22) CZARISMS (21) DADAISMS (12) DAEMONIC (13) DAIMONES (11) DAIMONIC (13) DAIRYMAN (14) [noun] A man who works in a dairy. | [noun] A man who delivers dairy products. DAIRYMEN (14) [noun] A man who works in a dairy. | [noun] A man who delivers dairy products. DALESMAN (11) [noun] A person from the Yorkshire Dales, or sometimes a person from Lakeland. DALESMEN (11) [noun] A person from the Yorkshire Dales, or sometimes a person from Lakeland. DALMATIC (13) [adjective] Related to Dalmatia and its language and culture; Dalmatian. | [noun] A long wide-sleeved tunic, which serves as a liturgical vestment in the Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches and is worn by a deacon at the Eucharist or Mass and, although infrequently, by bishops as an undergarment above the alb. DAMAGERS (12) DAMAGING (13) [verb] To impair the soundness, goodness, or value of; to harm or cause destruction. | [verb] To undergo damage. | [noun] An act of causing damage. DAMASKED (16) [verb] To decorate or weave in damascene patterns DAMEWORT (14) DAMNABLE (13) [adjective] Capable of being damned | [adjective] Deserving of damnation DAMNABLY (16) DAMNDEST (12) DAMNEDER (12) DAMOSELS (11) DAMOZELS (20) DAMPENED (14) [verb] To make damp or moist; to make slightly wet. | [verb] To become damp or moist. | [verb] To depress; to check; to make dull; to lessen. DAMPENER (13) [noun] A device that moistens or dampens something. | [noun] A discouraging event or remark. DAMPINGS (14) DAMPNESS (13) [noun] Moderate humidity; moisture; moistness. | [noun] The degree to which something is damp or moist. DANDYISM (15) DARKROOM (15) [noun] A dark room, where photographs are developed. | [noun] A darkened room where sexual activity can take place, especially one in a gay club. DARKSOME (15) [adjective] Characterised by darkness; gloomy; obscure DAYDREAM (15) [noun] A spontaneous and fanciful series of thoughts while awake not connected to immediate reality. | [verb] To have such a series of thoughts; to woolgather. DAYMARES (14) [noun] A vivid, unpleasant mental image, having the characteristics of a nightmare, during wakefulness. DAYROOMS (14) [noun] A common room in a barracks or dormitory where the inhabitants can mingle and socialize. DAYTIMES (14) [noun] The time of daylight; the time between sunrise and sunset. DECAGRAM (14) DECAMPED (16) [verb] To break up camp and move on. | [verb] To disappear suddenly and secretly. DECEMVIR (16) DECIGRAM (14) [noun] An SI unit of mass equal to 10-1 grams. Symbol: dg DECIMALS (13) [noun] A number expressed in the base-ten system, a fractional numeral written in this system. | [noun] The decimal system itself. | [noun] A decimal place. DECIMATE (13) [noun] A tithe or other 10% tax or payment. | [noun] A tenth of something. | [noun] A set of ten items. DECLAIMS (13) [verb] To object to something vociferously; to rail against in speech. | [verb] To recite, e.g., poetry, in a theatrical way; to speak for rhetorical display; to speak pompously, noisily, or theatrically; bemouth; to make an empty speech; to rehearse trite arguments in debate; to rant. | [verb] To speak rhetorically; to make a formal speech or oration; specifically, to recite a speech, poem, etc., in public as a rhetorical exercise; to practice public speaking. DECORUMS (13) [noun] Appropriate social behavior. | [noun] A convention of social behavior. DEEMSTER (11) [noun] A judge; one who pronounces sentence or doom. | [noun] A judge on the Isle of Man. DEFAMERS (14) DEFAMING (15) [verb] To disgrace; to bring into disrepute. | [verb] To charge; to accuse (someone) of an offence. | [verb] To harm or diminish the reputation of; to disparage. DEFOAMED (15) DEFOAMER (14) DEFORMED (15) [verb] To change the form of, usually negatively; to give (something) an unusual or abnormal shape. | [verb] To change the looks of, usually negatively; to give something an unusual or abnormal appearance. | [verb] To mar the character of. DEFORMER (14) DEGERMED (13) DEGUMMED (15) DEKAGRAM (16) DELIMING (12) DELIMITS (11) [verb] To mark or fix the limits of. | [verb] To demarcate. DELIRIUM (11) [noun] A temporary mental state with a sudden onset, usually reversible, including symptoms of confusion, inability to concentrate, disorientation, anxiety, and sometimes hallucinations. Causes can include dehydration, drug intoxication, and severe infection. DEMAGOGS (13) DEMAGOGY (16) [noun] Demagogism DEMANDED (13) [verb] To request forcefully. | [verb] To claim a right to something. | [verb] To ask forcefully for information. DEMANDER (12) DEMARCHE (16) [noun] A diplomatic maneuver; one handled with finesse. | [noun] A protest launched through diplomatic measures. DEMARKED (16) [verb] To demarcate. DEMASTED (12) DEMEANED (12) [verb] To debase; to lower; to degrade. | [verb] To humble, humble oneself; to humiliate. | [verb] To mortify. DEMEANOR (11) [noun] The social, non-verbal behaviours (such as body language and facial expressions) that are characteristic of a person. DEMENTED (12) [verb] To drive mad; to craze | [adjective] Insane or mentally ill. | [adjective] Suffering from dementia. DEMENTIA (11) [noun] A progressive decline in cognitive function due to damage or disease in the brain beyond what might be expected from normal aging. Areas particularly affected include memory, attention, judgement, language and problem solving. | [noun] Madness or insanity. DEMERARA (11) [noun] A type of natural, unrefined or partially refined cane sugar, which is light brown in colour, particularly used in pastries and biscuits like shortbread. | [noun] A dark rum, made in Guyana using molasses and this sugar, mainly used for blending. DEMERGED (13) [verb] To separate companies that were formerly combined; to reverse a merger. | [verb] To plunge down into; to sink; to immerse. DEMERGER (12) [noun] A partial or complete reversal of a previous merger. | [noun] The disposal of subsidiaries or divisions of a company. DEMERGES (12) [verb] To separate companies that were formerly combined; to reverse a merger. | [verb] To plunge down into; to sink; to immerse. DEMERITS (11) [noun] A quality of being inadequate; a fault; a disadvantage | [noun] A mark given for bad conduct to a person attending an educational institution or serving in the army. | [noun] That which one merits or deserves, either of good or ill; desert. DEMERSAL (11) [noun] Any demersal organism. | [adjective] That lives near the bottom of a body of water. DEMESNES (11) [noun] A lord’s chief manor place, with that part of the lands belonging thereto which has not been granted out in tenancy; a house, and the land adjoining, kept for the proprietor’s own use. | [noun] A region or area; a domain. DEMETONS (11) DEMIGODS (13) [noun] A half-god or hero; the offspring of a deity and a mortal. | [noun] A lesser deity. DEMIJOHN (21) [noun] A large bottle with a short neck, sometimes with two small handles at the neck, sometimes encased in wickerwork. DEMILUNE (11) [noun] A fortification constructed beyond the main ditch of a fortress, and in front of the curtain between two bastions, intended to defend the curtain; a ravelin. | [noun] A crescentic mass of granular protoplasm present in the salivary glands. | [adjective] (of furniture) In the shape of a half-moon, i.e. semicircular. DEMIREPS (13) [noun] A woman of doubtful reputation or suspected character; an adventuress. DEMISING (12) [verb] To give. | [verb] To convey, as by will or lease. | [verb] To transmit by inheritance. DEMITTED (12) [verb] To let fall; to depress; to yield. | [verb] To relinquish an office, membership, authority, etc.; to resign, as from a Masonic lodge. DEMIURGE (12) [noun] The (usually benevolent) being that created the universe out of primal matter. | [noun] A (usually jealous or outright malevolent) being who is inferior to the supreme being, and sometimes seen as the creator of evil. | [noun] Something (such as an idea, individual or institution) conceived as an autonomous creative force or decisive power. DEMIVOLT (14) DEMOBBED (16) [verb] To demobilize; to release someone from military service. DEMOCRAT (13) [noun] A supporter of democracy; an advocate of democratic politics (originally as opposed to the aristocrats in Revolutionary France). | [noun] Someone who rules a representative democracy. | [noun] A large light uncovered wagon with two or more seats. DEMOLISH (14) [verb] To destroy. | [verb] To defeat or consume utterly (as a theory, belief or opponent). DEMONESS (11) DEMONIAC (13) [noun] Someone who is possessed by a demon. | [adjective] Possessed or controlled by a demon. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to demons; demonic. DEMONIAN (11) DEMONISE (11) [verb] To turn into a demon. | [verb] To describe or represent as evil or diabolic. DEMONISM (13) [noun] Belief in, or worship of demons or devils. | [noun] The quality of being demonic (often figuratively). | [noun] An act or event attributed to demons or devils; an evil act. DEMONIST (11) DEMONIZE (20) [verb] To turn into a demon. | [verb] To describe or represent as evil or diabolic. DEMOTICS (13) DEMOTING (12) [verb] To lower the rank or status of. | [verb] To relegate. DEMOTION (11) [noun] An act of demoting; a lowering of rank or status DEMOTIST (11) DEMOUNTS (11) [verb] To remove from its mounting; to take down from a mounted position. | [verb] To dismount. DEMPSTER (13) DEMURELY (14) DEMUREST (11) [adjective] (usually of women) Quiet, modest, reserved, sober, or serious. | [adjective] Affectedly modest, decorous, or serious; making a show of gravity. DEMURRAL (11) [noun] The act of demurring. | [noun] A formal objection. DEMURRED (12) [verb] To linger; to stay; to tarry | [verb] To delay; to pause; to suspend proceedings or judgment in view of a doubt or difficulty; to hesitate; to put off the determination or conclusion of an affair. | [verb] To scruple or object; to take exception; to oppose; to balk DEMURRER (11) [noun] A motion by a party to an action, for the immediate or summary judgment of the court on the question, whether, assuming the truth of the matter alleged by the opposite party, it is sufficient in law to sustain the action or defense, and hence whether the party resting is bound to answer or proceed further. | [noun] Someone who demurs. DEPERMED (14) DEPLUMED (14) [verb] To strip of feathers or plumage. | [verb] To lay bare; to expose. DEPLUMES (13) [verb] To strip of feathers or plumage. | [verb] To lay bare; to expose. DERMISES (11) DERMOIDS (12) DESMOIDS (12) DEWORMED (15) [verb] To cause an animal to excrete any worms in the digestive tract by the administration of drugs. DEWORMER (14) DIADEMED (13) DIAGRAMS (12) [noun] A plan, drawing, sketch or outline to show how something works, or show the relationships between the parts of a whole. | [noun] A graph or chart. | [noun] A functor from an index category to another category. The objects and morphisms of the index category need not have any internal substance, but rather merely outline the connective structure of at least some part of the diagram's codomain. If the index category is J and the codomain is C, then the diagram is said to be "of type J in C". DIAMANTE (11) [noun] An artificial diamond used as adornment, such as a rhinestone. | [noun] A diamante poem. | [adjective] Covered in diamante decorations DIAMETER (11) [noun] Any straight line between two points on the circumference of a circle that passes through the centre/center of the circle. | [noun] The length of such a line. | [noun] The maximum distance between any two points in a metric space DIAMIDES (12) DIAMINES (11) [noun] Any compound containing two amino functional groups. DIAMONDS (12) [noun] A glimmering glass-like mineral that is an allotrope of carbon in which each atom is surrounded by four others in the form of a tetrahedron. | [noun] A gemstone made from this mineral. | [noun] A ring containing a diamond. DIASTEMA (11) [noun] A gap or space between two adjacent teeth, especially the upper front incisors (in humans). | [noun] Any abnormal space, fissure, or cleft in an organ or part of the body. | [noun] The modified protoplasm at the equator of a cell, existing before mitotic division. DIASTEMS (11) DIATOMIC (13) [noun] A diatomic molecule or other species | [adjective] (of a molecule etc.) Consisting of two atoms. | [adjective] Of or relating to diatoms. DIAZEPAM (22) [noun] A tranquilizing muscle relaxant drug (trademark Valium) used chiefly to relieve anxiety. DIBBUKIM (19) DIDYMIUM (17) [noun] A mixture of praseodymium and neodymium once thought to be an element (symbol Di). DIDYMOUS (15) DIDYNAMY (18) DIEMAKER (15) DIESTRUM (11) DIGAMIES (12) DIGAMIST (12) DIGAMMAS (14) [noun] Letter of the Old Greek alphabet: Ϝ, ϝ DIGAMOUS (12) DILEMMAS (13) [noun] A circumstance in which a choice must be made between two or more alternatives that seem equally undesirable. | [noun] A difficult circumstance or problem. | [noun] A type of syllogism of the form "if A is true then B is true; if C is true then D is true; either A or C is true; therefore either B or D is true". DILEMMIC (15) DILUVIUM (14) DIMERISM (13) DIMERIZE (20) [verb] To produce, or to undergo dimerization DIMEROUS (11) [adjective] In two parts; having two parts in each whorl of a flower. | [adjective] Having two-jointed tarsi. DIMETERS (11) [noun] A line in a poem having two metrical feet. | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has two feet. DIMETHYL (17) DIMETRIC (13) [adjective] Tetragonal | [adjective] (technical drawing) axonometric | [adjective] Exhibiting dimeter DIMINISH (14) [verb] To make smaller. | [verb] To become smaller. | [verb] To lessen the authority or dignity of; to put down; to degrade; to abase; to weaken; to nerf (in gaming). DIMITIES (11) DIMMABLE (15) DIMORPHS (16) DIMPLIER (13) DIMPLING (14) [verb] To create a dimple in. | [verb] To create a dimple in one's face by smiling. | [verb] To form dimples; to sink into depressions or little inequalities. DIOECISM (13) DIORAMAS (11) [noun] A three-dimensional display of a scenery, often having a painted background in front of which models are arranged, e.g. in a museum where stuffed animals are presented against a painted landscape. DIORAMIC (13) DIPLOMAS (13) [noun] A document issued by an educational institution testifying that the recipient has earned a degree or has successfully completed a particular course of study. DIPLOMAT (13) [noun] A person, such as an ambassador, who is accredited to represent a government officially in its relations with other governments or international organisations | [noun] Someone who uses skill and tact in dealing with other people DIRIMENT (11) DISARMED (12) [verb] To deprive of weapons; to deprive of the means of attack or defense; to render defenseless. | [verb] To deprive of the means or the disposition to harm; to render harmless or innocuous | [verb] To lay down arms; to stand down. DISARMER (11) [noun] A proponent of disarmament. DISBOSOM (13) DISCLAIM (13) [verb] To renounce all claim to; to deny ownership of or responsibility for; to disown; to disavow; to reject. | [verb] To deny, as a claim; to refuse. | [verb] To relinquish or deny having a claim; to disavow another's claim; to decline accepting, as an estate, interest, or office. DISHELMS (14) DISLIMNS (11) DISMALER (11) DISMALLY (14) [adverb] In a dismal manner. DISMASTS (11) [verb] To break off the mast (of a ship), especially by gunfire. DISMAYED (15) [verb] To cause to feel apprehension; great sadness, or fear; to deprive of energy | [verb] To render lifeless; to subdue; to disquiet. | [verb] To take dismay or fright; to be filled with dismay. DISMOUNT (11) [noun] The part of a routine in which the gymnast detaches from an apparatus. | [verb] To (cause to) get off (something). | [verb] To make (a mounted drive) unavailable for use. DISPLUME (13) [verb] To deprive of feathers or plumes. | [verb] To strip of an award. DISTOMES (11) DITHEISM (14) [noun] A belief in two deities, which may be in conflict with each other. DIVEBOMB (18) [verb] (of an aircraft) To bomb whilst in a steep dive. | [verb] (of a bird) To attack (especially the head of) a person or animal that strays into their territory. | [verb] (of a motorist) To overtake slower traffic by way of a more circuitous route, such as a pair of freeway exit and entrance ramps. DOCUMENT (13) [noun] An original or official paper used as the basis, proof, or support of anything else, including any writing, book, or other instrument conveying information pertinent to such proof or support. | [noun] Any material substance on which the information is represented by writing. | [noun] A file that contains text. DODOISMS (12) DOGEDOMS (13) DOGMATIC (14) [noun] One of an ancient sect of physicians who went by general principles; opposed to the empiric. | [adjective] Adhering only to principles which are true a priori, rather than truths based on evidence or deduction. | [adjective] Pertaining to dogmas; doctrinal. DOLDRUMS (12) [noun] A slothful or stupid person. | [noun] Usually preceded by the: a state of apathy or lack of interest; a situation where one feels boredom, ennui, or tedium; a state of listlessness or malaise. | [noun] Usually preceded by the: the state of a sailing ship when it is impeded by calms or light, baffling winds, and is unable to make progress. DOLESOME (11) DOLMADES (12) [noun] A dolma. DOLOMITE (11) [noun] A saline evaporite consisting of a mixed calcium and magnesium carbonate, with the chemical formula CaMg(CO3)2; it also exists as the rock dolostone. DOMELIKE (15) DOMESDAY (15) [noun] The day when God is expected to judge the world; end times. | [noun] Judgement day; the day of the Final Judgment; any day of decisive judgement or final dissolution. DOMESTIC (13) [noun] A house servant; a maid; a household worker. | [noun] A domestic dispute, whether verbal or violent | [adjective] Of or relating to the home. DOMICILE (13) [noun] A home or residence. | [noun] A residence at a particular place accompanied with an intention to remain there for an unlimited time; a residence accepted as a final abode. | [verb] To have a domicile in a particular place. DOMICILS (13) [noun] A home or residence. | [noun] A residence at a particular place accompanied with an intention to remain there for an unlimited time; a residence accepted as a final abode. DOMINANT (11) [noun] The fifth major tone of a musical scale (five major steps above the note in question); thus G is the dominant of C, A of D, and so on. | [noun] The triad built on the dominant tone. | [noun] A gene that is dominant. DOMINATE (11) [adjective] Ruling; governing; prevailing | [adjective] Predominant, common, prevalent, of greatest importance. | [adjective] Designating the follicle which will survive atresia and permit ovulation. DOMINEER (11) [verb] To rule over or control arbitrarily or arrogantly; to tyrannize. DOMINICK (17) DOMINIES (11) [noun] A schoolmaster, teacher. | [noun] A pastor of the Dutch Reformed Church. DOMINION (11) [noun] Power or the use of power; sovereignty over something; stewardship, supremacy. | [noun] Predominance; ascendancy | [noun] (sometimes figurative) A kingdom, nation, or other sphere of influence; governed territory. DOMINIUM (13) [noun] The ownership of a thing. DOMINOES (11) [noun] A tile divided into two squares, each having 0 to 6 (or sometimes more) dots or pips (as in dice), used in the game of dominoes. | [noun] A country that is expected to react to events in a neighboring country, according to the domino effect. | [noun] A masquerade costume consisting of a hooded robe and a mask covering the upper part of the face. DOOMSDAY (15) [noun] The day when God is expected to judge the world; end times. | [noun] Judgement day; the day of the Final Judgment; any day of decisive judgement or final dissolution. | [adjective] Concerned with or predicting future universal destruction. DOOMSTER (11) [noun] Someone who predicts doom | [noun] A judge; a deemster. DOORJAMB (20) DOORMATS (11) [noun] A coarse mat at the entrance to a house, upon which one wipes one's shoes. | [noun] Someone who is overly submissive to others' wishes. DOPAMINE (13) [noun] A neurotransmitter associated with movement, attention, learning, and the brain’s pleasure and reward system. DORMANCY (16) [noun] The state or characteristic of being dormant; quiet, inactive restfulness. DORMIENT (11) DORMOUSE (11) [noun] Any of several species of small, mostly European rodents of the family Gliridae; also called Myoxidae or Muscardinidae by some taxonomists. | [noun] Glis glis, the edible dormouse | [noun] Muscardinus avellanarius, the hazel dormouse. DOWNCOME (16) DOWNTIME (14) [noun] The amount of time lost due to forces beyond one's control, as with a computer crash. | [noun] A period of time set aside for rest and relaxation; leisure time. DRACHMAE (16) [noun] The currency of Greece in ancient times and again from 1832 until 2001, with the symbol ₯, since replaced by the euro. | [noun] A coin worth one drachma. | [noun] An Ancient Greek weight of about 66.5 grains, or 4.3 grams. DRACHMAI (16) DRACHMAS (16) [noun] The currency of Greece in ancient times and again from 1832 until 2001, with the symbol ₯, since replaced by the euro. | [noun] A coin worth one drachma. | [noun] An Ancient Greek weight of about 66.5 grains, or 4.3 grams. DRAGOMAN (12) [noun] An interpreter, especially for the Arabic and Turkish languages. DRAGOMEN (12) [noun] An interpreter, especially for the Arabic and Turkish languages. DRAMATIC (13) [adjective] Of or relating to the drama. | [adjective] Striking in appearance or effect. | [adjective] Having a powerful, expressive singing voice. DRAMMING (14) DRAMMOCK (19) DRAMSHOP (16) DREAMERS (11) [noun] One who dreams. | [noun] Someone whose beliefs are far from realistic. | [noun] Any anglerfish of the family Oneirodidae. DREAMFUL (14) [adjective] Dreamy | [noun] As much as one can dream about. DREAMIER (11) [adjective] As in a dream; resembling a dream. | [adjective] Sexy; handsome; attractive | [adjective] Having a pleasant or romantic atmosphere. DREAMILY (14) DREAMING (12) [verb] To see imaginary events in one's mind while sleeping. | [verb] To hope, to wish. | [verb] To daydream. DROMONDS (12) [noun] A Byzantine bireme, similar to the chelandion, but used primarily for naval combat. DRUIDISM (12) DRUMBEAT (13) [noun] The beating of a drum. | [noun] The sound of a beating drum. | [noun] (by extension) A repetitive beating sound. DRUMBLED (14) DRUMBLES (13) DRUMFIRE (14) [noun] Heavy, continuous, rapid gunfire. DRUMFISH (17) [noun] Any fish of the family Sciaenidae; they make a loud noise by means of an air bladder. DRUMHEAD (15) [noun] The thin circle of material attached to the top of a drum shell for the purpose of striking, sometimes made of skin and in such occurrences sometimes referred to as a skin, or drum-skin, but often synthetic. | [noun] A drumhead cabbage. DRUMLIER (11) DRUMLIKE (15) DRUMLINS (11) [noun] An elongated hill or ridge of glacial drift. DRUMMERS (13) [noun] One who plays the drums. | [noun] Travelling salesman | [noun] A drumstick (the lower part of a chicken or turkey leg). DRUMMING (14) [noun] The act of beating a drum. | [noun] A noise resembling that of a drum being beaten. | [noun] In many species of catfish, the sound produced by contraction of specialized sonic muscles with subsequent reverberation through the swim bladder. DRUMROLL (11) [noun] A sound produced by hitting a drum repeatedly and rhythmically over short intervals. DUALISMS (11) [noun] Duality; the condition of being double. | [noun] The view that the world consists of, or is explicable in terms of, two fundamental principles, such as mind and matter or good and evil. | [noun] The belief that the world is ruled by a pair of antagonistic forces, such as good and evil; the belief that man has two basic natures, the physical and the spiritual. DUKEDOMS (16) [noun] A region ruled by a duke or duchess; a duchy. | [noun] The rank or title of a duke. DULCIMER (13) [noun] A stringed instrument, with strings stretched across a sounding board, usually trapezoidal. It is played on the lap or horizontally on a table. Some have their own legs. These musical instruments are played by plucking on the strings (traditionally with a quill) or by tapping on them (in the case of the hammer dulcimers). DUMBBELL (15) [noun] A weight training implement consisting of a short bar with weight counterpoised on each end. | [noun] A stupid person. DUMBCANE (15) DUMBHEAD (17) [noun] A stupid person. DUMBNESS (13) DUMFOUND (15) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. DUMMKOPF (22) DUMMYING (17) [verb] To make a mock-up or prototype version of something, without some or all off its intended functionality. | [verb] To feint. DUMPCART (15) DUMPIEST (13) [adjective] Short and thick; stout or stocky DUMPINGS (14) DUMPLING (14) [noun] A ball of dough that is cooked and may have a filling and/or additional ingredients in the dough. | [noun] (familiar) A term of endearment. | [noun] (mildly) A piece of excrement. DUODENUM (12) [noun] The first part of the small intestine, starting at the lower end of the stomach and extending to the jejunum. DURAMENS (11) DURMASTS (11) DUTCHMAN (16) [noun] A piece of wood or stone used to repair a larger piece, shaped such that it fills as exactly as possible a void or cavity that is to be repaired. | [noun] A flaw or void repaired with such a piece. | [noun] A cloth strip attached to a flat to conceal a joint. DUTCHMEN (16) [noun] A piece of wood or stone used to repair a larger piece, shaped such that it fills as exactly as possible a void or cavity that is to be repaired. | [noun] A flaw or void repaired with such a piece. | [noun] A cloth strip attached to a flat to conceal a joint. DUUMVIRI (14) DUUMVIRS (14) [noun] One of two persons jointly exercising the same office in Republican Rome. DWARFISM (17) [noun] The condition of being a dwarf. DYBBUKIM (22) [noun] A malicious possessing spirit, believed to be the dislocated soul of a dead person. DYNAMICS (16) [noun] The branch of mechanics that is concerned with the effects of forces on the motion of objects. | [noun] The volume of the sound, such as piano, mezzo piano, mezzo forte, and forte. DYNAMISM (16) [noun] Any of several philosophical theories that attempt to explain the universe by an immanent force. | [noun] Great energy, drive, force, or power; vigor of body, mind or personality; oomph or pizzazz | [noun] Dynamic reality; active energy; continuous change, progress, or activity. DYNAMIST (14) DYNAMITE (14) [noun] A class of explosives made from nitroglycerine in an absorbent medium such as kieselguhr, used in mining and blasting; invented by Alfred Nobel in 1867. | [noun] A stick of trinitrotoluene (TNT) | [noun] Anything exceptionally dangerous, exciting or wonderful. EARDRUMS (11) [noun] A thin membrane that separates the outer ear from the middle ear and transmits sound from the air to the malleus. EARLDOMS (11) [noun] The rank of being an earl. | [noun] The territory controlled by an earl. EARMARKS (14) [verb] To mark (as of sheep) by slitting the ear. | [verb] (by extension) To specify or set aside for a particular purpose, to allocate. EARMUFFS (16) [noun] Objects designed to cover a person's ears for protection against cold or noise. They consist of a thermoplastic or metal head-band, that fits over the top of the head, and a pad at each end, to cover the external ears. EARTHMAN (13) EARTHMEN (13) EARWORMS (13) [noun] A tune that keeps replaying in one's head or that one keeps thinking about, especially if unwanted. | [noun] (originally United States) Short for corn earworm (“larva of the moths Helicoverpa zea (syn. Heliothis zea) and Helicoverpa armigera, which are agricultural pests”). | [noun] An earwig. EASEMENT (10) [noun] The legal right to use another person's real property (real estate), generally in order to cross a part of the property or to gain access to something on the property (right of way). | [noun] An element such as a baseboard, handrail, etc., that is curved instead of abruptly changing direction. | [noun] Easing, relief. ECHOGRAM (16) [noun] Sonogram ECHOISMS (15) ECONOMIC (14) [adjective] Pertaining to an economy. | [adjective] Frugal; cheap (in the sense of representing good value); economical. | [adjective] Pertaining to the study of money and its movement. ECTODERM (13) [noun] Outermost of the three tissue layers in the embryo of a metazoan animal. Through development, it will produce the epidermis (skin) and nervous system of the adult. ECTOMERE (12) ECUMENIC (14) EELWORMS (13) [noun] A nematode, or roundworm, especially any that resemble small eels. EGLOMISE (11) EGOMANIA (11) [noun] Excessive vanity, pride or arrogance; self-importance. EGOTISMS (11) ELECTRUM (12) [noun] Amber. | [noun] An alloy of gold and silver, used by the ancients; now specifically a natural alloy with between 20 and 50 per cent silver. | [noun] German silver plate. ELEMENTS (10) [noun] One of the simplest or essential parts or principles of which anything consists, or upon which the constitution or fundamental powers of anything are based. | [noun] A small part of the whole. | [noun] The sky. ELITISMS (10) ELUVIUMS (13) EMACIATE (12) EMANATED (11) [verb] To come from a source; issue from. | [verb] To send or give out; manifest. EMANATES (10) [verb] To come from a source; issue from. | [verb] To send or give out; manifest. EMANATOR (10) EMBALMED (15) [verb] To treat a corpse with preservatives in order to prevent decomposition. | [verb] To perfume or add fragrance to something. EMBALMER (14) EMBANKED (17) [verb] To throw up a bank so as to confine or to defend; to protect by a bank of earth or stone EMBARKED (17) [verb] To get on a boat or ship or (outside the USA) an aeroplane. | [verb] To start, begin. | [verb] To cause to go on board a vessel or boat; to put on shipboard. EMBARRED (13) EMBATTLE (12) [verb] To arrange in order of battle; to array for battle | [verb] To prepare or arm for battle; to equip as for battle. | [verb] To be arrayed for battle. | [noun] A merlon, or a single one of the series of solid projections of a battlement EMBAYING (16) [verb] To bathe; to steep. | [verb] To shut in, enclose, shelter or trap, such as ships in a bay. EMBEDDED (15) [verb] To lay as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed. | [verb] (by extension) To include in surrounding matter. | [verb] To encapsulate within another document or data file. EMBEZZLE (30) [verb] To steal or misappropriate money that one has been trusted with, especially to steal money from the organisation for which one works. EMBITTER (12) [verb] To cause to be bitter. EMBLAZED (22) EMBLAZER (21) EMBLAZES (21) EMBLAZON (21) [verb] To adorn with prominent markings. | [verb] To inscribe upon. | [verb] To draw (a coat of arms). EMBLEMED (15) EMBODIED (14) [verb] To represent in a physical or concrete form; to incarnate or personify. | [verb] To represent in some other form, such as a code of laws. | [verb] To comprise or include as part of a cohesive whole; to be made up of. EMBODIER (13) EMBODIES (13) [verb] To represent in a physical or concrete form; to incarnate or personify. | [verb] To represent in some other form, such as a code of laws. | [verb] To comprise or include as part of a cohesive whole; to be made up of. EMBOLDEN (13) [verb] To render (someone) bolder or more courageous. | [verb] To encourage, inspire, or motivate. | [verb] To format text in boldface. EMBOLIES (12) EMBOLISM (14) [noun] An obstruction or occlusion of an artery by an embolus, that is by a blood clot, air bubble or other matter that has been transported by the blood stream. | [noun] The insertion or intercalation of days into the calendar in order to correct the error arising from the difference between the civil year and the solar year. | [noun] An intercalated prayer for deliverance from evil coming after the Lord's Prayer. EMBORDER (13) EMBOSKED (17) EMBOSOMS (14) [verb] To draw to or into one's bosom; to treasure. | [verb] To enclose, surround, or protect. EMBOSSED (13) [verb] To mark or decorate with a raised design or symbol. | [verb] To raise in relief from a surface, as an ornament, a head on a coin, etc. | [verb] Of a hunted animal: to take shelter in a wood or forest. EMBOSSER (12) EMBOSSES (12) [verb] To mark or decorate with a raised design or symbol. | [verb] To raise in relief from a surface, as an ornament, a head on a coin, etc. | [verb] Of a hunted animal: to take shelter in a wood or forest. EMBOWELS (15) [verb] To enclose or bury. | [verb] To remove the bowels; disembowel. EMBOWERS (15) [verb] To enclose something or someone as if in a bower; shelter with foliage. | [verb] To lodge or rest in or as in a bower. | [verb] To form a bower. EMBOWING (16) EMBRACED (15) [verb] To clasp (someone or each other) in the arms with affection; to take in the arms; to hug. | [verb] To seize (something) eagerly or with alacrity; to accept or take up with cordiality; to welcome. | [verb] To submit to; to undergo. EMBRACER (14) EMBRACES (14) [noun] An act of putting arms around someone and bringing the person close to the chest; a hug. | [noun] An enclosure partially or fully surrounding someone or something. | [noun] Full acceptance (of something). EMBROILS (12) [verb] To draw into a situation; to cause to be involved. | [verb] To implicate in confusion; to complicate; to jumble. EMBROWNS (15) EMBRUING (13) [verb] To stain (in, with, blood, slaughter, etc.). EMBRUTED (13) EMBRUTES (12) EMBRYOID (16) EMBRYONS (15) EMCEEING (13) [verb] To act as the master of ceremonies (for). | [verb] To rap as part of a hip-hop performance. EMEERATE (10) EMENDATE (11) EMENDERS (11) EMENDING (12) [verb] To correct and revise (text or a document). EMERALDS (11) [noun] Any of various green gemstones, especially a green transparent form of beryl, highly valued as a precious stone. | [noun] Emerald green, a colour. | [noun] Any hummingbird in the genera Chlorostilbon and Elvira; and some in the genus Amazilia EMERGENT (11) [noun] A plant whose root system grows underwater, but whose shoot, leaves and flowers grow up and above the water. | [adjective] Emerging; coming into view or into existence; nascent; new. | [adjective] Arising unexpectedly, especially if also calling for immediate reaction; constituting an emergency. EMERGING (12) [verb] To come into view. | [verb] To come out of a situation, object or a liquid. | [verb] To become known. EMERITAE (10) EMERITUS (10) [noun] A person retired in this sense. | [adjective] Retired, but retaining an honorific version of a previous title. EMEROIDS (11) EMERSION (10) [noun] Emergence, especially from the water. | [noun] The reappearance of a heavenly body after being eclipsed by another or by the sun's brightness. EMETINES (10) EMIGRANT (11) [noun] Someone who leaves a country to settle in a new country. | [noun] Any of various pierid butterflies of the genus Catopsilia. Also called a migrant. EMIGRATE (11) [verb] To leave the country in which one lives, especially one's native country, in order to reside elsewhere. EMINENCE (12) [noun] Someone of high rank, reputation or social status. | [noun] The quality or state of being eminent. | [noun] Prominence in a particular order or accumulation; esteem. EMINENCY (15) EMIRATES (10) [noun] A country ruled by an emir. | [noun] The office of an emir. EMISSARY (13) [noun] An agent sent on a mission to represent the interests of someone else. | [noun] A venous channel in the skull. | [noun] An underground channel by which the water of a lake escapes. EMISSION (10) [noun] Something which is emitted or sent out; issue. | [noun] The act of emitting; the act of sending forth or putting into circulation. EMISSIVE (13) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or having the capacity to emit radiation or matter; emitting EMITTERS (10) [noun] That which emits something. | [noun] One terminal of a bipolar transistor (BJT). EMITTING (11) [verb] To send out or give off EMOTIONS (10) [noun] A person's internal state of being and involuntary physiological response to an object or a situation, based on or tied to physical state and sensory data. | [noun] A reaction by a non-human organism with behavioral and physiological elements similar to a person's response. EMPALERS (12) EMPALING (13) EMPANADA (13) [noun] Any of a variety of stuffed pastries found in Spanish and Latin American cuisine. EMPANELS (12) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. EMPATHIC (17) [adjective] Showing or expressing empathy. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or being an empath: of or having the capability of sensing the emotions of others. EMPERIES (12) EMPERORS (12) [noun] The male monarch or ruler of an empire. | [noun] Any monarch ruling an empire, irrespective of gender, with "empress" contrasting to mean when consort to emperor | [noun] (political theory) Specifically, the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire; the world-monarch. EMPHASES (15) [noun] Special weight or forcefulness given to something considered important. | [noun] Special attention or prominence given to something. | [noun] Prominence given to a syllable or words, by raising the voice or printing in italic or underlined type. EMPHASIS (15) [noun] Special weight or forcefulness given to something considered important. | [noun] Special attention or prominence given to something. | [noun] Prominence given to a syllable or words, by raising the voice or printing in italic or underlined type. EMPHATIC (17) [noun] An emphatic consonant. | [noun] A word or phrase adding emphasis, such as "a lot" or "really". | [adjective] Characterized by emphasis; forceful. EMPIRICS (14) [noun] A member of a sect of ancient physicians who based their theories solely on experience. | [noun] Someone who is guided by empiricism; an empiricist. | [noun] Any unqualified or dishonest practitioner; a charlatan; a quack. EMPLACED (15) EMPLACES (14) EMPLANED (13) [verb] To board an airplane EMPLANES (12) [verb] To board an airplane EMPLOYED (16) [verb] To hire (somebody for work or a job). | [verb] To use (somebody for a job, or something for a task). | [verb] To make busy. EMPLOYEE (15) [noun] An individual who provides labor to a company or another person. EMPLOYER (15) [noun] A person, firm or other entity which pays for or hires the services of another person. EMPLOYES (15) EMPOISON (12) EMPORIUM (14) [noun] A city or region which is a major trading centre; also, a place within a city for commerce and trading; a marketplace. | [noun] A shop that offers a wide variety of goods for sale; a department store; (with a descriptive word) a shop specializing in particular goods. | [noun] A business set up to enable foreign traders to engage in commerce in a country; a factory (now the more common term). EMPOWERS (15) [verb] To give permission, power, or the legal right to do something. | [verb] To give someone more confidence and/or strength to do something, often by enabling them to increase their control over their own life or situation. EMPRISES (12) EMPRIZES (21) EMPTIERS (12) EMPTIEST (12) [adjective] Devoid of content; containing nothing or nobody; vacant. | [adjective] Containing no elements (as of a string, array, or set), opposed to being null (having no valid value). | [adjective] Free; clear; devoid; often with of. EMPTINGS (13) EMPTYING (16) [noun] The sediment of beer, cider, etc. | [noun] A type of yeast obtained from the remains of the brewing process. | [verb] To make empty; to void; to remove the contents of. EMPURPLE (14) [verb] To make purple. | [verb] To enrage or anger, referring to making the face purple or red with blood. | [verb] Of writing, to make overly flowery or showy; to embellish unduly. EMPYEMAS (17) [noun] A collection of pus within a naturally existing anatomical cavity (as opposed to an abscess, which occurs in a newly formed cavity). EMPYEMIC (19) EMPYREAL (15) EMPYREAN (15) [noun] The region of pure light and fire; the highest heaven, where the pure element of fire was supposed by the ancients to exist: the same as the ether, the ninth heaven according to ancient astronomy. | [adjective] Of the sky or the heavens; celestially refined. EMULATED (11) [verb] To attempt to equal or be the same as. | [verb] To copy or imitate, especially a person. | [verb] To feel a rivalry with; to be jealous of, to envy. EMULATES (10) [verb] To attempt to equal or be the same as. | [verb] To copy or imitate, especially a person. | [verb] To feel a rivalry with; to be jealous of, to envy. EMULATOR (10) EMULSIFY (16) [verb] To make into an emulsion. EMULSION (10) [noun] A stable suspension of small droplets of one liquid in another with which it is immiscible. | [noun] A colloid in which both phases are liquid. | [noun] The coating of photosensitive silver halide grains in a thin gelatine layer on a photographic film. EMULSIVE (13) EMULSOID (11) ENAMELED (11) [verb] To coat or decorate with enamel. | [verb] To variegate with colours, as if with enamel. | [verb] To form a glossy surface like enamel upon. ENAMELER (10) ENAMINES (10) ENAMORED (11) [verb] (mostly in the passive, followed by "of" or "with") To cause to be in love. | [verb] (mostly in the passive) To captivate. | [adjective] In love, amorous. ENAMOURS (10) [verb] (mostly in the passive, followed by "of" or "with") To cause to be in love. | [verb] (mostly in the passive) To captivate. ENCAMPED (15) [verb] To establish a camp or temporary shelter. | [verb] To form into a camp. ENCOMIUM (14) [noun] Warm praise, especially a formal expression of such praise; a tribute. | [noun] A general category of oratory. | [noun] A method within rhetorical pedagogy. ENCUMBER (14) [verb] To load down something with a burden | [verb] To restrict or block something with a hindrance or impediment | [verb] To burden with a legal claim or other obligation ENDAMAGE (12) ENDAMEBA (13) ENDEMIAL (11) ENDEMICS (13) [noun] An individual or species that is endemic to a region. | [noun] A disease affecting a number of people simultaneously, so as to show a distinct connection with certain localities. ENDEMISM (13) ENDERMIC (13) ENDGAMES (12) [noun] The final stage of a game of chess, when there are few pieces left. | [noun] The final stage of a game of bridge, when there are few cards left. | [noun] The final stage of an extended process or course of events, especially with the implication of the imminent realization of a masterful strategy or plan. ENDODERM (12) [noun] One of the three tissue layers in the embryo of a metazoan animal. Through development, it will produce the digestive system of the adult. ENDOGAMY (15) [noun] The practice of marrying or requiring to marry within one's own ethnic, religious, or social group. | [noun] The fusion of two related gametes. ENDOSMOS (11) ENDOSOME (11) ENFLAMED (14) ENFLAMES (13) ENFRAMED (14) ENFRAMES (13) ENGRAMME (13) ENIGMATA (11) ENJAMBED (20) [verb] To carry a sentence over to the next line without a pause. | [adjective] (grammar, of two syntactic units) continued without a pause ENMESHED (14) [verb] To mesh; to tangle or interweave in such a manner as not to be easily separated, particularly in a mesh or net like manner. | [verb] To involve in such complications as to render extrication difficult | [verb] To involve in difficulties. ENMESHES (13) [verb] To mesh; to tangle or interweave in such a manner as not to be easily separated, particularly in a mesh or net like manner. | [verb] To involve in such complications as to render extrication difficult | [verb] To involve in difficulties. ENMITIES (10) [noun] The quality of being an enemy; hostile or unfriendly disposition. | [noun] A state or feeling of opposition, hostility, hatred or animosity. ENORMITY (13) [noun] Deviation from what is normal or standard; irregularity, abnormality. | [noun] Deviation from moral normality; extreme wickedness, nefariousness, or cruelty. | [noun] A breach of law or morality; a transgression, an act of evil or wickedness. ENORMOUS (10) [adjective] Deviating from the norm; unusual, extraordinary. | [adjective] Exceedingly wicked; atrocious or outrageous. | [adjective] Extremely large; greatly exceeding the common size, extent, etc. ENSAMPLE (12) ENSEMBLE (12) [noun] A group of separate things that contribute to a coordinated whole. | [noun] A coordinated costume or outfit; a suit. | [noun] (collective) A group of musicians, dancers, actors, etc who perform together; e.g. the chorus of a ballet company. ENSIFORM (13) [adjective] Shaped like a sword blade ENTAMEBA (12) [noun] Any of many parasitic amoebas, of the genus Entamoeba, that cause dysentery etc. ENTODERM (11) [noun] One of the three tissue layers in the embryo of a metazoan animal. Through development, it will produce the digestive system of the adult. ENTOMBED (13) [verb] To deposit in a tomb. | [verb] To confine in restrictive surroundings. ENVENOMS (13) [verb] To poison, to put or inject venom onto or into. | [verb] To acerbate. ENWOMBED (16) EPENDYMA (16) [noun] The thin membrane of glial cells lining the ventricles of the brain and the central canal of the spinal cord. EPHEMERA (15) [noun] Objects that are designed to be short-lived. | [noun] (library science) Published single-sheet or single page documents which are meant to be thrown away after one use. | [noun] (by extension) Transitory audiovisual matter not intended to be retained or preserved. EPIDEMIC (15) [noun] A widespread disease that affects many individuals in a population. | [noun] An occurrence of a disease or disorder in a population at a frequency higher than that expected in a given time period. | [adjective] Like or having to do with an epidemic; widespread EPIDERMS (13) EPIGRAMS (13) [noun] An inscription in stone. | [noun] A brief but witty saying. | [noun] A short, witty or pithy poem. EPIMERES (12) EPIMERIC (14) EPIMYSIA (15) EPISOMAL (12) EPISOMES (12) [noun] A segment of DNA that can exist and replicate either autonomously in the cytoplasm or as part of a chromosome, mainly found in bacteria | [noun] The upper half of the theca of a thecate protist such as a diatom or dinoflagellate. EPISTOME (12) EPITOMES (12) [noun] The embodiment or encapsulation of a class of items. | [noun] A representative example. | [noun] The height; the best. EPITOMIC (14) EPIZOISM (21) EPONYMIC (17) EREMITES (10) [noun] A hermit; a religious recluse, someone who lives alone. EREMITIC (12) EREMURUS (10) ERETHISM (13) [noun] Abnormal excitement of a bodily organ or tissue. | [noun] Any unusual or morbid overexcitement. | [noun] A neurological disorder arising from mercury poisoning, leading to irritability, depression, etc. ERGOTISM (11) [noun] The effect of long-term ergot poisoning, traditionally due to the ingestion of the alkaloids produced by the Claviceps purpurea fungus which infects rye and other cereals, and more recently by the action of a number of ergoline-based drugs. | [noun] A logical deduction. EROTISMS (10) ERUMPENT (12) ERYTHEMA (16) [noun] Abnormal redness and inflammation of the skin, due to vasodilation. | [noun] Skin redness from sunburn or chemical irritation ESCAPISM (14) [noun] An inclination to escape from routine or reality into fantasy. | [noun] A genre of book, film etc. that one uses to indulge this tendency. | [noun] The performance of an escape artist. ESTEEMED (11) [verb] To set a high value on; to regard with respect or reverence. | [verb] To regard something as valuable; to prize. | [verb] To look upon something in a particular way. ESTIMATE (10) [noun] A rough calculation or assessment of the value, size, or cost of something. | [noun] (construction and business) A document (or verbal notification) specifying how much a job is likely to cost. | [noun] An upper limitation on some positive quantity. ETAMINES (10) ETATISMS (10) ETHMOIDS (14) [noun] (bone) A square bone at the root of the nose, forming part of the cranium, and having many perforations through which the olfactory nerves pass to the nose. EUDAEMON (11) EUDEMONS (11) EULOGIUM (11) [noun] A eulogy. EUONYMUS (13) [noun] Any of many (often decorative) trees, shrubs and woody vines, of the genus Euonymus. EUPHUISM (15) [noun] An ornate style of writing (in Elizabethan England) marked by the excessive use of alliteration, antithesis and mythological similes. | [noun] An instance of euphuism. EUROPIUM (12) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Eu) with an atomic number of 63. EURYTHMY (19) [noun] The harmony of features and proportion in architecture. | [noun] Graceful body movements to the rhythm of spoken words and music. | [noun] Healthy, normal beating of the pulse. EVERMORE (13) [adverb] Always; forever; eternally. | [adverb] At any time in the future. EVERYMAN (16) [noun] In fiction, drama, or allegory, the archetypical ordinary individual, frequently the protagonist in a parable of some sort. EVERYMEN (16) EVONYMUS (16) EXAMINED (18) [verb] To observe or inspect carefully or critically | [verb] To check the health or condition of something or someone | [verb] To determine the aptitude, skills or qualifications of someone by subjecting them to an examination EXAMINEE (17) [noun] The one who is examined. EXAMINER (17) [noun] A person who investigates someone or something. | [noun] A person who sets an examination. | [noun] A person who marks an examination. EXAMINES (17) [verb] To observe or inspect carefully or critically | [verb] To check the health or condition of something or someone | [verb] To determine the aptitude, skills or qualifications of someone by subjecting them to an examination EXAMPLED (20) [verb] To be illustrated or exemplified (by). EXAMPLES (19) [noun] Something that is representative of all such things in a group. | [noun] Something that serves to illustrate or explain a rule. | [noun] Something that serves as a pattern of behaviour to be imitated (a good example) or not to be imitated (a bad example). EXANTHEM (20) EXCIMERS (19) [noun] Any diatomic exciplex EXCLAIMS (19) [noun] Exclamation; outcry, clamor. EXEMPLAR (19) [noun] Something fit to be imitated; an ideal, a model. | [noun] A role model. | [noun] Something typical or representative of a class; an example. | [adjective] Exemplary. EXEMPLUM (21) [noun] An example. | [noun] A story demonstrating a moral point; a parable. EXEMPTED (20) [verb] To grant (someone) freedom or immunity from. EXHUMERS (20) EXHUMING (21) [verb] To dig out of the ground; to take out of a place of burial; to disinter. | [verb] To uncover; to bring to light. EXIMIOUS (17) EXODERMS (18) EXOGAMIC (20) EXONUMIA (17) EXORCISM (19) [noun] The ritual act of driving out evil spirits from persons, places or things who are possessed by them. EXORDIUM (18) [noun] A beginning. | [noun] The introduction to an essay or discourse. EXOSMOSE (17) EXOTISMS (17) EXTREMER (17) EXTREMES (17) [noun] The greatest or utmost point, degree or condition. | [noun] Each of the things at opposite ends of a range or scale. | [noun] A drastic expedient. EXTREMUM (19) [noun] A point, or value, which is a maximum or a minimum EYEBEAMS (15) FACTOTUM (15) [noun] A person having many diverse activities or responsibilities. | [noun] A general servant. | [noun] An individual employed to do all sorts of duties. FADDISMS (15) FAIRYISM (16) FAMELESS (13) FAMILIAL (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a human family. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to any grouping of things referred to as a family. | [adjective] Inherited. FAMILIAR (13) [noun] An attendant spirit, often in animal or demon form. | [noun] A member of one's family or household. | [noun] A member of a pope's or bishop's household. FAMILIES (13) [noun] A group of people who are closely related to one another (by blood, marriage or adoption); kin; for example, a set of parents and their children; an immediate family. | [noun] An extended family; a group of people who are related to one another by blood or marriage. | [noun] A (close-knit) group of people related by blood, friendship, marriage, law, or custom, especially if they live or work together. FAMILISM (15) FAMISHED (17) [verb] To starve (to death); to kill or destroy with hunger. | [verb] To exhaust the strength or endurance of, by hunger; to distress with hunger. | [verb] To kill, or to cause to suffer extremity, by deprivation or denial of anything necessary. FAMISHES (16) [verb] To starve (to death); to kill or destroy with hunger. | [verb] To exhaust the strength or endurance of, by hunger; to distress with hunger. | [verb] To kill, or to cause to suffer extremity, by deprivation or denial of anything necessary. FAMOUSLY (16) [adverb] In a celebrated manner. | [adverb] Indicates that the act, state or occurrence described by the sentence is famous. | [adverb] Really well, having great rapport FANTASMS (13) FARADISM (14) FARMABLE (15) FARMHAND (17) [noun] A person who works on a farm. | [noun] A player in the minor leagues. FARMINGS (14) FARMLAND (14) [noun] Land that is suitable for farming and agricultural production. FARMWIFE (19) FARMWORK (20) FARMYARD (17) [noun] The area around a farm, excluding the fields. FASCISMS (15) FATALISM (13) [noun] The doctrine that all events are subject to fate or inevitable necessity, or determined in advance in such a way that human beings cannot change them. FATHOMED (17) [verb] To encircle with outstretched arms, especially to take a measurement; to embrace. | [verb] To measure the depth of, take a sounding of. | [verb] To get to the bottom of; to manage to comprehend; understand (a problem etc.). FAUVISMS (16) FEARSOME (13) [adjective] Frightening, especially in appearance. | [adjective] Fearful, frightened FEMINACY (18) FEMININE (13) [noun] That which is feminine. | [noun] (possibly obsolete) A woman. | [noun] (grammar) The feminine gender. FEMINISE (13) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. FEMINISM (15) [noun] The state of being feminine; femininity. | [noun] A social theory or political movement which argues that legal and social restrictions on women must be removed in order to bring about equality of the sexes in all aspects of public and private life. FEMINIST (13) [noun] An advocate of feminism; a person who believes in bringing about the equality of the sexes (of women and men) in all aspects of public and private life | [noun] A member of a feminist political movement | [adjective] Relating to or in accordance with feminism. FEMINITY (16) [noun] Femininity. FEMINIZE (22) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. FERMATAS (13) [noun] The holding of a note or rest for longer than its usual duration; also the notation of such a prolongation, usually represented as a dot with a semi-circle above or below it, written above or below the prolonged note or rest. FERMENTS (13) [noun] Something, such as a yeast or barm, that causes fermentation. | [noun] A state of agitation or of turbulent change. | [noun] A gentle internal motion of the constituent parts of a fluid; fermentation. FERMIONS (13) [noun] (Standard Model) Any elementary or composite particle that has half-integer spin and thus obeys Fermi–Dirac statistics and the Pauli exclusion principle (equivalently, a particle for which the wavefunction of any system of identical such particles changes sign whenever two are swapped); a baryon, a lepton or a quark; (slightly more loosely) any such particle or any composite particle composed of fermions. FERMIUMS (15) FERRYMAN (16) FERRYMEN (16) FIBROMAS (15) [noun] A benign tumour of fibrous connective tissue. FIDEISMS (14) FIEFDOMS (17) [noun] The estate controlled by a feudal lord; a fief. | [noun] (by extension) Any organization in the control of a dominant individual. FIGMENTS (14) [noun] A fabrication, fantasy, invention; something fictitious. FILAMENT (13) [noun] A fine thread or wire. | [noun] Such a wire, as can be heated until it glows, in an incandescent light bulb or a thermionic valve. | [noun] A massive, thread-like structure, such as those gaseous ones which extend outward from the surface of the sun, or such as those (much larger) ones which form the boundaries between large voids in the universe. FILIFORM (16) [adjective] Shaped like or resembling a thread or filament; filamentous. | [adjective] Having all component parts or segments cylindrical and more or less uniform in size. FILMABLE (15) FILMCARD (16) FILMDOMS (16) FILMGOER (14) [noun] A moviegoer. FILMIEST (13) [adjective] Resembling or made of a thin film; gauzy | [adjective] Covered by (or as if by) a film; hazy FILMLAND (14) FILMSETS (13) [noun] The enclosure in which a film scene is shot; includes scenery and props | [verb] To typeset by exposing type characters onto photographic film, which is then used to generate printing plates. FIMBRIAE (15) [noun] Any anatomical structure in the form of a fringe, but especially that around the ovarian end of the Fallopian tube. | [noun] Hairlike appendage found on the cell surface of many bacteria; used by the bacteria to adhere to one another, to animal cells and to some inanimate objects. FIMBRIAL (15) FINALISM (13) [noun] Teleology FINMARKS (17) FINNMARK (17) FIREARMS (13) [noun] A personal weapon that uses explosive powder to propel a projectile often made of lead. FIREBOMB (17) [noun] A weapon that causes fire, an incendiary weapon. | [verb] To attack with a firebomb. FIREDAMP (16) [noun] An inflammable gas (mostly methane) found in coal mines; forms an explosive mixture with air. FIREROOM (13) FIREWORM (16) FIRMNESS (13) [noun] The state of being firm; strength; permanence; stability; hardness; resolution. FIRMWARE (16) [noun] Something in between hardware and software. Like software, it is created from source code, but it is closely tied to the hardware it runs on. | [noun] Software intended for such embedded computer applications. FISHMEAL (16) [noun] Ground dried fish, used mainly for livestock feed. FISHWORM (19) FITMENTS (13) [noun] Something that suits or fits. | [noun] A thing fitted to another in order to accomplish a specific purpose. | [noun] An item of permanent furniture or equipment. FLAMBEAU (15) [noun] A burning torch, especially one carried in procession. FLAMBEED (16) [verb] To cook with a showy technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. FLAMENCO (15) [noun] A genre of folk music and dance native to Andalusia, in Spain. | [noun] A song or dance performed in such a style. | [verb] To dance flamenco. FLAMEOUT (13) [noun] The act of flaming out or burning out; extinguishing. | [noun] The act of quitting or failing, especially due to overwork or in a dramatic manner. | [noun] The sudden extinguishing of the flame of a burner (due to obstruction of fuel) FLAMIEST (13) FLAMINES (13) [noun] A priest devoted to the service of a particular god, from whom he received a distinguishing epithet. The most honored were those of Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus, called respectively Flamen Dialis, Flamen Martialis, and Flamen Quirinalis. FLAMINGO (14) [noun] A wading bird of the family Phoenicopteridae. | [noun] A deep pink color tinged with orange, like that of a flamingo. | [adjective] Of a deep pink color tinged with orange, like that of a flamingo. FLAMMING (16) FLATMATE (13) [noun] A person with whom one shares a flat. | [noun] A person with whom one shares any rental dwelling, not necessarily a flat. FLATWORM (16) [noun] Any of very many parasitic or free-living worms, of the phylum Platyhelminthes, having a flattened body with no skeleton or body cavity. FLEXTIME (20) [noun] An arrangement that allows employees to set their own working hours within agreed limits; normally must include certain periods (core time) when they must be at work. FLIMFLAM (18) [noun] Nonsense. | [noun] Deception. | [verb] To swindle or cheat. FLIMSIER (13) [adjective] Likely to bend or break under pressure. | [adjective] Weak; ill-founded. FLIMSIES (13) [noun] Thin typing paper used to make multiple copies. | [noun] A service certificate | [noun] (in the plural) Skimpy underwear. FLIMSILY (16) FLOTSAMS (13) FLUIDRAM (14) [noun] The dram (unit of volume). FLUMMERY (18) [noun] A custard; any of several bland, gelatinous foodstuffs, usually made from stewed fruit and thickened with oatmeal, cornstarch or flour. | [noun] Empty or meaningless talk, especially when used to flatter. | [noun] Pretentious trappings, useless ornaments used to impress. FLUMPING (16) [verb] To move or fall heavily, or with a dull sound. | [verb] To drop something heavily or with a dull sound. FOAMABLE (15) FOAMIEST (13) [adjective] Full of foam. FOAMLESS (13) FOAMLIKE (17) FOGYISMS (17) FOILSMAN (13) FOILSMEN (13) FOLKMOOT (17) FOLKMOTE (17) FOLKMOTS (17) FOMENTED (14) [verb] To incite or cause troublesome acts; to encourage; to instigate. | [verb] To apply a poultice to; to bathe with a cloth or sponge. FOMENTER (13) FOOTMARK (17) [noun] Footprint (an impression made by a foot) FORAMENS (13) FORAMINA (13) [noun] An opening, an orifice; a short passage. FOREARMS (13) [noun] The part of the arm between the wrist and the elbow. | [noun] A section of the weapon between the receiver and the muzzle, used to hold the firearm steady. FOREBOOM (15) FOREDOOM (14) [noun] A doom that is predicted; destiny. | [verb] To predestine to a doom. FORELIMB (15) [noun] The anterior limb (or equivalent appendage) of an animal FOREMAST (13) [noun] The mast nearest the bow, on a ship with more than one mast. FOREMILK (17) [noun] The first milk drawn from a cow during milking; in humans, the milk secreted initially during breastfeeding, typically low in fat and rich in protein. FOREMOST (13) [adjective] First, either in time or in space | [adjective] Most forward; front | [adjective] Of a higher rank or position; paramount FORENAME (13) [noun] A name that precedes the surname. FORETIME (13) FORMABLE (15) FORMALIN (13) [noun] A solution of formaldehyde in water; used as a disinfectant and to preserve biological specimens. FORMALLY (16) [adverb] In a formal manner. | [adverb] In accordance with official procedure. | [adverb] In accordance with rigorous rules. FORMANTS (13) [noun] A band of frequencies, in a sound spectrum, that have a greater intensity; they determine the quality of a sound; especially the characteristic sounds of the consonants. | [noun] A morpheme occurring as an affix to a root or stem, forming an extended root or stem. FORMATES (13) [verb] To assemble flying aircraft into formation; to fly in formation. FORMERLY (16) [adverb] At some time in the past | [adverb] Previously; once FORMLESS (13) [adjective] Without form; shapeless. | [adjective] Without the use of forms or templates. FORMULAE (13) [noun] Any mathematical rule expressed symbolically. | [noun] A symbolic expression of the structure of a compound. | [noun] A plan or method for dealing with a problem or for achieving a result. FORMULAS (13) [noun] Any mathematical rule expressed symbolically. | [noun] A symbolic expression of the structure of a compound. | [noun] A plan or method for dealing with a problem or for achieving a result. FORMWORK (20) [noun] A temporary mould, made from planks, into which concrete is poured FOURSOME (13) [noun] A group of four, a quartet or a game (such as golf) played by four players, especially by two teams of two. | [noun] A sex act between four people. FRAENUMS (13) [noun] A frenulum. FRAGMENT (14) [noun] A part broken off; a small, detached portion; an imperfect part, either physically or not | [noun] (grammar) A sentence not containing a subject or a predicate. | [noun] An incomplete portion of code. FRAMABLE (15) FRAMINGS (14) FRANCIUM (15) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Fr) with an atomic number of 87. It is an intensely radioactive alkali metal that is not found in nature. | [noun] A single atom of this element. FREEDMAN (14) [noun] A man who has been released from a condition of slavery. FREEDMEN (14) [noun] A man who has been released from a condition of slavery. FREEDOMS (14) [noun] The state of being free, of not being imprisoned or enslaved. | [noun] The lack of a specific constraint, or of constraints in general; a state of being free, unconstrained. | [noun] Frankness; openness; unreservedness. FREEFORM (16) [adjective] Having an unconventional, variable or asymmetric form. | [adjective] Referring to a roleplaying game which does not use a formal system of rules. FREMITUS (13) FRENULUM (13) [noun] A small fold of tissue that prevents an organ in the body from moving too far. FRESHMAN (16) [noun] A novice; one in the rudiments of knowledge. | [noun] A person of either sex entering the first year of an institution, especially a high school (ninth grade), a university, or legislative body. FRESHMEN (16) [noun] A novice; one in the rudiments of knowledge. | [noun] A person of either sex entering the first year of an institution, especially a high school (ninth grade), a university, or legislative body. FRETSOME (13) FROMAGES (14) FROMENTY (16) FRUMENTY (16) [noun] A porridge made by boiling hulled wheat, typically with additional ingredients such as milk, egg yolks, and/or almond milk, traditionally served with venison or porpoise. FRUMPIER (15) [adjective] Dowdy, unkempt, or unfashionable. | [adjective] Bad-tempered. FRUMPILY (18) FRUMPISH (18) [adjective] Poorly dressed; wearing drab, lifeless, ill-fitting clothing, or being clothing of this kind. | [adjective] Bad-tempered. FRUSTUMS (13) [noun] A cone or pyramid whose tip has been truncated by a plane parallel to its base. | [noun] A portion of a sphere, or in general any solid, delimited by two parallel planes. FUGLEMAN (14) [noun] The member of a military group who leads the way or demonstrates drill; hence, someone who keeps the beat or timing, and/or demonstrates motions in other contexts. | [noun] (by extension) A political leader, or a ringleader. FUGLEMEN (14) [noun] The member of a military group who leads the way or demonstrates drill; hence, someone who keeps the beat or timing, and/or demonstrates motions in other contexts. | [noun] (by extension) A political leader, or a ringleader. FULCRUMS (15) [noun] The support about which a lever pivots. | [noun] A crux or pivot; a central point. FULMINED (14) FULMINES (13) FULMINIC (15) FUMARASE (13) FUMARATE (13) [noun] Any salt or ester of fumaric acid; they are produced in the body as part of the urea cycle. FUMAROLE (13) [noun] An opening in the ground that emits steam and gases due to volcanic activity. FUMATORY (16) FUMBLERS (15) FUMBLING (16) [verb] To handle nervously or awkwardly. | [verb] To grope awkwardly in trying to find something | [verb] To blunder uncertainly. FUMELESS (13) FUMELIKE (17) FUMETTES (13) FUMIGANT (14) [noun] Any substance used, in the gaseous state, to fumigate or disinfect. FUMIGATE (14) [verb] To disinfect, purify, or rid of vermin with the fumes of certain chemicals. FUMINGLY (17) FUMITORY (16) [noun] A plant of the taxonomic genus Fumaria, which are annual herbaceous flowering plants in the family Papaveraceae, native to temperate Europe and Asia. FUNNYMAN (16) [noun] Comedian FUNNYMEN (16) [noun] Comedian FURCULUM (15) FURMENTY (16) FUSIFORM (16) [adjective] Shaped like a spindle with yarn spun on it; having round or roundish cross-section and tapering at each end. FUTURISM (13) [noun] An early 20th century avant-garde art movement focused on speed, the mechanical, and the modern, which took a deeply antagonistic attitude to traditional artistic conventions. | [noun] The study and prediction of possible futures. | [noun] The Jewish expectation of the messiah in the future rather than recognizing him in the presence of Christ. GALBANUM (13) [noun] A bitter, aromatic resin or gum, extracted from plants of the genus Ferula, that resembles assafoetida and has been used in incense and in aromatherapy GALLIUMS (11) GALUMPHS (16) [verb] To move heavily and clumsily, or with a sense of prancing and triumph. GAMASHES (14) GAMBADES (14) [noun] The leap of a horse | [noun] A prank or frolic GAMBADOS (14) [noun] (usually plural) Either of a pair of protective leather gaiters on a saddle. | [noun] (in the plural) gamashes; spatterdashes | [noun] A gambade (leaping movement). GAMBESON (13) GAMBIERS (13) GAMBLERS (13) [noun] One who plays at a game of chance, who gambles. | [noun] One who takes significant risks. GAMBLING (14) [verb] To take a risk, with the potential of a positive outcome. | [verb] To play risky games, especially casino games, for monetary gain. | [verb] To risk (something) for potential gain. GAMBOGES (14) GAMBOLED (14) [verb] To move about playfully; to frolic. | [verb] To do a forward roll. GAMBRELS (13) [noun] The hind leg of a horse. | [noun] (chiefly historical and obsolete outside dialectal) A bar, usually metal, with a central loop and a hook at each end, used to hang a carcass for butchering. | [noun] A gambrel roof. GAMBUSIA (13) [noun] Any of several live-bearing freshwater fish, of the genus Gambusia, that feed on the larva of mosquitos and are used to control them. GAMECOCK (19) [noun] A fighting cock: a rooster used in cockfighting. GAMELANS (11) [noun] A genre of music of Indonesian origin typically featuring metallophones, xylophones, drums, gongs and a bamboo flute (called a siuling). | [noun] The name of the ensemble performing this style of music. GAMELIKE (15) GAMENESS (11) GAMESMAN (13) GAMESMEN (13) GAMESOME (13) [adjective] Full of sport; playful GAMESTER (11) [noun] A person who plays games. | [noun] One who plays video games. | [noun] A gambler. GAMINESS (11) GAMMADIA (14) GAMMIEST (13) [adjective] Injured, or not functioning properly (with respect to legs). GAMMONED (14) [verb] To cure bacon by salting. | [verb] To beat by a gammon (without the opponent bearing off a stone). | [verb] To lash with ropes (on a ship). GAMMONER (13) GAMODEME (14) GANYMEDE (15) GAPEWORM (16) [noun] A parasitic nematode worm, Syngamus trachea, that infects the tracheas of some birds and causes the disease gapes. GARMENTS (11) [noun] A single item of clothing. | [noun] Short for temple garment. GASIFORM (14) GAZUMPED (23) [verb] To swindle; to extort. | [verb] To raise the selling price of something (especially property) after previously agreeing to a lower one. | [verb] To buy a property by bidding more than the price of an existing, accepted offer. GAZUMPER (22) GELSEMIA (11) GEMINATE (11) [noun] A doubled or repeated letter or speech sound. | [verb] To arrange in pairs. | [verb] To occur in pairs. GEMMATED (14) GEMMATES (13) GEMMIEST (13) GEMMULES (13) [noun] A small gemma or bud of dormant embryonic cells produced by some freshwater sponges. | [noun] A hypothetical particle once thought to be the basis of heredity according to pangenesis theory. GEMOLOGY (15) [noun] The art and science of gems GEMSBOKS (17) [noun] A large African antelope (Oryx gazella). GEMSBUCK (19) GEMSTONE (11) [noun] A gem, usually made of minerals. GENDARME (12) [noun] A member of the gendarmerie, a military body charged with police duties. | [noun] Policeman. | [noun] A rock pinnacle on a mountain ridge. GEOMANCY (16) [noun] A method of divination which interprets markings on the ground or how handfuls of dirt land when tossed. GEOMETER (11) [noun] A mathematician who specializes in geometry. | [noun] Any species of geometrid moth (family Geometridae). GEOMETRY (14) [noun] The branch of mathematics dealing with spatial relationships. | [noun] (often qualified in combination) A mathematical system that deals with spatial relationships and that is built on a particular set of axioms; a subbranch of geometry which deals with such a system or systems. | [noun] The observed or specified spatial attributes of an object, etc. GERANIUM (11) [noun] Any flowering plant of the genus Geranium, the cranesbills, of family Geraniaceae. | [noun] The common name for flowering plants of the genus Pelargonium. | [noun] A bright red color tinted with orange, like that of a scarlet geranium. GERMANIC (13) [adjective] Of or containing germanium. | [adjective] Containing germanium with a valence of 4. GERMFREE (14) GERMIEST (11) [adjective] That carries germs. GERMINAL (11) [adjective] Relating to spring | [adjective] Pertaining, similar, or belonging to a germ. | [adjective] Relating to a plant ovary GIANTISM (11) [noun] The quality or state of being gigantic; being of abnormally large size. | [noun] A condition where there is over-production of growth hormone by the pituitary gland in a child before the bone growth plates close, resulting in excessive long bone growth, accompanied by muscular weakness and sexual impotence. GIMBALED (14) GIMCRACK (19) [noun] Something showy but worthless; a gimmick or bauble. | [verb] To put together quickly and without much care; to bodge. | [verb] To embellish with gimcracks. GIMLETED (12) GIMMICKS (19) [noun] A trick or device used to attain some end. | [noun] A clever ploy or strategy. | [noun] A gimmick capacitor. GIMMICKY (22) [adjective] Resembling, or characteristic of a gimmick. | [adjective] Containing gimmicks. GIMPIEST (13) GINGHAMS (15) [noun] A cotton fabric made from dyed and white yarn woven in checks GISARMES (11) GLADSOME (12) [adjective] Marked by joy or gladness; happy, joyous, or light-hearted. GLAMOURS (11) GLASSMAN (11) GLASSMEN (11) GLAUCOMA (13) [noun] An eye disease or disorder that is defined as a characteristic optic neuropathy, or disease of the optic nerve, possibly, if untreated, leading to damage of the optic disc of the eye and resultant visual field loss due to lack of communication between the retina and the brain, which can lead to blindness. GLEAMERS (11) GLEAMIER (11) GLEAMING (12) [verb] To shine; to glitter; to glisten. | [verb] To be briefly but strongly apparent. | [verb] To disgorge filth, as a hawk. GLEESOME (11) [adjective] Characterised or marked by glee; gleeful; joyous. GLIMMERS (13) [noun] A faint light; a dim glow. | [noun] A flash of light. | [noun] A faint or remote possibility. GLIMPSED (14) [verb] To see or view briefly or incompletely. | [verb] To appear by glimpses. GLIMPSER (13) GLIMPSES (13) [noun] A brief look, glance, or peek. | [noun] A sudden flash. | [noun] A faint idea; an inkling. GLIOMATA (11) [noun] A tumour that arises from glial cells in the brain or spinal cord GLOAMING (12) [noun] Twilight, as at early morning (dawn) or (especially) early evening; dusk. | [noun] Sullenness; melancholy. GLOMMING (14) [verb] To steal, to grab. | [verb] To stare. | [verb] To attach. GLOOMFUL (14) GLOOMIER (11) [adjective] Not very illuminated; dim because of darkness, especially when appearing depressing or frightening. | [adjective] Suffering from gloom; melancholy; dejected. GLOOMILY (14) GLOOMING (12) [verb] To be dark or gloomy. | [verb] To look or feel sad, sullen or despondent. | [verb] To render gloomy or dark; to obscure; to darken. | [noun] Twilight of morning or evening; the gloaming. GLOSSEME (11) GLOWWORM (17) [noun] The larva or wingless grub-like female of a beetle from the families Phengodidae or Lampyridae that gives out a green light from its abdomen. | [noun] A carnivorous gnat larva in the keroplatid genus Arachnocampa that spins threads to capture insects attracted by its glow. GLUCINUM (13) GLUMMEST (13) [adjective] Despondent; moody; sullen GLUMNESS (11) GLUMPIER (13) GLUMPILY (16) GNOMICAL (13) GNOMISTS (11) GNOMONIC (13) GODDAMNS (13) GOMBROON (13) GOMERALS (11) GOMERELS (11) GOMERILS (11) GONIDIUM (12) GOOMBAHS (16) [noun] A person of Italian descent. | [noun] A companion, pal, close friend, or associate, used especially among Italian-American men. It sometimes has the connotation of an older friend who acts as a patron, protector or adviser. | [noun] A style of music from Guinea-Bissau which is primarily vocal and percussive. GOOMBAYS (16) [noun] (Bahamas) A type of traditional Bahamian drum. | [noun] (Bahamas) A genre of folk music played with this drum. | [noun] (Bahamas) A dance associated with this music genre. GORBLIMY (16) GORMANDS (12) GORMLESS (11) [adjective] (of a person) Lacking intelligence, sense or understanding; foolish. GOSSAMER (11) [noun] A fine film or strand as of cobwebs, floating in the air or caught on bushes, etc. | [noun] A soft, sheer fabric. | [noun] Anything delicate, light and flimsy. GOURAMIS (11) [noun] An edible freshwater fish of the family Osphronemidae. GOURMAND (12) [noun] A person given to excess in the consumption of food and drink; a greedy or ravenous eater. | [noun] A person who appreciates good food. GOURMETS (11) [noun] A connoisseur in eating and drinking; someone who takes their food seriously. GOWNSMAN (14) GOWNSMEN (14) GRAMARYE (14) GRAMERCY (16) GRAMMARS (13) [noun] A system of rules and principles for speaking and writing a language. | [noun] The study of the internal structure of words (morphology) and the use of words in the construction of phrases and sentences (syntax). | [noun] A book describing the rules of grammar of a language. GRANDAME (12) [noun] Grandmother | [noun] Old lady, elderly woman GRANDAMS (12) [noun] Grandmother | [noun] Old lady, elderly woman GRANDDAM (13) [noun] Grandmother | [noun] Old lady, elderly woman GRANDMAS (12) [noun] Grandmother GRAPHEME (16) [noun] A fundamental unit of a writing system, corresponding to (for example) letters in the English alphabet or jamo in Korean Hangeul. | [noun] In alphabetic writing, the shortest group of letters composing a phoneme. GRAVAMEN (14) [noun] The grievance complained of; the substantial cause of the action; also, in general, the ground or essence of a complaint. GRAYMAIL (14) GREMIALS (11) GREMLINS (11) [noun] A mythical creature reputed to be mischievously inclined to damage or dismantle machinery. | [noun] (by extension) Any mysterious, unknown source of trouble or mischief. | [noun] A young inexperienced surfer. GREMMIES (13) GREWSOME (14) GRIMACED (14) [verb] To make grimaces; to distort one's face; to make faces. | [adjective] Distorted; crabbed GRIMACER (13) GRIMACES (13) [noun] A contorted facial expression, often expressing contempt or pain. | [noun] Affectation, pretence. | [verb] To make grimaces; to distort one's face; to make faces. GRIMIEST (11) [adjective] Stained or covered with grime. | [adjective] From the urban musical genre called grime. GRIMMEST (13) [adjective] Dismal and gloomy, cold and forbidding | [adjective] Rigid and unrelenting | [adjective] Ghastly or sinister GRIMNESS (11) GROGRAMS (12) GROMMETS (13) [noun] A reinforced eyelet, or a small metal or plastic ring used to reinforce an eyelet. | [noun] A ring formed of a single strand of rope, laid in three times round, fastening the upper edge of a sail to its stay. | [noun] (flags) An eyelet at the hoist end of a flag, used to fasten the flag to its halyard. GROMWELL (14) [noun] Lithospermum arvense, a plant of the genus Lithospermum anciently used, because of its stony pericarp, in the cure of kidney stones. GROOMERS (11) GROOMING (12) [verb] To attend to one's appearance and clothing. | [verb] To care for (horses or other animals) by brushing and cleaning them. | [verb] To prepare (someone) for election or appointment. GRUBWORM (16) GRUESOME (11) [adjective] Repellently frightful and shocking; horrific or ghastly. GRUIFORM (14) GRUMBLED (14) [verb] To make a low, growling or rumbling noise, like a hungry stomach or certain animals. | [verb] To complain; to murmur or mutter with discontent; to make ill-natured complaints in a low voice and a surly manner. | [verb] To utter in a grumbling fashion. GRUMBLER (13) GRUMBLES (13) [noun] A low thundering, rumbling or growling sound. | [noun] The sound made by a hungry stomach. | [noun] A surly complaint. GRUMMEST (13) GRUMMETS (13) GRUMPHIE (16) GRUMPIER (13) [adjective] Dissatisfied and irritable. GRUMPILY (16) GRUMPING (14) [verb] To complain. | [verb] To be grumpy. GRUMPISH (16) [adjective] Surly; sullen; gruff; grumpy GUAIACUM (13) [noun] Any of a number of species of tree of the genus Guaiacum, native to the West Indies and parts of the Americas. | [noun] The wood or resin of this tree. GUAIOCUM (13) GUMBOILS (13) [noun] A small suppurating inflamed spot on the gum. GUMBOOTS (13) [noun] A type of boot made of rubber. | [noun] A style of popular music traditionally associated with gold miners. | [noun] Generic black tea. GUMBOTIL (13) GUMDROPS (14) [noun] A small chewy candy made with corn syrup, gelatin and some flavouring oils or powders. GUMMIEST (13) [adjective] Showing the gums. | [adjective] Resembling gum (the substance). | [adjective] Covered with gum or a substance resembling gum. GUMMITES (13) GUMMOSES (13) GUMMOSIS (13) [noun] The formation of patches of a gummy substance on the surface of certain plants, particularly fruit trees, caused by sap oozing from wounds or cankers. GUMPTION (13) [noun] Common sense, initiative, resourcefulness. | [noun] Boldness of enterprise; aggressiveness or initiative. | [noun] Energy of body and mind, enthusiasm. GUMSHOED (15) GUMSHOES (14) [noun] A sneaker or rubber overshoe. | [noun] A detective. GUMTREES (11) [noun] A eucalyptus tree. GUMWEEDS (15) GUMWOODS (15) GUNMETAL (11) [noun] A type of bronze used for making cannons. | [noun] An alloy of 88% copper, 10% tin and 2% zinc, originally used for making guns. | [noun] A dark grey or bluish-grey colour; gunmetal grey. GUNROOMS (11) [noun] A room where guns are stored. | [noun] Living quarters for junior officers and midshipmen on a warship (hence gunroom officers). In the past it was usually set in the forecastle. GUNSMITH (14) [noun] A person skilled in the repair and servicing of firearms. GYMKHANA (21) [noun] A competition where riders and horses display a range of skills and aptitudes. | [noun] A place of public resort for athletic games, etc. | [noun] A meeting for such sports. GYMNASIA (14) [noun] A large room or building for indoor sports. | [noun] A type of secondary school in some European countries which typically prepares students for university. | [noun] A public place or building where Ancient Greek youths took exercise, with running and wrestling grounds, baths, and halls for conversation. GYMNASTS (14) [noun] One who performs gymnastics GYNECIUM (16) GYPSYDOM (20) GYPSYISM (19) HAEMATAL (13) HAEMATIC (15) [noun] Hematinic | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, affecting or containing blood HAEMATIN (13) [noun] Hemoglobin with iron in ferric state. | [noun] Hemin. HAFNIUMS (16) HAHNIUMS (16) HAIRWORM (16) HALFTIME (16) [noun] The interval between the two halves of a sports match. | [noun] The time taken for a physical quantity to halve the difference between its present value and its final value. | [noun] The halftime show, the primary "light" entertainment of a game, after the second quarter when players can physically recover, coaches can give players a pep talk, bets can be doubled, etc. HALIDOME (14) HALIDOMS (14) HALLMARK (17) [noun] A distinguishing characteristic. | [noun] An official marking made by a trusted party, usually an assay office, on items made of precious metals. | [verb] To provide or stamp with a hallmark. HALUTZIM (22) HAMARTIA (13) [noun] The tragic flaw of the protagonist in a literary tragedy. | [noun] Sin. HAMBONED (16) HAMBONES (15) [noun] The bone at the center of a ham | [noun] A ham; an eager or inferior performer | [noun] A certain type of dance that involves making noise with the body, especially by slapping parts of the body with one's hands HAMBURGS (16) HAMMADAS (16) HAMMERED (16) [verb] To strike repeatedly with a hammer, some other implement, the fist, etc. | [verb] To form or forge with a hammer; to shape by beating. | [verb] To emphasize a point repeatedly. HAMMERER (15) HAMMIEST (15) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of ham. | [adjective] Amateurish; characterized by overacting. HAMMOCKS (21) [noun] A swinging couch or bed, usually made of netting or canvas about six feet wide, suspended by clews or cords at the ends. | [noun] (obsolete outside dialectal) A piece of land thickly wooded, and usually covered with bushes and vines. | [verb] To lie in a hammock. HAMPERED (16) [verb] To put into a hamper. | [verb] To put a hamper or fetter on; to shackle | [verb] To impede in motion or progress. HAMPERER (15) HAMSTERS (13) [noun] Any of various Old-World rodent species belonging to the subfamily Cricetinae. | [noun] Other rodents of similar appearance, such as the maned hamster or crested hamster, Lophiomys imhausi, mouse-like hamsters of genus Calomyscus, and the white-tailed rat (Mystromys albicaudatus). HAMULATE (13) HAMULOSE (13) HAMULOUS (13) HANDLOOM (14) [noun] A simple machine used for weaving by hand. HANDMADE (15) [noun] An art or craft object made by hand. | [adjective] Manufactured by hand. HANDMAID (15) [noun] A maid that waits at hand; a female servant or attendant. HANDSOME (14) [verb] To render handsome. | [adjective] (of people, things, etc) Having a good appearance; good-looking. | [adjective] Good, appealing, appropriate. HANDYMAN (17) [noun] A man who does small tasks and odd jobs HANDYMEN (17) [noun] A man who does small tasks and odd jobs HANUMANS (13) [noun] The entellus (Semnopithecus entellus, syn. Presbytis entellus) HARMINES (13) HARMLESS (13) [adjective] Incapable of causing harm or danger; safe. | [adjective] Not intended to harm; inoffensive. | [adjective] Unharmed. HARMONIC (15) [noun] A component frequency of the signal of a wave that is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency. | [noun] The place where, on a bowed string instrument, a note in the harmonic series of a particular string can be played without the fundamental present. | [noun] One of a class of functions that enter into the development of the potential of a nearly spherical mass due to its attraction. HARRUMPH (18) [noun] An expression of disdain, disbelief, protest, or dismissal; a huff, grunt, or snort. | [verb] To dislike, protest, or dismiss. | [interjection] An expression of disdain, disbelief, protest, refusal or dismissal. HARUMPHS (18) HATMAKER (17) HAULMIER (13) HAWKMOTH (23) [noun] Any of several moths, of the family Sphingidae, that hover over flowers when sucking nectar through a long proboscis. HAYMAKER (20) [noun] A person or machine which harvests or prepares tall grass for use as animal fodder. | [noun] (fisticuffs) A particularly powerful punch, especially one which knocks down an opponent, thrown like a scythe chop for cutting hay, as agricultural haymakers used to have strong arms. | [noun] (by extension) Any decisive blow, shock, or forceful action. HAZZANIM (31) [noun] A Jewish cantor in a synagogue. HEADLAMP (16) [noun] An individual headlight, particularly of a motor vehicle. | [noun] A flashlight worn on the head. HEADMOST (14) [adjective] Closest to the front of a group or pack HEADROOM (14) [noun] The vertical clearance above someone's head, as in a tunnel, doorway etc. | [noun] The vertical measurement, top to bottom, for example for clearance under a bridge. | [noun] The ability of a system to reproduce loud sounds free of distortion; dynamic headroom. HEADSMAN (14) [noun] A chief person; a head man | [noun] An executioner whose method of dispatching the condemned is decapitation. | [noun] A labourer in a colliery who transports the coal from the workings to the horseway, and who is oftentimes assisted by a younger worker called a foal. HEADSMEN (14) [noun] A chief person; a head man | [noun] An executioner whose method of dispatching the condemned is decapitation. | [noun] A labourer in a colliery who transports the coal from the workings to the horseway, and who is oftentimes assisted by a younger worker called a foal. HEBDOMAD (17) HECATOMB (17) [noun] A great feast and public sacrifice to the gods, originally of a hundred oxen. | [noun] (by extension) Any great sacrifice; a great number of people, animals or things, especially as sacrificed or destroyed; a large amount. HEDONISM (14) [noun] The belief that pleasure or happiness is the highest good in life. Some hedonists, such as the Epicureans, have insisted that pleasure of the entire mind, not just pleasure of the senses, is the highest good. | [noun] A general devotion to the pursuit of pleasure. HEGEMONY (17) [noun] Domination, influence, or authority over another, especially by one political group over a society or by one nation over others. | [noun] Dominance of one social group over another, such that the ruling group or hegemon acquires some degree of consent from the subordinate, as opposed to dominance purely by force. HEGUMENE (14) HEGUMENS (14) HEGUMENY (17) HEIRDOMS (14) HEIRLOOM (13) [noun] A valued possession that has been passed down through the generations. | [noun] An old crop variety that has been passed down through generations of farmers by seed saving and cultivation, in contrast to modern cultivars used in large-scale agriculture. HELMETED (14) HELMINTH (16) [noun] A parasitic worm; a fluke, tapeworm, or nematode. HELMLESS (13) HELMSMAN (15) [noun] A member of a ship's crew who is responsible for steering. | [noun] A leader. HELMSMEN (15) [noun] A member of a ship's crew who is responsible for steering. | [noun] A leader. HELOTISM (13) HELPMATE (15) [noun] A person who supplies help or companionship. | [noun] A wife or spouse. | [noun] A recreational problem in chess in which both sides cooperate to achieve a specific goal. HELPMEET (15) [noun] A helpful partner, particularly a spouse. HEMAGOGS (15) HEMATEIN (13) HEMATICS (15) HEMATINE (13) HEMATINS (13) HEMATITE (13) [noun] An iron ore, mainly peroxide of iron, Fe2O3. HEMATOID (14) HEMATOMA (15) [noun] A swelling of blood, usually clotted, which forms as a result of broken blood vessels. HEMIOLAS (13) [noun] The articulation of two bars in triple time as if they were three bars in duple time. HEMIOLIA (13) HEMIPTER (15) HEMLINES (13) [noun] The line formed by the bottom edge of a skirt, dress, or coat; hem. | [noun] The height of this line, measured from the floor. HEMLOCKS (19) [noun] Any of the poisonous umbelliferous plants, of the genera | [noun] The poison obtained from these Conium and Cicuta plants. | [noun] Any of several coniferous trees, of the genus Tsuga, that grow in North America; the wood of such trees. HEMOCOEL (15) [noun] The cavity, between the organs of arthropods and molluscs, through which the blood etc. circulates. HEMOCYTE (18) [noun] Any blood cell, especially that of an invertebrate HEMOLYZE (25) HEMOSTAT (13) [noun] An instrument that clamps blood vessels to diminish or halt blood flow. HEMPIEST (15) HEMPLIKE (19) HEMPSEED (16) [noun] The seed of the hemp plant, used as bait in angling HEMPWEED (19) HENCHMAN (18) [noun] A loyal and trusted follower or subordinate. | [noun] A person who supports a political figure chiefly out of selfish interests. | [noun] An assistant member of a criminal gang. HENCHMEN (18) [noun] A loyal and trusted follower or subordinate. | [noun] A person who supports a political figure chiefly out of selfish interests. | [noun] An assistant member of a criminal gang. HEPATOMA (15) [noun] A cancer originating in the liver. HERDSMAN (14) [noun] A person who tends livestock, especially cows and sheep. HERDSMEN (14) [noun] A person who tends livestock, especially cows and sheep. HERMAEAN (13) HERMETIC (15) [adjective] (chiefly with capital initial) Pertaining to Hermes Trismegistus or the writings attributed to him. | [adjective] Pertaining to alchemy or occult practices; magical, alchemical. | [adjective] Hermetically sealed. HERMITIC (15) HERMITRY (16) HEROISMS (13) HEXAGRAM (21) [noun] A hollow six-pointed star formed by overlapping two equilateral triangles. | [noun] Any of the 64 sets of solid and broken lines, formed by pairs of trigrams, used for divination in the I Ching. | [noun] A large silver coin minted during the Byzantine Empire. HEXAMINE (20) HIMATION (13) [noun] A rectangular cloak of linen or wool, worn in Ancient Greece, usually over a chiton. HINDMOST (14) [adjective] Located at the rear (most often said of animals' body parts). HISTAMIN (13) HOBOISMS (15) HOGMANAY (17) HOGMANES (14) HOGMENAY (17) HOLMIUMS (15) HOLOGAMY (17) HOLOGRAM (14) [noun] A three-dimensional image of an object created by holography. HOMAGERS (14) HOMAGING (15) HOMBURGS (16) [noun] A type of men's felt fedora; a stiff felt hat similar to a trilby. HOMEBODY (19) [noun] A person who prefers to remain at home, rather than participate in social events elsewhere. HOMEBOYS (18) [noun] Someone, particularly a male acquaintance, from one’s hometown. | [noun] A close friend or fellow member of a youth gang. | [noun] A person. HOMEBRED (16) [noun] A person or animal raised at home. | [noun] An inexperienced or unsophisticated person; a rustic. | [adjective] Born or raised in one's own home or country; native, indigenous. HOMELAND (14) [noun] The country that one regards as home. | [noun] One's country of residence. | [noun] One's country of birth. HOMELESS (13) [adjective] Lacking a permanent place of residence. HOMELIER (13) [adjective] Lacking in beauty or elegance, plain in appearance, physically unattractive. | [adjective] Cozy, befitting a home. | [adjective] Characteristic of or belonging to home; domestic. HOMELIKE (17) HOMEMADE (16) [adjective] Made at home. | [adjective] Made by oneself. | [adjective] In a simple style as if made at home. HOMEOBOX (22) [noun] A short sequence of DNA that is shared by several genes involved in the morphogenesis of many organisms. HOMEOTIC (15) HOMEPORT (15) [noun] The port where a vessel is based (not necessarily the one where it is registered). | [verb] To assign a vessel a port to act as its home. HOMERING (14) [verb] To hit a homer; to hit a home run. HOMEROOM (15) [noun] A classroom where school pupils of the same age gather for registration, or for other purposes that are unrelated to class content. | [noun] The collection of pupils who gather in such a room. HOMESICK (19) [adjective] (with for) missing one's home and family very much when away; nostalgic HOMESITE (13) [noun] The plot of land on which a house is or can be built HOMESPUN (15) [noun] Fabric made from homespun yarn. Also, machine made fabrics (usually cottons) similar to homespun fabrics in that solids, plaids, or stripes are created by weaving dyed threads (rather than printing), so that both sides of the fabric look the same. | [noun] An unpolished, rustic person. | [adjective] (of yarn) Spun in the home. HOMESTAY (16) [noun] A system whereby students, visiting a foreign country to study, board with a local family at an affordable price. | [noun] A house used primarily as the residence of the owner but with the business of accommodating paying guests. HOMETOWN (16) [noun] An individual’s place of birth, childhood home, or place of main residence. | [noun] Designating a decision or judgement that is biased, or perceived to be biased, in favour of local preference. HOMEWARD (17) [adverb] Towards home. | [adjective] Oriented towards home HOMEWORK (20) [noun] Work that is done at home, especially school exercises assigned by a teacher. | [noun] Preliminary or preparatory work, such as research. | [noun] Housework. HOMICIDE (16) [noun] The killing of one person by another, whether premeditated or unintentional. | [noun] A person who kills another. | [noun] (police jargon) A victim of homicide; a person who has been unlawfully killed by someone else. HOMILIES (13) [noun] A sermon, especially concerning a practical matter. | [noun] A moralizing lecture. | [noun] A platitude. HOMILIST (13) HOMINESS (13) HOMINIAN (13) HOMINIDS (14) [noun] Any primate of the taxonomic family Hominidae. All the great apes (chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans and humans). HOMINIES (13) HOMININE (13) HOMINIZE (22) HOMINOID (14) [noun] Any primate (including humans and apes) belonging to the superfamily Hominoidea HOMMOCKS (21) HOMMOSES (15) HOMOGAMY (19) [noun] Fertilization of a flower by pollen from the same plant. | [noun] Breeding between similar individuals. | [noun] Marriage or other union between similar people, or people of the same sex. HOMOGENY (17) [noun] Similarity in structure, though of different function, because of genetic relationships HOMOGONY (17) HOMOLOGS (14) [noun] Something homologous; a homologous organ or part, chemical compound or chromosome. | [noun] A word shared by two languages or dialects. | [noun] One of a group of similar DNA sequences that share a common ancestry. HOMOLOGY (17) [noun] A homologous relationship. | [noun] A theory associating a system of groups to each topological space. | [noun] A certain system of groups associated to a chain complex. HOMONYMS (18) [noun] (strict sense) A word that both sounds and is spelled the same as another word. | [noun] A word that sounds or is spelled the same as another word, technically called a homophone (same sound) or a homograph (same spelling). | [noun] A name for a taxon that is identical in spelling to another name that belongs to a different taxon. HOMONYMY (21) HOODLUMS (14) [noun] A gangster; a hired thug. | [noun] A rough or violent youth. HOOKWORM (20) [noun] Any of various parasitic bloodsucking roundworms which cause disease, especially the species Ancylostoma duodenale and Necator americanus, having hooked mouthparts and entering their hosts by boring through the skin. HORMONAL (13) [adjective] Pertaining to hormones. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the menstrual cycle. | [adjective] Strongly affected by one's hormones. HORMONES (13) [noun] Any substance produced by one tissue and conveyed by the bloodstream to another to effect physiological activity. | [noun] A synthetic compound with the same activity. | [noun] Any similar substance in plants. HORMONIC (15) HORNBEAM (15) [noun] A tree of the genus Carpinus, having a smooth gray bark and a ridged trunk, the wood being white and very hard, common along the banks of streams in the United States. | [noun] A hop hornbeam (Ostrya virginiana). | [noun] The wood of these trees. HORNWORM (16) [noun] A caterpillar of a hawk moth that has a hornlike tail process. | [noun] Some moths in the genus Manduca of the hawk moth family Sphingidae. HORSEMAN (13) [noun] A man who rides a horse. | [noun] A soldier on horseback. | [noun] A man skilled in horsemanship. HORSEMEN (13) [noun] A man who rides a horse. | [noun] A soldier on horseback. | [noun] A man skilled in horsemanship. HOTELDOM (14) HOTELMAN (13) HOTELMEN (13) HOUSEMAN (13) [noun] A male follower or retainer; a male domestic worker or servant. | [noun] A medical graduate gaining practical experience in a hospital; a house officer. HOUSEMEN (13) [noun] A male follower or retainer; a male domestic worker or servant. | [noun] A medical graduate gaining practical experience in a hospital; a house officer. HUMANELY (16) [adverb] In a humane way HUMANEST (13) [adjective] (notcomp) Of or belonging to the species Homo sapiens or its closest relatives. | [adjective] Having the nature or attributes of a human being. | [adjective] Having or showing concern for the pain or suffering of another; compassionate. HUMANISE (13) [verb] To make human; to give or cause to have the fundamental properties of a human. | [verb] To make sympathetic or relatable. | [verb] To become humane or civilized. HUMANISM (15) [noun] The study of the humanities or the liberal arts; literary (especially classical) scholarship. | [noun] (often capitalized) Specifically, a cultural and intellectual movement in 14th-16th century Europe characterised by attention to classical culture and a promotion of vernacular texts, notably during the Renaissance. | [noun] An ethical system that centers on humans and their values, needs, interests, abilities, dignity and freedom; especially used for a secular one which rejects theistic religion and superstition. HUMANIST (13) [noun] A scholar of one of the subjects in the humanities. | [noun] A person who believes in the philosophy of humanism. | [noun] In the Renaissance, a scholar of Greek and Roman classics. HUMANITY (16) [noun] Mankind; human beings as a group. | [noun] The human condition or nature. | [noun] The quality of being benevolent; humane traits of character; humane qualities or aspects. HUMANIZE (22) [verb] To make human; to give or cause to have the fundamental properties of a human. | [verb] To make sympathetic or relatable. | [verb] To become humane or civilized. | [verb] To make humane. HUMANOID (14) [noun] A being having the appearance or characteristics of a human. | [adjective] Having the appearance or characteristics of a human; being anthropomorphic under some criteria (physical, mental, genetical, ethological, ethical etc.). HUMBLERS (15) HUMBLEST (15) [adjective] Not pretentious or magnificent; unpretending; unassuming. | [adjective] Having a low opinion of oneself; not proud, arrogant, or assuming; modest. | [adjective] Near the ground. HUMBLING (16) [verb] To defeat or reduce the power, independence, or pride of | [verb] To make humble or lowly; to make less proud or arrogant; to make meek and submissive. | [noun] An event which causes humbleness; a set-down. HUMDRUMS (16) HUMERALS (13) HUMIDIFY (20) [verb] To increase the humidity in the air. HUMIDITY (17) [noun] Dampness, especially that of the air. | [noun] The amount of water vapour in the air. HUMIDORS (14) [noun] A container designed to keep its contents at a constant humidity; especially such a box for storing cigars. HUMIFIED (17) [verb] To convert into humus. HUMILITY (16) [noun] The characteristic of being humble; humbleness in character and behavior. HUMMABLE (17) HUMMOCKS (21) [noun] A small hill; a hillock; a knoll. | [noun] A ridge or hill of ice in an ice field. | [noun] A fistful. HUMMOCKY (24) HUMMUSES (15) HUMORFUL (16) HUMORING (14) [verb] To pacify by indulging. HUMORIST (13) [noun] Someone who believes that health and temperament are determined by bodily humours; a humoralist. | [noun] Someone subject to whims or fancies. | [noun] A humorous or witty person, especially someone skilled in humorous writing or performance. HUMOROUS (13) [adjective] Full of humor or arousing laughter; funny. | [adjective] Showing humor; witty, jocular. | [adjective] Damp or watery. HUMOURED (14) [verb] To pacify by indulging. | [adjective] (only in combination with good, bad or ill) Having a particular disposition or mood. HUMPBACK (23) [noun] A humped back (deformity in humans caused by abnormal curvature of the upper spine). | [noun] A person with a humpback; a person who suffers from kyphosis. | [noun] A humpback whale. HUMPHING (19) HUMPIEST (15) HUMPLESS (15) HUNTSMAN (13) [noun] A hunter. | [noun] A fox hunter. | [noun] One who manages the hounds during a hunt. HUNTSMEN (13) [noun] A hunter. | [noun] A fox hunter. | [noun] One who manages the hounds during a hunt. HUTMENTS (13) [noun] An encampment of huts HYDROMEL (17) [noun] A liquor consisting of honey diluted in water; mead prior to fermentation. HYMENEAL (16) [noun] A hymn, song or poem in honour of a wedding. | [adjective] Pertaining to marriage. | [adjective] Pertaining to sexual relations. HYMENIAL (16) HYMENIUM (18) [noun] The sporebearing surface of a fungus. HYMNBOOK (22) [noun] A book containing a collection of hymns. HYMNISTS (16) HYMNLESS (16) HYMNLIKE (20) HYPHEMIA (21) HYPODERM (19) HYPOGEUM (19) [noun] An underground room or cavern (also used figuratively). IAMBUSES (12) [noun] An iamb IDEALISM (11) [noun] The property of a person of having high ideals that are usually unrealizable or at odds with practical life. | [noun] The practice or habit of giving or attributing ideal form or character to things; treatment of things in art or literature according to ideal standards or patterns;—opposed to realism. | [noun] An approach to philosophical enquiry, which asserts that direct and immediate knowledge can only be had of ideas or mental pictures. IDEOGRAM (12) [noun] A picture or symbol which represents the idea of something without indicating the sequence of sounds used to pronounce it. Examples include digits, traffic signs, and graphic symbols such as @. IDIOTISM (11) IDOLISMS (11) IGNOMINY (14) [noun] Great dishonor, shame, or humiliation. IGNORAMI (11) ILLINIUM (10) ILLUMINE (10) [verb] To illuminate. | [verb] To light up. ILLUMING (11) [verb] To throw or spread light upon; to make light or bright ILLUVIUM (13) ILMENITE (10) [noun] A weakly magnetic dark gray mineral found in metamorphic and igneous rocks; it is a mixed oxide of iron and titanium, FeTiO3 IMAGINAL (11) [adjective] Of or relating to the imagination, or to a mental image. | [adjective] Of or relating to the insect imago. IMAGINED (12) [verb] To form a mental image of something; to envision or create something in one's mind. | [verb] To believe in something created by one's own mind. | [verb] To assume IMAGINER (11) IMAGINES (11) [noun] The final developmental stage of an insect after undergoing metamorphosis. | [noun] An idealised concept of a loved one, formed in childhood and retained unconsciously into adult life, the basis for the psychological formation of personality archetypes. | [noun] A short fanfic or prompt placing a reader insert in a novel scenario with a character or celebrity. IMAGINGS (12) IMAGISMS (13) IMAGISTS (11) IMAMATES (12) IMBALMED (15) IMBALMER (14) IMBARKED (17) IMBECILE (14) [noun] A person with limited mental capacity who can perform tasks and think only like a young child, in medical circles meaning a person who lacks the capacity to develop beyond the mental age of a normal five to seven-year-old child. | [noun] A fool, an idiot. | [adjective] Destitute of strength, whether of body or mind; feeble; impotent; especially, mentally weak. IMBEDDED (15) [verb] To lay as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed. | [verb] (by extension) To include in surrounding matter. | [verb] To encapsulate within another document or data file. IMBIBERS (14) IMBIBING (15) [verb] To drink (used frequently of alcoholic beverages). | [verb] To take in; absorb. | [noun] The act by which something is imbibed. IMBITTER (12) IMBLAZED (22) IMBLAZES (21) IMBODIED (14) IMBODIES (13) IMBOLDEN (13) IMBOSOMS (14) IMBOWERS (15) IMBROWNS (15) IMBRUING (13) [verb] To stain (in, with, blood, slaughter, etc.). IMBRUTED (13) IMBRUTES (12) IMITABLE (12) IMITATED (11) [verb] To follow as a model or a pattern; to make a copy, counterpart or semblance of. IMITATES (10) [verb] To follow as a model or a pattern; to make a copy, counterpart or semblance of. IMITATOR (10) [noun] One who imitates or apes another. IMMANENT (12) [adjective] Naturally part of something; existing throughout and within something; intrinsic. | [adjective] Restricted entirely to the mind or a given domain; internal; subjective. | [adjective] (of a deity) Existing within and throughout the mind and the world; dwelling within and throughout all things, all time, etc. Compare transcendent. IMMATURE (12) [noun] An immature member of a species. | [adjective] Occurring before the proper time; untimely, premature (especially of death). | [adjective] Not fully formed or developed; not grown. IMMENSER (12) IMMERGED (14) IMMERGES (13) IMMERSED (13) [verb] To put under the surface of a liquid; to dunk. | [verb] To involve or engage deeply. | [verb] To map into an immersion. IMMERSES (12) [verb] To put under the surface of a liquid; to dunk. | [verb] To involve or engage deeply. | [verb] To map into an immersion. IMMESHED (16) IMMESHES (15) IMMINENT (12) [adjective] About to happen, occur, or take place very soon, especially of something which won't last long. IMMINGLE (13) IMMIXING (20) IMMOBILE (14) [adjective] Not mobile, not movable | [adjective] Fixed, unable to be moved IMMODEST (13) [adjective] Without customary restraint or modesty of expression; shameless IMMOLATE (12) [verb] To kill as a sacrifice. | [verb] To destroy, especially by fire. IMMORTAL (12) [noun] One who is not susceptible to death. | [noun] A member of an elite regiment of the Persian army. | [noun] A member of the Académie française. IMMOTILE (12) [adjective] Not motile (lacking the ability to move) IMMUNISE (12) [verb] To make someone or something immune to something. | [verb] To inoculate someone, and thus produce immunity from a disease. IMMUNITY (15) [noun] The state of being insusceptible to something; notably: | [noun] A resistance to a specific thing. IMMUNIZE (21) [verb] To make someone or something immune to something. | [verb] To inoculate someone, and thus produce immunity from a disease. IMMURING (13) [verb] To cloister, confine, imprison: to lock up behind walls. | [verb] To put or bury within a wall. | [verb] (of a growing crystal) To trap or capture (an impurity); chiefly in the participial adjective immured and gerund or gerundial noun immuring. IMPACTED (15) [verb] To collide or strike, the act of impinging. | [verb] To compress; to compact; to press into something or pack together. | [verb] To influence; to affect; to have an impact on. IMPACTER (14) IMPACTOR (14) [noun] Any of several machines or devices in which a part impacts on another, or on a material. | [noun] An object which impacts another. IMPAINTS (12) IMPAIRED (13) [verb] To weaken; to affect negatively; to have a diminishing effect on. | [verb] To grow worse; to deteriorate. | [noun] A criminal charge for driving a vehicle while impaired. IMPAIRER (12) IMPALERS (12) IMPALING (13) [verb] To pierce (something) with any long, pointed object. | [verb] To place two coats of arms side by side on the same shield (often those of two spouses upon marriage). | [verb] To pierce with a pale; to put to death by fixing on a sharp stake. IMPANELS (12) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. IMPARITY (15) IMPARKED (17) [verb] To enclose or confine in, or as if in, a park. | [verb] To enclose or fence in (land) to make a park. IMPARTED (13) [verb] To give or bestow (e.g. a quality or property). | [verb] To give a part or to share. | [verb] To make known; to show (by speech, writing etc.). IMPARTER (12) IMPASSES (12) [noun] A road with no exit; a cul-de-sac | [noun] A deadlock or stalemate situation in which no progress can be made IMPASTED (13) IMPASTES (12) IMPASTOS (12) IMPAWNED (16) IMPEARLS (12) IMPEDERS (13) IMPEDING (14) [verb] To get in the way of; to hinder. IMPELLED (13) [verb] To urge a person; to press on; to incite to action or motion via intrinsic motivation. | [verb] To drive forward; to propel an object, to provide an impetus for motion or action. IMPELLER (12) [noun] Something which or someone who impels, usually a part of a pump. IMPELLOR (12) [noun] Something which or someone who impels, usually a part of a pump. IMPENDED (14) [verb] To hang or be suspended over (something); to overhang. | [verb] Figuratively to hang over (someone) as a threat or danger. | [verb] To threaten to happen; to be about to happen, to be imminent. IMPERIAL (12) [noun] A bottle of wine (usually Bordeaux) containing 6 liters of fluid, eight times the volume of a standard bottle. | [noun] A writing paper size measuring 30 × 22 inches, or printing paper measuring 32 × 22 inches. | [noun] A card game differing from piquet in some minor details, and in having a trump. IMPERILS (12) [verb] To put into peril; to place in danger. | [verb] To risk or hazard. IMPERIUM (14) [noun] Supreme power; dominion. | [noun] The right to command the force of the state; sovereignty. IMPETIGO (13) [noun] A contagious bacterial skin disease forming pustules and yellow crusty sores, chiefly on the face and hands. It is common in children and infection is often through cuts or insect bites. IMPINGED (14) [verb] To make a physical impact on. | [verb] To interfere with. | [verb] To have an effect upon, especially a negative one. IMPINGER (13) IMPINGES (13) [verb] To make a physical impact on. | [verb] To interfere with. | [verb] To have an effect upon, especially a negative one. IMPISHLY (18) IMPLANTS (12) [noun] Anything surgically implanted in the body, such as a tissue graft or prosthesis, particularly breast implants. | [noun] (travel) A representative of a travel company, working within the office of a large client and exclusively dealing with that client. | [verb] To fix firmly or set securely or deeply. IMPLEADS (13) [verb] To sue in court, raise an action against a defendant IMPLEDGE (14) IMPLICIT (14) [adjective] Implied indirectly, without being directly expressed | [adjective] Contained in the essential nature of something but not openly shown | [adjective] Having no reservations or doubts; unquestioning or unconditional; usually said of faith or trust. IMPLODED (14) [verb] To collapse or burst inward violently. | [verb] To compress (data) with a particular algorithm. | [adjective] That has collapsed inwards IMPLODES (13) [verb] To collapse or burst inward violently. | [verb] To compress (data) with a particular algorithm. IMPLORED (13) [verb] To beg urgently or earnestly. | [verb] To call upon or pray to earnestly; to entreat. IMPLORER (12) IMPLORES (12) [verb] To beg urgently or earnestly. | [verb] To call upon or pray to earnestly; to entreat. IMPLYING (16) [verb] (of a proposition) to have as a necessary consequence | [verb] (of a person) to suggest by logical inference | [verb] (of a person or proposition) to hint; to insinuate; to suggest tacitly and avoid a direct statement IMPOLICY (17) IMPOLITE (12) [adjective] Not polite; not of polished manners; wanting in good manners. IMPONING (13) IMPOROUS (12) IMPORTED (13) [verb] To bring (something) in from a foreign country, especially for sale or trade. | [verb] To load a file into a software application from another version or system. | [verb] To be important; to be significant; to be of consequence. IMPORTER (12) [noun] One who, or that which, imports: especially a person or company importing goods into a country. IMPOSERS (12) IMPOSING (13) [verb] To establish or apply by authority. | [verb] To be an inconvenience (on or upon) | [verb] To enforce: compel to behave in a certain way IMPOSTED (13) IMPOSTER (12) [noun] Someone who attempts to deceive by using an assumed name or identity. | [noun] A sprite or animation integrated into a three-dimensional scene, but not based on an actual 3D model. IMPOSTOR (12) [noun] Someone who attempts to deceive by using an assumed name or identity. | [noun] A sprite or animation integrated into a three-dimensional scene, but not based on an actual 3D model. IMPOTENT (12) [noun] A man who has erectile dysfunction | [noun] An impotent or powerless person | [adjective] Lacking physical strength or vigor; weak IMPOUNDS (13) [verb] To shut up or place in an enclosure called a pound | [verb] To hold back (for example water by a dam) | [verb] To hold in the custody of a court or its delegate IMPOWERS (15) IMPREGNS (13) IMPRESAS (12) IMPRESES (12) IMPRESTS (12) [noun] An advance of funds, especially to a government service or employee. | [verb] To advance funds on loan. IMPRIMIS (14) IMPRINTS (12) [noun] An impression; the mark left behind by printing something. | [noun] The name and details of a publisher or printer, as printed in a book etc.; a publishing house. | [noun] A distinctive marking, symbol or logo. IMPRISON (12) [verb] To put in or as if in prison; confine. IMPROPER (14) [verb] To appropriate; to limit. | [verb] To behave improperly | [adjective] Unsuitable to needs or circumstances; inappropriate; inapt IMPROVED (16) [verb] To make (something) better; to increase the value or productivity (of something). | [verb] To become better. | [verb] To disprove or make void; to refute. IMPROVER (15) IMPROVES (15) [verb] To make (something) better; to increase the value or productivity (of something). | [verb] To become better. | [verb] To disprove or make void; to refute. IMPUDENT (13) [adjective] Not showing due respect; impertinent; bold-faced. IMPUGNED (14) [verb] To assault, attack. | [verb] To verbally assault, especially to argue against an opinion, motive, or action; to question the truth or validity of. IMPUGNER (13) IMPULSED (13) IMPULSES (12) [noun] A thrust; a push; a sudden force that impels. | [noun] A wish or urge, particularly a sudden one prompting action. | [noun] The integral of force over time. IMPUNITY (15) [noun] Exemption from punishment. | [noun] Freedom from punishment or retribution; security from any reprisal or injurious consequences of an action, behaviour etc. IMPURELY (15) IMPURITY (15) [noun] The condition of being impure; because of contamination, pollution, adulteration or insufficient purification. | [noun] A component or additive that renders something else impure. | [noun] A state of immorality or sin; especially the weakness of the flesh: inchastity. IMPUTERS (12) IMPUTING (13) [verb] To attribute or ascribe (responsibility or fault) to a cause or source. | [verb] To ascribe (sin or righteousness) to someone by substitution. | [verb] To take into account. INARMING (11) INCHMEAL (15) [adverb] Gradually, little by little (an inch at a time) INCHWORM (18) [noun] The larva of a moth of the family Geometridae. | [verb] To move in a looping fashion, like an inchworm. | [verb] To crawl or creep slowly. INCOMERS (12) [noun] One who comes in. | [noun] An outsider who moves to a community or a place; (used by those who consider themselves to be its original inhabitants). INCOMING (13) [noun] The act of coming in; arrival. | [noun] Enemy fire directed at oneself. | [adjective] Coming (or about to come) in; arriving. INCUMBER (14) INDAMINE (11) INDAMINS (11) INDICIUM (13) [noun] An indication; a sign. INDUSIUM (11) [noun] A protecting membrane, especially that covering the developing spores of a fern. INFAMIES (13) [noun] The state of being infamous. | [noun] A reputation as being evil. | [noun] A reprehensible occurrence or situation. INFAMOUS (13) [adjective] Having a bad reputation, disreputable; notoriously bad, unpleasant or evil; widely known, especially for something bad. | [adjective] Causing infamy; disgraceful. | [adjective] Subject to a judicial punishment that deprived the infamous person of certain rights; this included a prohibition against holding public office, exercising the franchise, receiving a public pension, serving on a jury, or giving testimony in a court of law. INFIRMED (14) INFIRMLY (16) INFLAMED (14) [verb] To set on fire; to kindle; to cause to burn, flame, or glow. | [verb] To kindle or intensify (a feeling, as passion or appetite); to excite to an excessive or unnatural action or heat. | [verb] To provoke (a person) to anger or rage; to exasperate; to irritate; to incense; to enrage. INFLAMER (13) INFLAMES (13) [verb] To set on fire; to kindle; to cause to burn, flame, or glow. | [verb] To kindle or intensify (a feeling, as passion or appetite); to excite to an excessive or unnatural action or heat. | [verb] To provoke (a person) to anger or rage; to exasperate; to irritate; to incense; to enrage. INFORMAL (13) [adjective] Not formal or ceremonious. | [adjective] Not in accord with the usual regulations. | [adjective] Suited for everyday use. INFORMED (14) [verb] To instruct, train (usually in matters of knowledge). | [verb] To communicate knowledge to. | [verb] To impart information or knowledge. | [adjective] Created, given form. INFORMER (13) [noun] One who informs someone else about something. | [noun] A person who tells authorities about improper or illegal activity. | [noun] One who informs, animates, or inspires. INHUMANE (13) [adjective] Lacking pity or compassion for misery and suffering; cruel, unkind, not humane. INHUMERS (13) INHUMING (14) [verb] To bury in a grave. INIMICAL (12) [adjective] Harmful in effect. | [adjective] Unfriendly, hostile. INMESHED (14) INMESHES (13) INOCULUM (12) [noun] The active material used in an inoculation; an inoculant INSOMNIA (10) [noun] A sleeping disorder that is known for its symptoms of unrest and the inability to sleep. INSOMUCH (15) [adverb] Because of; since; as a result of. | [adverb] To the extent that. INTERCOM (12) [noun] An electronic communication system, especially one between rooms in a building INTERIMS (10) [noun] A transitional or temporary period between other events. INTERMIT (10) [verb] To interrupt, to stop or cease temporarily or periodically; to suspend. INTERMIX (17) [noun] An intermixture; the product of mixing together | [verb] To mix together; to intermingle or blend. INTIMACY (15) [noun] Feeling or atmosphere of closeness and openness towards someone else, not necessarily involving sexuality. | [noun] Intimate relationship. | [noun] (especially plural) Intimate detail, (item of) intimate information. INTIMATE (10) [noun] A very close friend. | [noun] (in plural intimates) Women's underwear, sleepwear, or lingerie, especially offered for sale in a store. | [verb] To suggest or disclose (something) discreetly. INTIMIST (10) INTOMBED (13) INTROMIT (10) IODOFORM (14) [noun] A halogenated hydrocarbon, CHI3; a yellow crystalline compound, formerly used as a mild antiseptic IONOMERS (10) [noun] A polymer, or a biological macromolecule (such as a protein) in which a small but significant proportion of the constituent monomers have ionic groups IOTACISM (12) IPOMOEAS (12) [noun] Any of the genus Ipomoea of twining plants with showy monopetalous flowers, including the morning glory, the sweet potato, and the cypress vine. IRIDIUMS (11) ISARITHM (13) ISCHEMIA (15) [noun] Local disturbance in blood circulation due to mechanical obstruction of the blood supply (vasoconstriction, thrombosis or embolism). ISCHEMIC (17) ISOCHEIM (15) [noun] A geoisotherm of equal mean winter temperature. ISOCHIME (15) ISOGRAMS (11) ISOMERIC (12) ISOMETRY (13) ISOMORPH (15) [noun] Anything that exhibits isomorphism ISONOMIC (12) ISOTHERM (13) [noun] A line on a graph or chart, such as a weather map, along which all the points have the same temperature. ISOZYMES (22) [noun] An isoenzyme ISOZYMIC (24) ISTHMIAN (13) [noun] A native or inhabitant of an isthmus. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to an isthmus, especially to the Isthmus of Corinth, in Greece. ISTHMOID (14) ITEMISED (11) [verb] To state in items, or by particulars ITEMISES (10) [verb] To state in items, or by particulars ITEMIZED (20) [verb] To state in items, or by particulars ITEMIZER (19) ITEMIZES (19) [verb] To state in items, or by particulars JACAMARS (19) [noun] Any of various insectivorous tropical birds, of the family Galbulidae, having iridescent plumage and a long, sharp bill. JAMBEAUX (26) [noun] A piece of armour for the leg. JAMBOREE (19) [noun] A boisterous or lavish celebration or party. | [noun] A frolic or spree. | [noun] A large rally of Scouts or Guides. JAMMIEST (19) [adjective] Resembling jam in taste, texture, etc. | [adjective] Covered in jam. | [adjective] (of a person) Lucky, especially undeservedly so. JANIFORM (20) JARLDOMS (18) JASMINES (17) [noun] Any of several plants, of the genus Jasminum, mostly native to Asia, having fragrant white or yellow flowers. | [noun] The perfume obtained from these plants. | [noun] Any of several unrelated plants having a similar perfume. JEMADARS (18) [noun] A former rank in the British Indian Army, the lowest rank for a viceroy's commissioned officer. JEMIDARS (18) JEMMYING (23) [verb] To shoehorn, to cram. | [verb] To pry (something, especially a lock) open with or as if with a crowbar. JEREMIAD (18) [noun] A long speech or prose work that bitterly laments the state of society and its morals, and often contains a prophecy of its coming downfall. JEROBOAM (19) [noun] A bottle of champagne or Burgundy wine containing 3 liters of fluid, four times the volume of a standard bottle. | [noun] A bottle of Bordeaux wine containing 4.5 liters of fluid, six times the volume of a standard bottle. JIBBOOMS (21) JIMMYING (23) [verb] To pry (something, especially a lock) open with or as if with a crowbar. JINGOISM (18) [noun] Excessive patriotism or aggressive nationalism, especially with regards to foreign policy. | [noun] A jingoistic attitude, comment, etc. | [noun] Chauvinism. JOBNAMES (19) JUDGMENT (19) [noun] The act of judging. | [noun] The power or faculty of performing such operations; especially, when unqualified, the faculty of judging or deciding rightly, justly, or wisely | [noun] The conclusion or result of judging; an opinion; a decision. JUJUISMS (24) JUMBLERS (19) JUMBLING (20) [verb] To mix or confuse. | [verb] To meet or unite in a confused way. | [noun] The act by which something is jumbled or confused. JUMBUCKS (25) [noun] A sheep. JUMPIEST (19) [adjective] Nervous and excited. JUMPOFFS (25) JUMPSUIT (19) [noun] A one-piece item of clothing originally used by parachutists | [noun] A similar item of clothing used for outdoor sports such as skiing KAKEMONO (18) [noun] A vertical Japanese scroll painting KAKIEMON (18) [noun] Japanese porcelain wares featuring enamel decoration. KALIMBAS (16) [noun] A type of thumb piano, similar to a mbira. KAMAAINA (14) KAMACITE (16) [noun] A meteoritic mineral which consists chiefly of iron and nickel KAMIKAZE (27) [noun] An attack requiring the suicide of the one carrying it out, especially when done with an aircraft. | [noun] One who carries out a suicide attack, especially with an aircraft. | [noun] One who takes excessive risks, as for example in a sporting event. KAMPONGS (17) [noun] (Cambodia) A landing, a port; a river town. | [noun] (Brunei) A traditional Malay village. | [noun] A district or suburb where a former kampung stood. KAMSEENS (14) KASHMIRS (17) KERAMICS (16) KERATOMA (14) KERMESSE (14) KERMISES (14) [noun] An outdoor festival and fair, usually in a German or Dutch-speaking country | [noun] An indoor entertainment and fair combined. KHAMSEEN (17) KHAMSINS (17) [noun] A hot wind in Egypt which blows (for about 50 days) from the desert, bringing with it sand. KHAZENIM (26) KILOGRAM (15) [noun] In the International System of Units, the base unit of mass; conceived of as the mass of one litre of water, but now defined by taking the fixed numerical value of the Planck constant h to be 6.626 070 15 × 10-34 when expressed in units of kg⋅m2⋅s−1. Symbol: kg | [noun] The unit of weight such that a one-kilogram mass is also a one-kilogram weight. KILOMOLE (14) KIMCHEES (19) KIMONOED (15) KINGDOMS (16) [noun] A realm having a king and/or queen as its actual or nominal sovereign. | [noun] A realm, region, or conceptual space where something is dominant. | [noun] A rank in the classification of organisms, below domain and above phylum; a taxon at that rank (e.g. the plant kingdom, the animal kingdom). KIRIGAMI (15) KISMETIC (16) KOMATIKS (18) [noun] A rawhide-lashed sledge with wooden crossbars and runners, first invented and used by the Inuit of Northern Canada, but since used also by non-Inuit people. KOMONDOR (15) KOUMISES (14) KOUMYSES (17) KREMLINS (14) [noun] (Russian architecture) A fortified, central complex found in various Russian cities. KRIMMERS (16) KRUMHORN (17) KUMISSES (14) KUMQUATS (23) [noun] A small, orange citrus-like fruit which is native to Asia (Citrus japonica, syn. Fortunella japonica). KYMOGRAM (20) LABARUMS (12) LABDANUM (13) [noun] A sticky brown resin obtained from species of rockrose, used mainly in perfume. LABELLUM (12) [noun] The lower central petal of a flower (especially an orchid), usually developed to be showy and attract pollinators. | [noun] Part of the mouth of an insect, especially the sucking mouthparts of a fly. LABURNUM (12) [noun] Any tree of genus Laburnum. They have bright yellow flowers and are poisonous. LACONISM (12) LACRIMAL (12) [noun] A lachrymal or lachrymatory (vase intended for collecting tears). | [noun] The lacrimal bone. | [adjective] Of or relating to tears or the tear-secreting organs. LADANUMS (11) LADYPALM (16) LAICISMS (12) LAMASERY (13) [noun] A monastery for lamas. LAMBASTE (12) [verb] To scold, reprimand or criticize harshly. | [verb] (dated in UK English but not US English) To give a thrashing to; to beat severely. LAMBASTS (12) [verb] To scold, reprimand or criticize harshly. | [verb] (dated in UK English but not US English) To give a thrashing to; to beat severely. LAMBDOID (14) [noun] The lambdoid suture. | [adjective] Shaped like the Greek letter lambda: LAMBENCY (17) LAMBERTS (12) [noun] A cgs unit of luminance; the brightness of a surface that emits one lumen per square centimetre LAMBIEST (12) LAMBKILL (16) LAMBKINS (16) [noun] A young lamb, a very young sheep. | [noun] A term of endearment. LAMBLIKE (16) LAMBSKIN (16) [noun] The skin of a very young sheep, especially prepared with the fleece still attached. A very fine form of leather. | [noun] A kind of woollen cloth resembling this. LAMELLAE (10) [noun] A thin, plate-like structure. | [noun] The gill of a mushroom. LAMELLAR (10) LAMELLAS (10) LAMENESS (10) LAMENTED (11) [verb] To express grief; to weep or wail; to mourn. | [verb] To feel great sorrow or regret; to bewail. | [adjective] Mourned for, or grieved for LAMENTER (10) LAMINARY (13) LAMINATE (10) [noun] Material formed of thin sheets glued together. | [verb] To assemble from thin sheets glued together. | [verb] To cover something flat, usually paper, in adhesive protective plastic. LAMINOSE (10) LAMINOUS (10) LAMISTER (10) LAMPASES (12) LAMPIONS (12) LAMPOONS (12) [noun] A written attack or other work ridiculing a person, group, or institution. LAMPPOST (14) [noun] The pole that holds up a light so it can illuminate a wide area, such as holds up a streetlight. LAMPREYS (15) [noun] Any long slender primitive eel-like freshwater and saltwater fish of the order Petromyzontiformes, having a sucking mouth with rasping teeth but no jaw. LAMPYRID (16) LAMSTERS (10) LANDFORM (14) [noun] Any geological feature, such as a mountain or valley. LANDMARK (15) [noun] An object that marks the boundary of a piece of land (usually a stone, or a tree). | [noun] A recognizable natural or man-made feature used for navigation. | [noun] A notable location with historical, cultural, or geographical significance. LANDMASS (11) [noun] A large continuous area of land, either surrounded by sea or contiguous with another landmass. LANDSMAN (11) [noun] The opposite of a seaman. A person who does not go to sea, who lacks the skills of a sailor or who is uncomfortable on ships or boats. | [noun] (oil and gas industry) A person who negotiates leases, contracts and other business deals between producers and landowners. | [noun] A fellow Jew who comes from the same district or town, especially in Eastern Europe LANDSMEN (11) [noun] The opposite of a seaman. A person who does not go to sea, who lacks the skills of a sailor or who is uncomfortable on ships or boats. | [noun] (oil and gas industry) A person who negotiates leases, contracts and other business deals between producers and landowners. | [noun] A fellow Jew who comes from the same district or town, especially in Eastern Europe LARKSOME (14) LAUDANUM (11) [noun] A tincture of opium, once widely used for various medical purposes and as a recreational drug. | [verb] To add laudanum to (a drink or the like). | [verb] To cause (a person) to be high on laudanum. LAWMAKER (17) [noun] One who makes or enacts laws. LAYWOMAN (16) [noun] A woman who is a layperson, one who has not taken a religious oath (such as becoming a nun). | [noun] By analogy, a woman who is not a professional in a given field LAYWOMEN (16) [noun] A woman who is a layperson, one who has not taken a religious oath (such as becoming a nun). | [noun] By analogy, a woman who is not a professional in a given field LEADSMAN (11) LEADSMEN (11) LEAFWORM (16) LECHAYIM (18) LEFTISMS (13) LEGALISM (11) [noun] A philosophy of focusing on the text of written law to the exclusion of the intent of law, elevating strict adherence to law over justice, mercy, grace and common sense. | [noun] A doctrine of salvation by strictly adhering to the requirements of divine law. | [noun] A legal axiom, term or rule. LEGROOMS (11) LEGUMINS (11) LEHAYIMS (16) LEMMINGS (13) [noun] A small Arctic and Subarctic rodent from any of six genera of similar rodents. | [noun] Any member of a group given to conformity or groupthink, especially a group poised to follow a leader off a cliff. LEMNISCI (12) LEMONADE (11) [noun] A flavoured beverage consisting of water, lemon, and sweetener, sometimes ice, served mainly as a refreshment. | [noun] A clear, usually carbonated, beverage made from lemon or artificial lemon flavouring, water, and sugar. | [noun] Recreational drugs of poor or weak quality, especially heroin. LEMONISH (13) LEMPIRAS (12) [noun] The currency of Honduras, divided into 100 centavos. LEMURINE (10) LEMUROID (11) LEUCEMIA (12) LEUCEMIC (14) LEUCOMAS (12) [noun] An opaque area or scar on the cornea of an eye LEUKEMIA (14) [noun] A type of malignancy affecting the blood cells or blood-forming tissues. | [noun] Any specific form or type of cancer of the blood-forming tissues. LEUKEMIC (16) LEUKOMAS (14) [noun] An opaque area or scar on the cornea of an eye LIEGEMAN (11) [noun] A male liege (subject of a sovereign or lord). LIEGEMEN (11) [noun] A male liege (subject of a sovereign or lord). LIFETIME (13) [noun] The duration of the life of someone or something. | [noun] A long period of time. LIGAMENT (11) [noun] A band of strong tissue that connects bones to other bones. | [noun] That which binds or acts as a ligament. LIMACINE (12) LIMACONS (12) LIMBECKS (18) LIMBERED (13) [verb] To cause to become limber; to make flexible or pliant. | [verb] To prepare an artillery piece for transportation (i.e., to attach it to its limber.) LIMBERER (12) LIMBERLY (15) LIMBIEST (12) LIMBLESS (12) LIMBUSES (12) LIMEADES (11) [noun] A citrus drink made from water, sugar, and the juice of limes. | [noun] A glass of this drink. | [noun] A variety of this drink. LIMEKILN (14) [noun] A furnace used to produce lime from limestone. | [noun] A burning sensation. LIMELESS (10) LIMERICK (16) [noun] A humorous, often bawdy verse of five anapaestic lines, with the rhyme scheme aabba, and typically having a 9–9–6–6–9 cadence. LIMINESS (10) LIMITARY (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a limit or boundary. | [adjective] That limits or restricts. | [adjective] Confined within limits; limited in extent, authority, power, etc. LIMITEDS (11) LIMITERS (10) [noun] That which limits or confines. | [noun] A circuit that allows signals below a specified input threshold to pass unaffected while attenuating the peaks of stronger signals. | [noun] A friar who had a license to beg within certain bounds. LIMITING (11) [verb] To restrict; not to allow to go beyond a certain bound, to set boundaries. | [verb] To have a limit in a particular set. | [verb] To beg, or to exercise functions, within a certain limited region. LIMNETIC (12) LIMONENE (10) [noun] A monoterpene hydrocarbon 1-methyl-4-prop-1-en-2-yl-cyclohexene found in the essential oils of oranges, lemons and similar fruit, and mainly responsible for their fragrance LIMONITE (10) [noun] Any of several natural hydrous iron oxides; often a mixture of goethite and hemite with clays and manganese oxide LIMPIDLY (16) LIMPKINS (16) [noun] A large bird, Aramus guarauna, found in marshes in the Caribbean, Central America and southern Florida. LIMPNESS (12) LIMPSIER (12) LIMULOID (11) LINESMAN (10) [noun] An assistant referee. | [noun] A male line judge. | [noun] An official whose primary task is to watch the blue line and determine when there has been an offside. LINESMEN (10) [noun] An assistant referee. | [noun] A male line judge. | [noun] An official whose primary task is to watch the blue line and determine when there has been an offside. LINIMENT (10) [noun] A topical medical preparation intended to be rubbed into the skin with friction, as for example to relieve symptoms of arthritis. | [verb] To apply liniment to. LINKSMAN (14) LINKSMEN (14) LINOLEUM (10) [noun] An inexpensive waterproof covering used especially for floors, made from solidified linseed oil over a burlap or canvas backing, or from its modern replacement, polyvinyl chloride. LIPOMATA (12) [noun] A nonmalignant tumor comprising fat cells. LIPOSOME (12) [noun] An aqueous compartment enclosed by a bimolecular membrane, typically of phospholipid; a lipid vesicle. LISSOMLY (13) LITHEMIA (13) LITHEMIC (15) LITHIUMS (13) LITMUSES (10) LIXIVIUM (20) LOAMIEST (10) [adjective] Consisting of loam; partaking of the nature of loam; resembling loam. LOAMLESS (10) LOBBYISM (17) LOBOTOMY (15) [noun] A surgical operation on the frontal lobe of the brain intent on treating certain mental illnesses. | [noun] The severing of the prefrontal cortex from the thalamic region of the brain. | [noun] The severing of the sympathetic nerve trunk. LOBWORMS (15) [noun] The lugworm. LOCALISM (12) [noun] A linguistic feature that is unique to a locality | [noun] Attachment to a particular local place; feelings or policies which emphasize local phenomena LOCKRAMS (16) LOCOISMS (12) LOCOMOTE (12) [verb] To move or travel (from one location to another). LODGMENT (12) [noun] An area used for lodging; a place in which a person or thing is or can be lodged. | [noun] The condition of being lodged. | [noun] The act of lodging or depositing. LOGOGRAM (12) [noun] A character or symbol that represents a word or phrase. | [noun] A kind of word puzzle: a logogriph. LOGOMACH (16) LOMENTUM (12) [noun] A type of modified legume that breaks apart at constrictions occurring between the segments of the seeds. LONESOME (10) [noun] Oneself alone. | [adjective] Unhappy due to being alone; lonely. LONGSOME (11) LONGTIME (11) [adjective] Having endured for a long period of time. | [adverb] Having been for a long time LORDOMAS (11) LORIMERS (10) [noun] A person who makes the bits and other metal parts of a horse's bridle, and other small metal pieces. LOTHSOME (13) LOVESOME (13) [adjective] Worthy of love; having qualities that inspire love; lovable. | [adjective] Lovable on account of beauty; lovely; beautiful; winsome. | [adjective] Marked or characterised by love; loving; manifesting love or affection; affectionate; friendly. LOYALISM (13) LUGWORMS (14) [noun] Any of several species of large marine annelid worm of the genus Arenicola LUKEWARM (17) [adjective] (temperature) Between warm and cool. | [adjective] Not very enthusiastic (about a proposal or an idea). LUMBAGOS (13) LUMBERED (13) [verb] To move clumsily and heavily; to move slowly. | [verb] (with with) To load down with things, to fill, to encumber, to impose an unwanted burden on | [verb] To heap together in disorder. LUMBERER (12) [noun] One who lumbers, who moves in a heavy and ungainly manner. | [noun] One who is involved in the production of lumber. LUMINARY (13) [noun] One who is an inspiration to others; one who has achieved success in their chosen field; a leading light. | [noun] A body that gives light; especially, one of the heavenly bodies. | [noun] An artificial light; an illumination. LUMINISM (12) LUMINIST (10) LUMINOUS (10) [adjective] Emitting light; glowing brightly. | [adjective] Brightly illuminated. LUMMOXES (19) [noun] A clumsy, stupid person; an awkward bungler. LUMPFISH (18) [noun] Lumpsucker LUMPIEST (12) [adjective] Full of lumps, not smooth. | [adjective] Of a water surface: covered in many small waves as a result of wind; choppy. LUNGWORM (14) [noun] Any of several nematode worms, of the family Metastrongylidae, that are parasitic to mammalian lungs LUSTRUMS (10) [noun] A ceremonial purification of all the people, performed every five years after the taking of the census; a lustration. | [noun] (by extension) A period of five years. LUTECIUM (12) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Lu) with an atomic number of 71, a silvery-white metal which resists corrosion in dry air. LUTETIUM (10) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Lu) with an atomic number of 71, a silvery-white metal which resists corrosion in dry air. LYMPHOID (19) [adjective] Relating to, or found within the lymphatic system of the body LYMPHOMA (20) [noun] A malignant tumor that arises in the lymph nodes or in other lymphoid tissue. LYRICISM (15) [noun] Great enthusiasm. | [noun] The emotional style of lyric poetry. | [noun] Suitability to be sung or used as lyrics. LYRIFORM (16) LYSOSOME (13) [noun] An organelle found in all types of animal cells which contains a large range of digestive enzymes capable of splitting most biological macromolecules. LYSOZYME (25) [noun] A bacteriolytic (or antibiotic) enzyme found in many animal secretions, and in egg white MACADAMS (15) MACAQUES (21) [noun] Any of a group of Old World monkeys of the subfamily Cercopithecinae, especially genus Macaca. MACARONI (12) [noun] A type of pasta in the form of short tubes; sometimes loosely, pasta in general. | [noun] A fop, a dandy; especially a young man in the 18th century who had travelled in Europe and who dressed and often spoke in an ostentatiously affected Continental manner. MACAROON (12) [noun] Any of various pastries based on almond and egg white, traditionally made in France. | [noun] A soft biscuit or cookie prepared with almond or coconut dough. | [noun] A coarse, rude, low fellow. MACCABAW (19) MACCABOY (19) MACCOBOY (19) MACERATE (12) [noun] A macerated substance. | [verb] To soften (something) or separate it into pieces by soaking it in a heated or unheated liquid. | [verb] To make lean; to cause to waste away. MACHETES (15) [noun] A sword-like tool used for cutting large plants with a chopping motion, or as a weapon. The blade is usually 50 to 65 centimeters long, and up to three millimeters thick. | [verb] To cut or chop with a machete. | [verb] To hack or chop crudely with a blade other than a machete. MACHINED (16) [verb] To make by machinery. | [verb] To shape or finish by machinery. | [adjective] Created by machine, or as though created by machine. MACHINES (15) [noun] A device that directs and controls energy, often in the form of movement or electricity, to produce a certain effect. | [noun] A vehicle operated mechanically, such as an automobile or an airplane. | [noun] (abbreviation) An answering machine or, by extension, voice mail. MACHISMO (17) [noun] Exaggerated masculinity MACHREES (15) MACHZORS (24) [noun] A prayerbook for a Jewish holiday. MACKEREL (16) [noun] An edible fish of the family Scombridae, often speckled. | [noun] A pimp; also, a bawd. MACKINAW (19) [noun] A heavy woolen cloth. | [noun] A blanket made of wool, formerly distributed to the Amerindians by the U.S. government. | [noun] A flat-bottomed cargo boat; mackinaw boat. MACKLING (17) MACRAMES (14) MACRURAL (12) MACRURAN (12) [noun] Any of many decapod crustaceans, such as the lobster and shrimp, that were once included in the subdivision Macrura MACULATE (12) [verb] To spot; to stain; to blur. | [adjective] Marked with spots or maculae; blotched. | [adjective] Defiled; impure. MACULING (13) MACUMBAS (16) MADDENED (13) [verb] To make angry. | [verb] To make insane; to inflame with passion. | [verb] To become furious. MADEIRAS (11) [noun] Madeira (wine) MADHOUSE (14) [noun] A house where insane persons are confined; an insane asylum. | [noun] (by extension) A chaotic place. MADONNAS (11) [noun] A one-footed lien-to-tail trick, where the front foot is taken off and kicked out straight down behind the board. MADRASES (11) MADRIGAL (12) [noun] A song for a small number of unaccompanied voices; from 13th century Italy. | [noun] A polyphonic song for about six voices, from 16th century Italy. | [noun] A short poem, often pastoral, and suitable to be set to music. MADRONAS (11) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADRONES (11) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADRONOS (11) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADWOMAN (16) [noun] A woman who is insane. MADWOMEN (16) [noun] A woman who is insane. MADWORTS (14) MADZOONS (20) MAENADES (11) MAENADIC (13) MAESTOSO (10) [adverb] Majestically MAESTROS (10) [noun] A master in some art, especially a composer or conductor. | [noun] A gang elder in prison. MAFFICKS (22) MAGAZINE (20) [noun] A non-academic periodical publication, generally consisting of sheets of paper folded in half and stapled at the fold. | [noun] An ammunition storehouse. | [noun] A chamber in a firearm enabling multiple rounds of ammunition to be fed into the firearm. MAGDALEN (12) MAGENTAS (11) MAGICIAN (13) [noun] A person who plays with or practices allegedly supernatural magic. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A spiritualist or practitioner of mystic arts. | [noun] A performer of tricks or an escapologist or an illusionist. MAGICKED (18) [verb] To produce, transform (something), (as if) by magic. MAGISTER (11) [noun] Master; sir: a title used in the Middle Ages, given to a person in authority, or to one having a license from a university to teach philosophy and the liberal arts. | [noun] The possessor of a master's degree. MAGMATIC (15) MAGNATES (11) [noun] Powerful industrialist; captain of industry. | [noun] A person of rank, influence or distinction in any sphere. MAGNESIA (11) [noun] Magnesium oxide MAGNESIC (13) MAGNETIC (13) [adjective] Of, relating to, operating by, or caused by magnetism. | [adjective] Having the properties of a magnet, especially the ability to draw or pull. | [adjective] Determined by earth's magnetic fields. MAGNETON (11) [noun] Any of several units of magnetic moment of an atom, molecule or subatomic particle MAGNETOS (11) [noun] A small magnetic dynamo, especially one that provides power to the spark plugs of a small internal combustion engine. MAGNIFIC (16) MAGNOLIA (11) [noun] A tree or shrub in any species of the genus Magnolia, many with large flowers and simple leaves. | [noun] The flower of a magnolia tree. | [noun] A native or resident of the American state of Mississippi. MAHARAJA (20) [noun] A Hindu monarch ranking above a raja, an emperor. MAHARANI (13) [noun] The wife of a maharajah; approximately, a queen consort. MAHATMAS (15) [noun] An epithet granted in India and Tibet to people thought to have great knowledge and love of humanity | [noun] Such a person. MAHIMAHI (18) [noun] A large food and game fish of the family Coryphaenidae which is commonly found in tropical and subtropical waters. MAHJONGG (22) [noun] A game (originally Chinese) for four players, using a collection of tiles divided into five or six suits. | [noun] A solitaire game using the same tiles, where the player wins by removing pairs of matching exposed tiles until none remain. MAHJONGS (21) MAHOGANY (17) [noun] Any of various tropical American evergreen trees, of the genus Swietenia, having a valuable hard red-brown wood. | [noun] The wood of these trees, mostly used to make furniture. | [noun] A reddish-brown color, like that of mahogany wood. MAHONIAS (13) [noun] Any of the genus Mahonia (now often included in Berberis) of evergreen shrubs. MAHUANGS (14) MAHZORIM (24) MAIDENLY (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a maiden. | [adjective] Suitable for, or befitting a maiden; gentle; modest; pure. MAIDHOOD (15) MAIEUTIC (12) [noun] Midwifery. | [adjective] Of or related to the Socratic method. | [adjective] Obstetric: of or related to childbirth. MAILABLE (12) MAILBAGS (13) [noun] A strong canvas bag used for the transportation of mail | [noun] A smaller bag, slung from the shoulders, used for the delivery of mail MAILINGS (11) [noun] An act of sending mail. | [noun] A farm. MAILLESS (10) MAILLOTS (10) [noun] A one-piece swimsuit (for women) | [noun] A leotard or tights of stretchable jersey fabric, generally worn by dancers and gymnasts. MAINLAND (11) [noun] The continent; the principal land, as distinguished from islands or a peninsula. | [noun] The principal island of a group. MAINLINE (10) [noun] An airline's main operating unit, as opposed to codeshares or regional subsidiaries. | [noun] The main repository for a software project, from which different versions (forks) may be split off. | [verb] To inject (a drug) directly into a vein. MAINMAST (12) [noun] The chief, and tallest mast of a sailing ship that has more than one mast. MAINSAIL (10) [noun] The largest (or only) sail on a sailing vessel. MAINSTAY (13) [noun] A chief support. | [noun] Someone or something that can be depended on to make a regular contribution. | [noun] A stabilising rope from the top of the mainmast to the bottom of the foremast. MAINTAIN (10) [verb] To support (someone), to back up or assist (someone) in an action. | [verb] To keep up; to preserve; to uphold (a state, condition etc.). | [verb] To declare or affirm (a clause) to be true; to assert. MAINTOPS (12) [noun] A platform at the top of a square-rigged vessel's mainmast; used for observation and for the attachment of rigging. MAIOLICA (12) [noun] Alternative form of majolica 2. MAJAGUAS (18) MAJESTIC (19) [adjective] Having qualities of splendor or royalty. MAJOLICA (19) [noun] Earthenware decorated with coloured lead glazes applied directly to an unglazed body. | [noun] Earthenware coated with opaque white tin glaze ornamented with metal oxide colour(s). MAJORING (18) [verb] To concentrate on a particular area of study as a student in a college or university MAJORITY (20) [noun] More than half (50%) of some group. | [noun] The difference between the winning vote and the rest of the votes. | [noun] Legal adulthood. MAKEABLE (16) MAKEBATE (16) MAKEFAST (17) MAKEOVER (17) [noun] A major change in the use of something, or in the appearance of something or someone; a radical transformation. MAKIMONO (16) MALACCAS (14) MALADIES (11) [noun] Any ailment or disease of the body; especially, a lingering or deep-seated disorder. | [noun] A moral or mental defect or disorder. MALAISES (10) [noun] A feeling of general bodily discomfort, fatigue or unpleasantness, often at the onset of illness. | [noun] An ambiguous feeling of mental or moral depression. | [noun] Ill will or hurtful feelings for others or someone. MALAMUTE (12) [noun] A ancient northern breed of dog of the husky type, particularly used as a sled dog. MALANGAS (11) [noun] Any of several Central and South American plants, of the genus Xanthosoma; yautia. | [noun] Taro (Colocasia esculenta) | [noun] The edible tuber of these plants, some of which have medicinal value. MALAPERT (12) [noun] A cheeky, impudent, or saucy person. | [adjective] Cheeky, impudent, saucy. MALAPROP (14) [noun] A malapropism. | [verb] To use a malapropism. | [adjective] Characterized by the use of malapropisms. MALARIAL (10) MALARIAN (10) MALARIAS (10) MALARKEY (17) [noun] (originally United States) Nonsense; rubbish. MALAROMA (12) MALEATES (10) [noun] Any salt or ester of maleic acid MALEDICT (13) MALEMIUT (12) MALEMUTE (12) [noun] A ancient northern breed of dog of the husky type, particularly used as a sled dog. MALENESS (10) MALIGNED (12) [verb] To make defamatory statements about; to slander or traduce. | [verb] To treat with malice; to show hatred toward; to abuse; to wrong. | [adjective] Assailed with contemptuous language MALIGNER (11) MALIGNLY (14) MALIHINI (13) MALINGER (11) [verb] To feign illness, injury, or incapacitation in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. | [verb] To self-inflict real injury or infection (to inflict self-harm) in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. MALISONS (10) [noun] A curse, a malediction. MALLARDS (11) [noun] A common and widespread dabbling duck, Anas platyrhynchos, whose male has a distinctive dark green head. MALLEOLI (10) [noun] The bony prominence on each side of the ankle joint. MALMIEST (12) MALMSEYS (15) [noun] A sweet fortified wine made in Madeira, originally from the malvasia grape. MALODORS (11) [noun] An offensive odor. MALPOSED (13) MALTASES (10) MALTIEST (10) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or characteristic of malt MALTOSES (10) MALTREAT (10) [verb] To treat badly, to abuse. MALTSTER (10) [noun] A person who makes malt; a malter. MALVASIA (13) [noun] A variety of grape, originally from the region of the Aegean, now used to make malmsey wine. MAMALIGA (13) MAMBOING (15) [verb] To perform this dance. MAMELUKE (16) [noun] A member of a military regime created and run originally by freed white European slaves, which formed a ruling caste in Egypt from 1250 until 1812 and in Syria until 1516. | [noun] A slave (especially European and white) in a Middle Eastern Muslim country. MAMMATUS (14) MAMMERED (15) MAMMILLA (14) [noun] The nipple. MAMMITIS (14) MAMMOCKS (20) MAMMOTHS (17) [noun] Any species of the extinct genus Mammuthus, of large, usually hairy, elephant-like mammals with long curved tusks and an inclined back, which became extinct with the last retreat of ice age glaciers during the late Pleistocene period, and are known from fossils, frozen carcasses, and Paleolithic cave paintings found in North America and Eurasia. | [noun] A mastodon. | [noun] Something very large of its kind. MANACLED (13) [verb] To confine with manacles. MANACLES (12) [noun] A shackle for the wrist, usually consisting of a pair of joined rings; a handcuff; (by extension) a similar device put around an ankle to restrict free movement. | [noun] A fetter, a restriction. | [noun] A plurale tantum with same meanings as manacle. MANAGERS (11) [noun] A person whose job is to manage something, such as a business, a restaurant, or a sports team. | [noun] The head coach. | [noun] An administrator, for a singer or group. MANAGING (12) [verb] To direct or be in charge of. | [verb] To handle or control (a situation, job). | [verb] To handle with skill, wield (a tool, weapon etc.). MANAKINS (14) [noun] Any of several small South American passerine birds of the family Pipridae. | [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. MANATEES (10) [noun] Any of several plant-eating marine mammals, of family Trichechidae, found in tropical regions. MANATOID (11) MANCHETS (15) [noun] A type of high-quality bread made from flour. MANCIPLE (14) [noun] A person in charge of purchasing and storing food and other provisions in a monastery, college, or court of law. MANDALAS (11) [noun] A graphic depiction of the spiritual universe and its myriad realms and deities. | [noun] Any ritualistic geometric design, symbolic of the Universe, used as an aid to meditation. | [noun] A division or book of the Rigveda (of which there are 10). MANDALIC (13) MANDAMUS (13) [noun] A common law prerogative writ that compels a court or government officer to perform mandatory or purely ministerial duties correctly. | [verb] To serve a writ of this kind upon. MANDARIN (11) [noun] A high government bureaucrat of the Chinese Empire | [noun] A pedantic or elitist bureaucrat | [noun] A pedantic senior person of influence in academia or literary circles | [noun] (color) an orange colour MANDATED (12) [verb] To authorize | [verb] To make mandatory | [adjective] Required, mandatory MANDATES (11) [noun] An official or authoritative command; an order or injunction; a commission; a judicial precept. | [noun] The authority to do something, as granted to a politician by the electorate. | [noun] A papal rescript. MANDATOR (11) MANDIBLE (13) [noun] The lower jaw, especially the lower jawbone. | [noun] One of a pair of mouthparts of an arthropod, designed for holding and cutting food. MANDIOCA (13) MANDOLAS (11) [noun] A stringed musical instrument resembling the mandolin, but of larger size and tuned lower. MANDOLIN (11) [noun] A stringed instrument and a member of the lute family, having eight strings in four courses, frequently tuned as a violin, and with either a bowl-shaped back or a flat back | [noun] A kitchen tool used for slicing vegetables (usually spelled mandoline) | [noun] An RAF World War II code name for patrols to attack enemy railway transport and other ground targets MANDRAKE (15) [noun] A mandragora, a kind of tiny demon immune to fire. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Mandragora, certain of which are said to have medicinal properties; the root of these plants often resembles the shape of a small person, hence occasioning various mythic, magical, or occult uses. | [noun] A root of a mandrake plant that resembled human form, especially one kept or used for magic or occult purposes. MANDRELS (11) [noun] A round object used as an aid for shaping a material, e.g. shaping or enlarging a ring, or bending or enlarging a pipe without creasing or kinking it. | [noun] A tool or component of a tool that guides, grips or clamps something, such as a workpiece to be machined, a machining tool or a part while it is moved. MANDRILL (11) [noun] A primate, Mandrillus sphinx, with colorful face and rump. MANDRILS (11) MANELESS (10) MANEUVER (13) [noun] The planned movement of troops, vehicles etc.; a strategic repositioning; (later also) a large training field-exercise of fighting units. | [noun] Any strategic or cunning action; a stratagem. | [noun] A movement of the body, or with an implement, instrument etc., especially one performed with skill or dexterity. MANFULLY (16) [adverb] In a manful manner; with the characteristics considered typical of a man, such as strength, courage, and determination. MANGABEY (16) [noun] Any of several large, arboreal monkeys of the family Cercopithecidae. MANGANIC (13) [adjective] Containing manganese in its higher oxidation states. MANGIEST (11) [adjective] Afflicted with mange. | [adjective] (by extension) Worn and squalid-looking; bedraggled or decrepit. MANGLERS (11) MANGLING (12) [verb] To change, mutilate or disfigure by cutting, tearing, rearranging etc. | [verb] To modify (an identifier from source code) so as to produce a unique identifier for internal use by the compiler, etc. | [verb] To wring laundry. MANGOLDS (12) [noun] Mangelwurzel MANGONEL (11) [noun] A military engine formerly used for throwing stones and burning objects. MANGROVE (14) [noun] Any of various tropical evergreen trees or shrubs that grow in shallow coastal water. | [noun] A habitat with such plants; mangrove forest; mangrove swamp. | [noun] Plants of the Rhizophoraceae family. MANHOLES (13) [noun] A hole in the ground used to access the sewers or other underground vaults and installations. | [noun] A hole providing access to the inside of a boiler, tank etc. | [noun] A man's anus, in a sexual context. MANHOODS (14) MANHUNTS (13) [noun] An organized search for a criminal or enemy. MANIACAL (12) [adjective] Like a maniac; insane; frenzied. MANICURE (12) [noun] A cosmetic treatment for the fingernails. | [noun] A manicurist. | [verb] To trim the fingernails MANIFEST (13) [noun] A list or invoice of the passengers or goods being carried by a commercial vehicle or ship. | [noun] A file containing metadata describing other files. | [noun] A public declaration; an open statement; a manifesto. MANIFOLD (14) [noun] A copy made by the manifold writing process. | [noun] A pipe fitting or similar device that connects multiple inputs or outputs. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The third stomach of a ruminant animal, an omasum. | [verb] To make manifold; multiply. MANIHOTS (13) MANIKINS (14) [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. | [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes MANILLAS (10) [noun] A penannular armlet, mostly in bronze, copper or gold, which served as a form of money or barter coinage amongst certain West African peoples. MANILLES (10) [noun] The second-highest trump in certain card games. | [noun] A card game played with a deck of 32, in which the ten (or ‘manille’) is the highest in each suit. MANIOCAS (12) MANIPLES (12) [noun] A division of the Roman army numbering 120 (or sometimes 60) soldiers exclusive of officers; (generally) any small body of soldiers. | [noun] In Western Christianity, an ornamental band or scarf worn upon the left arm as a part of the vestments of a priest in the Roman Catholic Church, and sometimes the Church of England. | [noun] A hand; a fist. MANITOUS (10) [noun] A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians. MANLIEST (10) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a man. | [adjective] Having qualities befitting a man; courageous, resolute, noble. MANNERED (11) [adjective] (often in combination) Having manners or (often excessive) mannerisms. MANNERLY (13) [adjective] Polite, having good manners. | [adverb] Politely; with good manners. MANNIKIN (14) [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. | [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes MANNITES (10) MANNITIC (12) MANNITOL (10) [noun] A polyhydroxy alcohol, an isomer of sorbitol, used as an artificial sweetener MANNOSES (10) MANORIAL (10) MANPOWER (15) [noun] The total number of all available workers; the workforce. | [noun] The power exerted by a single person (analogous to horsepower.) MANROPES (12) [noun] Each of the side ropes to a gangway or ladder of a ship. MANSARDS (11) [noun] A mansard roof | [noun] The upper storey of a building, surrounded by such a roof MANSIONS (10) [noun] A large house or building, usually built for the wealthy. | [noun] A luxurious flat (apartment). | [noun] A house provided for a clergyman; a manse. MANTEAUS (10) [noun] A cloak or gown, especially of a kind popular with women in the 17th and 18th centuries. MANTEAUX (17) MANTELET (10) [noun] A short sleeveless cloak or cape. | [noun] A portable screen or other covering, especially as used to protect the approach of soldiers engaged in a siege. | [noun] A mantelletta. MANTILLA (10) [noun] A lace veil of Spanish origin worn over a woman's hair and shoulders. | [noun] A woman's light cloak or cape made of silk, velvet, lace, or other material. MANTISES (10) [noun] Any of various large insects of the order Mantodea that catch insects or other small animals with their powerful forelegs. | [noun] A green colour, like that of many mantises. MANTISSA (10) [noun] A minor addition to a text. | [noun] The part of a common logarithm after the decimal point, the fractional part of a logarithm. | [noun] The significand; that part of a floating-point number or number in scientific notation that contains its significant digits. MANTLETS (10) [noun] A short sleeveless cloak or cape. | [noun] A portable screen or other covering, especially as used to protect the approach of soldiers engaged in a siege. | [noun] A mantelletta. MANTLING (11) [verb] To cover or conceal (something); to cloak; to disguise. | [verb] To become covered or concealed. | [verb] To spread like a mantle (especially of blood in the face and cheeks when a person flushes). MANTRAPS (12) [noun] A mechanical device for catching trespassers. | [noun] A small space with two sets of interlocking doors, such that the first set of doors must close before the second set opens, used to restrict access. | [noun] A woman who is dangerously seductive to men. MANUALLY (13) [adverb] By hand MANUBRIA (12) [noun] The broad, upper part of the sternum. | [noun] The tube extending from the central underside of a jellyfish and ending in a mouth. | [noun] A knob or handle that controls the stops of an organ. MANUMITS (12) [verb] To release from slavery, to free. MANURERS (10) MANURIAL (10) MANURING (11) [verb] To cultivate by manual labor; to till; hence, to develop by culture. | [verb] To apply manure (as fertilizer or soil improver). | [noun] An application of manure. MANWARDS (14) MANYFOLD (17) [adjective] Many | [adverb] By many times. MAPMAKER (18) [noun] A person who makes maps. MAPPABLE (16) MAPPINGS (15) [noun] The process of making maps. | [noun] The process of locating genes on a chromosome. | [noun] Assigning a PC to a shared drive or printer port on a network. MAQUETTE (19) [noun] A preliminary model or sketch used in preparation for making a sculpture. | [verb] To prepare a maquette (of). MARABOUS (12) [noun] Leptoptilos crumeniferus, a large wading bird native to Africa, with a naked head and neck adapted for scavenging. | [noun] A person, five-eighths of whose ancestry is black; the offspring of a mulatto and a griffe. | [noun] A kind of thrown raw silk, naturally nearly white, but capable of being dyed without scouring. MARABOUT (12) [noun] A Muslim holy man or mystic, especially in parts of North Africa. | [noun] The tomb or shrine of such a person. MARANTAS (10) MARASCAS (12) MARASMIC (14) MARASMUS (12) [noun] Any wasting disease, especially a severe loss of body weight, in children, caused by malnutrition or the inability to digest protein MARATHON (13) [noun] A 42.195 kilometre (26 mile 385 yard) road race. | [noun] (by extension) Any extended or sustained activity. | [verb] To run a marathon. MARAUDED (12) [verb] To move about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [verb] To go about aggressively or in a predatory manner. | [verb] To raid and pillage. MARAUDER (11) [noun] Someone who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [noun] By extension anything which marauds. MARAVEDI (14) [noun] A former Spanish coin and unit of currency, originally issued in gold but later in silver and copper, discontinued in 1848. MARBLERS (12) MARBLIER (12) MARBLING (13) [verb] To cause (something to have) the streaked or swirled appearance of certain types of marble, for example by mixing viscous ingredients incompletely, or by applying paint or other colorants unevenly. | [verb] To get or have the streaked or swirled appearance of certain types of marble, for example due to the incomplete mixing of viscous ingredients, or the uneven application of paint or other colorants. | [verb] To cause meat, usually beef, pork, or lamb, to be interlaced with fat so that its appearance resembles that of marble. MARCHERS (15) [noun] An inhabitant of a march (border country); specifically, a marcher lord. | [noun] A border territory, a march (now only in (attributive) use). | [noun] One who marches; one who participates in a march. MARCHESA (15) [noun] An Italian marchioness. MARCHESE (15) [noun] An Italian marquis. MARCHESI (15) [noun] An Italian marquis. MARCHING (16) [verb] To walk with long, regular strides, as a soldier does. | [verb] To cause someone to walk somewhere. | [verb] To go to war; to make military advances. MARGARIC (13) MARGARIN (11) MARGENTS (11) MARGINAL (11) [noun] Something that is marginal. | [noun] A constituency won with a small margin. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or located at or near a margin or edge; also figurative usages of location and margin (edge). MARGINED (12) [verb] To add a margin to. | [verb] To enter (notes etc.) into the margin. | [adjective] Having a margin. MARGRAVE (14) [noun] A feudal era military-administrative officer of comital rank in the Carolingian empire and some successor states, originally in charge of a border area. | [noun] A hereditary ruling prince in certain feudal states of the Holy Roman Empire and elsewhere; the titular equivalent became known as marquis or marquess. MARIACHI (15) [noun] A traditional form of Mexican music, either sung or purely instrumental. | [noun] A group that plays mariachi music. | [noun] A member of such a group. MARIGOLD (12) [noun] (genericised brand name, usually plural, sometimes with capital) A rubber glove, especially one for use in household cleaning. | [noun] Any of the Old World plants, of the genus Calendula, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers. | [noun] Any of the New World plants, of the genus Tagetes, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers. MARIMBAS (14) [noun] A musical instrument similar to a xylophone but clearer in pitch. MARINADE (11) [noun] A seasoned, often acidic liquid mixture in which food is marinated, or soaked, usually to flavor and prepare it for cooking. | [verb] To marinate. MARINARA (10) [noun] A marinara sauce. | [adjective] Prepared with tomatoes, or in a tomato sauce. | [adjective] Of pasta: In a seafood sauce. Of pizza: With seafood topping. MARINATE (10) [verb] To allow a sauce or flavoring mixture to absorb into something; to steep or soak something in a marinade to flavor or prepare it for cooking. MARINERS (10) [noun] A sailor. MARIPOSA (12) MARISHES (13) MARITIME (12) [adjective] Relating to or connected with the sea or its uses (as navigation, commerce, etc.). | [adjective] Bordering on the sea; living near the seacoast; coastal. | [adjective] Inhabiting the seashore; living coastwise; littoral. (distinguished from marine) MARJORAM (19) [noun] A herb of the mint family, Origanum majorana, having aromatic leaves. | [noun] The leaves of this plant used in flavouring food. MARKDOWN (18) [noun] A reduction in price in order to stimulate sales. MARKEDLY (18) [adverb] In a marked manner; distinctly, noticeably, conspicuously. MARKETED (15) [verb] To make (products or services) available for sale and promote them. | [verb] To sell | [verb] To deal in a market; to buy or sell; to make bargains for provisions or goods. MARKETER (14) [noun] One who designs and executes marketing campaigns. | [noun] One who sells goods at a market. MARKHOOR (17) MARKHORS (17) [noun] A large wild goat, Capra falconeri, especially (Capra falconeri megaceros, syn. Capra megaceros), having huge flattened spiral horns., found in the western Himalayas. MARKINGS (15) [noun] The action of the verb to mark. | [noun] A mark. | [noun] The characteristic colouration and patterning of an animal. MARKSMAN (16) [noun] A man or person skilled at hitting targets, as with a firearm, bow, or thrown object. | [noun] Goalscorer. MARKSMEN (16) [noun] A man or person skilled at hitting targets, as with a firearm, bow, or thrown object. | [noun] Goalscorer. MARLIEST (10) MARLINES (10) MARLINGS (11) MARLITES (10) MARLITIC (12) MARMITES (12) [noun] A rounded earthenware cooking pot. MARMOSET (12) [noun] A small monkey, now specifically a Central and South American monkey of the genera Callithrix, Mico, Cebuella, or Callibella, with claws instead of nails, and a rather primitive layout. | [noun] A hideous figure; a grotesque. | [noun] An unappealing or foolish man. MAROCAIN (12) [noun] A heavy crepe fabric of silk, wool, or both, having a cross-ribbed texture, used for apparel. MAROONED (11) [verb] To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a desert island. MARPLOTS (12) MARQUEES (19) [noun] A large tent with open sides, used for outdoors entertainment. | [noun] A projecting canopy over an entrance, especially one with a sign that displays the name of the establishment or other information of it. | [noun] (by generalization) Lights that turn on and off in sequence, or scrolling text, as these are common elements on a marquee. MARQUESS (19) [noun] A title of nobility for a man ranking beneath a duke and above an earl. MARQUISE (19) [noun] A marchioness, especially one who is French. | [noun] A marquee. | [noun] (jewelry) An oval cut diamond with pointed ends. MARRANOS (10) [noun] A Jew who converted to Catholicism under threat or force. MARRIAGE (11) [noun] The state of being married. | [noun] A union of two or more people that creates a family tie and carries legal, social, and/or religious rights and responsibilities. | [noun] A homosexual relationship between male prisoners. MARRIEDS (11) [noun] A married person. MARRIERS (10) MARROWED (14) MARRYING (14) [verb] To enter into the conjugal or connubial state; to take a husband or a wife. | [verb] (in passive) To be joined to (someone) as spouse according to law or custom. | [verb] To arrange for the marriage of; to give away as wife or husband. MARSALAS (10) MARSHALL (13) MARSHALS (13) [noun] A high-ranking officer in the household of a medieval prince or lord, who was originally in charge of the cavalry and later the military forces in general. | [noun] A military officer of the highest rank in several countries, including France and the former Soviet Union; equivalent to a general of the army in the United States. See also field marshal. | [noun] A person in charge of the ceremonial arrangement and management of a gathering. MARSHIER (13) [adjective] Of, or resembling a marsh; boggy. | [adjective] Growing in marshy ground. MARSUPIA (12) [noun] The external pouch in which female marsupials rear and feed the young. | [noun] A brood pouch in some fishes, crustaceans and insects in the family Monophlebidae. MARTAGON (11) MARTELLO (10) [noun] Martello tower MARTIANS (10) MARTINET (10) [noun] A strict disciplinarian. | [noun] Anyone who lays stress on a rigid adherence to the details of discipline, or to forms and fixed methods or rules. | [noun] A martin; a swift. MARTINIS (10) [noun] A cocktail made with gin or vodka and vermouth. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) Any cocktail served in a cocktail glass, often sweet or fruity and aimed at women. MARTLETS (10) [noun] A bird, the martin. | [noun] A depiction of a bird similar to a house martin or swallow with stylized feet. MARTYRED (14) [verb] To make someone into a martyr by putting him or her to death for adhering to, or acting in accordance with, some belief, especially religious; to sacrifice on account of faith or profession. | [verb] To persecute. | [verb] To torment; to torture. MARTYRLY (16) MARVELED (14) [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. | [verb] To marvel at. | [verb] (used impersonally) To cause to marvel or be surprised. MARYJANE (20) MARZIPAN (21) [noun] A confection made from a paste of almonds, sugar and egg white as a binder. | [verb] To cover with marzipan. MASCARAS (12) [noun] A cosmetic used to darken and thicken the eyelashes. MASKABLE (16) MASKINGS (15) MASKLIKE (18) MASONING (11) [verb] (normally with a preposition) To build stonework or brickwork about, under, in, over, etc.; to construct by masons MASQUERS (19) [noun] One who appears in disguise at a masquerade. MASSACRE (12) [noun] The killing of a considerable number (usually limited to people) where little or no resistance can be made, with indiscriminate violence, without necessity, and contrary to civilized norms. | [noun] Murder. | [noun] Any overwhelming defeat, as in a game or sport. MASSAGED (12) [verb] To rub and knead (someone's body or a part of a body), to perform a massage on (somebody). | [verb] To manipulate (data, a document etc.) to make it more presentable or more convenient to work with. | [verb] To falsify (data or accounts). MASSAGER (11) MASSAGES (11) [noun] The action of rubbing, kneading or hitting someone's body, to help the person relax, prepare for muscular action (as in contact sports) or to relieve aches. | [verb] To rub and knead (someone's body or a part of a body), to perform a massage on (somebody). | [verb] To manipulate (data, a document etc.) to make it more presentable or more convenient to work with. MASSCULT (12) MASSEDLY (14) MASSETER (10) [noun] The large muscle which raises the under jaw, and assists in mastication. MASSEURS (10) [noun] (massage) A person (especially male) who performs massage. | [noun] An instrument used in the performance of massage. MASSEUSE (10) [noun] A woman who performs massage; a female masseur. | [noun] A masseur; a man who performs massage. MASSICOT (12) [noun] Lead monoxide, PbO, obtained as a yellow amorphous powder, the fused and crystalline form of which is called litharge; lead ocher. It is used as a pigment; also, lead oxide yellow, as opposed to red lead, which is lead tetroxide Pb3O4. MASSIEST (10) MASSLESS (10) MASTABAH (15) [noun] A wide stone bench built into the wall of a house, shop etc. in the Middle East. | [noun] A rectangular structure with a flat top and slightly sloping sides, built during Ancient Egyptian times above tombs that were situated on flat land. Mastabas were made of wood, mud bricks, stone, or a combination of these materials. Some are solid structures, while others can contain one or more rooms, sometimes decorated with paintings or inscriptions. MASTABAS (12) [noun] A wide stone bench built into the wall of a house, shop etc. in the Middle East. | [noun] A rectangular structure with a flat top and slightly sloping sides, built during Ancient Egyptian times above tombs that were situated on flat land. Mastabas were made of wood, mud bricks, stone, or a combination of these materials. Some are solid structures, while others can contain one or more rooms, sometimes decorated with paintings or inscriptions. MASTERED (11) [verb] To be a master. | [verb] To become the master of; to subject to one's will, control, or authority; to conquer; to overpower; to subdue. | [verb] To learn to a high degree of proficiency. MASTERLY (13) [adjective] Executed in the manner of a master; showing competence and skill; masterful. | [adjective] (usually derogatory) Like a master; arbitrary; domineering, imperious. | [adverb] In a masterful manner; competently, masterfully. MASTHEAD (14) [noun] The top of a mast. | [noun] A list of a newspaper or other periodical's main staff, contributing writers, publisher, circulation, advertising rates etc. | [noun] The title (normally in a large and distinctive font) of a newspaper at the top of the front page MASTICHE (15) MASTIFFS (16) [noun] One of an old breed of powerful, deep-chested, and smooth-coated dogs, used chiefly as watchdogs and guard dogs. MASTITIC (12) MASTITIS (10) [noun] Inflammation of a breast. MASTIXES (17) MASTLESS (10) MASTLIKE (14) MASTODON (11) [noun] Extinct elephant-like mammal of the genus Mammut that flourished worldwide from Miocene through Pleistocene times; differs from elephants and mammoths in the form of the molar teeth. MASTOIDS (11) [noun] The mastoid process. MASURIUM (12) MATADORS (11) [noun] The person whose aim is to kill the bull in a bullfight. | [noun] A certain game of dominoes in which four dominoes (the 4-3, 5-2, 6-1, and double blank), called matadors, may be played at any time in any way. | [noun] The jack of clubs, or any other trump held in sequence with it, in the game of skat. MATCHBOX (24) [noun] A small cardboard box in which matches are kept. | [noun] Any small die-cast toy car, usually collectible. MATCHERS (15) MATCHING (16) [verb] To agree; to be equal; to correspond. | [verb] To agree with; to be equal to; to correspond to. | [verb] To make a successful match or pairing. MATCHUPS (17) [noun] A pairing of two things, people or teams, especially for a competition MATELESS (10) MATELOTE (10) [noun] A stew made primarily with fish and wine. | [noun] An old sailors' dance in double time, somewhat like a hornpipe. MATELOTS (10) [noun] Sailor; also "mate;" boon companion MATERIAL (10) [noun] Matter which may be shaped or manipulated, particularly in making something. | [noun] Text written for a specific purpose. | [noun] A sample or specimens for study. MATERIEL (10) [noun] Military equipment, apparatus, and supplies. MATERNAL (10) [noun] A mother. | [noun] A person related through the mother, or her side of the family; a maternal relative. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a mother; having the characteristics of a mother; motherly. MATESHIP (15) [noun] The post of mate on a ship; a posting as mate. | [noun] (whaling) A type of contract between ships to cooperate and share the proceeds of an expedition. | [noun] Fellowship; companionship. MATILDAS (11) [noun] A bundle of possessions, often tied up in a sack; a swag. MATINEES (10) [noun] A showing of a movie, sporting event, or theatrical performance in the morning or afternoon. | [noun] A woman's dress to be worn in the morning or before dinner. | [verb] To put on a matinee performance (of). MATINESS (10) MATRICES (12) [noun] The womb. | [noun] The material or tissue in which more specialized structures are embedded. | [noun] An extracellular matrix, the material or tissue between the cells of animals or plants. MATRIXES (17) [noun] The womb. | [noun] The material or tissue in which more specialized structures are embedded. | [noun] An extracellular matrix, the material or tissue between the cells of animals or plants. MATRONAL (10) MATRONLY (13) [adjective] In the capacity of a matron; serving as a housekeeper or head nurse. | [adjective] Exuding the authority, wisdom, power, and intelligence of an experienced woman. | [adjective] Having the appearance of a mature woman, often of larger physical stature and somewhat unkempt or dowdy. MATTEDLY (14) MATTERED (11) [verb] To be important. | [verb] (in negative constructions) To care about, to mind; to find important. | [verb] To form pus or matter, as an abscess; to maturate. MATTINGS (11) MATTOCKS (16) [noun] An agricultural tool whose blades are at right angles to the body, similar to a pickaxe. MATTOIDS (11) MATTRASS (10) MATTRESS (10) [noun] A pad on which a person can recline and sleep, usually having an inner section of coiled springs covered with foam or other cushioning material then enclosed with cloth fabric. | [noun] A form of retaining wall used to support foundations or an embankment | [verb] To cover with a thick layer, like a mattress; to blanket. MATURATE (10) [verb] To bring to ripeness or maturity; to ripen. | [verb] To promote the perfect suppuration of (an abscess). | [verb] To undergo perfect suppuration. MATURELY (13) MATUREST (10) [adjective] Fully developed; grown up in terms of physical appearance, behaviour or thinking; ripe. | [adjective] Brought to a state of complete readiness. | [adjective] Profound; careful. MATURING (11) [verb] To proceed toward maturity: full development or completion (either of concrete or of abstract things, e.g. plans, judgments, qualities). | [verb] (of food, especially fruit) To attain maturity, to become mature or ripe. | [verb] To bring (something) to maturity, full development or completion. MATURITY (13) [noun] The state of being mature, ready or ripe. | [noun] When bodily growth has completed and/or reproduction can begin. | [noun] The state of a debt obligation at the end of the term of maturation thereof, once all interest and any applicable fees have accrued to the principal. MATZOONS (19) MAUMETRY (15) MAUNDERS (11) [verb] To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle. | [verb] To wander or walk aimlessly. | [verb] To beg; to whine like a beggar. MAUNDIES (11) MAUSOLEA (10) [noun] A large stately tomb or a building housing such a tomb or several tombs. | [noun] (by extension) A gloomy, usually large room or building. MAVERICK (19) [noun] An unbranded range animal. | [noun] (by extension) Anything dishonestly obtained. | [noun] (by extension) One who is unconventional or does not abide by rules. MAXICOAT (19) MAXILLAE (17) [noun] Either of the two bones that together form the upper jaw. | [noun] (arthropodology) One of a set of paired mouthparts found in many arthropods and used for tasting and manipulating food. MAXILLAS (17) MAXIMALS (19) MAXIMINS (19) [noun] In decision theory and game theory etc, a rule to identify the worst outcome of each possible option to find one's best (maximum payoff) play. MAXIMISE (19) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMITE (19) MAXIMIZE (28) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMUMS (21) [noun] The highest limit | [noun] The greatest value of a set or other mathematical structure, especially the global maximum or a local maximum of a function | [noun] An upper bound of a set which is also an element of that set MAXWELLS (20) [noun] A unit of magnetic flux that produces one abvolt per turn per second. MAYAPPLE (17) [noun] A fruit-bearing flowering plant with poisonous roots, native to eastern North America, taxonomic name Podophyllum peltatum. | [noun] The fruit of the plant Podophyllum peltatum MAYFLIES (16) [noun] Any of the many fragile insects of the order Ephemeroptera that develop in fresh water and live very briefly as winged adults. MAYORESS (13) [noun] A female mayor. | [noun] The wife of a (male) mayor. | [noun] A daughter or female friend of a male mayor chosen by him to hold the title mayoress. MAYPOLES (15) [noun] A pole, garlanded with streamers held by people who dance around it to celebrate May Day. | [noun] A maypole-like structure of sticks placed about a sapling in the bowers of certain species of bowerbird. | [noun] A penis, especially a large one. MAYWEEDS (17) [noun] Stinking chamomile, Anthemis cotula. | [noun] Corn chamomile, field chamomile, Anthemis arvensis. | [noun] Plants of the genera Matricaria and Tripleurospermum. MAZAEDIA (20) MAZELIKE (23) [adjective] Like a maze; labyrinthine. MAZINESS (19) MAZOURKA (23) MAZURKAS (23) [noun] A Polish folk dance in triple time, usually moderately fast, containing a heavy accent on the third beat and occasionally the second beat. | [noun] A classical musical composition inspired by the folk dance and conforming in some respects to its form, particularly as popularized by Chopin. | [noun] A figure skating move that combines elements of the toe loop and bunny-hop. MAZZARDS (29) [noun] A sweet cherry, Prunus avium MEAGERLY (14) MEAGRELY (14) MEALIEST (10) [adjective] Resembling meal (the foodstuff). MEALLESS (10) MEALTIME (12) [noun] The appointed time at which a meal is served or eaten. MEALWORM (15) [noun] The larval stage of the mealworm beetle (Tenebrio molitor), a species of darkling beetle.. MEALYBUG (16) [noun] Any of various insects of the family Pseudococcidae, which secrete a powdery wax and are pests of fruit trees. MEANDERS (11) [noun] A decorative border constructed from a continuous line, shaped into a repeated motif, that is commonly found in Greek art. | [noun] A structural motif in proteins consisting of four adjacent antiparallel strands and their linking loops. | [noun] One of the turns of a winding, crooked, or involved course. MEANINGS (11) [noun] (of words or symbols) The entity, perception, feeling or concept thereby represented or evoked. | [noun] The value, purpose, importance, point or significance (of something beyond the fact of that thing's existence). | [noun] The object or concept that a word or phrase denotes, or that which a sentence says. MEANNESS (10) [noun] The condition, or quality, of being mean (any of its definitions) | [noun] A mean act. MEANTIME (12) [noun] The time spent waiting for another event; time in between. | [adverb] During the interval; meanwhile MEASLIER (10) [adjective] Particularly of pigs or pork: infected with larval tapeworms or trichinae (parasitic roundworms). | [adjective] Of a person: infected with measles. | [adjective] Small (especially contemptibly small) in amount. MEASURED (11) [verb] To ascertain the quantity of a unit of material via calculated comparison with respect to a standard. | [verb] To be of (a certain size), to have (a certain measurement) | [verb] To estimate the unit size of something. MEASURER (10) MEASURES (10) [noun] A prescribed quantity or extent. | [noun] The act or result of measuring. | [noun] Metrical rhythm. MEATBALL (12) [noun] A ball of minced or ground meat, seasoned and cooked. | [noun] A stupid person. | [noun] An easy pitch to hit, especially thrown right down the middle of the plate. MEATHEAD (14) [noun] An ungainly, dull or stupid person; someone who is lazy, disrespectful and/or whose beliefs and philosophies clash with another. | [noun] A large, muscular, stupid male, especially an athlete. | [noun] A member of the Canadian Forces Military Police. MEATIEST (10) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing meat. | [adjective] Resembling meat in flavour, etc. | [adjective] Of a person or a body part, large and solid. MEATLESS (10) MEATLOAF (13) [noun] A dish of ground meat (usually made from ground beef, although lamb, pork, veal, venison, poultry and seafood are also used) formed into a loaf shape, mixed with egg and breadcrumbs, then baked or smoked, and usually served in slices. MEATUSES (10) [noun] A tubular opening or passage in the body. MECHANIC (17) [noun] A manual worker; a labourer or artisan. | [noun] Someone who builds or repairs machinery, a technician; now specifically, someone who works with and repairs the mechanical parts of a motor vehicle, aircraft or similar. | [noun] A device, command, or feature which allows someone to achieve a specific task. MECONIUM (14) [noun] A dark green mass, the contents of the fetal intestines during the later stages of mammalian gestation, that forms the first faeces of the newborn | [noun] Opium MEDALING (12) [verb] To win a medal. | [verb] To award a medal to. MEDALIST (11) [noun] One who has received a medal; one who has medalled. | [noun] An engraver, designer or collector of medals. MEDALLED (12) [verb] To win a medal. | [verb] To award a medal to. MEDALLIC (13) MEDDLERS (12) MEDDLING (13) [verb] To interfere in or with; to concern oneself with unduly. | [verb] To interest or engage oneself; to have to do (with), in a good sense. | [verb] To mix (something) with some other substance; to commingle, combine, blend. MEDEVACS (16) [noun] The emergency transportation, usually by air, of patients to a medical facility. | [noun] A vehicle, typically aircraft, used for emergency transportation of patients to a medical facility. | [noun] Trained personnel who care for patients during emergency transportation to a medical facility. MEDFLIES (14) [noun] A small fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata, native to the Mediterranean. MEDIALLY (14) MEDIANLY (14) MEDIANTS (11) [noun] The third degree of the diatonic scale. | [noun] A rational number whose numerator is the sum of the numerators of two other given rational numbers and whose denominator is the sum of the denominators of those same two other rational numbers. MEDIATED (12) [verb] To resolve differences, or to bring about a settlement, between conflicting parties. | [verb] To intervene between conflicting parties in order to resolve differences or bring about a settlement. | [verb] To divide into two equal parts. MEDIATES (11) [verb] To resolve differences, or to bring about a settlement, between conflicting parties. | [verb] To intervene between conflicting parties in order to resolve differences or bring about a settlement. | [verb] To divide into two equal parts. MEDIATOR (11) [noun] One who negotiates between parties seeking mutual agreement. | [noun] A chemical substance transmitting information to a targeted cell. MEDICAID (14) MEDICALS (13) [noun] A medical examination. MEDICARE (13) MEDICATE (13) [verb] To prescribe or administer medication to. MEDICINE (13) [noun] A substance which specifically promotes healing when ingested or consumed in some way. | [noun] A treatment or cure. | [noun] The study of the cause, diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of disease or illness. MEDIEVAL (14) [noun] Someone living in the Middle Ages. | [noun] A medieval example (of something aforementioned or understood from context). | [adjective] Of or relating to the Middle Ages, the period from approximately 500 to 1500 AD. MEDIOCRE (13) [noun] A person of minor significance, accomplishment or acclaim; a common and undistinguished person. | [noun] A member of a socioeconomic class between the upper ranks of society and the agricultural workers. | [adjective] Having no peculiar or outstanding features; not extraordinary, special, exceptional, or great; of medium quality, almost always with a negative connotation. MEDITATE (11) [verb] To contemplate; to keep the mind fixed upon something; to study. | [verb] To sit or lie down and come to a deep rest while still remaining conscious. | [verb] To consider; to reflect on. MEDULLAE (11) MEDULLAR (11) MEDULLAS (11) [noun] The soft inner part of something, especially the pith of a fruit. | [noun] The inner substance of various organs and structures, especially the marrow of bones. | [noun] The medulla oblongata. MEDUSANS (11) MEDUSOID (12) [noun] Jellyfish | [adjective] Having the shape of a jellyfish MEEKNESS (14) [noun] The state or quality of being meek. MEERKATS (14) [noun] Suricata suricatta, a small carnivorous mammal of the mongoose family, from the Kalahari Desert, known for its habit of standing on its hind legs. MEETINGS (11) [noun] (gerund) The act of persons or things that meet. | [noun] A gathering of persons for a purpose; an assembly. | [noun] (collective) The people at such a gathering. MEETNESS (10) MEGABARS (13) MEGABITS (13) [noun] 106 = 1,000,000 bits or 125,000 bytes (125 kilobytes) | [noun] 220 = 1,048,576 bits; a mebibit | [noun] One megabit per second MEGABUCK (19) [noun] A million dollars. MEGABYTE (16) [noun] One million (106) bytes. | [noun] 1,048,576 bytes; a mebibyte. MEGACITY (16) [noun] A very large city; a megalopolis. MEGADEAL (12) MEGADOSE (12) [noun] A dose of drug or vitamin far exceeding the normal or recommended amount, and usually given intentionally. Compare overdose. | [verb] To dose (a patient) with a very large amount of a drug. | [verb] To dose with a very large amount of (a drug). MEGADYNE (15) MEGAHITS (14) MEGALITH (14) [noun] A construction involving one or several roughly hewn stone slabs of great size. | [noun] A large stone used in such a construction. MEGALOPS (13) MEGAPODE (14) [noun] Any of several chicken- or turkey-like birds in the family Megapodiidae, which incubate their eggs by burying them where they receive warmth from decaying vegetation, solar radiation or geothermal heat. | [adjective] Characteristic of the Megapodiidae. MEGAPODS (14) MEGASSES (11) MEGASTAR (11) [noun] A very famous or successful celebrity. MEGATONS (11) [noun] A measure of the strength of an explosion or a bomb based on how many million tons of TNT would be needed to produce the same energy. MEGAVOLT (14) [noun] One million (106) volts, abbreviated as MV. MEGAWATT (14) [noun] One million (1 000 000) watts, abbreviated as MW. MEGILLAH (14) MEGILPHS (16) MELAMDIM (15) MELAMINE (12) [noun] A strong aromatic heterocyclic base, triaminotriazine, used in combination with formaldehyde to manufacture melamine resins; any such resin, such as Formica MELANGES (11) [noun] A mixture of different things; a disordered mixture. | [noun] A Viennese coffee speciality, half steamed milk and half coffee. | [noun] A large-scale breccia formed in the accretionary wedge over a subductional environment. MELANIAN (10) MELANICS (12) MELANINS (10) MELANISM (12) [noun] Congenital excess of melanin pigmentation in the skin, hair, feathers and/or eyes. MELANIST (10) MELANITE (10) [noun] A black variety of andradite. MELANIZE (19) MELANOID (11) [adjective] Relating to, or resembling, melanin. | [adjective] Relating to, or afflicted with, melanosis. MELANOMA (12) [noun] A dark-pigmented, usually malignant tumor arising from a melanocyte and occurring most commonly in the skin. MELANOUS (10) MELILITE (10) MELILOTS (10) [noun] A fragrant plant of the genus Melilotus, often having small yellow or white flowers. MELINITE (10) MELISMAS (12) [noun] A passage of several notes sung to one syllable of text, as in Gregorian chant. MELLIFIC (15) MELLOWED (14) [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. MELLOWER (13) [adjective] Soft or tender by reason of ripeness; having a tender pulp. | [adjective] Easily worked or penetrated; not hard or rigid. | [adjective] Not coarse, rough, or harsh; subdued, soft, rich, delicate; said of sound, color, flavor, style, etc. MELLOWLY (16) MELODEON (11) [noun] A music hall. | [noun] A type of reed organ with a single keyboard. | [noun] An accordion where the melody-side keyboard is limited to the notes of diatonic scales in a small number of keys. MELODIAS (11) MELODICA (13) [noun] A free-reed keyboard wind instrument. MELODIES (11) [noun] Tune; sequence of notes that makes up a musical phrase MELODISE (11) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODIST (11) [noun] A performer or composer of melodies. MELODIZE (20) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELTABLE (12) MELTAGES (11) MELTDOWN (14) [noun] Severe overheating of the core of a nuclear reactor resulting in the core melting and radiation escaping. | [noun] A situation being likened to a nuclear meltdown; a crisis. | [noun] A tantrum. MEMBERED (15) [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified number of members. | [adjective] (in combination) Having limbs. | [adjective] (of a bird) Having legs of a different tincture from that of the body. MEMBRANE (14) [noun] A flexible enclosing or separating tissue forming a plane or film and separating two environments (usually in a plant or animal). | [noun] A mechanical, thin, flat flexible part that can deform or vibrate when excited by an external force. | [noun] A flexible or semi-flexible covering or waterproofing whose primary function is to exclude water. MEMENTOS (12) [noun] A keepsake; an object kept as a reminder of a place or event. MEMORIAL (12) [noun] Memory; recollection. | [noun] Something, such as a monument, by which someone or something is remembered. | [noun] A chronicle or memoir. MEMORIES (12) [noun] The ability of the brain to record information or impressions with the facility of recalling them later at will. | [noun] A record of a thing or an event stored and available for later use by the organism. | [noun] The part of a computer that stores variable executable code or data (RAM) or unalterable executable code or default data (ROM). MEMORISE (12) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORIZE (21) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMSAHIB (17) [noun] (as a respectful term of address) A white European woman in colonial India. MENACERS (12) MENACING (13) [verb] To make threats against (someone); to intimidate. | [verb] To threaten (an evil to be inflicted). | [verb] To endanger (someone or something); to imperil or jeopardize. MENARCHE (15) [noun] The onset of menstruation; a girl's first period. MENAZONS (19) MENDABLE (13) MENDIGOS (12) MENDINGS (12) MENFOLKS (17) [noun] Menfolk; male members of a group MENHADEN (14) [noun] Any of several species of fish in the genera Brevoortia and Ethmidium, used for fish meal, fish oil, fertilizer, and bait. MENIALLY (13) MENINGES (11) [noun] (chiefly plural) The three membranes that envelop the brain and spinal cord. MENISCAL (12) MENISCUS (12) [noun] A crescent moon, or an object shaped like it. | [noun] A lens which is convex on one side and concave on the other, being crescent-shaped in cross-section. | [noun] The curved surface of liquids in tubes, whether concave or convex, caused by the surface tension of the liquid. MENOLOGY (14) [noun] (often capitalized) A service book of the Eastern Orthodox Church that corresponds, though very roughly, to the proprium sanctorum of the Latin breviary. They include all the movable parts of the services connected with the commemoration of saints and in particular the canons sung in the Orthros, the office which corresponds with Catholic lauds, including the synaxaries, i. e. the historical notices regarding the saints of the day. | [noun] The tables of scriptural lessons, arranged according to months and saints' days, which are often found at the beginning of manuscripts of the gospels or other lectionaries. The saints' days are briefly named and the readings indicated beside each. | [noun] A collection of long lives of the saints of the Eastern Orthodox Church, whenever these lives, are arranged according to months and days of the year. MENORAHS (13) [noun] A holy candelabrum with seven branches used in the Temple of Jerusalem. | [noun] A candelabrum (hanukkiah) with nine branches used in Jewish worship on Hanukkah. MENSCHEN (15) MENSCHES (15) [noun] A person (chiefly male) of strength, integrity and honor or compassion. | [noun] A gentleman. MENSEFUL (13) [adjective] Decorous; mannerly; respectful and worth of respect MENSTRUA (10) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The menses; menstrual discharge. | [noun] A solvent. | [noun] Any liquid medium. MENSURAL (10) [adjective] Of or pertaining to measure or measurement. | [adjective] Having a fixed rhythm. MENSWEAR (13) [noun] Men's clothing, particularly in a retail context. MENTALLY (13) [adverb] In a mental manner; an idea thought out in one's mind, as opposed to an idea spoken orally. MENTHENE (13) MENTHOLS (13) MENTIONS (10) [noun] A speaking or notice of anything, usually in a brief or cursory manner. Used especially in the phrase make mention of. | [noun] A social media feed, a list of replies or posts mentioning a person. | [verb] To make a short reference to something. MENTORED (11) [verb] To act as someone's mentor | [adjective] Under the control of a mentor MEPHITIC (17) [adjective] Foul-smelling or noxious, particularly of a gas or atmosphere. MEPHITIS (15) [noun] A poisonous or foul-smelling gas, especially as emitted from the earth; an unpleasant smell. | [noun] A dilution of fluids derived from skunks or polecats. MERCAPTO (14) MERCHANT (15) [noun] A person who traffics in commodities for profit. | [noun] The owner or operator of a retail business. | [noun] A trading vessel; a merchantman. MERCIFUL (15) [adjective] Showing mercy MERCURIC (14) [adjective] Pertaining to or derived from mercury. | [adjective] Specifically (of a compound), containing mercury with an oxidation number of 2. | [adjective] Mercurial (of people). MERENGUE (11) [noun] A type of music common in the Caribbean, originally associated with the Dominican Republic. | [noun] A song performed in this style. | [noun] A dance to this style of music. MERGENCE (13) MERIDIAN (11) [noun] The south. | [noun] Midday, noon. | [noun] A great circle passing through the poles of the celestial sphere and the zenith for a particular point on the earth's surface. MERINGUE (11) [noun] A mixture consisting of beaten egg whites and sugar which is added to the tops of pies then browned. | [noun] A shell made of this mixture which serves as the receptacle for fruit, ice cream or sherbet. MERISTEM (12) [noun] The plant tissue composed of totipotent cells that allows plant growth. MERISTIC (12) MERITING (11) [verb] To deserve, to earn. | [verb] To be deserving or worthy. | [verb] To reward. MERMAIDS (13) [noun] A mythological creature with a woman's head and upper body, and a tail of a fish. | [noun] (as a modifier) Coloured a brilliant turquoise. | [noun] A prostitute. MEROPIAS (12) MERRIEST (10) [adjective] Jolly and full of high spirits. | [adjective] Festive and full of fun and laughter. | [adjective] Brisk MESDAMES (13) [noun] A polite form of address for a woman or lady. | [noun] The mistress of a household. | [noun] A conceited or quarrelsome girl. MESEEMED (13) MESHIEST (13) MESHUGAH (17) [adjective] Crazy, mad, senseless, insane MESHUGGA (15) [adjective] Crazy, mad, senseless, insane MESHUGGE (15) MESHWORK (20) [noun] A net; an assembly of meshes. MESIALLY (13) MESMERIC (14) [adjective] Of or relating to mesmerism or mesmerization MESNALTY (13) MESOCARP (14) [noun] The middle layer of the pericarp of a fruit. In many fruits such as drupes and tomatoes, the mesocarp is fleshy MESODERM (13) [noun] One of the three tissue layers in the embryo of a metazoan animal. Through embryonic development, it will produce many internal organs of the adult, e.g. muscles, spine and circulatory system. MESOGLEA (11) MESOMERE (12) MESOPHYL (18) MESOSOME (12) MESOTRON (10) MESQUITE (19) [noun] Any of several deciduous trees of the genus Prosopis found in North America, and used as forage, which have long, beige seed/bean pods which may be dried and ground into a sweet, nutty flour. | [noun] The wood of these trees, used for smoking food, or charcoal made from this wood. | [noun] Country or land dominated by mesquite trees. MESQUITS (19) MESSAGED (12) [verb] To send a message to; to transmit a message to, e.g. as text via a cell phone. | [verb] To send (something) as a message; usually refers to electronic messaging. | [verb] To send a message or messages; to be capable of sending messages. MESSAGES (11) [noun] A communication, or what is communicated; any concept or information conveyed. | [noun] An underlying theme or conclusion to be drawn from something. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) An errand. MESSIAHS (13) [noun] (Abrahamic tradition) The one who is ordained by God to lead the people of Israel, believed by Christians and Muslims to be Jesus Christ. | [noun] A similar religious figure or awaited divine ruler, such as the Islamic Mahdi. | [noun] An extremely powerful figure. MESSIEST (10) [adjective] (of a place, situation, person, etc) In a disorderly state; chaotic; disorderly. | [adjective] (of a person) Prone to causing mess. | [adjective] (of a situation) Difficult or unpleasant to deal with. MESSMATE (12) [noun] An associate with whom one shares a mess (eating place) on a ship | [noun] Any of various eucalypts with rough bark, specifically Eucalyptus obliqua. MESSUAGE (11) [noun] A plot of land as the site for a house; later, a residential building taken together with its outbuildings and assigned land. MESTESOS (10) MESTINOS (10) MESTIZAS (19) [noun] A female mestizo. MESTIZOS (19) [noun] A person of mixed ancestry, especially one of Spanish and Native American heritage. METALING (11) METALISE (10) METALIST (10) METALIZE (19) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLED (11) [verb] To make a road using crushed rock, stones etc. | [adjective] (of a road) Surfaced, tarred, covered in stone or crushed rock (usually tar-coated). | [adjective] (of any object) Made of metal or having metal fittings or plating. METALLIC (12) [noun] A metallic color. | [adjective] Of, relating to or characteristic of metal. | [adjective] Made of or containing metal. METAMERE (12) [noun] One of successive or homodynamous parts in animals and plants; one of a series of similar parts that follow one another in a vertebrate or articulate animal, as in an earthworm; a segment or somite. METAMERS (12) METAPHOR (15) [noun] The use of a word or phrase to refer to something that it is not, invoking a direct similarity between the word or phrase used and the thing described (but in the case of English without the words like or as, since use of those words would imply a simile); the word or phrase used in this way; an implied comparison. | [noun] The use of an everyday object or concept to represent an underlying facet of the computer and thus aid users in performing tasks. | [verb] To use a metaphor. METAZOAL (19) METAZOAN (19) [noun] Any animal that undergoes development from an embryo stage with three tissue layers, namely the ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. | [noun] Any animal that is multicellular. | [adjective] Having to do with animals that develop from an embryo with three tissue layers. METAZOIC (21) METAZOON (19) [noun] One of the Metazoa. METEORIC (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or originating from a meteor. | [adjective] Like a meteor in speed, brilliance, or ephemeralness. | [adjective] Of water: originating in the atmosphere. METERAGE (11) METERING (11) [verb] To measure with a metering device. | [verb] To imprint a postage mark with a postage meter. | [verb] To regulate the flow of or to deliver in regulated amounts (usually of fluids but sometimes of other things such as anticipation or breath). METHADON (14) METHANES (13) METHANOL (13) [noun] The simplest aliphatic alcohol, CH3OH; a colourless, toxic, inflammable liquid, used as a solvent, antifreeze, in the chemical industry, and in the preparation of methylated spirit. METHINKS (17) METHODIC (16) METHOXYL (23) METHYLAL (16) METHYLIC (18) METICAIS (12) [noun] The currency of Mozambique, divided into 100 centavos METICALS (12) METISSES (10) METONYMS (15) [noun] (grammar) A word that names an object from a single characteristic of it or of a closely related object; a word used in metonymy. | [noun] (by extension) A concept, idea, or word used to represent, typify, or stand in for a broader set of ideas. METONYMY (18) [noun] The use of a single characteristic or part of an object, concept or phenomenon to identify the entire object, concept, phenomenon or a related object. | [noun] A metonym. METOPONS (12) METRICAL (12) [adjective] Relating to poetic meter | [adjective] Having a regular rhythm | [adjective] Of or pertaining to measurement METRISTS (10) METRITIS (10) [noun] Inflammation of the uterus. MEUNIERE (10) MEZEREON (19) [noun] An ornamental shrub, Daphne mezereum, having purple flowers and bright red fruit. | [noun] The dried bark of this plant, once used as a vesicant. MEZEREUM (21) [noun] An ornamental shrub, Daphne mezereum, having purple flowers and bright red fruit. | [noun] The dried bark of this plant, once used as a vesicant. MEZQUITE (28) MEZQUITS (28) MEZUZAHS (31) [noun] A piece of parchment inscribed with specific Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21) and attached in a case to the doorpost of a house, in accordance with the mitzvah (Biblical commandment as interpreted in Jewish law) to "write the words of God on the gates and doorposts of your house" (Deuteronomy 6:9). MEZUZOTH (31) [noun] A piece of parchment inscribed with specific Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21) and attached in a case to the doorpost of a house, in accordance with the mitzvah (Biblical commandment as interpreted in Jewish law) to "write the words of God on the gates and doorposts of your house" (Deuteronomy 6:9). MIAOUING (11) MIAOWING (14) [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. | [noun] The act of uttering a meow. MIASMATA (12) MIAULING (11) [verb] To give the cry of a cat. | [noun] The cry of a cat. MICAWBER (17) MICELLAE (12) MICELLAR (12) MICELLES (12) [noun] A colloidal aggregate, in a simple geometric form, of a specific number of amphipathic molecules which forms at a well-defined concentration, called the critical micelle concentration MICKLEST (16) MICROBAR (14) MICROBES (14) [noun] Any microorganism, but especially a harmful bacterium. MICROBIC (16) MICROBUS (14) MICRODOT (13) [noun] A text or photographic image that has been reduced in size to that of a typographical dot in order to escape detection by unintended recipients. | [noun] A small-sized tablet containing lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD). | [verb] To make a microdot of. MICROHMS (17) MICROLUX (19) MICROMHO (17) MICRURGY (16) [noun] The manipulation of individual cells, using very small instruments and a microscope MIDBRAIN (13) [noun] A part of the brain located rostral to the pons and caudal to the thalamus and the basal ganglia, composed of the tectum (dorsal portion) and the tegmentum (ventral portion). MIDCULTS (13) MIDDLERS (12) MIDDLING (13) [noun] Something of intermediate or average size, position, or quality. | [adjective] Of intermediate or average size, position, or quality; mediocre. | [adjective] In fairly good health. MIDFIELD (15) [noun] The middle of the field of play MIDIRONS (11) [noun] An iron golf club with more lift than a driver. MIDLANDS (12) [noun] The region of a country not near the borders; the interior. MIDLINES (11) [noun] The medial line (or plane) of the body, which divides the body into halves that are mirror-images of each other. | [noun] The level of the top of the x-height of a typeface. MIDLIVES (14) MIDMONTH (16) MIDMOSTS (13) MIDNIGHT (15) [noun] The middle of the night: the sixth temporal hour, equidistant between sunset and sunrise. | [noun] 12 o'clock at night exactly. | [adjective] Utterly dark or black. MIDNOONS (11) MIDPOINT (13) [noun] A point equidistant between two extremes. | [noun] A point which divides a line segment into two lines of equal length. MIDRANGE (12) [noun] The middle portion of a particular range. MIDRIFFS (17) [noun] The middle section of the human torso, from below the chest to above the waist MIDSHIPS (16) [adverb] In the middle of a ship, either longitudinally or laterally. | [adverb] Usually in the line of the keel, but sometimes halfway between bow and stern; often contracted to “midships.” (FM 55-501). | [adverb] On the flank, at a vulnerable place. MIDSIZED (21) [adjective] Of medium size, not particularly large or small MIDSOLES (11) [noun] The layer of a shoe in between the outsole and insole, typically there for shock absorption. MIDSPACE (15) MIDSTORY (14) MIDTERMS (13) [noun] A midterm school exam (i.e., halfway through the term). | [noun] A midterm election MIDTOWNS (14) MIDWATCH (19) MIDWEEKS (18) [noun] The middle of the week. MIDWIFED (18) [verb] To act as a midwife | [verb] To facilitate the emergence of MIDWIFES (17) [verb] To act as a midwife | [verb] To facilitate the emergence of MIDWIVED (18) MIDWIVES (17) [noun] A person, usually a woman, who is trained to assist women in childbirth, but who is not a physician. | [noun] Someone who assists in bringing about some result or project. | [verb] To act as a midwife MIDYEARS (14) MIFFIEST (16) MIGHTIER (14) [adjective] Very strong; possessing might. | [adjective] Very heavy and powerful. | [adjective] Very large; hefty. MIGHTILY (17) [adverb] In a mighty manner; with strength or force. | [adverb] Thoroughly; entirely. MIGNONNE (11) MIGRAINE (11) [noun] A severe, disabling headache, usually affecting only one side of the head, and often accompanied by nausea, vomiting, photophobia and visual disturbances. | [noun] A neurological condition characterised by such headaches. MIGRANTS (11) [noun] A migratory bird or other animal. | [noun] Traveller or worker who moves from one region or country to another. | [noun] An immigrant or refugee. MIGRATED (12) [verb] To relocate periodically from one region to another, usually according to the seasons. | [verb] To change one's geographic pattern of habitation. | [verb] To change habitations across a border; to move from one country or political region to another. MIGRATES (11) [verb] To relocate periodically from one region to another, usually according to the seasons. | [verb] To change one's geographic pattern of habitation. | [verb] To change habitations across a border; to move from one country or political region to another. MIGRATOR (11) MIJNHEER (20) MILADIES (11) [noun] An English noblewoman or gentlewoman; the form of address to such a person; a lady. MILDENED (12) MILDEWED (15) [verb] To taint with mildew. | [verb] To become tainted with mildew. MILDNESS (11) [noun] The quality of being mild; gentleness. MILEAGES (11) [noun] The total distance travelled in miles or in air miles. | [noun] The number of miles travelled by a vehicle on a certain volume of fuel. | [noun] An allowance for travel expenses at a specified rate per mile. MILEPOST (12) [noun] A post on a highway, often with one or more fingerposts, showing the distance in miles to nearby places | [noun] A sign or post beside a railway marking the distance from the (actual or nominal) start of a line (usually the principal terminus or junction with a more major line) | [verb] To place mileposts along (a road, etc.). MILESIMO (12) MILFOILS (13) [noun] Common yarrow, Achillea millefolium. | [noun] Any of several similar pungent Eurasian herbs, of the genus Achillea | [noun] Any plants of the genus Myriophyllum; water milfoil. MILIARIA (10) [noun] A rash caused by blocked, malfunctioning, or underdeveloped sweat glands. MILITANT (10) [noun] A soldier, a combatant. | [noun] An entrenched or aggressive adherent to a particular cause, now especially a member of a particular ideological faction. | [noun] Specifically, someone who supports the Trotskyist political view expressed in the newspaper Militant, or who engages in aggressive left-wing politics. MILITARY (13) [noun] Armed forces. | [adjective] Characteristic of members of the armed forces. | [adjective] Relating to armed forces such as the army, marines, navy and air force (often as distinguished from civilians or police forces). MILITATE (10) [verb] To give force or effect toward; to influence. | [verb] To fight. MILITIAS (10) [noun] An army of trained civilians, which may be an official reserve army, called upon in time of need, the entire able-bodied population of a state which may also be called upon, or a private force not under government control. | [noun] The police in the Soviet Union and some related or successor states (e.g. modern Belarus). MILKFISH (20) [noun] Chanos chanos, an important food fish in southeast Asia. MILKIEST (14) [adjective] Resembling milk in color, consistency, smell, etc.; consisting of milk. | [adjective] (color science) Of the black in an image, appearing as dark gray rather than black. | [adjective] (of a drink) Containing (an especially large amount of) milk. MILKMAID (17) [noun] A girl or young woman who milks the cows on a farm MILKSHED (18) MILKSOPS (16) [noun] A piece of bread sopped in milk. | [noun] Bread pieces in a bowl, sprinkled with sugar, & covered in hot milk. | [noun] (by extension) A weak, easily frightened or ineffectual person. MILKWEED (18) [noun] Any of several plants that have a milky sap and have pods that split to release seeds with silky tufts. | [noun] A monarch butterfly (Danaus spp). MILKWOOD (18) MILKWORT (17) [noun] Any of more than 500 species of flowering plants of the genus Polygala that are used as a food source by the larvae of some members of the Lepidoptera order. MILLABLE (12) MILLAGES (11) MILLCAKE (16) MILLDAMS (13) [noun] A dam constructed across a river or stream to raise the water level so that it can turn a millwheel; also, the millpond so created. MILLEPED (13) MILLIARD (11) [numeral] 109, a thousand (times a) million. (Now generally replaced by the short scale billion.) MILLIARE (10) MILLIARY (13) MILLIBAR (12) [noun] A non-SI unit of pressure equal to 100 pascals, used primarily to report atmospheric pressure. MILLIEME (12) MILLIERS (10) MILLIGAL (11) MILLILUX (17) MILLIMES (12) MILLIMHO (15) MILLINER (10) [noun] A person who is involved in the manufacture, design, or sale of hats for women. MILLINES (10) MILLINGS (11) MILLIOHM (15) MILLIONS (10) [noun] (long and short scales) The cardinal number 1,000,000: 106; a thousand thousand. | [noun] An unspecified very large number. MILLIPED (13) MILLIREM (12) MILLPOND (13) [noun] A pond or reservoir produced by damming a river or stream in order to provide a steady source of water for a millrace. MILLRACE (12) [noun] A fast-running water-filled channel diverted from a river or stream used to drive a mill wheel. MILLRUNS (10) MILLWORK (17) MILTIEST (10) MIMEOING (13) MIMETITE (12) [noun] An arsenate mineral which forms in lead deposits, usually by the oxidation of galena and arsenopyrite. MIMICKED (19) [verb] To imitate, especially in order to ridicule. | [verb] To take on the appearance of another, for protection or camouflage. MIMICKER (18) [noun] One who mimics. MINACITY (15) MINARETS (10) [noun] The tall slender tower of an Islamic mosque, from which the muezzin recites the adhan (call to prayer). MINATORY (13) [adjective] Threatening, menacing. MINCIEST (12) MINDLESS (11) [adjective] Showing a lack of forethought or sense. | [adjective] Having no sensible meaning or purpose. | [adjective] Heedless. MINDSETS (11) [noun] A way of thinking; an attitude or opinion, especially a habitual one. MINEABLE (12) MINERALS (10) [noun] Any naturally occurring inorganic material that has a (more or less) definite chemical composition and characteristic physical properties. | [noun] Any inorganic material (as distinguished from animal or vegetable). | [noun] (nutrition) Any inorganic element that is essential to nutrition; a dietary mineral. MINGIEST (11) [adjective] Mean, miserly, stingy. MINGLERS (11) [noun] One who, or that which, mingles. MINGLING (12) [verb] To intermix; to combine or join, as an individual or part, with other parts, but commonly so as to be distinguishable in the product | [verb] To associate or unite in a figurative way, or by ties of relationship | [verb] To cause or allow to intermarry MINIBIKE (16) MINICABS (14) [noun] A small car used as a taxi (rather than a traditional black cab). | [noun] An unlicensed taxi. MINICAMP (16) [noun] A short training session for members of a professional sports team, held before the main preseason training MINICARS (12) MINIFIED (14) MINIFIES (13) MINIKINS (14) [noun] A young person, especially a young woman. | [noun] A small or insignificant person, thing or amount. | [noun] A little pin. MINILABS (12) MINIMALS (12) MINIMILL (12) MINIMISE (12) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMIZE (21) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMUMS (14) [noun] The lowest limit. | [noun] The smallest amount. | [noun] A period of minimum brightness or energy intensity (of a star). MINIPARK (16) MINISHED (14) MINISHES (13) MINISKIS (14) MINISTER (10) [noun] A person who is trained to preach, to perform religious ceremonies, and to afford pastoral care at a Protestant church. | [noun] A politician who heads a ministry (national or regional government department for public service). | [noun] At a diplomacy, the rank of diplomat directly below ambassador. MINISTRY (13) [noun] Government department, at the administrative level normally headed by a minister (or equivalent rank, e.g. secretary of state), who holds it as portfolio, especially in a constitutional monarchy, but also as a polity | [noun] The complete body of government ministers (whether or not they are in cabinet) under the leadership of a head of government (such as a prime minister) | [noun] A ministration MINIVANS (13) [noun] A small van. MINIVERS (13) MINORCAS (12) MINORING (11) [verb] To choose or have an area of secondary concentration as a student in a college or university. MINORITY (13) [noun] The state of being a minor; youth, the period of a person's life prior to reaching adulthood. | [noun] Any subgroup that does not form a numerical majority. | [noun] (used attributively of a party, government, etc.) Empowered by or representing a minority (usually a plurality) of votes cast, legislative seats, etc., rather than an outright majority thereof. MINSTERS (10) [noun] A monastic church. | [noun] A cathedral church without any monastic connection. MINSTREL (10) [noun] A medieval traveling entertainer who would sing and recite poetry, often to his own musical accompaniment. | [noun] One of a troupe of entertainers who wore black makeup (blackface) to present a so-called minstrel show, being a variety show of song, dance and banjo music. MINTAGES (11) MINTIEST (10) MINUENDS (11) [noun] A number or quantity from which another is to be subtracted. MINUTELY (13) [adjective] Happening every minute; continuing; unceasing. | [adverb] With attention to tiny details. | [adverb] On a minute scale. MINUTEST (10) [adjective] Very small. | [adjective] Very careful and exact, giving small details. MINUTIAE (10) [noun] A minor detail, often of negligible importance. | [noun] (biometrics, forensics) Any of the point features on fingerprints used for matching, usually endings and bifurcations of ridges. MINUTIAL (10) MINUTING (11) [verb] Of an event, to write in a memo or the minutes of a meeting. | [verb] To set down a short sketch or note of; to jot down; to make a minute or a brief summary of. MINYANIM (15) [noun] The minimum number of ten (male) adult Jews required for a communal religious service. | [noun] (by extension) A Jewish prayer service. | [noun] A member of the Minyan race of Greek mythology MIQUELET (19) MIRACLES (12) [noun] An event that appears inexplicable by the laws of nature and so is held to be supernatural in origin. | [noun] A fortunate outcome that prevails despite overwhelming odds against it. | [noun] An awesome and exceptional example of something MIRADORS (11) [noun] A tower that offers a panoramic view MIRINESS (10) MIRKIEST (14) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MIRLITON (10) [noun] A pear-shaped vegetable or its vine; the chayote. | [noun] The eunuch flute, a kind of kazoo or membranophone. | [noun] An 18th-century hussar hat resembling a slightly conical shako or tall fez. MIRRORED (11) [verb] Of an event, activity, behaviour, etc, to be identical to, to be a copy of. | [verb] To create something identical to (a web site, etc.). | [verb] To reflect, as in a mirror. MIRTHFUL (16) [adjective] Filled with mirth. MISACTED (13) MISADAPT (13) MISADDED (13) MISAGENT (11) MISAIMED (13) MISALIGN (11) MISALTER (10) MISANDRY (14) [noun] Hatred of, contempt for, or prejudice against men. MISAPPLY (17) [verb] To apply incorrectly; to misuse. MISASSAY (13) MISATONE (10) MISAVERS (13) MISAWARD (14) MISBEGAN (13) MISBEGIN (13) MISBEGOT (13) MISBEGUN (13) MISBILLS (12) MISBINDS (13) MISBOUND (13) MISBRAND (13) MISBUILD (13) MISBUILT (12) MISCALLS (12) [verb] To call (someone) bad names; to insult, abuse. | [verb] To call (something) by the wrong name. | [verb] To make a wrong call; to announce (one's hand of cards) incorrectly. MISCARRY (15) [verb] To have an unfortunate accident of some kind; to be killed, or come to harm. | [verb] To go astray; to do something wrong. | [verb] To have a miscarriage; to abort a foetus, usually without intent to do so. MISCASTS (12) [verb] To cast or reckon incorrectly. | [verb] To cast or direct erroneously or improperly. | [verb] To cast an actor in an inappropriate role. MISCHIEF (18) [noun] Conduct that playfully causes petty annoyance. | [noun] A playfully annoying action. | [noun] (collective) A group or a pack of rats. MISCIBLE (14) [adjective] (of liquids) that can be mixed together in all proportions MISCITED (13) MISCITES (12) MISCLAIM (14) MISCLASS (12) MISCODED (14) MISCODES (13) MISCOINS (12) MISCOLOR (12) MISCOOKS (16) MISCOUNT (12) [noun] An incorrect counting. | [verb] To incorrectly count or add up. MISCUING (13) [verb] To give an incorrect cue. | [verb] To mishit, strike incorrectly. | [noun] An instance of something being miscued; a miscue. MISDATED (12) [verb] To date incorrectly; to mark with the wrong date. MISDATES (11) [verb] To date incorrectly; to mark with the wrong date. MISDEALS (11) [noun] Incorrect dealing or distribution. | [verb] To deal or distribute wrongly. MISDEALT (11) [verb] To deal or distribute wrongly. MISDEEDS (12) [noun] That which was done that should not have been, ranging from any sin or moral offense to various degrees of crime. MISDEEMS (13) MISDIALS (11) [noun] An instance of misdialling. | [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDOERS (11) MISDOING (12) [verb] To do evil. | [verb] To do (something) incorrectly or improperly. | [verb] To do harm to; to injure, mistreat. MISDOUBT (13) [noun] Suspicion; hesitation | [verb] To doubt the existence or reality of. | [verb] To have suspicions about. MISDRAWN (14) MISDRAWS (14) MISDRIVE (14) MISDROVE (14) MISEASES (10) MISEATEN (10) MISEDITS (11) MISENROL (10) MISENTER (10) MISENTRY (13) MISERERE (10) [noun] A prayer for mercy. | [noun] An expression of lamentation or complaint. | [noun] A medieval dagger, used for the mercy stroke to a wounded foe; misericord. MISERIES (10) [noun] Great unhappiness; extreme pain of body or mind; wretchedness; distress; woe. | [noun] A bodily ache or pain. | [noun] Cause of misery; calamity; misfortune. MISEVENT (13) MISFAITH (16) MISFIELD (14) [noun] A failure to field the ball properly. | [verb] To field the ball clumsily or ineptly; in cricket this can result in the batsman scoring another run. MISFILED (14) [verb] To file incorrectly; to file in the wrong place or the wrong way. MISFILES (13) [verb] To file incorrectly; to file in the wrong place or the wrong way. MISFIRED (14) [verb] To fail to discharge properly. | [verb] (of an engine) To fail to ignite in the proper sequence. | [verb] (by extension) To fail to achieve the anticipated result. MISFIRES (13) [noun] An act of misfiring. | [verb] To fail to discharge properly. | [verb] (of an engine) To fail to ignite in the proper sequence. MISFOCUS (15) MISFORMS (15) MISFRAME (15) MISGAUGE (12) MISGIVEN (14) [verb] (of the mind, heart, etc.) To give fear or doubt to; to make irresolute. | [verb] To suspect; to dread. | [verb] To give wrongly; to give or grant amiss. MISGIVES (14) [verb] (of the mind, heart, etc.) To give fear or doubt to; to make irresolute. | [verb] To suspect; to dread. | [verb] To give wrongly; to give or grant amiss. MISGRADE (12) MISGRAFT (14) MISGROWN (14) MISGROWS (14) MISGUESS (11) MISGUIDE (12) [verb] To guide poorly or incorrectly. | [verb] To lead astray; to lead into error. MISHEARD (14) [verb] To hear wrongly. | [verb] To misunderstand. MISHEARS (13) [verb] To hear wrongly. | [verb] To misunderstand. MISHMASH (18) [noun] A collection containing a variety of miscellaneous things. | [verb] To mix together, especially in a confused way. | [verb] To become mixed together. MISHMOSH (18) MISINFER (13) MISINTER (10) MISJOINS (17) MISJUDGE (19) [verb] To make an error in judging, to incorrectly assess. MISKEEPS (16) MISKICKS (20) [noun] A bad kick. | [verb] To kick incorrectly or badly. MISKNOWN (17) MISKNOWS (17) MISLABEL (12) [verb] To label incorrectly. MISLABOR (12) MISLAYER (13) MISLEADS (11) [verb] To lead astray, in a false direction. | [verb] To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. | [verb] To deceptively trick into something wrong. MISLEARN (10) MISLIGHT (14) MISLIKED (15) [verb] To displease. | [verb] To dislike; to disapprove of; to have aversion to. MISLIKER (14) MISLIKES (14) [verb] To displease. | [verb] To dislike; to disapprove of; to have aversion to. MISLIVED (14) MISLIVES (13) MISLODGE (12) MISLYING (14) MISMAKES (16) MISMARKS (16) MISMATCH (17) [verb] To match unsuitably; to fail to match | [noun] Something that does not match; something dissimilar, inappropriate or unsuitable. MISMATED (13) [verb] To mate or match wrongly or unsuitably; mismatch. | [adjective] Provided with an unsuitable mate MISMATES (12) [verb] To mate or match wrongly or unsuitably; mismatch. MISMEETS (12) MISMOVED (16) MISMOVES (15) MISNAMED (13) [verb] To call by a wrong name. | [verb] To give an unsuitable or injurious name to; name incorrectly. MISNAMES (12) [verb] To call by a wrong name. | [verb] To give an unsuitable or injurious name to; name incorrectly. MISNOMER (12) [noun] A use of a term that is misleading; a misname. | [noun] A term that is misleading. | [noun] A term whose sense in common usage conflicts with a technical sense. MISOGAMY (16) [noun] Hatred of or opposition to marriage MISOGYNY (17) [noun] Hatred of, contempt for, or prejudice against women. MISOLOGY (14) MISORDER (11) MISPAGED (14) MISPAGES (13) MISPAINT (12) MISPARSE (12) MISPARTS (12) MISPATCH (17) MISPLACE (14) [verb] To put something somewhere and then forget its location; to mislay | [verb] To apply one's talents inappropriately. | [verb] To put something in the wrong location. MISPLANS (12) MISPLANT (12) MISPLAYS (15) [verb] To play incorrectly or poorly. MISPLEAD (13) MISPOINT (12) MISPOISE (12) MISPRICE (14) MISPRINT (12) [noun] An accidental mistake in print. | [verb] To make a misprint. MISPRIZE (21) [noun] Contempt. | [verb] To despise or hold in contempt; to undervalue. MISQUOTE (19) [noun] An incorrect recitation of a quote. | [noun] An incorrect recording of a quote. | [verb] To incorrectly recite a quote. MISRAISE (10) MISRATED (11) MISRATES (10) MISREADS (11) [noun] An instance of reading wrongly. | [verb] To read wrongly, normally by accident; misconstrue; misinterpret; mistake the sense or significance of. MISREFER (13) MISROUTE (10) [verb] To route incorrectly; to send the wrong way. MISRULED (11) [verb] Of a trial judge, to make a bad decision in court. | [verb] To rule badly; to misgovern. MISRULES (10) [noun] The state of being ruled badly; disorder, lawlessness, anarchy. | [noun] Misgovernment; bad or unjust government. MISSABLE (12) MISSEATS (10) MISSENDS (11) MISSENSE (10) MISSHAPE (15) [noun] A misshapen person; a misshapen body. | [noun] A misshapen object; now especially, a broken item (especially food) sold individually at a cheaper price. | [verb] To shape badly or incorrectly. MISSILES (10) [noun] Any object used as a weapon by being thrown or fired through the air, such as stone, arrow or bullet. | [noun] A self-propelled projectile whose trajectory can be adjusted after it is launched. MISSILRY (13) MISSIONS (10) [noun] A set of tasks that fulfills a purpose or duty; an assignment set by an employer, or by oneself. | [noun] Religious evangelism. | [noun] (in the plural, "the missions") third world charities, particularly those which preach as well as provide aid. MISSISES (10) MISSIVES (13) [noun] A written message; a letter, note or memo. | [noun] (in the plural) Letters sent between two parties in which one makes an offer and the other accepts it. | [noun] One who is sent; a messenger. MISSORTS (10) MISSOUND (11) MISSOUTS (10) MISSPACE (14) MISSPEAK (16) [verb] To fail to pronounce, utter, or speak correctly. | [verb] To speak insultingly or disrespectfully. MISSPELL (12) [verb] To spell incorrectly. MISSPELT (12) [verb] To spell incorrectly. MISSPEND (13) [verb] To spend poorly, incorrectly or unwisely. MISSPENT (12) [verb] To spend poorly, incorrectly or unwisely. | [adjective] Spent in a bad way, squandered MISSPOKE (16) [verb] To fail to pronounce, utter, or speak correctly. | [verb] To speak insultingly or disrespectfully. MISSTART (10) MISSTATE (10) [verb] To make a statement that is in error, inadvertently; to say incorrectly, through a slip of the tongue. MISSTEER (10) MISSTEPS (12) [verb] To step badly or incorrectly. | [verb] To make an error or mistake. MISSTOPS (12) MISSTYLE (13) MISSUITS (10) MISSUSES (10) MISTAKEN (14) [verb] To understand wrongly, taking one thing or person for another. | [verb] To misunderstand (someone). | [verb] To commit an unintentional error; to do or think something wrong. MISTAKER (14) MISTAKES (14) [noun] An error; a blunder. | [noun] A pitch which was intended to be pitched in a hard-to-hit location, but instead ends up in an easy-to-hit place. | [verb] To understand wrongly, taking one thing or person for another. MISTBOWS (15) MISTEACH (15) [verb] To teach incorrectly. MISTENDS (11) MISTERMS (12) MISTHINK (17) MISTHREW (16) MISTHROW (16) MISTIEST (10) [adjective] Covered in mist; foggy. | [adjective] Dim; vague; obscure. | [adjective] With tears in the eyes; dewy-eyed. MISTIMED (13) [verb] To do at the wrong time; especially to misjudge the timing of coordinated events. | [adjective] Done at the wrong time. MISTIMES (12) [verb] To do at the wrong time; especially to misjudge the timing of coordinated events. MISTITLE (10) [verb] To title incorrectly; to give the wrong name to. MISTOUCH (15) MISTRACE (12) MISTRAIN (10) MISTRALS (10) [noun] A strong cold north-west wind in southern France and the Mediterranean. MISTREAT (10) [verb] To treat someone, or something roughly or badly. MISTRESS (10) [noun] A woman, specifically one with great control, authority or ownership | [noun] A female teacher | [noun] The other woman in an extramarital relationship, generally including sexual relations MISTRIAL (10) [noun] A trial that has been declared invalid because of an error in procedure, or because of hung jury. MISTRUST (10) [noun] Lack of trust or confidence; distrust, untrust. | [verb] To have no confidence in (something or someone). | [verb] To be wary, suspicious or doubtful of (something or someone). MISTRUTH (13) MISTRYST (13) MISTUNED (11) MISTUNES (10) MISTUTOR (10) MISTYPED (16) [verb] To type incorrectly, introducing spelling mistakes or other errors. | [verb] To categorize incorrectly. MISTYPES (15) [verb] To type incorrectly, introducing spelling mistakes or other errors. | [verb] To categorize incorrectly. MISUNION (10) MISUSAGE (11) [noun] Improper usage (especially of words). | [noun] Abuse; improper handling or treatment. MISUSERS (10) MISUSING (11) [verb] To use (something) incorrectly. | [verb] To abuse or mistreat (something or someone). | [verb] To rape (a woman); later more generally, to sexually abuse (someone). MISVALUE (13) MISWORDS (14) MISWRITE (13) MISWROTE (13) MISYOKED (18) MISYOKES (17) MITERERS (10) MITERING (11) [verb] To adorn with a mitre. | [verb] To unite at an angle of 45°. MITICIDE (13) MITIGATE (11) [verb] To reduce, lessen, or decrease; to make less severe or easier to bear. | [verb] To downplay. MITOGENS (11) [noun] Any substance that stimulates mitosis MITSVAHS (16) MITSVOTH (16) MITTIMUS (12) [noun] (obsolete outside the United States) A warrant issued for someone to be taken into custody. | [noun] A writ for moving records from one court to another. | [noun] A formal dismissal from a situation. MITZVAHS (25) MITZVOTH (25) [noun] Any of the 613 commandments of Jewish law | [noun] An act of kindness, a good deed. MIXOLOGY (21) [noun] The art of combining various ingredients to make cocktails. | [noun] The work of a disc jockey. MIXTURES (17) [noun] The act of mixing. | [noun] Something produced by mixing. | [noun] Something that consists of diverse elements. MIZZLING (29) [verb] To rain in very fine drops. | [verb] To abscond, scram, flee. | [verb] To yield. MNEMONIC (14) [noun] Anything (especially something in verbal form) used to help remember something. | [noun] The textual, human-readable form of an assembly language instruction, not including operands. | [adjective] Of or relating to mnemonics: the study of techniques for remembering anything more easily. MOATLIKE (14) MOBILISE (12) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILITY (15) [noun] The ability to move; capacity for movement. | [noun] A tendency to sudden change; mutability, changeableness. | [noun] The ability of a military unit to move or be transported to a new position. MOBILIZE (21) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBOCRAT (14) MOBSTERS (12) [noun] A member of a mob or Mafia MOCCASIN (14) [noun] A traditional Native North American shoe, usually without a heel or sole, made of a piece of deerskin or other soft leather turned up at the edges which are either stitched together at the top of the shoe, or sewn to a vamp (a piece covering the top of the foot). | [noun] A modern shoe with either a low or no heel resembling a traditional Native American moccasin in that the leather forming the sides of the shoe is stitched at the top. | [noun] A light beige colour, like that of a moccasin. MOCHILAS (15) MOCKABLE (18) MODALITY (14) [noun] The fact of being modal. | [noun] The classification of propositions on the basis on whether they claim possibility, impossibility, contingency or necessity; mode. | [noun] The inflection of a verb that shows how its action is conceived by the speaker; mood MODELERS (11) MODELING (12) [verb] To display for others to see, especially in regard to wearing clothing while performing the role of a fashion model | [verb] To use as an object in the creation of a forecast or model | [verb] To make a miniature model of MODELIST (11) MODELLED (12) [verb] To display for others to see, especially in regard to wearing clothing while performing the role of a fashion model | [verb] To use as an object in the creation of a forecast or model | [verb] To make a miniature model of MODELLER (11) MODERATE (11) [noun] One who holds an intermediate position between extremes, as in politics. | [noun] One of a party in Scottish Church history dominant in the 18th century, lax in doctrine and discipline, but intolerant of evangelicalism and popular rights. It caused the secessions of 1733 and 1761, and its final resultant was the Disruption of 1843. | [verb] To reduce the excessiveness of (something) MODERATO (11) [noun] A tempo mark directing that a passage is to be played at a moderate tempo. | [noun] A passage having this mark | [adjective] (to be) played in this style MODERNER (11) MODERNLY (14) MODESTER (11) MODESTLY (14) [adverb] In a modest manner. MODICUMS (15) [noun] A modest, small, or trifling amount. MODIFIED (15) [noun] Any vehicle used in modified racing. | [adjective] Changed; altered | [verb] To change part of. MODIFIER (14) [noun] One who, or that which, modifies. | [noun] (grammar) A word, phrase, or clause that limits or qualifies the sense of another word or phrase. | [noun] A keyword that qualifies the meaning of other code. MODIFIES (14) [verb] To change part of. | [verb] To be or become modified. | [verb] To set bounds to; to moderate. MODIOLUS (11) [noun] The central core of the cochlea | [noun] A chiasma of facial muscles held together by fibrous tissue MODISHLY (17) MODISTES (11) [noun] A person who makes or sells fashionable women's clothing, especially dresses or hats. MODULATE (11) [verb] To regulate, adjust or adapt | [verb] To change the pitch, intensity or tone of one's voice or of a musical instrument | [verb] To vary the amplitude, frequency or phase of a carrier wave in proportion to the amplitude etc of a source wave (such as speech or music) MOFETTES (13) [noun] A volcanic discharge of carbon dioxide together with other, mostly smelly, gases MOFFETTE (16) MOIDORES (11) [noun] An old Portuguese gold coin, minted from 1640 to 1732. MOIETIES (10) [noun] A half. | [noun] A share or portion, especially a smaller share. | [noun] Each descent group in a culture which is divided exactly into two descent groups. MOISTENS (10) [verb] To make moist or moister. | [verb] To become moist or moister. MOISTEST (10) [verb] To moisten. | [adjective] Slightly wet; characterised by the presence of moisture, not dry; damp. | [adjective] Of eyes: tearful, wet with tears. MOISTFUL (13) MOISTURE (10) [noun] That which moistens or makes damp or wet; exuding fluid; liquid in small quantity. | [noun] The state of being moist. | [noun] Skin moisture noted as dry, moist, clammy, or diaphoretic as part of the skin signs assessment. MOJARRAS (17) [noun] A perciform fish in the family Gerreidae, often used as bait. MOLALITY (13) MOLARITY (13) MOLASSES (10) [noun] A thick brownish syrup produced in the refining of raw sugar. | [noun] A shallow deposit of sandstone, shale and conglomerate in front of a rising mountain chain. MOLDABLE (13) MOLDERED (12) [verb] To decay or rot. MOLDIEST (11) [adjective] Covered with mold. | [adjective] Stale or musty. MOLDINGS (12) [noun] The act or process of shaping in or on a mold, or of making molds; the art or occupation of a molder. | [noun] Anything cast in a mold, or which appears to be so, as grooved or ornamental bars of wood or metal. | [noun] A plane, or curved, narrow surface, either sunk or projecting, used for decoration by means of the lights and shades upon its surface and to conceal joints, especially between unlike materials. MOLDWARP (16) MOLECULE (12) [noun] The smallest particle of a specific element or compound that retains the chemical properties of that element or compound; two or more atoms held together by chemical bonds. | [noun] A tiny amount. MOLEHILL (13) [noun] A small mound of earth created by a mole's burrowing underneath the surface of the ground. MOLESKIN (14) [noun] The fur of a mole. | [noun] A cotton twill fabric with a heavy velvety nap. | [noun] (by extension, in the plural) Clothing made of this fabric. MOLESTED (11) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLESTER (10) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLLUSCS (12) [noun] A soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically with a hard shell of one or more pieces. | [noun] A weak-willed person. MOLLUSKS (14) [noun] A soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically with a hard shell of one or more pieces. | [noun] A weak-willed person. MOLTENLY (13) MOLYBDIC (18) MOMENTLY (15) [adverb] From moment to moment; continually. | [adverb] Momentarily; for a moment. MOMENTOS (12) MOMENTUM (14) [noun] Of a body in motion: the tendency of a body to maintain its inertial motion; the product of its mass and velocity. | [noun] The impetus, either of a body in motion, or of an idea or course of events; a moment. MONACHAL (15) [adjective] Of or pertaining to monks or their lifestyle; monastic. MONACIDS (13) MONADISM (13) [noun] A metaphysical theory, introduced by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, based on elementary particles with blurred perceptions of one another. MONANDRY (14) [noun] The possession by a woman of only one husband at one time. MONARCHS (15) [noun] The ruler of an absolute monarchy or the head of state of a constitutional monarchy. | [noun] The monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus, and others of genus Danaus, found primarily in North America, so called because of the designs on its wings. | [noun] (Aboriginal English) A police officer. MONARCHY (18) [noun] A government in which sovereignty is embodied within a single, today usually hereditary head of state (whether as a figurehead or as a powerful ruler). | [noun] The territory ruled over by a monarch; a kingdom. | [noun] A form of government where sovereignty is embodied by a single ruler in a state and his high aristocracy representing their separate divided lands within the state and their low aristocracy representing their separate divided fiefs. MONARDAS (11) MONASTIC (12) [noun] A person with monastic ways; a monk. | [adjective] Of or relating to monasteries or monks. MONAURAL (10) [adjective] Of, relating to, affecting, or designed for use with one ear. | [adjective] Monophonic MONAXIAL (17) MONAXONS (17) MONAZITE (19) [noun] Any of a range of reddish-brown minerals that are mixed phosphates of the lighter rare earth elements lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, promethium, samarium, europium, gadolinium and yttrium MONECIAN (12) MONELLIN (10) MONERANS (10) MONETARY (13) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or consisting of money. MONETISE (10) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETIZE (19) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONEYBAG (16) MONEYERS (13) [noun] A moneylender. | [noun] Someone who makes coins; an official minter. MONEYMAN (15) [noun] Someone tasked with handling money, often specifically a financier MONEYMEN (15) [noun] Someone tasked with handling money, often specifically a financier MONGEESE (11) MONGERED (12) MONGOOSE (11) [noun] Any of several species of generalist predatory Carnivores in the family Herpestidae; the various species range in size from rats to large cats. The Indian mongoose is noted as a predator of venomous snakes, though other mongoose species have similar habits. | [noun] Any species of Malagasy mongoose; only distantly related to the Herpestidae, these are members of the family Eupleridae; they resemble mongooses in appearance and habits, but have larger ears and ringed tails. MONGRELS (11) [noun] Someone or something of mixed kind or uncertain origin, especially a dog. | [noun] A thuggish, obnoxious, or contemptible person; (often preceded by "poor") a pitiable person. MONICKER (16) [noun] A personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute. | [noun] A signature. | [noun] An object (structured item of data) used to associate the name of an object with its location. MONIKERS (14) [noun] A personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute. | [noun] A signature. | [noun] An object (structured item of data) used to associate the name of an object with its location. MONISHED (14) MONISHES (13) MONISTIC (12) MONITION (10) [noun] A caution or warning. | [noun] A legal notification of something. | [noun] A sign of impending danger; an omen. MONITIVE (13) MONITORS (10) [noun] Someone who watches over something; a person in charge of something or someone. | [noun] A device that detects and informs on the presence, quantity, etc., of something. | [noun] A device similar to a television set used as to give a graphical display of the output from a computer. MONITORY (13) [noun] A written letter giving admonition | [adjective] Giving admonition and warning MONKEYED (18) [verb] To meddle; to mess (with). | [verb] To mimic; to ape. MONKFISH (20) [noun] Any large bottom-dwelling anglerfish of the genus Lophius, such as Lophius piscatorius, of the Atlantic, having a large head and mouth. | [noun] Angel sharks of the genus Squatina. MONKHOOD (18) MONOACID (13) [noun] Any acid that has only one replaceable hydrogen ion. MONOCARP (14) MONOCLED (13) MONOCLES (12) [noun] A single lens, usually in a wire frame, and used to correct vision for only one eye. | [noun] A one-eyed animal. MONOCOTS (12) [noun] Any plant whose seedlings typically have one cotyledon (seed leaf) (in contrast to the two cotyledons typical of dicots), thereby belonging to the taxonomic monocots, formerly variously known as Monocotyledones, Monocotyledonae, or Liliopsida, a class in the angiosperms (Angiospermae), the flowering plants. MONOCRAT (12) MONOCYTE (15) [noun] A type of blood leukocyte that differentiates into a macrophage. MONODIES (11) [noun] An ode, as in Greek drama, for a single voice, often specifically a mournful song or dirge. | [noun] Any poem mourning the death of someone; an elegy. | [noun] A monotonous or mournful noise. MONODIST (11) MONOFILS (13) [noun] A monofilament yarn. MONOFUEL (13) MONOGAMY (16) [noun] A form of sexual bonding involving a permanent pair bond between two beings. | [noun] The practice of being married to one person as opposed to multiple. MONOGENY (14) [noun] Monogenesis | [noun] The doctrine that all of the members of the human race have a common origin. MONOGERM (13) MONOGLOT (11) [noun] A person capable of speaking only a single language. | [adjective] Capable of speaking only a single language; monolingual. MONOGRAM (13) [noun] A picture drawn in line only, before the colour and/or shading is applied; an outline sketch. | [noun] A sentence consisting of only one line, or an epigram consisting of only one verse, of poetry. | [noun] A design composed of one or more letters, often intertwined, used as an identifying mark of an individual or institution. MONOGYNY (17) [noun] The practice of having one wife at a time. | [noun] The condition in ants of having only one queen at a time. MONOHULL (13) [noun] A boat that has a single hull. MONOLITH (13) [noun] A large, single block of stone which is a natural feature; or a block of stone or other similar material used in architecture and sculpture, especially one carved into a monument in ancient times. | [noun] Anything massive, uniform, and unmovable, especially a towering and impersonal cultural, political, or social organization or structure. | [noun] A substrate having many tiny channels that is cast as a single piece, which is used as a stationary phase for chromatography, as a catalytic surface, etc. MONOLOGS (11) [noun] (authorship) A long speech by one person in a play; sometimes a soliloquy; other times spoken to other characters. | [noun] A long series of comic stories and jokes as an entertainment. | [noun] A long, uninterrupted utterance that monopolizes a conversation. MONOLOGY (14) MONOMERS (12) [noun] A relatively small molecule which can be covalently bonded to other monomers to form a polymer. MONOMIAL (12) [noun] A single term consisting of a product of numbers and variables with positive integer exponents. | [adjective] Relative to a polynomial consisting of one term. MONOPODE (13) MONOPODY (16) MONOPOLE (12) [noun] An appellation owned by a single winery. | [noun] A magnetic monopole. | [noun] A monopole antenna. MONOPOLY (15) [noun] A situation, by legal privilege or other agreement, in which solely one party (company, cartel etc.) exclusively provides a particular product or service, dominating that market and generally exerting powerful control over it. | [noun] An exclusive control over the trade or production of a commodity or service through exclusive possession. | [noun] The privilege granting the exclusive right to exert such control. MONORAIL (10) [noun] A railroad system where the trains run on one rail | [noun] A train running on a single rail MONOSOME (12) [noun] The chromosome whose homologous counterpart is missing in monosomy. MONOSOMY (15) [noun] A genetic disorder with the presence of only one chromosome (instead of the typical two in humans) from a pair. MONOTINT (10) [noun] A monochrome print. MONOTONE (10) [noun] A single unvaried tone of speech or a sound. | [noun] A piece of writing in one strain throughout. | [verb] To speak in a monotone. MONOTONY (13) [noun] Tedium as a result of repetition or a lack of variety. | [noun] The property of a monotonic function. | [noun] The quality of having an unvarying tone or pitch. MONOTYPE (15) [noun] A print made by creating the design using oil paint or printer's ink on metal or glass, then transferring the image directly to paper. | [noun] The technique of making such prints. | [noun] A monotypic taxon. MONOXIDE (18) [noun] Any oxide containing a single oxygen atom in each molecule or formula unit MONSIEUR (10) [noun] A man, especially a French gentleman. MONSOONS (10) [noun] Any of a number of winds associated with regions where most rain falls during a particular season. | [noun] Tropical rainy season when the rain lasts for several months with few interruptions. | [noun] The rains themselves. MONSTERA (10) [noun] Any of the plants of the genus Monstera. MONSTERS (10) [noun] A terrifying and dangerous creature. | [noun] A bizarre or whimsical creature. | [noun] A cruel or antisocial person, especially a criminal. MONTAGED (12) MONTAGES (11) [noun] A composite work, particularly an artwork, created by assembling or putting together other elements such as pieces of music, pictures, texts, videos, etc. | [noun] The art or process of doing this. MONTANES (10) MONTEITH (13) [noun] A bowl used for the cooling or washing of wine glasses. | [noun] A large 18th-century punchbowl, usually of silver, fluted and scalloped. | [noun] A cotton handkerchief with white spots on a coloured background. MONTEROS (10) MONUMENT (12) [noun] A structure built for commemorative or symbolic reasons, or as a memorial; a commemoration. | [noun] An important site owned by the community as a whole. | [noun] An exceptional or proud achievement. MONURONS (10) MOOCHERS (15) [noun] A person having a tendency to take advantage of the help of others, especially if making little effort to help themselves. MOOCHING (16) [verb] To wander around aimlessly, often causing irritation to others. | [verb] To beg, cadge, or sponge; to exploit or take advantage of others for personal gain. | [verb] To steal or filch. MOODIEST (11) [adjective] Given to sudden or frequent changes of mind; temperamental. | [adjective] Sulky or depressed. | [adjective] Dour, gloomy or brooding. MOONBEAM (14) [noun] A shaft of moonlight. | [noun] Moonlight generally. | [noun] Any of various Australasian lycaenid butterflies of the genus Philiris. MOONBOWS (15) MOONCALF (15) [noun] An abnormal mass within the uterus; a false conception. | [noun] A poorly-conceived idea or plan. | [noun] A dreamer, someone absent-minded or distracted; a fool, simpleton. MOONDUST (11) MOONEYES (13) [noun] A primitive ray-finned fish of the family Hiodontidae. MOONFISH (16) [noun] Any of various flat, oval marine fish species. MOONIEST (10) [adjective] Resembling the moon. | [adjective] Moonlit. | [adjective] Absent-minded. MOONLESS (10) MOONLETS (10) [noun] A very small body orbiting a planet, often as part of a ring. MOONLIKE (14) MOONPORT (12) MOONRISE (10) [noun] The time of day or night when the moon begins to rise over the horizon. MOONSAIL (10) MOONSEED (11) [noun] A twining plant of the genera Menispermum or Cocculus, in the family Menispermaceae. MOONSETS (10) [noun] The setting of the moon below the horizon MOONSHOT (13) [noun] The launching of a spacecraft or an object to orbit or land on the Moon. | [noun] An act of throwing or hitting a ball with a high trajectory. | [noun] An expensive, hard, or unlikely task of great potential impact. MOONWALK (17) [noun] An exploration of the Moon's surface on foot (by an astronaut). | [noun] A dance move in which the dancer slides backwards though the feet move as if walking forwards; the backslide. | [noun] A dance style in which the dancer appears to be moving in a low gravity environment. MOONWARD (14) MOONWORT (13) [noun] A small fern, Botrychium lunaria (lesser moonwort); later, any member of the genus. | [noun] Lunaria annua (greater moonwort); also known as Honesty and Actual Honesty. MOORAGES (11) [noun] The act of mooring. | [noun] A place where a ship or an aircraft may be moored. | [noun] The fee for mooring. MOORCOCK (18) [noun] The red grouse. MOORFOWL (16) [noun] The red grouse. MOORHENS (13) [noun] Any of various medium-sized water birds of the genus Gallinula, of the rail family, that feed in open water margins. | [noun] A female red grouse, Lagopus lagopus scotica. MOORIEST (10) MOORINGS (11) [noun] A place to moor a vessel. | [noun] The act of securing a vessel with a cable or anchor etc. | [noun] Something to which one adheres, or the means that helps one to maintain a stable position and keep one's identity - moral, intellectual, political, etc. MOORLAND (11) [noun] Open land that has an acidic peaty soil and is mostly covered with heather or bracken. MOORWORT (13) MOPBOARD (15) [noun] A skirting board (to protect a wall from wet mops) MOPERIES (12) MOPINGLY (16) MOPISHLY (18) MOQUETTE (19) [noun] A kind of fabric with a thick pile used for carpeting or to upholster seating etc. | [noun] An article covered in such material. MORAINAL (10) MORAINES (10) [noun] An accumulation of rocks and debris carried and deposited by a glacier. MORAINIC (12) MORALISE (10) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALISM (12) [noun] The act or practice of moralizing (making moral reflections or judging the morality of others). | [noun] A maxim or saying believed by the speaker to embody a moral truth; an instance of moralizing. | [noun] Religious practice that focuses on morality while placing little emphasis on doctrine or the metaphysical; adherence to a system of morality with little or no reference to religion. MORALIST (10) [noun] One who bases all decisions on perceived morals, especially one who enforces them with censorship. | [noun] A teacher of morals. MORALITY (13) [noun] Recognition of the distinction between good and evil or between right and wrong; respect for and obedience to the rules of right conduct; the mental disposition or characteristic of behaving in a manner intended to produce morally good results. | [noun] A set of social rules, customs, traditions, beliefs, or practices which specify proper, acceptable forms of conduct. | [noun] A set of personal guiding principles for conduct or a general notion of how to behave, whether respectable or not. MORALIZE (19) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORASSES (10) [noun] A tract of soft, wet ground; a marsh; a fen. | [noun] Anything that entraps or makes progress difficult. MORATORY (13) MORBIDLY (16) [adverb] In a morbid manner, or to a morbid degree. MORBIFIC (17) [adjective] That causes disease; sickening, pathogenic. | [adjective] Pertaining to or caused by disease; diseased. MORBILLI (12) [noun] Measles, rubeola MORCEAUX (19) [noun] A bit; a morsel. MORDANCY (16) MORDANTS (11) [noun] Any substance used to facilitate the fixing of a dye to a fibre; usually a metallic compound which reacts with the dye using chelation. | [noun] Any corrosive substance used in etching. | [noun] A glutinous size used as a ground for gilding, to make the gold leaf adhere. MORDENTS (11) [noun] An ornament consisting of a single alternation between a given pitch and the one immediately below it. MORELLES (10) MORELLOS (10) [noun] A variety of cultivated cherry, Prunus cerasus 'austera', having a dark skin MOREOVER (13) [adverb] In addition to what has been said; furthermore; additionally. MORESQUE (19) MORIBUND (13) [noun] A person who is near to dying. | [adjective] Approaching death; about to die; dying; expiring. | [adjective] Almost obsolete, nearing an end. MORNINGS (11) [noun] The part of the day from dawn to noon. | [noun] The part of the day between midnight and noon. | [noun] The early part of anything. MOROCCOS (14) [noun] A soft leather, made from goatskin, used especially in bookbinding. | [noun] A sheepskin leather in imitation of this. | [noun] A very strong ale, anciently brewed in Cumberland. MORONISM (12) MORONITY (13) MOROSELY (13) MOROSITY (13) MORPHEME (17) [noun] The smallest linguistic unit within a word that can carry a meaning. MORPHIAS (15) MORPHINE (15) [noun] A crystalline alkaloid (7,8-didehydro-4,5-epoxy-17-methyl-morphinan-3,6-diol), extracted from opium, the salts of which are soluble in water and are used as analgesics, anaesthetics and sedatives; it is one of a group of morphine alkaloids. MORPHINS (15) MORRIONS (10) MORRISES (10) MORSELED (11) MORTALLY (13) [adverb] Fatally; in such a way as to cause death. | [adverb] As a mortal. MORTARED (11) [verb] To use mortar or plaster to join two things together. | [verb] To pound in a mortar. | [verb] To fire a mortar (weapon). MORTGAGE (12) [noun] A special form of secured loan where the purpose of the loan must be specified to the lender, to purchase assets that must be fixed (not movable) property, such as a house or piece of farm land. The assets are registered as the legal property of the borrower but the lender can seize them and dispose of them if they are not satisfied with the manner in which the repayment of the loan is conducted by the borrower. Once the loan is fully repaid, the lender loses this right of seizure and the assets are then deemed to be unencumbered. | [noun] State of being pledged. | [verb] To borrow against a property, to obtain a loan for another purpose by giving away the right of seizure to the lender over a fixed property such as a house or piece of land; to pledge a property in order to get a loan. MORTICED (13) [verb] To cut a mortise in. | [verb] To join by a mortise and tenon. | [verb] To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters; to kern. MORTICES (12) [noun] A hole that is made to receive a tenon so as to form a joint. | [noun] Stability; power of adhesion. | [verb] To cut a mortise in. MORTISED (11) [verb] To cut a mortise in. | [verb] To join by a mortise and tenon. | [verb] To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters; to kern. MORTISER (10) MORTISES (10) [noun] A hole that is made to receive a tenon so as to form a joint. | [noun] Stability; power of adhesion. | [verb] To cut a mortise in. MORTMAIN (12) [noun] The perpetual, inalienable possession of lands by a corporation or non-personal entity such as a church. | [noun] A strong and inalienable possession. MORTUARY (13) [noun] A place where dead bodies are stored prior to burial or cremation. | [noun] A sort of ecclesiastical heriot, a customary gift claimed by, and due to, the minister of a parish on the death of a parishioner. | [adjective] Of, or relating to death or a funeral; funereal MOSASAUR (10) [noun] A large extinct marine reptile in the family Mosasauridae, dominant marine predator of the Cretaceous. Mosasaurs are considred to be in squmata, the same group that includes lizards and snakes. MOSCHATE (15) MOSEYING (14) [verb] To set off, get going; to start a journey. | [verb] To go off quickly: to hurry up. | [verb] To amble; to walk or proceed in a leisurely manner. MOSHAVIM (18) [noun] An Israeli town or settlement: in particular, a type of cooperative agricultural community of individual farms pioneered by the Labour Zionists during the second aliyah. MOSQUITO (19) [noun] A small flying insect of the family Culicidae, the females of which bite humans and animals and suck blood, leaving an itching bump on the skin, and sometimes carrying diseases like malaria and yellow fever. | [verb] To fly close to the ground, seemingly without a course. MOSSBACK (18) [noun] A turtle that, because of its age, has a growth of algae on its back. | [noun] An old fish. | [noun] (by extension) A very conservative or reactionary person, especially one with old-fashioned views. MOSSIEST (10) [adjective] Covered in or overgrown with moss. MOSSLIKE (14) MOSTESTS (10) MOTHBALL (15) [noun] (usually in plural) A small ball of chemical pesticide (typically naphthalene) and deodorant placed in or around clothing and other articles susceptible to damage from mold or moth larvae in order to protect them from this damage. | [verb] To store or shelve something no longer used. | [verb] To stop using (something), but keep it in good condition. MOTHERED (14) [verb] To give birth to or produce (as its female parent) a child. (Compare father.) | [verb] To treat as a mother would be expected to treat her child; to nurture. | [verb] To cause to contain mother. | [adjective] Thick, like mother (film or membrane on fermented liquids); viscid. MOTHERLY (16) [adjective] Befitting a mother; warm, caring, nurturing, protective, loving. MOTHIEST (13) [adjective] Infested with moths | [adjective] Moth-eaten MOTHLIKE (17) MOTILITY (13) MOTIONAL (10) MOTIONED (11) [verb] To gesture indicating a desired movement. | [verb] To introduce a motion in parliamentary procedure. | [verb] To make a proposal; to offer plans. MOTIONER (10) MOTIVATE (13) [verb] To provide someone with an incentive to do something; to encourage. | [verb] To animate; to propel; to cause to take action MOTIVING (14) MOTIVITY (16) MOTLEYER (13) MOTLIEST (10) MOTORBUS (12) [noun] A motorised bus, or coach. MOTORCAR (12) [noun] An enclosed passenger vehicle powered by an engine. MOTORDOM (13) MOTORING (11) [verb] To make a journey by motor vehicle; to drive. | [verb] To move at a brisk pace. | [verb] To leave. MOTORISE (10) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORIST (10) [noun] One who drives a motor vehicle. MOTORIZE (19) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORMAN (12) [noun] A man who controls a motor. | [noun] A person who operates a motor vehicle. | [noun] A train driver. MOTORMEN (12) [noun] A man who controls a motor. | [noun] A person who operates a motor vehicle. | [noun] A train driver. MOTORWAY (16) [noun] (parts of Australia) A broad highway designed for high speed traffic, having restrictions on the vehicle types permitted and merging lanes instead of cross traffic; in parts of the United States and other places called freeway. MOTTLERS (10) MOTTLING (11) [verb] To mark with blotches of different color, or shades of color, as if stained; to spot; to maculate. | [noun] Spots or blotches of different shades or colours MOUCHING (16) MOUCHOIR (15) [noun] A handkerchief. MOUFFLON (16) [noun] A species of wild sheep, Ovis orientalis musimon, syn. Ovis aries musimon, endemic to Sardinia and Corsica. MOUFLONS (13) [noun] A species of wild sheep, Ovis orientalis musimon, syn. Ovis aries musimon, endemic to Sardinia and Corsica. MOULAGES (11) MOULDERS (11) [verb] To decay or rot. MOULDIER (11) [adjective] Covered with mould. | [adjective] Neglected. | [adjective] Worthless; lousy; rotten MOULDING (12) [verb] To shape in or on a mold; to form into a particular shape; to give shape to. | [verb] To guide or determine the growth or development of; influence | [verb] To fit closely by following the contours of. MOULTERS (10) MOULTING (11) [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. | [noun] A moult; the shedding of skin, feathers, etc. MOUNDING (12) [verb] To fortify with a mound; add a barrier, rampart, etc. to. | [verb] To force or pile into a mound or mounds. | [noun] A mound of material. MOUNTAIN (10) [noun] An elevation of land of considerable dimensions rising more or less abruptly, forming a conspicuous figure in the landscape, usually having a small extent of surface at its summit. | [noun] Something very large in size or quantity; a huge amount; a great heap. | [noun] Of, belonging to, relating to, or found on a mountain; like a mountain in size; (of living things) growing or living on a mountain. MOUNTERS (10) MOUNTING (11) [verb] To get upon; to ascend; to climb. | [verb] To place oneself on (a horse, a bicycle, etc.); to bestride. | [verb] To cause to mount; to put on horseback; to furnish with animals for riding. MOURNERS (10) [noun] Someone filled with or expressing grief or sadness, especially over a death; someone who mourns. MOURNFUL (13) [adjective] Filled with grief or sadness; being in a state in which one mourns. | [adjective] Fit to inspire mourning; tragic. MOURNING (11) [verb] To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death). | [verb] To utter in a sorrowful manner. | [verb] To wear mourning. MOUSIEST (10) [adjective] Resembling a mouse. | [adjective] Abounding or infested with mice. MOUSINGS (11) MOUSSAKA (14) [noun] A dish consisting of layers of minced lamb or beef, sliced aubergine (eggplant) or potatoes, tomatoes and béchamel sauce, baked in the oven. MOUSSING (11) [verb] To apply mousse (styling cream). MOUTHERS (13) MOUTHFUL (16) [noun] The amount that will fit in a mouth. | [noun] Quite a bit. | [noun] Something difficult to pronounce or say. | [adjective] Bombastic or awkward. MOUTHIER (13) [adjective] Overly talkative, insolent, and loud. MOUTHILY (16) MOUTHING (14) [verb] To speak; to utter. | [verb] To make the actions of speech, without producing sound. | [verb] To utter with a voice that is overly loud or swelling. MOVABLES (15) [noun] Something which is movable; an article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of property not fixed, or not a part of real estate; generally, in the plural, goods; wares; furniture. MOVEABLE (15) [noun] Something which is movable; an article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of property not fixed, or not a part of real estate; generally, in the plural, goods; wares; furniture. | [adjective] Capable of being moved, lifted, carried, drawn, turned, or conveyed, or in any way made to change place or posture; not fixed or stationary | [adjective] Changing from one time to another MOVEABLY (18) MOVELESS (13) [adjective] Motionless. | [adjective] Immovable. MOVEMENT (15) [noun] Physical motion between points in space. | [noun] A system or mechanism for transmitting motion of a definite character, or for transforming motion, such as the wheelwork of a watch. | [noun] The impression of motion in an artwork, painting, novel etc. MOVIEDOM (16) MOVIEOLA (13) MOVINGLY (17) [adverb] In a moving manner. MOVIOLAS (13) MOZETTAS (19) MOZZETTA (28) [noun] A short cape worn by some Catholic clergy. MOZZETTE (28) [noun] A short cape worn by some Catholic clergy. MRIDANGA (12) MUCHACHO (20) [noun] An informal term of address, especially to a young man; similar to man, chap, dude, etc. MUCHNESS (15) [noun] Large size or bulk; bigness; size; magnitude (large or small). | [noun] Greatness in quantity, number, amount, or degree. MUCIDITY (16) MUCILAGE (13) [noun] A thick gluey substance (gum) produced by many plants and some microorganisms. MUCINOID (13) MUCINOUS (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or producing (one or more) mucins. MUCKIEST (16) [adjective] Covered in muck. | [adjective] Obscene, pornographic. MUCKLUCK (22) MUCKRAKE (20) [noun] A rake for scraping up dung. | [verb] To search for and expose corruption or scandal, especially as a form of investigative journalism. MUCKWORM (21) MUCOIDAL (13) MUCOSITY (15) MUCRONES (12) [noun] A pointed end, often sharp, abruptly terminating an organ, such as a projection at the tip of a leaf; the posterior tip of a cuttlebone; or the distal part of the furcula in Collembola. MUDDIEST (12) [adjective] Covered with or full of mud or wet soil. | [adjective] With mud or other sediment brought into suspension, turbid. | [adjective] Not clear; mixed up or blurry. MUDDLERS (12) [noun] A person or thing that muddles. | [noun] A tool used in muddling, used to mash and mix. MUDDLING (13) [verb] To mix together, to mix up; to confuse. | [verb] To mash slightly for use in a cocktail. | [verb] To dabble in mud. MUDDYING (16) [verb] To get mud on (something). | [verb] To make a mess of, or create confusion with regard to; to muddle. | [noun] The process of making something muddy or obscure. MUDFLATS (14) [noun] Flat land along a river, lying few feet above normal high water, often consisting of alluvial deposits and naturally fertile. | [noun] A muddy expanse of flat land, especially such land as a river bed exposed at low tide. MUDFLOWS (17) [noun] A type of landslide characterized by large flows of mud and water. | [noun] The dried-out product of such a flow. MUDGUARD (13) [noun] A cover over the wheels of a vehicle, or a flap behind that wheel, to prevent water and mud being projected. MUDHOLES (14) MUDLARKS (15) [noun] A pig; pork. | [noun] One who scavenges in river or harbor mud for items of value, especially in London. | [noun] A child who plays in the mud; a child that spends most of its time in the streets, a street urchin. MUDPACKS (19) [noun] A paste of earth or clay, applied to the face for therapeutic or cosmetic purposes. MUDPUPPY (20) [noun] An aquatic salamander of the family Proteidae. MUDROCKS (17) MUDROOMS (13) [noun] A room used as a barrier between outdoors and indoors. MUDSILLS (11) MUDSLIDE (12) [noun] A geological event in which viscous mud flows down an incline. | [noun] A mixed drink consisting of vodka, Kahlua and Bailey's. MUDSTONE (11) [noun] A fine-grained sedimentary rock whose original constituents were clays or muds. MUEDDINS (12) MUENSTER (10) MUEZZINS (28) [noun] The person who issues the call to prayer from one of the minarets of a mosque. MUFFLERS (16) [noun] Part of the exhaust pipe of a car that dampens the noise the engine produces. | [noun] A silencer or suppressor fitted to a gun. | [noun] A type of scarf. MUFFLING (17) [verb] To wrap (a person, face etc.) in fabric or another covering, for warmth or protection; often with up. | [verb] To wrap up or cover (a source of noise) in order to deaden the sound. | [verb] To mute or deaden (a sound etc.). MUGGIEST (12) [adjective] (Of the weather, air, etc) humid, or hot and humid. | [adjective] Wet or mouldy MUGGINGS (13) [noun] A quick violent robbery of a person, usually in a public place. MUGWORTS (14) [noun] Any of several aromatic plants of the genus Artemisia native to Europe and Asia. | [noun] Artemisia vulgaris, traditionally used medicinally. MUGWUMPS (18) [noun] An independent neutral politician, especially in reference to the 1884 U.S. presidential election. | [noun] An aloof or self-important but inconsequential person. MULATTOS (10) [noun] A person of mixed black and white descent, especially a person with one black and one white parent. MULBERRY (15) [noun] Any of several trees, of the genus Morus, having edible fruits. | [noun] The fruit of this tree. | [noun] A dark purple colour tinted with red. MULCHING (16) [verb] To apply mulch. | [verb] To turn into mulch. | [noun] The act of preparing/applying a mulch. MULCTING (13) [verb] To impose such a fine or penalty. | [verb] To swindle (someone) out of money. | [noun] The imposition of a fine or penalty. MULETEER (10) [noun] A mule driver. MULISHLY (16) MULLEINS (10) [noun] Any of several European and Asian plants, of the genus Verbascum, that have yellow flowers and downy leaves; the velvet plant. MULLIGAN (11) [noun] Mulligan stew. | [noun] An unpenalized chance to re-take a stroke that went awry. | [noun] An opportunity (sometimes penalized) for a player to reshuffle their cards and draw a new initial hand at the beginning of a game. MULLIONS (10) [noun] A vertical bar between the panes of glass or casements of a window or the panels of a screen. MULLITES (10) MULLOCKS (16) MULLOCKY (19) MULTIAGE (11) MULTICAR (12) [adjective] Using or involving multiple cars MULTIFID (14) [adjective] Cleft into many parts or lobes. MULTIJET (17) MULTIPED (13) MULTIPLE (12) [noun] A whole number that can be divided by another number with no remainder. | [noun] Price-earnings ratio. | [noun] One of a set of the same thing; a duplicate. MULTIPLY (15) [noun] An act or instance of multiplying. | [verb] To increase the amount, degree or number of (something). | [verb] (with by) To perform multiplication on (a number). | [adverb] In many or multiple ways. MULTITON (10) MULTIUSE (10) MULTURES (10) MUMBLERS (14) MUMBLING (15) [verb] To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. | [verb] To chew something gently with closed lips. | [noun] An act in which someone mumbles something MUMMYING (18) MUNCHERS (15) MUNCHIES (15) [noun] Food, especially convenience snack foods. | [noun] (with the definite article) Hunger, especially a craving for food as a result of cannabis or alcohol consumption. MUNCHING (16) [verb] To chew with a grinding, crunching sound, and with the mouth closed — often used with on. | [verb] To eat vigorously or with excitement. | [noun] The sound or action of one who munches. MUNCHKIN (19) [noun] A domestic cat breed with short legs. | [noun] The empty space in the center of a donut. | [noun] A small ball-shaped pastry, made in the same manner as a donut, roughly the size of the hole in a donut. MUNDUNGO (12) MUNGOOSE (11) MUNIMENT (12) [noun] A deed, or other official document kept as proof of ownership or rights or privileges; an archived document. | [noun] (in the plural) Things which a person or place is equipped with; effects, furnishings, accoutrements. | [noun] Something used as a defence. MUNITION (10) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Materials of war: armaments, weapons and ammunition. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural, NATO) Bombs, rockets, missiles (complete explosive devices, in contrast to e.g. guns). | [noun] A tower or fortification. MUNNIONS (10) MUNSTERS (10) MUNTINGS (11) MUNTJACS (19) [noun] Any of various species of east Asian deer of the genus Muntiacus, having short antlers and a barking call. MUNTJAKS (21) MUONIUMS (12) MURAENID (11) MURALIST (10) MURDERED (12) [verb] To deliberately kill (a person or persons) without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To kick someone's ass or chew someone out (used to express one’s anger at somebody). MURDEREE (11) MURDERER (11) [noun] A person who commits murder. MURIATED (11) MURIATES (10) [noun] Chloride MURICATE (12) [adjective] Covered with short rough points or studs | [adjective] Covered with crystals MURKIEST (14) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MURMURED (13) [verb] To grumble; to complain in a low, muttering voice, or express discontent at or against someone or something. | [verb] To speak or make low, indistinguishable noise; to mumble, mutter. | [verb] To say (something) indistinctly, to mutter. MURMURER (12) MURPHIES (15) [noun] An Irish or white potato. MURRAINS (10) [noun] Plague, infectious disease, pestilence. | [noun] Any of several highly infectious diseases of cattle such as anthrax. MURRELET (10) [noun] Any of several species of small seabirds, in the genera Brachyramphus and Synthliboramphus of the auk family, found in the North Pacific. MURRHINE (13) MURTHERS (13) [noun] The crime of deliberately killing another person without justification. | [noun] The act of deliberate killing of another person or other being without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [noun] (in jurisdictions which use the felony murder rule) The commission of an act which abets the commission of a crime the commission of which causes the death of a human. MUSCADEL (13) [noun] Muscatel (wine or grape) MUSCADET (13) [noun] A white grape grown chiefly in the Loire valley of France, or a dry white wine made from this grape MUSCATEL (12) [noun] A muscat grape or raisin, especially one from southern Spain. | [noun] A sweet wine made from these grapes. MUSCLING (13) [verb] To use force to make progress, especially physical force. | [noun] Muscles in the body, meant collectively | [noun] The process of muscle formation or growth MUSCULAR (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, or connected with muscles. | [adjective] Brawny, thewy, having strength. | [adjective] Having large, well-developed muscles. MUSETTES (10) [noun] Any of various form of small bagpipe, especially with a bellows, having a soft sound, and once popular in France. | [noun] A dance tune or pastoral air that imitates this instrument. | [noun] A small instrument similar to an oboe or shawm. MUSHIEST (13) [adjective] Resembling or having the consistency of mush; semiliquid, pasty, or granular. | [adjective] Soft; squishy. | [adjective] Overly sappy, corny, or cheesy; maudlin. MUSHROOM (15) [noun] Any of the fleshy fruiting bodies of fungi typically produced above ground on soil or on their food sources (such as decaying wood). | [noun] A fungus producing such fruiting bodies. | [noun] Champignon or Agaricus bisporus, the mushroom species most commonly used in cooking. MUSICALE (12) [noun] A musical entertainment, usually private and typically involving classical music MUSICALS (12) [noun] A stage performance, show or film that involves singing, dancing and musical numbers performed by the cast as well as acting. | [noun] A meeting or a party for a musical entertainment; a musicale. MUSICIAN (12) [noun] A composer, conductor, or performer of music; specifically, a person who sings and/or plays a musical instrument as a hobby, an occupation, or a profession. MUSINGLY (14) MUSKETRY (17) [noun] The technique of using small arms such as muskets. | [noun] A collection of muskets or musketeers. | [noun] Musket fire. MUSKIEST (14) [adjective] Having the scent of musk MUSKRATS (14) [noun] A large aquatic rodent (Ondatra zibethicus). | [noun] Any of several species of shrews in the family Soricidae, especially the Asian house shrew, Suncus murinus MUSPIKES (16) MUSQUASH (22) [noun] The muskrat, Ondatra zibethicus. MUSSIEST (10) MUSTACHE (15) [noun] A growth of facial hair between the nose and the upper lip. MUSTANGS (11) [noun] A small, hardy, naturalized (feral) horse of the North American west. | [noun] A merchant marine who joined the U.S. Navy as a commissioned officer during the American Civil War. | [noun] (generalized) A commissioned officer who started military service as an enlisted person. MUSTARDS (11) [noun] A plant of certain species of the genus Brassica, or of related genera (especially Sinapis alba, in the family Brassicaceae, with yellow flowers, and linear seed pods). | [noun] Powder or paste made from seeds of the mustard plant, and used as a condiment or a spice. | [noun] The leaves of the mustard plant, used as a salad. MUSTARDY (14) MUSTERED (11) [verb] To show, exhibit. | [verb] To be gathered together for parade, inspection, exercise, or the like (especially of a military force); to come together as parts of a force or body. | [verb] To collect, call or assemble together, such as troops or a group for inspection, orders, display etc. MUSTIEST (10) [adjective] Having a stale odor. MUTAGENS (11) [noun] Any agent or substance that can cause genetic mutation. MUTATING (11) [verb] To undergo mutation. | [verb] To cause mutation. | [adjective] Causing or tending to cause mutation. MUTATION (10) [noun] Any alteration or change. | [noun] Any heritable change of the base-pair sequence of genetic material. | [noun] A mutant. MUTATIVE (13) MUTCHKIN (19) [noun] A unit of fluid capacity approximately equal to three-quarters of an imperial pint (0.43 litres) MUTENESS (10) MUTICOUS (12) MUTILATE (10) [verb] To physically harm as to impair use, notably by cutting off or otherwise disabling a vital part, such as a limb. | [verb] To destroy beyond recognition. | [verb] To render imperfect or defective. MUTINEER (10) [noun] Someone who participates in mutiny. | [verb] To mutiny. MUTINIED (11) [verb] To commit mutiny. MUTINIES (10) [noun] An organized rebellion against a legally constituted authority, especially by seamen against their officers. | [noun] Violent commotion; tumult; strife. | [verb] To commit mutiny. MUTINING (11) MUTINOUS (10) [adjective] Likely to commit mutiny. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or constituting mutiny. MUTTERED (11) [verb] To utter words, especially complaints or angry expressions, indistinctly or with a low voice and lips partly closed; to say under one's breath. | [verb] To speak softly and incoherently, or with imperfect articulations. | [verb] To make a sound with a low, rumbling noise. MUTTERER (10) MUTUALLY (13) [adverb] In the same way, each to the other; reciprocally | [adverb] In a shared manner; equally; affecting all parties the same way MUZZIEST (28) [adjective] Hazy, indistinct, blurred, unfocussed. | [adjective] Dazed; bewildered; tipsy. MUZZLERS (28) MUZZLING (29) [verb] To bind or confine an animal's mouth by putting a muzzle, as to prevent it from eating or biting. | [verb] To restrain (from speaking, expressing opinion or acting); gag, silence, censor. | [verb] To veil, mask, muffle. MYALGIAS (14) MYCELIAL (15) MYCELIAN (15) MYCELIUM (17) [noun] The vegetative part of any fungus, consisting of a mass of branching, threadlike hyphae, often underground. MYCELOID (16) MYCETOMA (17) [noun] Chronic subcutaneous inflammation caused by infection with certain bacteria or fungi. MYCOLOGY (19) [noun] The study of fungi, in the wide sense. MYELINES (13) MYELINIC (15) MYELITIS (13) [noun] Inflammation of the spinal cord or of bone marrow. MYELOMAS (15) [noun] A malignant tumour arising from cells of the bone marrow, specifically plasma cells. MYLONITE (13) [noun] Any rock that has undergone modifications due to dynamic recrystallization following plastic flow; a schist created by crushed or ground rock. MYNHEERS (16) MYOBLAST (15) MYOGENIC (16) [adjective] Forming muscle fibres; pertaining to myogenesis. | [adjective] Originating in muscle tissue; specifically, pertaining to contractile activity that is produced by the muscles independent of any neural mechanism. MYOGRAPH (19) MYOLOGIC (16) MYOPATHY (21) [noun] Any of several diseases of muscle that are not caused by nerve disorders MYOSCOPE (17) MYOSITIS (13) [noun] Inflammation of the muscles. MYOSOTES (13) [noun] (botany) Myosotis. MYOSOTIS (13) [noun] Any plant of the genus Myosotis, the forget-me-nots. MYOTOMES (15) [noun] In vertebrate embryonic development, a group of tissues formed from somites that develop into the body wall muscle. MYOTONIA (13) [noun] A symptom of several muscular disorders characterized by the slow relaxation of the muscles after voluntary contraction or electrical stimulation. MYOTONIC (15) MYRIAPOD (16) [noun] Any arthropod (such as centipedes and millipedes) of the subphylum Myriapoda MYRIOPOD (16) MYRMIDON (16) [noun] A soldier or a subordinate civil officer who executes orders of a superior without protest or pity (sometimes applied to bailiffs, constables, etc). MYSTAGOG (15) MYSTICAL (15) [adjective] Relating to mystics or mysticism. | [adjective] Having a spiritual or magical significance that transcends human understanding. | [adjective] Inspiring a sense of spiritual mystery, awe, and fascination. MYSTICLY (18) MYSTIQUE (22) [noun] An aura of heightened interest, meaning or mystery surrounding a person or thing. MYTHICAL (18) [adjective] Existing in myth. | [adjective] (by extension) Not real; false or fabricated. MYTHIEST (16) MYXEDEMA (23) [noun] A form of cutaneous and dermal edema that is secondary to increased deposition of connective tissue components in subcutaneous tissue. MYXOCYTE (25) MYXOMATA (22) [noun] A tumor of primitive connective tissue. NABOBISM (14) NAMEABLE (12) NAMELESS (10) [adjective] Not having a name; unnamed. | [adjective] Whose name is unknown; unidentified or obscure. | [adjective] Anonymous NAMESAKE (14) [noun] One who is named after another or for whom another is named. | [noun] (by extension) A ship or a building that is named after someone or something. | [noun] A person with the same name as another. NAMETAGS (11) [noun] A tag with one's name inscribed on it. NANOGRAM (11) [noun] A unit of mass equal to 0.000 000 001 grams. Symbol: ng NAPALMED (13) [verb] To spray or attack with this substance. NAPIFORM (15) NARCISMS (12) NATIVISM (13) [noun] A policy of favoring native-born inhabitants over immigrants. | [noun] The policy of perpetuating the culture of the natives of a colonised country. | [noun] The doctrine that some skills or abilities are innate and not learned. NATRIUMS (10) NATURISM (10) [noun] The belief in or practice of going nude in social settings, often in mixed-gender groups, specifically either in cultures where this is not the norm or for health reasons. | [noun] The worship of the powers of nature. NAUMACHY (18) NELUMBOS (12) NEMATODE (11) [noun] A worm of the large phylum Nematoda, such as a roundworm or threadworm. NEOMORPH (15) NEOMYCIN (15) [noun] A broad-spectrum aminoglycoside antibiotic that is found in many topical medications NEOPLASM (12) [noun] An abnormal new growth of disorganized tissue in animals or plants. NEPHRISM (15) NEPOTISM (12) [noun] The favoring of relatives or personal friends because of their relationship rather than because of their abilities. NEUMATIC (12) NEUROMAS (10) [noun] A tumour composed of nerve cells. NEWCOMER (15) [noun] One who has recently come to a community; a recent arrival. | [noun] A new participant in some activity; a neophyte. NEWSROOM (13) [noun] The office of a news organisation, especially that part of it where the journalists work and news stories are processed. | [noun] A room where newspapers and magazines are available for reading. NGULTRUM (11) [noun] The official currency of Bhutan, equal to 100 chetrums. NICKNAME (16) [noun] A familiar, invented given name for a person or thing used instead of the actual name of the person or thing. | [noun] A kind of byname that describes a person by a characteristic of that person. | [verb] To give a nickname to (a person or thing). NIHILISM (13) [noun] (usually uncountable) The view that all endeavours are devoid of objective meaning. | [noun] (usually uncountable) The rejection of, or opposition to, religious beliefs, (inherent or objective) moral principles, legal rules, etc., often due to the view that life is meaningless (sense 1). | [noun] (usually uncountable) The rejection of non-proven or non-rationalized assertions in the social and political spheres of society. NIMBLEST (12) [adjective] Adept at taking or grasping | [adjective] Quick and light in movement or action. | [adjective] Quick-witted and alert. NIMBUSED (13) NIMBUSES (12) [noun] A circle of light; a halo. | [noun] A gray rain cloud. NIOBIUMS (12) NIZAMATE (19) NOBELIUM (12) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol No) with an atomic number of 102. NOBLEMAN (12) [noun] A peer; an aristocrat; ranks range from baron to king to emperor. NOBLEMEN (12) [noun] A peer; an aristocrat; ranks range from baron to king to emperor. NOMADISM (13) NOMARCHS (15) [noun] Chief administrator or magistrate of a nome or nomarchy NOMARCHY (18) [noun] Nome NOMBRILS (12) [noun] A point halfway between the fess point and the middle base point of an escutcheon. NOMINALS (10) NOMINATE (10) [verb] To name someone as a candidate for a particular role or position, including that of an office. | [verb] To entitle, confer a name upon. | [adjective] Nominotypical NOMINEES (10) [noun] A person named, or designated, by another, to any office, duty, or position; one nominated, or proposed, by others for office or for election to office. | [noun] A person or organisation in whose name a security is registered though true ownership is held by another party, called nominator, especially for the purpose of concealing the identity of the nominator. | [noun] A person to whom the holder of a copyhold estate surrenders their interest. NOMISTIC (12) NOMOGRAM (13) [noun] A diagram in which the relationship between three variables is represented by a straight line or curve for each variable; the value of the third variable corresponding to particular values of the first two is obtained by drawing a straight line through the points on the first two curves that represent particular values of the first two variables and noting the point at which the line intersects the third line or curve. NOMOLOGY (14) NONCRIME (12) NONEMPTY (15) [adjective] Not empty, containing something. | [adjective] Of a set, containing at least one element, thereby being distinct from the empty set. NONHUMAN (13) [noun] A creature or thing that is not human. | [adjective] Not human; not of the human race. NONIMAGE (11) NONMAJOR (17) NONMETAL (10) [noun] An element, such as phosphorus or chlorine, that does not have the chemical or physical properties of a metal. NONMETRO (10) NONMODAL (11) NONMONEY (13) NONMORAL (10) [adjective] Not moral; unconnected with morals; having no relation to ethics or morals; not involving ethical or moral considerations. NONMUSIC (12) NONOHMIC (15) NONTRUMP (12) NOONTIME (10) [noun] Approximately noon. NORMALCY (15) [noun] The state of being normal; the fact of being normal; normality. NORMALLY (13) [adverb] Under normal conditions or circumstances; usually; most of the time | [adverb] In the expected or customary manner. | [adverb] To a usual or customary extent or degree. NORMANDE (11) NORMLESS (10) NOSTRUMS (10) [noun] A medicine or remedy in conventional use which has not been proven to have any desirable medical effects. | [noun] An ineffective but favorite remedy for a problem, usually involving political action. NOUMENAL (10) NOUMENON (10) [noun] A thing as it is independent of any conceptualization or perception by the human mind, postulated by practical reason but existing in a condition which is in principle unknowable and unexperienceable. NUMBERED (13) [verb] To label (items) with numbers; to assign numbers to (items). | [verb] To total or count; to amount to. NUMBERER (12) NUMBFISH (18) [noun] An electric ray of the family Narcinidae, capable of delivering numbing shocks. NUMBNESS (12) [noun] Absent or reduced sensitivity to cutaneous stimulation. | [noun] Inability or reduced ability to experience emotion. NUMERACY (15) [noun] The quality of being numerate; numerical skill. NUMERALS (10) [noun] A symbol that is not a word and represents a number, such as the Arabic numerals 1, 2, 3 and the Roman numerals I, V, X, L. | [noun] A word representing a number. | [noun] A card whose rank is a number (usually including the ace as 1). NUMERARY (13) NUMERATE (10) [verb] To count | [adjective] Having the ability to understand numbers and perform arithmetic. NUMERICS (12) NUMEROUS (10) [adjective] Indefinitely large numerically, many. NUMINOUS (10) [adjective] Of or relating to a numen (divinity); indicating the presence of a divinity. | [adjective] Evoking a sense of the mystical, sublime, or transcendent; awe-inspiring. NUMMULAR (12) [adjective] Of or relating to coins or money. | [adjective] Coin-shaped; flattened, with a rounded form, as disk. | [adjective] Characterized by round lesions. NUMSKULL (14) [noun] A dunce, mentally dull or stupid person. | [noun] A person who refuses to learn or grow mentally. | [noun] A traditional name for a fool who serves as the butt of jokes about stupidity. NUTMEATS (10) NYMPHEAN (18) NYMPHETS (18) [noun] A small nymph. | [noun] A sexually attractive girl or young woman. OATMEALS (10) OBEAHISM (15) OBELISMS (12) ODDMENTS (12) [noun] A part of something that is left over, such as a piece of cloth. | [noun] Something that does not match the things it is with or cannot easily be categorized; a miscellaneous item. | [noun] An item that was originally part of a set but is sold individually; an excess item of stock. ODOMETER (11) [noun] An instrument attached to the wheel of a vehicle, to measure the distance traveled. | [noun] A wheel used by surveyors, which registers distance traveled. ODOMETRY (14) OEDEMATA (11) OENOMELS (10) OESTRUMS (10) OFFRAMPS (18) [noun] A segment of roadway that directs vehicular traffic from a freeway onto local roads OFTTIMES (13) [adverb] Often; frequently OGHAMIST (14) OGREISMS (11) OHMMETER (15) [noun] A portable device for measuring relatively small values of electrical resistance. OILCAMPS (14) OINOMELS (10) OINTMENT (10) [noun] A viscous preparation of oils and/or fats, usually containing medication, used as a treatment or as an emollient. | [noun] A substance used to anoint, as in religious rituals. OLIBANUM (12) [noun] A gum resin from trees of the genus Boswellia, formerly used as a medicine and now mainly as incense. OLIGOMER (11) [noun] A compound intermediate between a monomer and a polymer, normally having a specified number of units between about five and a hundred. OLYMPIAD (16) [noun] A period of four years, by which the ancient Greeks reckoned time, being the interval from one celebration of the Olympic games to another, beginning with the victory of Corbus in the foot race, which took place in the year 776 BC; as, the era of the olympiads. | [noun] An occurrence of the Olympic games. | [noun] A competition or series of competitions resembling an Olympiad, especially in science. OMELETTE (10) [noun] A dish made with beaten eggs cooked in a frying pan without stirring, flipped over to cook on both sides, and sometimes filled or topped with cheese, chives or other foodstuffs. | [noun] A form of shellcode that searches the address space for multiple small blocks of data ("eggs") and recombines them into a larger block to be executed. OMENTUMS (12) OMICRONS (12) [noun] The 15th letter of Classical and Modern Greek, and the 16th in Ancient and Old Greek. OMIKRONS (14) OMISSION (10) [noun] The act of omitting. | [noun] The act of neglecting to perform an action one has an obligation to do. | [noun] Something deleted or left out. OMISSIVE (13) OMITTERS (10) OMITTING (11) [verb] To leave out or exclude. | [verb] To fail to perform. | [verb] To neglect or take no notice of. OMNIARCH (15) OMNIFORM (15) OMNIMODE (13) OMNIVORA (13) OMNIVORE (13) [noun] An animal which is able to consume both plants (like a herbivore) and meat (like a carnivore). OMOPHAGY (19) [noun] The eating of raw flesh. OMPHALOS (15) [noun] An ancient religious stone artifact, or baetylus, used to denote the direction of the "center" of the world. | [noun] The theological proposition that the world was created with certain indicia of a history which had not actually occurred (such as the humans who had never been connected to umbilical cords being created with navels). | [noun] The navel. ONANISMS (10) ONCIDIUM (13) ONCOMING (13) [verb] To arrive; come to; come on. | [noun] Approach, onset | [adjective] Approaching; coming closer ONDOGRAM (12) ONSTREAM (10) [adjective] Being produced | [adjective] Available for use OOGAMETE (11) OOGAMIES (11) OOGAMOUS (11) [adjective] Of or relating to oogamy OOGONIUM (11) [noun] An immature ovarian egg within a developing fetus | [noun] A sac (the female gametangium) containing oospheres in algae or fungi. OOMIACKS (16) OOMPAHED (16) [verb] To produce an oom-pah sound. OOSPERMS (12) OPIUMISM (14) OPOSSUMS (12) [noun] Any American marsupial of the family Didelphidae. The common species of the United States is Didelphis virginiana. OPTIMISE (12) [verb] (originally intransitive) To act optimistically or as an optimist. | [verb] To make (something) optimal. | [verb] To make (something) more efficient, such as a computer program. OPTIMISM (14) [noun] A tendency to expect the best, or at least, a favourable outcome | [noun] The doctrine that this world is the best of all possible worlds | [noun] The belief that good will eventually triumph over evil OPTIMIST (12) [noun] A person who expects a favourable outcome | [noun] A believer in optimism OPTIMIZE (21) [verb] (originally intransitive) To act optimistically or as an optimist. | [verb] To make (something) optimal. | [verb] To make (something) more efficient, such as a computer program. OPTIMUMS (14) [noun] The best or most favorable condition, or the greatest amount or degree possible under specific sets of comparable circumstances. ORALISMS (10) ORGANISM (11) [noun] A discrete and complete living thing, such as animal, plant, fungus or microorganism. | [noun] (by extension) Any complex thing with properties normally associated with living things. ORGANUMS (11) ORGASMIC (13) [adjective] Of or relating to orgasms. | [adjective] Prone to or capable of having orgasms. | [adjective] Very exciting or stimulating. ORIGAMIS (11) ORIGANUM (11) [noun] Any herbaceous plant of the genus Origanum ORNAMENT (10) [noun] An element of decoration; that which embellishes or adorns. | [noun] A Christmas tree decoration. | [noun] A musical flourish that is unnecessary to the overall melodic or harmonic line, but serves to decorate or "ornament" that line. OROMETER (10) ORPIMENT (12) [noun] Arsenic trisulphide, occurring naturally in crystals or massive deposits, formerly used as a dye or pigment OSMOSING (11) [verb] To diffuse by osmosis. | [verb] To cause to diffuse by osmosis. OSMUNDAS (11) [noun] Royal fern, osmund (of genus Osmunda) OSTEOMAS (10) OSTMARKS (14) [noun] The currency unit of the former German Democratic Republic (aka GDR, DDR, East Germany) until 1990, abbreviated DDM. OSTOMIES (10) [noun] A surgical procedure to provide an exit point for the waste of an organism. | [noun] An exit point created by such surgical procedure. OTTOMANS (10) [noun] An upholstered sofa, without arms or a back, sometimes with a compartment for storing linen, etc. | [noun] A low stool or thick cushion used to rest the feet or as a seat. | [noun] A fabric with a pronounced ribbed or corded effect, often made of silk or a mixture of cotton and silk-like yarns. OUTBEAMS (12) OUTBLOOM (12) OUTCHARM (15) OUTCLIMB (14) OUTCLOMB (14) OUTCOMES (12) [noun] That which is produced or occurs as a result of an event or process. | [noun] The result of a random trial. An element of a sample space. | [noun] The anticipated or desired results or evidence of a learning experience (often used in the phrase learning outcomes). OUTDREAM (11) OUTHOMER (13) [verb] To score more home runs than another player. OUTHUMOR (13) OUTJUMPS (19) [verb] To jump better than; particularly higher than, or further than. OUTMARCH (15) OUTMATCH (15) [verb] To surpass or be better than something or someone else OUTMODED (12) [verb] To render no longer fashionable. | [adjective] Unfashionable | [adjective] Obsolete OUTMODES (11) OUTMOVED (14) OUTMOVES (13) OUTSHAME (13) OUTSMART (10) [verb] To beat in a competition of wits. OUTSMILE (10) OUTSMOKE (14) OUTSWIMS (13) OUTTRUMP (12) OVERCAME (15) [verb] To surmount (a physical or abstract obstacle); to prevail over, to get the better of. | [verb] To win or prevail in some sort of battle, contest, etc. | [verb] To come or pass over; to spread over. OVERCOME (15) [noun] The burden or recurring theme in a song. | [noun] A surplus. | [verb] To surmount (a physical or abstract obstacle); to prevail over, to get the better of. OVERCRAM (15) OVERMANS (13) [verb] To provide with too many personnel; overstaff. OVERMANY (16) OVERMEEK (17) OVERMELT (13) OVERMILD (14) OVERMILK (17) OVERMINE (13) OVERMUCH (18) [adjective] Excessive | [adverb] Too much; overly much | [pronoun] Too much OVERPUMP (17) OVERTAME (13) OVERTIME (13) [noun] Working time outside of one's regular hours. | [noun] The rate of pay, usually higher, for work done outside of or in addition to regular hours. | [noun] An extra period of play when a contest has a tie score at the end of regulation. (British: extra time.) OVERTRIM (13) OVERWARM (16) OXAZEPAM (28) OXYMORON (20) [noun] A figure of speech in which two words or phrases with opposing meanings are used together intentionally for effect. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) A contradiction in terms. OXYSOMES (20) PABULUMS (14) PACHADOM (18) PACIFISM (17) [noun] The conviction that it is morally wrong to settle disputes (especially between countries) by war or other violent means. | [noun] The additional challenge of winning a game without attacking any enemy characters. PAEANISM (12) PAGANDOM (14) PAGANISM (13) [noun] Any indigenous polytheistic religion. | [noun] Any of a class of religions often associated with nature rituals. PAJAMAED (20) [adjective] Wearing pajamas. PALIMONY (15) [noun] A form of alimony paid to a former partner in a nonmarital relationship. PALLIUMS (12) [noun] A large cloak worn by Greek philosophers and teachers. | [noun] A woolen liturgical vestment resembling a collar and worn over the chasuble in the Western Christian liturgical tradition, conferred on archbishops by the Pope, equivalent to the Eastern Christian omophorion. | [noun] The mantle of a mollusc. PALMATED (13) PALMETTE (12) [noun] A motif in decorative art resembling the fan-shaped leaves of a palm tree. PALMETTO (12) [noun] Any member of either of two closely related genera of New World palms, of the family Arecaceae: | [noun] A hat made of palmetto leaves. | [noun] A native or resident of the US state of South Carolina. PALMIEST (12) [adjective] Made out of palm leaves or palm sap. | [adjective] Of, related to, or abounding in palm trees. | [adjective] Prosperous, flourishing, booming or thriving. PALMISTS (12) [noun] A fortuneteller who uses palmistry. PALMITIN (12) PALMLIKE (16) PALMYRAS (15) [noun] A palm, Borassus flabelliformis, with straight black upright trunk and palmate leaves, whose wood, fruit, and roots can be used for many purposes. PALOMINO (12) [noun] A horse with a golden-colored coat and a white or cream-colored mane and tail. PALUDISM (13) PAMPEANS (14) PAMPERED (15) [verb] To treat with excessive care, attention or indulgence. | [verb] To feed luxuriously. PAMPERER (14) PAMPEROS (14) [noun] A violent wind from the west or southwest, which sweeps over the pampas of South America and the adjacent seas, often doing great damage. PAMPHLET (17) [noun] A small booklet of printed informational matter, often unbound, having only a paper cover. PANDEMIC (15) [noun] A pandemic disease; a disease that affects a wide geographical area and a large proportion of the population. | [adjective] Of a disease: epidemic over a wide geographical area and affecting a large proportion of the population; also, of or pertaining to a disease of this nature. | [adjective] (usually derogatory) General, widespread. | [adjective] Of Aphrodite Pandemos, the earthly aspect of the Greek goddess of beauty and love Aphrodite and her Roman counterpart Venus, as contrasted with the heavenly aspect known as Aphrodite Urania: earthly, physical, sensual. PANHUMAN (15) PANICUMS (14) PANMIXES (19) PANMIXIA (19) [noun] A situation in which an individual is just as likely to mate with another randomly chosen individual as any other in the population. | [noun] The cessation of natural selection, as on a useless organ. PANMIXIS (19) PANORAMA (12) [noun] An unbroken view of an entire surrounding area. | [noun] A picture or series of pictures representing a continuous scene. | [noun] A comprehensive survey. PANTOUMS (12) [noun] A poem, similar to a villanelle, that comprises a series of quatrains, the second and fourth lines of each stanza repeated as the first and third lines of the next. PARADIGM (14) [noun] A pattern, a way of doing something, especially a pattern of thought, a system of beliefs, a conceptual framework. | [noun] An example serving as the model for such a pattern. | [noun] A set of all forms which contain a common element, especially the set of all inflectional forms of a word or a particular grammatical category. PARAFORM (15) PARAMENT (12) PARAMOUR (12) [noun] (somewhat obsolete) An illicit lover, either male or female. | [noun] The Virgin Mary or Jesus Christ (when addressed by a person of the opposite sex). | [adverb] (of loving, etc.) Passionately, out of sexual desire. PARECISM (14) PARONYMS (15) [noun] A word derived from the same root or stem as another word. | [noun] A near-homophone, a word that sounds like another word. PAROXYSM (22) [noun] A random or sudden outburst (of activity). | [noun] An explosive event during a volcanic eruption. | [noun] A sudden recurrence of a disease, such as a seizure or a coughing fit. PASHADOM (16) PASTIMES (12) [noun] Something which amuses, and serves to make time pass agreeably. PASTRAMI (12) [noun] A seasoned smoked cut of beef. Traditionally, this is made from a navel cut. PASTROMI (12) PATAGIUM (13) [noun] The thin membrane that extends between the limbs and body of a bat or of gliding mammals. | [noun] A similar membrane between the body and wing of a bird. | [noun] One of the scales affixed to the pronotum of lepidopterous insects; the tegula. PATAMARS (12) PATTAMAR (12) PAVEMENT (15) [noun] (now chiefly in technical contexts) A paved surface; a hard covering on the ground. | [noun] The paved part of a road or other thoroughfare; the roadway. | [noun] A paved footpath, especially at the side of a road. PAYMENTS (15) [noun] The act of paying. | [noun] A sum of money paid in exchange for goods or services. PEARMAIN (12) [noun] A type of pear. | [noun] Any of various types of apple, having an elongated shape and often with streaky skin. PECULIUM (14) PEDIFORM (16) PEDIMENT (13) [noun] A classical architectural element consisting of a triangular section or gable found above the horizontal superstructure (entablature) which lies immediately upon the columns; fronton. PELLMELL (12) PEMBINAS (14) PEMICANS (14) PEMMICAN (16) [noun] A food made from meat which has been dried and beaten into a paste, mixed with berries and rendered fat, and shaped into little patties. | [noun] A speech or piece of writing that is very condensed, conveying a lot of thought or information in few words. PEMOLINE (12) PENDULUM (13) [noun] A body suspended from a fixed support so that it swings freely back and forth under the influence of gravity, commonly used to regulate various devices such as clocks. | [noun] A lamp, etc. suspended from a ceiling. | [noun] A watch's guard-ring by which it is attached to a chain. PENNAMES (12) [noun] A fictitious name used by an author in place of their actual name; a writer's pseudonym. PENTOMIC (14) PENUMBRA (14) [noun] A partially shaded area around the edges of a shadow, especially an eclipse. | [noun] A region around the edge of a sunspot, darker than the sun's surface but lighter than the middle of the sunspot. | [noun] An area of uncertainty or intermediacy between two mutually exclusive states or categories. PEONISMS (12) PEPLUMED (15) PEPONIUM (14) PERFORMS (15) [verb] To do something; to execute. | [verb] To do (something) in front of an audience, such as acting or music, often in order to entertain. PERFUMED (16) [verb] To apply perfume to; to fill or impregnate with a perfume; to scent. | [adjective] Scented, having been given a pleasant smell. PERFUMER (15) [noun] A person who makes or sells perfume. | [noun] One who perfumes something. PERFUMES (15) [noun] A pleasant smell; the scent, odor, or odoriferous particles emitted from a sweet-smelling substance; a pleasant odor | [noun] A substance created to provide a pleasant smell or one which emits an agreeable odor. | [verb] To apply perfume to; to fill or impregnate with a perfume; to scent. PERIBLEM (14) PERIDERM (13) [noun] The outer layer of plant tissue comprising the phellem, phellogen and the phelloderm. | [noun] The perisarc; the hard outer layer of hydroids and other marine animals. PERIDIUM (13) [noun] The outer layer that covers the spore-bearing organ in many fungi. PERINEUM (12) [noun] The region between the human genitalia and anus. PERMEANT (12) PERMEASE (12) PERMEATE (12) [noun] A watery by-product of milk production. | [noun] Liquid that has passed through a filtration system. | [verb] To pass through the pores or interstices of; to penetrate and pass through without causing rupture or displacement; applied especially to fluids which pass through substances of loose texture PERMUTED (13) [verb] Change the order of | [verb] Make a permutation of PERMUTES (12) [verb] Change the order of | [verb] Make a permutation of PHALLISM (15) PHANTASM (15) [noun] Something seen but having no physical reality; a phantom or apparition. PHANTOMS (15) [noun] A ghost or apparition. | [noun] Something apparently seen, heard, or sensed, but having no physical reality; an image that appears only in the mind; an illusion or delusion. | [noun] A placeholder for a pair of players when there are an odd number of pairs playing. PHARMACY (20) [noun] (countable) A place where prescription drugs are dispensed; a dispensary. | [noun] (uncountable) The science of medicinal substances comprising pharmaceutics, pharmaceutical chemistry, pharmacology, phytochemistry and forensics. | [noun] (uncountable) The occupation of a pharmacist. PHASMIDS (16) PHELLEMS (15) PHILOMEL (15) PHILTRUM (15) [noun] The shallow groove running down the center of the outer surface of the upper lip. PHIMOSES (15) PHIMOSIS (15) [noun] A contraction of the foreskin (either as a stage of development or a pathological condition), which prevents it from being retracted. PHIMOTIC (17) PHONEMES (15) [noun] An indivisible unit of sound in a given language. A phoneme is an abstraction of the physical speech sounds (phones) and may encompass several different phones. PHONEMIC (17) [adjective] Relating to phonemes. | [adjective] Relating to a difference between sounds that can change the meaning of words in a language. PHOTOMAP (17) [noun] A map made by the superimposition of aerial photographs onto grid lines, contours and other normal map features | [verb] To produce such a map (from a photograph or existing map) PHYLLOME (18) PIANISMS (12) PICIFORM (17) PICLORAM (14) PICOGRAM (15) PICOMOLE (14) PIEDMONT (13) [noun] Any region of foothills of a mountain range. | [adjective] Formed or lying at the foot of a mountain range. PIETISMS (12) PIGMENTS (13) [noun] Any color in plant or animal cells | [noun] A dry colorant, usually an insoluble powder | [noun] Wine flavoured with spices and honey. PILGRIMS (13) [noun] One who travels, especially on a journey to visit sites of religious significance. | [noun] A newcomer. | [noun] A silk screen formerly attached to the back of a woman's bonnet to protect the neck. PILIFORM (15) PIMENTOS (12) [noun] A red sweet pepper, a cultivar of Capsicum annuum, used to make relish, stuffed into olives, or used as spice. | [noun] A tropical berry used to make allspice. | [noun] The tree on which it grows. PIMIENTO (12) [noun] A red sweet pepper, a cultivar of Capsicum annuum, used to make relish, stuffed into olives, or used as spice. | [noun] A tropical berry used to make allspice. | [noun] The tree on which it grows. PIMPLIER (14) PINWORMS (15) [noun] Any of several nematode worms, of the family Oxyuridae, that are parasitic to mammals PIPESTEM (14) PIRIFORM (15) [adjective] Pear-shaped PISIFORM (15) [noun] A small bone in the wrist at the junction of the ulna and the carpus | [adjective] Resembling a pea or peas in size and shape PISMIRES (12) [noun] An ant. PITCHMAN (17) [noun] A salesman, especially one who aggressively markets wares from a street stall, or a carnival or side show act. PITCHMEN (17) [noun] A salesman, especially one who aggressively markets wares from a street stall, or a carnival or side show act. PIVOTMAN (15) [noun] A pivot; the soldier around whom a body of troops wheels. | [noun] A player in a central position. | [noun] A central or key person; someone around whom a particular project etc. rotates. PIVOTMEN (15) [noun] A pivot; the soldier around whom a body of troops wheels. | [noun] A player in a central position. | [noun] A central or key person; someone around whom a particular project etc. rotates. PLACEMAN (14) [noun] (UK politics) One appointed to an office, especially in government, as a reward for political or other support; an appointee, a yes-man. PLACEMEN (14) [noun] (UK politics) One appointed to an office, especially in government, as a reward for political or other support; an appointee, a yes-man. PLANFORM (15) [noun] The shape and layout of a fixed-wing aircraft's fuselage and wing. PLASMIDS (13) [noun] A loop of double-stranded DNA that is separate from and replicates independently of the chromosomes, most commonly found in bacteria, but also in archaeans and eukaryotic cells, and used in genetic engineering as a vector for gene transfer. PLASMINS (12) PLASMOID (13) PLASMONS (12) [noun] All the genetic material in an organism. | [noun] The quantum of waves produced by the collective effects of large numbers of electrons when disturbed from equilibrium. PLASTRUM (12) PLATFORM (15) [noun] A raised stage from which speeches are made and on which musical and other performances are made. | [noun] A raised floor for any purpose, e.g. for workmen during construction, or formerly for military cannon. | [noun] A place or an opportunity to express one's opinion; a tribune. PLATINUM (12) [noun] The chemical element with atomic number 78 and symbol Pt; a dense, malleable, ductile, highly unreactive, silverish-white transition metal of great value. | [noun] A whitish grey colour, like that of the metal. | [noun] A single or album that has achieved platinum sales, i.e. over 1 million or 2 million. PLAYMATE (15) [noun] A companion for someone (especially a child) to play with. | [noun] A female who has appeared as the centerfold in Playboy magazine. | [noun] A person's lover. PLAYROOM (15) [noun] A room, allocated as a children's play area, in which noisy or boisterous activities are tolerated. | [noun] (BDSM) A room dedicated to sadomasochistic sexual activity. PLAYTIME (15) [noun] Time for play or diversion. | [noun] A time when children can play outside during the school day. | [noun] A duration of time when one is not as serious as they could be, especially in a conflict of sorts. PLECTRUM (14) [noun] A small piece of plastic, metal, ivory, etc., for plucking the strings of a guitar, lyre, mandolin, etc. | [noun] A projection of bone or other stiff tissue, such as the ridges in some insects' stridulatory organs. PLENISMS (12) PLEONASM (12) [noun] Redundancy in wording. | [noun] A phrase involving pleonasm; a phrase containing one or more words which are redundant because their meaning is expressed elsewhere in the phrase. PLIMSOLE (12) [noun] A rubber-soled lace-up canvas shoe for sports or onboard ships; a precursor of trainers. | [noun] The plimsoll symbol ⦵ (or o) that is used as a superscript in the notation of thermodynamics to indicate an arbitrarily chosen non-zero reference point. PLIMSOLL (12) [noun] A rubber-soled lace-up canvas shoe for sports or onboard ships; a precursor of trainers. | [noun] The plimsoll symbol ⦵ (or o) that is used as a superscript in the notation of thermodynamics to indicate an arbitrarily chosen non-zero reference point. PLIMSOLS (12) PLUMAGED (14) PLUMAGES (13) [noun] Layer or collection of feathers covering a bird’s body; feathers used ornamentally. | [noun] Finery or elaborate dress. PLUMBAGO (15) [noun] A plant of the genus Plumbago; leadwort. | [noun] Graphite. PLUMBERS (14) [noun] One who works in or with lead. | [noun] One who furnishes, fits, and repairs pipes and other apparatus for the conveyance of water, gas, or drainage. | [noun] A person who investigates or prevents leaks of information PLUMBERY (17) PLUMBING (15) [noun] The pipes, together with the joints, tanks, stopcocks, taps and other fixtures of a water, gas or sewage system in a house or other building. | [noun] The trade or occupation of a plumber. | [noun] A system of vessels or ducts in the human body, especially the genitourinary system. PLUMBISM (16) [noun] A diseased condition, produced by the absorption of lead, common among workers in this metal or in its compounds, as among painters, typesetters, etc. Symptoms include lead colic, lead line, and wrist drop. PLUMBOUS (14) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, resembling or containing lead. | [adjective] Specifically, of compounds in which it has a lower valence as contrasted with plumbic compounds. PLUMBUMS (16) PLUMELET (12) PLUMERIA (12) [noun] Frangipani PLUMIEST (12) PLUMIPED (15) PLUMLIKE (16) PLUMMETS (14) [noun] A piece of lead attached to a line, used in sounding the depth of water, a plumb bob or a plumb line | [noun] Hence, any weight | [noun] A piece of lead formerly used by school children to rule paper for writing (that is, to mark with rules, with lines) PLUMMIER (14) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or characteristic of plums | [adjective] Desirable; profitable; advantageous | [adjective] (of a voice) rich, mellow and carefully articulated, especially with an upper-class accent PLUMPENS (14) PLUMPERS (14) PLUMPEST (14) [adjective] Having a full and rounded shape; chubby, somewhat overweight. | [adjective] Fat. | [adjective] Sudden and without reservation; blunt; direct; downright. PLUMPING (15) [verb] To grow plump; to swell out. | [verb] To make plump; to fill (out) or support; often with up. | [verb] To cast or let drop all at once, suddenly and heavily. PLUMPISH (17) PLUMULAR (12) [adjective] Relating to a plumule. PLUMULES (12) [noun] The first bud, or gemmule, of a young plant; the bud, or growing point, of the embryo, above the cotyledons. | [noun] A down feather. | [noun] The aftershaft of a feather. POCKMARK (22) [noun] A mark or scar in the skin caused by a pock. | [noun] A crater in the seafloor caused by erupting gas or liquid. PODOMERE (13) POGROMED (14) POINTMAN (12) [noun] In combat, the soldier who takes point; the soldier who assumes the first and most exposed position in a combat military formation; the lead soldier/unit advancing through hostile or unsecured territory. | [noun] (by extension) A most trusted assistant or associate; the person upon whom one would most rely. POINTMEN (12) [noun] In combat, the soldier who takes point; the soldier who assumes the first and most exposed position in a combat military formation; the lead soldier/unit advancing through hostile or unsecured territory. | [noun] (by extension) A most trusted assistant or associate; the person upon whom one would most rely. POLEMICS (14) [noun] A person who writes in support of one opinion, doctrine, or system, in opposition to another; one skilled in polemics; a controversialist; a disputant. | [noun] An argument or controversy. | [noun] A strong verbal or written attack on someone or something. POLEMIST (12) POLEMIZE (21) POLONIUM (12) [noun] A rare, highly radioactive chemical element (symbol Po) with atomic number 84. POLYGAMY (19) [noun] The condition of having more than one spouse or marriage partner at one time. | [noun] The state or habit of having more than one sexual mate. | [noun] The condition or state of a plant which bears both perfect and unisexual flowers. POLYMATH (18) [noun] A person with extraordinarily broad and comprehensive knowledge. POLYMERS (15) [noun] A long or larger molecule consisting of a chain or network of many repeating units, formed by chemically bonding together many identical or similar small molecules called monomers. A polymer is formed by polymerization, the joining of many monomer molecules. | [noun] A material consisting of such polymer molecules. POLYOMAS (15) POLYSEMY (18) [noun] The property of a word, sign or symbol that can represent multiple similar meanings. POLYSOME (15) [noun] A polyribosome POMADING (14) [verb] To anoint with pomade; to use pomade to style (hair). POMANDER (13) [noun] A mixture of aromatic substances, made into a ball and carried by a person to impart a sweet smell or as a protection against infection. | [noun] A small case in which an aromatic ball was carried. | [noun] A perforated container filled with pot-pourri for placing in a drawer, wardrobe, room, etc., to provide a sweet smell. POMATUMS (14) [noun] Pomade. | [verb] To dress with pomatum. POMFRETS (15) [noun] A fish of family Bramidae, consisting of eight genera and some twenty species. | [noun] Several species of butterfishes in the genus Pampus. POMMELED (15) [verb] To pound or beat. | [adjective] (often in combination) Having a pommel. POMOLOGY (16) [noun] The study of pome fruit and of the cultivation of such fruit. | [noun] The study of fruit in general and of the cultivation of fruit. | [noun] A work or treatise written on this subject. POMPANOS (14) [noun] Any of various carangid fish, of the genus Trachinotus or species Alectis ciliaris, the African pompano, from coastal parts of the North Atlantic. | [noun] An edible butterfish, Peprilus simillimus, the Pacific pompano. POOLROOM (12) [noun] A room with pool tables where pool can be played, usually for a fee. POPEDOMS (15) POPULISM (14) [noun] A political doctrine or philosophy that proposes that the rights and powers of ordinary people are exploited by a privileged elite, and supports their struggle to overcome this. | [noun] The practice of appealing to the interests of the common people. POSTFORM (15) POSTGAME (13) [noun] A postgame show | [adjective] Following a game, usually specifically a sporting match POSTMARK (16) [noun] A marking made by a postal service on a letter, package, postcard or the like, usually indicating the place where and the date and time when the item was received or processed for the first time, and often serving to cancel a postage stamp. | [verb] To apply a postmark on. PREADMIT (13) PREAMBLE (14) [noun] A short preliminary statement or remark, especially an explanatory introduction to a formal document or statute. | [noun] A syncword. | [verb] To speak or write a preamble; to provide a preliminary statement or set of remarks. PREARMED (13) PREEMIES (12) [noun] A baby that has been born prematurely PREEMPTS (14) [noun] A preemptive bid. | [verb] To appropriate something (before someone else does). | [verb] To displace something, or take precedence over something. PREFLAME (15) PREFORMS (15) [noun] An object that has undergone preliminary shaping but is not yet in its final form. | [noun] The rough, incomplete and unused basic form of a stone tool. | [noun] A word that is no longer in use, but has been reconstructed from current ones. PREHUMAN (15) [noun] One of the human-like creatures prior to Homo sapiens. | [adjective] Preceding the advent of modern humanity, Homo sapiens PRELIMIT (12) PREMEDIC (15) PREMIERE (12) [noun] The first showing of a film, play or other form of entertainment, often held as a special event with celebrity guests. | [noun] The first episode of a television show or a particular season of that show. | [noun] In a series of narrative works, the installment that is chronologically set first. PREMIERS (12) [noun] (Westminster system) The head of government in parliament and leader of the cabinet. | [noun] (non-Westminster) The government leader in a legislative congress or leader of a government-level administrative body; the head of government. | [noun] The first lieutenant or other second-in-command officer of a ship. PREMISED (13) [verb] To state or assume something as a proposition to an argument. | [verb] To make a premise. | [verb] To set forth beforehand, or as introductory to the main subject; to offer previously, as something to explain or aid in understanding what follows. PREMISES (12) [noun] Land, and all the built structures on it, especially when considered as a single place. | [noun] The subject of a conveyance or deed | [noun] A proposition antecedently supposed or proved; something previously stated or assumed as the basis of further argument; a condition; a supposition. PREMIUMS (14) [noun] A prize or award. | [noun] Something offered at a reduced price as an inducement to buy something else. | [noun] A bonus paid in addition to normal payments. PREMIXED (20) [verb] To blend in advance. | [adjective] Mixed prior to use or sale PREMIXES (19) [noun] A blend of components that has been mixed in advance of use or of further processing. | [noun] A manufactured beverage consisting of alcohol and soft drink, milk or other non-alcoholic drinks; an alcopop. PREMOLAR (12) [noun] A tooth situated in front of the molar teeth; especially a tooth in humans with two cusps which is between the canines and the molars (Latin: singular dens premolaris, plural dentes premolares) | [adjective] Before a molar tooth, either in physical position or in its time of development; deciduous. PREMOLDS (13) PREMORAL (12) PREMORSE (12) PRENAMES (12) PRENOMEN (12) PRESSMAN (12) [noun] Someone who operates a printing press. | [noun] A journalist or newspaper reporter. | [noun] One who pressgangs people into naval service PRESSMEN (12) [noun] Someone who operates a printing press. | [noun] A journalist or newspaper reporter. | [noun] One who pressgangs people into naval service PRESTAMP (14) PRESUMED (13) [verb] With infinitive object: to be so presumptuous as (to do something) without proper authority or permission. | [verb] To perform, do (something) without authority; to lay claim to without permission. | [verb] To assume or suggest to be true (without proof); to take for granted, to suppose. PRESUMER (12) PRESUMES (12) [verb] With infinitive object: to be so presumptuous as (to do something) without proper authority or permission. | [verb] To perform, do (something) without authority; to lay claim to without permission. | [verb] To assume or suggest to be true (without proof); to take for granted, to suppose. PRETRIMS (12) PREWARMS (15) PRIAPISM (14) [noun] A potentially painful or harmful medical condition in which the erect penis (erection) does not return to its flaccid state (despite the absence of both physical and psychological stimulation), often as a result of a spinal injury. | [noun] Obsessive focus on one's genitals or on the need for genital gratification. PRIGGISM (14) PRIMAGES (13) PRIMATAL (12) PRIMATES (12) [noun] A mammal of the order Primates, including simians and prosimians. | [noun] A simian anthropoid; an ape, human or monkey. | [noun] In the Catholic Church, a rare title conferred to or claimed by the sees of certain archbishops, or the highest-ranking bishop of a present or historical, usually political circumscription. PRIMEROS (12) PRIMEVAL (15) [adjective] Belonging to the first ages | [adjective] Primary; original | [adjective] Primitive PRIMINES (12) PRIMINGS (13) PRIMMEST (14) [adjective] Prudish, straight-laced | [adjective] Formal; precise; affectedly neat or nice PRIMMING (15) [verb] To make affectedly precise or proper. | [verb] To dress or act smartly. PRIMNESS (12) PRIMPING (15) [verb] To spend time improving one's appearance, often in front of a mirror. | [verb] To dress in an affected manner. | [noun] The act of one who primps. PRIMROSE (12) [noun] A flowering plant of the genus Primula. | [noun] A plant of the family Primulaceae. | [noun] A plant of the genus Oenothera, better known as an evening primrose. PRIMULAS (12) [noun] Any plant of the genus Primula; the primroses. PRIMUSES (12) [noun] One of the bishops of the Scottish Episcopal Church, who presides at the meetings of the bishops, and has certain privileges but no metropolitan authority. PRISMOID (13) [noun] A prismatoid that has planar sides, and the same number of vertices in both of its parallel planes. | [noun] An antiprism. | [adjective] Resembling a prism. PROBLEMS (14) [noun] A difficulty that has to be resolved or dealt with. | [noun] A question to be answered, schoolwork exercise. | [noun] A puzzling circumstance. PROCLAIM (14) [verb] To announce or declare. PRODROME (13) [noun] A precursor or harbinger; also a warning event. | [noun] An introductory or preliminary book or treatise. | [noun] An early symptom warning of the onset of a disease. PROEMIAL (12) PROGRAMS (13) [noun] A set of structured activities. | [noun] A leaflet listing information about a play, game or other activity. | [noun] A performance of a show or other broadcast on radio or television. PROLAMIN (12) PROMINES (12) PROMISED (13) [verb] To commit to (some action or outcome), or to assure (a person) of such commitment; to make an oath or vow. | [verb] To give grounds for expectation, especially of something good. | [adjective] Predicted; expected; anticipated. PROMISEE (12) [noun] A person who receives a promise. PROMISER (12) PROMISES (12) [noun] An oath or affirmation; a vow | [noun] A transaction between two persons whereby the first person undertakes in the future to render some service or gift to the second person or devotes something valuable now and here to his use | [noun] Reason to expect improvement or success; potential PROMISOR (12) [noun] One who engages or undertakes; a promiser. PROMOTED (13) [verb] To raise (someone) to a more important, responsible, or remunerative job or rank. | [verb] To advocate or urge on behalf of (something or someone); to attempt to popularize or sell by means of advertising or publicity. | [verb] To encourage, urge or incite. PROMOTER (12) [noun] One who promotes, particularly with respect to entertainment events or goods. | [noun] The section of DNA that controls the initiation of RNA transcription as a product of a gene. | [noun] An accelerator of catalysis that is not itself a catalyst. PROMOTES (12) [verb] To raise (someone) to a more important, responsible, or remunerative job or rank. | [verb] To advocate or urge on behalf of (something or someone); to attempt to popularize or sell by means of advertising or publicity. | [verb] To encourage, urge or incite. PROMPTED (15) [verb] To lead (someone) toward what they should say or do. | [verb] To show or tell an actor/person the words they should be saying, or actions they should be doing. | [verb] To initiate; to cause or lead to. PROMPTER (14) [noun] The person who does the prompting. PROMPTLY (17) [adverb] In prompt manner; both soon and quickly. PROMULGE (13) [verb] To promulgate; to publish or teach. PRONOTUM (12) PROSAISM (12) PROSOMAL (12) PROSOMAS (12) [noun] The front segment of a body which is divided into two or more segments, especially the cephalothorax of an arachnid or crustacean. PROTAMIN (12) PROTIUMS (12) PROXEMIC (21) PROXIMAL (19) [adjective] Closer to the point of attachment or observation. | [adjective] Facing toward another tooth. The proximal surfaces of a tooth are those that touch or are close to neighboring teeth. | [adjective] Closer to the speaker. PSALMING (13) PSALMIST (12) [noun] A composer of psalms | [noun] (capitalized) A composer of one of the Biblical Psalms PSALMODY (16) [noun] The singing or the writing of psalms. | [noun] A collection of psalms. | [verb] To celebrate in psalms. PSAMMITE (14) PSAMMONS (14) PSYLLIUM (15) [noun] Any of several plants of the subgenus Plantago subg. Psyllium, whose seeds are used commercially for the production of mucilage and their laxative properties. | [noun] Synonym of psyllium (seed) husk, especially as a dietary supplement PTOMAINE (12) [noun] Any of various amines formed by putrefactive bacteria. | [noun] Food poisoning. PTOMAINS (12) PTYALISM (15) PUDENDUM (14) [noun] (usually in the plural) An external genital organ in a human; especially a woman’s vulva. | [noun] (in the plural) A person’s genital organ, mons pubis, anus, and buttocks collectively. | [noun] A shameful part of something. PUGILISM (13) [noun] Fighting with fists. PUGMARKS (17) PULLMANS (12) PULMONIC (14) [noun] A medicine for treating lung disease. | [noun] A person affected by lung disease. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or produced by the lungs; pulmonary. PULMOTOR (12) PUMICERS (14) PUMICING (15) [verb] To abrade or roughen with pumice. PUMICITE (14) PUMMELED (15) [verb] To hit or strike heavily and repeatedly. PUMMELOS (14) [noun] The large fruit of the Citrus maxima (syn. C. grandis), native to South Asia and Southeast Asia, with a thick green or yellow rind, a thick white pith, and semi-sweet translucent pale flesh. | [noun] The tree which produces this fruit. | [noun] The grapefruit. PUMPKINS (18) [noun] A domesticated plant, in species Cucurbita pepo, similar in growth pattern, foliage, flower, and fruit to the squash or melon. | [noun] The round yellow or orange fruit of this plant. | [noun] The color of the fruit of the pumpkin plant. PUMPLESS (14) PUMPLIKE (18) PUPARIUM (14) [noun] An enclosing case of a pupa that is formed from the exoskeleton of an insect's final stage before pupation. PUPPYDOM (20) PUTAMINA (12) [noun] A round structure located at the base of the forebrain, regulating movement and learning. | [noun] A hard, shell-like covering. | [noun] The shell of a nut; the stone of a drupe fruit; endocarp. PYAEMIAS (15) PYGIDIUM (17) [noun] The caudal plate of trilobites, crustacea, and certain insects. PYGMAEAN (16) PYGMYISH (22) PYGMYISM (21) PYODERMA (16) [noun] An infection of the skin by pyogenic bacteria PYRAMIDS (16) [noun] An ancient massive construction with a square or rectangular base and four triangular sides meeting in an apex, such as those built as tombs in Egypt or as bases for temples in Mesoamerica. | [noun] A construction in the shape of a pyramid, usually with a square or rectangular base. | [noun] A solid with triangular lateral faces and a polygonal (often square or rectangular) base. PYRIFORM (18) [adjective] Pear-shaped PYXIDIUM (23) [noun] A seed capsule in the form of a box, the seeds being released when the top splits off. QUACKISM (25) QUAGMIRE (20) [noun] A swampy, soggy area of ground. | [noun] A perilous, mixed up and troubled situation; a hopeless tangle; a predicament. | [verb] To embroil (a person, etc.) in complexity or difficulty. QUAGMIRY (23) QUALMIER (19) QUALMISH (22) QUEENDOM (20) QUIETISM (19) [noun] A form of mysticism involving quiet contemplation. | [noun] A state of passive quietness. QUOMODOS (20) RACEMATE (12) [noun] A racemic mixture | [noun] Any salt or ester of racemic acid RACEMISM (14) RACEMIZE (21) [verb] To convert (an enantiomer) into a racemic mixture. RACEMOID (13) RACEMOSE (12) [adjective] Having flowers arranged along a single central axis, as in a raceme, spike, or catkin. | [adjective] (of a disease) expressing such a pattern RACEMOUS (12) RADIOMAN (11) RADIOMEN (11) RAFTSMAN (13) [noun] A person who transports a raft of floating logs downstream to a sawmill; a rafter. RAFTSMEN (13) [noun] A person who transports a raft of floating logs downstream to a sawmill; a rafter. RAGTIMES (11) RAIMENTS (10) [noun] Clothing, garments, dress, material. RAMBLERS (12) [noun] A recreational walker, a hiker. | [noun] One who rambles. | [noun] A ranch-style house. RAMBLING (13) [verb] To move about aimlessly, or on a winding course | [verb] To walk for pleasure; to amble or saunter. | [verb] To talk or write incessantly, unclearly, or incoherently, with many digressions. RAMBUTAN (12) [noun] A tree, Nephelium lappaceum, of Southeast Asia. | [noun] The fruit of this tree. RAMEKINS (14) [noun] A small glass or earthenware dish, often white and circular, in which food is baked and served. | [noun] A cheese- or meat-based dish baked in a small mold. RAMENTUM (12) RAMEQUIN (19) RAMIFIED (14) [verb] To divide into branches or subdivisions. | [verb] To spread or diversify into multiple fields or categories. RAMIFIES (13) [verb] To divide into branches or subdivisions. | [verb] To spread or diversify into multiple fields or categories. RAMIFORM (15) RAMILIES (10) RAMILLIE (10) RAMMIEST (12) RAMOSELY (13) RAMOSITY (13) RAMPAGED (14) [verb] To move about wildly or violently. RAMPAGER (13) RAMPAGES (13) [verb] To move about wildly or violently. RAMPANCY (17) RAMPARTS (12) [noun] A defensive mound of earth or a wall with a broad top and usually a stone parapet; a wall-like ridge of earth, stones or debris; an embankment for defensive purpose. | [noun] A defensive structure; a protective barrier; a bulwark. | [noun] That which defends against intrusion from outside; a protection. RAMPIKES (16) RAMPIONS (12) [noun] A species of bellflower with roots and leaves formerly used in salads, Campanula rapunculus | [noun] Any of several flowering plants of the genus Phyteuma, within the family Campanulaceae. RAMPOLES (12) RAMSHORN (13) RAMULOSE (10) RAMULOUS (10) RANCHMAN (15) RANCHMEN (15) RANDOMLY (14) [adverb] In a random manner. | [adverb] By random access; at any point at a given time; not sequentially. RANSOMED (11) [verb] (14th century) To deliver, especially in context of sin or relevant penalties. | [verb] To pay a price to set someone free from captivity or punishment. | [verb] To exact a ransom for, or a payment on. RANSOMER (10) READMITS (11) [verb] To admit, or allow to enter, again. REAFFIRM (16) [verb] To affirm again. | [verb] To bolster or support. REALISMS (10) REARMICE (12) REARMING (11) [verb] To replace or restore the weapons or arms of a previously defeated, or disarmed army, country, person or other body. REARMOST (10) [adjective] Furthest to the rear. REASSUME (10) [verb] To resume, to carry on (a practice, thought, occupation etc.) again. | [verb] To take on or adopt again. | [verb] To take back into one's possession. REBELDOM (13) REBLOOMS (12) RECAMIER (12) RECLAIMS (12) [verb] To return land to a suitable condition for use. | [verb] To obtain useful products from waste; to recycle. | [verb] To claim something back; to repossess. RECLAMES (12) RECOMBED (15) RECOMMIT (14) [verb] Commit again REDAMAGE (12) REDEEMED (12) [verb] To recover ownership of something by buying it back. | [verb] To liberate by payment of a ransom. | [verb] To set free by force. REDEEMER (11) [noun] One who redeems; one who provides redemption. REDEMAND (12) REDREAMS (11) REDREAMT (11) REEMBARK (16) REEMBODY (16) REEMERGE (11) [verb] To emerge again, to come into view after having hidden. | [verb] To come out of a situation, object or a liquid after having entered it. REEMPLOY (15) [verb] To employ again. REFILMED (14) REFORMAT (13) [verb] To format anew or again, generally erasing a previous format. REFORMED (14) [verb] To put into a new and improved form or condition; to restore to a former good state, or bring from bad to good; to change from worse to better | [verb] To return to a good state; to amend or correct one's own character or habits | [verb] To form again or in a new configuration. REFORMER (13) [noun] One who reforms, or who works for reform. | [noun] (history) One who was involved in the Reformation. | [noun] (chemical engineering, fuel cells) A device which converts hydrocarbons into a hydrogen-rich mixture of gases. REFRAMED (14) [verb] To frame again. | [verb] To redescribe, from a different perspective; to relabel. REFRAMES (13) [noun] An instance of reframing. | [verb] To frame again. | [verb] To redescribe, from a different perspective; to relabel. REFUGIUM (14) [noun] Any local environment that has escaped regional ecological change and therefore provides a habitat for endangered species. | [noun] (aquaculture) A separate section of a fishtank that shares the same water supply, used for denitrification, plankton production, etc. REGIMENS (11) [noun] Orderly government; system of order; administration. | [noun] Any regulation or remedy which is intended to produce beneficial effects by gradual operation. | [noun] (grammar) object REGIMENT (11) [noun] A unit of armed troops under the command of an officer, and consisting of several smaller units; now specifically, usually composed of two or more battalions. | [noun] Rule or governance over a person, place etc.; government, authority. | [noun] The state or office of a ruler; rulership. REGROOMS (11) REHAMMER (15) REHEMMED (16) REHOBOAM (15) [noun] A bottle of Champagne or Burgundy wine containing 4.5 liters of fluid, six times the volume of a standard bottle. REIMAGED (12) REIMAGES (11) REIMPORT (12) [noun] The act or practice of importing again, or back to a place of origin; reimportation. | [noun] A product which has been reimported. | [verb] To import again. REIMPOSE (12) [verb] To impose again, a further time. REINFORM (13) REINSMAN (10) [noun] (horseriding) A (male) jockey, especially in harness racing. | [noun] A skilful driver of horses. REINSMEN (10) [noun] (horseriding) A (male) jockey, especially in harness racing. | [noun] A skilful driver of horses. RELUMINE (10) RELUMING (11) [verb] To rekindle; to relight (literally or figuratively). | [verb] To make clear or bright again. REMAILED (11) REMAINED (11) [verb] To stay behind while others withdraw; to be left after others have been removed or destroyed; to be left after a number or quantity has been subtracted or cut off; to be left as not included or comprised. | [verb] To continue unchanged in place, form, or condition, or undiminished in quantity; to abide; to stay; to endure; to last. | [verb] To await; to be left to. REMAKERS (14) REMAKING (15) [verb] To make again. | [verb] To make a new, especially updated, version of (a film, video game, etc.). | [noun] Recreation; reconstruction REMANDED (12) [verb] To send a prisoner back to custody. | [verb] To send a case back to a lower court for further consideration. | [verb] To send back. REMANENT (10) [noun] That which remains; a remnant; a residue. | [adjective] Remaining or persisting especially after an electrical or magnetic influence is removed. | [adjective] Additional REMANNED (11) [verb] To supply with new personnel. REMAPPED (15) [verb] To assign differently; to relabel or repurpose. | [verb] To map again. REMARKED (15) [verb] To mark again. | [verb] To make a remark or remarks; to comment. | [verb] To express in words or writing; to state; to make a comment REMARKER (14) REMARKET (14) REMARQUE (19) REMASTER (10) [verb] To produce a new version of a recording by remixing the original master recordings. | [verb] To create a new master copy by enhancing sound or picture quality of an older recording. | [verb] To produce a new version of a video game with updated graphics, often re-recorded music, and added features and content. REMATING (11) REMEDIAL (11) [adjective] Curative; providing a remedy | [adjective] Intended to correct or improve deficient skills in some subject REMEDIED (12) [verb] To provide or serve as a remedy for. REMEDIES (11) [noun] Something that corrects or counteracts. | [noun] The legal means to recover a right or to prevent or obtain redress for a wrong. | [noun] A medicine, application, or treatment that relieves or cures a disease. REMELTED (11) REMEMBER (14) [verb] To recall from one's memory; to have an image in one's memory. | [verb] To memorize; to put something into memory. | [verb] To keep in mind, be mindful of | [verb] To reconstitute or reassemble that which has been dismembered. REMENDED (12) REMERGED (12) REMERGES (11) REMIGIAL (11) REMINDED (12) [verb] To cause one to experience a memory (of someone or something); to bring to the notice or consideration (of a person). REMINDER (11) [noun] Someone or something that reminds. | [noun] Writing that reminds of open payments. REMINTED (11) REMISING (11) [verb] To send or give back. | [verb] To surrender all interest in a property by executing a deed, to quitclaim. REMISSLY (13) REMITTAL (10) [noun] Anything remitted; remittance. REMITTED (11) [verb] To transmit or send (e.g. money in payment); to supply. | [verb] To forgive, pardon (a wrong, offence, etc.). | [verb] To refrain from exacting or enforcing. REMITTER (10) REMITTOR (10) REMIXING (18) [verb] To mix again. | [verb] To create a remix. | [verb] To rearrange or radically alter (a particular piece of music). REMNANTS (10) [noun] The small portion remaining of a larger thing or group. | [noun] The remaining fabric at the end of the bolt. | [noun] An unsold end of piece goods, as cloth, ribbons, carpets, etc. REMODELS (11) [verb] To change the appearance, layout, or furnishings of. | [noun] An instance of modification or redecorating. REMODIFY (17) [verb] To modify again REMOLADE (11) REMOLDED (12) [verb] Mold again, apply a new mold to REMORSES (10) REMOTELY (13) [adverb] At a distance, far away. | [adverb] Not much; scarcely; hardly. REMOTEST (10) [adjective] At a distance; disconnected. | [adjective] Distant or otherwise inaccessible. | [adjective] (especially with respect to likelihood) Slight. REMOTION (10) REMOUNTS (10) [noun] The opportunity of, or things necessary for, remounting; specifically, a fresh horse, with its equipment. | [noun] The process of mounting a drive or volume again. | [noun] The restaging of a play or film. REMOVALS (13) [noun] The process of moving, or the fact of being removed. | [noun] The relocation of a business etc. | [noun] The dismissal of someone from office. REMOVERS (13) REMOVING (14) [verb] To move something from one place to another, especially to take away. | [verb] To murder. | [verb] To dismiss a batsman. RENAMING (11) [verb] To give a new name to. | [noun] (gerund of rename) An act in which something is renamed RENIFORM (13) [adjective] Shaped like a kidney; having a circular or roughly circular shape with a notch. RENMINBI (12) [noun] The official currency of the People's Republic of China RENOGRAM (11) RENUMBER (12) [verb] To number again, to assign new numbers to. REPLUMBS (14) REPUMPED (15) REQUIEMS (19) [noun] A mass (especially Catholic) to honor and remember a dead person. | [noun] A musical composition for such a mass. | [noun] A piece of music composed to honor a dead person. REREMICE (12) REREMIND (11) RESAMPLE (12) RESEMBLE (12) [verb] To be like or similar to (something); to represent as similar. | [verb] To compare; to regard as similar, to liken. | [verb] To counterfeit; to imitate. RESIDUUM (11) [noun] The residue, remainder or rest of something | [noun] The solid material remaining after the liquid in which it was dissolved has been evaporated; a residue. | [noun] A binary function from [0,1] × [0,1] to [0,1] which is defined in terms of the t-norm as follows: x \rightarrow y = \sup \{ z | z * x \leqslant y\}, where * denotes the t-norm function and \sup denotes the supremum. RESMELTS (10) RESMOOTH (13) RESTAMPS (12) RESTROOM (10) [noun] A room containing a public toilet: a public lavatory. RESUBMIT (12) [verb] To submit again. RESUMERS (10) RESUMING (11) [verb] To take back possession of (something). | [verb] To summarise. | [verb] To start (something) again that has been stopped or paused from the point at which it was stopped or paused; continue, carry on. RESUMMON (12) RETEAMED (11) RETEMPER (12) RETIFORM (13) [adjective] Having the form of a net; reticulate RETIMING (11) [verb] To reschedule for another time. | [verb] To change the timing or duration of. REVAMPED (16) [verb] To renovate, revise, improve or renew. REVAMPER (15) REWARMED (14) RHABDOME (16) [noun] In sponges, the shaft of a cladose rhabdus, bearing the cladome. RHABDOMS (16) [noun] Any of the rods that support each ommatidium in the compound eye of arthropods RHAMNOSE (13) [noun] A methyl-pentose, 6-deoxy-L-mannose, which occurs in the leaves and flowers of poison ivy and is a constituent of many plant glycosides. RHEMATIC (15) RHENIUMS (13) RHEUMIER (13) [adjective] Of, relating to, or producing rheum from the mucous membranes; watery RHIZOMES (22) [noun] A horizontal, underground stem of some plants that sends out roots and shoots from its nodes. | [noun] A so-called "image of thought" that apprehends multiplicities. See Rhizome (philosophy). RHIZOMIC (24) RHODAMIN (14) RHODIUMS (14) RHOMBOID (16) [noun] A parallelogram which is neither a rhombus nor a rectangle | [noun] Any of several muscles that control the shoulders | [noun] A solid shape which has rhombic faces RHUMBAED (16) [verb] To dance the rumba RHYTHMIC (21) [adjective] Of or relating to rhythm. | [adjective] Characterized by rhythm. | [adjective] Written in verse, especially rhyming verse. RIBOSOME (12) [noun] A small organelle found in all cells; involved in the production of proteins by translating messenger RNA. RIFAMPIN (15) [noun] An antibiotic drug used in the treatment of tuberculosis RIFLEMAN (13) [noun] A soldier trained to use a rifle as their primary weapon. | [noun] A person especially skilled in the use of a rifle. | [noun] A small wrenlike insectivorous passerine bird endemic to New Zealand, Acanthisitta chloris, the titipounamu. RIFLEMEN (13) [noun] A soldier trained to use a rifle as their primary weapon. | [noun] A person especially skilled in the use of a rifle. | [noun] A small wrenlike insectivorous passerine bird endemic to New Zealand, Acanthisitta chloris, the titipounamu. RIGHTISM (14) [noun] Belief in, or support of, the principles of the political right. | [noun] An act or statement supporting the political right. RIGORISM (11) [noun] Strictness (in interpreting or enforcing a rule) | [noun] In Roman Catholic moral theology, the doctrine that in a case of doubt between right and wrong one should take the safer course, i.e. the one in verbal accordance with the law. RIMESTER (10) RIMFIRES (13) RIMINESS (10) RIMLANDS (11) [noun] A land or region at the periphery of a heartland RIMOSELY (13) RIMOSITY (13) RIMPLING (13) RIMROCKS (16) [noun] An outcrop of hard rock, often in the form of a cliff at the edge of a plateau, that forms the margin of a gravel deposit RINGWORM (14) [noun] A contagious fungal infection of the skin, characterised by ring-shaped discoloured patches, covered by vesicles or scales. ROBOTISM (12) ROLAMITE (10) ROLLMOPS (12) [noun] A fillet of herring, rolled and flavoured with sliced onion and spices then pickled in brine ROMAINES (10) [noun] Lactuca sativa var. longifolia, a type of lettuce having long crisp leaves forming a slender head. ROMANCED (13) [verb] To woo; to court. | [verb] To write or tell romantic stories, poetry, letters, etc. | [verb] To talk extravagantly and imaginatively; to build castles in the air. ROMANCER (12) [noun] One who romances. | [noun] (entertainment industry) A romantic film or television show. ROMANCES (12) [noun] A story relating to chivalry; a story involving knights, heroes, adventures, quests, etc. | [noun] An intimate relationship between two people; a love affair. | [noun] A strong obsession or attachment for something or someone. ROMANISE (10) [verb] To put letters or words written in another writing system into the Latin (Roman) alphabet. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To bring under the authority or influence of Rome. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To make or become Roman in character or style. ROMANIZE (19) [verb] To put letters or words written in another writing system into the Latin (Roman) alphabet. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To bring under the authority or influence of Rome. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To make or become Roman in character or style. ROMANTIC (12) [adjective] Of or dealing with languages or cultures derived from Roman influence and Latin: Italian, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Romanian, Catalan, Occitan, Corsican, etc. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to Romance. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to Romanticism. ROMAUNTS (10) ROOMETTE (10) [noun] A small private compartment, for one person, in a railroad sleeping car ROOMFULS (13) [noun] The amount that a room can hold, especially the number of people that can fit into a room. | [noun] The people in a room, considered as a group. ROOMIEST (10) [adjective] Spacious, expansive, comfortable. ROOMMATE (12) [noun] A person with whom one shares a room, as at university etc. | [noun] A person (UK: flatmate, housemate, AU: sharemate) sharing the same home (sharehome). ROSARIUM (10) [noun] A rose-garden. ROSEMARY (13) [noun] A shrub, Rosmarinus officinalis, that originates from Europe and Asia Minor and produces a fragrant herb used in cooking and perfumes. ROSTRUMS (10) [noun] A dais, pulpit, or similar platform for a speaker, conductor, or other performer. | [noun] A platform for a film or television camera. | [noun] The projecting prow of a rowed warship, such as a trireme. ROTIFORM (13) ROUTEMAN (10) ROUTEMEN (10) ROWDYISM (17) ROYALISM (13) RUBIDIUM (13) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Rb) with an atomic number of 37. It is a soft, highly reactive alkali metal. | [noun] A single atom of this element. RUDIMENT (11) [noun] (often in the plural) A fundamental principle or skill, especially in a field of learning. | [noun] (often in the plural) Something in an undeveloped form. | [noun] A body part that no longer has a function RUMBAING (13) [verb] To dance the rumba RUMBLERS (12) [noun] One who, or that which, rumbles. RUMBLING (13) [verb] To make a low, heavy, continuous sound. | [verb] To discover deceitful or underhanded behaviour. | [verb] To move while making a rumbling noise. RUMINANT (10) [noun] An artiodactyl ungulate mammal which chews cud, such as a cow or deer. | [adjective] Chewing cud. | [adjective] Pondering; ruminative. RUMINATE (10) [verb] To chew cud. (Said of ruminants.) Involves regurgitating partially digested food from the rumen. | [verb] To meditate or reflect. | [verb] To meditate or ponder over; to muse on. RUMMAGED (14) [verb] To arrange (cargo, goods, etc.) in the hold of a ship; to move or rearrange such goods. | [verb] To search a vessel for smuggled goods. | [verb] To search something thoroughly and with disregard for the way in which things were arranged. RUMMAGER (13) RUMMAGES (13) [noun] A thorough search, usually resulting in disorder. | [noun] Commotion; disturbance. | [noun] A disorganized collection of miscellaneous objects; a jumble. RUMMIEST (12) [adjective] Resembling or tasting of rum. | [adjective] Peculiar; odd. RUMORING (11) [verb] (usually used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip. RUMOURED (11) [verb] (usually used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip. RUMPLESS (12) RUMPLIER (12) RUMPLING (13) [verb] To make wrinkled, particularly fabric. | [verb] To muss; to tousle. | [noun] The act by which something is rumpled. RUMPUSES (12) [noun] A noisy, sometimes violent disturbance; noise and confusion; a quarrel. | [noun] A rumpus room. RURALISM (10) SACHEMIC (17) SAGAMORE (11) [noun] A chief of one or several Native American tribe(s), especially of the Algonquians. | [noun] A juice used in medicine. SAINTDOM (11) SALAAMED (11) [verb] To perform a salaam (to someone). SALEROOM (10) [noun] A room in which items for sale are displayed; a showroom | [noun] A room in which items are auctioned SALESMAN (10) [noun] A man whose job it is to sell things, either in a shop/store or elsewhere. SALESMEN (10) [noun] A man whose job it is to sell things, either in a shop/store or elsewhere. SALMONID (11) [noun] A fish of the Salmonidae family. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to fish of the salmon family (Salmonidae), including salmon, trout, chars, freshwater whitefishes and graylings. SAMARIUM (12) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Sm) with an atomic number of 62, a moderately hard silvery metal that slowly oxidizes in air. SAMBAING (13) [verb] To dance the samba. SAMBHARS (15) [noun] A Southeast Asian deer, Cervus unicolor. SAMBHURS (15) SAMBUCAS (14) [noun] An Italian liqueur made from elderberries and flavoured with licorice, traditionally served with 3 coffee beans that represent health, wealth and fortune (or past, present and future). | [noun] An ancient form of triangular harp having a very sharp, shrill tone. SAMBUKES (16) SAMENESS (10) [noun] The quality of being the same; identity. | [noun] The state of being equivalent; equality. | [noun] A tiring lack of variety; monotony. SAMISENS (10) [noun] A kind of three-stringed Japanese fretless lute. SAMIZDAT (20) [noun] The secret copying and sharing of illegal publications, chiefly in the Soviet Union; underground publishing and its publications. | [noun] A samizdat publication. SAMOVARS (13) [noun] A metal urn with a spigot, for boiling water for making tea. Traditionally, the water is heated by hot coals or charcoal in a chimney-like tube which runs through the center of the urn. Today, it is more likely that the water is heated by an electric coil. SAMPHIRE (15) [noun] One of several salt-tolerant plants, some edible SAMPLERS (12) [noun] A piece of needlework embroidered with a variety of designs. | [noun] Someone whose job is to take samples. | [noun] A device that takes samples. SAMPLING (13) [verb] To take or to test a sample or samples of. | [verb] To reduce a continuous signal (such as a sound wave) to a discrete signal. | [verb] To reuse a portion of (an existing sound recording) in a new piece of music. SAMSARAS (10) SAMURAIS (10) [noun] In feudal Japan, a soldier who served a daimyo. SANCTUMS (12) [noun] A place set apart, as with a sanctum sanctorum; a sacred or private place; a private retreat or workroom. SANDWORM (14) SAPPHISM (17) [noun] Lesbianism; female homosexuality SAPREMIA (12) SAPREMIC (14) SARCASMS (12) [noun] Use of acerbic language to mock or convey contempt, often using irony and (in speech) often marked by overemphasis and a sneering tone of voice. | [noun] An act of sarcasm. SARCOMAS (12) [noun] A type of malignant tumor of the bone, cartilage, fat, muscle, blood vessels, or other connective or supportive tissue. SARMENTA (10) SARMENTS (10) SASHIMIS (13) SATANISM (10) [noun] Worship of Satan (usually synonymous with "the Devil"). | [noun] A profession, philosophy, or ideological construct featuring a positive, admirable, or useful association to the figure, character or entity known as 'Satan'; or, featuring opposition to all morality and the procurement of what is wanted regardless of the consequences concerning others. | [noun] LaVeyan Satanism. SATSUMAS (10) [noun] A seedless and easy-peeling cultivar of mandarin orange of Japanese origin; Citrus unshiu. SAVAGISM (14) SAWMILLS (13) [noun] A machine, building or company used for cutting (milling) lumber. SCAMMING (15) [verb] To defraud or embezzle. SCAMMONY (17) [noun] Convolvulus scammonia, a twining perennial bindweed native to the eastern part of the Mediterranean basin, whose juice has been used in medicine as scammonium. | [noun] The cathartic gum resin obtained from this plant. SCAMPERS (14) [verb] To run quickly and lightly, especially in a playful or undignified manner. SCAMPIES (14) SCAMPING (15) [verb] To skimp; to do something in a skimpy or slipshod fashion. SCAMPISH (17) SCANDIUM (13) [noun] A metallic chemical element, atomic number 21, obtained from some uranium ores; it is a transition element. SCHEMATA (15) [noun] An outline or image universally applicable to a general conception, under which it is likely to be presented to the mind (for example, a body schema). | [noun] A formal description of the structure of a database: the names of the tables, the names of the columns of each table, and the data type and other attributes of each column. | [noun] (markup languages) A formal description of data, data types, and data file structures, such as XML schemas for XML files. SCHEMERS (15) [noun] One who plots or schemes, who formulates plans. | [noun] One who is given to scheming. SCHEMING (16) [verb] To plot, or contrive a plan. | [verb] To plan; to contrive. | [adjective] Tending to scheme; forming underhand plots. | [noun] The activity or practice of making secret or underhanded plans. SCHLUMPS (17) [noun] Someone who is lazy, slovenly or dull-looking. | [verb] To move in a heavy, lazy or slovenly way. SCHMALTZ (24) [noun] Liquid chicken fat. | [noun] Excessively sentimental art or music. SCHMALZY (27) SCHMEARS (15) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SCHMEERS (15) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SCHMELZE (24) SCHMOOSE (15) SCHMOOZE (24) [noun] A casual conversation, especially one held in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. | [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SCHMUCKS (21) [noun] A jerk; a person who is unlikable, detestable, or contemptible because he or she is stupid, foolish, clumsy, oafish, inept, malicious, or unpleasant. | [noun] A deplorable, pitiful person; often in the form poor schmuck. SCHOLIUM (15) [noun] A note added to a text as an explanation, criticism or commentary | [noun] A note added to a proof as amplification SCIMETAR (12) SCIMITAR (12) [noun] A sword of Persian origin that features a curved blade. | [noun] A long-handled billhook. | [verb] To strike or slice with, or as if with, a scimitar. SCIMITER (12) SCIOLISM (12) SCLEROMA (12) [noun] Induration of the tissues | [noun] Rhinoscleroma SCOLIOMA (12) SCOTOMAS (12) [noun] An area of impaired or lost vision within a field of vision otherwise in a good (or at least healthy) state. SCRAMBLE (14) [noun] A rush or hurry, especially making use of the limbs against a surface. | [noun] An emergency defensive air force mission to intercept attacking enemy aircraft. | [noun] A motocross race. SCRAMJET (19) [noun] A jet engine capable of propelling an aircraft at hypersonic speeds; combustion of the fuel/air mixture occurs at supersonic speeds. SCRAMMED (15) [verb] To use the shutdown or safety device of a nuclear reactor. | [verb] (by extension) To use any emergency shutdown. | [verb] Leave in a hurry, go away. SCREAMED (13) [verb] To cry out with a shrill voice; to utter a sudden, sharp outcry, or shrill, loud cry, as in fright or extreme pain; to shriek; to screech. | [verb] To move quickly; to race. | [verb] To be very indicative of; clearly having the characteristics of. SCREAMER (12) [noun] One who screams; one who shouts; one who sings harshly. | [noun] Any bird in the taxonomic family Anhimidae, endemic to South America, being large, bulky birds with a small downy head, long legs and large feet. | [noun] A healthy, vigorous animal. SCRIMPED (15) [verb] To make too small or short. | [verb] To limit or straiten; to put on short allowance. | [verb] To be frugal. SCRIMPER (14) SCRIMPIT (14) SCROTUMS (12) [noun] The bag of skin and muscle that contains the testicles in mammals. SCRUMMED (15) SCUMBAGS (15) [noun] Condom | [noun] (mildly) sleazy, disreputable or despicable person; lowlife SCUMBLED (15) [verb] To apply an opaque glaze to an area of a painting to make it softer or duller. SCUMBLES (14) [verb] To apply an opaque glaze to an area of a painting to make it softer or duller. SCUMLIKE (16) SCUMMERS (14) [noun] An instrument for taking off scum | [noun] A supporter of Southampton F.C.. | [noun] One who engages in scumming. SCUMMIER (14) SCUMMING (15) [noun] The accumulation of sticky ink on a plate. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) That which is scummed off; skimmings; scum. | [noun] The strategy of collecting easy rewards in unchallenging areas, e.g. when a high-level character visits levels suitable for low-level characters in roguelike games. SEADROME (11) SEAMANLY (13) SEAMARKS (14) [noun] Any elevated object on land which serves as a guide to mariners, such as a hill or steeple. | [noun] A beacon, buoy, etc. placed in the sea to aid navigation. SEAMIEST (10) [adjective] Sordid, squalid or corrupt. | [adjective] Having or showing a seam. SEAMLESS (10) [adjective] Having no seams. | [adjective] Without interruption; coherent SEAMLIKE (14) SEAMOUNT (10) [noun] A mountain that rises from the floor of the ocean and does not breach the water's surface. SEAMSTER (10) SEATMATE (10) SECUNDUM (13) SEDILIUM (11) SEDIMENT (11) [noun] A collection of small particles, particularly dirt, that precipitates from a river or other body of water. | [verb] To deposit material as a sediment. | [verb] To be deposited as a sediment. SEEDSMAN (11) [noun] One who sows seeds. | [noun] A dealer in seed. SEEDSMEN (11) [noun] One who sows seeds. | [noun] A dealer in seed. SEEDTIME (11) [noun] The time to sow seeds. | [noun] A time for new development. SEEMINGS (11) [noun] Outward appearance. | [noun] Apprehension; judgement. SEEMLIER (10) [adjective] (of behavior) Appropriate; suited to the occasion or purpose; becoming. SEGMENTS (11) [noun] A length of some object. | [noun] One of the parts into which any body naturally separates or is divided; a part divided or cut off; a section; a portion. | [noun] A portion. SEISMISM (12) SELAMLIK (14) SELDOMLY (14) [adverb] (sometimes proscribed) Seldom; rarely. SELENIUM (10) [noun] A nonmetallic chemical element (symbol Se) with an atomic number of 34, used mainly in glassmaking and pigments and as a semiconductor. | [noun] A single atom of this element. SELFDOMS (14) SELFSAME (13) [adjective] Precisely the same; the very same; identical. SEMANTIC (12) [noun] In such writing systems as the Chinese writing system, the portion of a phono-semantic character that provides an indication of its meaning; contrasted with phonetic. | [adjective] Of or relating to semantics or the meanings of words. | [adjective] (software design, of code) Reflecting intended structure and meaning. SEMESTER (10) [noun] Half of a school year or academic year such as fall or spring semester. | [noun] A period or term of six months. SEMIARID (11) [adjective] Somewhat arid, receiving little rainfall but more than an arid area would. Typically defined as 25 to 50 cm or 10 to 20 inches of rainfall annually. SEMIBALD (13) SEMICOMA (14) SEMIDEAF (14) SEMIDOME (13) SEMIGALA (11) SEMIHARD (14) SEMIHIGH (17) SEMIHOBO (15) SEMIMATT (12) SEMIMUTE (12) SEMINARS (10) [noun] A class held for advanced studies in which students meet regularly to discuss original research, under the guidance of a professor. | [noun] A meeting held for the exchange of useful information by members of a common business community. SEMINARY (13) [noun] A theological school for the training of rabbis, priests, or ministers. | [noun] A private residential school for girls. | [noun] A class of religious education for youths ages 14–18 that accompanies normal secular education. SEMINUDE (11) SEMIOSES (10) SEMIOSIS (10) [noun] Any activity, conduct, or process that involves signs, including the production of meaning. SEMIOTIC (12) [adjective] Of or relating to semiotics or to semantics. | [adjective] Of or relating to the signs or symptoms of diseases. SEMIPROS (12) [noun] Semiprofessional. SEMISOFT (13) SEMITIST (10) SEMITONE (10) [noun] The musical interval equal (exactly or approximately) to half a tone or one-twelfth of an octave | [noun] Any of the pitches of the chromatic scale SEMIWILD (14) SEMOLINA (10) [noun] Coarse grains produced at an intermediate stage of wheat flour milling. | [noun] Such grains, usually from hard wheat, used in the preparation of pasta, couscous and various sweet dishes. | [noun] A soft dessert made by boiling a mixture of semolina, sugar and flavourings in milk. SEMPLICE (14) [adverb] (To be played) simply, without embellishments. SENTIMOS (10) SEPTIMES (12) SERAPHIM (15) [noun] A six-winged angel; the highest choir or order of angels in Christian angelology, ranked above cherubim, and below God. They are the 5th highest order of angels in Jewish angelology. A detailed description can be found at the beginning of Isaiah chapter 6 SERFDOMS (14) SERIATIM (10) [adjective] Point by point; sequential. | [adverb] One after another, in order; taking one topic or subject at a time in an order; sequentially. SERIEMAS (10) [noun] Either of two species of bird in the family Cariamidae, endemic to South America. SERMONIC (12) SESAMOID (11) [noun] A sesamoid bone or sesamoid cartilage. | [adjective] Resembling a sesame seed in size or shape. | [adjective] Of or relating to a sesamoid bone. SETIFORM (13) SFUMATOS (13) SHAHDOMS (17) SHAMABLE (15) SHAMANIC (15) [adjective] Of or relating to a shaman or to shamanism. SHAMBLED (16) [verb] To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet. SHAMBLES (15) [verb] To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet. | [noun] Work done in a poor fashion | [noun] A scene of great disorder or ruin SHAMEFUL (16) [adjective] Causing or meriting shame or disgrace; disgraceful | [adjective] Giving offense. SHAMMASH (18) SHAMMERS (15) SHAMMIED (16) SHAMMIES (15) [noun] Chamois leather. | [noun] A cloth made of this leather. SHAMMING (16) [verb] To deceive, cheat, lie. | [verb] To obtrude by fraud or imposition. | [verb] To assume the manner and character of; to imitate; to ape; to feign. SHAMOSIM (15) SHAMOYED (17) SHAMPOOS (15) [noun] A traditional Indian and Persian body massage given after pouring warm water over the body and rubbing it with extracts from herbs. | [noun] A commercial liquid soap product for washing hair or other fibres/fibers, such as carpets. | [noun] An instance of washing the hair or other fibres with shampoo. SHAMROCK (19) [noun] The trefoil leaf of any small clover, especially Trifolium repens, or such a leaf from a clover-like plant, commonly used as a symbol of Ireland. | [noun] Any of several small plants, forms of clover, with trefoil leaves, especially Trifolium repens. SHAMUSES (13) [noun] A private detective; originally, a policeman or police detective. SHEEPMAN (15) [noun] A shepherd. SHEEPMEN (15) [noun] A shepherd. SHEIKDOM (18) SHEQALIM (22) SHIMMERS (15) [noun] A faint or veiled and tremulous gleam or shining. | [noun] A measure of the irregularities in the loudness of a particular pitch over time. | [verb] To shine with a veiled, tremulous, or intermittent light; to gleam faintly. SHIMMERY (18) [adjective] Appearing to shimmer, glistening. SHIMMIED (16) [verb] To perform a shimmy (dance movement involving thrusting the shoulders back and forth alternately). | [verb] To climb something (e.g. a pole) gradually (e.g. using alternately one's arms then one's legs). | [verb] To vibrate abnormally, as a broken wheel. SHIMMIES (15) [verb] To perform a shimmy (dance movement involving thrusting the shoulders back and forth alternately). | [verb] To climb something (e.g. a pole) gradually (e.g. using alternately one's arms then one's legs). | [verb] To vibrate abnormally, as a broken wheel. SHIMMING (16) [verb] To fit one or more shims to a piece of machinery. | [verb] To adjust something by using shims. | [verb] To intercept and modify calls to (an API), usually for compatibility purposes. SHIPMATE (15) [noun] A fellow sailor serving on the same ship as another. | [noun] Any sailor (when used as a form of address by a sailor). SHIPMENT (15) [noun] A load of goods that is transported by any method (not just by ship) | [noun] The act of transporting goods SHIPWORM (18) [noun] Any of several wormlike marine mollusks (not true worms) of the family Teredinidae, that bore through the wooden hulls of ships and other woody material immersed in salt water. SHITTIMS (13) SHKOTZIM (26) SHLEMIEL (13) [noun] A loser or a fool. | [noun] A person who is clumsy or who hurts others emotionally. SHLUMPED (16) SHMALTZY (25) SHMOOZED (23) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SHMOOZES (22) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SHOWROOM (16) [noun] A room in a business set aside for the display of the company's products. | [noun] A room or apartment where a show is exhibited. | [verb] To inspect merchandise in a physical store, then purchase the identical product from an online merchant; to use a physical store as a showroom for an online merchant. SHRIMPED (16) [verb] To fish for shrimp. | [verb] To contract; to shrink. SHRIMPER (15) [noun] One who fishes for or catches shrimp. | [noun] A boat used in fishing for shrimp. SIAMANGS (11) [noun] A large black gibbon, Symphalangus syndactylus, from Sumatra SIAMESES (10) SICKROOM (16) [noun] A room to be used by someone who is ill. SIDDURIM (12) [noun] A prayer book containing a set order of daily prayers. SIEROZEM (19) SIGMOIDS (12) [noun] A function having a graph whose shape is sigmoid.. SILICIUM (12) SILKWORM (17) [noun] Any of various caterpillars of moths that produce silk cocoons, especially Bombyx mori, the source of most commercial silk. SIMARUBA (12) SIMAZINE (19) [noun] The herbicide and algicide 6-chloro-N2,N4-diethyl-1,3,5-triazine-2,4-diamine SIMITARS (10) SIMMERED (13) [verb] To cook or undergo heating slowly at or below the boiling point. | [verb] To cause to cook or to cause to undergo heating slowly at or below the boiling point. | [verb] To be on the point of breaking out into anger; to be agitated. SIMOLEON (10) [noun] A dollar. SIMONIAC (12) [noun] One who carries on or is guilty of simony. | [adjective] Practising simony SIMONIES (10) SIMONIST (10) SIMONIZE (19) [verb] To polish with a wax-like substance. | [verb] To commit simony SIMPERED (13) [verb] To smile in a foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, coy, or smug manner. | [verb] To glimmer; to twinkle. SIMPERER (12) SIMPLEST (12) [adjective] Uncomplicated; taken by itself, with nothing added. | [adjective] Without ornamentation; plain. | [adjective] Free from duplicity; guileless, innocent, straightforward. SIMPLIFY (18) [verb] To make simpler, either by reducing in complexity, reducing to component parts, or making easier to understand. | [verb] To become simpler. SIMPLISM (14) [noun] The trait of oversimplifying things by ignoring complexity and complications. SIMPLIST (12) SIMULANT (10) [noun] Something that simulates something else such as, for example, a gemstone. | [adjective] Simulating, replacing, or having the form or appearance of something else. SIMULARS (10) SIMULATE (10) [verb] To model, replicate, duplicate the behavior, appearance or properties of. | [adjective] Feigned; pretended. SINAPISM (12) SISTRUMS (10) SITZMARK (23) [noun] An indentation in the snow made by a fallen skier. SJAMBOKS (23) [noun] A stout whip, especially made of rhinoceros or hippopotamus hide. SKELLUMS (14) SKIAGRAM (15) SKIMMERS (16) [noun] A device that skims. | [noun] A person who skims. | [noun] Any of three species of bird in the genus Rynchops of the family Laridae, that feed by skimming the surface of water bodies with their bills in flight. SKIMMING (17) [verb] To pass lightly; to glide along in an even, smooth course; to glide along near the surface. | [verb] To pass near the surface of; to brush the surface of; to glide swiftly along the surface of. | [verb] To hasten along with superficial attention. SKIMPIER (16) [adjective] Small or inadequate; not generous, or of a garment, very small, light, or revealing. SKIMPILY (19) SKIMPING (17) [verb] To mock, deride, scorn, scold, make fun of. | [verb] To slight; to do carelessly; to scamp. | [verb] To make insufficient allowance for; to scant; to scrimp. SKIRMISH (17) [noun] A brief battle between small groups, usually part of a longer or larger battle or war. | [noun] (by extension) Any minor dispute. | [noun] A type of outdoor military style game using paintball or similar weapons. SLALOMED (11) [verb] To race in a slalom. | [verb] To move in a slalom-like manner. SLAMMERS (12) [noun] One who, or that which, slams. | [noun] (usually "the slammer") Jail, prison. | [noun] A tequila cocktail. SLAMMING (13) [verb] To shut with sudden force so as to produce a shock and noise. | [verb] To put in or on a particular place with force and loud noise. (Often followed by a preposition such as down, against or into.) | [verb] To strike forcefully with some implement. SLIMIEST (10) [adjective] Of or pertaining to slime | [adjective] Resembling, of the nature of, covered or daubed with, or abounding in slime | [adjective] Friendly in a false, calculating way; underhanded; sneaky; slick; smarmy. SLIMMERS (12) [noun] A person who is trying to become slim by dieting. SLIMMEST (12) [adjective] Slender, thin. | [adjective] (of something abstract like a chance or margin) Very small, tiny. | [adjective] (rural) Bad, of questionable quality; not strongly built, flimsy. SLIMMING (13) [verb] To lose weight in order to achieve slimness. | [verb] To make slimmer; to reduce in size. | [noun] The process of making or becoming slimmer. SLIMNESS (10) SLIMSIER (10) SLIPFORM (15) [noun] A type of process for setting concrete which uses moveable forms that are moved and reused once the concrete is stiff enough to retain its shape under its own weight. | [noun] A moveable form used when setting concrete using the slipform technique. | [verb] To use the slipform technique when creating a concrete structure. SLOWWORM (16) SLUMBERS (12) [noun] A very light state of sleep, almost awake. | [noun] A state of ignorance or inaction. | [verb] To be in a very light state of sleep, almost awake. SLUMBERY (15) SLUMGUMS (13) SLUMISMS (12) SLUMLORD (11) [noun] A person who makes money by renting housing that is kept in poor condition. SLUMMERS (12) SLUMMIER (12) [adjective] Like a slum; run-down, dirty, decrepit. SLUMMING (13) [verb] To visit a neighborhood of a status below one's own. | [noun] A period of associating with people or engaging in activities with a status below one's own. SLUMPING (13) [verb] To collapse heavily or helplessly. | [verb] To decline or fall off in activity or performance. | [verb] To slouch or droop. SMACKERS (16) [noun] One who smacks or spanks. | [noun] One who makes a smacking noise, especially while eating. | [noun] A kiss. SMACKING (17) [verb] To get the flavor of. | [verb] To indicate or suggest something; used with of. | [verb] To have a particular taste; used with of. SMALLAGE (11) SMALLEST (10) [adjective] Not large or big; insignificant; few in number. | [adjective] Young, as a child. | [adjective] (writing, incomparable) Minuscule or lowercase, referring to written or printed letters. SMALLISH (13) [adjective] Somewhat small. SMALLPOX (19) [noun] An acute, highly infectious often fatal disease caused by Variola virus of the family Poxviridae. It was completely eradicated in the 1970s. Those who survived were left with pockmarks. SMALTINE (10) SMALTITE (10) [noun] A variety of skutterudite with the chemical formula (Co,Fe,Ni)As2, crystallizing in the cubic system. SMARAGDE (12) SMARAGDS (12) SMARMIER (12) [adjective] Falsely earnest, smug, or ingratiating. | [adjective] Unctuous, greasy, as hair from pomade SMARMILY (15) SMARTASS (10) [noun] One who is particularly insolent, who tends to make snide remarks or jokes. | [verb] To talk like a smartass, with a lot of snide remarks. | [adjective] Related to or characteristic of a smartass. SMARTENS (10) [verb] To make smarter in appearance; to refurbish or spruce up. | [verb] To increase the speed of (one's travel on foot, etc.). | [verb] To augment with computer technology. SMARTEST (10) [adjective] Exhibiting social ability or cleverness. | [adjective] Exhibiting intellectual knowledge, such as that found in books. | [adjective] (often in combination) Equipped with intelligent behaviour (digital/computer technology). SMARTIES (10) [noun] An obnoxiously clever or quick-witted person. SMARTING (11) [verb] To hurt or sting. | [verb] To cause a smart or sting in. | [verb] To feel a pungent pain of mind; to feel sharp pain or grief; be punished severely; to feel the sting of evil. SMASHERS (13) [noun] Something that, or someone who, smashes. | [noun] An attractive person (see also smashing). | [noun] Anything very large or extraordinary; a whopper. SMASHING (14) [verb] To break (something brittle) violently. | [verb] To be destroyed by being smashed. | [verb] To hit extremely hard. SMASHUPS (15) [noun] An abrupt, damaging breakdown or failure. | [noun] A violent collision involving one or more vehicles. SMATTERS (10) [verb] To talk superficially; to babble, chatter. | [verb] To speak (a language) with spotty or superficial knowledge. | [verb] To study or approach superficially; to dabble in. SMEARERS (10) SMEARIER (10) SMEARING (11) [verb] To spread (a substance, especially one that colours or is dirty) across a surface by rubbing. | [verb] To have a substance smeared on (a surface). | [verb] To damage someone's reputation by slandering, misrepresenting, or otherwise making false accusations about an individual, their statements, or their actions. SMECTITE (12) [noun] Any of many clay phyllosilicate minerals that have a relatively open structure. SMEDDUMS (14) SMEEKING (15) SMELLERS (10) SMELLIER (10) [adjective] Having a bad smell. | [adjective] Having a quality that arouses suspicion. | [adjective] (in extreme programming) Having signs that suggest a design problem; having a code smell. SMELLING (11) [verb] To sense a smell or smells. | [verb] Followed by like or of if descriptive: to have a particular smell, whether good or bad. | [verb] (without a modifier) To smell bad; to stink. SMELTERS (10) [noun] A person employed to do smelting. | [noun] A machine used to smelt metal. | [noun] A place where smelting is done. SMELTERY (13) SMELTING (11) [verb] To fuse or melt two things into one, especially in order to extract metal from ore; to meld | [noun] The process of melting or fusion, especially to extract a metal from its ore. SMERKING (15) SMIDGENS (12) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMIDGEON (12) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMIDGINS (12) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMILAXES (17) [noun] Any member of the Smilax genus of greenbriers. SMIRCHED (16) [verb] To dirty; to make dirty. | [verb] To harm the reputation of; to smear or slander. SMIRCHES (15) [verb] To dirty; to make dirty. | [verb] To harm the reputation of; to smear or slander. SMIRKERS (14) SMIRKIER (14) [adjective] Smirking, or as if smirking | [adjective] Smart; spruce. SMIRKING (15) [verb] To smile in a way that is affected, smug, insolent or contemptuous. | [noun] The act of one who smirks. SMITHERS (13) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A fragment or atom. | [noun] Light, fine rain. SMITHERY (16) [noun] The place where a smith works. | [noun] The trade or craft of a smith. SMITHIES (13) [noun] The location where a smith (particularly a blacksmith) works, a forge. SMOCKING (17) [verb] To provide with, or clothe in, a smock or a smock frock. | [verb] To apply smocking. | [noun] An embroidery technique in which the fabric is gathered and then embroidered with decorative stitches to hold the gathers in place; the product of the use of this embroidery technique. SMOGGIER (12) SMOGLESS (11) SMOKABLE (16) SMOKEPOT (16) SMOKIEST (14) [adjective] Filled with smoke. | [adjective] Giving off smoke. | [adjective] Of a colour or colour pattern similar to that of smoke. SMOLDERS (11) [verb] To burn with no flame and little smoke. | [verb] To show signs of repressed anger or suppressed mental turmoil or other strong emotion, such as passion. | [verb] To exist in a suppressed or hidden state. SMOOCHED (16) [verb] To kiss. | [verb] To soil, stain or smudge. SMOOCHES (15) [noun] A kiss. | [verb] To kiss. | [verb] To soil, stain or smudge. SMOOTHED (14) [verb] To make smooth or even. | [verb] To make straightforward or easy. | [verb] To calm or palliate. SMOOTHEN (13) [verb] To make smooth. | [verb] To become smooth. SMOOTHER (13) [adjective] Having a texture that lacks friction. Not rough. | [adjective] Without difficulty, problems, or unexpected consequences or incidents. | [adjective] Bland; glib. SMOOTHES (13) SMOOTHIE (13) [noun] A smooth-talking person. | [noun] A drink made from whole fruit, thus thicker than fruit juice. | [noun] A member of the mod subculture who is relatively non-violent and wears expensive clothing. SMOOTHLY (16) [adverb] In a smooth manner SMOTHERS (13) [verb] To suffocate; stifle; obstruct, more or less completely, the respiration of something or someone. | [verb] To extinguish or deaden, as fire, by covering, overlaying, or otherwise excluding the air. | [verb] To reduce to a low degree of vigor or activity; suppress or do away with; extinguish SMOTHERY (16) SMOULDER (11) [verb] To burn with no flame and little smoke. | [verb] To show signs of repressed anger or suppressed mental turmoil or other strong emotion, such as passion. | [verb] To exist in a suppressed or hidden state. SMUDGIER (12) [adjective] Marked with smudges. | [adjective] Like a thick smoke (such as is emitted by a smudge pot). SMUDGILY (15) SMUDGING (13) [verb] To obscure by blurring; to smear. | [verb] To soil or smear with dirt. | [verb] To use dense smoke to protect from insects. SMUGGEST (12) [adjective] Irritatingly pleased with oneself, offensively self-complacent, self-satisfied. | [adjective] Studiously neat or nice, especially in dress; spruce; affectedly precise; smooth and prim. SMUGGLED (13) [verb] To import or export, illicitly or by stealth, without paying lawful customs charges or duties | [verb] To bring in surreptitiously | [verb] To fondle or cuddle. SMUGGLER (12) [noun] One who smuggles things. | [noun] A vessel employed in smuggling. SMUGGLES (12) [verb] To import or export, illicitly or by stealth, without paying lawful customs charges or duties | [verb] To bring in surreptitiously | [verb] To fondle or cuddle. SMUGNESS (11) [noun] The state or quality of being smug. | [noun] The result or product of being smug. SMUTCHED (16) SMUTCHES (15) SMUTTIER (10) [adjective] Soiled with smut; blackened, dirty. | [adjective] Obscene, indecent. | [adjective] Affected with the smut fungus. SMUTTILY (13) SMUTTING (11) SNOBBISM (14) [noun] A snobbish attitude, particularly in relation to art or high culture. SNOWMELT (13) [noun] Runoff from melting snow SNOWMOLD (14) SODAMIDE (12) SODOMIES (11) SODOMIST (11) SODOMITE (11) [noun] One who practices sodomy; a sodomist. | [noun] A native or inhabitant of Sodom SODOMIZE (20) [verb] To perform anal or oral sex upon a person, especially if against his or her will. | [verb] To perform sexual intercourse with an animal. SOLANUMS (10) [noun] Any plant in the genus Solanum. | [noun] A traditional green vegetable in the genus Solanum, specifically Solanum nigrum, and sometimes Solanum macrocarpon, Solanum scabrun, and Solanum villosum. SOLARISM (10) SOLARIUM (10) [noun] An establishment with sunbeds in it or where one can rent sunbeds. | [noun] A room, with many windows, exposed to the sun. | [noun] A sundial. SOLATIUM (10) [noun] A form of compensation for emotional rather than physical or financial harm. | [noun] Intangible or emotional compensation. SOLECISM (12) [noun] An erroneous or improper usage. | [noun] (grammar) Error in the use of language. | [noun] A faux pas or breach of etiquette; a transgression against the norms of expected behavior. SOLEMNER (10) SOLEMNLY (13) [adverb] In a solemn manner. SOMBERLY (15) SOMBRELY (15) SOMBRERO (12) [noun] A kind of hat with a high conical or cylindrical crown and a saucer-shaped brim, highly embroidered, made of plush felt. | [noun] A mixed drink with coffee liqueur and cream. | [noun] A series of four consecutive strikes. SOMBROUS (12) SOMEBODY (16) [noun] A recognised or important person, a celebrity. | [pronoun] Some unspecified person. SOMEDEAL (11) SOMEONES (10) SOMERSET (10) SOMETIME (12) [adjective] Former, erstwhile; at some previous time. | [adjective] Occasional. | [adverb] At an indefinite but stated time in the past or future. SOMEWAYS (16) [adverb] Somehow, in an unspecified manner. SOMEWHAT (16) [noun] More or less; a certain quantity or degree; a part, more or less; something. | [noun] A person or thing of importance; a somebody. | [adverb] (degree) To a limited extent or degree. SOMEWHEN (16) [adverb] At some time; indefinitely; some time or other, sometime SOMEWISE (13) SONARMAN (10) SONARMEN (10) SONOGRAM (11) [noun] A medical image produced by ultrasound echo | [noun] A spectrogram | [verb] To perform a sonogram upon. SOPHISMS (15) [noun] A method of teaching using the techniques of philosophy and rhetoric. | [noun] A flawed argument, superficially correct in its reasoning, usually designed to deceive. | [noun] An intentional fallacy. SORGHUMS (14) [noun] A cereal, Sorghum bicolor (syn. Sorghum vulgare) the grains of which are used to make flour and as cattle feed. | [noun] Sorghum syrup. SOUNDMAN (11) SOUNDMEN (11) SOYMILKS (17) [noun] A milky liquid made from soy beans and used as a beverage, cooking ingredient or substitute for dairy milk. | [noun] An individual serving of such a beverage. SPACEMAN (14) [noun] An astronaut, often a male astronaut. SPACEMEN (14) [noun] An astronaut, often a male astronaut. SPANWORM (15) [noun] A measuring worm or inchworm (Lepidoptera, Geometridae) SPEARMAN (12) [noun] A soldier who fights with a spear SPEARMEN (12) [noun] A soldier who fights with a spear SPECIMEN (14) [noun] An individual instance that represents a class; an example. | [noun] A sample, especially one used for diagnostic analysis. | [noun] (often preceded with “fine”) An eligible man. SPECTRUM (14) [noun] A range; a continuous, infinite, one-dimensional set, possibly bounded by extremes. | [noun] Specifically, a range of colours representing light (electromagnetic radiation) of contiguous frequencies; hence electromagnetic spectrum, visible spectrum, ultraviolet spectrum, etc. | [noun] The autism spectrum. SPECULUM (14) [noun] A medical instrument used during an examination to dilate an orifice. | [noun] A mirror, especially one used in a telescope. | [noun] A bright, lustrous patch of colour found on the wings of ducks and some other birds, usually situated on the distal portions of the secondary quills, and much more brilliant in the adult male than in the female. SPERMARY (15) SPERMINE (12) [noun] A polyamine, N,N'-bis(3-aminopropyl) butane-1,4-diamine, originally extracted from sperm, that is involved in cellular metabolism SPERMOUS (12) SPHAGNUM (16) [noun] Any of various widely distributed mosses, of genus Sphagnum, which slowly decompose to form peat. SPHYGMIC (21) SPHYGMUS (19) SPICULUM (14) SPIREMES (12) SPLENIUM (12) [noun] The thick posterior part of the corpus callosum of the brain. SPUMIEST (12) SPUMONES (12) SPUMONIS (12) SQUAMATE (19) [noun] Any reptile of the order Squamata. | [adjective] Covered in scales. SQUAMOSE (19) [adjective] Covered with, made of, or resembling scales; scaly. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the squamosal bone; squamosal SQUAMOUS (19) [adjective] Covered with, made of, or resembling scales; scaly. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the squamosal bone; squamosal SQUIRMED (20) [verb] To twist one's body with snakelike motions. | [verb] To twist in discomfort, especially from shame or embarrassment. | [verb] To evade a question, an interviewer etc. SQUIRMER (19) STADIUMS (11) [noun] A venue where sporting events are held. | [noun] An Ancient Greek racecourse, especially, the Olympic course for foot races. | [noun] A Greek measure of length, being the chief one used for itinerary distances, also adopted by the Romans for nautical and astronomical measurements, equal to 600 Greek or 625 Roman feet, or 125 Roman paces, or to 606 feet, 9 inches. STAMINAL (10) STAMINAS (10) STAMMELS (12) STAMMERS (12) [noun] The involuntary repetition of a sound in speech. | [verb] To keep repeating a particular sound involuntarily during speech. | [verb] To utter with a stammer, or with timid hesitancy. STAMPEDE (13) [noun] A wild, headlong scamper, or running away, of a number of animals; usually caused by fright; hence, any sudden flight or dispersion, as of a crowd or an army in consequence of a panic. | [noun] A situation in which many people in a crowd are trying to go in the same direction at the same time. | [noun] Any sudden unconcerted moving or acting together of a number of persons, as from some common impulse. STAMPERS (12) STAMPING (13) [verb] To step quickly and heavily, once or repeatedly. | [verb] To move (the foot or feet) quickly and heavily, once or repeatedly. | [verb] To strike, beat, or press forcibly with the bottom of the foot, or by thrusting the foot downward. STANNUMS (10) STARDOMS (11) STASIMON (10) STATISMS (10) STAUMREL (10) STEAMERS (10) [noun] A device or object that works by the operation of steam. | [noun] A mode of transportation propelled by steam. | [noun] A babycino (frothy milk drink). STEAMIER (10) [adjective] Warm and humid; full of steam | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of steam | [adjective] Erotic STEAMILY (13) STEAMING (11) [verb] To cook with steam. | [verb] To expose to the action of steam; to apply steam to for softening, dressing, or preparing. | [verb] To produce or vent steam. STEMLESS (10) STEMLIKE (14) STEMMATA (12) [noun] A family tree or recorded genealogy | [noun] In the study of stemmatics, a diagram showing the relationship of a text to its manuscripts | [noun] One of the types of simple eyes in arthropods STEMMERS (12) STEMMERY (15) STEMMIER (12) STEMMING (13) [verb] To remove the stem from. | [verb] To be caused or derived; to originate. | [verb] To descend in a family line. STEMSONS (10) STEMWARE (13) [noun] Drinking glasses that have a stem, such as wine glasses or champagne flutes. STEPDAME (13) STERIGMA (11) [noun] A slim projecting part of the basidium of some species of fungi that carries the basidiospore. | [noun] A woody projection from the tip of the leaf base in certain conifers (Picea and Tsuga). | [noun] Part of the genitalia of moths. STERNUMS (10) [noun] The breastbone | [noun] The sclerotized plate of spiders, between the coxae, marking the floor of the cephalothorax STEWBUMS (15) [noun] A homeless alcoholic. STIBIUMS (12) STICKMAN (16) STICKMEN (16) STICKUMS (16) STIGMATA (11) [noun] A mark of infamy or disgrace. | [noun] A scar or birthmark. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural stigmata) A mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion on Jesus' body, and sometimes reported to bleed periodically. STILLMAN (10) STILLMEN (10) STIMULUS (10) [noun] Any external phenomenon that has an influence on a system, by triggering or modifying an internal phenomenon. | [noun] Something external that elicits or influences a physiological or psychological activity or response. | [noun] Anything effectively impinging upon any of the sensory apparatuses of a living organism, including physical phenomena both internal and external to the body. STIMYING (14) STOCKMAN (16) [noun] A man who raises or looks after livestock. | [noun] A person who works in a stockroom. STOCKMEN (16) [noun] A man who raises or looks after livestock. | [noun] A person who works in a stockroom. STOICISM (12) [noun] A school of philosophy popularized during the Roman Empire that emphasized reason as a means of understanding the natural state of things, or logos, and as a means of freeing oneself from emotional distress. | [noun] A real or pretended indifference to pleasure or pain; insensibility; impassiveness. STOMACHS (15) [noun] An organ in animals that stores food in the process of digestion. | [noun] The belly. | [noun] Pride, haughtiness. STOMACHY (18) STOMATAL (10) [adjective] Relating to, or containing, a stoma STOMATES (10) [noun] Stoma STOMATIC (12) STOMODEA (11) STOMPERS (12) STOMPING (13) [verb] To trample heavily. | [verb] To severely beat someone physically or figuratively. | [noun] The act of one who stomps. STORMIER (10) [adjective] Of or pertaining to storms. | [adjective] Characterized by, or proceeding from, a storm; subject to storms; agitated with strong winds and heavy rain. | [adjective] Proceeding from violent agitation or fury. STORMILY (13) STORMING (11) [verb] (with adverbial of direction) To move quickly and noisily like a storm, usually in a state of uproar or anger. | [verb] To rage or fume; to be in a violent temper. | [verb] To assault (a stronghold or fortification) with military forces. STRAMASH (13) [noun] A tumult or disturbance. | [verb] A noise, an uproar, a disturbance | [verb] To strike, beat, or bang; to break; to destroy. STRAMONY (13) STRATUMS (10) STREAMED (11) [verb] To flow in a continuous or steady manner, like a liquid. | [verb] To extend; to stretch out with a wavy motion; to float in the wind. | [verb] To discharge in a stream. STREAMER (10) [noun] A long, narrow flag, or piece of material used or seen as a decoration. | [noun] Strips of paper or other material used as confetti. | [noun] A newspaper headline that runs along the top of a page. STROMATA (10) [noun] The tissue structure of an organ, etc., that serves to support it. STRUMMED (13) [verb] To play (a guitar or other stringed instrument) using various strings simultaneously. STRUMMER (12) STRUMOSE (10) STRUMOUS (10) [adjective] Scrofulous; having struma STRUMPET (12) [noun] A female prostitute | [noun] A woman who is very sexually active. | [noun] A female adulterer. STUMBLED (13) [verb] To trip or fall; to walk clumsily. | [verb] To make a mistake or have trouble. | [verb] To cause to stumble or trip. STUMBLER (12) STUMBLES (12) [noun] A fall, trip or substantial misstep. | [noun] An error or blunder. | [noun] A clumsy walk. STUMMING (13) [verb] To ferment. | [verb] To renew (wine etc.) by mixing must with it and raising a new fermentation. | [verb] To fume, as a cask of liquor, with burning sulphur. STUMPAGE (13) STUMPERS (12) [noun] One who stumps, or speaks, or orates, as a politician. | [noun] A difficult puzzle or problem. | [noun] A boastful person. STUMPIER (12) [adjective] Like or resembling a stump; short and cut off. | [adjective] Full of stumps. STUMPING (13) [verb] To stop, confuse, or puzzle. | [verb] To baffle; to make unable to find an answer to a question or problem. | [verb] To campaign. STUNTMAN (10) [noun] In films, someone who performs stunts that are deemed too dangerous or physically difficult for the main actors to attempt. STUNTMEN (10) [noun] In films, someone who performs stunts that are deemed too dangerous or physically difficult for the main actors to attempt. STYMYING (17) SUBATOMS (12) SUBFRAME (15) [noun] A subsidiary frame (chunk of data). | [noun] A structural component of a vehicle, such as an automobile or aircraft, that uses a discrete, separate structure within a larger body-on-frame or unit body to carry certain components, such as the engine, drivetrain, or suspension. | [noun] One of the HTML frames that make up a frameset. SUBHUMAN (15) [noun] Anything which is less than human. | [adjective] Less than human; lacking characteristics of a human. SUBHUMID (16) SUBITEMS (12) SUBLIMED (13) [verb] To sublimate. | [verb] To raise on high. | [verb] To exalt; to heighten; to improve; to purify. SUBLIMER (12) [adjective] Noble and majestic. | [adjective] Impressive and awe-inspiring, yet simple. | [adjective] Lifted up; high in place; exalted aloft; uplifted; lofty. SUBLIMES (12) [noun] Something sublime. SUBMENUS (12) [noun] A secondary menu available through another menu, especially one that branches off the first. SUBMERGE (13) [verb] To sink out of sight. | [verb] To put into a liquid; to immerse; to plunge into and keep in. | [verb] To be engulfed in or overwhelmed by something. SUBMERSE (12) [verb] To submerge. | [adjective] Growing entirely under water. SUBSUMED (13) [verb] To place (any one cognition) under another as belonging to it; to include or contain something else. | [verb] To consider an occurrence as part of a principle or rule; to colligate SUBSUMES (12) [verb] To place (any one cognition) under another as belonging to it; to include or contain something else. | [verb] To consider an occurrence as part of a principle or rule; to colligate SUBTHEME (15) SUCCUMBS (16) [verb] To yield to an overpowering force or overwhelming desire. | [verb] To give up, or give in. | [verb] To die. SUDARIUM (11) [noun] A napkin or handkerchief. SUMMABLE (14) SUMMANDS (13) [noun] Something which is added or summed. SUMMATED (13) SUMMATES (12) SUMMERED (13) [verb] To spend the summer, as in a particular place on holiday. SUMMERLY (15) SUMMITAL (12) SUMMITED (13) [verb] (hiking) To reach the summit of a mountain. | [adjective] Having a summit. SUMMITRY (15) SUMMONED (13) [verb] To call people together; to convene. | [verb] To ask someone to come; to send for. | [verb] To order (goods) and have delivered SUMMONER (12) SUMPTERS (12) [noun] The driver of a packhorse. | [noun] A packhorse; a beast of burden. | [noun] A pack; a burden. SUMPWEED (16) SUNBEAMS (12) [noun] A visible, narrow, and intense (relative to ambient light) ray of sunlight. | [noun] An item of cutlery or crockery laid out on a table, but not used, and which can be returned to the drawer without being washed. | [noun] Any of various lycaenid butterflies of the genus Curetis. SUNBEAMY (15) SUNLAMPS (12) [noun] A lamp that produces ultraviolet radiation; used for therapeutic or cosmetic purposes. | [noun] A high-intensity lamp, used to produce an illusion of daylight. SUNROOMS (10) [noun] A room in a residence with numerous large windows admitting sunlight. | [noun] Solarium SUPERMAN (12) [noun] An imagined superior type of human being representing a new stage of human development; an übermensch, an overman. | [noun] A person of extraordinary or seemingly superhuman powers. SUPERMEN (12) [noun] An imagined superior type of human being representing a new stage of human development; an übermensch, an overman. | [noun] A person of extraordinary or seemingly superhuman powers. SUPERMOM (14) [noun] A mother who looks after her home and children whilst being in full-time employment SUPREMER (12) SUPREMOS (12) [noun] The most important person in an organization. SURMISED (11) [verb] To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises. SURMISER (10) SURMISES (10) [noun] Thought, imagination, or conjecture, which may be based upon feeble or scanty evidence; suspicion; guess. | [noun] Reflection; thought; posit. | [verb] To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises. SURMOUNT (10) [verb] To get over; to overcome. | [verb] To cap; to sit on top off. SURNAMED (11) [verb] To give a surname to. | [verb] To call by a surname. SURNAMER (10) SURNAMES (10) [noun] An additional name, particularly those derived from a birthplace, quality, or achievement; an epithet. | [noun] An additional name given to a person, place, or thing; a byname or nickname. | [noun] The name a person shares with other members of that person's family, distinguished from that person's given name or names; a family name. SWAMPERS (15) [noun] A person who lives in a swampy area. | [noun] A person who clears a road for lumberers in a forest or swamp. | [noun] Someone or something that swamps or overwhelms. SWAMPIER (15) [adjective] Soggy and marshy; wet like a swamp. | [adjective] Flowing smoothly with no harsh tones but possibly including muddy tones. SWAMPING (16) [verb] To drench or fill with water. | [verb] To overwhelm; to make too busy, or overrun the capacity of. | [verb] To plunge into difficulties and perils; to overwhelm; to ruin; to wreck. SWAMPISH (18) SWARMERS (13) [noun] Something that swarms. SWARMING (14) [verb] To move as a swarm. | [verb] To teem, or be overrun with insects, people, etc. | [verb] To fill a place as a swarm. SWIMMERS (15) [noun] One who swims. | [noun] A protuberance on the leg of a horse. | [noun] A webfooted aquatic bird. SWIMMIER (15) SWIMMILY (18) SWIMMING (16) [noun] The act or art of sustaining and propelling the body in water. | [noun] The state of being dizzy or in vertigo. | [verb] To move through the water, without touching the bottom; to propel oneself in water by natural means. SWIMSUIT (13) [noun] A garment worn for swimming. | [noun] A tight-fitting one-piece garment worn by women and girls. SWIMWEAR (16) [noun] Items of clothing appropriate for swimming SWINGMAN (14) [noun] A player who can swing between two different positions, often the small forward and shooting guard positions in basketball. SWINGMEN (14) [noun] A player who can swing between two different positions, often the small forward and shooting guard positions in basketball. SWORDMAN (14) SWORDMEN (14) SYCAMINE (15) [noun] A tree, mentioned in Luke's Gospel, and thought to be the black mulberry. SYCAMORE (15) [noun] Any of several North American plane trees, of the genus Platanus, especially Platanus occidentalis (American sycamore). | [noun] A large British and European species of maple, Acer pseudoplatanus, known in North America as the sycamore maple. | [noun] A large tree bearing edible fruit, Ficus sycomorus, allied to the common fig and found in Egypt and Syria; also called the sycamore fig or the fig-mulberry; the Biblical sycomore. SYCOMORE (15) [noun] A type of fig, Ficus sycomorus, native to the Middle East; the sycamore tree of the Bible. SYCONIUM (15) [noun] A collective fleshy fruit, in which the ovaries are hidden within a hollow receptacle, as in the fig; a hollow ball with a stalk at one end and an opening (ostiole) at the other, with flowers or fruits on the inside SYMBIONS (15) SYMBIONT (15) [noun] An organism that lives in a symbiotic relationship; a symbiote. SYMBIOTE (15) [noun] An organism in a partnership with another such that each profits from their being together; a symbiont SYMBIOTS (15) SYMBOLED (16) [verb] To symbolize. SYMBOLIC (17) [adjective] Pertaining to a symbol. | [adjective] Implicitly representing or referring to another thing. SYMMETRY (18) [noun] Exact correspondence on either side of a dividing line, plane, center or axis. | [noun] The satisfying arrangement of a balanced distribution of the elements of a whole. SYMPATHY (21) [noun] A feeling of pity or sorrow for the suffering or distress of another; compassion. | [noun] The ability to share the feelings of another. | [noun] A mutual relationship between people or things such that they are correspondingly affected by any condition. SYMPATRY (18) SYMPHONY (21) [noun] An extended piece of music of sophisticated structure, usually for orchestra. | [noun] An instrumental introduction or termination to a vocal composition. | [noun] Harmony in music or colour, or a harmonious combination of elements. SYMPODIA (16) [noun] A pattern of branching, similar to dichotomous branching, where the axis or stem is morphologically made up of a series of superposed branches imitating a simple stem. SYMPOSIA (15) [noun] A conference or other meeting for discussion of a topic, especially one in which the participants make presentations. | [noun] A drinking party in Ancient Greece, especially one with intellectual discussion. SYMPTOMS (17) [noun] A perceived change in some function, sensation or appearance of a person that indicates a disease or disorder, such as fever, headache or rash. | [noun] A signal; anything that indicates, or is characteristic of, the presence of something else, especially of something undesirable. SYNDROME (14) [noun] A recognizable pattern of signs, symptoms and/or behaviours, especially of a disease or medical or psychological condition. | [noun] Any set of characteristics regarded as identifying a certain type, condition, etc., usually adverse. SYNGAMIC (16) SYNONYME (16) SYNONYMS (16) [noun] (strictly) A word whose meaning is the same as that of another word. | [noun] A word or phrase with a meaning that is the same as, or very similar to, another word or phrase. | [noun] Any of the formal names for a taxon, including the valid name (i.e. the senior synonym). SYNONYMY (19) [noun] The quality of being synonymous; sameness of meaning. | [noun] A list or collection of synonyms, often compared and contrasted. | [noun] The study of synonyms. SYNTAGMA (14) [noun] A constituent segment within a text, such as a word or a phrase that forms a syntactic unit. | [noun] An arrangement of units that together bears a meaning. | [noun] (history) A Macedonian phalanx fighting formation consisting of 256 men with long spears (sarissae). SYSTEMIC (15) [adjective] Embedded within and spread throughout and affecting a whole system, group, body, economy, market, or society. | [adjective] Pertaining to an entire organism. TACHISME (15) [noun] A French style of abstract painting popular in the 1940s and 1950s. TACHISMS (15) TAGMEMES (13) [noun] (grammar, tagmemics) The smallest functional element in the grammatical structure of a sentence. TAGMEMIC (15) TAILLAMP (12) [noun] A taillight. TALESMAN (10) [noun] The (male) author or relater of a tale; storyteller. | [noun] Someone summoned to a jury when a tales is awarded, to make up numbers. TALESMEN (10) [noun] The (male) author or relater of a tale; storyteller. | [noun] Someone summoned to a jury when a tales is awarded, to make up numbers. TALEYSIM (13) TALISMAN (10) [noun] A magical object providing protection against ill will, or the supernatural, or conferring the wearer with a boon such as good luck, good health, or power(s). TALLISIM (10) TALLITIM (10) TALLYMAN (13) [noun] A person who keeps a tally of something. | [noun] A man who conducts the tally trade | [noun] A man who cohabits (with someone) outside of marriage. TALLYMEN (13) [noun] A person who keeps a tally of something. | [noun] A man who conducts the tally trade | [noun] A man who cohabits (with someone) outside of marriage. TALMUDIC (13) TAMANDUA (11) [noun] An anteater of the genus Tamandua. TAMANDUS (11) TAMARACK (16) [noun] Any of several North American larches, of the genus Larix. | [noun] The wood from such a tree. TAMARAOS (10) TAMARAUS (10) [noun] A small, dark brown, hoofed buffalo, Bubalus mindorensis, found only on Mindoro in the Philippines. TAMARIND (11) [noun] A tropical tree, Tamarindus indica. | [noun] The fruit of this tree; the pulp is used as spice in Asian cooking and in Worcestershire sauce. | [noun] Other similar species: TAMARINS (10) [noun] One of a family of squirrel-sized South American monkeys. TAMARISK (14) [noun] Any of several shrubs, of the genus Tamarix, native to arid regions in Eurasia and Africa, often invasive in other arid regions. TAMASHAS (13) [noun] A visual art form from Maharashtra, India, involving singing and dancing. | [noun] (colonial India) Any traditional indigenous public ceremony. TAMBALAS (12) [noun] Malawi's minor currency unit, a hundredth of a kwacha. TAMBOURA (12) [noun] A type of long-necked lute-like stringed instrument found throughout the world but originating in the traditional music of India. TAMBOURS (12) [noun] A percussive musical instrument spanned with a thin covering on at least one end for striking, forming an acoustic chamber, affecting what materials are used to make it; a membranophone. | [noun] Any similar hollow, cylindrical object. | [noun] A barrel or large cylindrical container for liquid transport and storage. TAMBURAS (12) [noun] A type of long-necked lute-like stringed instrument found throughout the world but originating in the traditional music of India. TAMEABLE (12) TAMELESS (10) TAMENESS (10) TAMPALAS (12) TAMPERED (13) [verb] To make unauthorized or improper alterations, sometimes causing deliberate damage; to meddle (with something). | [verb] To try to influence someone, usually in an illegal or devious way; to try to deal (with someone). | [verb] To meddle (with something) in order to corrupt or pervert it. TAMPERER (12) TAMPIONS (12) [noun] A wooden plug, or a metal or canvas cover for the muzzle of a gun, a cannon or other piece of ordnance when not in use; a stopper; a bung. | [noun] A plug for the upper end of an organ pipe. TAMPONED (13) [verb] To plug (a wound) with a tampon or compress. TANGRAMS (11) [noun] A Chinese puzzle made of a square that is cut up into different triangular pieces which can then be reassembled to make designs. TANTALUM (10) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Ta) with atomic number 73: a rare, hard, blue-gray, lustrous transition metal that is highly corrosion-resistant. TANTRUMS (10) [noun] An often childish display or fit of bad temper. TAPEWORM (15) [noun] Any parasitical worm of the class or infraclass Cestoda, which infest the intestines of animals, including humans, often infecting different host species during their life cycle. | [noun] Infection by tapeworms. TAPROOMS (12) [noun] A bar or barroom; a room where alcoholic beverages are served on tap. TAUTOMER (10) [noun] Any of the multiple forms of a tautomeric compound. TAUTONYM (13) [noun] A binomial name consisting of the same word twice, such as Bison bison. | [noun] A word or term made from two identical parts or syllables, such as bonbon or dada. | [noun] Absolute synonym TAXONOMY (20) [noun] The science or the technique used to make a classification. | [noun] A classification; especially, a classification in a hierarchical system. | [noun] The science of finding, describing, classifying and naming organisms. TEAMAKER (14) TEAMMATE (12) [noun] One who is on the same team. TEAMSTER (10) [noun] A person who drives a team of animals (such as horses or oxen). | [noun] A person who drives a cargo truck (see Teamster). TEAMWORK (17) [noun] The cooperative effort of a team of people to achieve a common goal. TEAROOMS (10) [noun] A café which serves tea, usually with light food. | [noun] A public lavatory, particularly as a meeting place for homosexual men. | [noun] A room in a workplace set aside for tea breaks, lunch breaks, snacking, etc.; a break room. TEATIMES (10) [noun] The traditional time, in the late afternoon, for serving tea (the meal). TEETOTUM (10) [noun] A toy (spinning top) similar to a dreidel. | [noun] A working men's club conducted under religious influences, as an alternative to drinking in the saloon. TEGMENTA (11) [noun] The ventral portion of the midbrain, divided from the tectum by the cerebral aqueduct and the periaqueductal grey | [noun] Containing the following nuclei: red nucleus, substantia nigra, ventral tegmental area TEGMINAL (11) TEGUMENT (11) [noun] Something which covers; a covering or coating. | [noun] A natural covering of the body or of a bodily organ; an integument. TEGUMINA (11) TELEFILM (13) [noun] A film made for television. TELEGRAM (11) [noun] A message transmitted by telegraph. | [verb] To send a telegram. | [verb] To send a telegram to (a person). TELEMARK (14) [noun] Telemark skiing, a method of skiing using the telemark turn and a binding that only connects the boot to the ski at the toes. | [noun] A telemark turn. | [noun] (ski jumping) A telemark landing. TELOMERE (10) [noun] Either of the sequences of DNA at each end of a eukaryotic chromosome. TEMBLORS (12) [noun] An earthquake. TEMERITY (13) [noun] Reckless boldness; foolish bravery. | [noun] An act or case of reckless boldness. | [noun] Effrontery; impudence. TEMPERAS (12) TEMPERED (13) [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified disposition or temper. | [adjective] Pertaining to the metallurgical process for finishing metals. | [adjective] Pertaining to the industrial process for toughening glass, or to such toughened glass. | [verb] To moderate or control. TEMPERER (12) TEMPESTS (12) [noun] A storm, especially one with severe winds. | [noun] Any violent tumult or commotion. | [noun] A fashionable social gathering; a drum. TEMPLARS (12) [noun] A barrister having chambers in the Inner Temple or Middle Temple. TEMPLATE (12) [noun] A physical object whose shape is used as a guide to make other objects. | [noun] A generic model or pattern from which other objects are based or derived. | [noun] A macromolecule which provides a pattern for the synthesis of another molecule. TEMPLETS (12) TEMPORAL (12) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Anything temporal or secular; a temporality. | [adjective] (also grammar) Of or relating to time. | [adjective] Of limited time; transient; passing; not perpetual. | [noun] Either of the bones on the side of the skull, near the ears. TEMPTERS (12) [noun] Someone or something that tempts. | [noun] A seducer, especially a man who seduces. TEMPTING (13) [verb] To provoke someone to do wrong, especially by promising a reward; to entice. | [verb] To attract; to allure. | [verb] To provoke something; to court. TEMPURAS (12) TENEMENT (10) [noun] A building that is rented to multiple tenants, especially a low-rent, run-down one. | [noun] Any form of property that is held by one person from another, rather than being owned. | [noun] Dwelling; abode; habitation. TENESMIC (12) TENESMUS (10) [noun] A continual or recurrent inclination to evacuate the bowels, caused by disorder of the rectum or other illness. TENOTOMY (13) [noun] The surgical procedure of cutting, or making an incision in, a tendon TERAOHMS (13) TERAPHIM (15) [noun] An idol or other image of reverence and divination among the ancient Hebrews; apparently especially a kind of household god. TERATISM (10) TERATOMA (10) [noun] A benign or malignant tumour, especially of the gonads, that arises from germ cells and consists of different types of tissue such as skin, hair, or muscle. TERBIUMS (12) TERMINAL (10) [noun] A building in an airport where passengers transfer from ground transportation to the facilities that allow them to board airplanes. | [noun] A harbour facility where ferries embark and disembark passengers and load and unload vehicles. | [noun] A rail station where service begins and ends; the end of the line. For example: Grand Central Terminal in New York City. TERMINUS (10) [noun] The end or final point of something. | [noun] The end point of a transportation system, or the town or city in which it is located. | [noun] A boundary or border, or a post or stone marking such a boundary. TERMITES (10) [noun] A white-bodied, wood-consuming insect of the infraorder Isoptera, in the order Blattodea. | [noun] A termite. TERMITIC (12) TERMLESS (10) TERMTIME (12) TETOTUMS (10) TETRAMER (10) [noun] An oligomer having four subunits THALAMIC (15) THALAMUS (13) [noun] Either of two large, ovoid structures of grey matter within the forebrain that relay sensory impulses to the cerebral cortex. | [noun] The receptacle of a flower; a torus. | [noun] A thallus. THALLIUM (13) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Tl) with atomic number 81: a gray post-transition metal that discolors when exposed to air. | [noun] A single atom of this element. THEMATIC (15) [noun] A postage stamp that is part of a thematic collection. | [adjective] Relating to, or having a theme or a topic. | [adjective] Relating to a melodic subject. THEONOMY (16) THEOREMS (13) [noun] A mathematical statement of some importance that has been proven to be true. Minor theorems are often called propositions. Theorems which are not very interesting in themselves but are an essential part of a bigger theorem's proof are called lemmas. | [noun] A mathematical statement that is expected to be true | [noun] A syntactically correct expression that is deducible from the given axioms of a deductive system. THEREMIN (13) [noun] An electronic musical instrument that generates sound of varying pitch and volume depending on the proximity of the musician’s hands to two antennae mounted on the instrument. THERMALS (13) [noun] A column of rising air in the lower atmosphere created by uneven heating of Earth's surface. THERMELS (13) THERMION (13) [noun] An electrically charged particle, either an electron or an ion, emitted by a conducting material at high temperatures THERMITE (13) [noun] A mixture of a metal and a metal oxide capable of producing a thermite reaction, such as aluminium metal and ferric oxide; used in incendiary devices. THIAMINE (13) [noun] One of the constituents of vitamin B complex, found in meat, yeast and bran, that is necessary for the metabolism of carbohydrates. THIAMINS (13) THIMBLES (15) [noun] A pitted, now usually metal, cap for the fingers, used in sewing to push the needle. | [noun] A similarly shaped socket in machinery. | [noun] A thimbleful. THORIUMS (13) THRALDOM (14) THROMBIN (15) [noun] An enzyme in blood that facilitates blood clotting by converting fibrinogen to fibrin (by means of ionized calcium). THROMBUS (15) [noun] A blood clot formed from platelets and other elements that forms in a blood vessel in a living organism, and causes thrombosis or obstruction of the vessel at its point of formation or travel to other areas of the body. THRUMMED (16) [verb] To cause a steady rhythmic vibration, usually by plucking. | [verb] To make a monotonous drumming noise. | [verb] To furnish with thrums; to insert tufts in; to fringe. THRUMMER (15) THULIUMS (13) THUMBING (16) [verb] To touch or cover with the thumb. | [verb] (with through) To turn the pages of (a book) in order to read it cursorily. | [verb] (travel) To hitchhike THUMBKIN (19) THUMBNUT (15) THUMPERS (15) THUMPING (16) [verb] To hit (someone or something) as if to make a thump. | [verb] To cause to make a thumping sound. | [verb] To thud or pound. THYMIEST (16) THYMINES (16) THYMOSIN (16) THYMUSES (16) TIDEMARK (15) [noun] A line (of seaweed or differently coloured sand etc) on the shore showing the level of high or low tide | [noun] (by extension) any mark showing the limit of some past activity | [noun] A line of scum left on a bath tub when the water is drained away TIMARAUS (10) TIMBALES (12) [noun] A drum-shaped mould used to cook food. | [noun] An individual serving of food so cooked. TIMBERED (13) [verb] To fit with timbers. | [verb] To construct, frame, build. | [verb] To light or land on a tree. TIMBRELS (12) [noun] An ancient percussion instrument rather like a simple tambourine. TIMECARD (13) TIMELESS (10) [noun] A gene encoding an essential protein that regulates circadian rhythm, normally written in italics: timeless. | [adjective] Eternal. | [adjective] Not affected by time; ageless. TIMELIER (10) [adjective] Done at the proper time or within the proper time limits; prompt. | [adjective] Happening or appearing at the proper time. | [adjective] Keeping time or measure. TIMELINE (10) [noun] A graphical representation of a chronological sequence of events (past or future); a chronology. | [noun] A schedule of activities; a timetable. | [noun] An individual universe or reality, especially a parallel/alternate one in which events differ from actual history, or differ from the established canon of a fictional world. TIMEOUTS (10) [noun] A short break in the action of a sport, for substitution, consultation, etc. | [noun] A break from a tense, heated or stressful situation (often enforced, sometimes as a disciplinary measure); a cooling-off period. | [noun] (communication) The intentional ending of an incomplete task after a time limit considered long enough for it to end normally. TIMEWORK (17) TIMEWORN (13) [adjective] Showing the effects of wear due to long use. | [adjective] Trite or banal; overused or hackneyed. TIMIDEST (11) [adjective] Lacking in courage or confidence. TIMIDITY (14) [noun] Shyness TIMOLOLS (10) TIMOROUS (10) [adjective] Fearful; afraid; timid TIMPANUM (14) TINAMOUS (10) [noun] Any of the birds belonging to the South American family Tinamidae, the only family in the order Tinamiformes. They are related to the ratites, together with which they form the superorder Paleognathae. TINSMITH (13) [noun] A person who makes or repairs things with tin or similar alloys. | [noun] A dealer in tin goods. TIRAMISU (10) [noun] An Italian semifreddo dessert, originally from Veneto, made from ladyfinger biscuits, cocoa, mascarpone cheese, Marsala wine, eggs (or sometimes cream), sugar and espresso coffee TIRESOME (10) [adjective] Causing fatigue or boredom; wearisome. TITANISM (10) TITANIUM (10) [noun] A chemical element, atomic number 22; it is a strong, corrosion-resistant transition metal, used to make light alloys for aircraft etc. | [noun] A single atom of this element. TITMOUSE (10) [noun] Any small passerine bird of the family Paridae, which are found in the woods of the Northern Hemisphere and of Africa. TOADYISM (14) TOILSOME (10) [adjective] Requiring continuous physical effort; laborious. TOKAMAKS (18) [noun] A torus-shaped chamber used in nuclear fusion research in which a plasma is magnetically confined. TOKENISM (14) [noun] A policy of formally complying with efforts to achieve a goal by making small, token gestures; especially to hire a minimal number of ethnically diverse or disadvantaged people TOKOMAKS (18) TOKONOMA (14) [noun] A recess in a domestic interior in which a hanging scroll and a flower arrangement is displayed TOMAHAWK (20) [noun] An ax used by Native American warriors. | [noun] A dunk in which the person dunking the ball does so with his arm behind his head. | [noun] A geometric construction consisting of a semicircle and two line segments that serves as a tool for trisecting an angle; so called from its resemblance to the American Indian axe. TOMALLEY (13) [noun] The hepatopancreas of a crustacean. TOMATOES (10) [noun] A widely cultivated plant, Solanum lycopersicum, having edible fruit. | [noun] The savory fruit of this plant, red when ripe, treated as a vegetable in horticulture and cooking. | [noun] A shade of red, the colour of a ripe tomato. TOMATOEY (13) TOMBACKS (18) TOMBLESS (12) TOMBLIKE (16) TOMBOLAS (12) [noun] A lottery in which winning tickets are drawn from a revolving drum. TOMBOLOS (12) [noun] A spit of sand linking an island to the mainland (or to another island), formed by longshore drift. TOMENTUM (12) [noun] A mass of filamentous hairs on the leaf of a plant. | [noun] A covering of fine, soft hairs; a pubescence. | [noun] A network of fine blood vessels between the pia mater and the cerebral cortex. TOMFOOLS (13) [noun] A silly or stupid person, especially a boy or man. | [noun] Any of various tyrant flycatchers viewed as foolishly confiding. TOMMYROT (15) [noun] Nonsense, rot. TOMOGRAM (13) [noun] A two-dimensional image produced by tomography, representing a slice or section through a three-dimensional object. TOMORROW (13) [noun] The day after the present day. | [adverb] On the day after the present day. | [adverb] At some point in the future; later on TOMPIONS (12) [noun] A wooden plug, or a metal or canvas cover for the muzzle of a gun, a cannon or other piece of ordnance when not in use; a stopper; a bung. | [noun] A plug for the upper end of an organ pipe. TONEARMS (10) [noun] The pivoting bar that holds the pickup of a record player and conducts the resulting signal to the amplifier. TOOLROOM (10) TOPMASTS (12) [noun] The highest mast in a fore-and-aft-rigged ship. | [noun] The mast below the topgallant mast in a square-rigged ship. TOPONYMS (15) [noun] A placename. | [noun] A word derived from the name of a place. | [noun] The technical designation of any region of an animal. TOPONYMY (18) [noun] Lexicological study of place names; a branch of onomastics. | [noun] The nomenclature of anatomical regions. TORMENTS (10) [noun] A catapult or other kind of war-engine. | [noun] Torture, originally as inflicted by an instrument of torture. | [noun] Any extreme pain, anguish or misery, either physical or mental. TOTALISM (10) TOTEMISM (12) TOTEMIST (10) TOTEMITE (10) TOURISMS (10) TOWMONDS (14) TOWMONTS (13) TOWNHOME (16) [noun] A townhouse or row house. TOWNSMAN (13) [noun] A man who is a resident of a town, especially of one's own town. TOWNSMEN (13) [noun] A man who is a resident of a town, especially of one's own town. TOXAEMIA (17) [noun] Blood poisoning; adverse reaction to toxic byproducts of systemic infection. TOXAEMIC (19) TOXEMIAS (17) TRACHOMA (15) [noun] An infectious disease of the eyelid caused by the bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis. TRACKMAN (16) [noun] A railway employee who inspects and maintains the permanent way of a railway installation. TRACKMEN (16) [noun] A railway employee who inspects and maintains the permanent way of a railway installation. TRAINMAN (10) [noun] A person who works on trains on a railway / railroad. | [noun] A brakeman. TRAINMEN (10) [noun] A person who works on trains on a railway / railroad. | [noun] A brakeman. TRAMCARS (12) [noun] A streetcar. | [noun] A rail vehicle for carrying loads in a mine; a tram. TRAMELED (11) TRAMELLS (10) TRAMLESS (10) TRAMLINE (10) [noun] The rails that a tram runs on. | [noun] Either of the two pairs of sidelines marked on a tennis court which mark the outside of the singles and doubles playing areas. | [noun] A scratch on a film, usually vertical, that extends through multiple frames. TRAMMELS (12) [noun] Whatever impedes activity, progress, or freedom, such as a net or shackle. | [noun] A fishing net that has large mesh at the edges and smaller mesh in the middle | [noun] A kind of net for catching birds, fishes, or other prey. TRAMMING (13) TRAMPERS (12) [noun] One who tramps. | [noun] A recreational hiker. | [noun] A mechanism which pounds material into a more compact form for further processing; found for example in cotton gins and trash processors. TRAMPING (13) [verb] To walk with heavy footsteps. | [verb] To walk for a long time (usually through difficult terrain). | [verb] To hitchhike. TRAMPISH (15) TRAMPLED (13) [verb] To crush something by walking on it. | [verb] (by extension) To treat someone harshly. | [verb] To walk heavily and destructively. TRAMPLER (12) TRAMPLES (12) [noun] A heavy stepping. | [noun] The sound of heavy footsteps. | [verb] To crush something by walking on it. TRAMROAD (11) [noun] A road designed for use by trams or wagons. TRAMWAYS (16) [noun] The track on which a tram (streetcar) runs. | [noun] The system of cables that supports a cable car. TRANGAMS (11) TRANSMIT (10) [verb] To send or convey something from one person, place or thing to another. | [verb] To spread or pass on something such as a disease or a signal. | [verb] To impart, convey or hand down something by inheritance or heredity. TRANSOMS (10) [noun] A crosspiece over a door; a lintel. | [noun] A horizontal dividing bar in a window. | [noun] A transom window. TRASHMAN (13) TRASHMEN (13) TRAUMATA (10) [noun] Any serious injury to the body, often resulting from violence or an accident. | [noun] An emotional wound leading to psychological injury. | [noun] An event that causes great distress. TREMBLED (13) [verb] To shake, quiver, or vibrate. | [verb] To fear; to be afraid. TREMBLER (12) [noun] One who, or that which, trembles. | [noun] Any of various New World passerine birds of the family Mimidae. | [noun] The vibrating hammer, or spring contact piece of a hammer break, as of the electric ignition apparatus for an internal combustion engine. TREMBLES (12) [noun] A shake, quiver, or vibration. | [verb] To shake, quiver, or vibrate. | [verb] To fear; to be afraid. TREMOLOS (10) [noun] A rapid repetition of the same note, or an alternation between two or more notes. It can also be intended to mean a rapid and repetitive variation in pitch for the duration of a note. It is notated by a strong diagonal bar across the note stem, or a detached bar for a set of notes (or stemless notes). | [noun] A variation in the volume of a note or a chord, evoking a tremor or quiver. | [noun] The device in an organ that produces a tremolo effect. TRIADISM (11) TRICHOME (15) [noun] A hair- or scale-like extension of the epidermis of a plant. | [noun] Hairlike structures found in some microscopic organisms and algae. | [noun] A row of cells formed by successive cell divisions. TRIDUUMS (11) TRIGRAMS (11) [noun] Any of the eight combinations of three complete or broken lines forming half of a hexagram in Chinese system of divination I Ching. | [noun] A trigraph. | [noun] A special case of the n-gram where n is 3, used in natural language processing for doing statistical analysis of texts TRILLIUM (10) [noun] Any of several perennial flowering plants, of the genus Trillium, having flowers with three petals TRIMARAN (10) [noun] A type of boat with three parallel hulls. TRIMERIC (12) TRIMETER (10) [noun] A line in a poem having three metrical feet. | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has three feet. TRIMMERS (12) [noun] One who trims, arranges, fits, or ornaments. | [noun] A device used to trim. | [noun] A member of the crew who trims the sails. TRIMMEST (12) [verb] To reduce slightly; to cut; especially, to remove excess. | [verb] To decorate or adorn; especially of a Christmas tree. | [verb] (of an aircraft) To adjust pitch using trim tabs. TRIMMING (13) [verb] To reduce slightly; to cut; especially, to remove excess. | [verb] To decorate or adorn; especially of a Christmas tree. | [verb] (of an aircraft) To adjust pitch using trim tabs. TRIMNESS (10) TRIMORPH (15) TRIMOTOR (10) TRINKUMS (14) TRIREMES (10) [noun] (history) A galley with three banks of oars, one above the other, used mainly as a warship. TRISEMES (10) TRISEMIC (12) TRISOMES (10) TRISOMIC (12) TRITICUM (12) TRITIUMS (10) TRITOMAS (10) TRIUMPHS (15) [noun] A conclusive success following an effort, conflict, or confrontation of obstacles; victory; conquest. | [noun] A magnificent and imposing ceremonial performed in honor of a victor. | [noun] Any triumphal procession; a pompous exhibition; a stately show or pageant. TRIUMVIR (13) [noun] One member of a triumvirate TROILISM (10) [noun] The practice of two people having sex while a third person watches (and may or may not take part). | [noun] The practice of three people having sex, i.e. having threesomes. TROMBONE (12) [noun] A musical instrument in the brass family, having a cylindrical bore, and usually a sliding tube (but sometimes piston valves, and rarely both). Most often refers to the tenor trombone, which is the most common type of trombone and has a fundamental tone of B♭ˌ (contra B♭). | [noun] The common European bittern. | [verb] To transmit a signal or data back to a central switching point before sending it out to its destination. TROMMELS (12) [noun] A revolving buddle or sieve for separating, or sizing, ores. | [noun] A rotating drum for sorting items, such as waste for recycling. TROMPING (13) [verb] To tread heavily, especially to crush underfoot. | [verb] To utterly defeat an opponent. TROPISMS (12) TRUCKMAN (16) TRUCKMEN (16) TRUMEAUX (17) [noun] The pillar or center post supporting the lintel in the middle of a doorway or window opening, especially in a church. | [noun] A trumeau mirror. TRUMPERY (15) [noun] Worthless finery; bric-a-brac or junk. | [noun] Nonsense. | [noun] Deceit; fraud. TRUMPETS (12) [noun] A musical instrument of the brass family, generally tuned to the key of B-flat; by extension, any type of lip-vibrated aerophone, most often valveless and not chromatic. | [noun] Someone who plays the trumpet; a trumpeter. | [noun] The cry of an elephant, or any similar loud cry. TRUMPING (13) [verb] To play on (a card of another suit) with a trump. | [verb] To play a trump, or to take a trick with a trump. | [verb] To get the better of, or finesse, a competitor. TSARDOMS (11) TSARISMS (10) TSUNAMIC (12) TSUNAMIS (10) [noun] A very large and destructive wave, generally caused by a tremendous disturbance in the ocean, such as an undersea earthquake or volcanic eruption. Tsunami are usually a series of waves, or wave train. | [noun] A large and generally unstoppable surge. TUBIFORM (15) [adjective] Having the form of a tube. TUMBLERS (12) [noun] One who tumbles; one who plays tricks by various motions of the body; an acrobat. | [noun] A movable obstruction in a lock, consisting of a lever, latch, wheel, slide, or the like, which must be adjusted to a particular position by a key or other means before the bolt can be thrown in locking or unlocking. | [noun] A rotating device for smoothing and polishing rough objects, placed inside it, on relatively small parts. TUMBLING (13) [verb] To fall end over end; to roll over and over. | [verb] To perform gymnastics such as somersaults, rolls, and handsprings. | [verb] To drop rapidly. TUMBRELS (12) [noun] A kind of medieval torture device, later associated with a cucking stool. | [noun] A cart which opens at the back to release its load. | [noun] A cart used to carry condemned prisoners to their death, especially to the guillotine during the French Revolution. TUMBRILS (12) [noun] A kind of medieval torture device, later associated with a cucking stool. | [noun] A cart which opens at the back to release its load. | [noun] A cart used to carry condemned prisoners to their death, especially to the guillotine during the French Revolution. TUMEFIED (14) [verb] To cause to swell. | [verb] To swell; to rise into a tumour. TUMEFIES (13) [verb] To cause to swell. | [verb] To swell; to rise into a tumour. TUMIDITY (14) TUMMLERS (12) [noun] An employee - usually male - of a Borscht Belt resort charged with the duty of entertaining guests throughout the day by providing any number of services, from comedian to master of ceremonies. | [noun] A lively, mischievous man. | [noun] (by extension) a person with an official role which involves facilitating social interaction. TUMOROUS (10) TUMPLINE (12) [noun] A strap used to carry objects tied to its ends by placing the broadened or cushioned middle of the strap over the head just above the forehead. TUMULOSE (10) TUMULOUS (10) TURMERIC (12) [noun] An Indian plant, Curcuma longa, with aromatic rhizomes, part of the ginger family (Zingiberaceae). | [noun] The pulverized rhizome of the turmeric plant, used for flavoring and to add a bright yellow color to food. | [noun] A yellow to reddish-brown dye extracted from the turmeric plant. TURMOILS (10) [noun] A state of great disorder or uncertainty. | [noun] Harassing labour; trouble; disturbance. TWASOMES (13) TWELVEMO (16) [noun] Duodecimo, or 12mo, a paper size, so called because it is cut 12 to a (huge, originally made) sheet | [noun] A page, book etc. of that size TWOSOMES (13) [noun] A group of two; a pair; a couple; a group of two distinct individuals or components. | [noun] A dance for two people. TYMPANAL (15) TYMPANIC (17) [noun] The tympanic bone. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or resembling a drum. | [adjective] Relating to the eardrum or middle ear. TYMPANUM (17) [noun] A triangular space between the sides of a pediment. | [noun] The space within an arch, and above a lintel or a subordinate arch, spanning the opening below the arch. | [noun] The middle ear. TYRAMINE (13) [noun] A compound which occurs naturally in cheese and other foods and can cause dangerously high blood pressure in people taking a monoamine oxidase inhibitor. TZARDOMS (20) TZARISMS (19) UDOMETER (11) UDOMETRY (14) ULTIMACY (15) ULTIMATA (10) [noun] A final statement of terms or conditions made by one party to another, especially one that expresses a threat of reprisal or war. ULTIMATE (10) [noun] The most basic or fundamental of a set of things | [noun] The final or most distant point; the conclusion | [noun] The greatest extremity; the maximum ULTRAISM (10) [noun] Radicalism or political extremism. | [noun] A Spanish poetic movement opposed to modernism. UMANGITE (11) UMBELLAR (12) UMBELLED (13) UMBELLET (12) UMBERING (13) UMBILICI (14) [noun] Navel | [noun] Hilum | [noun] A depression or opening in the center of the base of many spiral shells. UMBONATE (12) [adjective] (of a mushroom etc) Having an umbo UMBRAGES (13) UMBRELLA (12) [noun] Cloth-covered frame used for protection against rain or sun. | [noun] Generally, anything that provides protection. | [noun] Something that covers a wide range of concepts, purposes, groups, etc. UMBRETTE (12) UMLAUTED (11) [verb] To place an umlaut over (a vowel). | [verb] To modify (a word) so that an umlaut is required in it. | [adjective] Modified by the addition of an umlaut. UMPIRAGE (13) UMPIRING (13) [verb] To act as an umpire in a game. | [verb] To decide as an umpire. UMTEENTH (13) UNAMUSED (11) [adjective] Not amused; thus often offended or put off. UNARMING (11) [verb] To disarm, to remove the armour and weapons from. | [verb] To remove one's armour. UNBLAMED (13) UNBOSOMS (12) [verb] To tell someone about (one's troubles), and thus obtain relief. | [verb] To free (oneself) of the burden of one's troubles by telling of them. | [verb] To confess a misdeed. UNCIFORM (15) [noun] The hamate bone. | [adjective] Of the shape of a hook; hook-shaped. UNCLAMPS (14) [verb] To remove a clamp from. UNCOMBED (15) [verb] To reverse the effect of combing; to muss. | [verb] To remove a backcomb from. | [verb] To comb out; to disentangle. UNCOMELY (15) [adjective] Not comely. | [adverb] In an uncomely way; inappropriately, unappealingly. UNCOMMON (14) [adjective] Rare; not readily found; unusual. | [adjective] Remarkable; exceptional. | [adverb] Exceedingly, exceptionally. UNDAMPED (14) UNDERARM (11) [noun] The armpit. | [noun] Old-fashioned and now outlawed style of bowling in which the arm is not swung over the shoulder. | [verb] To supply with insufficient weaponry. UNDIMMED (14) [adjective] Not dimmed. UNDREAMT (11) [adjective] Not dreamed; not dreamt. UNFAMOUS (13) UNFILMED (14) UNFORMED (14) [adjective] Not formed or made. | [adjective] Not having a definite form; shapeless; amorphous. | [adjective] Not well developed. UNFRAMED (14) [adjective] Not framed; not having a frame. UNHARMED (14) [adjective] Which has not suffered harm; which has not been injured or damaged UNHELMED (14) UNIFORMS (13) [noun] A distinctive outfit that serves to identify members of a group. | [noun] Phonetic equivalent for the letter U in the ICAO spelling alphabet, informally known as the NATO phonetic alphabet. | [noun] A uniformed police officer (as opposed to a detective). UNIMBUED (13) UNIONISM (10) [noun] The support of advocacy of a union, especially of a trade union | [noun] (often capitalised) Support for the North (the Union) during the American Civil War | [noun] (often capitalised) Support for the continuance of the United Kingdom (especially with respect to Northern Ireland) UNLIMBER (12) [verb] To deploy an artillery piece for firing (ie, to detach it from its limber). | [verb] (by extension) To clumsily put into employ a large weapon or object. | [verb] To unsling something, as a backpack, carried on the body with a strap; to bring something carried into the hands for use. UNMAKERS (14) UNMAKING (15) [verb] To destroy or take apart; to cause (a made article) to lose its nature. | [noun] The act by which something is unmade. UNMANFUL (13) UNMANNED (11) [verb] To castrate; to remove the manhood of. | [verb] To sap (a person) of the strength, whether physical or emotional, required to deal with a situation. | [verb] To deprive of men. UNMAPPED (15) [adjective] Not mapped. UNMARKED (15) [adjective] Not bearing identification. | [adjective] Free from blemishes. | [adjective] Not noticed. UNMARRED (11) [adjective] Undamaged; not marred. UNMASKED (15) [verb] To remove a mask from someone. | [verb] To expose, or reveal the true character of someone. | [verb] To remove one's mask. UNMASKER (14) UNMATTED (11) UNMEETLY (13) UNMELLOW (13) UNMELTED (11) [adjective] Not melted; in a solid state. UNMENDED (12) UNMESHED (14) UNMESHES (13) UNMEWING (14) UNMILLED (11) [adjective] Not milled. UNMINGLE (11) UNMITERS (10) UNMITRED (11) UNMITRES (10) UNMIXING (18) UNMODISH (14) UNMOLDED (12) UNMOLTEN (10) UNMOORED (11) [adjective] Not moored. | [adjective] Mentally immature, unstable, or lacking in emotional connections. | [verb] To unfix or unsecure (a moored boat). UNMOVING (14) [adjective] Not moving; still; static. | [adjective] Not emotionally moving or rousing; failing to inspire the emotions. UNMUFFLE (16) UNMUZZLE (28) [verb] Remove a muzzle from UNPRIMED (13) [adjective] Not primed UNRHYMED (17) [adjective] Having no rhyme. | [verb] To remove the rhyme or expected rhyme from. UNSEAMED (11) UNSEEMLY (13) [adjective] Inconsistent with established standards of good form or taste. | [adverb] In an unseemly manner. UNSHAMED (14) UNSMOKED (15) [adjective] (of food) not preserved by treatment with smoke and thus retaining more of the original flavour, for example: unsmoked bacon or salmon. | [adjective] Of a cigarette, cigar or pipe not lit, not burnt. UNTIMELY (13) [adjective] At an inopportune time | [adjective] Early; premature | [adverb] Prematurely UNWARMED (14) [adjective] Not warmed UNWISDOM (14) [noun] Lack of wisdom; unwise conduct or action UPCLIMBS (16) UPCOMING (15) [noun] The act of coming up. | [noun] Comeuppance; deserts | [adjective] Happening or appearing in the relatively near future. UPMARKET (16) [verb] To make or become upmarket. | [adjective] Designed for customers with a high income. | [adverb] Towards the more expensive end of the market. UPSTREAM (12) [noun] Part of the river towards the upstream direction. | [noun] (open-source software) The original developers or maintainers of software. | [verb] To stream upward. URAEMIAS (10) URANISMS (10) URANIUMS (10) URBANISM (12) [noun] The study of cities, their geographic, economic, political, social and cultural environment. | [noun] The culture or way of life of people who live in cities. | [noun] Urbanization. URINEMIA (10) URINEMIC (12) URSIFORM (13) UTOPISMS (12) VACUUMED (16) [verb] To clean (something) with a vacuum cleaner. | [verb] To use a vacuum cleaner. | [verb] To optimise a database or database table by physically removing deleted tuples. VAGOTOMY (17) [noun] The surgical resection of the vagus nerve so as to reduce the secretion of acid in the stomach and so control duodenal ulcers. VAMBRACE (17) [noun] The piece of armor designed to protect the arm from the elbow to the wrist. | [noun] The pieces of armor protecting the arm from the shoulder to the wrist. VAMOOSED (14) [verb] To run away (from); to flee. | [verb] To hurry. | [verb] To be expelled. VAMOOSES (13) [verb] To run away (from); to flee. | [verb] To hurry. | [verb] To be expelled. VAMOSING (14) VAMPIRES (15) [noun] A mythological undead creature said to feed on the blood of the living. | [noun] A person with the medical condition systemic lupus erythematosus, colloquially known as vampirism, with effects such as photosensitivity and brownish-red stained teeth. | [noun] A blood-sucking bat; vampire bat (Desmodus rotundus) VAMPIRIC (17) VANADIUM (14) [noun] A chemical element (symbol V) with atomic number 23; it is a transition metal, used in the production of special steels. | [noun] A single atom of this element. VARIFORM (16) [adjective] That can take various forms. VARIORUM (13) [noun] An edition of a written work (especially the complete works of a classical writer) showing the notes and readings of a variety of different editors or commentators. VARMENTS (13) VARMINTS (13) [noun] A pestering animal such as one that kills or harasses a farmer's livestock or crops. | [noun] (by extension) An obnoxious person or troublemaker. VAROOMED (14) VASCULUM (15) [noun] A container used by botanists to keep samples viable by maintaining a cool, humid environment. VASIFORM (16) VASOTOMY (16) VEGANISM (14) [noun] Strict vegetarianism; the practice of eating neither meat nor other animal products, such as fish, milk and milk products, eggs, and honey. | [noun] A way of life which strictly avoids use of any kind of animal products and services that are based on exploitation of living animals. | [noun] A belief that is against the killing of animals for meat consumption; the antithesis to carnism. VEHEMENT (16) [adjective] Showing strong feelings; passionate; forceful or intense. VELAMINA (13) [noun] A covering membrane or velum | [noun] A spongy, usually pale, multiseriate epidermis (i.e. consisting of multiple layers of cells) covering the roots of some kinds of plants, especially plant species with an epiphytic or semi-epiphytic habit. Examples include various orchid and Clivia species VELARIUM (13) [noun] The marginal membrane of certain medusae belonging to the Discophora | [noun] An awning that stretched over the seating area of the Colosseum in Ancient Rome VENOGRAM (14) [noun] An X-ray of a vein that has been injected with an opaque material VENOMERS (13) VENOMING (14) VENOMOUS (13) [adjective] Full of venom. | [adjective] Toxic; poisonous. | [adjective] Noxious; evil. VERATRUM (13) [noun] Any of various poisonous herbs of the genus Veratrum VERBATIM (15) [noun] A word-for-word report of a speech. | [adjective] (of a document) Corresponding with the original word for word. | [adjective] (of a person) Able to take down a speech word for word, especially in shorthand. VERISMOS (13) VERMEILS (13) VERMOULU (13) VERMOUTH (16) [noun] A dry, or sweet apéritif wine flavored with aromatic herbs, and often used in mixed drinks. | [noun] An aperitif wine that matches the general description of vermouth. VERMUTHS (16) VERSEMAN (13) VERSEMEN (13) VESTMENT (13) [noun] A robe, gown, or other article of clothing worn as an indication of office. | [noun] Any of the special articles of clothing worn by members of the clergy etc., especially a garment worn at the celebration of the Eucharist. | [noun] (in plural) Clothing. VEXILLUM (20) [noun] A flag, banner, or standard. | [noun] A company of troops serving under one standard. | [noun] The sign of the cross. VIATICUM (15) [noun] The Eucharist, when given to a person who is dying or one in danger of death. | [noun] Provisions, money, or other supplies given to someone setting off on a long journey. | [noun] A portable altar. VIBURNUM (15) [noun] Any of many shrubs and trees, of the genus Viburnum, native to the Northern Hemisphere that have showy clusters of flowers VICOMTES (15) [noun] A French viscount. VILLADOM (14) VINCULUM (15) [noun] A bond or link signifying union. | [noun] Any symbol used to group some of the terms in an expression, indicating that that part of the calculation should be done before other parts. | [noun] A horizontal line over the top of some of the terms in an expression, indicating that that part of the calculation is to be done before other parts. VIOMYCIN (18) VIREMIAS (13) VIRILISM (13) [noun] The condition resulting from virilization in a female. VITALISM (13) [noun] The doctrine that life involves some immaterial "vital force", and cannot be explained scientifically. VITAMERS (13) VITAMINE (13) VITAMINS (13) [noun] Any of a specific group of organic compounds essential in small quantities for healthy human growth, metabolism, development, and body function; found in minute amounts in plant and animal foods or sometimes produced synthetically; deficiencies of specific vitamins produce specific disorders. VIVARIUM (16) [noun] A place artificially arranged for keeping or raising living animals. VOCALISM (15) [noun] Speaking or singing. | [noun] The vowel sounds used in a language. VOLTAISM (13) VOLUMING (14) VOMERINE (13) VOMITERS (13) VOMITING (14) [verb] To regurgitate or eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth; puke. | [verb] To regurgitate and discharge (something swallowed); to spew. | [verb] To eject from any hollow place; to belch forth; to emit. VOMITIVE (16) VOMITORY (16) [noun] The entrance into a theater or other large public venue, where masses of people are disgorged into the stands; a vomitorium | [noun] A substance that induces vomiting; an emetic | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) Inducing vomiting; emetic VOMITOUS (13) [adjective] Characteristic of, or causing one to vomit. VROOMING (14) [verb] To move with great speed; to zoom. WADMAALS (14) WADMOLLS (14) WAILSOME (13) WAMBLIER (15) WAMBLING (16) WAMEFOUS (16) WAMEFULS (16) WAMMUSES (15) WAMPUSES (15) WARDROOM (14) [noun] The living quarters of a ship designated for the commissioned officers other than the captain. | [noun] The commissioned officers of a ship, excluding the captain. WAREROOM (13) WARMAKER (17) WARMNESS (13) WARMOUTH (16) WARTIMES (13) WASHROOM (16) [noun] A room intended to wash the face and hands. | [noun] A room with a toilet, particularly a public toilet. WATCHMAN (18) [noun] One set to watch; a person who keeps guard, especially one who guards a building, or the streets of a city, by night. WATCHMEN (18) [noun] One set to watch; a person who keeps guard, especially one who guards a building, or the streets of a city, by night. WATERMAN (13) [noun] A seaman, a sailor. | [noun] A man who lives or works on the water; a boatman. | [noun] Someone who distributes or supplies water for a living; a water-carrier. WATERMEN (13) [noun] A seaman, a sailor. | [noun] A man who lives or works on the water; a boatman. | [noun] Someone who distributes or supplies water for a living; a water-carrier. WAVEFORM (19) [noun] The shape of a wave function represented by a graph showing some dependent variable as function of an independent variable. | [noun] The shape of a physical wave, such as sound, electric current or electromagnetic radiation, or its representation obtained by plotting a characteristic of the phenomenon (such as voltage) versus another variable, often time. WAXWORMS (23) WEBWORMS (18) [noun] Any of various caterpillars, of diverse moth families, that spin a web; the moth species of such a caterpillar. WEIGHMAN (17) WEIGHMEN (17) WELCOMED (16) [verb] To affirm or greet the arrival of someone, especially by saying "Welcome!". | [verb] To accept something willingly or gladly. | [adjective] Having received a warm welcome. WELCOMER (15) WELCOMES (15) [noun] The act of greeting someone’s arrival, especially by saying "Welcome!"; reception. | [noun] The utterance of such a greeting. | [noun] Kind reception of a guest or newcomer. WELDMENT (14) WESTMOST (13) WHALEMAN (16) WHALEMEN (16) WHAMMIES (18) [noun] A serious or devastating setback | [noun] An evil spell; a curse or hex | [noun] The vibrato system of an electric guitar, or just its lever (whammy bar) WHAMMING (19) [verb] To strike or smash (into) something with great force or impact WHEELMAN (16) [noun] A driver of an automobile, especially a getaway vehicle in a criminal enterprise. | [noun] The steersman on a ship. | [noun] A cyclist. WHEELMEN (16) [noun] A driver of an automobile, especially a getaway vehicle in a criminal enterprise. | [noun] The steersman on a ship. | [noun] A cyclist. WHELMING (17) [verb] To bury, to cover; to engulf, to submerge. | [verb] To throw (something) over a thing so as to cover it. | [verb] To ruin or destroy. WHIMBREL (18) [noun] A large migratory wading bird, Numenius phaeopus, of the family Scolopacidae, with a long downcurved bill. WHIMPERS (18) [noun] A low intermittent sob. | [verb] To cry or sob softly and intermittently. | [verb] To cry with a low, whining, broken voice; to whine; to complain. WHIMSEYS (19) [noun] A quaint and fanciful idea; a whim; playfully odd behaviour. | [noun] An impulsive, illogical or capricious character. | [noun] A whim (capstan or vertical drum). WHIMSIED (17) WHIMSIES (16) [noun] A quaint and fanciful idea; a whim; playfully odd behaviour. | [noun] An impulsive, illogical or capricious character. | [noun] A whim (capstan or vertical drum). WHIPWORM (21) [noun] Any of the genus Trichuris of roundworms that infect certain mammals | [noun] Trichuriasis, infection by members of the genus Trichuris. WHOLISMS (16) WHOMEVER (19) [pronoun] Whatever person or persons (as object of verb or preposition). WHOMPING (19) [verb] Hit extremely hard. WHOREDOM (17) [noun] The state of being a whore, prostitution; sexual indulgence, fornication. WHUMPING (19) [verb] To strike something with a whump. WIFEDOMS (17) WIGMAKER (18) WIMBLING (16) WIMPIEST (15) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a wimp; feeble, indecisive, cowardly. WIMPLING (16) WINDMILL (14) [noun] A machine which translates linear motion of wind to rotational motion by means of adjustable vanes called sails. | [noun] The structure containing such machinery. | [noun] A child's toy consisting of vanes mounted on a stick that rotate when blown by a person or by the wind. WINSOMER (13) WIREWORM (16) [noun] The larva of the click beetle. WOLFRAMS (16) WOMANING (14) WOMANISE (13) [verb] (said of a man) To flirt with and/or seduce, or attempt to seduce, women, especially lecherously. | [verb] (usually figurative) To turn into a woman; to feminize. WOMANISH (16) [adjective] Characteristic of a woman; feminine; effeminate. | [adjective] Carried out by or pertaining to a woman. WOMANIZE (22) [verb] (said of a man) To flirt with and/or seduce, or attempt to seduce, women, especially lecherously. | [verb] (usually figurative) To turn into a woman; to feminize. WOMBIEST (15) WOMMERAS (15) WOODSMAN (14) [noun] A man who lives and works in woodland; a forester or woodman. | [noun] Designating a group of sports related to forestry culture, including axe throwing, wood splitting, wood chopping, axe cutting, chainsaw cutting, pulpwood tossing, log rolling and decking, pole climbing, and fire building. WOODSMEN (14) [noun] A man who lives and works in woodland; a forester or woodman. | [noun] Designating a group of sports related to forestry culture, including axe throwing, wood splitting, wood chopping, axe cutting, chainsaw cutting, pulpwood tossing, log rolling and decking, pole climbing, and fire building. WOODWORM (17) [noun] Any of many beetle larvae that bore into wood. | [noun] A shipworm, a worm-like mollusk in the family Teredinidae that feeds on wood underwater in saltwater. WOOMERAS (13) [noun] An Australian spearthrower consisting of a stick with a hooked end. WORKMATE (17) [noun] Somebody with whom one works; a coworker. WORKROOM (17) [noun] A room, such as a workshop or studio, where work is done. WORMHOLE (16) [noun] A hole burrowed by a worm | [noun] A hypothetical shortcut between two points in spacetime, permitting faster-than-light travel and sometimes time travel. | [noun] A location in a monitor program containing the address of a routine, allowing the user to substitute different functionality. WORMIEST (13) [adjective] Of or like a worm or worms; shaped like a worm or worms. | [adjective] Infested with worms. WORMLIKE (17) WORMROOT (13) WORMSEED (14) [noun] An aromatic tropical plant (Dysphania ambrosioides, syn. Chenopodium ambrosioides) that yields an anthelmintic oil | [noun] Santonica or Levant wormseed, Seriphidium cinum, syn. Artemisia cina, an Asian plant related to wormwood. WORMWOOD (17) [noun] An intensely bitter herb (Artemisia absinthium and similar plants in genus Artemisia) used in medicine, in the production of absinthe and vermouth, and as a tonic. | [noun] Something that causes bitterness or affliction; a cause of mortification or vexation. XANTHOMA (20) [noun] A small, yellow nodule, rich in cholesterol and other lipids, that occurs in the skin, often near a joint XENOGAMY (21) [noun] The transfer of pollen from the anthers of one plant to the stigma of another; cross-pollination | [noun] Cross-cultural marriage XYLOTOMY (23) YACHTMAN (18) YACHTMEN (18) YAHOOISM (16) YAMALKAS (17) YAMMERED (16) [verb] To complain peevishly. | [verb] To talk loudly and persistently. | [verb] To repeat on and on, usually loudly or in complaint. YAMMERER (15) YAMULKAS (17) YARDARMS (14) [noun] The outer end of a yard, often equipped with blocks for reeving signal halyards. YARMELKE (17) YARMULKE (17) [noun] A skullcap worn by religious Jewish males (especially during prayer). YASHMACS (18) YASHMAKS (20) [noun] A veil worn by Muslim women to cover parts of the face when they are in public. YAWMETER (16) YEOMANLY (16) YEOMANRY (16) [noun] A class of small freeholders who cultivated their own land. | [noun] A British volunteer cavalry force organized in 1761 for home defense and later incorporated into the Territorial Army. YOKEMATE (17) YTTRIUMS (13) YUMMIEST (15) [adjective] (lighthearted) Delicious. ZADDIKIM (25) [noun] A very righteous person, especially a Hassidic spiritual leader. ZAMARRAS (19) ZAMARROS (19) ZAMINDAR (20) [noun] (Bangladesh) An Indian landowner who collected local taxes and paid them to the British government. ZEMINDAR (20) [noun] (Bangladesh) An Indian landowner who collected local taxes and paid them to the British government. ZEMSTVOS (22) ZOMBIISM (23) ZONETIME (19) ZOOECIUM (21) ZOOMANIA (19) ZOOMETRY (22) ZOOMORPH (24) ZOOSPERM (21) ZOOTOMIC (21) ZYGOMATA (23) [noun] The cheekbone. ZYMOGENE (23) ZYMOGENS (23) [noun] A proenzyme, or enzyme precursor, which requires a biochemical change (i.e. hydrolysis) to become an active form of the enzyme. ZYMOGRAM (25) ZYMOLOGY (26) ZYMOSANS (22)

9-Letter Words (5583)

ABAMPERES (15) ABASEMENT (13) [noun] The act of abasing, humbling, or bringing low. | [noun] The state of being abased or humbled; humiliation. ABASHMENT (16) ABATEMENT (13) [noun] The act of abating, or the state of being abated; a lessening, diminution, or reduction; a moderation; removal or putting an end to; the suppression of. | [noun] The amount abated; that which is taken away by way of reduction; deduction; decrease; a rebate or discount allowed; in particular from a tax. | [noun] A mark of dishonor on an escutcheon; any figure added to the coat of arms tending to lower the dignity or station of the bearer. | [noun] The action of a person that abates, or without proper authority enters a residence after the death of the owner and before the heir takes possession. ABDOMINAL (14) [noun] A fish of the order Abdominales. | [noun] (usually plurale tantum) An abdominal muscle. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the abdomen; ventral. ABELMOSKS (17) ABETMENTS (13) ABNORMALS (13) ABOMINATE (13) [verb] To feel disgust towards; to loathe or detest thoroughly; to hate in the highest degree, as if with religious dread. | [verb] To dislike strongly. | [adjective] Abominable; detested. ABSURDISM (14) [noun] A philosophy which holds that the universe is chaotic and irrational and that any attempt to impose order will ultimately fail. | [noun] Absurdity, something that is absurd ABUTMENTS (13) [noun] The point of junction between two things, in particular a support, that abuts. | [noun] The solid portion of a structure that supports the lateral pressure of an arch or vault. | [noun] A construction that supports the ends of a bridge; a structure that anchors the cables on a suspension bridge. ABYSMALLY (19) [adverb] Very; incredibly; profoundly; to an extreme degree; dreadfully. ACADEMIAS (14) [noun] Plural of academia; institutions of higher learning or the academic world and environment. ACADEMICS (16) [noun] (usually capitalized) A follower of Plato, a Platonist. | [noun] A senior member of an academy, college, or university; a person who attends an academy; a person engaged in scholarly pursuits; one who is academic in practice. | [noun] A member of the Academy; an academician. ACADEMIES (14) [noun] (usually capitalized) The garden where Plato taught. | [noun] (usually capitalized) Plato's philosophical system based on skepticism; Plato's followers. | [noun] An institution for the study of higher learning; a college or a university; typically a private school. ACADEMISM (16) [noun] (sometimes capitalized) The doctrines of Plato's academy; specifically the skeptical doctrines of the later academy stating that nothing can be known; a tenet of the Academic philosophy; state of being Academic. | [noun] Traditional or orthodox formalism; conventionalism. | [noun] Speculative thoughts and attitudes. ACCLAIMED (16) [verb] To shout; to call out. | [verb] To express great approval (for). | [verb] To salute or praise with great approval; to compliment; to applaud; to welcome enthusiastically. ACCLAIMER (15) [noun] One who acclaims or praises loudly. ACCLIMATE (15) [verb] To habituate to a climate not native; to acclimatize. | [verb] To adjust to a new environment; not necessarily a wild, natural, earthy one. | [verb] To become accustomed to a new climate or environment. ACCOMPANY (20) [verb] To go with or attend as a companion or associate; to keep company with; to go along with. | [verb] To supplement with; add to. | [verb] To perform an accompanying part or parts in a composition. ACCUSTOMS (15) [verb] To make someone familiar with something through repeated exposure or experience. ACELDAMAS (14) [noun] A field purchased with blood money; a place of carnage or bloodshed, named after the biblical field bought with Judas's thirty pieces of silver. ACETAMIDE (14) [noun] The amide of acetic acid, CH3CONH2. ACETAMIDS (14) [noun] Plural of acetamid, a chemical compound derived from acetic acid, commonly used in organic synthesis and industrial applications. ACHROMATS (16) [noun] A lens that imparts little color; a lens that is achromatic. ACICULUMS (15) [noun] Plural of aciculum, a needle-like structure or bristle found in certain animals, particularly worms and mollusks. ACIDEMIAS (14) [noun] Plural of acidemia; conditions characterized by excessive acid in the blood or body tissues. ACONITUMS (13) [noun] Plural of aconitum, a genus of poisonous plants commonly known as monkshood or wolfsbane, characterized by helmet-shaped flowers. ACRONYMIC (18) [adjective] Relating to or being an acronym; formed from the initial letters of words. ACROSOMAL (13) [adjective] Relating to or denoting the acrosome, a structure at the tip of a sperm cell that helps it penetrate an egg during fertilization. ACROSOMES (13) [noun] Plural of acrosome, a cap-like structure at the tip of a sperm cell that contains enzymes for penetrating an egg. ACROTISMS (13) ACTINISMS (13) [noun] The quality or property of being actinic; the ability of radiation to produce chemical effects. | [noun] Plural of actinism, referring to instances or manifestations of actinic radiation or its effects. ACTINIUMS (13) [noun] Plural of actinium, a radioactive chemical element with atomic number 89. ACTIVISMS (16) [noun] Plural of activism; the practice of vigorous action or engagement to promote a political or social cause. ACUMINATE (13) [verb] To render sharp or keen; to sharpen. | [verb] To end in or come to a sharp point. | [adjective] Tapering to a point; pointed. ADAMANCES (14) [noun] Plural of adamance; an archaic or obsolete term referring to hardness or inflexibility, or a legendary hard stone. | [noun] In geology/mineralogy, an alternative plural form relating to adamant or diamond-like hardness. ADAMANTLY (15) [adverb] In an immovable or inflexible manner. ADAMSITES (12) [noun] A type of chemical compound used in tear gas and riot control agents, named after their discoverer. ADENOMATA (12) [noun] A benign tumour of the epithelium arising from or resembling a gland. ADMEASURE (12) [verb] To measure or determine the dimensions of something. | [verb] To apportion or distribute according to measure. ADMIRABLE (14) [adjective] Deserving of the highest esteem or admiration. ADMIRABLY (17) [adverb] In a way worthy of admiration. | [adverb] To an admirable degree. ADMIRALTY (15) [noun] The office or jurisdiction of an admiral. | [noun] The department or officers having authority over naval affairs generally. | [noun] The court which has jurisdiction of maritime questions and offenses. ADMISSION (12) [noun] The act or practice of admitting. | [noun] Permission to enter, or the entrance itself; admittance; entrance; access | [noun] The granting of an argument or position not fully proved; the act of acknowledging something asserted; acknowledgement; concession. ADMISSIVE (15) [adjective] Relating to or tending toward admission; permitting entry or access. ADMITTERS (12) [noun] People who allow entry or grant admission to a place or institution. | [noun] People who acknowledge or confess to something. ADMITTING (13) [verb] To allow to enter; to grant entrance (to), whether into a place, into the mind, or into consideration | [verb] To allow (someone) to enter a profession or to enjoy a privilege; to recognize as qualified for a franchise. | [verb] To concede as true; to acknowledge or assent to, as an allegation which it is impossible to deny ADMIXTURE (19) [noun] An instance of admixing, a mixing in of something. | [noun] A mixture, in some contexts ADORNMENT (12) [noun] A decoration; that which adorns. | [noun] The act of decorating. ADUMBRATE (14) [verb] To foreshadow vaguely. | [verb] To give a vague outline. | [verb] To obscure or overshadow. ADYNAMIAS (15) [noun] Plural of adynamia; a lack of physical strength or energy, or loss of vital powers. | [noun] In medicine, absence or loss of normal muscular strength. AERODROME (12) [noun] An airfield: | [noun] A flying machine composed of aeroplanes. An aeroplane, particularly one constructed by or according to the design of Samuel Pierpont Langley and Charles M. Manly. AEROGRAMS (12) [noun] A wireless message. | [noun] A telegram whose transmission included at least one segment sent via airplane. | [noun] A thin piece of foldable and gummed paper for writing a letter and serving as its own envelope for transit via airmail. AEROMETER (11) [noun] An instrument for measuring the weight or density of air or gases. AERONOMER (11) [noun] A scientist who studies the atmosphere, particularly the upper atmosphere and its chemical and physical properties. AERONOMIC (13) [adjective] Relating to aeronomy, the study of the upper atmosphere and its chemical and physical properties. AFFIRMERS (17) [noun] People or things that affirm; those who assert or confirm something to be true. AFFIRMING (18) [verb] To agree, verify or concur; to answer positively. | [verb] To assert positively; to tell with confidence; to aver; to maintain as true. | [verb] To support or encourage. AFFIXMENT (24) AFTERMATH (17) [noun] A second mowing; the grass which grows after the first crop of hay in the same season. | [noun] That which happens after, that which follows, usually of strongly negative connotation in most contexts, implying a preceding catastrophe. AFTERMOST (14) [adjective] Nearest the stern of a vessel; hindmost. AFTERTIME (14) AGERATUMS (12) [noun] Plural of ageratum, a genus of tropical American plants with small blue, pink, or white flowers commonly grown in gardens. AGREEMENT (12) [noun] An understanding between entities to follow a specific course of conduct. | [noun] A state whereby several parties share a view or opinion; the state of not contradicting one another. | [noun] A legally binding contract enforceable in a court of law. AGRONOMIC (14) [adjective] Relating to agronomy, the science of crop production and soil management. AIMLESSLY (14) [adverb] Without an aim, purpose or direction; in an aimless manner. AIRDROMES (12) [noun] A location where aircraft are operated, usually having a runway and maintenance facilities. AIRFRAMES (14) [noun] The main body and structure of an aircraft (without the powerplant). AIRMAILED (12) [verb] To send mail by air. | [verb] To (unintentionally) throw the ball well over a fielder's head where that fielder is unable to make a play on the ball. AIRMOBILE (13) [adjective] Capable of being moved by air. AIRSTREAM (11) [noun] A flow or current of air. | [noun] The flow of air around an object. ALARMISMS (13) ALARMISTS (11) [noun] One who causes others to become alarmed without cause. ALARUMING (12) ALBINISMS (13) [noun] Plural of albinism; the condition of having little or no pigmentation in the skin, hair, and eyes due to a genetic lack of melanin production. ALBUMOSES (13) ALBURNUMS (13) [noun] The sapwood of a tree, located between the bark and the heartwood. | [noun] Plural of alburnum. ALCHEMIES (16) ALCHEMIST (16) [noun] One who practices alchemy. | [noun] One who blends material or substances in the nature or supposed nature of alchemy. ALCHEMIZE (25) [verb] To change something's properties by means of alchemy. ALCHYMIES (19) [noun] Plural of alchymy, an archaic or variant spelling of alchemy, the medieval chemical science and philosophy seeking to transform base metals into gold or discover the elixir of life. ALGORISMS (12) ALGORITHM (15) [noun] A collection of ordered steps that solve a mathematical problem. A precise step-by-step plan for a computational procedure that possibly begins with an input value and yields an output value in a finite number of steps. | [noun] Calculation with Arabic numerals; algorism. ALIENISMS (11) ALIGNMENT (12) [noun] An arrangement of items in a line. | [noun] The process of adjusting a mechanism such that its parts are aligned; the condition of having its parts so adjusted. | [noun] An alliance of factions. ALIMENTED (12) ALIMONIES (11) ALINEMENT (11) ALLELISMS (11) ALLEMANDE (12) [noun] A popular instrumental dance form in Baroque music, and a standard element of a suite, generally the first or second movement. | [verb] To perform this dance. ALLOMETRY (14) [noun] The science studying the differential growth rates of the parts of a living organism's body part or process. ALLOMORPH (16) [noun] Any of the different crystalline forms of a substance. | [noun] Any of the different phonological representations of a morpheme. ALLOTMENT (11) [noun] The act of allotting. | [noun] Something allotted; a share, part, or portion granted or distributed | [noun] The allowance of a specific amount of money or other credit of a particular thing to a particular person. ALLUVIUMS (14) [noun] Soil, clay, silt or gravel deposited by flowing water, as it slows, in a river bed, delta, estuary or flood plain ALMAGESTS (12) [noun] A comprehensive treatise on astronomy, alchemy, geography and/or mathematics (originally compiled by Ptolemy circa 150 C.E.). ALMANDINE (12) [noun] A type of garnet having a deep red color, inclining to purple, with the chemical formula Fe3Al2(SiO4)3. ALMANDITE (12) ALMONRIES (11) [noun] A building in which alms were distributed. ALMSGIVER (15) ALMSHOUSE (14) [noun] A building of residence for the poor, sick or elderly of a parish. Originally founded by the Church. Usually a charity relying on donations for funding. ALPINISMS (13) ALTIMETER (11) [noun] An apparatus for measuring altitude. ALTIMETRY (14) [noun] The science of measuring altitude ALTRUISMS (11) ALUMINATE (11) ALUMINIUM (13) [noun] A light, silvery metal extracted from bauxite, and a chemical element (symbol Al) with an atomic number of 13. | [noun] A single atom of this element. | [noun] Aircraft or other machinery made partially or wholly of aluminium. ALUMINIZE (20) [verb] To coat with a layer of aluminium. ALUMINOUS (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to alumina or alum ALUMINUMS (13) ALUMROOTS (11) [noun] Any of several perennial herbs, of the genus Heuchera, native to North America. | [noun] Flowering plants of genus Geranium, also called wild geraniums or cranesbills. AMADAVATS (15) [noun] An estrildid finch, Amandava amandava, of India and Southeast Asia, commonly kept and bred as a cagebird. AMANITINS (11) AMARANTHS (14) [noun] An imaginary flower that does not wither. | [noun] Any of various herbs of the genus Amaranthus. | [noun] The characteristic purplish-red colour of the flowers or leaves of these plants. AMARELLES (11) AMARETTOS (11) [noun] A sweet-bitter liqueur originating from Italy (but also produced in Turkey), flavored with almonds and a secret blend-specific mix of some 200 ingredients such as the pits from apricots, peaches, cherries or other stone fruits. | [noun] A glass of that liqueur. | [noun] A light Italian cookie made with almonds. AMARYLLIS (14) [noun] The belladonna lily, Amaryllis belladonna, native to South Africa. | [noun] A similar lily in genus Hippeastrum, such as Hippeastrum puniceum, and cultivars. AMASSMENT (13) [noun] The act of amassing. | [noun] That which is amassed; a large quantity (of something). AMATIVELY (17) AMAUROSES (11) AMAUROSIS (11) [noun] Any form of blindness that is accompanied by no obvious change to the eye; often the result of disease of the optic nerve. AMAUROTIC (13) AMAZEMENT (22) [noun] The condition of being amazed; overwhelming wonder, as from surprise, sudden fear, horror, or admiration; astonishment. | [noun] A particular feeling of wonder, surprise, fear, or horror. | [noun] Something which amazes. AMAZINGLY (24) [adverb] In an amazing manner; in a way that causes amazement; wonderfully. | [adverb] Difficult to believe; strange but true. | [adverb] To a wonder-inspiring extent. AMAZONITE (20) AMBERGRIS (14) [noun] A solid, waxy, flammable substance of a dull grey or blackish color, produced in the intestines of the sperm whale. It is used in perfumes. AMBERINAS (13) AMBERJACK (26) [noun] Any of several large food and game yellowtail fishes of the genus Seriola, found in warm waters of all oceans. AMBEROIDS (14) AMBIANCES (15) [noun] A particular mood or atmosphere of an environment or surrounding influence. | [noun] (3D models) A secondary color of a polygon that becomes more pronounced with shading. AMBIENCES (15) [noun] A particular mood or atmosphere of an environment or surrounding influence. | [noun] (3D models) A secondary color of a polygon that becomes more pronounced with shading. AMBIGUITY (17) [noun] Something, particularly words and sentences, that is open to more than one interpretation, explanation or meaning, if that meaning etc cannot be determined from its context. | [noun] The state of being ambiguous. AMBIGUOUS (14) [adjective] Open to multiple interpretations. | [adjective] Vague and unclear. | [adjective] (of persons) Hesitant; uncertain; not taking sides. AMBITIONS (13) [noun] Eager or inordinate desire for some object that confers distinction, as preferment, honor, superiority, political power, or literary fame; desire to distinguish one's self from other people. | [noun] An object of an ardent desire. | [noun] A desire, as in (sense 1), for another person to achieve these things. AMBITIOUS (13) [adjective] (of a person or their character) Having or showing ambition; wanting a lot of power, honor, respect, superiority, or other distinction. | [adjective] (followed by "of" or the infinitive) Very desirous | [adjective] Resulting from, characterized by, or indicating, ambition AMBIVERTS (16) [noun] A person who is neither clearly extroverted nor introverted, but has characteristics of each. AMBLYOPIA (18) [noun] Dimness or blurring of the eyesight due to a fault in transmission of signals to the brain from an otherwise healthy eye. | [noun] A disorder of visual development in which the brain partially or wholly ignores input from one or both eyes. AMBLYOPIC (20) AMBROSIAL (13) AMBROSIAS (13) AMBROTYPE (18) AMBULACRA (15) [noun] (of an echinoderm) A row of pores for the protrusion of appendages such as tube feet. AMBULANCE (15) [noun] An emergency vehicle designed for transporting seriously ill or injured people to a hospital. | [noun] A mobile field hospital. | [noun] A prairie wagon. AMBULATED (14) [verb] To walk; to relocate oneself under the power of one's own legs. AMBULATES (13) [verb] To walk; to relocate oneself under the power of one's own legs. AMBUSCADE (16) [noun] An ambush; a trap laid for an enemy. | [noun] The place in which troops lie hidden for an ambush. | [noun] The body of troops lying in ambush. AMBUSHERS (16) AMBUSHING (17) [verb] To station in ambush with a view to surprise an enemy. | [verb] To attack by ambush; to waylay. | [noun] An ambush. AMEBIASES (13) AMEBIASIS (13) [noun] An infectious disease caused by the parasitic protozoan Entamoeba histolytica; amoebic dysentery. AMEBOCYTE (18) AMEERATES (11) AMELCORNS (13) AMENDABLE (14) AMENDMENT (14) [noun] An alteration or change for the better; correction of a fault or of faults; reformation of life by quitting vices. | [noun] In public bodies, any alteration made or proposed to be made in a bill or motion that adds, changes, substitutes, or omits. | [noun] Correction of an error in a writ or process. AMENITIES (11) [noun] The quality of being pleasant or agreeable, whether in respect to situation, climate, manners, or disposition; pleasantness; civility; suavity; gentleness. | [noun] Pleasantness. | [noun] A thing or circumstance that is welcome and makes life a little easier or more pleasant. AMERICIUM (15) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Am) with an atomic number of 95. AMETHYSTS (17) [noun] A transparent purple variety of quartz, used as a gemstone. | [noun] A purple colour. | [noun] The purple tincture when emblazoning the arms of the English nobility. AMETROPIA (13) AMETROPIC (15) AMIDOGENS (13) AMIDSHIPS (17) [adverb] In the middle of a ship, either longitudinally or laterally. | [adverb] Usually in the line of the keel, but sometimes halfway between bow and stern; often contracted to “midships.” (FM 55-501). | [adverb] On the flank, at a vulnerable place. AMINITIES (11) AMITROLES (11) [noun] Plural of amitrole, a herbicide used to control weeds and plant growth. AMMOCETES (15) [noun] The larval stage of a lamprey, characterized by a jawless, sucker-like mouth and a body without fins. AMMONIACS (15) [noun] Plural of ammoniac, a gum resin obtained from an umbelliferous plant, used in adhesives and medicine. | [noun] Plural of ammoniaca, salts of ammonia or compounds containing ammonia. AMMONIATE (13) [verb] To treat or combine with ammonia or an ammonium compound. AMMONITES (13) [noun] Any of an extinct group of cephalopods of the subclass Ammonoidea; a fossil shell of such an animal. AMMONITIC (15) AMMONIUMS (15) [noun] Plural of ammonium, referring to the polyatomic cation NH4+ or compounds containing this ion. AMMONOIDS (14) [noun] An extinct cephalopod of the subclass Ammonoidea (including ammonites). AMNESIACS (13) [noun] Person who suffers from loss of memory (amnesia). AMNESTIED (12) [adjective] That has been given amnesty; whose past offences have been forgiven. | [verb] To grant a pardon (to a group) AMNESTIES (11) [noun] Forgetfulness; cessation of remembrance of wrong; oblivion. | [noun] An act of the sovereign power granting oblivion, or a general pardon, for a past offense, as to subjects concerned in an insurrection. AMORALISM (13) [noun] The philosophical position that morality does not exist or that moral distinctions are meaningless. | [noun] Indifference to or rejection of moral principles. AMORALITY (14) [noun] The quality or state of being amoral; lack of moral sense or moral principles. AMORETTOS (11) [noun] Plural of amoretto, a representation of a cupid or cherub, especially in art and decoration. AMORISTIC (13) AMOROUSLY (14) [adverb] In a manner showing romantic or sexual desire; with amorous intent or affection. AMORPHOUS (16) [adjective] Lacking a definite form or clear shape. | [adjective] (by extension) Being without definite character or nature. | [adjective] (by extension) Lacking organization or unity. AMORTISED (12) [verb] To alienate (property) in mortmain. | [verb] To wipe out (a debt, liability etc.) gradually or in installments. | [verb] To even out the costs of running an algorithm over many iterations, so that high-cost iterations are much less frequent than low-cost iterations, which lowers the average running time. AMORTISES (11) [verb] To alienate (property) in mortmain. | [verb] To wipe out (a debt, liability etc.) gradually or in installments. | [verb] To even out the costs of running an algorithm over many iterations, so that high-cost iterations are much less frequent than low-cost iterations, which lowers the average running time. AMORTIZED (21) [verb] To alienate (property) in mortmain. | [verb] To wipe out (a debt, liability etc.) gradually or in installments. | [verb] To even out the costs of running an algorithm over many iterations, so that high-cost iterations are much less frequent than low-cost iterations, which lowers the average running time. AMORTIZES (20) [verb] To alienate (property) in mortmain. | [verb] To wipe out (a debt, liability etc.) gradually or in installments. | [verb] To even out the costs of running an algorithm over many iterations, so that high-cost iterations are much less frequent than low-cost iterations, which lowers the average running time. AMOUNTING (12) [verb] (followed by to) To total or evaluate. | [verb] (followed by to) To be the same as or equivalent to. | [verb] To go up; to ascend. AMPERAGES (14) [noun] The electric current; charge transmitted per unit time, measured in amperes. AMPERSAND (14) [noun] The symbol "&". | [verb] To add an ampersand to. AMPHIBIAN (18) [noun] An animal of the Amphibia; any four-legged vertebrate that does not have amniotic eggs, living both on land and in water. | [noun] A vehicle which can operate on land and water. See Wikipedia article on "Amphibious aircraft" | [adjective] Of or relating to the class Amphibia. AMPHIBOLE (18) [noun] Any of a large group of structurally similar hydrated double silicate minerals, containing various combinations of sodium, calcium, magnesium, iron, and aluminium/aluminum AMPHIBOLY (21) [noun] (grammar) An ambiguous grammatical construction. AMPHIOXUS (23) [noun] The lancelet, particularly of the genus Branchiostoma. AMPHIPODS (19) [noun] A member of taxonomic order Amphipoda of small, shrimp-like crustaceans. AMPLENESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being ample; abundance or plentifulness. AMPLIDYNE (17) [noun] A type of electrical generator that amplifies a small input signal to produce a large output signal, used in control systems. AMPLIFIED (17) [adjective] Having been made the subject of amplification; more potent or stronger, louder | [verb] To render larger, more extended, or more intense. | [verb] To enlarge by addition or commenting; to treat copiously by adding particulars, illustrations, etc.; to expand. AMPLIFIER (16) [noun] Anything that amplifies, or makes something larger or more intense. | [noun] An adverb that adds intensity, such as "really" or "totally". | [noun] An appliance or circuit that increases the strength of a weak electrical signal without changing the other characteristics of the signal. AMPLIFIES (16) [verb] To render larger, more extended, or more intense. | [verb] To enlarge by addition or commenting; to treat copiously by adding particulars, illustrations, etc.; to expand. | [verb] To increase the amplitude of something, especially of an electric current. AMPLITUDE (14) [noun] The measure of something's size, especially in terms of width or breadth; largeness, magnitude. | [noun] The maximum absolute value of the vertical component of a curve or function, especially one that is periodic. | [noun] The maximum absolute value of some quantity that varies. AMPULLARY (16) [adjective] Relating to or shaped like an ampulla; resembling a small flask or bottle-shaped structure. AMPUTATED (14) [verb] To surgically remove a part of the body, especially a limb | [adjective] Having been removed or cut off. AMPUTATES (13) [verb] To surgically remove a part of the body, especially a limb AMUSEMENT (13) [noun] Entertainment. | [noun] An activity that is entertaining or amusing, such as dancing, gunning, or fishing. AMUSINGLY (15) [adverb] In an amusing manner. AMYGDALAE (16) [noun] The region of the brain, located in the medial temporal lobe, believed to play a key role in the emotions, such as fear and pleasure, in both animals and humans. AMYGDALES (16) [noun] An almond-shaped inclusion in igneous rock or lava AMYGDALIN (16) [noun] A glycoside of benzaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide found in bitter almonds, and in the kernels of some other fruit. AMYGDULES (16) [noun] Small rounded stones or mineral nodules found in volcanic rock, formed by the filling of cavities with mineral deposits. AMYLOGENS (15) [noun] Substances or organisms that produce starch or starch-like compounds. AMYLOPSIN (16) [noun] An enzyme that breaks down starch into simpler sugars, found in saliva and pancreatic secretions. AMYOTONIA (14) [noun] A condition characterized by abnormal muscle weakness or lack of muscle tone, particularly in infants. ANABOLISM (13) [noun] The constructive metabolism of the body, as distinguished from catabolism. ANALCIMES (13) [noun] Plural of analcime, a white or colorless zeolite mineral composed of hydrated sodium aluminum silicate, commonly found in volcanic rocks. ANALEMMAS (13) [noun] An egg-shaped or figure-eight curve that results when the Sun's position in the sky is plotted out over the year at the same hour of mean solar time every day. ANAMNESES (11) [noun] The ability to recall past events; recollection. | [noun] The medical history of a patient. | [noun] The mention of the past; quotation of exemplary authors from memory to establish one's authority. ANAMNESIS (11) [noun] The ability to recall past events; recollection. | [noun] The medical history of a patient. | [noun] The mention of the past; quotation of exemplary authors from memory to establish one's authority. ANARCHISM (16) [noun] The belief that proposes the absence and abolition of hierarchy and authority in most forms. ANATHEMAS (14) [noun] A ban or curse pronounced with religious solemnity by ecclesiastical authority, often accompanied by excommunication; something denounced as accursed. | [noun] (by extension) Something which is vehemently disliked by somebody. | [noun] An imprecation; a curse; a malediction. ANATOMIES (11) [noun] The art of studying the different parts of any organized body, to discover their situation, structure, and economy. | [noun] The science that deals with the form and structure of organic bodies; anatomical structure or organization. | [noun] A treatise or book on anatomy. ANATOMISE (11) [verb] To inspect or investigate by dissection. | [verb] To scrutinize down to the most minute detail. ANATOMIST (11) [noun] One who studies, teaches, writes on, or does research on anatomy and anatomical structures. ANATOMIZE (20) [verb] To inspect or investigate by dissection. | [verb] To scrutinize down to the most minute detail. ANCHORMAN (16) [noun] The main host of a television or radio program, particularly one relating to the broadcast of news. | [noun] The most reliable runner in a relay team, usually the one that runs last. | [noun] The person on a ship in charge of the anchor. ANCHORMEN (16) [noun] The main host of a television or radio program, particularly one relating to the broadcast of news. | [noun] The most reliable runner in a relay team, usually the one that runs last. | [noun] The person on a ship in charge of the anchor. ANDROMEDA (13) [noun] Any shrub of the genus Pieris (family Ericaceae), having leathery leaves and small flowers. | [noun] Bog rosemary. ANEURISMS (11) [noun] An abnormal blood-filled swelling of an artery or vein, resulting from a localized weakness in the wall of the vessel. ANEURYSMS (14) [noun] An abnormal blood-filled swelling of an artery or vein, resulting from a localized weakness in the wall of the vessel. ANGIOGRAM (13) [noun] An X-ray image of the blood vessels gained after the injection of a radiopaque contrast medium. ANGIOMATA (12) [noun] A benign tumor made up of small blood vessels or lymph vessels. ANGLEWORM (15) [noun] A earthworm, especially one used as fishing bait. ANGLICISM (14) [noun] A word or other feature originating in the English language that has been borrowed by another language. | [noun] A Briticism. | [noun] A cultural aspect typical of the English people. ANGSTROMS (12) [noun] A unit of length equal to 10−10 meters (that is, one ten-billionth of a meter), approximately the size of an atom, and denoted by the symbol Å, used especially to measure the wavelength of electromagnetic radiation or distances between atoms. ANIMALIER (11) [noun] An artist who specializes in painting or sculpting animals. ANIMALISM (13) [noun] The doctrine that humans are merely animals, and lack any spirituality. | [noun] The enjoyment of physical appetites. | [noun] (ontology) A theory of personal identity which holds that persons are individual organisms of the species Homo sapiens, and the conditions of our persistence and identity are simply those of animals. ANIMALITY (14) [noun] The nature of an animal. | [noun] The animal kingdom. | [noun] Any characteristic of animality. ANIMALIZE (20) [verb] To represent in the form of an animal. | [verb] To brutalize. | [verb] To convert or produce material rich in animal substance. ANIMATELY (14) ANIMATERS (11) [noun] Plural of animator; people who create animations or bring drawings to life through sequential imagery. | [noun] People or things that animate or give life and energy to something. ANIMATING (12) [verb] To impart motion or the appearance of motion to. | [verb] To give spirit or vigour to; to stimulate or enliven; to inspirit. ANIMATION (11) [noun] The act of animating, or giving life or spirit. | [noun] (in the sense of a cartoon) The technique of making inanimate objects or drawings appear to move in motion pictures or computer graphics; the object (film, computer game, etc.) so produced | [noun] The state of being lively, brisk, or full of spirit and vigor; vivacity; spiritedness ANIMATORS (11) [noun] One who animates something; one who brings something to life or the appearance of life. | [noun] One who creates an animation or cartoon; a cartoonist. ANIMISTIC (13) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of animism, the belief that natural objects and phenomena possess spiritual essence or consciousness. ANIMOSITY (14) [noun] Violent hatred leading to active opposition; active enmity; energetic dislike. ANISOGAMY (15) [noun] A form of sexual bonding involving partners of unusually widely differing ages. | [noun] Sexual reproduction involving the union or fusion of two dissimilar gametes. ANNULMENT (11) [noun] An act or instance of annulling. | [noun] The state of having been annulled. | [noun] An invalidation of something, especially a legal contract. ANOMALIES (11) [noun] A deviation from a rule or from what is regarded as normal; an outlier. | [noun] Something or someone that is strange or unusual. | [noun] Any event or measurement that is out of the ordinary regardless of whether it is exceptional or not. ANOMALOUS (11) [adjective] Deviating from the normal; marked by incongruity or contradiction; aberrant or abnormal. | [adjective] Of uncertain or unknown categorization; strange. | [adjective] Having anomalies. ANONYMITY (17) [noun] The quality or state of being anonymous; anonymousness. | [noun] That which is anonymous. ANONYMOUS (14) [adjective] Lacking a name; not named, for example an animal not assigned to any species. | [adjective] Without any name acknowledged of a person responsible | [adjective] Of unknown name; whose name is withheld ANOXEMIAS (18) [noun] Plural of anoxemia, a deficiency of oxygen in the blood. ANTEROOMS (11) [noun] A room before, or forming an entrance to, another; a waiting room. ANTHEMING (15) ANTHEMION (14) [noun] An ornamental design consisting of palmettes or lotus flowers. ANTHODIUM (15) [noun] A type of inflorescence consisting of a dense cluster of small flowers, typically found in plants of the daisy family. ANTHURIUM (14) [noun] Any of several tropical American evergreen plants, of the genus Anthurium, grown for their ornamental leaves and spathes ANTIATOMS (11) [noun] Particles of antimatter that are the antiparticle counterparts of atoms, composed of positrons, antineutrons, and antineutrinos. ANTICRIME (13) ANTIHUMAN (14) ANTIMACHO (16) ANTIMASKS (15) ANTIMERES (11) [noun] Corresponding parts of an organism that are arranged symmetrically on either side of an axis, particularly in biology and zoology. ANTIMYCIN (16) ANTINOMIC (13) [adjective] Relating to or containing antinomies; contradictory or mutually incompatible. | [adjective] Opposed to or rejecting established laws or customs. ANTISERUM (11) [noun] A serum prepared from human or animal sources containing antibodies specific for combatting an infectious disease. ANTISMOKE (15) ANTITUMOR (11) [noun] Any substance that inhibits tumors. | [adjective] Inhibiting the development of a tumor. ANTIWOMAN (14) ANTONYMIC (16) [adjective] Relating to or being words that have opposite meanings. APARTMENT (13) [noun] A complete domicile occupying only part of a building, especially one for rent; a flat. | [noun] A suite of rooms within a domicile, designated for a specific person or persons and including a bedroom. | [noun] A division of an enclosure that is separate from others; a compartment APHORISMS (16) [noun] An original, laconic phrase conveying some principle or concept of thought. | [verb] To speak or write aphorisms. APIMANIAS (13) APOENZYME (25) [noun] A protein that forms the inactive precursor of an enzyme, requiring a cofactor or coenzyme to become catalytically active. APOGAMIES (14) [noun] The plural of apogamy, a form of asexual reproduction in plants where an embryo develops without fertilization. | [noun] In botany, instances of plant reproduction that bypasses the sexual process. APOGAMOUS (14) [adjective] Reproducing without sexual union or fertilization; capable of producing offspring asexually. APOMICTIC (17) [adjective] Relating to or reproducing by apomixis, a form of asexual reproduction in plants where seeds develop without fertilization. APOTHEGMS (17) [noun] A short, witty, instructive saying; an aphorism or maxim. AQUARIUMS (20) [noun] A tank, often made of glass, for keeping live fish or other aquatic animals. | [noun] A public place where live fish and other aquatic animals are exhibited. ARAPAIMAS (13) [noun] A large carnivorous predatory South American tropical freshwater fish, Arapaima gigas. ARBORETUM (13) [noun] A place where many varieties of tree are grown for research, educational, and ornamental purposes. ARCHAISMS (16) [noun] The adoption or imitation of archaic words or style. | [noun] An archaic word, style, etc. ARCHENEMY (19) [noun] A principal enemy. | [noun] A supreme and most powerful enemy. ARGENTUMS (12) [noun] Plural of argentum; silver or silver-colored metal. ARGUMENTA (12) ARGUMENTS (12) [noun] A fact or statement used to support a proposition; a reason. | [noun] A verbal dispute; a quarrel. | [noun] A process of reasoning. ARMADILLO (12) [noun] Any of the burrowing mammals covered with bony, jointed, protective plates, order Cingulata, found in the Americas, especially in South America. ARMAGNACS (14) [noun] A brandy made in the region of Armagnac. ARMAMENTS (13) [noun] A body of forces equipped for war. | [noun] All the cannon and small arms collectively, with their equipments, belonging to a ship or a fortification. | [noun] Any equipment for resistance. ARMATURED (12) [adjective] Fitted with or having an armature; equipped with a protective covering or framework. ARMATURES (11) [noun] The rotating part of an electric motor or dynamo, which mostly consists of coils of wire around a metal core. | [noun] The moving part in an electromechanical device like a loudspeaker or a buzzer. | [noun] A piece of soft steel or iron that connects the poles of a magnet ARMCHAIRS (16) [noun] A chair with supports for the arms or elbows. | [verb] To create based on theory or general knowledge rather than data. | [verb] To theorize based on analysis of data that was gathered previously; to reflect. ARMIGERAL (12) [adjective] Relating to or bearing heraldic arms; entitled to bear a coat of arms. ARMIGEROS (12) ARMISTICE (13) [proper noun] The armistice agreement signed between the Allies and Germany on 11 November 1918 to end World War I; (by extension) the end of World War I. | [noun] A (short) cessation of combat; a ceasefire, a truce. | [noun] A formal agreement, especially between nations, to end combat. ARMONICAS (13) ARMORIALS (11) [noun] Plural of armorial; heraldic emblems or designs, especially those displayed on shields or coats of arms. | [adjective] Relating to or bearing coats of arms or heraldic designs. ARMORLESS (11) [adjective] Not wearing armor; unarmored or unprotected. ARMOURERS (11) [noun] A manufacturer of weapons, especially of guns | [noun] A military specialist in charge of the upkeep of small arms etc | [noun] Someone who makes or repairs armor ARMOURIES (11) [noun] Heraldry | [noun] A place where arms are kept, an arsenal. | [noun] A collection of weapons and materiel. ARMOURING (12) [verb] To equip something with armour or a protective coating or hardening. | [verb] To provide something with an analogous form of protection. | [noun] Armour or shielding. ARMYWORMS (19) [noun] The larva of any of the Spodoptera and Mythimna genera of noctuid moths, which typically feed in large, destructive groups. AROMATICS (13) [noun] A fragrant plant or spice added to a dish to flavour it. | [noun] Any aromatic compound. AROMATIZE (20) [verb] To make aromatic, fragrant, or spicy. | [verb] To convert into an aromatic compound by means of a chemical reaction. ARROWWORM (17) [noun] A small marine worm of the phylum Chaetognatha, characterized by arrow-shaped body and lateral fins. ARTEMISIA (11) [noun] Any of many aromatic flowering plants of the genus Artemisia, including wormwood, sagebrush, and tarragon. ARYTHMIAS (17) [noun] Plural of arrhythmia; irregular heartbeats or abnormal heart rhythms. ASHAMEDLY (18) [adverb] In a manner characterized by or showing shame; with shame or embarrassment. ASPARTAME (13) [noun] An artificial sweetener, the methyl ester of a dipeptide formed from aspartic acid and phenylalanine, used in many processed foods and beverages. ASPHALTUM (16) [noun] A dark bituminous substance used for surfacing roads and waterproofing, similar to asphalt or bitumen. ASSEMBLED (14) [verb] To put together. | [verb] To gather as a group. | [verb] To translate from assembly language to machine code ASSEMBLER (13) [noun] A program that reads source code written in assembly language and produces executable machine code, possibly together with information needed by linkers, debuggers and other tools. | [noun] Assembly language. | [noun] One who assembles items. ASSEMBLES (13) [verb] To put together. | [verb] To gather as a group. | [verb] To translate from assembly language to machine code ASSUMABLE (13) [adjective] Capable of being assumed or taken for granted. | [adjective] (of a mortgage) able to be transferred to a new owner under the same terms. ASSUMABLY (16) [adverb] In a manner that can be assumed or is reasonably supposed to be true. ASSUMPSIT (13) [noun] A legal action for breach of contract, or a promise or undertaking made orally or in writing. ASTERISMS (11) [noun] (constellation) An unofficial constellation (small group of stars that forms a visible pattern). | [noun] A rarely used typographical symbol (⁂, three asterisks arranged in a triangle), used to call attention to a passage or to separate subchapters in a book. | [noun] A star-shaped figure exhibited by some crystals by reflected light (as in a star sapphire) or by transmitted light (as in some mica). ASTHMATIC (16) [noun] A person who suffers from asthma. | [adjective] Having the characteristics of asthma, as in an "asthmatic cough". ASTIGMIAS (12) [noun] Plural of astigmia, a refractive error of the eye in which the cornea or lens has an irregular shape, causing blurred or distorted vision at all distances. ASTRODOME (12) [noun] A transparent dome in the fuselage of an aircraft or spacecraft through which navigational observations may be made ASTRONOMY (14) [noun] The study of the physical universe beyond the Earth's atmosphere, including the process of mapping locations and properties of the matter and radiation in the universe. | [noun] Astrology. ASYMMETRY (19) [noun] Absence of symmetry or proportion between the parts of a thing, or a distinction that produces such a lack of symmetry. | [noun] The lack of a common measure between two objects or quantities; incommensurability. ASYMPTOTE (16) [noun] A straight line which a curve approaches arbitrarily closely, as they go to infinity. The limit of the curve, its tangent "at infinity". | [noun] (by extension) Anything which comes near to but never meets something else. | [verb] To approach, but never quite touch, a straight line, as something goes to infinity. ATAMASCOS (13) [noun] Plural of atamasco, a type of lily plant (Zephyranthes atamasco) native to the southeastern United States, characterized by white or pink flowers. ATEMPORAL (13) [adjective] Unaffected by time; timeless; permanent or unchanging. ATHENAEUM (14) [noun] A temple primarily dedicated to Athena or her Roman equivalent Minerva, especially that of Athens. | [noun] An association for the advancement of learning, particularly in science or literature. | [noun] The reading room or library of such an association; any reading room or library. ATHENEUMS (14) [noun] Plural of atheneum; institutions or buildings devoted to learning and the promotion of literature, science, or the arts. | [noun] Literary or scientific associations or clubs. ATHEROMAS (14) [noun] Deposits of fatty substances, cholesterol, and other materials that form in the inner lining of arteries, leading to plaque buildup and atherosclerosis. ATMOMETER (13) [noun] An instrument that measures the rate of evaporation of water from a surface into the atmosphere. ATOMISERS (11) [noun] An instrument for reducing a liquid to spray or vapor for disinfecting, cooling, medical use or perfume spraying. ATOMISING (12) [verb] To separate or reduce into atoms | [verb] To make into a fine spray | [verb] To fragment, break into small pieces or concepts ATOMISTIC (13) [adjective] Relating to or composed of atoms. | [adjective] Treating something as a collection of independent units rather than as an integrated whole. ATOMIZERS (20) [noun] An instrument for reducing a liquid to spray or vapor for disinfecting, cooling, medical use or perfume spraying. ATOMIZING (21) [verb] To separate or reduce into atoms | [verb] To make into a fine spray | [verb] To fragment, break into small pieces or concepts ATONALISM (11) ATONEMENT (11) [noun] Making amends to restore a damaged relationship; expiation. | [noun] (often with capitalized initial) The reconciliation of God and mankind through the death of Jesus. | [noun] Reconciliation; restoration of friendly relations; concord. ATROPISMS (13) ATTACKMAN (17) [noun] A player in a position whose primary responsibility is offense. ATTACKMEN (17) [noun] A player in a position whose primary responsibility is offense. ATTEMPERS (13) [verb] Third person singular present of "attemper," meaning to moderate, temper, or regulate something. | [noun] Plural of "attemper," referring to devices or agents that temper or moderate. ATTEMPTED (14) [verb] To try. | [verb] To try to move, by entreaty, by afflictions, or by temptations; to tempt. | [verb] To try to win, subdue, or overcome. ATTICISMS (13) [noun] Expressions, phrases, or stylistic features characteristic of Attic Greek or Athens. | [noun] Refined or elegant expressions in language, particularly those imitating classical Attic style. AUDIOGRAM (13) [noun] A graphical representation of the hearing ability of a person AUGMENTED (13) [verb] To increase; to make larger or supplement. | [verb] To grow; to increase; to become greater. | [verb] To slow the tempo or meter, e.g. for a dramatic or stately passage. AUGMENTER (12) [noun] One who augments or increases something. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of augment. AUGMENTOR (12) AUSFORMED (15) [verb] Past tense of ausform, which means to heat treat steel or other metal by a special process involving controlled cooling. | [adjective] Treated by the ausforming process. AUTECISMS (13) [noun] Plural of autecism; a condition in rust fungi where both spore stages occur on the same host plant. | [noun] Self-fertilization or self-pollination in plants. AUTOECISM (13) [noun] A condition in rust fungi where both stages of the fungal life cycle occur on the same host plant. AUTOMAKER (15) [noun] One who manufactures automobiles; typically used to refer to a large corporation such as General Motors. AUTOMATED (12) [verb] To replace or enhance human labor with machines. | [adjective] Made automatic | [adjective] Done by machine. AUTOMATES (11) [verb] To replace or enhance human labor with machines. AUTOMATIC (13) [noun] A car with automatic transmission. | [noun] A semi-automatic pistol. | [adjective] Capable of operating without external control or intervention. AUTOMATON (11) [noun] A machine or robot designed to follow a precise sequence of instructions. | [noun] A person who acts like a machine or robot, often defined as having a monotonous lifestyle and lacking in emotion. | [noun] A formal system, such as finite automaton. AUTONOMIC (13) [adjective] Acting or occurring involuntarily, without conscious control. | [adjective] Pertaining to the autonomic nervous system. AUTOSOMAL (11) [adjective] Relating to or inherited through an autosome, a chromosome that is not a sex chromosome. AUTOSOMES (11) [noun] Any chromosome other than sex chromosomes. AVERMENTS (14) [noun] The act of averring, or that which is averred; positive assertion. | [noun] Verification; establishment by evidence. | [noun] A positive statement of facts; an allegation; an offer to justify or prove what is alleged. AWESOMELY (17) [adverb] In a manner inspiring awe. AXIOMATIC (20) [adjective] Self-evident or unquestionable. | [adjective] Relating to or containing axioms. AXOPLASMS (20) [noun] The cytoplasm of an axon, the long extension of a nerve cell that conducts electrical impulses. AZIMUTHAL (23) [adjective] Relating to or measured along the azimuth, which is the horizontal angle or direction of a celestial object measured clockwise from north. AZOTEMIAS (20) [noun] Plural of azotemia; a medical condition characterized by an abnormally high level of nitrogen-containing compounds, especially urea, in the blood. BACTERIUM (15) [noun] A single celled organism with cell walls but no nucleus or organelles. BADMINTON (14) [noun] A racquet sport played indoors on a court by two opposing players (singles) or two opposing pairs of players (doubles), in which a shuttlecock is volleyed over a net and the competitions are presided by an umpire in British English and a referee in American English. | [noun] A cooling summer drink made with claret, sugar and soda water. BADMOUTHS (17) [verb] To criticize or malign, especially unfairly or spitefully. BAILMENTS (13) [noun] Bail. | [noun] The handing over of control over, or possession of, personal property by one person, the bailor, to another, the bailee, for a specific purpose upon which the parties have agreed. BAKEMEATS (17) [noun] Baked food items, particularly meat dishes prepared for a feast or special occasion, especially as used in Shakespeare's time. BALLGAMES (14) [noun] Any game played with a ball. | [noun] A specific contest or match between teams playing such a game, in particular a baseball game. | [noun] A sport played in the Aztec and Mayan civilizations; Mesoamerican ballgame. BALLROOMS (13) [noun] A large room used for dancing and banquets. | [noun] A type of elegant dance. BALMACAAN (15) [noun] A loose overcoat of a certain type, with raglan sleeves BALMINESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being balmy; mildness or pleasantness, especially of weather. | [noun] The quality of being foolish or silly. BALMORALS (13) [noun] A Scottish cap with a flat top and a plume but no brim; a blue bonnet. | [noun] A heavy walking shoe. | [noun] An Oxford shoe. BALSAMING (14) [verb] The present participle of "balsam," meaning to treat or anoint with balsam, or to soothe and heal. | [verb] To apply a healing or soothing substance to something. BAMBOOZLE (24) [verb] To con, defraud, trick, to make a fool of, to humbug or impose on someone. | [verb] To confuse, frustrate or perplex. BAPTISMAL (15) [noun] A baptismal name: a name given at baptism. | [noun] A baptismal font: a large basin used for baptism. | [adjective] Of or relating to baptism. BARBARISM (15) [noun] A barbaric act. | [noun] The condition of existing barbarically. | [noun] A word hybridizing Ancient Greek and Latin or other heterogeneous roots. BARNSTORM (13) [noun] A series of appearances in small country towns, as by a politician or a travelling theatre group. | [verb] To travel around the countryside making political speeches etc. | [verb] To appear at fairs and carnivals in exhibitions of stunt flying, sporting events, or theater. BAROGRAMS (14) [noun] Plural of barogram; records or charts produced by a barograph showing atmospheric pressure variations over time. BAROMETER (13) [noun] An instrument for measuring atmospheric pressure. | [noun] (by extension) Anything used as a gauge or indicator. BAROMETRY (16) BASEMENTS (13) [noun] A floor of a building below ground level. | [noun] A mass of igneous or metamorphic rock forming the foundation over which a platform of sedimentary rocks is laid. | [noun] Last place in a sports conference standings. BATHROOMS (16) [noun] A room containing a shower and/or bathtub, and (typically but not necessarily) a toilet. | [noun] A lavatory: a room containing a toilet and (typically but not necessarily) a bathtub. BATTEMENT (13) [noun] A ballet move involving a beating action with an extended leg | [noun] A thumping or beating sensation BDELLIUMS (14) [noun] A fragrant resin obtained from certain trees in Arabia and India, used in perfumes and incense. | [noun] A tree that produces bdellium resin. BEACHCOMB (22) [verb] To search along a beach for shells, sea glass, or other items of interest. | [noun] A person who searches beaches for collectible items. BEAMISHLY (19) [adverb] In a beamish manner; with a bright, cheerful, or radiant quality. BECALMING (16) [verb] To make calm or still; make quiet; calm. | [verb] To deprive (a ship) of wind, so that it cannot move (usually in passive). BECHAMELS (18) [noun] Plural of béchamel, a creamy white sauce made from butter, flour, and milk, used in cooking. BECHARMED (19) [verb] Past tense of becharm; to charm or enchant. BECLAMORS (15) BECOMINGS (16) [noun] The plural of becoming; instances or processes of coming to be or developing into something. | [noun] Plural of becoming, referring to attractive or flattering qualities or appearances. BECRIMING (16) BEDAMNING (15) BEDFRAMES (17) [noun] The structural framework or base of a bed that supports a mattress and bedding. BEDIMMING (17) [verb] To make dim; to obscure or darken. BEDIMPLED (17) [adjective] Having dimples or marked with small indentations. BEDIMPLES (16) BEDLAMITE (14) [noun] A person who is insane or chaotic in behavior; an inhabitant of Bedlam (a historical asylum in London). BEDMAKERS (18) [noun] Someone who manufactures beds | [noun] (Cantab) a domestic servant employed by a University for the benefit of its students BEDROOMED (15) [adjective] Having a specified number of bedrooms, as in "a three-bedroomed house." BEDUMBING (17) BEGLAMORS (14) BEGLAMOUR (14) BEGLOOMED (15) BEGRIMING (15) [verb] To make something dirty; to soil. BEGRIMMED (17) [adjective] Covered or made dirty with grime; soiled or blackened. BEHEMOTHS (19) [noun] A great and mighty beast God shows Job in Job 40:15–24. | [noun] (by extension) Any great and mighty monster. | [noun] Something which has the qualities of great power and might, and monstrous proportions. BEJUMBLED (23) BEJUMBLES (22) BELEMNITE (13) [noun] Any member of the extinct order †Belemnitida of Mesozoic marine cephalopods, very similar in many ways to the modern squid and closely related to the modern cuttlefish. BEMADAMED (17) BEMADDENS (15) [verb] Third person singular simple present indicative form of bemadden; to make mad or drive to madness. BEMEANING (14) BEMEDALED (15) [adjective] Decorated with or wearing medals. BEMINGLED (15) [verb] Past tense and past participle of "bemingle," meaning to mingle or mix together with others. BEMINGLES (14) BEMISTING (14) [verb] Covering or obscuring with mist or fog. BEMOANING (14) [verb] To moan or complain about (something). | [verb] To be dismayed or worried about (someone), particularly because of their situation or what has happened to them. | [noun] The act of one who bemoans something. BEMOCKING (20) [verb] Present participle of bemock; to mock or ridicule someone or something. BEMUDDLED (16) [verb] Confused or bewildered; made unclear or muddled. BEMUDDLES (15) [verb] To confuse or bewilder someone; to muddle the mind of a person. BEMURMURS (15) BEMUSEDLY (17) [adverb] In a confused or bewildered manner; with a puzzled or perplexed expression or demeanor. BEMUZZLED (32) [verb] Past tense of bemuzzle; to confuse or perplex. | [verb] To put a muzzle on; to silence or restrain. BEMUZZLES (31) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "bemuzzle," meaning to put a muzzle on or to silence someone. BENCHMARK (22) [noun] A standard by which something is evaluated or measured. | [noun] A surveyor's mark made on some stationary object and shown on a map; used as a reference point. | [noun] A computer program that is executed to assess the performance of the runtime environment. BENEMPTED (16) BENJAMINS (20) [noun] Plural of benjamin, a term for a hundred-dollar bill (slang). | [noun] Plural of benjamin, referring to the youngest son in a family or group. BENUMBING (16) [verb] To make numb, as by cold or anesthetic. | [verb] To deaden, dull (the mind, faculties, etc.). BEPIMPLED (18) BEPIMPLES (17) BERGAMOTS (14) [noun] A tree of the orange family (Citrus × limon, syn. Citrus bergamia), having a roundish or pear-shaped fruit, from the rind of which an essential oil of delicious odor is extracted, much prized as a perfume. | [noun] The fruit from the bergamot tree | [noun] The essence or perfume made from the fruit. BERHYMING (20) BERKELIUM (17) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Bk) with an atomic number of 97. BERYLLIUM (16) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Be) with an atomic number of 4; a soft silvery-white low density alkaline earth metal with specialist industrial applications. | [noun] An atom of this element. BESEEMING (14) BESETMENT (13) BESHAMING (17) BESLIMING (14) [verb] Present participle of beslime; to cover or coat with slime. BESMEARED (14) [verb] To smear over; smear all over; sully. BESMILING (14) [verb] Present participle of besmile; to smile at or upon someone or something. BESMOKING (18) BESMOOTHS (16) [verb] Third person singular present of besmooth; to make smooth or smoother. BESMUDGED (16) [verb] Past tense of besmudge; to smudge or soil with dirt or marks. BESMUDGES (15) [verb] Smudges or dirties something by rubbing or marking it with dirt or stains. BESMUTTED (14) [adjective] Marked or soiled with smut; covered with soot or grime. BESWARMED (17) [verb] Past tense of bswarm; to surround or crowd around in large numbers like a swarm. BETHUMPED (19) BEVOMITED (17) BEWORMING (17) [verb] Present participle of "beworm," meaning to infest with or as if with worms. BIBLICISM (17) BICAMERAL (15) [adjective] Being or having a system with two, often unequal, chambers or compartments; of, signifying, relating to, or being the product of such a two-chambered system. | [adjective] Of, having or relating to two separate legislative chambers or houses. | [adjective] Of a script or typeface: having two cases, upper case and lower case. BIENNIUMS (13) [noun] A period of two years. BIGAMISTS (14) [noun] Plural of bigamist; people who are married to more than one person at the same time, or who have been married more than once. BIGEMINAL (14) [adjective] Occurring in pairs or having two parts; in medical usage, describing a cardiac rhythm with two beats followed by a pause. BIGMOUTHS (17) [noun] One who talks too much or says things which should not be said. BIMESTERS (13) [noun] Plural of bimester; periods of two months each, typically used in academic or institutional settings to divide the year into two-month segments. BIMETHYLS (19) [noun] Plural of bimethyl, a chemical compound containing two methyl groups. BIMONTHLY (19) [noun] A publication that is published on a bimonthly basis. | [adjective] Occurring once every two months; bimestrial | [adjective] Twice every month; semimonthly. BINOMIALS (13) [noun] A polynomial with two terms. | [noun] A quantity expressed as the sum or difference of two terms. | [noun] A scientific name at the rank of species, with two terms: a generic name and a specific name. BIOLOGISM (14) [noun] The use or emphasis of biological principles or methods in explaining human, especially social, behavior. BIOMASSES (13) [noun] The total mass of living organisms in a particular area or ecosystem. | [noun] Plural of biomass, referring to multiple quantities or types of organic matter used as fuel or energy source. BIOMETRIC (15) [adjective] Of, pertaining to or using biometrics. BIONOMICS (15) [noun] The study of an organism and its relation to its environment; ecology. BIONOMIES (13) [noun] The plural of bionomy, referring to the study of organisms in relation to their environment; ecology. | [noun] The laws or principles of life and living organisms. BIOPLASMS (15) [noun] The living matter or protoplasm of a cell, excluding the nucleus. | [noun] Plural of bioplasm, referring to multiple instances of living cellular substance. BIORHYTHM (22) [noun] Any cyclic biological or physiological pattern or activity | [noun] (pseudoscience) Any of three sinusoidal graphs, normally plotted by computer, having a person's birthdate as origin, that that are supposed to give meaningful information about emotional levels, physical energy levels, and mental/psychic sensitivity. BIPYRAMID (19) [noun] A geometric solid formed by joining two pyramids base-to-base, having two apex points and a polygonal base in the middle. BIRDFARMS (17) BIRDLIMED (15) [verb] Past tense of birdlime; to trap or catch with birdlime (a sticky substance used to catch birds). | [adjective] Smeared with or trapped by birdlime. BIRDLIMES (14) [noun] A sticky substance made from the bark of holly or mistletoe, used to trap birds. | [verb] Third person singular of birdlime, meaning to coat with birdlime or to trap. BIRTHMARK (20) [noun] A mark on the skin formed before birth. BISMUTHIC (18) BLACKGUMS (20) BLACKMAIL (19) [noun] The extortion of money by threats of public accusation, exposure, or censure. | [noun] A form of protection money (or corn, cattle, etc.) anciently paid, in the north of England and south of Scotland, to the allies of robbers in order to be spared from pillage. | [noun] Black rent, or rent paid in corn, meat, or the lowest coin, as opposed to white rent, which was paid in silver. BLAMELESS (13) [adjective] Free from blame; without fault; innocent | [adjective] Not meriting blame or censure; undeserving of reproof. BLASPHEME (18) [verb] To commit blasphemy; to speak against God or religious doctrine. | [verb] To speak of, or address, with impious irreverence; to revile impiously (anything sacred). | [verb] To calumniate; to revile; to abuse. BLASPHEMY (21) [noun] An act of irreverence or contempt toward a god or toward something considered sacred; an impious act, utterance, view, etc. | [noun] (by extension) An act of irreverence towards anything considered inviolable; the act of disregarding a convention. BLASTEMAL (13) [adjective] Relating to or composed of blastema, a mass of cells capable of growth and differentiation during embryonic development or regeneration. BLASTEMAS (13) [noun] Plural of blastema; masses of embryonic cells capable of growth and differentiation into organs or tissues. BLASTMENT (13) BLASTOMAS (13) [noun] Plural of blastoma; tumors arising from embryonic cells or immature tissue. BLEMISHED (17) [verb] To spoil the appearance of. | [verb] To tarnish (reputation, character, etc.); to defame. | [adjective] Having blemishes; flawed. BLEMISHES (16) [noun] A small flaw which spoils the appearance of something, a stain, a spot. | [noun] A moral defect; a character flaw. | [verb] To spoil the appearance of. BLINDWORM (17) [noun] Anguis fragilis (slowworm), a small species of legless lizard. BLOODWORM (17) [noun] The larva of a chironomid (family Chironomidae). | [noun] Any member of the genus Glycera. | [noun] The blackworm (Lumbriculus variegatus). BLOOMIEST (13) [adjective] Superlative form of bloomy; having the most bloom or powdery coating, as on certain fruits or flowers. BLOSSOMED (14) [verb] To have, or open into, blossoms; to bloom. | [verb] To begin to thrive or flourish. BLUESTEMS (13) [noun] Plural of bluestem, a type of tall prairie grass with bluish coloring at the base of its stems, commonly found in North American grasslands. BOARDROOM (14) [noun] The room where a group of people (especially the board of a company or organization) conducts its meetings | [noun] Corporations or corporate management considered as a section of society BODEMENTS (14) [noun] Plural of bodement; omens or portents of future events. | [noun] Announcements or declarations of something to come. BOEHMITES (16) [noun] Plural of boehmite, a mineral form of aluminum oxide hydroxide (AlO(OH)) that is an important ore of aluminum. BOHEMIANS (16) [noun] An unconventional or nonconformist artist or writer. BOLLWORMS (16) [noun] The larvae of any of various species of moth that are pests to cotton. BOLOMETER (13) [noun] A sensitive device for detecting and measuring the energy of electromagnetic radiation. BOMBARDED (17) [verb] To continuously attack something with bombs, artillery shells or other missiles or projectiles. | [verb] To attack something or someone by directing objects at them. | [verb] To direct at a substance an intense stream of high-energy particles, usually sub-atomic or made of at most a few atoms. BOMBARDON (16) [noun] A brass instrument, the bass version of the tuba. | [noun] A bass instrument of the shawm family | [noun] A organ pedal stop at 32' pitch which imitates the sound of the above mentioned instruments. BOMBASTIC (17) [adjective] (of a person, their language or writing) showy in speech and given to using flowery or elaborate terms; grandiloquent; pompous | [adjective] High-sounding but with little meaning. | [adjective] Inflated, overfilled. BOMBAZINE (24) [noun] A twilled or corded fabric made from silk, wool, or cotton dyed black. BOMBESINS (15) [noun] Plural of bombesin, a neuropeptide hormone found in the brain and gastrointestinal tract of mammals that regulates various physiological functions including appetite and body temperature. BOMBINATE (15) [verb] To buzz or hum BOMBLOADS (16) BOMBPROOF (20) [noun] An air-raid shelter, a structure designed to give protection against air raids and bombs. | [verb] To make resistant to bomb blasts. | [adjective] Sufficiently strong to resist the effects of a blast from a bomb. BOMBSHELL (18) [noun] A bomb or artillery shell designed to explode on impact. | [noun] Something that is very surprising, shocking, amazing or sensational. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who is very attractive; sex symbol. BOMBSIGHT (19) [noun] A device which allows bombs to be accurately dropped from moving aircraft so as to hit a desired target. BOMBYCIDS (21) BONDMAIDS (15) [noun] Plural of bondmaid; a female slave or servant bound to servitude. BONDWOMAN (17) [noun] A woman bound in servitude or slavery; a female slave or serf. BONDWOMEN (17) [noun] Plural of bondwoman; women held in servitude or slavery, or women bound by legal or moral obligation. BONEMEALS (13) [noun] Ground or crushed bone used as a fertilizer or animal feed supplement. BONHOMIES (16) [noun] Plural of bonhomie; good-natured friendliness and affability. | [noun] Instances or displays of warm and cordial interaction between people. BONHOMOUS (16) [adjective] Good-natured; full of bonhomie. BOOGERMAN (14) BOOGERMEN (14) BOOGEYMAN (17) [noun] A menacing, ghost-like monster in children's stories. | [noun] (by extension) Any make-believe threat, especially one used to intimidate or distract. BOOGEYMEN (17) [noun] A menacing, ghost-like monster in children's stories. | [noun] (by extension) Any make-believe threat, especially one used to intimidate or distract. BOOKMAKER (21) [noun] A person who prints or binds books. | [noun] A person who compiles books from the writings of others. | [noun] A person (or a business) who calculates odds and accepts bets, especially on horse racing; a bookie. BOOKMARKS (21) [noun] A strip of material used to mark a place in a book. | [noun] A record of the address of a file or Internet page serving as a shortcut to it. | [noun] A pointer found in a nonclustered index to a row in a clustered index or a table heap BOOKWORMS (20) [noun] Any of various insects that infest books. | [noun] An avid book reader. BOOMBOXES (22) [noun] A powerful portable audio system for listening collectively to recorded or broadcast sound. BOOMERANG (14) [noun] A flat curved airfoil, that spins about an axis perpendicular to the direction of flight, that was originally used in various parts of the world as hunting weapons or, in returnable types, for sports or training. | [noun] A breakdancing move in which the performer walks on his or her hands while keeping the legs raised off the ground. | [verb] To return or rebound unexpectedly, especially when the result is undesired; to backfire. BOOMTOWNS (16) [noun] Plural of boomtown; towns that experience sudden rapid growth, typically due to discovery of natural resources or economic opportunity. BOTHRIUMS (16) [noun] Plural of bothrium, a longitudinal groove or slit-like aperture found on the scolex (head region) of certain tapeworms, used for attachment to the host's intestinal wall. BOTTOMERS (13) [noun] Players or athletes who consistently perform poorly or finish last in competitions. | [noun] In mining or drilling, workers or equipment that operates at the bottom of a shaft or borehole. BOTTOMING (14) [verb] To furnish (something) with a bottom. | [verb] To wind (like a ball of thread etc.). | [verb] To establish or found (something) on or upon. BOTULINUM (13) [noun] A potent neurotoxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum, used medically and cosmetically to paralyze muscles. BOTULISMS (13) [noun] Plural of botulism; instances or cases of poisoning caused by the toxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum. BOYARISMS (16) BRAMBLIER (15) [adjective] More bramble-like; characterized by more brambles or thorny growth; more prickly or tangled. BRAMBLING (16) [noun] A finch, Fringilla montifringilla of northern Eurasia, the male having a black head in summer and an orange breast with white belly and a long white rump. BRIMSTONE (13) [noun] The sulfur of Hell; Hell, damnation. | [noun] Sulfur. | [noun] A whore. BROADLOOM (14) [noun] A wide loom. | [noun] A carpet woven on a wide loom. | [adjective] Woven on a wide loom, and so needing fewer seams. BROMATING (14) [verb] Present participle of bromate; to treat or combine with bromine or a bromate compound. BROMELAIN (13) [noun] An enzyme found in pineapple that breaks down proteins and is used in cooking and medicine. BROMELIAD (14) [noun] Any of various tropical or subtropical New World herbaceous plants in the family Bromeliaceae. BROMELINS (13) [noun] Protein-digesting enzymes found in pineapple and other plants of the bromeliad family, used in medicine and food processing. BROMINATE (13) [verb] To treat or react with bromine or hydrobromic acid, to introduce bromine into a compound. BROMIZING (23) BRONCHIUM (18) BROODMARE (14) [noun] A mare (female horse) kept for breeding purposes. BROOMBALL (15) [noun] A Canadian team sport resembling ice hockey and played with sticks and a ball. | [noun] The ball used in this sport. BROOMCORN (15) [noun] A variety of sorghum grown for its stiff bristles, which are used to make brooms and brushes. BROOMIEST (13) [adjective] Superlative form of broomy; most resembling or full of broom (a shrubby plant with yellow flowers). BROOMRAPE (15) [noun] Any of various plants, of the genus Orobanche, that are parasitic on the roots of other plants. BROUGHAMS (17) [noun] A four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage, designed in 1839. It had an open seat for the driver in front of the closed cabin for two or four passengers. | [noun] An automobile, a sedan without a roof over the driver's seat. BRUMMAGEM (18) [adjective] Cheap and showy; meretricious. BRUNIZEMS (22) [noun] Dark humus-rich soils developed under grassland vegetation in temperate climates, characterized by high organic matter and fertility. BUBBLEGUM (18) [noun] (usually uncountable) A sweet chewing gum formulated to be stretchy so the chewer can blow bubbles with it. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A type of pop music marked by sweetness, pep and charm (rather than depth or complexity). | [noun] A light pink colour, like bubblegum. BUCKRAMED (20) BUMBLEBEE (17) [noun] Any of several species of large bee in the genus Bombus BUMBLINGS (16) [noun] Plural of bumbling; clumsy or confused actions or movements. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of bumble; to move or act in a clumsy or confused manner. BUMPERING (16) BUMPINESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being bumpy; the condition of having many bumps or uneven surfaces. BUMPKINLY (22) [adjective] In the manner or style of a bumpkin; resembling or characteristic of a rustic or unsophisticated person. | [adjective] Awkward, clumsy, or crude in behavior or appearance. BUMPTIOUS (15) [adjective] Obtrusively pushy; self-assertive to a pretentious extreme. BUNCOMBES (17) [noun] Plural of buncombe; meaningless or insincere talk; nonsense. BUNKMATES (17) [noun] People who share the same bunk or sleeping quarters, typically in military barracks, ships, or camps. BUXOMNESS (20) [noun] The quality or state of being buxom; fullness of figure, particularly in a woman's bosom or bust. CABALISMS (15) [noun] Plural of cabalism; mystical or esoteric doctrines or practices, particularly those associated with Jewish mysticism or occult interpretation of sacred texts. CABLEGRAM (16) [noun] A telegram transmitted via a submarine cable. | [verb] To communicate by cablegram. CACIQUISM (24) [noun] A system of political control exercised by a cacique (local leader or boss), particularly in Spanish-speaking countries. CACODEMON (16) [noun] An evil or malevolent spirit. | [noun] The twelfth astrological House, from which only evil prognostics are alleged to proceed. CACOMIXLS (22) CACUMINAL (15) [noun] A sound pronounced using a retroflexed tongue. | [adjective] Pertaining to a point, top, or crown. | [adjective] Pronounced using a retroflexed tongue. CAIRNGORM (14) [noun] A precious stone of smoky yellow-brown or gray-brown color, used in Scottish jewellery. CALADIUMS (14) [noun] Any of the genus Caladium of flowering plants, especially an ornamental cultivar of Caladium bicolor. CALAMARIS (13) CALAMINED (14) CALAMINES (13) CALAMINTS (13) [noun] Any species of aromatic garden herb of the genus Calamintha. CALAMITES (13) [noun] An extinct genus of treelike horsetails, Calamites. CALCANEUM (15) [noun] The calcaneus. CALCIMINE (15) [noun] A form of whitewash (inexpensive white paint) made from calcium carbonate, glue and water, used to coat wooden or plaster surfaces. | [verb] To coat with this substance. CALDARIUM (14) [noun] In Roman baths, the hottest room, with a plunge-pool. It preceded the tepidarium and frigidarium. | [noun] In modern spas, a room with a hot floor. CALMATIVE (16) [noun] A drug with calming effects. | [adjective] Calming. CALUMNIES (13) [noun] A false accusation or charge brought to tarnish another's reputation or standing. | [noun] Falsifications or misrepresentations intended to disparage or discredit another. | [verb] To make false accusations or levy false charges against a person with the intent to tarnish that person's reputation or standing; to calumniate. CALVARIUM (16) [noun] The upper rounded part of the skull; the cranium. | [noun] A skull-shaped drinking vessel used in medieval times. CAMARILLA (13) [noun] A secret, usually sinister, group of conspiring advisors close to the leadership; a cabal. CAMBERING (16) [verb] The present participle of camber, meaning to curve or arch slightly, especially the slight convex curve given to a road surface for drainage or to an aircraft wing for lift. CAMBOGIAS (16) CAMCORDER (16) [noun] A portable electronic device for recording images and audio on to a storage device, hence functioning as a camera and a recorder in a single unit | [verb] To record using a camcorder. CAMELBACK (21) [noun] The backs of camels. | [noun] A flexible water container worn on the back. | [noun] A house with a second storey that does not completely cover the ground floor. CAMELEERS (13) [noun] Camel driver or camel rider, one who travels by camel. CAMELLIAS (13) [noun] Any plant of the genus Camellia, shrubs and small trees native to Asia; Camellia japonica is the most popular as a garden plant; Camellia sinensis is the tea plant. CAMERAMAN (15) [noun] Somebody who operates a movie camera or television camera. CAMERAMEN (15) [noun] Somebody who operates a movie camera or television camera. CAMISADES (14) [noun] Surprise night attacks or assaults, typically on an enemy camp or fortification. | [noun] Shirts or tunics worn over armor, often white and used as identifying garments during night attacks. CAMISADOS (14) [noun] Night attacks or raids, especially military assaults made under cover of darkness; soldiers wearing white shirts over their armor to identify each other during nighttime attacks. CAMISOLES (13) [noun] A short, sleeveless undergarment worn by women underneath a blouse, or as a form of short négligée. | [noun] A straitjacket. | [noun] A light jacket with sleeves. CAMOMILES (15) [noun] Composite plant with a fragrance reminiscent of apples: | [noun] Any of several other similar plants. (See below) | [noun] Short for camomile tea. CAMPAIGNS (16) [noun] A series of operations undertaken to achieve a set goal. | [noun] The period during which a blast furnace is continuously in operation. | [noun] An open field; a large, open plain without considerable hills; a champaign. CAMPANILE (15) [noun] A bell tower (now especially when freestanding), often associated with a church or other public building, especially in Italy. CAMPANILI (15) [noun] Plural of campanile, a bell tower or freestanding tower containing bells, typically associated with Italian churches. CAMPANULA (15) [noun] Any plant of the genus Campanula. CAMPCRAFT (20) [noun] Any of the outdoor skills associated with camping expeditions, such as map-reading. CAMPESINO (15) [noun] An agricultural worker in Latin America. CAMPFIRES (18) [noun] A fire at a campground or on a camping trip, often used for cooking, to provide light and heat, to drive away bugs, and as a focal point for sitting around in the evening and talking, telling stories, and singing. CAMPHENES (18) [noun] Plural of camphene, a hydrocarbon found in essential oils and used in organic synthesis. CAMPHINES (18) [noun] A volatile flammable liquid mixture of hydrocarbons obtained from turpentine or petroleum, formerly used as a lamp fuel. | [noun] Plural of camphine, a type of lighting oil used in the 19th century. CAMPHIRES (18) [noun] Plural of camphire, an archaic or variant spelling of camphor, a volatile aromatic substance obtained from the camphor tree or synthesized. CAMPINESS (15) [noun] The quality or style of being exaggerated, theatrical, or deliberately over-the-top in a humorous or affected way. | [noun] Ostentatious or affected behavior or style that is deliberately exaggerated for effect. CAMPOREES (15) [noun] A gathering of Scouts in which accommodation is in tents CAMPSITES (15) [noun] A place where a tent may be or is pitched. CAMPUSING (16) [verb] To restrict a student to campus as a disciplinary measure. | [verb] In real estate, to restrict the use or development of property. CAMSHAFTS (19) [noun] A shaft fitted with cams; especially one in a piston engine that activates the valves. CAPITULUM (15) [noun] A densely clustered inflorescence composed of a large number of individual florets arising from a platform-like base. | [noun] The head-like mouthpart apparatus of a tick, including the palpi, mandibles, and hypostome. | [noun] A small protuberance on a bone which articulates into another bone to form a ball-and-socket joint. CAPMAKERS (19) [noun] People who make caps, typically hats or head coverings. CAPSICUMS (17) [noun] Any of several tropical American plants, of the genus Capsicum, principally the species Capsicum annuum and Capsicum frutescens, that are cultivated as edible peppers. | [noun] The spicy fruit of the above plants, the bell peppers. CAPSOMERS (15) [noun] Protein subunits that assemble together to form the capsid (outer shell) of a virus. CARAMBOLA (15) [noun] A tree species native of southern Asia, Averrhoa carambola. | [noun] The fruit of this tree, more commonly known as star fruit. | [noun] A yellow colour, like that of a carambola. CARBAMATE (15) [noun] Any salt or ester of carbamic acid. CARBAMIDE (16) [noun] A chemical compound, also known as urea, used in fertilizers and various industrial processes. CARBAMINO (15) [adjective] Relating to or denoting a compound formed by the combination of carbon dioxide with hemoglobin or other amino compounds in the blood. CARBAMYLS (18) [noun] Plural of carbamyl, a chemical group or radical derived from carbamic acid, used in organic chemistry and pharmaceutical compounds. CARCINOMA (15) [noun] An invasive malignant tumor derived from epithelial tissue that tends to metastasize to other areas of the body. CARDAMOMS (16) [noun] The Elettaria cardamomum, an Indian herb. | [noun] The seed of E. cardamomum, used as a medicine and spice, especially in curry powder. | [noun] The seeds or seed capsules of the Aframomum melegueta, used as a medicine and spice, especially as a substitute for black pepper and in flavoring alcoholic beverages. CARDAMONS (14) [noun] The plural of cardamom, a spice made from the seeds of plants in the ginger family, used in cooking and flavoring. | [noun] The aromatic seed pods themselves from cardamom plants. CARDAMUMS (16) [noun] The plural of cardamom, a spice consisting of the seeds of a plant native to India, used in cooking and baking for its aromatic flavor. CAREERISM (13) [noun] Excessive devotion to advancement in one's career, often at the expense of other values or relationships. CARMAKERS (17) [noun] A company that manufactures automobiles. CARROMING (14) [verb] To strike and rebound, as in billiards or carrom (a board game played with coins or discs). | [verb] To move in a series of collisions or bounces. CASEMATES (13) [noun] A bombproof chamber, usually of masonry, in which cannon may be placed, to be fired through embrasures; or one capable of being used as a magazine, or for quartering troops. | [noun] A hollow molding, chiefly in cornices. CASEMENTS (13) [noun] A window sash that is hinged on the side. | [noun] A window having such sashes; a casement window.Wp | [noun] Occasionally seen as a usage error due to the similarity of the words: A casemate. CASEWORMS (16) [noun] Larval forms of caddisflies that build protective cases from materials like sand, twigs, or leaves. | [noun] In textile manufacturing, worms or larvae that infest casings or wrapped materials. CASHMERES (16) [noun] Fine, downy wool from beneath the outer hair of the Cashmere goat. | [noun] A soft fabric made of this wool. | [noun] A rich kind of shawl made from this wool. CASIMERES (13) [noun] Plural of casimere, a fine twilled woolen fabric used for clothing. | [noun] Garments made from casimere fabric. CASIMIRES (13) [noun] Plural of casimire, a fine twilled woolen fabric similar to cassimere. CASSIMERE (13) [noun] A fine twilled woolen fabric, typically used for suits and trousers. | [noun] An alternative spelling of cashmere, a soft fabric made from the hair of cashmere goats. CASTEISMS (13) [noun] Plural of casteism; systems of discrimination or prejudice based on caste, particularly in South Asian societies. CASTOREUM (13) [noun] A strong-smelling substance secreted by beavers and used in perfume and medicine. CATACLYSM (18) [noun] A sudden, violent event. | [noun] A sudden and violent change in the earth's crust. | [noun] A great flood. CATACOMBS (17) [noun] (often plural) An underground system of tunnels and chambers with recesses for graves, used (in former times) as a cemetery; a tunnel system used for burying the dead, as in Paris or Ancient Rome. CATAMARAN (13) [noun] A twin-hulled ship or boat. | [noun] A quarrelsome woman; a scold. | [noun] A raft of three pieces of wood lashed together, the middle piece being longer than the others, and serving as a keel on which the rower squats while paddling. CATAMENIA (13) [noun] The female period; menstrual discharge. CATAMITES (13) [noun] A boy or younger man in a homoerotic relationship with an older man. CATAMOUNT (13) [noun] A wild animal of the family Felidae, especially cougar, puma or lynx. CATAPLASM (15) [noun] A poultice or plaster, spread over one's skin as medical treatment. CATCHMENT (18) [noun] Any structure or land feature which catches and holds water; the collection of such water. | [noun] A catchment area, or the people it serves. | [verb] To divide into catchment areas. CATECHISM (18) [noun] A book, in question and answer form, summarizing the basic principles of Christianity. | [noun] A basic manual in some subject. | [noun] A set of questions designed to determine knowledge. CATTLEMAN (13) [noun] A man who raises or tends cattle. CATTLEMEN (13) [noun] A man who raises or tends cattle. CELLMATES (13) [noun] A person with whom one shares a prison cell. CEMENTERS (13) [noun] Plural of cementer; one who cements or applies cement. | [noun] Things that cement or bind together. CEMENTING (14) [verb] To affix with cement. | [verb] To overlay or coat with cement. | [verb] To unite firmly or closely. CEMENTITE (13) [noun] A form of iron carbide, Fe3C, that is a component of steel. CENTESIMI (13) [noun] Plural of centesimo, a monetary unit equal to one hundredth of the basic monetary unit in various countries, particularly Italy and Panama. CENTESIMO (13) [noun] A unit of currency constituting one hundredth of a lira. | [noun] A monetary unit worth one-hundredth of the main currency in Uruguay, Panama and (formerly) Chile. CENTIGRAM (14) [noun] An SI unit of mass equal to 10-2 grams. Symbol: cg CENTRISMS (13) [noun] The plural of centrism, referring to political or ideological positions that favor moderation and the center rather than extremes. CERAMISTS (13) [noun] Plural of ceramist; artists or craftspeople who create objects from ceramic materials such as clay and pottery. CEREBRUMS (15) [noun] Plural of cerebrum, the largest part of the brain responsible for higher functions such as thought, memory, and voluntary movement. CEREMENTS (13) [noun] A burial shroud or garment. | [noun] Cerecloth. CHAIRMANS (16) [noun] The plural of chairman, referring to multiple persons who preside over meetings or organizations. CHALUTZIM (25) [noun] Jewish pioneers who settled in Palestine/Israel, or members of a Jewish collective settlement movement. CHAMBERED (19) [adjective] (often in combination) Having chambers. | [verb] To enclose in a room. | [verb] To reside in or occupy a chamber or chambers. CHAMBRAYS (21) [noun] Plural of chambray, a lightweight cotton fabric with a colored warp and white weft, typically used for shirts and dresses. CHAMELEON (16) [noun] A small to mid-size reptile, of the family Chamaeleonidae, and one of the best known lizard families able to change color and project its long tongue. | [noun] A person with inconstant behavior; one able to quickly adjust to new circumstances. | [noun] A hypothetical scalar particle with a non-linear self-interaction, giving it an effective mass that depends on its environment: the presence of other fields. CHAMFERED (20) [verb] To cut off the edge or corner of something. | [verb] To cut a groove in something. CHAMFRONS (19) [noun] A piece of armor for a horse's face, or the face guard of a helmet. CHAMMYING (22) [verb] Present participle of "chammy," meaning to prepare leather by treating it with oil to make it soft and pliable. CHAMOISED (17) [verb] Past tense of chamois, meaning to treat leather with oil to make it soft and pliable, or to clean and polish with chamois leather. CHAMOISES (16) [noun] Plural of chamois, soft leather made from the skin of chamois animals or sheep. | [noun] Plural of chamois, small agile antelopes native to European mountains. CHAMOMILE (18) [noun] Composite plant with a fragrance reminiscent of apples: | [noun] Any of several other similar plants. (See below) | [noun] Short for camomile tea. CHAMPAGNE (19) [noun] A sparkling white wine made from a blend of grapes, especially Chardonnay and pinot, produced in Champagne, France, by the méthode champenoise. | [noun] Any sparkling wine made by the méthode champenoise. | [noun] Any sparkling white wine. CHAMPAIGN (19) [noun] Open countryside, or an area of open countryside. | [noun] A battlefield. | [adjective] Pertaining to open countryside; unforested, flat. CHAMPERTY (21) [noun] The investing of money into an individual's lawsuit. CHAMPIONS (18) [noun] An ongoing winner in a game or contest. | [noun] Someone who is chosen to represent a group of people in a contest. | [noun] Someone who fights for a cause or status. CHAMPLEVE (21) [noun] A decorative technique in which areas of a metal surface are hollowed out and filled with enamel or other material. CHARMEUSE (16) [noun] A fine semi-lustrous crepe in satin weave. CHARMLESS (16) [adjective] (of character) unpleasant, unappealing, lacking charm CHARWOMAN (19) [noun] A woman employed to do housework, traditionally coming and going on a daily basis and paid weekly wages. CHARWOMEN (19) [noun] A woman employed to do housework, traditionally coming and going on a daily basis and paid weekly wages. CHAZZANIM (34) [noun] Plural of chazzan, a cantor in a Jewish synagogue who leads liturgical prayers and singing. CHAZZENIM (34) [noun] Plural of hazzan; cantors in a synagogue who lead liturgical chanting and singing. CHECKMARK (26) [noun] A mark (✓) made to indicate agreement, correctness or acknowledgement. | [noun] In long jump, javelin and similar events, little mark alongside the runway which helps the athlete to set their steps just right for their performance. | [verb] To mark with a ✓ symbol; to tick. CHECKMATE (22) [noun] The conclusive victory in a game of chess that occurs when an opponent's king is threatened with unavoidable capture. | [noun] (by extension) Any losing situation with no escape; utter defeat. | [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. CHECKROOM (22) [noun] A room where outdoor clothing or luggage may be temporarily stored. CHEMICALS (18) [noun] Any specific chemical element or chemical compound or alloy. | [noun] An artificial chemical compound. | [noun] An addictive drug. CHEMISORB (18) [verb] To bind to a surface through chemisorption, a process where molecules form chemical bonds with a surface rather than being held by weak physical forces. CHEMISTRY (19) [noun] The branch of natural science that deals with the composition and constitution of substances and the changes that they undergo as a consequence of alterations in the constitution of their molecules. | [noun] An application of chemical theory and method to a particular substance. | [noun] The mutual attraction between two people; rapport. CHEONGSAM (17) [noun] A tight-fitting formal woman's dress, usually brightly coloured, patterned and/or embroidered, with a split at the thigh. | [noun] A plain coloured, tight-fitting dress with a short split at the thigh, worn as a school uniform by schoolgirls. | [noun] A long formal dress-like garment or robe worn by Asian men. CHERIMOYA (19) [noun] A subtropical tree, Annona cherimola, native to mountainous areas of South America. | [noun] A conical fruit with white flesh from that tree. CHERNOZEM (25) [noun] A fertile black soil containing a very high percentage of humus (3% to 15%) and high percentages of phosphoric acids, phosphorus and ammonia. CHERUBIMS (18) [noun] Plural of cherub; celestial beings depicted as beautiful winged figures in religious art and literature, often representing divine messengers or guardians. CHIASMATA (16) [noun] A crossing of two nerves, ligaments etc. | [noun] The contact point between the two chromatids of a chromosome during meiosis. CHIEFDOMS (20) [noun] An area or region governed by a chief. | [noun] A society larger than a tribe but smaller or simpler than a state. CHILIASMS (16) [noun] Plural of chiliasm; beliefs or doctrines concerning a thousand-year reign of Christ on earth. | [noun] Millenarian or apocalyptic religious movements or doctrines. CHIMAERAS (16) [noun] A cartilaginous marine fish in the subclass Holocephali and especially the order Chimaeriformes, with a blunt snout, long tail, and a spine before the first dorsal fin | [noun] Alternative letter-case form of Chimera (a flame-spewing monster often represented as having two heads, one of a goat and the other of a lion; the body of a goat; and a serpent as a tail). | [noun] Any fantastic creature with parts from different animals. CHIMAERIC (18) [adjective] Like a chimera. | [adjective] Imaginary, fanciful. | [adjective] Pertaining to a genetic chimera. CHIMBLEYS (21) [noun] A vertical tube or hollow column used to emit environmentally polluting gaseous and solid matter (including but not limited to by-products of burning carbon or hydrocarbon based fuels); a flue. | [noun] The glass flue surrounding the flame of an oil lamp. | [noun] The smokestack of a steam locomotive. CHIMBLIES (18) [noun] Plural of chimbley, a dialectal or informal variant spelling of chimney. CHIMERISM (18) [noun] The state or condition of being a chimera, or an organism composed of cells from two or more genetically distinct individuals. | [noun] In genetics, the presence of two or more populations of cells with different genotypes in one individual organism. CHIPMUCKS (24) CHIPMUNKS (22) [noun] A squirrel-like rodent of the genus Tamias, native mainly to North America. CHIRIMOYA (19) [noun] A subtropical tree, Annona cherimola, native to mountainous areas of South America. | [noun] A conical fruit with white flesh from that tree. CHLAMYDES (20) [noun] Plural of chlamys, an ancient Greek or Roman cloak or garment worn by men, typically draped over one shoulder. CHLAMYDIA (20) [noun] Any of several common, often asymptomatic, sexually transmitted diseases caused by the microorganism Chlamydia trachomatis. | [noun] Any of various coccoid microorganisms of the genus Chlamydia that are pathogenic to humans and other animals. CHLAMYSES (19) [noun] A short poncho-like cloak caught up on the shoulder, worn by hunters, soldiers, and horsemen in Ancient Greece. CHORIAMBS (18) [noun] A choriambus. CHOWTIMES (19) CHRISMONS (16) [noun] Ornaments symbolizing Christ or Christian themes, traditionally used to decorate Christmas trees. | [noun] A combination of the words "Christ" and "monogram," representing Christian symbols or designs used as holiday decorations. CHROMATES (16) [noun] Any salt of chromic acid; in solution the yellow chromate anion (CrO42-) is in equilibrium with the orange dichromate anion (Cr2O72-), the relative amount of each ion depending on the pH; they are both very powerful oxidizing agents CHROMATIC (18) [adjective] Relating to or characterised by hue. | [adjective] Having the capacity to separate spectral colours by refraction. | [adjective] Related to or using notes not belonging to the diatonic scale of the key in which a passage is written. CHROMATID (17) [noun] After DNA replication either of the two connected double-helix strands of a metaphase chromosome that separate during mitosis CHROMATIN (16) [noun] A complex of DNA, RNA and proteins within the cell nucleus out of which chromosomes condense during cell division. CHROMIDES (17) [noun] Any of various cichlid fishes found in Asia. CHROMINGS (17) [noun] Plural of chroming; the process or result of coating with chromium or chrome plating. CHROMITES (16) [noun] Plural of chromite, a mineral composed of iron chromium oxide (FeCr₂O₄), typically black and used as an ore of chromium. CHROMIUMS (18) [noun] Plural of chromium, a hard silvery-white metallic element used in alloys and plating. CHROMIZED (26) [verb] Treated or coated with chromium or a chromium compound to increase hardness, corrosion resistance, or wear resistance. CHROMIZES (25) [verb] To treat or coat with chromium or chromic compounds, especially to give a shiny metallic finish or to increase corrosion resistance. CHROMOGEN (17) [noun] Any substance that lacks colour, but can be converted into a pigment or dye. | [noun] A strongly pigmented organelle or organism. CHUMMIEST (18) [adjective] Friendly; on, or trying to be on, intimate terms. CHUMSHIPS (21) CHURCHMAN (21) [noun] A churchwarden. | [noun] A person (originally a man) of authority in a religious organization; a cleric. | [noun] A member or adherent of an established church, especially the Church of England. CHURCHMEN (21) [noun] A churchwarden. | [noun] A person (originally a man) of authority in a religious organization; a cleric. | [noun] A member or adherent of an established church, especially the Church of England. CHYMOSINS (19) [noun] Plural of chymosin, an enzyme used in cheese making to curdle milk. | [noun] A proteolytic enzyme produced by the stomach lining that helps digest proteins. CIMBALOMS (17) [noun] A type of concert hammered dulcimer used primarily in the music of Eastern Europe. CINEMATIC (15) [noun] A cut scene. | [adjective] Of or relating to the cinema. | [adjective] Relating to kinematics; kinematic. CINNAMONS (13) [noun] A small evergreen tree native to Sri Lanka and southern India, Cinnamomum verum or Cinnamomum zeylanicum, belonging to the family Lauraceae. | [noun] Several related trees, notably the Indonesian cinnamon (Cinnamomum burmanni) and Chinese cinnamon or cassia (Cinnamomum aromaticum or Cinnamomum cassia). | [noun] A spice from the dried aromatic bark of the cinnamon tree, either rolled into strips or ground into a powder. The word is commonly used as trade name for spices made of any of the species above. CINNAMYLS (16) [noun] Plural of cinnamyl, a chemical radical (C₆H₅CH=CHCH₂-) derived from cinnamon or containing cinnamon-related organic compounds. CIVICISMS (18) CLADOGRAM (15) [noun] A branching treelike graphical representation of the phylogenetic relationships between organisms showing which taxa have branched from common ancestors. | [noun] A phylogenetic tree that is strictly the outcome of a cladistic analysis. CLAIMABLE (15) [adjective] Able to be claimed or asserted as one's own. CLAIMANTS (13) [noun] One who claims; one who makes a claim. | [noun] A person receiving money from the government, in a form of unemployment benefits, disability benefits or similar. | [noun] The party who initiates a lawsuit before a court. CLAMANTLY (16) [adverb] In a clamant manner; loudly, urgently, or insistently demanding attention. CLAMBAKES (19) [noun] An informal beach party in which food, usually seafood, is cooked in a pit dug in the sand, filled with hot coals. | [noun] An instance of smoking (usually marijuana) in an enclosed space. | [noun] A meeting of predominantly females. CLAMBERED (16) [verb] To climb (something) with some difficulty, or in a haphazard fashion. CLAMBERER (15) [noun] One who clambers; a person who climbs or scrambles awkwardly or with difficulty. CLAMMIEST (15) [adjective] Cold and damp, usually referring to hands or palms. | [adjective] The quality of normal skin signs, epidermis that is neither diaphoretic nor dry. CLAMORERS (13) [noun] Plural of clamorer; those who clamor or make loud demands or protests. CLAMORING (14) [verb] To cry out and/or demand. | [verb] To demand by outcry. | [verb] To become noisy insistently. CLAMOROUS (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to clamor. | [adjective] Having especially (and often unpleasantly) bright or contrasting colours or patterns. CLAMOURED (14) [verb] To cry out and/or demand. | [verb] To demand by outcry. | [verb] To become noisy insistently. CLAMPDOWN (19) [noun] A sudden repressive or punitive restriction or control CLAMSHELL (16) [noun] The shell of a clam. | [noun] A dredging bucket with hinges like the shell of a clam. | [noun] In food service, the closing box (usually styrofoam but sometimes cardboard) given to consumers with take-out food. CLAMWORMS (18) [noun] Plural of clamworm, a marine polychaete worm of the genus Nereis, commonly used as bait for fishing. CLASSISMS (13) [noun] Plural of classism; systems or practices of discrimination based on socioeconomic class or social status. CLASSMATE (13) [noun] A student who is in the same class at school. | [noun] (by extension) A member of a different sort of class, such as locomotives etc. CLASSROOM (13) [noun] A room, often in a school, where classes take place CLAUSTRUM (13) [noun] A thin, irregular sheet of grey matter underneath the inner part of the neocortex on both sides of the brains of mammals; its exact function is not understood, but it is believed to facilitate coordination between senses. CLAYMORES (16) [noun] A large two-handed sword historically used by the Scottish Highlanders. | [noun] Alternative letter-case form of Claymore (antipersonnel mine) CLEMENTLY (16) [adverb] In a clement manner; with mildness, mercy, or leniency. CLERGYMAN (17) [noun] An ordained (male) Christian minister, a male member of the clergy. CLERGYMEN (17) [noun] An ordained (male) Christian minister, a male member of the clergy. CLERKDOMS (18) [noun] The plural of clerkdom; the domain, position, or office of a clerk or clerical work. CLIMACTIC (17) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or constituting a climax; reaching a decisive moment or point of greatest tension. CLIMAXING (21) [verb] To reach or bring to a climax. | [verb] To orgasm; to reach orgasm. CLIMBABLE (17) [adjective] Able to be climbed; suitable or possible to climb. CLITELLUM (13) [noun] A thickened, saddle-like region on the body of an earthworm or leech that secretes a mucus sheath for reproduction. CLOAKROOM (17) [noun] A room intended for holding guests' cloaks and other heavy outerwear, as at a theater. | [noun] A room intended for holding luggage, as at an airport. | [noun] A private lounge next to a legislative chamber. CLUBROOMS (15) [noun] Plural of clubroom; rooms used by members of a club for meetings, socializing, or recreational activities. CLUMPIEST (15) [adjective] Forming or tending to form clumps. | [adjective] Resembling a clump. | [adjective] Clompy; with heavy footfalls. CLUMSIEST (13) [adjective] Awkward, lacking coordination, not graceful, not dextrous. | [adjective] Not elegant or well-planned, lacking tact or subtlety. | [adjective] Awkward or inefficient in use or construction, difficult to handle or manage especially because of shape. COADMIRED (15) COADMIRES (14) COAGULUMS (14) [noun] Plural of coagulum; a mass or clot formed by coagulation, especially of blood or other liquid. COASSUMED (14) COASSUMES (13) [verb] Third person singular present of coassume; to assume jointly or together with another party. COATROOMS (13) [noun] A room intended for holding guests' coats and other heavy outerwear, as at a theater; a cloakroom. COBALAMIN (15) [noun] Any of several forms of vitamin B12 depending on the upper axial ligand of the cobalt ion. COCCIDIUM (18) [noun] A parasitic protozoan of the genus Coccidia that infects the intestines of vertebrates, particularly poultry and livestock. | [noun] The disease caused by infection with coccidia, characterized by diarrhea and intestinal inflammation. COCKAMAMY (24) [adjective] Foolish, silly | [adjective] Trifling COCKSCOMB (23) [noun] The fleshy red crest of a rooster | [noun] A red cap once worn by court jesters | [noun] A yellow rattle, Rhinanthus minor (flowering plant native to Eurasia) COELOMATA (13) [noun] A fluid-filled cavity within the body of an animal. The digestive system is suspended within the cavity, which is lined by a tissue called the peritoneum. COELOMATE (13) [noun] An animal having a coelom, a body cavity that is lined with mesoderm and contains the internal organs. COEMPLOYS (18) COEMPTING (16) COENAMORS (13) COENZYMES (25) [noun] Any small molecule that is necessary for the functioning of an enzyme. COFFERDAM (20) [noun] A temporary watertight structure that is pumped dry to enclose an area underwater and allow construction work on a ship, bridge, or rig to be carried out; a caisson. | [noun] An empty space that acts as a protective barrier between two floors or bulkheads on a ship. COGNOMENS (14) [noun] Surname. | [noun] The third part of the name of a citizen of Ancient Rome. | [noun] A nickname or epithet by which someone is identified. COGNOMINA (14) [noun] Plural of cognomen; surnames or family names, especially in ancient Rome. | [noun] Names or nicknames by which a person is known. COINMATES (13) COLCHICUM (20) [noun] Any of several flowers of the genus Colchicum. | [noun] The dried seed of the poisonous meadow saffron, Colchicum autumnale, used medicinally. COLIFORMS (16) [noun] Plural of coliform; rod-shaped bacteria found in the intestines of warm-blooded animals, used as indicators of water contamination and fecal pollution. COLISEUMS (13) [noun] A large theatre, cinema, or stadium. | [noun] A large, often circular building, for indoor sporting events, exhibitions, concerts, etc.; arena. COLLEGIUM (14) [noun] (in Russia) A committee or council | [noun] (in Ancient Rome) Any of several legal associations COLLIMATE (13) [verb] To focus into a narrow beam or column; to adjust a focusing device so that it produces a narrow beam. COLLUVIUM (16) [noun] A loose accumulation of rock and soil debris at the foot of a slope COLLYRIUM (16) [noun] A lotion or liquid wash used as a cleanser for the eyes; an eye-salve. | [noun] Loosely, any product applied to or around the eyes; kohl. COLORISMS (13) [noun] Plural of colorism; the practice of discriminating against people based on skin tone, typically favoring lighter skin tones within the same racial or ethnic group. COLOSSEUM (13) [noun] A large theatre, cinema, or stadium. | [noun] A large, often circular building, for indoor sporting events, exhibitions, concerts, etc.; arena. COLOSTOMY (16) [noun] An incision into the colon to allow for drainage; the opening produced in such incision. COLOSTRUM (13) [noun] A form of milk produced by the mammary glands in late pregnancy and the few days after giving birth. Human and bovine colostrum is thick and yellowish. In humans, it has high concentrations of nutrients and antibodies, but it is small in quantity. | [noun] A mixture of turpentine and egg yolk, formerly used as an emulsion. COLUMBINE (15) [noun] Any plant of the genus Aquilegia, having distinctive bell-shaped flowers with spurs on each petal. | [adjective] Pertaining to a dove or pigeon. COLUMBITE (15) [noun] A black mineral that is a mixed iron and manganese niobate and tantalate, and is the main ore of niobium and tantalum. COLUMBIUM (17) [noun] A former name of niobium. COLUMELLA (13) [noun] Any of various small structures in plants or animals that are columnar in shape. | [noun] The skin at the end of the septum which separates the nostrils. | [noun] (comparative anatomy) In birds, reptiles, and amphibians, the small bone which carries vibration from the tympanum to the inner ear. COLUMNIST (13) [noun] A regular writer of a column, such as in a magazine or newspaper COMANAGED (15) [verb] Managed jointly by two or more parties or entities. COMANAGER (14) [noun] A manager who shares responsibility for managing something jointly with another manager. COMANAGES (14) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "comanage," meaning to manage or oversee something jointly with another person or entity. COMATULAE (13) [noun] Plural of comatula, a type of feather star or crinoid, a marine animal with a cup-shaped body and branching arms. COMBATANT (15) [noun] A person engaged in combat, often armed. | [adjective] Contending; disposed to contend. | [adjective] Involving combat. COMBATERS (15) COMBATING (16) [verb] To fight; to struggle against. | [verb] To fight (with); to struggle for victory (against). COMBATIVE (18) [adjective] Given to fighting; disposed to engage in combat; pugnacious. COMBATTED (16) [verb] To fight; to struggle against. | [verb] To fight (with); to struggle for victory (against). COMBINERS (15) [noun] A person who or a thing that combines. COMBINING (16) [verb] To bring (two or more things or activities) together; to unite. | [verb] To have two or more things or properties that function together. | [verb] To come together; to unite. COMBUSTED (16) [verb] To burn; to catch fire. | [verb] To erupt with enthusiasm or boisterousness. COMBUSTOR (15) [noun] A chamber in a gas turbine or jet engine where fuel is burned. | [noun] A device or apparatus that burns fuel for heat or power generation. COMEBACKS (21) [noun] A return (e.g. to popularity, success, etc.) after an extended period of obscurity. | [noun] A retort or answer, particularly a quick or clever one. | [noun] An occurrence of an athlete or sports team in a competition overcoming a substantial disadvantage in points to win or draw. COMEDIANS (14) [noun] An entertainer who performs in a humorous manner, especially by telling jokes. | [noun] (by extension) Any person who is humorous or amusing, either characteristically or on a particular occasion. | [noun] A person who performs in theatrical plays. COMEDONES (14) [noun] A blackhead or whitehead. COMEDOWNS (17) [noun] A sudden drop to a lower status, condition or level; a disappointment or letdown | [noun] A calm, mellow period experienced after the initial high from taking drugs COMELIEST (13) [adjective] (of a person) Pleasing or attractive to the eye. | [adjective] Suitable or becoming; proper; agreeable. COMEMBERS (17) [noun] Plural of comember; individuals who are members together of the same organization, group, or body. COMETHERS (16) [noun] A call or summons; an enticement or invitation. | [noun] Plural of comether, a persuasive inducement or blandishment. COMFORTED (17) [verb] To relieve the distress or suffering of; to provide comfort to. | [verb] To make comfortable. | [verb] To make strong; to invigorate; to fortify; to corroborate. COMFORTER (16) [noun] A person who comforts someone who is suffering. | [noun] A padded cover for a bed, duvet, continental quilt. | [noun] A woollen scarf for winter. COMICALLY (18) [adverb] In a comical manner COMINGLED (15) [verb] Past tense of commingle; to mix together or blend with something else. COMINGLES (14) [verb] To mix together or blend; to combine or unite into one mass or group. COMMANDED (17) [verb] To order, give orders; to compel or direct with authority. | [verb] To have or exercise supreme power, control or authority over, especially military; to have under direction or control. | [verb] To require with authority; to demand, order, enjoin. COMMANDER (16) [noun] One who exercises control and direction of a military or naval organization. | [noun] A naval officer whose rank is above that of a lieutenant commander and below that of captain. | [noun] One who exercises control and direction over a group of persons. COMMANDOS (16) [noun] A small fighting force specially trained for making quick destructive raids against enemy-held areas. | [noun] A commando trooper | [noun] An organized force of Boer troops in South Africa; a raid by such troops COMMENCED (18) [verb] To begin, start. | [verb] To begin to be, or to act as. | [verb] To take a degree at a university. COMMENCER (17) COMMENCES (17) [verb] To begin, start. | [verb] To begin to be, or to act as. | [verb] To take a degree at a university. COMMENDED (17) [verb] To congratulate or reward. | [verb] To praise or acclaim. | [verb] To entrust or commit to the care of someone else. COMMENDER (16) [noun] One who commends; a person who praises or recommends something. COMMENSAL (15) [noun] An organism partaking in a commensal relationship. | [noun] One who eats at the same table. | [adjective] Of a form of symbiosis in which one organism derives a benefit while the other is unaffected. COMMENTED (16) [verb] To remark. | [verb] (with "on" or "about") To make remarks or notes. | [verb] To comment or remark on. COMMERCED (18) COMMERCES (17) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "commerce," meaning to engage in trade or business exchange. COMMINGLE (16) [verb] To mix, to blend. | [verb] To become mixed or blended. COMMINUTE (15) [verb] To reduce to minute particles or powder by grinding, crushing, or breaking into small fragments. COMMISSAR (15) [noun] An official of the Communist Party, often attached to a military unit, who was responsible for political education. | [noun] In the early Soviet Union, the head of a commissariat. COMMITTAL (15) [noun] The act of entrusting something to someone. | [noun] The act of committing someone to confinement; an order for someone's imprisonment. | [noun] The act of perpetrating an offence. COMMITTED (16) [verb] To give in trust; to put into charge or keeping; to entrust; to consign; used with to or formerly unto. | [verb] To put in charge of a jailer; to imprison. | [verb] To have (a person) enter an establishment, such as a hospital or asylum, as a patient. COMMITTEE (15) [noun] A body of one or more persons convened for the accomplishment of some specific purpose, typically with formal protocols. | [noun] A guardian; someone in charge of another person deemed to be unable to look after himself or herself. COMMIXING (23) [verb] To mix separate things together. | [verb] To become mixed; to amalgamate. COMMODIFY (22) [verb] To make something into a commodity, sometimes at the expense of its intrinsic value. COMMODITY (19) [noun] Anything movable (a good) that is bought and sold. | [noun] Something useful or valuable. | [noun] Raw materials, agricultural and other primary products as objects of large-scale trading in specialized exchanges. COMMODORE (16) [noun] A naval officer holding a rank between captain and rear admiral. | [noun] A (temporary) commander over a collection of ships who is not an admiral. | [noun] The leading ship in a fleet of merchantmen. COMMONAGE (16) [noun] The condition of land that is held in common. | [noun] The right to pasture animals on common land. | [noun] Shared land; a common. COMMONERS (15) [noun] A member of the common people who holds no title or rank. | [noun] Someone who is not of noble rank. | [noun] (Oxbridge slang) An undergraduate who does not hold either a scholarship or an exhibition. COMMONEST (15) [adjective] Mutual; shared by more than one. | [adjective] Occurring or happening regularly or frequently; usual. | [adjective] Found in large numbers or in a large quantity; usual. COMMOTION (15) [noun] A state of turbulent motion. | [noun] An agitated disturbance or a hubbub. | [noun] Sexual excitement. COMMOVING (19) [adjective] Moving together or at the same rate; in cosmology, describing a reference frame that moves with the expansion of the universe. COMMUNARD (16) [noun] A person who lives in a commune COMMUNING (16) [verb] To converse together with sympathy and confidence; to interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel. | [verb] (followed by with) To communicate (with) spiritually; to be together (with); to contemplate or absorb. | [verb] To receive the communion. COMMUNION (15) [noun] A joining together of minds or spirits. | [noun] Holy Communion | [noun] A form of ecclesiastical unity between the Roman Church and another, so that the latter is considered part of the former. COMMUNISE (15) [verb] To make something the property of a community. | [verb] To impose Communist ideals on people. | [verb] To become or be made communistic. COMMUNISM (17) [noun] Any political ideology or philosophy advocating holding the production of resources collectively. | [noun] Any political social system that implements a communist political philosophy. | [noun] The international socialist society where classes, money, and the state no longer exist. COMMUNIST (15) [noun] An advocate of a society based on the common ownership of property; a proponent of communism. | [noun] Any revolutionary or subversive radical. | [adjective] Of, relating to, supporting, or advocating communism. COMMUNITY (18) [noun] A group sharing a common understanding, and often the same language, law, manners, and/or tradition. | [noun] A residential or religious collective; a commune. | [noun] A group of interdependent organisms inhabiting the same region and interacting with each other. COMMUNIZE (24) [verb] To make something the property of a community. | [verb] To impose Communist ideals on people. | [verb] To become or be made communistic. COMMUTATE (15) [verb] To reverse the direction of (a current). | [verb] To convert from being or using an alternating current into being or using a direct current. | [verb] To commute; to be invariant under a reversal of the positions of operands. COMMUTERS (15) [noun] One who commutes (etymology 1). | [noun] A person who regularly travels from one place to another, typically to work. | [noun] A piece of transportation equipment used for the transportation of such persons. COMMUTING (16) [verb] To exchange substantially; to abate but not abolish completely, a penalty, obligation, or payment in return for a great, single thing or an aggregate; to cash in; to lessen | [verb] Of an operation, to be commutative, i.e. to have the property that changing the order of the operands does not change the result. | [verb] To regularly travel from one's home to one's workplace or school, or vice versa. COMONOMER (15) COMPACTED (18) [verb] To make more dense; to compress. | [verb] To unite or connect firmly, as in a system. | [adjective] Closely or densely packed together. COMPACTER (17) [noun] A machine or device that compresses or packs materials into a denser form. | [adjective] More compact; comparative form of compact. COMPACTLY (20) [adverb] In a compact manner; closely or densely packed together. | [adverb] In a concise or brief way; without unnecessary words or space. COMPACTOR (17) [noun] A machine that compresses waste or other materials into a compact mass. | [noun] A person or device that compacts or presses something together. COMPADRES (16) [noun] A friend or companion. COMPANIED (16) [verb] To accompany, keep company with. | [verb] To associate. | [verb] To be a lively, cheerful companion. COMPANIES (15) [noun] A team; a group of people who work together professionally. | [noun] A small group of birds or animals. | [noun] An entity having legal personality, and thus able to own property and to sue and be sued in its own name; a corporation. COMPANION (15) [noun] A friend, acquaintance, or partner; someone with whom one spends time or keeps company | [noun] A person employed to accompany or travel with another. | [noun] The framework on the quarterdeck of a sailing ship through which daylight entered the cabins below. COMPARERS (15) [noun] Plural of comparer; people or things that compare. | [noun] In computing, functions or programs that perform comparisons between data items. COMPARING (16) [verb] To assess the similarities and differences between two or more things ["to compare X with Y"]. Having made the comparison of X with Y, one might have found it similar to Y or different from Y. | [verb] To declare two things to be similar in some respect ["to compare X to Y"]. | [verb] (grammar) To form the three degrees of comparison of (an adjective). COMPARTED (16) COMPASSED (16) [verb] To surround; to encircle; to environ; to stretch round. | [verb] To go about or round entirely; to traverse. | [verb] To accomplish; to reach; to achieve; to obtain. COMPASSES (15) [noun] A magnetic or electronic device used to determine the cardinal directions (usually magnetic or true north). | [noun] A pair of compasses (a device used to draw an arc or circle). | [noun] The range of notes of a musical instrument or voice. | [verb] To surround; to encircle; to environ; to stretch round. COMPEERED (16) [verb] Past tense of "compeers," meaning to be equal with or to match; to associate with as a peer or equal. COMPELLED (16) [verb] To drive together, round up | [verb] To overpower; to subdue. | [verb] To force, constrain or coerce. COMPENDIA (16) [noun] A short, complete summary; an abstract. | [noun] A list or collection of various items. COMPERING (16) [verb] To emcee, to act as compere. COMPETENT (15) [adjective] Having sufficient skill, knowledge, ability, or qualifications. | [adjective] Having jurisdiction or authority over a particular issue or question. | [adjective] Adequate for the purpose COMPETING (16) [verb] To be in battle or in a rivalry with another for the same thing, position, or reward; to contend | [verb] To be in a position in which it is possible to win or triumph. | [verb] To take part in a contest, game or similar event COMPILERS (15) [noun] One who compiles. | [noun] A computer program which transforms source code into object code. COMPILING (16) [verb] To put together; to assemble; to make by gathering things from various sources. | [verb] To construct, build. | [verb] To use a compiler to process source code and produce executable code. COMPLAINS (15) [verb] To express feelings of pain, dissatisfaction, or resentment. | [verb] To make a formal accusation or bring a formal charge. | [verb] To creak or squeak, as a timber or wheel. COMPLAINT (15) [noun] The act of complaining. | [noun] A grievance, problem, difficulty, or concern. | [noun] In a civil action, the first pleading of the plaintiff setting out the facts on which the claim is based; The purpose is to give notice to the adversary of the nature and basis of the claim asserted. COMPLECTS (17) [verb] To make complex or complicated; to entangle or interweave. COMPLETED (16) [verb] To finish; to make done; to reach the end. | [verb] To make whole or entire. | [verb] To call from the small blind in an unraised pot. COMPLETER (15) [adjective] With all parts included; with nothing missing; full. | [adjective] Finished; ended; concluded; completed. | [adjective] Generic intensifier. COMPLETES (15) [noun] A completed survey. | [verb] To finish; to make done; to reach the end. | [verb] To make whole or entire. COMPLEXED (23) [verb] To form a complex with another substance | [verb] To complicate. | [adjective] Combined in the form of a complex COMPLEXER (22) [adjective] More complex; having a greater degree of complexity or complication. COMPLEXES (22) [noun] A network of interconnected systems. | [noun] A collection of buildings with a common purpose, such as a university or military base. | [noun] An assemblage of related things; a collection. COMPLEXLY (25) [adverb] In a complex manner; in a way that is complicated or intricate. COMPLIANT (15) [adjective] Willing to comply; submissive; willing to do what someone wants. | [adjective] Compatible with or following guidelines, specifications, rules, or laws. COMPLICES (17) [noun] Plural of complice; persons who are accomplices or partners in wrongdoing. | [noun] Associates or partners in crime or misconduct. COMPLICIT (17) [adjective] Associated with or participating in an activity, especially one of a questionable nature. COMPLIERS (15) [noun] People who comply with rules, regulations, or requests. | [noun] In computing, software or devices that conform to specified standards or protocols. COMPLINES (15) [noun] The last of the canonical hours, sung just before retiring COMPLYING (19) [verb] To yield assent; to accord; to acquiesce, agree, consent; to adapt oneself, to conform. | [verb] To accomplish, to fulfil. | [verb] To be ceremoniously courteous; to make one's compliments. COMPONENT (15) [noun] A smaller, self-contained part of a larger entity. Often refers to a manufactured object that is part of a larger device. | [adjective] Making up a larger whole; as a component word. | [adjective] Made up of smaller complete units in combination; as a component stereo. COMPORTED (16) [verb] To tolerate, bear, put up (with). | [verb] To be in agreement (with); to be of an accord. | [verb] To behave (in a given manner). COMPOSERS (15) [noun] One who composes; an author. | [noun] One who, or that which, quiets or calms. COMPOSING (16) [verb] To make something by merging parts. | [verb] To make up the whole; to constitute. | [verb] To comprise. COMPOSITE (15) [noun] A mixture of different components. | [noun] A structural material that gains its strength from a combination of complementary materials. | [noun] A plant belonging to the family Asteraceae, syn. Compositae. COMPOSTED (16) [verb] To produce compost, let organic matter decay into fertilizer. COMPOSURE (15) [noun] Calmness of mind or matter, self-possession. | [noun] The act of composing, or that which is composed; a composition. | [noun] Orderly adjustment; disposition. COMPOUNDS (16) [noun] An enclosure within which workers, prisoners, or soldiers are confined | [noun] A group of buildings situated close together, e.g. for a school or block of offices | [noun] Anything made by combining several things. COMPRADOR (16) [noun] An intermediary. | [noun] A native of a colonised country who acts as the agent of the coloniser. | [noun] A ship's chandler in the Far East. COMPRISED (16) [verb] To be made up of; to consist of (especially a comprehensive list of parts). | [verb] To contain or embrace. | [verb] (sometimes proscribed, usually in the passive) To compose, to constitute. See usage note below. COMPRISES (15) [verb] To be made up of; to consist of (especially a comprehensive list of parts). | [verb] To contain or embrace. | [verb] (sometimes proscribed, usually in the passive) To compose, to constitute. See usage note below. COMPRIZED (25) [verb] Past tense of comprise; to consist of or be made up of. COMPRIZES (24) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "comprise," meaning to consist of or be made up of. COMPUTERS (15) [noun] A person employed to perform computations; one who computes. | [noun] (by restriction) A male computer, where the female computer is called a computress. | [noun] A programmable electronic device that performs mathematical calculations and logical operations, especially one that can process, store and retrieve large amounts of data very quickly; now especially, a small one for personal or home use employed for manipulating text or graphics, accessing the Internet, or playing games or media. COMPUTING (16) [verb] To reckon or calculate. | [verb] To make sense. | [noun] The process or act of calculation. COMRADELY (17) [adjective] In a manner befitting comrades; showing the friendly and equal spirit of comrades. | [adjective] Characterized by or exhibiting comradeship; expressing solidarity or fellowship. COMRADERY (17) [noun] Camaraderie CONDEMNED (15) [verb] To strongly criticise or denounce; to excoriate the perpetrators of. | [verb] To judicially pronounce (someone) guilty. | [verb] To confer eternal divine punishment upon. CONDEMNER (14) [noun] One who condemns or expresses disapproval of something or someone. CONDEMNOR (14) [noun] A person who condemns. | [noun] In law, a person or entity that exercises the power of eminent domain to take property for public use. CONDIMENT (14) [noun] Something used to enhance the flavor of food; for example, salt or pepper. | [verb] To season with condiments. | [verb] To pickle. CONDYLOMA (17) [noun] A wartlike growth on the skin or a mucous membrane, caused by certain types of HPV viruses, usually occurring in the genital area CONFIRMED (17) [verb] To strengthen; to make firm or resolute. | [verb] To administer the sacrament of confirmation on (someone). | [verb] To assure the accuracy of previous statements. CONFORMAL (16) [adjective] That conforms, especially to the shape of something. | [adjective] (of a transformation) That preserves angles between intersecting curves. | [adjective] (of a map projection) That preserves relative angles over small scales, at all but a limited number of distinct points. CONFORMED (17) [verb] (of persons, often followed by to) To act in accordance with expectations; to behave in the manner of others, especially as a result of social pressure. | [verb] (of things, situations, etc.) To be in accordance with a set of specifications or regulations, or with a policy or guideline. | [verb] To make similar in form or nature; to make suitable for a purpose; to adapt. CONFORMER (16) [noun] Any of a set of stereoisomers characterised by a conformation that corresponds to a distinct potential energy minimum. | [noun] A particular folded state or conformation of a protein, especially an abnormal conformation of a prion | [noun] A person who conforms; a conformist. CONOMINEE (13) CONSOMMES (15) [noun] A clear broth made from reduced meat or vegetable stock, served either hot as a soup or chilled as a jelly CONSUMERS (13) [noun] One who, or that which, consumes. | [noun] Someone who trades money for goods or services as an individual. | [noun] (by extension) The consumer base of a product, service or business. CONSUMING (14) [verb] To use up. | [verb] To eat. | [verb] To completely occupy the thoughts or attention of. CONTAGIUM (14) [noun] A disease-causing agent or infectious material that can be transmitted from one organism to another. | [noun] In historical medicine, a hypothetical agent thought to transmit disease through direct contact or proximity. CONTEMNED (14) [verb] To disdain; to value at little or nothing; to treat or regard with contempt. | [verb] To commit an offence of contempt, such as contempt of court; to unlawfully flout (e.g. a ruling). CONTEMNER (13) [noun] A person who contemns; one who treats with contempt or scorn. CONTEMNOR (13) [noun] A person who treats something or someone with contempt; one who shows disrespect or scorn. CONTEMPTS (15) [noun] The state or act of contemning; the feeling or attitude of regarding someone or something as inferior, base, or worthless; scorn, disdain. | [noun] The state of being despised or dishonored; disgrace. | [noun] Open disrespect or willful disobedience of the authority of a court of law or legislative body. CONTINUUM (13) [noun] A continuous series or whole, no part of which is noticeably different from its adjacent parts, although the ends or extremes of it are very different from each other. | [noun] A continuous extent. | [noun] The set of real numbers; more generally, any compact connected metric space. CONTUMACY (18) [noun] Disobedience, resistance to authority. CONTUMELY (16) [noun] Offensive and abusive language or behaviour; scorn, insult. CONUNDRUM (14) [noun] A difficult question or riddle, especially one using a play on words in the answer. | [noun] A difficult choice or decision that must be made. COPEMATES (15) COPOLYMER (18) [noun] A polymer derived from more than one species of monomer. COPREMIAS (15) CORDIFORM (17) [adjective] Heart-shaped in form or outline. COREDEEMS (14) CORMORANT (13) [noun] Any of various medium-large black seabirds of the family Phalacrocoracidae, especially the great cormorant, Phalacrocorax carbo. | [noun] A voracious eater. | [adjective] Ravenous, greedy. CORNERMAN (13) [noun] A coach, trainer or other assistant who attends to a boxer between rounds. | [noun] A player who can play both the small forward and power forward positions. | [noun] A policeman assigned to an intersection to direct the traffic. CORNERMEN (13) [noun] A coach, trainer or other assistant who attends to a boxer between rounds. | [noun] A player who can play both the small forward and power forward positions. | [noun] A policeman assigned to an intersection to direct the traffic. CORNMEALS (13) [noun] Dried corn (maize) milled (ground) to a coarse meal. CORUNDUMS (14) CORYMBOSE (18) COSMETICS (15) [noun] Preparations applied externally to change or enhance the beauty of skin, hair, nails, lips, and eyes. | [noun] The study of such products. COSMOGONY (17) [noun] The study of the origin, and sometimes the development, of the universe or the solar system, in astrophysics, religion, and other fields. | [noun] Any specific theory, model, myth, or other account of the origin of the universe. | [noun] The creation of the universe. COSMOLOGY (17) [noun] The study of the physical universe, its structure, dynamics, origin and evolution, and fate. | [noun] A metaphysical study into the origin and nature of the universe. | [noun] A particular view (cultural or religious) of the structure and origin of the universe. COSMONAUT (13) [noun] An astronaut, especially a Russian or Soviet one. COSTUMERS (13) [noun] A person who designs, makes or supplies theatrical costumes; a costumier. | [noun] A person who wears a costume or takes part in cosplay. | [noun] A costume drama. COSTUMERY (16) COSTUMIER (13) [noun] A person who supplies or designs costumes. COSTUMING (14) [verb] To dress or adorn with a costume or appropriate garb. COULOMBIC (17) COUMARINS (13) [noun] The bicyclic aromatic compound 1,2-benzopyrone or any of its derivatives COUMAROUS (13) COURTROOM (13) [noun] The room where a judge presides over hearings and trials, sometimes with a jury. COXCOMBRY (27) CRABMEATS (15) CRACKSMAN (19) [noun] A burglar or safebreaker. CRACKSMEN (19) [noun] A burglar or safebreaker. CRAFTSMAN (16) [noun] A male artisan. CRAFTSMEN (16) [noun] A male artisan. CRAMOISIE (13) CRAMPOONS (15) CREAMCUPS (17) CREAMIEST (13) [adjective] Containing cream. | [adjective] Of food or drink, having the rich taste or thick, smooth texture of cream, whether or not it actually contains cream. | [adjective] Of any liquid, having the thick texture of cream. CREAMWARE (16) [noun] Cream-coloured earthenware produced chiefly from 1750 to 1820 by the potters of Staffordshire, England CREDENDUM (15) CREMATING (14) [verb] To burn something to ashes. | [verb] To incinerate a dead body (as an alternative to burial). CREMATION (13) [noun] A burning; especially the act or practice of cremating the dead, burning a corpse. CREMATORS (13) CREMATORY (16) [noun] The establishment or furnace that cremates bodies. | [adjective] Pertaining to the act of cremating bodies. CRETINISM (13) [noun] A condition of severely stunted physical and mental growth due to the untreated congenital deficiency of thyroid hormones. CREWMATES (16) CRIMELESS (13) CRIMINALS (13) [noun] A person who is guilty of a crime, notably breaking the law. CRIMINATE (13) CRIMINOUS (13) CRIMPIEST (15) CRIMPLING (16) CRIMSONED (14) [verb] To become crimson or deep red; to blush. | [verb] To dye with crimson or deep red; to redden. CRITERIUM (13) CRITICISM (15) [noun] The act of criticising; a critical judgment passed or expressed | [noun] A critical observation or detailed examination and review. CROMLECHS (18) [noun] A dolmen or ancient underground tomb in Wales, usually made with stones disposed in a circular shape. CRONYISMS (16) CROSSARMS (13) CRUCIFORM (18) [noun] A cross shape in DNA; a Holliday junction. | [noun] Any emblem in the shape of a cross. | [adjective] Having the shape of a cross. CRUMBIEST (15) [adjective] Crumbly; inclined to break into crumbs. | [adjective] Bad; poor. | [adjective] Full of crumb or crumbs. CRUMBLIER (15) [adjective] Easy to break into small fragments; brittle or friable. CRUMBLING (16) [verb] To fall apart; to disintegrate. | [verb] To break into crumbs. | [verb] To mix (ingredients such as flour and butter) in such a way as to form crumbs. CRUMHORNS (16) [noun] Any of several related simple woodwind instruments having a bent horn CRUMMIEST (15) [adjective] Bad; poor. | [adjective] Full of crumb or crumbs. | [adjective] Soft, like the crumb of bread; not crusty. CRUMPLIER (15) CRUMPLING (16) [verb] To rumple; to press into wrinkles by crushing together. | [verb] To cause to collapse. | [verb] To become wrinkled. CRYPTOGAM (19) [noun] Any plant that reproduces using spores (rather than seeds), formerly placed in the taxonomic group Cryptogamae, which included ferns, mosses, algae, fungi, lichens and liverworts. CRYPTONYM (21) [noun] A secret name, a code name. CTENIDIUM (14) [noun] A respiratory system, in the form of a comb, in some molluscs | [noun] A row of spines in some insects CUBICULUM (17) CUCUMBERS (17) [noun] A vine in the gourd family, Cucumis sativus. | [noun] The edible fruit of this plant, having a green rind and crisp white flesh. CULMINANT (13) [adjective] Being vertical, or at the highest point of altitude | [adjective] (by extension) predominant CULMINATE (13) [verb] Of a heavenly body, to be at the highest point, reach its greatest altitude. | [verb] To reach the (physical) summit, highest point, peak etc. | [verb] To reach a climax; to come to the decisive point (especially as an end or conclusion). CUMBERERS (15) CUMBERING (16) [verb] To slow down; to hinder; to burden; to encumber. CUMULATED (14) [verb] To accumulate; to amass. | [verb] To be accumulated. CUMULATES (13) [verb] To accumulate; to amass. | [verb] To be accumulated. CUNEIFORM (16) [noun] An ancient Mesopotamian writing system, adapted within several language families, originating as pictograms in Sumer around the 30th century BC, evolving into more abstract and characteristic wedge shapes formed by a blunt reed stylus on clay tablets. | [noun] A wedge-shaped bone, especially a cuneiform bone. | [adjective] Having the form of a wedge; wedge-shaped, especially with a tapered end. CUNIFORMS (16) CURRYCOMB (20) CUSTOMARY (16) [noun] A book containing laws and usages, or customs; a custumal. | [adjective] In accordance with, or established by, custom or common usage | [adjective] Holding or held by custom CUSTOMERS (13) [noun] A patron, a client; one who purchases or receives a product or service from a business or merchant, or intends to do so. | [noun] A person, especially one engaging in some sort of interaction with others. CUSTOMISE (13) [verb] To build or alter according to personal preferences or specifications. CUSTOMIZE (22) [verb] To build or alter according to personal preferences or specifications. CUSTUMALS (13) [noun] A survey of a medieval English manor, listing each tenant and the customs under which the tenancy was held. CYANAMIDE (17) [noun] A chemical compound, NH2CN; a white crystalline solid, soluble in water, having many commercial applications including fertilizer | [noun] Any derivative of this compound in which one or more hydrogen atoms are replaced by an alkyl or aryl group CYANAMIDS (17) CYCLAMATE (18) [noun] Any salt or ester of cyclamic acid, especially the sodium and calcium salts, which have been used as artificial sweeteners CYCLAMENS (18) [noun] Any of various flowering plants, of the genus Cyclamen, widely cultivated as a houseplant, having decorative leaves and solitary flowers. CYCLORAMA (18) [noun] A display consisting of a continuous series of pictures placed on the walls of a circular room so as to appear in natural perspective by a person standing in the middle; a circular or semi-circular display. | [noun] A large curtain or wall, often concave, hung upstage, in a theatre. CYMBALERS (18) CYMBALIST (18) CYMBALOMS (20) [noun] A type of concert hammered dulcimer used primarily in the music of Eastern Europe. CYMBIDIUM (21) [noun] Any orchid of the genus Cymbidium. CYMBLINGS (19) CYMOGENES (17) CYMOPHANE (21) CYNICISMS (18) CYTOPLASM (18) [noun] The contents of a cell except for the nucleus. It includes cytosol, organelles, vesicles, and the cytoskeleton. DAIRYMAID (16) [noun] A woman who works in a dairy. DALMATIAN (12) [noun] One of a breed of dog with a short, white coat with dark spots. | [noun] (demonym) A native or inhabitant of Dalmatia. DALMATICS (14) [noun] A long wide-sleeved tunic, which serves as a liturgical vestment in the Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches and is worn by a deacon at the Eucharist or Mass and, although infrequently, by bishops as an undergarment above the alb. DAMASCENE (14) [noun] A breed of pigeon | [verb] To decorate (metalwork) with a peculiar marking or water produced in the process of manufacture, or with designs produced by inlaying or encrusting with another metal, such as silver or gold, or by etching, etc.; to damask. | [adjective] Inlaid with silver or gold DAMASKING (17) [verb] To decorate or weave in damascene patterns DAMEWORTS (15) DAMNATION (12) [noun] The state of being damned; condemnation; openly expressed disapprobation. | [noun] Condemnation to everlasting punishment in the future state, or the punishment itself. DAMNATORY (15) [adjective] Containing a sentence of condemnation. DAMNDESTS (13) DAMNEDEST (13) [verb] To condemn to hell. | [verb] To condemn; to declare guilty; to doom; to adjudge to punishment. | [verb] To put out of favor; to ruin; to label negatively. DAMNIFIED (16) [verb] To damage physically; to injure. | [verb] To cause injuries or loss to. DAMNIFIES (15) [verb] To damage physically; to injure. | [verb] To cause injuries or loss to. DAMNINGLY (16) DAMPENERS (14) [noun] A device that moistens or dampens something. | [noun] A discouraging event or remark. DAMPENING (15) [verb] To make damp or moist; to make slightly wet. | [verb] To become damp or moist. | [verb] To depress; to check; to make dull; to lessen. DAMSELFLY (18) [noun] Any of various insects of the suborder Zygoptera that have long slender bodies, and are similar to dragonflies but having wings folded when at rest. DANDYISMS (16) DARKROOMS (16) [noun] A dark room, where photographs are developed. | [noun] A darkened room where sexual activity can take place, especially one in a gay club. DAYDREAMS (16) [noun] A spontaneous and fanciful series of thoughts while awake not connected to immediate reality. DAYDREAMT (16) DEAMINASE (12) DEAMINATE (12) DEATHSMAN (15) DEATHSMEN (15) DEBARMENT (14) DECAGRAMS (15) DECAMETER (14) [noun] An SI unit of length equal to 10-1 metres. Symbol: dam | [noun] A line in a poem having ten metrical feet. | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has ten feet. DECAMPING (17) [verb] To break up camp and move on. | [verb] To disappear suddenly and secretly. DECEMVIRI (17) DECEMVIRS (17) DECENNIUM (14) [noun] A period of ten years. DECIGRAMS (15) [noun] An SI unit of mass equal to 10-1 grams. Symbol: dg DECIMALLY (17) DECIMATED (15) [verb] To kill one-tenth of a group, (specifically) as a military punishment in the Roman army selected by lot, usually carried out by the surviving soldiers. | [verb] To destroy or remove one-tenth of anything. | [verb] To devastate: to reduce or destroy significantly but not completely. DECIMATES (14) [noun] A tithe or other 10% tax or payment. | [noun] A tenth of something. | [noun] A set of ten items. DECIMETER (14) [noun] An SI unit of length equal to 10-1 metres. Symbol: dm DECLAIMED (15) [verb] To object to something vociferously; to rail against in speech. | [verb] To recite, e.g., poetry, in a theatrical way; to speak for rhetorical display; to speak pompously, noisily, or theatrically; bemouth; to make an empty speech; to rehearse trite arguments in debate; to rant. | [verb] To speak rhetorically; to make a formal speech or oration; specifically, to recite a speech, poem, etc., in public as a rhetorical exercise; to practice public speaking. DECLAIMER (14) DECOMPOSE (16) [verb] To separate or break down something into its components; to disintegrate or fragment | [verb] To rot, decay or putrefy DECREMENT (14) [noun] A small quantity removed or lost. One of a series of regular subtractions. | [verb] To decrease a value by a basic quantity unit. DECUMBENT (16) [adjective] Lying down; reclining on the ground. | [adjective] Of a plant, which lies on the ground with tips turned upwards. DEEMSTERS (12) [noun] A judge; one who pronounces sentence or doom. | [noun] A judge on the Isle of Man. DEFEATISM (15) DEFERMENT (15) [noun] An act or instance of deferring or putting off. | [noun] Officially sanctioned postponement of compulsory military service. DEFOAMERS (15) DEFOAMING (16) DEFORMERS (15) DEFORMING (16) [verb] To change the form of, usually negatively; to give (something) an unusual or abnormal shape. | [verb] To change the looks of, usually negatively; to give something an unusual or abnormal appearance. | [verb] To mar the character of. DEFORMITY (18) [noun] The state of being deformed. | [noun] An ugly or misshapen feature or characteristic. DEGERMING (14) DEGUMMING (16) DEKAGRAMS (17) DEKAMETER (16) [noun] An SI unit of length equal to 10-1 metres. Symbol: dam | [noun] A line in a poem having ten metrical feet. | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has ten feet. DELIMITED (13) [verb] To mark or fix the limits of. | [verb] To demarcate. | [adjective] With specified conditions. DELIMITER (12) DELIRIUMS (12) [noun] A temporary mental state with a sudden onset, usually reversible, including symptoms of confusion, inability to concentrate, disorientation, anxiety, and sometimes hallucinations. Causes can include dehydration, drug intoxication, and severe infection. DEMAGOGED (15) DEMAGOGIC (16) DEMAGOGUE (14) [noun] A political orator or leader who gains favor by pandering to or exciting the passions and prejudices of the audience rather than by using rational argument. | [noun] A leader of the people. | [verb] To speak or act in the manner of a demagogue; to speak about (an issue) in the manner of a demagogue. DEMANDANT (13) DEMANDERS (13) DEMANDING (14) [verb] To request forcefully. | [verb] To claim a right to something. | [verb] To ask forcefully for information. DEMANTOID (13) [noun] A green garnet. DEMARCATE (14) [verb] To mark the limits or boundaries of something; to delimit. | [verb] To mark the difference between two causes of action; to distinguish. DEMARCHES (17) [noun] A diplomatic maneuver; one handled with finesse. | [noun] A protest launched through diplomatic measures. DEMARKING (17) [verb] To demarcate. DEMASTING (13) DEMEANING (13) [verb] To debase; to lower; to degrade. | [verb] To humble, humble oneself; to humiliate. | [verb] To mortify. DEMEANORS (12) [noun] The social, non-verbal behaviours (such as body language and facial expressions) that are characteristic of a person. DEMEANOUR (12) [noun] The social, non-verbal behaviours (such as body language and facial expressions) that are characteristic of a person. DEMENTIAL (12) DEMENTIAS (12) DEMENTING (13) DEMERARAS (12) DEMERGERS (13) [noun] A partial or complete reversal of a previous merger. | [noun] The disposal of subsidiaries or divisions of a company. DEMERGING (14) [verb] To separate companies that were formerly combined; to reverse a merger. | [verb] To plunge down into; to sink; to immerse. DEMERITED (13) DEMIJOHNS (22) [noun] A large bottle with a short neck, sometimes with two small handles at the neck, sometimes encased in wickerwork. DEMILUNES (12) [noun] A fortification constructed beyond the main ditch of a fortress, and in front of the curtain between two bastions, intended to defend the curtain; a ravelin. | [noun] A crescentic mass of granular protoplasm present in the salivary glands. DEMIMONDE (15) [noun] A class of women maintained by wealthy protectors; female courtesans or prostitutes as a group. | [noun] (by extension) A group having little respect or reputation. | [noun] (by extension) A member of such a class or group of persons. DEMISSION (12) [noun] Resignation; abdication. DEMITASSE (12) [noun] A small cup of strong black coffee. | [noun] The cup in which this coffee is served. DEMITTING (13) [verb] To let fall; to depress; to yield. | [verb] To relinquish an office, membership, authority, etc.; to resign, as from a Masonic lodge. DEMIURGES (13) [noun] The (usually benevolent) being that created the universe out of primal matter. | [noun] A (usually jealous or outright malevolent) being who is inferior to the supreme being, and sometimes seen as the creator of evil. | [noun] Something (such as an idea, individual or institution) conceived as an autonomous creative force or decisive power. DEMIURGIC (15) DEMIVOLTS (15) DEMIWORLD (16) DEMOBBING (17) [verb] To demobilize; to release someone from military service. DEMOCRACY (19) [noun] Rule by the people, especially as a form of government; either directly or through elected representatives (representative democracy). | [noun] A government under the direct or representative rule of the people of its jurisdiction. | [noun] Belief in political freedom and equality; the "spirit of democracy". DEMOCRATS (14) [noun] A supporter of democracy; an advocate of democratic politics (originally as opposed to the aristocrats in Revolutionary France). | [noun] Someone who rules a representative democracy. | [noun] A large light uncovered wagon with two or more seats. DEMONIACS (14) [noun] Someone who is possessed by a demon. DEMONICAL (14) DEMONISED (13) [verb] To turn into a demon. | [verb] To describe or represent as evil or diabolic. DEMONISES (12) [verb] To turn into a demon. | [verb] To describe or represent as evil or diabolic. DEMONISMS (14) DEMONISTS (12) DEMONIZED (22) [verb] To turn into a demon. | [verb] To describe or represent as evil or diabolic. DEMONIZES (21) [verb] To turn into a demon. | [verb] To describe or represent as evil or diabolic. DEMOTIONS (12) [noun] An act of demoting; a lowering of rank or status DEMOTISTS (12) DEMOUNTED (13) [verb] To remove from its mounting; to take down from a mounted position. | [verb] To dismount. DEMPSTERS (14) DEMULCENT (14) [noun] A soothing medication used to relieve pain in inflamed tissues. | [adjective] Soothing or softening. DEMURRAGE (13) [noun] (shipping) the detention of a ship or other freight vehicle, during delayed loading or unloading | [noun] Compensation paid for such detention | [noun] A charge made for exchanging currency for bullion DEMURRALS (12) [noun] The act of demurring. | [noun] A formal objection. DEMURRERS (12) [noun] A motion by a party to an action, for the immediate or summary judgment of the court on the question, whether, assuming the truth of the matter alleged by the opposite party, it is sufficient in law to sustain the action or defense, and hence whether the party resting is bound to answer or proceed further. | [noun] Someone who demurs. DEMURRING (13) [verb] To linger; to stay; to tarry | [verb] To delay; to pause; to suspend proceedings or judgment in view of a doubt or difficulty; to hesitate; to put off the determination or conclusion of an affair. | [verb] To scruple or object; to take exception; to oppose; to balk DEMYSTIFY (21) [verb] To remove the mystery from something; to explain or clarify. DENOMINAL (12) [noun] (grammar) A denominative: a word, often a verb, that is derived from a noun or adjective. | [adjective] (grammar) Denominative (deriving from a noun). DENTALIUM (12) [noun] Any of various tooth shells of the genus Dentalium. DENTIFORM (15) DEPERMING (15) DEPLUMING (15) [verb] To strip of feathers or plumage. | [verb] To lay bare; to expose. DEPROGRAM (15) [verb] To counteract the effects of previous programming or brainwashing, especially in an attempt to persuade (a person) to abandon allegiance to a cult. DERMATOME (14) [noun] An instrument used surgically to remove a thin slice of skin for grafting | [noun] An area of skin which is innervated by afferent nerve fibers coming to a single posterior spinal root. Compare: myotome. | [noun] The cutis plate. DERMESTID (13) [noun] Any beetle of the family Dermestidae, most of which are scavengers that feed on dry animal or plant material. DESMOSOME (14) [noun] A structural unit that functions in the adhesion of cells to form tissue DESPOTISM (14) [noun] Government by a singular authority, either a single person or tight-knit group, which rules with absolute power, especially in a cruel and oppressive way. DETERMENT (12) DETERMINE (12) [verb] To set the boundaries or limits of. | [verb] To ascertain definitely; to figure out, find out, or conclude by analyzing, calculating, or investigating. | [verb] To fix the form or character of; to shape; to prescribe imperatively; to regulate; to settle. DETRIMENT (12) [noun] Harm, hurt, damage. | [noun] A charge made to students and barristers for incidental repairs of the rooms they occupy. | [verb] To be detrimental to; to harm or mar. DEUTERIUM (12) [noun] An atom of this isotope. DEVILMENT (15) [noun] Devilish action or conduct; mischief. DEWORMERS (15) DEWORMING (16) [verb] To cause an animal to excrete any worms in the digestive tract by the administration of drugs. | [noun] The elimination of parasitic worms from an animal. DIABOLISM (14) [noun] Worship of the devil; Satanism | [noun] Character, action, utterances, creative works, behavior or principles appropriate to the devil. | [noun] Possession by Satan or other demonic forces. DIADEMING (14) DIAGRAMED (14) [verb] To represent or indicate something using a diagram. | [verb] To schedule the operations of a locomotive or train according to a diagram. DIAMANTES (12) DIAMETERS (12) [noun] Any straight line between two points on the circumference of a circle that passes through the centre/center of the circle. | [noun] The length of such a line. | [noun] The maximum distance between any two points in a metric space DIAMETRAL (12) DIAMETRIC (14) DIAMONDED (14) DIAPHRAGM (18) [noun] In mammals, a sheet of muscle separating the thorax from the abdomen, contracted and relaxed in respiration to draw air into and expel air from the lungs; also called thoracic diaphragm. | [noun] Any of various membranes or sheets of muscle or ligament which separate one cavity from another. | [noun] A contraceptive device consisting of a flexible cup, used to cover the cervix during intercourse. DIATHERMY (18) [noun] The generation of heat using high-frequency electromagnetic currents; especially the therapeutic production of heat in tissues in order to form coagulation DIATOMITE (12) [noun] A fine, powdery earth formed from the skeletons of diatoms DIAZEPAMS (23) DIAZONIUM (21) [noun] Any univalent cation, of general formula R-N2+; diazonium salts are used to manufacture azo dyes, and take part in the Sandmeyer reaction DICHASIUM (17) [noun] A cymose inflorescence with all branches below the terminal flower in regular opposite pairs. DICHOGAMY (21) [noun] The condition in which an organism changes sex during its lifetime. DICHOTOMY (20) [noun] A separation or division into two; a distinction that results in such a division. | [noun] Such a division involving apparently incompatible or opposite principles; a duality. | [noun] The division of a class into two disjoint subclasses that are together comprehensive, as the division of man into white and not white. DICHROISM (17) DICHROMAT (17) DICROTISM (14) DICUMAROL (14) DIDYMIUMS (18) DIEMAKERS (16) DIESTRUMS (12) DIGAMISTS (13) DILUVIUMS (15) DIMENSION (12) [noun] A single aspect of a given thing. | [noun] A measure of spatial extent in a particular direction, such as height, width or breadth, or depth. | [noun] A construct whereby objects or individuals can be distinguished. DIMERISMS (14) DIMERIZED (22) [verb] To produce, or to undergo dimerization | [adjective] That have been reacted to form a dimer DIMERIZES (21) [verb] To produce, or to undergo dimerization DIMETHYLS (18) DIMNESSES (12) DIMORPHIC (19) [adjective] Occurring or existing in two different forms | [adjective] Exhibiting dimorphism DIMPLIEST (14) DIOECISMS (14) DIPLOMACY (19) [noun] The art and practice of conducting international relations by negotiating alliances, treaties, agreements etc., bilaterally or multilaterally, between states and sometimes international organizations, or even between polities with varying status, such as those of monarchs and their princely vassals. | [noun] Tact and subtle skill in dealing with people so as to avoid or settle hostility. DIPLOMAED (15) DIPLOMATA (14) DIPLOMATE (14) [noun] A professional who has earned a diploma. | [verb] To award a diploma to. DIPLOMATS (14) [noun] A person, such as an ambassador, who is accredited to represent a government officially in its relations with other governments or international organisations | [noun] Someone who uses skill and tact in dealing with other people DIRIGISME (13) [noun] A policy of strong state control over the economy and related social matters. DISAFFIRM (18) [verb] To deny, contradict or repudiate DISARMERS (12) [noun] A proponent of disarmament. DISARMING (13) [verb] To deprive of weapons; to deprive of the means of attack or defense; to render defenseless. | [verb] To deprive of the means or the disposition to harm; to render harmless or innocuous | [verb] To lay down arms; to stand down. DISBOSOMS (14) DISCIFORM (17) DISCLAIMS (14) [verb] To renounce all claim to; to deny ownership of or responsibility for; to disown; to disavow; to reject. | [verb] To deny, as a claim; to refuse. | [verb] To relinquish or deny having a claim; to disavow another's claim; to decline accepting, as an estate, interest, or office. DISCLIMAX (21) DISCOMFIT (17) [verb] To defeat completely; to rout. | [verb] To defeat the plans or hopes of; to frustrate; disconcert. | [verb] To embarrass greatly; to confuse; to perplex; to disconcert. DISEMBARK (18) [verb] To remove from on board a vessel; to put on shore | [verb] To go ashore out of a ship or boat; to leave a train or airplane DISEMBODY (18) [verb] To cause someone's soul, spirit, consciousness, voice, etc, to become separated from the physical body. | [verb] To separate (a part of the body) from the body. | [verb] To discharge from military service or array. DISESTEEM (12) [noun] Lack of esteem; disregard. | [verb] To hold little or no esteem for; to consider worthless. DISHELMED (16) DISLIMNED (13) DISMALEST (12) DISMANTLE (12) [verb] To divest, strip of dress or covering. | [verb] To remove fittings or furnishings from. | [verb] To take apart; to disassemble; to take to pieces. DISMASTED (13) [verb] To break off the mast (of a ship), especially by gunfire. DISMAYING (16) [verb] To cause to feel apprehension; great sadness, or fear; to deprive of energy | [verb] To render lifeless; to subdue; to disquiet. | [verb] To take dismay or fright; to be filled with dismay. DISMEMBER (16) [verb] To remove the limbs of. | [verb] To cut or otherwise divide something into pieces. DISMISSAL (12) [noun] The act of sending someone away. | [noun] Deprivation of office; the fact or process of being fired from employment or stripped of rank. | [noun] A written or spoken statement of such an act. DISMISSED (13) [verb] To discharge; to end the employment or service of. | [verb] To order to leave. | [verb] To dispel; to rid one’s mind of. DISMISSES (12) [verb] To discharge; to end the employment or service of. | [verb] To order to leave. | [verb] To dispel; to rid one’s mind of. DISMOUNTS (12) [noun] The part of a routine in which the gymnast detaches from an apparatus. | [verb] To (cause to) get off (something). | [verb] To make (a mounted drive) unavailable for use. DISPLUMED (15) [verb] To deprive of feathers or plumes. | [verb] To strip of an award. DISPLUMES (14) [verb] To deprive of feathers or plumes. | [verb] To strip of an award. DISSEMBLE (14) [verb] To disguise or conceal something. | [verb] To feign. | [verb] To deliberately ignore something; to pretend not to notice. DISTEMPER (14) [noun] A viral disease of animals, such as dogs and cats, characterised by fever, coughing and catarrh. | [noun] A disorder of the humours of the body; a disease. | [noun] A glue-based paint. DITHEISMS (15) DITHYRAMB (20) [noun] A choral hymn sung in ancient Athens in honor of the god Dionysus. | [noun] A poem or oration in the same style. DIVEBOMBS (19) [verb] (of an aircraft) To bomb whilst in a steep dive. | [verb] (of a bird) To attack (especially the head of) a person or animal that strays into their territory. | [verb] (of a motorist) To overtake slower traffic by way of a more circuitous route, such as a pair of freeway exit and entrance ramps. DOCUDRAMA (15) [noun] A type of drama (a film, a television show, or a play) that combines elements of documentary and drama, to some extent showing real events and to some extent using actors performing recreations of documented events. DOCUMENTS (14) [noun] An original or official paper used as the basis, proof, or support of anything else, including any writing, book, or other instrument conveying information pertinent to such proof or support. | [noun] Any material substance on which the information is represented by writing. | [noun] A file that contains text. DOGMATICS (15) [noun] The systematic study of church dogma. DOGMATISM (15) [noun] The manner or character of a dogmatist; arrogance or positiveness in stating opinion. DOGMATIST (13) DOGMATIZE (22) [verb] To treat something as dogma. | [verb] To speak or write dogmatically. DOLOMITES (12) DOLOMITIC (14) DOMESDAYS (16) [noun] The day when God is expected to judge the world; end times. | [noun] Judgement day; the day of the Final Judgment; any day of decisive judgement or final dissolution. DOMESTICS (14) [noun] A house servant; a maid; a household worker. | [noun] A domestic dispute, whether verbal or violent | [noun] Articles manufactured within a country rather than being imported, especially home-made cotton cloths. DOMICILED (15) [verb] To have a domicile in a particular place. | [adjective] Living, residing or (of a company) based (in a particular place). DOMICILES (14) [noun] A home or residence. | [noun] A residence at a particular place accompanied with an intention to remain there for an unlimited time; a residence accepted as a final abode. DOMINANCE (14) [noun] The state of being dominant; of prime importance; supremacy. | [noun] Being in a position of power, authority or ascendancy over others. | [noun] The superior development of or preference for one side of the body or one of a pair of organs; such as being right-handed. DOMINANTS (12) [noun] The fifth major tone of a musical scale (five major steps above the note in question); thus G is the dominant of C, A of D, and so on. | [noun] The triad built on the dominant tone. | [noun] A gene that is dominant. DOMINATED (13) [verb] To govern, rule or control by superior authority or power | [verb] To exert an overwhelming guiding influence over something or someone | [verb] To enjoy a commanding position in some field DOMINATES (12) [verb] To govern, rule or control by superior authority or power | [verb] To exert an overwhelming guiding influence over something or someone | [verb] To enjoy a commanding position in some field DOMINATOR (12) DOMINEERS (12) [verb] To rule over or control arbitrarily or arrogantly; to tyrannize. DOMINICAL (14) [noun] Sunday. | [noun] The Lord's Prayer. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to Jesus Christ as Lord. DOMINICKS (18) DOMINIONS (12) [noun] Power or the use of power; sovereignty over something; stewardship, supremacy. | [noun] Predominance; ascendancy | [noun] (sometimes figurative) A kingdom, nation, or other sphere of influence; governed territory. DOMINIQUE (21) DOMINIUMS (14) DOOMFULLY (18) DOOMSAYER (15) [noun] One who makes dire predictions about the future; one who predicts doom. DOOMSDAYS (16) [noun] The day when God is expected to judge the world; end times. | [noun] Judgement day; the day of the Final Judgment; any day of decisive judgement or final dissolution. DOOMSTERS (12) [noun] Someone who predicts doom | [noun] A judge; a deemster. DOORJAMBS (21) DOPAMINES (14) DORMITORY (15) [noun] A room containing a number of beds (and often some other furniture and/or utilities) for sleeping, often applied to student and backpacker accommodation of this kind. | [noun] A building or part of a building which houses students, soldiers, monks etc. who sleep there and use communal further facilities. | [noun] A dormitory town. DORONICUM (14) [noun] Any of several plants of the genus Doronicum, including some called leopardsbane. DOSIMETER (12) [noun] A device used to measure a dose of ionizing radiation. DOSIMETRY (15) DOWNCOMES (17) DOWNTIMES (15) [noun] The amount of time lost due to forces beyond one's control, as with a computer crash. | [noun] A period of time set aside for rest and relaxation; leisure time. DRAFTSMAN (15) [noun] A person skilled at drawing engineering or architectural plans. | [noun] A book illustrator. | [noun] A piece in the game of draughts (checkers). DRAFTSMEN (15) [noun] A person skilled at drawing engineering or architectural plans. | [noun] A book illustrator. | [noun] A piece in the game of draughts (checkers). DRAGOMANS (13) [noun] An interpreter, especially for the Arabic and Turkish languages. DRAMATICS (14) [noun] (used with a singular or plural verb) the art of acting and stagecraft. | [noun] (used with a singular or plural verb) dramatic behaviour. DRAMATISE (12) [verb] To adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television | [verb] To present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner DRAMATIST (12) [noun] A writer and creator of theatrical plays. DRAMATIZE (21) [verb] To adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television | [verb] To present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner DRAMATURG (13) [noun] Someone who writes or adapts theater plays, a playwright, dramatist, especially one connected with a specific theater or company. | [noun] A literary adviser or editor in a theater, opera, or film company that researches, selects, adapts, edits, and interprets scripts, libretti, texts, and printed programs (or helps others with these tasks), consults with authors, and does public relations work. DRAMEDIES (13) [noun] A genre of film or television that lies somewhere between drama and comedy. | [noun] A film or television programme belonging to this genre. DRAMMOCKS (20) DRAMSHOPS (17) DREAMIEST (12) [adjective] As in a dream; resembling a dream. | [adjective] Sexy; handsome; attractive | [adjective] Having a pleasant or romantic atmosphere. DREAMLAND (13) [noun] An imaginary world experienced while dreaming. | [noun] An imagined world that is ideal yet unrealistic; a fantasy. DREAMLESS (12) DREAMLIKE (16) [adjective] Like something from a dream; having a sense of vagueness, insubstantiality, or incongruousness. DREAMTIME (14) DROMEDARY (16) [noun] The single-humped camel (Camelus dromedarius). | [noun] Any swift riding camel. DRUGMAKER (17) [noun] A pharmaceutical manufacturer DRUIDISMS (13) DRUMBEATS (14) [noun] The beating of a drum. | [noun] The sound of a beating drum. | [noun] (by extension) A repetitive beating sound. DRUMBLING (15) DRUMFIRES (15) DRUMHEADS (16) [noun] The thin circle of material attached to the top of a drum shell for the purpose of striking, sometimes made of skin and in such occurrences sometimes referred to as a skin, or drum-skin, but often synthetic. | [noun] A drumhead cabbage. DRUMLIEST (12) DRUMROLLS (12) [noun] A sound produced by hitting a drum repeatedly and rhythmically over short intervals. DRUMSTICK (18) [noun] A stick used to play drums. | [noun] The second joint of the legbone of a chicken or other fowl, especially as an item of food. | [noun] The moringa or drumstick tree, Moringa oleifera, especially its slender, cylindrical pods. DULCIMERS (14) [noun] A stringed instrument, with strings stretched across a sounding board, usually trapezoidal. It is played on the lap or horizontally on a table. Some have their own legs. These musical instruments are played by plucking on the strings (traditionally with a quill) or by tapping on them (in the case of the hammer dulcimers). DULCIMORE (14) DUMBBELLS (16) [noun] A weight training implement consisting of a short bar with weight counterpoised on each end. | [noun] A stupid person. DUMBCANES (16) DUMBFOUND (18) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. DUMBHEADS (18) [noun] A stupid person. DUMFOUNDS (16) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. DUMMKOPFS (23) DUMPCARTS (16) DUMPINESS (14) DUMPLINGS (15) [noun] A ball of dough that is cooked and may have a filling and/or additional ingredients in the dough. | [noun] (familiar) A term of endearment. | [noun] (mildly) A piece of excrement. DUODECIMO (15) [noun] A size of paper, so called because it is originally made by folding and cutting a single sheet from a printing press into 12 leaves; (5 by 7¾ inches): 6.5 to 7.5 inches high, approximately 4.5 inches wide. | [noun] A sheet or page of that size. | [noun] A book having pages of that size. DUODENUMS (13) [noun] The first part of the small intestine, starting at the lower end of the stomach and extending to the jejunum. DURALUMIN (12) [noun] An alloy of over 90% aluminium, 4% copper and traces of manganese, magnesium, iron and silicon, widely used in the aircraft industry DUROMETER (12) DWARFISMS (18) DYNAMICAL (17) DYNAMISMS (17) DYNAMISTS (15) DYNAMITED (16) [verb] To blow up with dynamite or other high explosive. DYNAMITER (15) DYNAMITES (15) [verb] To blow up with dynamite or other high explosive. DYNAMITIC (17) DYNAMOTOR (15) EALDORMAN (12) EALDORMEN (12) EARMARKED (16) [verb] To mark (as of sheep) by slitting the ear. | [verb] (by extension) To specify or set aside for a particular purpose, to allocate. EARTHWORM (17) [noun] A worm that lives in the ground. | [noun] A worm of the family Lumbricidae, or, more generally, of the suborder Lumbricina. | [noun] A contemptible person; a groveller. EASEMENTS (11) [noun] The legal right to use another person's real property (real estate), generally in order to cross a part of the property or to gain access to something on the property (right of way). | [noun] An element such as a baseboard, handrail, etc., that is curved instead of abruptly changing direction. | [noun] Easing, relief. ECHOGRAMS (17) [noun] Sonogram ECLAMPSIA (15) [noun] A complication of pregnancy characterized by seizures and coma due to hypertension. ECLAMPTIC (17) [noun] One who suffers from eclampsia. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to eclampsia. ECONOMICS (15) [noun] The study of resource allocation, distribution and consumption; of capital and investment; and of management of the factors of production. ECONOMIES (13) [noun] Effective management of a community or system, or especially its resources. | [noun] The study of money, currency and trade, and the efficient use of resources. | [noun] Frugal use of resources. ECONOMISE (13) [verb] To practice being economical (by using things sparingly or in moderation, and by avoiding waste or extravagance). | [verb] To use frugally. ECONOMIST (13) [noun] An expert in economics, especially one who studies economic data and extracts higher-level information or proposes theories. | [noun] One concerned with political economy. | [noun] One who manages a household. ECONOMIZE (22) [verb] To practice being economical (by using things sparingly or in moderation, and by avoiding waste or extravagance). | [verb] To use frugally. ECOSYSTEM (16) [noun] A system formed by an ecological community and its environment that functions as a unit. | [noun] The interconnectedness of organisms (plants, animals, microbes) with each other and their environment. | [noun] A set of interconnected products and services. ECTHYMATA (19) ECTODERMS (14) [noun] Outermost of the three tissue layers in the embryo of a metazoan animal. Through development, it will produce the epidermis (skin) and nervous system of the adult. ECTOMERES (13) ECTOMORPH (18) [noun] Someone with a lean, only slightly muscular body | [noun] : Theoretical body type in which a person has a high metabolism. Such a person can easily maintain a low fat physique, but does not add muscle or body weight easily. ECTOPLASM (15) [noun] A visible substance believed to emanate from the body of a spiritualistic medium during communication with the dead. | [noun] An immaterial or ethereal substance, especially the transparent corporeal presence of a spirit or ghost. | [noun] The outer granule-free layer of cytoplasm. ECTOTHERM (16) [noun] An animal, such as an amphibian, fish, reptile, or arthropod, which has a limited ability to regulate its body temperature and whose body temperature thus depends on the ambient temperature. ECUMENICS (15) ECUMENISM (15) [noun] Ecumenical doctrines and practices, especially as manifested in the ecumenical movement. ECUMENIST (13) EDEMATOUS (12) EFFLUVIUM (20) [noun] A gaseous or vaporous emission, especially a foul-smelling one. | [noun] A condition causing the shedding of hair. EGOMANIAC (14) [noun] A person obsessed with their own (supposed) importance. EGOMANIAS (12) EIGENMODE (13) EJECTMENT (20) [noun] The legal process of ejecting someone from their property or holdings. | [noun] (generally) A casting out, an ejection. ELASTOMER (11) [noun] Any polymer having the elastic properties of rubber ELBOWROOM (16) [noun] Sufficient space to have freedom of movement | [noun] Sufficient latitude to modify something; latitude or margin ELECTRUMS (13) ELEMENTAL (11) [noun] (theosophy) A creature (usually a spirit) that is attuned with, or composed of, one of the classical elements: air, earth, fire and water or variations of them like ice, lightning, etc. They sometimes have unique proper names and sometimes are referred to as Air, Earth, Fire, or Water. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or being an element (as opposed to a compound). | [adjective] Basic, fundamental or elementary. ELIMINATE (11) [verb] To completely remove, get rid of, put an end to. | [verb] To kill (a person or animal). | [verb] To excrete (waste products). ELOPEMENT (13) EMACIATED (14) [verb] To make extremely thin or wasted. | [verb] To become extremely thin or wasted. | [adjective] Thin or haggard, especially from hunger or disease. EMACIATES (13) EMANATING (12) [verb] To come from a source; issue from. | [verb] To send or give out; manifest. EMANATION (11) [noun] The act of flowing or proceeding (of something, quality, or feeling) from a source or origin. | [noun] That which issues, flows, or proceeds from any object as a source; efflux; an effluence. | [noun] The element radon. EMANATIVE (14) EMANATORS (11) EMBALMERS (15) EMBALMING (16) [verb] To treat a corpse with preservatives in order to prevent decomposition. | [verb] To perfume or add fragrance to something. | [noun] The work of an embalmer. EMBANKING (18) [verb] To throw up a bank so as to confine or to defend; to protect by a bank of earth or stone EMBARGOED (15) [verb] To impose an embargo on trading certain goods with another country. | [verb] To impose an embargo on a document. EMBARGOES (14) [noun] An order by the government prohibiting ships from leaving port. | [noun] A ban on trade with another country. | [noun] A temporary ban on making certain information public. EMBARKING (18) [verb] To get on a boat or ship or (outside the USA) an aeroplane. | [verb] To start, begin. | [verb] To cause to go on board a vessel or boat; to put on shipboard. EMBARRASS (13) [verb] To humiliate; to disrupt somebody's composure or comfort with acting publicly or freely; to disconcert; to abash | [verb] To hinder from liberty of movement; to impede; to obstruct. | [verb] To involve in difficulties concerning money matters; to encumber with debt; to beset with urgent claims or demands. EMBARRING (14) EMBASSAGE (14) [noun] An embassy. | [noun] Message; errand. EMBASSIES (13) [noun] The function or duty of an ambassador. | [noun] An organization or group of officials who permanently represent a sovereign state in a second sovereign state or with respect to an international organization such as the United Nations. | [noun] A temporary mission representing a sovereign state. EMBATTLED (14) [verb] To arrange in order of battle; to array for battle | [verb] To prepare or arm for battle; to equip as for battle. | [verb] To be arrayed for battle. EMBATTLES (13) [verb] To arrange in order of battle; to array for battle | [verb] To prepare or arm for battle; to equip as for battle. | [verb] To be arrayed for battle. EMBAYMENT (18) [noun] A bay. (the water) | [noun] The shoreline of a bay, an indentation in a shoreline. (the land, not the water) | [noun] A topographical feature that used to be a bay, like the Mississippi embayment. EMBEDDING (16) [verb] To lay as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed. | [verb] (by extension) To include in surrounding matter. | [verb] To encapsulate within another document or data file. EMBEDMENT (16) EMBELLISH (16) [verb] To make more beautiful and attractive; to decorate. | [verb] To make something sound or look better or more acceptable than it is in reality; to distort, to embroider. EMBEZZLED (32) [verb] To steal or misappropriate money that one has been trusted with, especially to steal money from the organisation for which one works. EMBEZZLER (31) EMBEZZLES (31) [verb] To steal or misappropriate money that one has been trusted with, especially to steal money from the organisation for which one works. EMBITTERS (13) [verb] To cause to be bitter. EMBLAZERS (22) EMBLAZING (23) EMBLAZONS (22) [verb] To adorn with prominent markings. | [verb] To inscribe upon. | [verb] To draw (a coat of arms). EMBLEMING (16) EMBODIERS (14) EMBODYING (18) [verb] To represent in a physical or concrete form; to incarnate or personify. | [verb] To represent in some other form, such as a code of laws. | [verb] To comprise or include as part of a cohesive whole; to be made up of. EMBOLDENS (14) [verb] To render (someone) bolder or more courageous. | [verb] To encourage, inspire, or motivate. | [verb] To format text in boldface. EMBOLISMS (15) [noun] An obstruction or occlusion of an artery by an embolus, that is by a blood clot, air bubble or other matter that has been transported by the blood stream. | [noun] The insertion or intercalation of days into the calendar in order to correct the error arising from the difference between the civil year and the solar year. | [noun] An intercalated prayer for deliverance from evil coming after the Lord's Prayer. EMBORDERS (14) EMBOSKING (18) EMBOSOMED (16) [verb] To draw to or into one's bosom; to treasure. | [verb] To enclose, surround, or protect. EMBOSSERS (13) EMBOSSING (14) [verb] To mark or decorate with a raised design or symbol. | [verb] To raise in relief from a surface, as an ornament, a head on a coin, etc. | [verb] Of a hunted animal: to take shelter in a wood or forest. EMBOWELED (17) [verb] To enclose or bury. | [verb] To remove the bowels; disembowel. EMBOWERED (17) [verb] To enclose something or someone as if in a bower; shelter with foliage. | [verb] To lodge or rest in or as in a bower. | [verb] To form a bower. EMBRACEOR (15) EMBRACERS (15) EMBRACERY (18) EMBRACING (16) [verb] To clasp (someone or each other) in the arms with affection; to take in the arms; to hug. | [verb] To seize (something) eagerly or with alacrity; to accept or take up with cordiality; to welcome. | [verb] To submit to; to undergo. EMBRACIVE (18) EMBRANGLE (14) EMBRASURE (13) [noun] Any of the indentations between the merlons of a battlement. | [noun] The slanting indentation in a wall for a door or window, such that the space is larger on the inside than the outside. | [noun] An embrace. EMBRITTLE (13) [verb] To become or make brittle. EMBROIDER (14) [verb] To stitch a decorative design on fabric with needle and thread of various colours. | [verb] To add imaginary detail to a narrative to make it more interesting or acceptable. EMBROILED (14) [verb] To draw into a situation; to cause to be involved. | [verb] To implicate in confusion; to complicate; to jumble. EMBROWNED (17) EMBRUTING (14) EMBRYOIDS (17) EMBRYONAL (16) EMBRYONIC (18) [adjective] Of or relating to an embryo. | [adjective] Of a project, etc: very new and still evolving; yet to reach its full potential. EMEERATES (11) EMENDABLE (14) EMENDATED (13) EMENDATES (12) EMERGENCE (14) [noun] The act of rising out of a fluid, or coming forth from envelopment or concealment, or of rising into view; sudden uprising or appearance. | [noun] In particular: the arising of emergent structure in complex systems. | [noun] An emergency. EMERGENCY (17) [noun] A situation which poses an immediate risk and which requires urgent attention. | [noun] The department of a hospital that treats emergencies. | [noun] An individual brought in at short notice to replace a member of staff, a player in a sporting team, etc. EMERGENTS (12) [noun] A plant whose root system grows underwater, but whose shoot, leaves and flowers grow up and above the water. EMERSIONS (11) EMIGRANTS (12) [noun] Someone who leaves a country to settle in a new country. | [noun] Any of various pierid butterflies of the genus Catopsilia. Also called a migrant. EMIGRATED (13) [verb] To leave the country in which one lives, especially one's native country, in order to reside elsewhere. EMIGRATES (12) [verb] To leave the country in which one lives, especially one's native country, in order to reside elsewhere. EMINENCES (13) [noun] Someone of high rank, reputation or social status. | [noun] The quality or state of being eminent. | [noun] Prominence in a particular order or accumulation; esteem. EMINENTLY (14) [adverb] In an eminent or prominent manner. | [adverb] To a great degree; notably; highly. EMISSIONS (11) [noun] Something which is emitted or sent out; issue. | [noun] The act of emitting; the act of sending forth or putting into circulation. EMITTANCE (13) EMOLLIENT (11) [noun] Something which softens or lubricates the skin; moisturizer. | [noun] Anything soothing the mind, or that makes something more acceptable. | [adjective] Moisturizing. EMOLUMENT (13) [noun] Payment for an office or employment; compensation for a job, which is usually monetary. EMOTIONAL (11) [adjective] Of or relating to the emotions. | [adjective] Characterised by emotion. | [adjective] Determined by emotion rather than reason. EMOTIVELY (17) EMOTIVITY (17) EMPANADAS (14) [noun] Any of a variety of stuffed pastries found in Spanish and Latin American cuisine. EMPANELED (14) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. EMPATHIES (16) EMPATHISE (16) [verb] To feel empathy for another person EMPATHIZE (25) [verb] To feel empathy for another person EMPENNAGE (14) [noun] The tail assembly of an aircraft. | [noun] The feathers of an arrow or the tail fins of a bomb or rocket used to stabilize the longitudinal axis of the projectile parallel to the flight path. EMPHASISE (16) [verb] To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something). EMPHASIZE (25) [verb] To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something). EMPHYSEMA (21) [noun] An abnormal accumulation of air or other gas in tissues, most commonly the lungs. | [noun] Pulmonary emphysema, a chronic lung disease, one type of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. EMPIRICAL (15) [adjective] Pertaining to or based on experience. | [adjective] Pertaining to, derived from, or testable by observations made using the physical senses or using instruments which extend the senses. | [adjective] (philosophy of science) Verifiable by means of scientific experimentation. EMPLACING (16) EMPLANING (14) [verb] To board an airplane EMPLOYEES (16) [noun] An individual who provides labor to a company or another person. EMPLOYERS (16) [noun] A person, firm or other entity which pays for or hires the services of another person. EMPLOYING (17) [verb] To hire (somebody for work or a job). | [verb] To use (somebody for a job, or something for a task). | [verb] To make busy. EMPOISONS (13) EMPORIUMS (15) [noun] A city or region which is a major trading centre; also, a place within a city for commerce and trading; a marketplace. | [noun] A shop that offers a wide variety of goods for sale; a department store; (with a descriptive word) a shop specializing in particular goods. | [noun] A business set up to enable foreign traders to engage in commerce in a country; a factory (now the more common term). EMPOWERED (17) [verb] To give permission, power, or the legal right to do something. | [verb] To give someone more confidence and/or strength to do something, often by enabling them to increase their control over their own life or situation. | [noun] One who is empowered. EMPRESSES (13) [noun] The female monarch (ruler) of an empire. | [noun] The wife or widow of an emperor or equated ruler. | [noun] The third trump or major arcana card of most tarot decks. EMPTINESS (13) [noun] The state or feeling of being empty. EMPURPLED (16) [verb] To make purple. | [verb] To enrage or anger, referring to making the face purple or red with blood. | [verb] Of writing, to make overly flowery or showy; to embellish unduly. EMPURPLES (15) [verb] To make purple. | [verb] To enrage or anger, referring to making the face purple or red with blood. | [verb] Of writing, to make overly flowery or showy; to embellish unduly. EMPYEMATA (18) EMPYREANS (16) EMULATING (12) [verb] To attempt to equal or be the same as. | [verb] To copy or imitate, especially a person. | [verb] To feel a rivalry with; to be jealous of, to envy. EMULATION (11) [noun] The endeavor or desire to equal or excel someone else in qualities or actions. | [noun] Jealous rivalry; envy; envious contention. | [noun] Running a program or other software designed for a different system, by simulating parts of the other system. EMULATIVE (14) EMULATORS (11) EMULOUSLY (14) EMULSIONS (11) [noun] A stable suspension of small droplets of one liquid in another with which it is immiscible. | [noun] A colloid in which both phases are liquid. | [noun] The coating of photosensitive silver halide grains in a thin gelatine layer on a photographic film. EMULSOIDS (12) ENACTMENT (13) [noun] The act of enacting, or the state of being enacted. | [noun] A piece of legislation that has been properly authorized by a legislative body. ENAMELERS (11) ENAMELING (12) [verb] To coat or decorate with enamel. | [verb] To variegate with colours, as if with enamel. | [verb] To form a glossy surface like enamel upon. ENAMELIST (11) ENAMELLED (12) [verb] To coat or decorate with enamel. | [verb] To variegate with colours, as if with enamel. | [verb] To form a glossy surface like enamel upon. ENAMORING (12) [verb] (mostly in the passive, followed by "of" or "with") To cause to be in love. | [verb] (mostly in the passive) To captivate. ENAMOURED (12) [verb] (mostly in the passive, followed by "of" or "with") To cause to be in love. | [verb] (mostly in the passive) To captivate. | [adjective] In love, amorous. ENCAMPING (16) [verb] To establish a camp or temporary shelter. | [verb] To form into a camp. ENCOMIAST (13) [noun] A person who delivers an encomium or eulogy. ENCOMIUMS (15) [noun] Warm praise, especially a formal expression of such praise; a tribute. | [noun] A general category of oratory. | [noun] A method within rhetorical pedagogy. ENCOMPASS (15) [verb] To form a circle around; to encircle. | [verb] To include within its scope; to circumscribe or go round so as to surround; to enclose; to contain. | [verb] To include completely; to describe fully or comprehensively. ENCRIMSON (13) ENCUMBERS (15) [verb] To load down something with a burden | [verb] To restrict or block something with a hindrance or impediment | [verb] To burden with a legal claim or other obligation ENDAMAGED (14) ENDAMAGES (13) ENDAMEBAE (14) ENDAMEBAS (14) ENDAMOEBA (14) ENDEMISMS (14) ENDODERMS (13) [noun] One of the three tissue layers in the embryo of a metazoan animal. Through development, it will produce the digestive system of the adult. ENDOLYMPH (20) [noun] The fluid inside the labyrinth of the inner ear. ENDOMIXIS (19) ENDOMORPH (17) [noun] A mineral, especially a crystal, enclosed within another | [noun] A person of the endomorphic physical type, characterised by big bones, round face, large trunk and thighs and a naturally high degree of body fat, especially around the midsection. | [noun] A person having a theoretical body type with slow metabolism in which weight is gained easily, but fat levels are hard to reduce. Endomorphic bodybuilders tend to be the most massive. ENDOPLASM (14) [noun] The inner portion of the cytoplasm of a cell ENDOSOMES (12) ENDOSPERM (14) [noun] Tissue surrounding the embryo of flowering plant seeds, that provides nutrition to the developing embryo; usually triploid ENDOSTEUM (12) ENDOTHERM (15) [noun] An animal that maintains a constant body temperature ENDOWMENT (15) [noun] Something with which a person or thing is endowed. | [noun] Property or funds invested for the support and benefit of a person or not-for-profit institution. | [noun] Endowment assurance or pure endowment. ENFLAMING (15) ENFRAMING (15) ENGRAMMES (14) ENIGMATIC (14) [adjective] Pertaining to an enigma. | [adjective] Mysterious. | [adjective] Defying description. ENJOYMENT (21) [noun] The condition of enjoying anything. | [noun] An enjoyable state of mind. | [noun] An activity that gives pleasure. ENMESHING (15) [verb] To mesh; to tangle or interweave in such a manner as not to be easily separated, particularly in a mesh or net like manner. | [verb] To involve in such complications as to render extrication difficult | [verb] To involve in difficulties. ENSAMPLES (13) ENSEMBLES (13) [noun] A group of separate things that contribute to a coordinated whole. | [noun] A coordinated costume or outfit; a suit. | [noun] (collective) A group of musicians, dancers, actors, etc who perform together; e.g. the chorus of a ballet company. ENTAMEBAE (13) [noun] Any of many parasitic amoebas, of the genus Entamoeba, that cause dysentery etc. ENTAMEBAS (13) [noun] Any of many parasitic amoebas, of the genus Entamoeba, that cause dysentery etc. ENTAMOEBA (13) [noun] Any of many parasitic amoebas, of the genus Entamoeba, that cause dysentery etc. ENTHYMEME (19) [noun] A by and large statement, a maxim, a less-than-100% argument. | [noun] A syllogism with a required but unstated assumption. ENTODERMS (12) [noun] One of the three tissue layers in the embryo of a metazoan animal. Through development, it will produce the digestive system of the adult. ENTOMBING (14) [verb] To deposit in a tomb. | [verb] To confine in restrictive surroundings. ENTREMETS (11) [noun] A side dish (often of vegetables), or a small dish of savories served between courses. | [noun] A dessert. ENUMERATE (11) [verb] To specify each member of a sequence individually in incrementing order. | [verb] To determine the amount of. ENVENOMED (15) [verb] To poison, to put or inject venom onto or into. | [verb] To acerbate. ENWOMBING (17) ENZYMATIC (25) EPENDYMAS (17) [noun] The thin membrane of glial cells lining the ventricles of the brain and the central canal of the spinal cord. EPHEMERAE (16) EPHEMERAL (16) [noun] Something which lasts for a short period of time. | [adjective] Lasting for a short period of time. | [adjective] Existing for only one day, as with some flowers, insects, and diseases. EPHEMERAS (16) EPHEMERID (17) EPHEMERIS (16) [noun] (singular or plural) A journal or diary. | [noun] A table giving the apparent position of celestial bodies throughout the year; normally given as right ascension and declination. | [noun] Software that calculates the apparent position of celestial bodies. EPICEDIUM (16) [noun] Dirge, lament, elegy EPICENISM (15) EPICURISM (15) EPIDEMICS (16) [noun] A widespread disease that affects many individuals in a population. | [noun] An occurrence of a disease or disorder in a population at a frequency higher than that expected in a given time period. EPIDERMAL (14) EPIDERMIC (16) EPIDERMIS (14) [noun] The outer, protective layer of the skin of vertebrates, covering the dermis | [noun] The similar outer layer of cells in invertebrates and plants EPIGONISM (14) EPIMERASE (13) EPIMYSIUM (18) [noun] A layer of connective tissue which surrounds individual muscles EPIPHRAGM (19) EPISTEMIC (15) [adjective] Of or relating to knowledge or cognition; cognitive. | [adjective] Of or relating to the theory of knowledge (epistemology). EPISTOMES (13) EPITOMISE (13) [verb] To make an epitome of; to shorten; to condense. | [verb] To be an epitome of. EPITOMIZE (22) [verb] To make an epitome of; to shorten; to condense. | [verb] To be an epitome of. EPIZOISMS (22) EPONYMIES (16) EPONYMOUS (16) [adjective] Of, relating to, or being the person or entity after which something or someone is named. EQUIMOLAR (20) [adjective] Containing the same number of moles (of two or more compounds) EQUIPMENT (22) [noun] The act of equipping, or the state of being equipped, as for a voyage or expedition. | [noun] Whatever is used in equipping something or someone, for example things needed for an expedition or voyage. EQUISETUM (20) [noun] The horsetail (plant of genus Equisetum) EREMITISM (13) ERETHISMS (14) ERGOMETER (12) [noun] A dynamometer used to measure the work done by muscles | [noun] A rowing machine or ergocycle ERGONOMIC (14) [adjective] Of or relating to the science of ergonomics. | [adjective] Designed for comfort or to minimize fatigue. ERGOTISMS (12) EROTICISM (13) [noun] The state of being erotic, or of being sexually aroused | [noun] Sexual excitement, especially if abnormally persistent ERYTHEMAS (17) ERYTHRISM (17) [noun] Abnormal red colouration. ESCAPISMS (15) ESTAMINET (11) [noun] A small café or bar. | [noun] A restaurant where smoking is allowed. ESTEEMING (12) [verb] To set a high value on; to regard with respect or reverence. | [verb] To regard something as valuable; to prize. | [verb] To look upon something in a particular way. ESTIMABLE (13) [adjective] Worthy of esteem; admirable. | [adjective] Valuable. | [adjective] Capable of being estimated; estimatable. ESTIMABLY (16) ESTIMATED (12) [verb] To calculate roughly, often from imperfect data. | [verb] To judge and form an opinion of the value of, from imperfect data. ESTIMATES (11) [noun] A rough calculation or assessment of the value, size, or cost of something. | [noun] (construction and business) A document (or verbal notification) specifying how much a job is likely to cost. | [noun] An upper limitation on some positive quantity. ESTIMATOR (11) [noun] A person who estimates, especially one who estimates costs | [noun] A function of a random sample of a population used to estimate some parameter of the whole population ETHMOIDAL (15) ETYMOLOGY (18) [noun] The study of the historical development of languages, particularly as manifested in individual words. | [noun] The origin and historical development of a word; the derivation. | [noun] An account of the origin and historical development of a word as presented in a dictionary or the like. EUDAEMONS (12) EULOGIUMS (12) [noun] A eulogy. EUNUCHISM (16) EUPHEMISE (16) [verb] To utter one or more euphemisms; to speak euphemistically. | [verb] To describe in euphemistic terms. EUPHEMISM (18) [noun] The use of a word or phrase to replace another with one that is considered less offensive, blunt or vulgar than the word or phrase which it replaces. | [noun] A word or phrase that is used to replace another in this way. EUPHEMIST (16) EUPHEMIZE (25) [verb] To utter one or more euphemisms; to speak euphemistically. | [verb] To describe in euphemistic terms. EUPHONIUM (16) [noun] A valved brass instrument, a sax horn, the tenor of the tuba family of instruments, having the appearance very similar to that of a tuba. It is similar to and often used instead of a "Baritone" horn. (A true Baritone has a cylindrical tubing, while the Euphonium tubing is conical, though they both cover the same range of tones. This relationship is also between the Trumpet [cylindrical] and Cornet [conical] respectively.) EUPHUISMS (16) EURHYTHMY (23) [noun] The harmony of features and proportion in architecture. | [noun] Graceful body movements to the rhythm of spoken words and music. | [noun] Healthy, normal beating of the pulse. EUROPIUMS (13) EURYTHMIC (19) [adjective] Harmonious | [adjective] Of, or relating to, eurythmics | [adjective] Of, or relating to, eurythmy EXAMINANT (18) [noun] One who examines; an examiner. | [noun] One who is to be examined. EXAMINEES (18) [noun] The one who is examined. EXAMINERS (18) [noun] A person who investigates someone or something. | [noun] A person who sets an examination. | [noun] A person who marks an examination. EXAMINING (19) [verb] To observe or inspect carefully or critically | [verb] To check the health or condition of something or someone | [verb] To determine the aptitude, skills or qualifications of someone by subjecting them to an examination EXAMPLING (21) [verb] To be illustrated or exemplified (by). EXANIMATE (18) [verb] To deprive of animation or of life. | [adjective] Lifeless, not or no longer living, dead. | [adjective] Spiritless, dispirited, disheartened, not lively. EXANTHEMA (21) [noun] A widespread rash usually occurring in children. EXANTHEMS (21) EXCISEMAN (20) [noun] An officer employed to collect excise duty (excise tax), and to enforce excise laws. EXCISEMEN (20) [noun] An officer employed to collect excise duty (excise tax), and to enforce excise laws. EXCLAIMED (21) [verb] To cry out suddenly, from some strong emotion. | [verb] To say suddenly and with strong emotion. EXCLAIMER (20) EXCREMENT (20) [noun] (now specifically) Human and animal solid waste excreted from the bowels; feces. | [noun] Any waste matter excreted from the human or animal body, or discharged by bodily organs. | [noun] Something which grows out of the body; hair, nails etc. EXEMPLARS (20) [noun] Something fit to be imitated; an ideal, a model. | [noun] A role model. | [noun] Something typical or representative of a class; an example. EXEMPLARY (23) [noun] An example, or typical instance. | [noun] A copy of a book or a piece of writing. | [adjective] Deserving honour, respect and admiration. EXEMPLIFY (26) [verb] To show or illustrate by example. | [verb] To be an instance of or serve as an example. | [verb] To make an attested copy or transcript of (a document) under seal. EXEMPTING (21) [verb] To grant (someone) freedom or immunity from. EXEMPTION (20) [noun] An act of exempting. | [noun] The state of being exempt; immunity. | [noun] A deduction from the normal amount of taxes. EXODERMIS (19) [noun] Hypodermis EXOENZYME (30) [noun] Any enzyme, generated by a cell, that functions outside of that cell. EXOGAMIES (19) EXOGAMOUS (19) EXORCISMS (20) [noun] The ritual act of driving out evil spirits from persons, places or things who are possessed by them. EXORDIUMS (19) [noun] A beginning. | [noun] The introduction to an essay or discourse. EXOSMOSES (18) EXOTICISM (20) [noun] The state of being exotic. | [noun] Something exotic. EXPERTISM (20) EXTEMPORE (20) [noun] Something improvised. | [adjective] Carried out with no preparation; impromptu. | [adverb] Without preparation; extemporaneously. EXTERMINE (18) EXTOLMENT (18) EXTREMELY (21) [adverb] (degree) To an extreme degree. EXTREMEST (18) EXTREMISM (20) [noun] Extreme ideas or actions. EXTREMIST (18) [noun] A person who holds extreme views, especially one who advocates such views; a radical or fanatic. | [adjective] Holding extreme views, especially on a political subject. | [adjective] Of or relating to extremism. EXTREMITY (21) [noun] The most extreme or furthest point of something. | [noun] An extreme measure. | [noun] A hand or foot. FACSIMILE (16) [noun] A copy or reproduction. | [noun] A fax, a machine for making and sending copies of printed material and images via radio or telephone network. | [noun] The image sent by the machine itself. FACTOTUMS (16) [noun] A person having many diverse activities or responsibilities. | [noun] A general servant. | [noun] An individual employed to do all sorts of duties. FAIRYISMS (17) FALCIFORM (19) [adjective] Sickle-shaped. FAMILIARS (14) [noun] An attendant spirit, often in animal or demon form. | [noun] A member of one's family or household. | [noun] A member of a pope's or bishop's household. FAMILISMS (16) FAMISHING (18) [verb] To starve (to death); to kill or destroy with hunger. | [verb] To exhaust the strength or endurance of, by hunger; to distress with hunger. | [verb] To kill, or to cause to suffer extremity, by deprivation or denial of anything necessary. FARADISMS (15) FARMHANDS (18) [noun] A person who works on a farm. | [noun] A player in the minor leagues. FARMHOUSE (17) [noun] A farmer's residence. FARMLANDS (15) [noun] Land that is suitable for farming and agricultural production. FARMSTEAD (15) [noun] The main building of a farm. | [noun] A farm, including its buildings. FARMWIVES (20) FARMWORKS (21) FARMYARDS (18) [noun] The area around a farm, excluding the fields. FATALISMS (14) FATHOMING (18) [verb] To encircle with outstretched arms, especially to take a measurement; to embrace. | [verb] To measure the depth of, take a sounding of. | [verb] To get to the bottom of; to manage to comprehend; understand (a problem etc.). FELLOWMAN (17) FELLOWMEN (17) FEMININES (14) [noun] That which is feminine. | [noun] (possibly obsolete) A woman. | [noun] (grammar) The feminine gender. FEMINISED (15) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. | [adjective] Made feminine; made to have more feminine behaviour, traits or physiology. FEMINISES (14) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. FEMINISMS (16) FEMINISTS (14) [noun] An advocate of feminism; a person who believes in bringing about the equality of the sexes (of women and men) in all aspects of public and private life | [noun] A member of a feminist political movement FEMINIZED (24) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. | [adjective] Made feminine; made to have more feminine behaviour, traits or physiology. FEMINIZES (23) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. FEOFFMENT (20) [noun] The grant of a feud or fee. | [noun] A gift or conveyance in fee of land or other corporeal hereditaments, accompanied by actual delivery of possession. | [noun] The instrument or deed by which corporeal hereditaments are conveyed. FERMENTED (15) [verb] To react, using fermentation; especially to produce alcohol by aging or by allowing yeast to act on sugars; to brew. | [verb] To stir up, agitate, cause unrest or excitement in. | [adjective] Produced by fermentation. FERMENTER (14) [noun] Any organism, such as a yeast, that causes fermentation. | [noun] A fermentor; a vessel in which fermentation takes place. FERMENTOR (14) [noun] The vessel in which fermentation takes place FETICHISM (19) FETISHISM (17) [noun] The belief that natural objects have supernatural powers, or that something created by people has power over people. | [noun] A form of paraphilia where the object of attraction is an inanimate object or a part of a person's body. FEUDALISM (15) [noun] A social system based on personal ownership of resources and personal fealty between a suzerain (lord) and a vassal (subject). Defining characteristics are direct ownership of resources, personal loyalty, and a hierarchical social structure reinforced by religion. FIBROMATA (16) [noun] A benign tumour of fibrous connective tissue. FILAMENTS (14) [noun] A fine thread or wire. | [noun] Such a wire, as can be heated until it glows, in an incandescent light bulb or a thermionic valve. | [noun] A massive, thread-like structure, such as those gaseous ones which extend outward from the surface of the sun, or such as those (much larger) ones which form the boundaries between large voids in the universe. FILMCARDS (17) FILMGOERS (15) [noun] A moviegoer. FILMINESS (14) FILMLANDS (15) FILMMAKER (20) [noun] A producer or director of films/movies. FILMSTRIP (16) [noun] A length of film containing individual photographs or diagrams intended to be shown in sequence as instruction or as a visual aid. | [noun] A file containing a sequence of images or video frames. FIMBRIATE (16) [verb] To hem; to fringe. | [adjective] Fringed, e.g. where the ends of a petal are split into two or more divisions. FINALISMS (14) FINNMARKS (18) FIREBOMBS (18) [noun] A weapon that causes fire, an incendiary weapon. | [verb] To attack with a firebomb. FIREDAMPS (17) FIREMANIC (16) FIREROOMS (14) FIRESTORM (14) [noun] A fire whose intensity is greatly increased by inrushing winds. | [noun] An intense or violent altercation. FIREWORMS (17) FIRMAMENT (16) [noun] (usually uncountable) The vault of the heavens, where the clouds, sun, moon, and stars can be seen; the heavens, the sky. | [noun] The field or sphere of an activity or interest. | [noun] In the geocentric Ptolemaic system, the eighth celestial sphere which carried the fixed stars; (by extension) any celestial sphere. FIRMWARES (17) FISHERMAN (17) [noun] A fisher, a person engaged in fishing: | [noun] A vessel (boat or ship) used for fishing. FISHERMEN (17) [noun] A fisher, a person engaged in fishing: | [noun] A vessel (boat or ship) used for fishing. FISHMEALS (17) FISHWORMS (20) FLABELLUM (16) FLAGELLUM (15) [noun] In protists, a long, whiplike membrane-enclosed organelle used for locomotion or feeding. | [noun] In bacteria, a long, whiplike proteinaceous appendage, used for locomotion. | [noun] A whip FLAMBEAUS (16) [noun] A burning torch, especially one carried in procession. FLAMBEAUX (23) [noun] A burning torch, especially one carried in procession. FLAMBEING (17) [verb] To cook with a showy technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. FLAMENCOS (16) [noun] A genre of folk music and dance native to Andalusia, in Spain. | [noun] A song or dance performed in such a style. FLAMEOUTS (14) [noun] The act of flaming out or burning out; extinguishing. | [noun] The act of quitting or failing, especially due to overwork or in a dramatic manner. | [noun] The sudden extinguishing of the flame of a burner (due to obstruction of fuel) FLAMINGLY (18) FLAMINGOS (15) [noun] A wading bird of the family Phoenicopteridae. | [noun] A deep pink color tinged with orange, like that of a flamingo. FLAMMABLE (18) [noun] Any flammable substance. | [adjective] Capable of burning, especially a liquid. | [adjective] Easily set on fire. FLASHLAMP (19) [noun] A kind of lamp that uses an electric current to start powder burning and produce a brief sudden burst of bright light. It was formerly used in flash photography. FLATMATES (14) [noun] A person with whom one shares a flat. | [noun] A person with whom one shares any rental dwelling, not necessarily a flat. FLATWORMS (17) [noun] Any of very many parasitic or free-living worms, of the phylum Platyhelminthes, having a flattened body with no skeleton or body cavity. FLEMISHED (18) FLEMISHES (17) FLESHMENT (17) FLEXITIME (21) [noun] An arrangement that allows employees to set their own working hours within agreed limits; normally must include certain periods (core time) when they must be at work. FLEXTIMES (21) FLIMFLAMS (19) [noun] Nonsense. | [noun] Deception. FLIMSIEST (14) [adjective] Likely to bend or break under pressure. | [adjective] Weak; ill-founded. FLOWMETER (17) [noun] Any of various devices used to measure the flow of a fluid through a pipe, etc. FLUIDRAMS (15) [noun] The dram (unit of volume). FLUMMOXED (24) [verb] To confuse; to fluster; to flabbergast. | [adjective] Confused, perplexed or flustered. FLUMMOXES (23) [verb] To confuse; to fluster; to flabbergast. FOAMINESS (14) FOLKMOOTS (18) FOLKMOTES (18) FOMENTERS (14) FOMENTING (15) [verb] To incite or cause troublesome acts; to encourage; to instigate. | [verb] To apply a poultice to; to bathe with a cloth or sponge. FOOTMARKS (18) [noun] Footprint (an impression made by a foot) FORAMINAL (14) FORCEMEAT (16) [noun] Meat chopped fine and highly seasoned, either served up alone, or used as a stuffing. FOREARMED (15) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To arm in preparation. | [adjective] (in combination) Having some specific type of forearm. FOREBOOMS (16) FOREDOOMS (15) [verb] To predestine to a doom. FORELIMBS (16) [noun] The anterior limb (or equivalent appendage) of an animal FOREMASTS (14) [noun] The mast nearest the bow, on a ship with more than one mast. FOREMILKS (18) FORENAMED (15) FORENAMES (14) [noun] A name that precedes the surname. FORETIMES (14) FOREWOMAN (17) [noun] A female leader of a work crew (a female foreperson or female foreman). | [noun] A female foreman of a jury. FOREWOMEN (17) [noun] A female leader of a work crew (a female foreperson or female foreman). | [noun] A female foreman of a jury. FORMALINS (14) FORMALISE (14) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALISM (16) [noun] Strict adherence to a given form of conduct, practice etc. | [noun] One of several alternative computational paradigms for a given theory. | [noun] An approach to interpretation and/or evaluation focused on the (usually linguistic) structure of a literary work rather than on the contexts of its origin or reception. FORMALIST (14) [noun] An overly formal person, especially one who adheres to current forms; a stickler | [noun] An advocate of formalism | [adjective] Of or pertaining to formalism; formalistic FORMALITY (17) [noun] The state of being formal. | [noun] Something said or done as a matter of form. | [noun] A customary ritual without new or unique meaning. FORMALIZE (23) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMAMIDE (17) [noun] The amide of formic acid HCO-NH2 or any N-substituted derivative; they are used in the synthesis of pharmaceuticals FORMATION (14) [noun] Something possessing structure or form. | [noun] The act of assembling a group or structure. | [noun] The process during which something comes into being and gains its characteristics. FORMATIVE (17) [noun] (grammar) A language unit that has morphological function. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the formation and subsequent growth of something. | [adjective] Capable of forming something. FORMATTED (15) [verb] To create or edit the layout of a document. | [verb] Change a document so it will fit onto a different type of page. | [verb] To prepare a mass storage medium for initial use, erasing any existing data in the process. FORMATTER (14) FORMICARY (19) [noun] An ant colony, a pile of earth built by ants in which they nest. FORMULAIC (16) [adjective] Closely following a formula or predictable pattern; imitative, not original. FORMULARY (17) [noun] A list of formulas; a collection of set forms to be followed, especially in religious belief. | [noun] A pharmacopoeia or list of available drugs, particularly prescription drugs | [noun] A list of drugs, created by health insurers, hospitals, or prescription drug plans, that defines how costs for any drug are shared between patient and health care provider, typically broken down by tiers such as preferred generics with lowest copay, or preferred brand with higher copay, or non-preferred brand and not covered tiers with the highest cost to the patient. FORMULATE (14) [verb] To reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression. FORMULIZE (23) FORMWORKS (21) FOURSOMES (14) [noun] A group of four, a quartet or a game (such as golf) played by four players, especially by two teams of two. | [noun] A sex act between four people. FRAGMENTS (15) [noun] A part broken off; a small, detached portion; an imperfect part, either physically or not | [noun] (grammar) A sentence not containing a subject or a predicate. | [noun] An incomplete portion of code. FRAMBESIA (16) [noun] Yaws, the disease FRAMBOISE (16) [noun] Raspberry liqueur. FRAMEABLE (16) FRAMEWORK (21) [noun] A support structure comprising joined parts or conglomerated particles and intervening open spaces of similar or larger size. | [noun] The arrangement of support beams that represent a building's general shape and size. | [noun] The larger branches of a tree that determine its shape. FRANCIUMS (16) FRENULUMS (14) [noun] A small fold of tissue that prevents an organ in the body from moving too far. FRUMPIEST (16) [adjective] Dowdy, unkempt, or unfashionable. | [adjective] Bad-tempered. FULMINANT (14) [noun] A thunderbolt. | [noun] An explosive. | [adjective] That fulminates. FULMINATE (14) [noun] Any salt or ester of fulminic acid, mostly explosive. | [verb] To make a verbal attack. | [verb] To issue as a denunciation. FULMINING (15) FULSOMELY (17) FUMARASES (14) FUMARATES (14) [noun] Any salt or ester of fumaric acid; they are produced in the body as part of the urea cycle. FUMAROLES (14) [noun] An opening in the ground that emits steam and gases due to volcanic activity. FUMAROLIC (16) FUMIGANTS (15) [noun] Any substance used, in the gaseous state, to fumigate or disinfect. FUMIGATED (16) [verb] To disinfect, purify, or rid of vermin with the fumes of certain chemicals. FUMIGATES (15) [verb] To disinfect, purify, or rid of vermin with the fumes of certain chemicals. FUMIGATOR (15) FUNDAMENT (15) [noun] Foundation. | [noun] The bottom; the buttocks or anus. | [noun] The underlying basis or principle for a theoretical or mathematical system. FUNGIFORM (18) [adjective] Having the shape of a mushroom. FURMETIES (14) FURMITIES (14) FUTURISMS (14) GALBANUMS (14) GALLAMINE (12) GALLICISM (14) [noun] A loanword borrowed from French. GALUMPHED (18) [verb] To move heavily and clumsily, or with a sense of prancing and triumph. GALVANISM (15) [noun] The chemical generation of electricity. | [noun] The therapeutic use of electricity. GAMBADOES (15) [noun] (usually plural) Either of a pair of protective leather gaiters on a saddle. | [noun] (in the plural) gamashes; spatterdashes | [noun] A gambade (leaping movement). GAMBESONS (14) GAMBOLING (15) [verb] To move about playfully; to frolic. | [verb] To do a forward roll. | [noun] The act of one who gambols. GAMBOLLED (15) [verb] To move about playfully; to frolic. | [verb] To do a forward roll. GAMBUSIAS (14) [noun] Any of several live-bearing freshwater fish, of the genus Gambusia, that feed on the larva of mosquitos and are used to control them. GAMECOCKS (20) [noun] A fighting cock: a rooster used in cockfighting. GAMESTERS (12) [noun] A person who plays games. | [noun] One who plays video games. | [noun] A gambler. GAMMADION (15) GAMMONERS (14) GAMMONING (15) [verb] To cure bacon by salting. | [verb] To beat by a gammon (without the opponent bearing off a stone). | [verb] To lash with ropes (on a ship). GAMODEMES (15) GANYMEDES (16) GAPEWORMS (17) [noun] A parasitic nematode worm, Syngamus trachea, that infects the tracheas of some birds and causes the disease gapes. GARAGEMAN (13) GARAGEMEN (13) GARMENTED (13) GASOMETER (12) [noun] An apparatus used to store or measure gas or the flow of gas, particularly in a laboratory setting. | [noun] A large tank or reservoir for storing gas; a gasholder. GAZUMPERS (23) GAZUMPING (24) [verb] To swindle; to extort. | [verb] To raise the selling price of something (especially property) after previously agreeing to a lower one. | [verb] To buy a property by bidding more than the price of an existing, accepted offer. GELSEMIUM (14) [noun] Any of several flowering plants, of the genus Gelsemium, many of which are poisonous. GEMINALLY (15) GEMINATED (13) [verb] To arrange in pairs. | [verb] To occur in pairs. | [adjective] Of a consonant, pronounced longer and considered as being doubled; geminate. GEMINATES (12) [verb] To arrange in pairs. | [verb] To occur in pairs. GEMMATING (15) GEMMATION (14) [noun] Asexual reproduction via gemmae | [noun] Arrangement of buds on the stalk GEMMOLOGY (18) [noun] The branch of mineralogy that studies mineral gems and petrified gemstones GEMSBUCKS (20) GEMSTONES (12) [noun] A gem, usually made of minerals. GEMUTLICH (17) [adjective] Comfortable, cosy, cozy, pleasant. | [adjective] Friendly, genial, cheerful, easy-going. GENDARMES (13) [noun] A member of the gendarmerie, a military body charged with police duties. | [noun] Policeman. | [noun] A rock pinnacle on a mountain ridge. GENTLEMAN (12) [noun] A man of gentle but not noble birth, particularly a man of means (originally ownership of property) who does not work for a living but has no official status in a peerage; an armiferous man ranking below a knight. | [noun] Any well-bred, well-mannered, or charming man. | [noun] An effeminate or oversophisticated man. GENTLEMEN (12) [noun] A man of gentle but not noble birth, particularly a man of means (originally ownership of property) who does not work for a living but has no official status in a peerage; an armiferous man ranking below a knight. | [noun] Any well-bred, well-mannered, or charming man. | [noun] An effeminate or oversophisticated man. GEOMANCER (14) GEOMANTIC (14) [adjective] Of or relating to geomancy GEOMETERS (12) [noun] A mathematician who specializes in geometry. | [noun] Any species of geometrid moth (family Geometridae). GEOMETRIC (14) [adjective] Of or relating to geometry. | [adjective] Increasing or decreasing in a geometric progression. | [adjective] Using simple shapes such as circles, triangles and lines in a decorative object. GEOMETRID (13) [noun] Any of the family Geometridae of moths. | [noun] A larva of such moth, which when walking alternate legs and prolegs, giving the appearance of measuring. GERANIUMS (12) [noun] Any flowering plant of the genus Geranium, the cranesbills, of family Geraniaceae. | [noun] The common name for flowering plants of the genus Pelargonium. | [noun] A bright red color tinted with orange, like that of a scarlet geranium. GERMANDER (13) [noun] A Mediterranean herb, Teucrium chamaedrys, historically grown for medicinal use but now mostly as an ornamental miniature hedge in herb gardens. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Teucrium, some with small, pink, white, or pale purple flowers and a small upper lip. GERMANELY (15) GERMANIUM (14) [noun] A nonmetallic chemical element (symbol Ge) with an atomic number of 32: a lustrous, hard-brittle, grayish-white metalloid in the carbon group. | [noun] An atom of this element. GERMANIZE (21) GERMICIDE (15) [noun] An agent that kills pathogenic organisms; a disinfectant. GERMINATE (12) [verb] Of a seed, to begin to grow, to sprout roots and leaves. | [verb] To cause to grow; to produce. GERMPROOF (17) GIANTISMS (12) GIGANTISM (13) [noun] The quality or state of being gigantic; being of abnormally large size. | [noun] A condition where there is over-production of growth hormone by the pituitary gland in a child before the bone growth plates close, resulting in excessive long bone growth, accompanied by muscular weakness and sexual impotence. GIMBALING (15) GIMBALLED (15) GIMCRACKS (20) [noun] Something showy but worthless; a gimmick or bauble. | [verb] To put together quickly and without much care; to bodge. | [verb] To embellish with gimcracks. GIMLETING (13) GIMMICKED (21) [verb] To rig or set up with a trick or device. | [adjective] Furnished with gimmicks GIMMICKRY (23) [noun] Gimmicks collectively. | [noun] The use of gimmicks. GLADSOMER (13) GLAMORISE (12) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMORIZE (21) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMOROUS (12) [adjective] Having glamour; stylish. | [adjective] Being associated with one or more glamours. GLAMOURED (13) GLAUCOMAS (14) GLEAMIEST (12) GLIMMERED (15) [verb] To shine with a faint, unsteady light. GLIMPSERS (14) GLIMPSING (15) [verb] To see or view briefly or incompletely. | [verb] To appear by glimpses. GLOAMINGS (13) GLOBALISM (14) [noun] An ideology based on the belief that people, goods and information ought to be able to cross national borders unfettered. | [noun] A socio-economic system dedicated to free trade and free access to markets. GLOMERULE (12) GLOMERULI (12) [noun] A small intertwined group of capillaries within nephrons of the kidney that filter the blood to make urine | [noun] A structure in the olfactory bulb central to olfactory sensory transduction, composed of receptor neuron axons and mitral neuron dendrites and organized by odor type. | [noun] Any of several other similar intertwined masses of things GLOOMIEST (12) [adjective] Not very illuminated; dim because of darkness, especially when appearing depressing or frightening. | [adjective] Suffering from gloom; melancholy; dejected. GLOOMINGS (13) GLOSSEMES (12) GLOWWORMS (18) [noun] The larva or wingless grub-like female of a beetle from the families Phengodidae or Lampyridae that gives out a green light from its abdomen. | [noun] A carnivorous gnat larva in the keroplatid genus Arachnocampa that spins threads to capture insects attracted by its glow. GLUCINUMS (14) GLUMPIEST (14) GLUTAMATE (12) [noun] Any salt or ester of glutamic acid. GLUTAMINE (12) [noun] A nonessential amino acid C5H10N2O3 found in most animal and plant proteins. GNOMELIKE (16) GOALMOUTH (15) [noun] The area in front of the goal. | [noun] The space between the goalposts through which the ball, puck, etc has to pass in order to score GODDAMMED (17) GODDAMNED (15) [adjective] Damned by God. | [adjective] Used as an intensifier expressing anger. GODMOTHER (16) [noun] A woman present at the christening of a baby who promises to help raise the child in a Christian manner; a female godparent who sponsors the baptism of a child. | [verb] To act as godmother to. GOLDSMITH (16) [noun] A person who makes, repairs or sells things out of gold, especially jewelry. | [noun] A banker (because the goldsmiths of London used to receive money on deposit, being equipped to keep it safely). GOMBROONS (14) GOSSAMERS (12) GOSSAMERY (15) GOURAMIES (12) GOURMANDS (13) [noun] A person given to excess in the consumption of food and drink; a greedy or ravenous eater. | [noun] A person who appreciates good food. GRAMARIES (12) GRAMARYES (15) GRAMPUSES (14) [noun] The killer whale, Orcinus orca. | [noun] Risso's dolphin, Grampus griseus, with a blunt nose. | [noun] The hellbender salamander, Cryptobranchus alleganiensis. GRANDAMES (13) [noun] Grandmother | [noun] Old lady, elderly woman GRANDDAMS (14) [noun] Grandmother | [noun] Old lady, elderly woman GRANTSMAN (12) GRANTSMEN (12) GRANULOMA (12) [noun] An inflammatory nodule found in many diseases, consisting of histiocytes (macrophages) attempting to wall off substances they perceive as foreign but are unable to eliminate, such as certain infectious organisms as well as other materials such as suture fragments | [noun] (medicine, less specific) any small nodule GRAPHEMES (17) [noun] A fundamental unit of a writing system, corresponding to (for example) letters in the English alphabet or jamo in Korean Hangeul. | [noun] In alphabetic writing, the shortest group of letters composing a phoneme. GRAPHEMIC (19) GRAVAMENS (15) GRAVAMINA (15) GRAYMAILS (15) GREENMAIL (12) [noun] Profiting from an attempted hostile takeover by forcing the target company to buy back the hostile bidder's shares at an inflated price. | [verb] To profit from an attempted hostile takeover by forcing the target company to buy back the hostile bidder's shares at an inflated price. GREENROOM (12) [noun] In a television studio, theatre or concert hall, the room where performers await their entrance. | [noun] The inside of a tube (i.e. of a wave making a tube). GREWSOMER (15) GRILLROOM (12) GRIMACERS (14) GRIMACING (15) [verb] To make grimaces; to distort one's face; to make faces. | [noun] The act of making a grimace. GRIMALKIN (16) [noun] A cat, especially an elderly female. | [noun] A bad-tempered old woman; a crone. GRIMINESS (12) GRISTMILL (12) [noun] A mill that grinds grain, especially grain brought by a farmer to be exchanged for the flour (less a percentage) GROMWELLS (15) [noun] Lithospermum arvense, a plant of the genus Lithospermum anciently used, because of its stony pericarp, in the cure of kidney stones. GROOMSMAN (14) [noun] A man who serves as one of a number of attendants to a bridegroom at a wedding, one of whom is the best man. GROOMSMEN (14) [noun] A man who serves as one of a number of attendants to a bridegroom at a wedding, one of whom is the best man. GRUBWORMS (17) GRUESOMER (12) GRUMBLERS (14) GRUMBLING (15) [verb] To make a low, growling or rumbling noise, like a hungry stomach or certain animals. | [verb] To complain; to murmur or mutter with discontent; to make ill-natured complaints in a low voice and a surly manner. | [verb] To utter in a grumbling fashion. GRUMPHIES (17) GRUMPIEST (14) [adjective] Dissatisfied and irritable. GUACAMOLE (14) [noun] An avocado-based greenish dip with onions, tomato, and spices. Common to Mexican cuisine, it is often served with tortilla chips. GUAIACUMS (14) [noun] Any of a number of species of tree of the genus Guaiacum, native to the West Indies and parts of the Americas. | [noun] The wood or resin of this tree. GUAIOCUMS (14) GUARDROOM (13) [noun] A room used by soldiers when on guard. | [noun] A jail cell in which military prisoners are kept. GUARDSMAN (13) [noun] A person, especially a soldier, who is on guard. | [noun] A member of the National Guard. | [noun] A member of a Guards regiment. GUARDSMEN (13) [noun] A person, especially a soldier, who is on guard. | [noun] A member of the National Guard. | [noun] A member of a Guards regiment. GUILDSMAN (13) [noun] A male member of a guild. GUILDSMEN (13) [noun] A male member of a guild. GUILLEMET (12) [noun] Either of the punctuation marks « or », used in several languages to indicate passages of speech. Similar to typical quotation marks used in the English language such as “ and ”. GUILLEMOT (12) [noun] Any seabird belonging to the genera Uria and Cepphus of the auk family Alcidae. They have black and white bodies and are good at swimming and diving. GUMBOTILS (14) GUMMATOUS (14) GUMMINESS (14) GUMPTIONS (14) GUNMETALS (12) GUNSMITHS (15) [noun] A person skilled in the repair and servicing of firearms. GYMKHANAS (22) [noun] A competition where riders and horses display a range of skills and aptitudes. | [noun] A place of public resort for athletic games, etc. | [noun] A meeting for such sports. GYMNASIUM (17) [noun] A large room or building for indoor sports. | [noun] A type of secondary school in some European countries which typically prepares students for university. | [noun] A public place or building where Ancient Greek youths took exercise, with running and wrestling grounds, baths, and halls for conversation. GYMNASTIC (17) [noun] A gymnast. | [adjective] Pertaining to gymnastics. | [adjective] Pertaining to the gymnasia (ancient Greek schools). GYNAECEUM (17) [noun] The women's quarters in a household, especially of ancient Greece or Rome. | [noun] Establishment in Rome where female workers made clothing and furniture for royalty. GYNAECIUM (17) GYNOECIUM (17) [noun] The pistils of a flower considered as a group GYPSYDOMS (21) GYPSYISMS (20) HACKAMORE (20) [noun] A kind of bridle with no bit. HAEMATICS (16) HAEMATINS (14) HAEMATITE (14) [noun] An iron ore, mainly peroxide of iron, Fe2O3. HAILSTORM (14) [noun] A storm characterized by lots of large hail. HAIRWORMS (17) HALFTIMES (17) [noun] The interval between the two halves of a sports match. | [noun] The time taken for a physical quantity to halve the difference between its present value and its final value. | [noun] The halftime show, the primary "light" entertainment of a game, after the second quarter when players can physically recover, coaches can give players a pep talk, bets can be doubled, etc. HALIDOMES (15) HALLMARKS (18) [noun] A distinguishing characteristic. | [noun] An official marking made by a trusted party, usually an assay office, on items made of precious metals. HAMADRYAD (19) [noun] A wood-nymph who was physically a part of her tree; she would die if her tree were felled. | [noun] The king cobra. | [noun] A kind of baboon, Papio hamadryas, venerated by the ancient Egyptians. HAMARTIAS (14) [noun] The tragic flaw of the protagonist in a literary tragedy. | [noun] Sin. HAMBONING (17) HAMBURGER (17) [noun] A hot sandwich consisting of a patty of cooked ground beef or a meat substitute, in a sliced bun, sometimes also containing salad vegetables, condiments, or both. | [noun] The patty used in such a sandwich. | [noun] Ground beef, especially that intended to be made into hamburgers. HAMMERERS (16) HAMMERING (17) [verb] To strike repeatedly with a hammer, some other implement, the fist, etc. | [verb] To form or forge with a hammer; to shape by beating. | [verb] To emphasize a point repeatedly. HAMMERTOE (16) [noun] A medical condition where a toe is permanently bent down. | [noun] A toe suffering from such condition. HAMMINESS (16) HAMPERERS (16) HAMPERING (17) [verb] To put into a hamper. | [verb] To put a hamper or fetter on; to shackle | [verb] To impede in motion or progress. HAMSTRING (15) [noun] One of the great tendons situated in each side of the ham, or space back of the knee, and connected with the muscles of the back of the thigh. | [noun] The biceps femoris, semimembranosus, and semitendinosus muscles. | [verb] To lame or disable by cutting the tendons of the ham or knee; to hough. HAMSTRUNG (15) [verb] To lame or disable by cutting the tendons of the ham or knee; to hough. | [verb] To cripple; to incapacitate; to disable. | [adjective] Restricted as if by being crippled with a hamstring. HANDLOOMS (15) [noun] A simple machine used for weaving by hand. HANDMAIDS (16) [noun] A maid that waits at hand; a female servant or attendant. HANDSOMER (15) [adjective] (of people, things, etc) Having a good appearance; good-looking. | [adjective] Good, appealing, appropriate. | [adjective] Generous or noble in character. HARDIMENT (15) HARMATTAN (14) [noun] A dry and dusty wind which blows from the Sahara over the Atlantic coast of West Africa in December, January and February, being a hot wind in some areas and a cold wind in others. | [noun] A season which spans the period in which the harmattan wind blows. HARMFULLY (20) HARMONICA (16) [noun] A musical wind instrument with a series of holes for the player to blow into, each hole producing a different note | [noun] A musical instrument, consisting of a series of hemispherical glasses which, by touching the edges with the dampened finger, give forth the tones. | [noun] A toy instrument of strips of glass or metal hung on two tapes, and struck with hammers. HARMONICS (16) [noun] A component frequency of the signal of a wave that is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency. | [noun] The place where, on a bowed string instrument, a note in the harmonic series of a particular string can be played without the fundamental present. | [noun] One of a class of functions that enter into the development of the potential of a nearly spherical mass due to its attraction. HARMONIES (14) [noun] Agreement or accord. | [noun] A pleasing combination of elements, or arrangement of sounds. | [noun] The academic study of chords. HARMONISE (14) [verb] To be in harmonious agreement. | [verb] To play or sing in harmony. | [verb] To provide parts to. HARMONIUM (16) [noun] A small keyboard instrument that consists of a series of reed pipes, which sound when one of the keys is pressed to open a valve that allows air to pass through. HARMONIZE (23) [verb] To be in harmonious agreement. | [verb] To play or sing in harmony. | [verb] To provide parts to. HARRUMPHS (19) [noun] An expression of disdain, disbelief, protest, or dismissal; a huff, grunt, or snort. | [verb] To dislike, protest, or dismiss. HARUMPHED (20) HATCHMENT (19) [noun] An escutcheon of a deceased person, placed within a black lozenge and hung on a wall HATMAKERS (18) HAULMIEST (14) HAWKMOTHS (24) [noun] Any of several moths, of the family Sphingidae, that hover over flowers when sucking nectar through a long proboscis. HAYMAKERS (21) [noun] A person or machine which harvests or prepares tall grass for use as animal fodder. | [noun] (fisticuffs) A particularly powerful punch, especially one which knocks down an opponent, thrown like a scythe chop for cutting hay, as agricultural haymakers used to have strong arms. | [noun] (by extension) Any decisive blow, shock, or forceful action. HEADLAMPS (17) [noun] An individual headlight, particularly of a motor vehicle. | [noun] A flashlight worn on the head. HEADROOMS (15) HEARTSOME (14) HEARTWORM (17) [noun] A parasitic organism that afflicts dogs, the roundworm Dirofilaria immitis. | [noun] The condition caused by this organism. HEBDOMADS (18) HECATOMBS (18) [noun] A great feast and public sacrifice to the gods, originally of a hundred oxen. | [noun] (by extension) Any great sacrifice; a great number of people, animals or things, especially as sacrificed or destroyed; a large amount. HECTOGRAM (17) [noun] An SI unit of mass equal to 102 grams. Symbol: hg HEDONISMS (15) HEGEMONIC (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to hegemony. HEGUMENES (15) HEIRLOOMS (14) [noun] A valued possession that has been passed down through the generations. | [noun] An old crop variety that has been passed down through generations of farmers by seed saving and cultivation, in contrast to modern cultivars used in large-scale agriculture. HELMETING (15) HELMINTHS (17) [noun] A parasitic worm; a fluke, tapeworm, or nematode. HELOTISMS (14) HELPMATES (16) [noun] A person who supplies help or companionship. | [noun] A wife or spouse. | [noun] A recreational problem in chess in which both sides cooperate to achieve a specific goal. HELPMEETS (16) [noun] A helpful partner, particularly a spouse. HEMATEINS (14) HEMATINES (14) HEMATINIC (16) HEMATITES (14) [noun] An iron ore, mainly peroxide of iron, Fe2O3. HEMATITIC (16) HEMATOMAS (16) [noun] A swelling of blood, usually clotted, which forms as a result of broken blood vessels. HEMATURIA (14) [noun] The presence of blood in the urine HEMELYTRA (17) HEMICYCLE (21) [noun] Semicircle | [noun] A semicircular structure HEMIOLIAS (14) HEMIPTERS (16) HEMISTICH (19) [noun] An approximate half-line of verse, separated from another by a caesura, often for dramatic effect | [noun] An unfinished line of verse HEMOCOELS (16) [noun] The cavity, between the organs of arthropods and molluscs, through which the blood etc. circulates. HEMOCYTES (19) [noun] Any blood cell, especially that of an invertebrate HEMOLYMPH (24) [noun] A circulating fluid in the bodies of some invertebrates that is the equivalent of blood HEMOLYSES (17) HEMOLYSIN (17) HEMOLYSIS (17) [noun] The destruction of red blood cells, and subsequent release of hemoglobin, at the normal end of the cell's life. HEMOLYTIC (19) [adjective] Producing hemolysis; destroying red blood cells. HEMOLYZED (27) HEMOLYZES (26) HEMOSTATS (14) [noun] An instrument that clamps blood vessels to diminish or halt blood flow. HEMPSEEDS (17) HEMPWEEDS (20) HEMSTITCH (19) [noun] An embroidery stitch in which parallel threads are drawn together in groups | [verb] To sew or embroider using this stitch HEPATOMAS (16) [noun] A cancer originating in the liver. HERBARIUM (16) [noun] A collection of dried plants or parts of plants. | [noun] A building or institution where such a collection is kept. HERMETISM (16) HERMETIST (14) HERMITAGE (15) [noun] A house or dwelling where a hermit lives. | [noun] A place of seclusion. | [noun] A period of seclusion. HERMITISM (16) HEROINISM (14) HETERONYM (17) [noun] A word having the same spelling as another, but a different pronunciation and meaning. | [noun] A fictitious character created by an author for the purpose of writing in a different style. HEXAGRAMS (22) [noun] A hollow six-pointed star formed by overlapping two equilateral triangles. | [noun] Any of the 64 sets of solid and broken lines, formed by pairs of trigrams, used for divination in the I Ching. | [noun] A large silver coin minted during the Byzantine Empire. HEXAMETER (21) [noun] A line in a poem having six metrical feet | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has six feet HEXAMINES (21) HIMATIONS (14) [noun] A rectangular cloak of linen or wool, worn in Ancient Greece, usually over a chiton. HIPPIEDOM (19) [noun] The state or quality of being a hippie. HIRSUTISM (14) [noun] Excessive and increased hair growth in locations where terminal hair is normally minimal or absent. HISPANISM (16) HISTAMINE (14) [noun] An amine, C5H9N3, formed by decarboxylation of histidine, that causes dilatation of capillaries, contraction of smooth muscle, and stimulation of gastric acid secretion; it is released during allergic reactions. HISTAMINS (14) HISTOGRAM (15) [noun] A graphical display of numerical data in the form of upright bars, with the area of each bar representing frequency. | [verb] To represent (data) as a histogram. HOGMANAYS (18) HOGMENAYS (18) HOLOGRAMS (15) [noun] A three-dimensional image of an object created by holography. HOMEBOUND (17) [adjective] Confined to one's home, unable to leave it for some reason. | [adjective] Heading homeward, homeward bound. HOMEBREDS (17) HOMEBUILT (16) HOMEGROWN (18) [adjective] Grown at home. | [adjective] Created or constructed in an informal or amateur manner; done without formal assistance, as from a business, organization, or professional. | [adjective] Raised or brought up in one's own country. HOMELANDS (15) [noun] The country that one regards as home. | [noun] One's country of residence. | [noun] One's country of birth. HOMELIEST (14) [adjective] Lacking in beauty or elegance, plain in appearance, physically unattractive. | [adjective] Cozy, befitting a home. | [adjective] Characteristic of or belonging to home; domestic. HOMEMAKER (20) [noun] A person who maintains the administration and upkeep of his or her residence, especially one who is not employed outside the home; one who runs the household. HOMEOPATH (19) [noun] A person who practices homeopathy. HOMEPORTS (16) [noun] The port where a vessel is based (not necessarily the one where it is registered). | [verb] To assign a vessel a port to act as its home. HOMEROOMS (16) [noun] A classroom where school pupils of the same age gather for registration, or for other purposes that are unrelated to class content. | [noun] The collection of pupils who gather in such a room. HOMESITES (14) [noun] The plot of land on which a house is or can be built HOMESPUNS (16) HOMESTAYS (17) [noun] A system whereby students, visiting a foreign country to study, board with a local family at an affordable price. | [noun] A house used primarily as the residence of the owner but with the business of accommodating paying guests. HOMESTEAD (15) [noun] A house together with surrounding land and buildings, especially on a farm; the property comprising these. | [noun] The place that is one's home. | [noun] A cluster of several houses occupied by an extended family. HOMETOWNS (17) [noun] An individual’s place of birth, childhood home, or place of main residence. | [noun] Designating a decision or judgement that is biased, or perceived to be biased, in favour of local preference. HOMEWARDS (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to leading toward home. | [adverb] Towards home HOMEWORKS (21) HOMEYNESS (17) HOMICIDAL (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to homicide HOMICIDES (17) [noun] The killing of one person by another, whether premeditated or unintentional. | [noun] A person who kills another. | [noun] (police jargon) A victim of homicide; a person who has been unlawfully killed by someone else. HOMILETIC (16) [adjective] Of or relating to a homily, or to homiletics. | [adjective] Preachy. HOMILISTS (14) HOMINIANS (14) HOMINIZED (24) HOMINIZES (23) HOMINOIDS (15) [noun] Any primate (including humans and apes) belonging to the superfamily Hominoidea HOMOGRAFT (18) [noun] An allograft HOMOGRAPH (20) [noun] A word that is spelled the same as another word, usually having a different etymology. | [noun] A text character or string that looks identical to another when rendered. HOMOLOGUE (15) [noun] Something homologous; a homologous organ or part, chemical compound or a chromosome. | [noun] A word shared by two languages or dialects. | [noun] One of a group of similar DNA sequences that share a common ancestry. HOMOLYSES (17) HOMOLYSIS (17) HOMOLYTIC (19) HOMONYMIC (21) HOMOPHILE (19) [noun] A homosexual, a gay man or lesbian, one who has a sexual or romantic preference for persons of the same gender; used to emphasize love over sex. | [adjective] Homosexual, gay or lesbian, having a sexual or romantic preference for persons of one's own gender; used to emphasize love over sex. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the “homophile movement”, a gay activist movement. HOMOPHOBE (21) [noun] A person who is prejudiced against homosexuals and homosexuality. | [noun] A person who fears sameness. | [noun] A person who fears men. HOMOPHONE (19) [noun] A word which is pronounced the same as another word but differs in spelling or meaning or origin. | [noun] A letter or group of letters which are pronounced the same as another letter or group of letters. HOMOPHONY (22) HOMOPLASY (19) HOMOPOLAR (16) [adjective] Having symmetrically equal distribution of polarity HOMOSEXES (21) HOMOSPORY (19) HOMUNCULI (16) [noun] A miniature man, once imagined by spermists to be present in human sperm. | [noun] The nerve map of the human body that exists on the parietal lobe of the human brain. HONEYCOMB (21) [noun] A structure of hexagonal cells made by bees primarily of wax, to hold their larvae and for storing the honey to feed the larvae and to feed themselves during winter. | [noun] (by extension) Any structure resembling a honeycomb. | [noun] Voids left in concrete resulting from failure of the mortar to effectively fill the spaces among coarse aggregate particles. HONEYMOON (17) [noun] The period of time immediately following a marriage. | [noun] A trip taken by a newly married couple during this period. | [noun] A period of goodwill at the beginning of a new term or relationship (e.g. towards a newly elected politician or in respect of a new business arrangement). HOODOOISM (15) HOOKWORMS (21) [noun] Any of various parasitic bloodsucking roundworms which cause disease, especially the species Ancylostoma duodenale and Necator americanus, having hooked mouthparts and entering their hosts by boring through the skin. HORNBEAMS (16) [noun] A tree of the genus Carpinus, having a smooth gray bark and a ridged trunk, the wood being white and very hard, common along the banks of streams in the United States. | [noun] A hop hornbeam (Ostrya virginiana). | [noun] The wood of these trees. HORNWORMS (17) [noun] A caterpillar of a hawk moth that has a hornlike tail process. | [noun] Some moths in the genus Manduca of the hawk moth family Sphingidae. HORSEMINT (14) [noun] A coarse American plant of the mint family (Monarda punctata). | [noun] The wild mint (Mentha sylvestris, now Mentha longifolia). | [noun] An aromatic plant of the mint family, Agastache urticifolia. HOSPITIUM (16) HOTELDOMS (15) HOUSEMAID (15) [noun] A female domestic worker attached to the non-servant quarter part of the house, as opposed to a scullery maid. | [noun] A housewife. | [verb] To be a housemaid. HOUSEMATE (14) [noun] Someone living in the same house. HOUSEROOM (14) [noun] Room or place in a house. | [noun] A room dedicated for the use of a particular house at a boarding school. HUMANISED (15) [verb] To make human; to give or cause to have the fundamental properties of a human. | [verb] To make sympathetic or relatable. | [verb] To become humane or civilized. HUMANISES (14) [verb] To make human; to give or cause to have the fundamental properties of a human. | [verb] To make sympathetic or relatable. | [verb] To become humane or civilized. HUMANISMS (16) HUMANISTS (14) [noun] A scholar of one of the subjects in the humanities. | [noun] A person who believes in the philosophy of humanism. | [noun] In the Renaissance, a scholar of Greek and Roman classics. HUMANIZED (24) [verb] To make human; to give or cause to have the fundamental properties of a human. | [verb] To make sympathetic or relatable. | [verb] To become humane or civilized. HUMANIZER (23) HUMANIZES (23) [verb] To make human; to give or cause to have the fundamental properties of a human. | [verb] To make sympathetic or relatable. | [verb] To become humane or civilized. HUMANKIND (19) [noun] The human race; mankind, humanity; Homo sapiens. HUMANLIKE (18) HUMANNESS (14) HUMANOIDS (15) [noun] A being having the appearance or characteristics of a human. HUMBUGGED (19) [verb] To play a trick on someone, to cheat, to swindle, to deceive. | [verb] (African American Vernacular) To fight; to act tough. | [verb] To waste time talking. HUMDINGER (16) [noun] Something that is particularly outstanding, unusual, or exceptional. HUMECTANT (16) [noun] Any substance that promotes the retention of water, especially one used to keep a food product moist. HUMILIATE (14) [verb] To injure the dignity and self-respect of. | [verb] To make humble; to lower in condition or status. HUMMOCKED (23) HUMONGOUS (15) [adjective] Of an extremely large size. HUMORISTS (14) [noun] Someone who believes that health and temperament are determined by bodily humours; a humoralist. | [noun] Someone subject to whims or fancies. | [noun] A humorous or witty person, especially someone skilled in humorous writing or performance. HUMORLESS (14) [adjective] Lacking humor or levity; serious; not funny, amusing, amused, or lighthearted. HUMOURING (15) [verb] To pacify by indulging. HUMPBACKS (24) [noun] A humped back (deformity in humans caused by abnormal curvature of the upper spine). | [noun] A person with a humpback; a person who suffers from kyphosis. | [noun] A humpback whale. HUMUNGOUS (15) [adjective] Of an extremely large size. HYBRIDISM (20) HYBRIDOMA (20) HYDROMELS (18) HYDRONIUM (18) HYLOZOISM (26) [noun] A philosophical doctrine espousing that all or some material things possess life, or that all life is inseparable from matter. HYMENEALS (17) HYMENIUMS (19) HYMNARIES (17) [noun] A book of hymns. HYMNBOOKS (23) [noun] A book containing a collection of hymns. HYMNODIES (18) HYMNOLOGY (21) [noun] The study of hymns; hymnody. HYPEREMIA (19) [noun] Excess of blood in a body part. HYPEREMIC (21) HYPERGAMY (23) [noun] Act or practice of seeking a spouse of higher socioeconomic status or caste status than oneself. HYPHEMIAS (22) HYPNOTISM (19) [noun] The art of inducing hypnosis. HYPODERMS (20) HYPOMANIA (19) [noun] A mild form of mania, especially the phase of several mood disorders characterized by euphoria or hyperactivity. HYPOMANIC (21) HYPOMORPH (24) HYPOSTOME (19) HYPOXEMIA (26) [noun] An abnormal deficiency in the concentration of oxygen in the blood, be it the partial pressure of oxygen (mm Hg), the content of oxygen (ml oxygen per dl of blood) or the per cent saturation of the blood's hemoglobin, singly or in combination. HYPOXEMIC (28) ICHNEUMON (16) [noun] The Egyptian mongoose, Herpestes ichneumon, found in Africa and southern Europe. | [noun] The ichneumon wasp. IDEALISMS (12) IDEOGRAMS (13) [noun] A picture or symbol which represents the idea of something without indicating the sequence of sounds used to pronounce it. Examples include digits, traffic signs, and graphic symbols such as @. IDEOMOTOR (12) IDIOMATIC (14) [noun] A manner of speaking, a mode of expression peculiar to a language, person, or group of people. | [noun] A language or language variety; specifically, a restricted dialect used in a given historical period, context etc. | [noun] An established expression whose meaning is not deducible from the literal meanings of its component words, often peculiar to a given language. IDIOTISMS (12) IGNORAMUS (12) [noun] A totally ignorant person—unknowledgeable, uneducated, or uninformed; a fool. | [noun] A grand jury's ruling on an indictment when the evidence is determined to be insufficient to send the case to trial. ILLINIUMS (11) ILLUMINED (12) [verb] To illuminate. | [verb] To light up. | [adjective] Illuminated ILLUMINES (11) [verb] To illuminate. | [verb] To light up. ILLUVIUMS (14) ILMENITES (11) [noun] A weakly magnetic dark gray mineral found in metamorphic and igneous rocks; it is a mixed oxide of iron and titanium, FeTiO3 IMAGERIES (12) IMAGINARY (15) [noun] Imagination; fancy. | [noun] An imaginary quantity. | [noun] The set of values, institutions, laws, and symbols common to a particular social group and the corresponding society through which people imagine their social whole. IMAGINERS (12) IMAGINING (13) [verb] To form a mental image of something; to envision or create something in one's mind. | [verb] To believe in something created by one's own mind. | [verb] To assume IMAGISTIC (14) IMBALANCE (15) [noun] The property of not being in balance. IMBALMERS (15) IMBALMING (16) IMBARKING (18) IMBECILES (15) [noun] A person with limited mental capacity who can perform tasks and think only like a young child, in medical circles meaning a person who lacks the capacity to develop beyond the mental age of a normal five to seven-year-old child. | [noun] A fool, an idiot. IMBECILIC (17) IMBEDDING (16) [verb] To lay as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed. | [verb] (by extension) To include in surrounding matter. | [verb] To encapsulate within another document or data file. IMBITTERS (13) IMBLAZING (23) IMBODYING (18) IMBOLDENS (14) IMBOSOMED (16) IMBOWERED (17) IMBRICATE (15) [verb] To overlap in a regular pattern. | [verb] To undergo or cause to undergo imbrication. | [adjective] Having regular overlapping edges; intertwined. IMBROGLIO (14) [noun] A complicated situation; an entanglement. IMBROWNED (17) IMBRUTING (14) IMIDAZOLE (21) [noun] A heterocyclic organic compound containing two nitrogen atoms separated by a carbon atom in a five-membered ring, called 1,3-diazole in IUPAC nomenclature. | [noun] A group of compounds containing that structure. IMITATING (12) [verb] To follow as a model or a pattern; to make a copy, counterpart or semblance of. | [noun] An instance of imitation. IMITATION (11) [noun] The act of imitating. | [noun] (attributive) A copy or simulation; something that is not the real thing. IMITATIVE (14) [adjective] Imitating; copying; not original. | [adjective] Modelled after another thing. IMITATORS (11) [noun] One who imitates or apes another. IMMANENCE (15) IMMANENCY (18) IMMATURES (13) IMMEDIACY (19) [noun] The quality of being immediate, of happening right away. | [noun] Lack of mediation; directness. | [noun] Immediate awareness or apprehension. IMMEDIATE (14) [adjective] Happening right away, instantly, with no delay. | [adjective] Very close; direct or adjacent. | [adjective] Manifestly true; requiring no argument. IMMENSELY (16) [adverb] Greatly; hugely; extremely; vastly; to a great extent. IMMENSEST (13) IMMENSITY (16) [noun] The state or characteristic of being immense. | [noun] An immense object. IMMERGING (15) IMMERSING (14) [verb] To put under the surface of a liquid; to dunk. | [verb] To involve or engage deeply. | [verb] To map into an immersion. IMMERSION (13) [noun] The act of immersing or the condition of being immersed. | [noun] An immersion heater. | [noun] A smooth map whose differential is everywhere injective, related to the mathematical concept of an embedding. IMMESHING (17) IMMIGRANT (14) [noun] A non-native person who comes to a country from another country in order to permanently settle there. | [noun] A plant or animal that establishes itself in an area where it previously did not exist. | [adjective] Of or relating to immigrants or the act of immigrating. IMMIGRATE (14) [verb] To move into a foreign country to stay permanently. IMMINENCE (15) [noun] The state or condition of being about to happen; imminent quality. IMMINENCY (18) IMMINGLED (15) IMMINGLES (14) IMMIXTURE (20) [noun] The act, or the result of immixing IMMODESTY (17) [noun] The state of being immodest; a lack of modesty. IMMOLATED (14) [verb] To kill as a sacrifice. | [verb] To destroy, especially by fire. IMMOLATES (13) [verb] To kill as a sacrifice. | [verb] To destroy, especially by fire. IMMOLATOR (13) IMMORALLY (16) IMMORTALS (13) [noun] One who is not susceptible to death. | [noun] A member of an elite regiment of the Persian army. | [noun] A member of the Académie française. IMMOVABLE (18) [noun] That which can not be moved; something which is immovable | [adjective] Incapable of being physically moved; fixed | [adjective] Steadfast in purpose or intention; unalterable, unyielding IMMOVABLY (21) IMMUNISED (14) [verb] To make someone or something immune to something. | [verb] To inoculate someone, and thus produce immunity from a disease. IMMUNISES (13) [verb] To make someone or something immune to something. | [verb] To inoculate someone, and thus produce immunity from a disease. IMMUNIZED (23) [verb] To make someone or something immune to something. | [verb] To inoculate someone, and thus produce immunity from a disease. IMMUNIZES (22) [verb] To make someone or something immune to something. | [verb] To inoculate someone, and thus produce immunity from a disease. IMMUNOGEN (14) IMMUTABLE (15) [noun] Something that cannot be changed | [adjective] Unable to be changed without exception. | [adjective] (of a variable) not able to be altered in the memory after its value is set initially. IMMUTABLY (18) IMPACTERS (15) IMPACTING (16) [verb] To collide or strike, the act of impinging. | [verb] To compress; to compact; to press into something or pack together. | [verb] To influence; to affect; to have an impact on. IMPACTION (15) [noun] Compression; the packing together of loose matter | [noun] Something packed together tightly; a mass of densely-packed matter | [noun] A solid, immobile bulk of stool IMPACTIVE (18) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, possessing, or caused by impact. IMPACTORS (15) [noun] Any of several machines or devices in which a part impacts on another, or on a material. | [noun] An object which impacts another. IMPAINTED (14) IMPAIRERS (13) IMPAIRING (14) [verb] To weaken; to affect negatively; to have a diminishing effect on. | [verb] To grow worse; to deteriorate. | [noun] Impairment IMPANELED (14) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. IMPARKING (18) [verb] To enclose or confine in, or as if in, a park. | [verb] To enclose or fence in (land) to make a park. IMPARTERS (13) IMPARTIAL (13) [adjective] Treating all parties, rivals, or disputants equally; not partial; not biased IMPARTING (14) [verb] To give or bestow (e.g. a quality or property). | [verb] To give a part or to share. | [verb] To make known; to show (by speech, writing etc.). IMPASSION (13) [verb] Make passionate, instill passion in IMPASSIVE (16) [adjective] Having, or revealing, no emotion. | [adjective] Still or motionless. IMPASTING (14) IMPASTOED (14) IMPATIENS (13) [noun] Any of various ornamental plants of the genus Impatiens. IMPATIENT (13) [adjective] Restless and intolerant of delays. | [adjective] Anxious and eager, especially to begin something. | [adjective] Not to be borne; unendurable. IMPAWNING (17) IMPEACHED (19) [verb] To hinder, impede, or prevent. | [verb] To bring a legal proceeding against a public official. | [verb] To charge with impropriety; to discredit; to call into question. IMPEACHES (18) [verb] To hinder, impede, or prevent. | [verb] To bring a legal proceeding against a public official. | [verb] To charge with impropriety; to discredit; to call into question. IMPEARLED (14) IMPEDANCE (16) [noun] The act of impeding; that which impedes; a hindrance. | [noun] A measure of the opposition to the flow of an alternating current in a circuit; the aggregation of its resistance, and inductive and capacitive reactances; the ratio of voltage to current treated as complex quantities. | [noun] A quantity analogous to electrical impedance in some other energy domain IMPELLERS (13) [noun] Something which or someone who impels, usually a part of a pump. IMPELLING (14) [verb] To urge a person; to press on; to incite to action or motion via intrinsic motivation. | [verb] To drive forward; to propel an object, to provide an impetus for motion or action. IMPELLORS (13) [noun] Something which or someone who impels, usually a part of a pump. IMPENDENT (14) IMPENDING (15) [verb] To hang or be suspended over (something); to overhang. | [verb] Figuratively to hang over (someone) as a threat or danger. | [verb] To threaten to happen; to be about to happen, to be imminent. IMPERATOR (13) [noun] An emperor. IMPERFECT (18) [noun] Something having a minor flaw | [noun] (grammar) a tense of verbs used in describing a past action that is incomplete or continuous | [verb] To make imperfect IMPERIALS (13) [noun] A bottle of wine (usually Bordeaux) containing 6 liters of fluid, eight times the volume of a standard bottle. | [noun] A writing paper size measuring 30 × 22 inches, or printing paper measuring 32 × 22 inches. | [noun] A card game differing from piquet in some minor details, and in having a trump. IMPERILED (14) [verb] To put into peril; to place in danger. | [verb] To risk or hazard. | [adjective] (biological conservation) at risk of becoming extinct IMPERIOUS (13) [adjective] Domineering, arrogant, or overbearing. | [adjective] Urgent. | [adjective] Imperial or regal. IMPERIUMS (15) IMPETIGOS (14) IMPETRATE (13) [verb] To obtain by asking; to procure upon request. | [verb] To ask for; to demand. | [adjective] Obtained by entreaty IMPETUOUS (13) [adjective] Making arbitrary decisions, especially in an impulsive and forceful manner. | [adjective] Characterized by sudden violence or vehemence. IMPETUSES (13) [noun] Something that impels; a stimulating factor. | [noun] A force, either internal or external, that impels; an impulse. | [noun] The force or energy associated with a moving body; a stimulus. IMPIETIES (13) [noun] The state of being impious. | [noun] An impious act. | [noun] The lack of respect for a god or something sacred. IMPINGERS (14) IMPINGING (15) [verb] To make a physical impact on. | [verb] To interfere with. | [verb] To have an effect upon, especially a negative one. IMPIOUSLY (16) IMPLANTED (14) [verb] To fix firmly or set securely or deeply. | [verb] To insert (something) surgically into the body. | [verb] Of an embryo, to become attached to and embedded in the womb. IMPLANTER (13) IMPLEADED (15) [verb] To sue in court, raise an action against a defendant IMPLEDGED (16) IMPLEDGES (15) IMPLEMENT (15) [noun] A tool or instrument for working with. | [verb] To bring about; to put into practice | [verb] To carry out; to do IMPLICATE (15) [noun] The thing implied. | [verb] (with “in”) To show to be connected or involved in an unfavorable or criminal way. | [verb] To imply, to have as a necessary consequence or accompaniment. IMPLODING (15) [verb] To collapse or burst inward violently. | [verb] To compress (data) with a particular algorithm. IMPLORERS (13) IMPLORING (14) [verb] To beg urgently or earnestly. | [verb] To call upon or pray to earnestly; to entreat. | [noun] The act of one who implores; imploration. IMPLOSION (13) [noun] The inrush of air in forming a suction stop. | [noun] The action of imploding. | [noun] The act or action of bringing to or as if to a center. IMPLOSIVE (16) [noun] An implosive sound; an implodent. | [adjective] Formed by implosion. IMPOLITIC (15) [adjective] Not in accordance with good policy. IMPORTANT (13) [adjective] Having relevant and crucial value. | [adjective] Pompous; self-important. IMPORTERS (13) [noun] One who, or that which, imports: especially a person or company importing goods into a country. IMPORTING (14) [verb] To bring (something) in from a foreign country, especially for sale or trade. | [verb] To load a file into a software application from another version or system. | [verb] To be important; to be significant; to be of consequence. IMPORTUNE (13) [verb] To bother, trouble, irritate. | [verb] To harass with persistent requests. | [verb] To approach to offer one's services as a prostitute, or otherwise make improper proposals. IMPOSTERS (13) [noun] Someone who attempts to deceive by using an assumed name or identity. | [noun] A sprite or animation integrated into a three-dimensional scene, but not based on an actual 3D model. IMPOSTING (14) IMPOSTORS (13) [noun] Someone who attempts to deceive by using an assumed name or identity. | [noun] A sprite or animation integrated into a three-dimensional scene, but not based on an actual 3D model. IMPOSTUME (15) [verb] To form an abscess. | [verb] To affect with an abscess. | [noun] An abscess. IMPOSTURE (13) [noun] The act or conduct of an impostor; deception practiced under a false or assumed character; fraud or imposition IMPOTENCE (15) [noun] Powerlessness; incapacity. | [noun] Inability to copulate or beget children; sterility, erectile dysfunction, etc. IMPOTENCY (18) IMPOTENTS (13) IMPOUNDED (15) [verb] To shut up or place in an enclosure called a pound | [verb] To hold back (for example water by a dam) | [verb] To hold in the custody of a court or its delegate IMPOWERED (17) IMPRECATE (15) [verb] To call down by prayer, as something hurtful or calamitous. IMPRECISE (15) [adjective] Not precise or exact; containing some error or uncertainty IMPREGNED (15) IMPRESSED (14) [verb] To affect (someone) strongly and often favourably. | [verb] To make an impression, to be impressive. | [verb] To produce a vivid impression of (something). IMPRESSES (13) [noun] The act of impressing. | [noun] An impression; an impressed image or copy of something. | [noun] A stamp or seal used to make an impression. IMPRINTED (14) [verb] To leave a print, impression, image, etc. | [verb] To learn something indelibly at a particular stage of life, such as who one's parents are. | [verb] To mark a gene as being from a particular parent so that only one of the two copies of the gene is expressed. IMPRINTER (13) IMPRISONS (13) [verb] To put in or as if in prison; confine. IMPROMPTU (17) [noun] A short musical composition for an informal occasion often with the character of improvisation and usually to be played solo. | [noun] (by extension) Any composition, musical or otherwise, that is created on the spot without preparation. | [adjective] Improvised; without prior preparation, planning or rehearsal. IMPROVERS (16) IMPROVING (17) [verb] To make (something) better; to increase the value or productivity (of something). | [verb] To become better. | [verb] To disprove or make void; to refute. IMPROVISE (16) [verb] To make something up or invent it as one goes on; to proceed guided only by imagination, instinct, and guesswork rather than by a careful plan. IMPRUDENT (14) [adjective] Not prudent; wanting in prudence or discretion; indiscreet; injudicious; not attentive to consequence; improper. IMPUDENCE (16) [noun] The quality of being impudent, not showing due respect. | [noun] Impudent language, conduct or behavior. IMPUGNERS (14) IMPUGNING (15) [verb] To assault, attack. | [verb] To verbally assault, especially to argue against an opinion, motive, or action; to question the truth or validity of. IMPULSING (14) IMPULSION (13) [noun] The act of impelling or driving onward, or the state of being impelled; the sudden or momentary agency of a body in motion on another body; also, the impelling force, or impulse. | [noun] Influence acting unexpectedly or temporarily on the mind; sudden motive or influence; impulse. IMPULSIVE (16) [noun] That which impels or gives an impulse; an impelling agent. | [noun] One whose behaviour or personality is characterized by being impulsive. | [adjective] Having the power of driving or impelling; giving an impulse; moving; impellent. IMPUTABLE (15) INAMORATA (11) [noun] A female lover or woman with whom one is in love; a mistress INANIMATE (11) [noun] Something that is not alive. | [verb] To animate. | [adjective] Lacking the quality or ability of motion; as an inanimate object. INCHWORMS (19) [noun] The larva of a moth of the family Geometridae. | [verb] To move in a looping fashion, like an inchworm. | [verb] To crawl or creep slowly. INCLEMENT (13) [adjective] Stormy, of rough weather | [adjective] Merciless, unrelenting. | [adjective] Unmercifully severe in temper or action. INCOMINGS (14) [noun] The act of coming in; arrival. | [noun] Enemy fire directed at oneself. INCOMMODE (16) [verb] To disturb, to discomfort, to hinder. INCREMENT (13) [noun] The action of increasing or becoming greater. | [noun] The waxing of the moon. | [noun] The amount of increase. INCUMBENT (15) [noun] The current holder of an office, such as ecclesiastical benefice or an elected office. | [noun] A holder of a position as supplier to a market or market segment that allows the holder to earn above-normal profits. | [adjective] Imposed on someone as an obligation, especially due to one's office. INCUMBERS (15) INDAMINES (12) INDECORUM (14) [noun] Indecorous behavior, or the state of being indecorous INDEMNIFY (18) [verb] To secure against loss or damage; to insure. | [verb] To compensate or reimburse someone for some expense or injury | [verb] To hurt, to harm INDEMNITY (15) [noun] Security from damage, loss, or penalty. | [noun] An obligation or duty upon an individual to incur the losses of another. | [noun] Repayment; compensation for loss or injury. INDICIUMS (14) INFIRMARY (17) [noun] A place where sick or injured people are cared for, especially a small hospital; sickhouse. | [noun] A clinic or dispensary within another institution. INFIRMING (15) INFIRMITY (17) [noun] Feebleness, frailty or ailment, especially due to old age. | [noun] A moral weakness or defect INFLAMERS (14) INFLAMING (15) [verb] To set on fire; to kindle; to cause to burn, flame, or glow. | [verb] To kindle or intensify (a feeling, as passion or appetite); to excite to an excessive or unnatural action or heat. | [verb] To provoke (a person) to anger or rage; to exasperate; to irritate; to incense; to enrage. INFORMANT (14) [noun] One who relays confidential information to someone, especially to the police; an informer. | [noun] A native speaker who acts as a linguistic reference for a language being studied. The informant demonstrates native pronunciation, provides grammaticality judgments regarding linguistic well-formedness, and may also explain cultural references and other important contextual information. INFORMERS (14) [noun] One who informs someone else about something. | [noun] A person who tells authorities about improper or illegal activity. | [noun] One who informs, animates, or inspires. INFORMING (15) [verb] To instruct, train (usually in matters of knowledge). | [verb] To communicate knowledge to. | [verb] To impart information or knowledge. INHARMONY (17) INHUMANLY (17) INMESHING (15) INNERMOST (11) [noun] That which is innermost; the core. | [adjective] Farthest inside or towards the center or middle. INOCULUMS (13) INSOMNIAC (13) [noun] One who suffers an inability or difficulty sleeping; a sufferer from insomnia. | [adjective] Suffering from or pertaining to insomnia. INSOMNIAS (11) INTERCOMS (13) [noun] An electronic communication system, especially one between rooms in a building INTERFIRM (14) INTERMALE (11) INTERMENT (11) [noun] The act of burying a dead body; burial. INTERMESH (14) [verb] To mesh between one another. INTERMITS (11) [verb] To interrupt, to stop or cease temporarily or periodically; to suspend. INTERMONT (11) INTERTERM (11) INTIMATED (12) [verb] To suggest or disclose (something) discreetly. | [verb] To notify. INTIMATER (11) INTIMATES (11) [noun] A very close friend. | [noun] (in plural intimates) Women's underwear, sleepwear, or lingerie, especially offered for sale in a store. | [verb] To suggest or disclose (something) discreetly. INTIMISTS (11) INTOMBING (14) INTROMITS (11) INUREMENT (11) IODOFORMS (15) IOTACISMS (13) IRKSOMELY (18) ISARITHMS (14) ISCHAEMIA (16) [noun] Local disturbance in blood circulation due to mechanical obstruction of the blood supply (vasoconstriction, thrombosis or embolism). ISCHEMIAS (16) ISOCHEIMS (16) [noun] A geoisotherm of equal mean winter temperature. ISOCHIMES (16) ISOENZYME (23) [noun] Any of a group of enzymes that catalyze the same reaction but have different structures and physical, biochemical and immunological properties. ISOGAMETE (12) ISOGAMIES (12) ISOGAMOUS (12) ISOMERASE (11) [noun] Any enzyme which catalyzes the conversion of one isomeric form of a chemical compound to another. ISOMERISM (13) ISOMERIZE (20) [verb] To convert a compound into a different isomeric form ISOMETRIC (13) [noun] A line connecting isometric points. | [adjective] Of, or exhibiting equality in dimensions. | [adjective] Of, or being a geometric system of three equal axes lying at right angles to each other (especially in crystallography). ISOMORPHS (16) [noun] Anything that exhibits isomorphism ISONOMIES (11) ISOSMOTIC (13) [adjective] Having the same osmotic pressure ISOTHERMS (14) [noun] A line on a graph or chart, such as a weather map, along which all the points have the same temperature. ISTHMIANS (14) ISTHMUSES (14) [noun] A narrow strip of land, bordered on both sides by water, and connecting two larger landmasses. | [noun] Any such narrow part connecting two larger structures. | [noun] An edge in a graph whose deletion increases the number of connected components of the graph. ITEMISING (12) [verb] To state in items, or by particulars ITEMIZERS (20) ITEMIZING (21) [verb] To state in items, or by particulars JACKSMELT (24) JAMBALAYA (23) [noun] Any of various of rice-based dishes common in Louisiana Cajun or Creole cooking; most often with shrimp, oysters, chicken or ham. JAMBOREES (20) [noun] A boisterous or lavish celebration or party. | [noun] A frolic or spree. | [noun] A large rally of Scouts or Guides. JEREMIADS (19) [noun] A long speech or prose work that bitterly laments the state of society and its morals, and often contains a prophecy of its coming downfall. JEROBOAMS (20) [noun] A bottle of champagne or Burgundy wine containing 3 liters of fluid, four times the volume of a standard bottle. | [noun] A bottle of Bordeaux wine containing 4.5 liters of fluid, six times the volume of a standard bottle. JESSAMINE (18) [noun] Any of several plants, of the genus Jasminum, mostly native to Asia, having fragrant white or yellow flowers. | [noun] The perfume obtained from these plants. | [noun] Any of several unrelated plants having a similar perfume. JESUITISM (18) JINGOISMS (19) JOINTWORM (21) JUDGEMENT (20) [noun] The act of judging. | [noun] The power or faculty of performing such operations; especially, when unqualified, the faculty of judging or deciding rightly, justly, or wisely | [noun] The conclusion or result of judging; an opinion; a decision. JUDGMATIC (22) JUDGMENTS (20) [noun] The act of judging. | [noun] The power or faculty of performing such operations; especially, when unqualified, the faculty of judging or deciding rightly, justly, or wisely | [noun] The conclusion or result of judging; an opinion; a decision. JUMPINESS (20) JUMPSUITS (20) [noun] A one-piece item of clothing originally used by parachutists | [noun] A similar item of clothing used for outdoor sports such as skiing KADDISHIM (20) KAISERDOM (16) KAISERISM (15) KAKEMONOS (19) [noun] A vertical Japanese scroll painting KAKIEMONS (19) KAMAAINAS (15) KAMACITES (17) KAMIKAZES (28) [noun] An attack requiring the suicide of the one carrying it out, especially when done with an aircraft. | [noun] One who carries out a suicide attack, especially with an aircraft. | [noun] One who takes excessive risks, as for example in a sporting event. KANAMYCIN (20) [noun] An aminoglycoside antibiotic used to treat severe bacterial infections and tuberculosis. KARYOGAMY (22) KARYOSOME (18) KERATOMAS (15) KERMESSES (15) KERYGMATA (19) [noun] The Apostolic proclamation of religious truths; the core teachings of Christianity taught by the early Church. KHAMSEENS (18) KIBBUTZIM (28) [noun] A community, usually an agricultural one in Israel, based on a high level of social and economical sharing, equality, direct democracy and tight social relations. KILOGRAMS (16) [noun] In the International System of Units, the base unit of mass; conceived of as the mass of one litre of water, but now defined by taking the fixed numerical value of the Planck constant h to be 6.626 070 15 × 10-34 when expressed in units of kg⋅m2⋅s−1. Symbol: kg | [noun] The unit of weight such that a one-kilogram mass is also a one-kilogram weight. KILOMETER (15) [noun] (official BIPM spelling, Australian, New Zealand, Irish, Indian and South African spelling) An SI unit of length equal to 103 metres. Symbol: km KILOMOLES (15) KINEMATIC (17) KINGMAKER (20) [noun] Someone who has strong influence over the choice of a leader. | [noun] A player who is unable to win but powerful enough to decide which of the other viable players will eventually win. KINSWOMAN (18) [noun] A female relative. KINSWOMEN (18) [noun] A female relative. KIRIGAMIS (16) KIRMESSES (15) KLEZMORIM (26) [noun] A Jewish folk musician. | [noun] A type of popular Jewish folk music especially associated with Ashkenazi cultures. KOMONDORS (16) KOUMISSES (15) KOUMYSSES (18) KRUMHORNS (18) KRUMMHOLZ (29) [noun] Dense low matted bushes at the tree-line. KRUMMHORN (20) [noun] A mediaeval and Renaissance wind instrument. | [noun] A stop on an organ. KYMOGRAMS (21) KYMOGRAPH (24) [noun] A device that gives a graphical representation of a variation in a phenomenon such as blood pressure over time, using a pen on a rotating drum. LABDANUMS (14) LABURNUMS (13) [noun] Any tree of genus Laburnum. They have bright yellow flowers and are poisonous. LACHRYMAL (19) [noun] A lachrymatory (vase intended for collecting tears) | [noun] (in the plural) Lachrymal feelings or organs | [noun] One of the bones of the face, the os unguis, or nail-bone, in humans. LACONISMS (13) LACRIMALS (13) [noun] A lachrymal or lachrymatory (vase intended for collecting tears). | [noun] The lacrimal bone. LADYPALMS (17) LAGOMORPH (17) [noun] A member of the mammalian taxonomic order, Lagomorpha, which includes hares, rabbits, and pikas. LAMBASTED (14) [verb] To scold, reprimand or criticize harshly. | [verb] (dated in UK English but not US English) To give a thrashing to; to beat severely. LAMBASTES (13) [verb] To scold, reprimand or criticize harshly. | [verb] (dated in UK English but not US English) To give a thrashing to; to beat severely. LAMBENTLY (16) LAMBKILLS (17) LAMBSKINS (17) [noun] The skin of a very young sheep, especially prepared with the fleece still attached. A very fine form of leather. | [noun] A kind of woollen cloth resembling this. LAMEBRAIN (13) [noun] A fool. LAMELLATE (11) LAMENTERS (11) LAMENTING (12) [verb] To express grief; to weep or wail; to mourn. | [verb] To feel great sorrow or regret; to bewail. | [noun] Lamentation. LAMINARIA (11) LAMINARIN (11) LAMINATED (12) [verb] To assemble from thin sheets glued together. | [verb] To cover something flat, usually paper, in adhesive protective plastic. | [verb] To form, as metal, into a thin plate, as by rolling. LAMINATES (11) [noun] Material formed of thin sheets glued together. LAMINATOR (11) LAMINITIS (11) [noun] A disease of the digital laminae of the hoof LAMISTERS (11) LAMPBLACK (21) [noun] An amorphous form of carbon made from incompletely burned organic matter; used to make pigments and inks. | [verb] To blacken using this form of carbon. LAMPERSES (13) LAMPLIGHT (17) [noun] The light emitted by a lamp. LAMPOONED (14) [verb] To satirize or poke fun at. LAMPOONER (13) [noun] Someone who lampoons; someone who pokes fun. LAMPPOSTS (15) [noun] The pole that holds up a light so it can illuminate a wide area, such as holds up a streetlight. LAMPSHELL (16) LAMPYRIDS (17) LANDFORMS (15) [noun] Any geological feature, such as a mountain or valley. LANDMARKS (16) [noun] An object that marks the boundary of a piece of land (usually a stone, or a tree). | [noun] A recognizable natural or man-made feature used for navigation. | [noun] A notable location with historical, cultural, or geographical significance. LANTHANUM (14) [noun] A chemical element (symbol La) with an atomic number of 57: a soft, ductile, silvery-white metal that tarnishes slowly when exposed to air. | [noun] An atom of this element. LATECOMER (13) [noun] One who has arrived comparatively recently. | [noun] One who arrived late. LATHYRISM (17) [noun] A neurological disease of humans and domestic animals, caused by eating certain legumes of the genus Lathyrus and characterised by paralysis and emaciation. LAUDANUMS (12) LAWMAKERS (18) [noun] One who makes or enacts laws. LAWMAKING (19) [noun] The process of passing or enacting laws; legislation. LEAFWORMS (17) LECHAYIMS (19) LEGALISMS (12) [noun] A philosophy of focusing on the text of written law to the exclusion of the intent of law, elevating strict adherence to law over justice, mercy, grace and common sense. | [noun] A doctrine of salvation by strictly adhering to the requirements of divine law. | [noun] A legal axiom, term or rule. LEITMOTIF (14) [noun] A melodic theme associated with a particular character, place, thing or idea in an opera. | [noun] A recurring theme. LEITMOTIV (14) [noun] A melodic theme associated with a particular character, place, thing or idea in an opera. | [noun] A recurring theme. LEMNISCAL (13) LEMNISCUS (13) LEMONADES (12) [noun] A flavoured beverage consisting of water, lemon, and sweetener, sometimes ice, served mainly as a refreshment. | [noun] A clear, usually carbonated, beverage made from lemon or artificial lemon flavouring, water, and sugar. | [noun] Recreational drugs of poor or weak quality, especially heroin. LEMUROIDS (12) LEPTOSOME (13) LETTERMAN (11) [noun] A student who has attained a specified level of participation in a sporting or other activity, and is awarded a cloth “letter” to be affixed to an item of clothing. LETTERMEN (11) [noun] A student who has attained a specified level of participation in a sporting or other activity, and is awarded a cloth “letter” to be affixed to an item of clothing. LEUCEMIAS (13) LEUKAEMIA (15) [noun] A type of malignancy affecting the blood cells or blood-forming tissues. | [noun] Any specific form or type of cancer of the blood-forming tissues. LEUKEMIAS (15) [noun] A type of malignancy affecting the blood cells or blood-forming tissues. | [noun] Any specific form or type of cancer of the blood-forming tissues. LEUKEMICS (17) LEUKEMOID (16) LEUKOTOMY (18) [noun] Lobotomy LIBRIFORM (16) LIFETIMES (14) [noun] The duration of the life of someone or something. | [noun] A long period of time. LIGAMENTS (12) [noun] A band of strong tissue that connects bones to other bones. | [noun] That which binds or acts as a ligament. LIGHTSOME (15) [adjective] Characterised by light; luminous; emitting or manifesting light; radiant. | [adjective] Upbeat; cheery; light graceful. LIMBEREST (13) LIMBERING (14) [verb] To cause to become limber; to make flexible or pliant. | [verb] To prepare an artillery piece for transportation (i.e., to attach it to its limber.) LIMEKILNS (15) [noun] A furnace used to produce lime from limestone. | [noun] A burning sensation. LIMELIGHT (15) [noun] A type of stage lighting once used in theatres and music halls, producing a bright light by the use of incandescent quicklime. | [noun] (by extension) Attention, notice, a starring or central role, present fame. | [verb] To illuminate with limelight LIMERICKS (17) [noun] A humorous, often bawdy verse of five anapaestic lines, with the rhyme scheme aabba, and typically having a 9–9–6–6–9 cadence. LIMESTONE (11) [noun] An abundant rock of marine and fresh-water sediments; primarily composed of calcite (CaCO3); it occurs in a variety of forms, both crystalline and amorphous. | [adjective] Made of or with limestone. LIMEWATER (14) [noun] A solution of calcium hydroxide in water, used as a simple test for carbon dioxide, and in skin preparations. LIMITABLE (13) LIMITEDLY (15) LIMITLESS (11) [adjective] Without limits in extent, size, or quantity; boundless. LIMNOLOGY (15) [noun] The science concerning the biological, physical and geological properties of fresh water bodies, especially lakes and ponds. LIMONENES (11) LIMONITES (11) LIMONITIC (13) LIMOUSINE (11) [noun] An automobile body with seats and permanent top like a coupe, and with the top projecting over the driver and a projecting front. | [noun] An automobile with such a body. | [noun] A luxury sedan or saloon car, especially one with a lengthened wheelbase or driven by a chauffeur. LIMPIDITY (17) LIMPSIEST (13) LIMULOIDS (12) LINEAMENT (11) [noun] Any distinctive shape or line, etc. | [noun] A distinctive feature that characterizes something, especially the parts of the face of an individual. LINIMENTS (11) [noun] A topical medical preparation intended to be rubbed into the skin with friction, as for example to relieve symptoms of arthritis. LINOLEUMS (11) [noun] An inexpensive waterproof covering used especially for floors, made from solidified linseed oil over a burlap or canvas backing, or from its modern replacement, polyvinyl chloride. LIPOSOMAL (13) LIPOSOMES (13) [noun] An aqueous compartment enclosed by a bimolecular membrane, typically of phospholipid; a lipid vesicle. LISSOMELY (14) LITERATIM (11) [adverb] (of the copying of text) Letter by letter. LITHEMIAS (14) LITHESOME (14) [adjective] Characterised or marked by litheness; pliant, limber, nimble, lissome. LITHOTOMY (17) [noun] A surgical method for removal of calculi, such as kidney stones and gallstones. LIVERYMAN (17) [noun] Someone who works in a livery stable. | [noun] Someone who wears livery in the course of their employment. | [noun] A member of a livery company. LIVERYMEN (17) [noun] Someone who works in a livery stable. | [noun] Someone who wears livery in the course of their employment. | [noun] A member of a livery company. LIXIVIUMS (21) LOATHSOME (14) [adjective] Highly offensive; abominable, sickening. LOBBYISMS (18) LOBECTOMY (18) [noun] The surgical removal of a lobe from an organ such as the lung or the brain LOCALISMS (13) [noun] A linguistic feature that is unique to a locality | [noun] Attachment to a particular local place; feelings or policies which emphasize local phenomena LOCKSMITH (20) [noun] One who practices locksmithing | [noun] Someone who only bets when they are sure they will win LOCOMOTED (14) [verb] To move or travel (from one location to another). LOCOMOTES (13) [verb] To move or travel (from one location to another). LOCOMOTOR (13) [noun] Something that is capable of locomotion. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to movement or locomotion. LODGEMENT (13) [noun] An area used for lodging; a place in which a person or thing is or can be lodged. | [noun] The condition of being lodged. | [noun] The act of lodging or depositing. LODGMENTS (13) [noun] An area used for lodging; a place in which a person or thing is or can be lodged. | [noun] The condition of being lodged. | [noun] The act of lodging or depositing. LOGARITHM (15) [noun] For a number x, the power to which a given base number must be raised in order to obtain x. Written \log_b x. For example, \log_{10} 1000 = 3 because 10^3 = 1000 and \log_2 16 = 4 because 2^4 = 16. LOGNORMAL (12) [noun] A logarithmic function that has a normal distribution. | [adjective] Describing a logarithmic function that has a normal distribution. LOGOGRAMS (13) [noun] A character or symbol that represents a word or phrase. | [noun] A kind of word puzzle: a logogriph. LOGOMACHS (17) LOGOMACHY (20) [noun] Dispute over the meaning of words | [noun] A conflict waged only as a battle of words LOMENTUMS (13) LONESOMES (11) LOUDMOUTH (15) [noun] One who talks too much or too loudly, especially in a boastful or self-important manner. LOWERMOST (14) [adjective] Lowest LOXODROME (19) [noun] A line on a surface (such as the Earth) that cuts all meridians at a constant angle (but not a right angle) – on Earth, the path followed by a ship or aircraft that maintains a constant course by the compass. LOYALISMS (14) LUMBERERS (13) [noun] One who lumbers, who moves in a heavy and ungainly manner. | [noun] One who is involved in the production of lumber. LUMBERING (14) [noun] The act of one who lumbers; heavy, clumsy movement. | [noun] The business of felling trees for lumber. | [adjective] Clumsy or awkward. LUMBERMAN (15) [noun] A man involved in the production or sale of lumber; a lumberjack or logger. LUMBERMEN (15) [noun] A man involved in the production or sale of lumber; a lumberjack or logger. LUMINAIRE (11) [noun] An electrical device that contains an electric lamp that provides illumination. LUMINANCE (13) [noun] The quality of being luminous. | [noun] The amount of light that passes through, is emitted, or is reflected from a particular area, and falls within a given solid angle. | [noun] The luminous flux emitted in a given direction divided by the product of the projected area of the source element perpendicular to the direction and the solid angle containing that direction (i.e. luminous intensity divided by unit area), measured in stilbs or apostilbs. LUMINARIA (11) LUMINESCE (13) [verb] To give off light, including in the invisible electromagnetic radiation frequencies, or become luminescent. LUMINISMS (13) LUMINISTS (11) LUMPINESS (13) LUMPISHLY (19) LUNCHROOM (16) [noun] A room designated as a place to eat lunch. | [noun] A diner or small restaurant that serves lunch. LUNCHTIME (16) [noun] The time or hour at or around which lunch is normally eaten. | [noun] A break in work or school to eat lunch. LUNGWORMS (15) [noun] Any of several nematode worms, of the family Metastrongylidae, that are parasitic to mammalian lungs LUTECIUMS (13) LUTETIUMS (11) LYMPHATIC (21) [noun] A vessel that transports lymph. | [adjective] Pertaining to lymph or the lymphatic system. | [adjective] Lacking energy or enthusiasm; having characteristics once associated with an excess of lymph: lack of muscle tone, paleness, sluggishness, etc. LYMPHOMAS (21) [noun] A malignant tumor that arises in the lymph nodes or in other lymphoid tissue. LYRICISMS (16) LYSIMETER (14) [noun] An instrument that measures the percolation of water through soil LYSOSOMAL (14) LYSOSOMES (14) [noun] An organelle found in all types of animal cells which contains a large range of digestive enzymes capable of splitting most biological macromolecules. LYSOZYMES (26) MACADAMIA (16) [noun] An evergreen tree, of the genus Macadamia, native to Australia and cultivated in Hawaii. | [noun] The fruit of this tree; the macadamia nut. MACARONIC (15) [noun] A work of macaronic character. | [noun] A word consisting of a mix of words of two or more languages, one of which is Latin, or a non-Latin stem with a Latin ending. | [adjective] Jumbled, mixed MACARONIS (13) MACAROONS (13) [noun] Any of various pastries based on almond and egg white, traditionally made in France. | [noun] A soft biscuit or cookie prepared with almond or coconut dough. | [noun] A coarse, rude, low fellow. MACCABAWS (20) MACCABOYS (20) MACCOBOYS (20) MACEDOINE (14) [noun] A mixture of diced vegetables or fruit served as a salad. | [noun] A medley or mixture. MACERATED (14) [verb] To soften (something) or separate it into pieces by soaking it in a heated or unheated liquid. | [verb] To make lean; to cause to waste away. | [verb] To subdue the appetite by poor or scanty diet; to mortify. MACERATES (13) [noun] A macerated substance. | [verb] To soften (something) or separate it into pieces by soaking it in a heated or unheated liquid. | [verb] To make lean; to cause to waste away. MACERATOR (13) MACHINATE (16) [verb] To devise a plot or secret plan; to conspire. MACHINERY (19) [noun] The machines constituting a production apparatus, in a plant etc., collectively. | [noun] The working parts of a machine as a group. | [noun] The collective parts of something which allow it to function. MACHINING (17) [verb] To make by machinery. | [verb] To shape or finish by machinery. | [noun] The act or process of machining, of manufacturing or finishing by machine. MACHINIST (16) [noun] A constructor of machines and engines; one versed in the principles of machines. | [noun] One skilled in the use of machine tools for fashioning metal parts or tools out of metal. | [noun] A person who operates machinery. MACHISMOS (18) MACHZORIM (27) [noun] A prayerbook for a Jewish holiday. MACINTOSH (16) [noun] A raincoat. MACKERELS (17) [noun] An edible fish of the family Scombridae, often speckled. | [noun] A pimp; also, a bawd. MACKINAWS (20) [noun] A heavy woolen cloth. | [noun] A blanket made of wool, formerly distributed to the Amerindians by the U.S. government. | [noun] A flat-bottomed cargo boat; mackinaw boat. MACROCOSM (17) [noun] A complex structure, such as a society, considered as a single entity that contains numerous similar, smaller-scale structures. | [noun] (used absolutely) The universe. MACROCYTE (18) MACROMERE (15) MACRURANS (13) MACULATED (14) [verb] To spot; to stain; to blur. | [adjective] Having spots or blotches; maculate. MACULATES (13) [verb] To spot; to stain; to blur. MADDENING (14) [verb] To make angry. | [verb] To make insane; to inflame with passion. | [verb] To become furious. MADELEINE (12) [noun] A French type of small gateau or sponge cake, often shaped like an elongated scallop shell. | [noun] Something which brings back a memory; a source of nostalgia or evocative memories. MADHOUSES (15) [noun] A house where insane persons are confined; an insane asylum. | [noun] (by extension) A chaotic place. MADNESSES (12) [noun] The state of being mad; insanity; mental disease. | [noun] Rash folly MADREPORE (14) [noun] A coral of the genus Madrepora or of the larger group Madreporaria. | [noun] Any stony coral. MADRIGALS (13) [noun] A song for a small number of unaccompanied voices; from 13th century Italy. | [noun] A polyphonic song for about six voices, from 16th century Italy. | [noun] A short poem, often pastoral, and suitable to be set to music. MADRILENE (12) MAELSTROM (13) [noun] A large and violent whirlpool. | [noun] Any violent or turbulent situation. MAESTOSOS (11) MAFFICKED (24) MAGAZINES (21) [noun] A non-academic periodical publication, generally consisting of sheets of paper folded in half and stapled at the fold. | [noun] An ammunition storehouse. | [noun] A chamber in a firearm enabling multiple rounds of ammunition to be fed into the firearm. MAGDALENE (13) MAGDALENS (13) MAGICALLY (17) [adverb] In a magical manner; by magic, or as if by magic. MAGICIANS (14) [noun] A person who plays with or practices allegedly supernatural magic. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A spiritualist or practitioner of mystic arts. | [noun] A performer of tricks or an escapologist or an illusionist. MAGICKING (19) [verb] To produce, transform (something), (as if) by magic. MAGISTERS (12) MAGISTRAL (12) [noun] A sovereign medicine or remedy. | [noun] A magistral line. | [noun] Powdered copper pyrites used in the amalgamation of ores of silver, as at the Spanish mines of Mexico and South America. MAGNESIAN (12) [adjective] Containing magnesia | [adjective] Describing minerals containing magnesium MAGNESIAS (12) MAGNESITE (12) [noun] A form of magnesium carbonate, MgCO3, occurring as dolomite (with calcite) but rarely found in the pure state. MAGNESIUM (14) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Mg) with an atomic number of 12. It is a light, easily flammable, silvery-white alkaline earth metal. MAGNETICS (14) MAGNETISE (12) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETISM (14) [noun] The property of being magnetic. | [noun] The science which treats of magnetic phenomena. | [noun] Power of attraction; power to excite the feelings and to gain the affections. MAGNETITE (12) [noun] A magnetic mineral, Fe3O4, one of the primary ores of iron. It has also been called lodestone. MAGNETIZE (21) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETONS (12) [noun] Any of several units of magnetic moment of an atom, molecule or subatomic particle MAGNETRON (12) [noun] A device in which electrons are made to resonate in a specially shaped chamber and thus produce microwave radiation; used in radar, and in microwave ovens MAGNIFICO (17) [noun] A grandee or nobleman of Venice. | [noun] A rector of a German university. MAGNIFIED (16) [adjective] Having been visually enlarged by the process of magnification. | [verb] To praise, glorify (someone or something, especially God). | [verb] To make (something) larger or more important. MAGNIFIER (15) MAGNIFIES (15) [verb] To praise, glorify (someone or something, especially God). | [verb] To make (something) larger or more important. | [verb] To make (someone or something) appear greater or more important than it is; to intensify, exaggerate. MAGNITUDE (13) [noun] The absolute or relative size, extent or importance of something. | [noun] An order of magnitude. | [noun] A number, assigned to something, such that it may be compared to others numerically MAGNOLIAS (12) [noun] A tree or shrub in any species of the genus Magnolia, many with large flowers and simple leaves. | [noun] The flower of a magnolia tree. | [noun] A native or resident of the American state of Mississippi. MAHARAJAH (24) [noun] A Hindu monarch ranking above a raja, an emperor. MAHARAJAS (21) [noun] A Hindu monarch ranking above a raja, an emperor. MAHARANEE (14) [noun] The wife of a maharajah; approximately, a queen consort. MAHARANIS (14) [noun] The wife of a maharajah; approximately, a queen consort. MAHARISHI (17) [noun] A teacher of Hindu mysticism MAHJONGGS (23) MAHLSTICK (20) [noun] A short stick with a pad on one end, used by a painter to steady their hand, and to prevent it from accidentally touching the painting. MAIDHOODS (16) MAILBOXES (20) [noun] A box into which mail is put | [noun] A folder or account for the storage of e-mail; an electronic in-box or mailstore. MAINFRAME (16) [noun] A large, powerful computer able to manage very many simultaneous tasks and communicate with very many connected terminals; used by large, complex organizations (such as banks and supermarkets) where continuously sustained operation is vital MAINLANDS (12) [noun] The continent; the principal land, as distinguished from islands or a peninsula. | [noun] The principal island of a group. MAINLINED (12) [verb] To inject (a drug) directly into a vein. | [verb] To integrate (code, etc.) into the main repository for a software project, rather than separate forks. MAINLINES (11) [verb] To inject (a drug) directly into a vein. | [verb] To integrate (code, etc.) into the main repository for a software project, rather than separate forks. MAINMASTS (13) [noun] The chief, and tallest mast of a sailing ship that has more than one mast. MAINSAILS (11) [noun] The largest (or only) sail on a sailing vessel. MAINSHEET (14) [noun] The rope connected to and controlling the mainsail. MAINSTAYS (14) [noun] A chief support. | [noun] Someone or something that can be depended on to make a regular contribution. | [noun] A stabilising rope from the top of the mainmast to the bottom of the foremast. MAINTAINS (11) [verb] To support (someone), to back up or assist (someone) in an action. | [verb] To keep up; to preserve; to uphold (a state, condition etc.). | [verb] To declare or affirm (a clause) to be true; to assert. MAIOLICAS (13) MAJESTIES (18) [noun] The quality of being impressive and great. MAJOLICAS (20) MAJORDOMO (21) [noun] The head servant or official in a royal Spanish or Italian household; later, any head servant in a wealthy household in a foreign country; a leading servant or butler. | [noun] (Southwest) A manager of a hacienda, ranch or estate. | [noun] Any overseer, organizer, person in command. MAJORETTE (18) [noun] A dancer who twirls and performs stunts with a lightweight baton, whether as a solo, in a group of majorettes, or in the company of a marching band. MAJUSCULE (20) [noun] A capital letter, especially one used in ancient manuscripts. MAKEBATES (17) MAKEFASTS (18) MAKEOVERS (18) [noun] A major change in the use of something, or in the appearance of something or someone; a radical transformation. MAKEREADY (19) [noun] A sheet of paper on which overlays are pasted for printing. | [noun] The process of preparing such sheets | [noun] The process of preparing something for use. MAKESHIFT (21) [noun] A temporary (usually insubstantial) substitution. | [adjective] Made to work or suffice; improvised; substituted. | [noun] A rogue; a shifty person. MAKIMONOS (17) MALACHITE (16) [noun] A bright green mineral, a basic copper carbonate, Cu2CO3(OH)2; one of the principal ores of copper. | [noun] A mild green colour, like that of the mineral. | [adjective] Of a colour ranging from olive-taupe to a mild to deeply-rich (at times seemingly translucent) green, like that of the mineral which is present on oxidized copper. MALADROIT (12) [noun] Somebody who is inept, or lacking in skill, or talent. | [adjective] Not adroit; awkward, clumsy, inept. MALAGUENA (12) [noun] A Spanish dance, typical of Malaga, similar to a fandango MALAMUTES (13) [noun] A ancient northern breed of dog of the husky type, particularly used as a sled dog. MALAPERTS (13) [noun] A cheeky, impudent, or saucy person. MALAPROPS (15) [noun] A malapropism. | [verb] To use a malapropism. MALARIOUS (11) MALARKEYS (18) MALARKIES (15) MALAROMAS (13) MALATHION (14) [noun] A pesticide, Diethyl [(dimethoxyphosphinothioyl)-thio]butanedioate. MALEDICTS (14) MALEMIUTS (13) MALEMUTES (13) [noun] A ancient northern breed of dog of the husky type, particularly used as a sled dog. MALFORMED (17) [adjective] Not formed correctly; misshapen; deformed. MALICIOUS (13) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or as a result of malice or spite | [adjective] Spiteful and deliberately harmful MALIGNANT (12) [noun] A deviant; a person who is hostile or destructive to society. | [noun] A person who fought for Charles I in the English Civil War. | [adjective] Harmful, malevolent, injurious. MALIGNERS (12) MALIGNING (13) [verb] To make defamatory statements about; to slander or traduce. | [verb] To treat with malice; to show hatred toward; to abuse; to wrong. MALIGNITY (15) MALIHINIS (14) MALINGERS (12) [verb] To feign illness, injury, or incapacitation in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. | [verb] To self-inflict real injury or infection (to inflict self-harm) in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. MALLEABLE (13) [adjective] Able to be hammered into thin sheets; capable of being extended or shaped by beating with a hammer, or by the pressure of rollers. | [adjective] Flexible, liable to change. | [adjective] (of an algorithm) in which an adversary can alter a ciphertext such that it decrypts to a related plaintext MALLEOLUS (11) [noun] The bony prominence on each side of the ankle joint. MALTREATS (11) [verb] To treat badly, to abuse. MALTSTERS (11) [noun] A person who makes malt; a malter. MALVASIAS (14) MAMALIGAS (14) MAMELUKES (17) [noun] A member of a military regime created and run originally by freed white European slaves, which formed a ruling caste in Egypt from 1250 until 1812 and in Syria until 1516. | [noun] A slave (especially European and white) in a Middle Eastern Muslim country. MAMMALIAN (15) [noun] Any mammal. | [adjective] Of, or pertaining to, mammals | [adjective] Like a mammal MAMMALOGY (19) [noun] The study of mammals. MAMMERING (16) MAMMILLAE (15) [noun] The nipple. MAMMOCKED (22) MAMMOGRAM (18) [noun] An X-ray picture of the breasts (mammaries), used to screen for breast cancer. MAMMONISM (17) MAMMONIST (15) MANACLING (14) [verb] To confine with manacles. MANCIPLES (15) [noun] A person in charge of purchasing and storing food and other provisions in a monastery, college, or court of law. MANDARINS (12) [noun] A high government bureaucrat of the Chinese Empire | [noun] A pedantic or elitist bureaucrat | [noun] A pedantic senior person of influence in academia or literary circles MANDATARY (15) [noun] One who receives a mandate. MANDATING (13) [verb] To authorize | [verb] To make mandatory MANDATORS (12) MANDATORY (15) [noun] A sign or line that require the path of the disc to be above, below or to one side of it. | [noun] A person, organisation or state who receives a mandate; a mandatary. | [adjective] Obligatory; required or commanded by authority. MANDIBLES (14) [noun] The lower jaw, especially the lower jawbone. | [noun] One of a pair of mouthparts of an arthropod, designed for holding and cutting food. MANDIOCAS (14) MANDOLINE (12) MANDOLINS (12) [noun] A stringed instrument and a member of the lute family, having eight strings in four courses, frequently tuned as a violin, and with either a bowl-shaped back or a flat back | [noun] A kitchen tool used for slicing vegetables (usually spelled mandoline) | [noun] An RAF World War II code name for patrols to attack enemy railway transport and other ground targets MANDRAKES (16) [noun] A mandragora, a kind of tiny demon immune to fire. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Mandragora, certain of which are said to have medicinal properties; the root of these plants often resembles the shape of a small person, hence occasioning various mythic, magical, or occult uses. | [noun] A root of a mandrake plant that resembled human form, especially one kept or used for magic or occult purposes. MANDRILLS (12) [noun] A primate, Mandrillus sphinx, with colorful face and rump. MANEUVERS (14) [noun] The planned movement of troops, vehicles etc.; a strategic repositioning; (later also) a large training field-exercise of fighting units. | [noun] Any strategic or cunning action; a stratagem. | [noun] A movement of the body, or with an implement, instrument etc., especially one performed with skill or dexterity. MANGABEYS (17) [noun] Any of several large, arboreal monkeys of the family Cercopithecidae. MANGABIES (14) MANGANATE (12) [noun] Any compound containing the ion MnO42-. MANGANESE (12) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Mn) with an atomic number of 25, not a free element in nature but often found in minerals in combination with iron, and useful in industrial alloy production. | [noun] A single atom of this element. MANGANITE (12) [noun] A dark gray mineral of manganese, MnO(OH), found throughout North America and Europe MANGANOUS (12) [adjective] Containing manganese in its +2 oxidation state. MANGINESS (12) MANGONELS (12) [noun] A military engine formerly used for throwing stones and burning objects. MANGROVES (15) [noun] Any of various tropical evergreen trees or shrubs that grow in shallow coastal water. | [noun] A habitat with such plants; mangrove forest; mangrove swamp. | [noun] Plants of the Rhizophoraceae family. MANHANDLE (15) [verb] To move something heavy by force of men, without aid of levers, pulleys, machine, or tackles. | [verb] To assault or beat up a person. | [verb] To mishandle; to handle roughly; to mangle. MANHATTAN (14) [noun] A cocktail made from whiskey, sweet vermouth and bitters. | [noun] A bar chart representing the number of runs scored each over (supposed to resemble a skyline of skyscrapers). MANICALLY (16) MANICOTTI (13) [noun] Wide tubes of pasta filled with a savoury stuffing and baked in the oven. MANICURED (14) [verb] To trim the fingernails MANICURES (13) [noun] A cosmetic treatment for the fingernails. | [noun] A manicurist. | [verb] To trim the fingernails MANIFESTO (14) [noun] A public declaration of principles, policies, or intentions, especially that of a political party. | [verb] To issue a manifesto MANIFESTS (14) [noun] A list or invoice of the passengers or goods being carried by a commercial vehicle or ship. | [noun] A file containing metadata describing other files. | [noun] A public declaration; an open statement; a manifesto. MANIFOLDS (15) [noun] A copy made by the manifold writing process. | [noun] A pipe fitting or similar device that connects multiple inputs or outputs. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The third stomach of a ruminant animal, an omasum. MANIPULAR (13) MANLINESS (11) [noun] The quality of being manly; the set of qualities, traits and abilities considered appropriate to men (as opposed to women or children); similarity to a man. | [noun] Male genitals. MANNEQUIN (20) [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes | [noun] A jointed model of the human body used by artists, especially to demonstrate the arrangement of drapery | [noun] An anatomical model of the human body for use in teaching of e.g. CPR MANNERISM (13) [noun] A noticeable personal habit, a verbal or other (often, but not necessarily unconscious) habitual behavior peculiar to an individual. | [noun] Exaggerated or affected style in art, speech, or other behavior. | [noun] In literature, an ostentatious and unnatural style of the second half of the sixteenth century. In the contemporary criticism, described as a negation of the classicist equilibrium, pre-Baroque, and deforming expressiveness. MANNERIST (11) MANNIKINS (15) [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. | [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes MANNISHLY (17) MANNITOLS (11) MANOEUVRE (14) [noun] The planned movement of troops, vehicles etc.; a strategic repositioning; (later also) a large training field-exercise of fighting units. | [noun] Any strategic or cunning action; a stratagem. | [noun] A movement of the body, or with an implement, instrument etc., especially one performed with skill or dexterity. MANOMETER (13) [noun] An instrument to measure pressure in a fluid, especially a double-legged liquid column gauge used to measure the difference in the pressures of two fluids. MANOMETRY (16) MANPOWERS (16) MANSARDED (13) MANSLAYER (14) MANTELETS (11) [noun] A short sleeveless cloak or cape. | [noun] A portable screen or other covering, especially as used to protect the approach of soldiers engaged in a siege. | [noun] A mantelletta. MANTICORE (13) [noun] A beast with the body of a lion (usually red), the tail of a scorpion, and the head/face of a man with a mouth filled with multiple rows of sharp teeth (like a shark), said to be able to shoot spikes from its tail or mane to paralyse prey. It may be horned, winged, or both; its voice is described as a mixture of pipes and trumpets. MANTILLAS (11) [noun] A lace veil of Spanish origin worn over a woman's hair and shoulders. | [noun] A woman's light cloak or cape made of silk, velvet, lace, or other material. MANTISSAS (11) [noun] A minor addition to a text. | [noun] The part of a common logarithm after the decimal point, the fractional part of a logarithm. | [noun] The significand; that part of a floating-point number or number in scientific notation that contains its significant digits. MANTLINGS (12) [noun] The representation of a mantle, or the drapery behind and around a coat of arms. | [noun] Cloth suitable for making mantles. MANUBRIUM (15) [noun] The broad, upper part of the sternum. | [noun] The tube extending from the central underside of a jellyfish and ending in a mouth. | [noun] A knob or handle that controls the stops of an organ. MANZANITA (20) [noun] Any evergreen shrub or tree of the genus Arctostaphylos, especially Arctostaphylos manzanita, having smooth red or orange bark and stiff, twisting branches. MAPMAKERS (19) [noun] A person who makes maps. MAPMAKING (20) MAQUETTES (20) [noun] A preliminary model or sketch used in preparation for making a sculpture. MARABOUTS (13) [noun] A Muslim holy man or mystic, especially in parts of North Africa. | [noun] The tomb or shrine of such a person. MARATHONS (14) [noun] A 42.195 kilometre (26 mile 385 yard) road race. | [noun] (by extension) Any extended or sustained activity. MARAUDERS (12) [noun] Someone who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [noun] By extension anything which marauds. MARAUDING (13) [verb] To move about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [verb] To go about aggressively or in a predatory manner. | [verb] To raid and pillage. MARAVEDIS (15) [noun] A former Spanish coin and unit of currency, originally issued in gold but later in silver and copper, discontinued in 1848. MARBLEISE (13) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEIZE (22) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLIEST (13) MARBLINGS (14) [noun] A mottled or streaky appearance | [noun] The process of adding such an appearance, especially as a decoration MARCASITE (13) [noun] The orthorhombic form of iron disulfide, FeS2, occurring as yellow crystals. | [noun] (jewellery) Pyrite. | [noun] Any of various metal sulfides, usually iron sulfide minerals. MARCELLED (14) [verb] To wave (hair) by the marcel method. | [verb] To wave. MARCHLIKE (20) MARCHPANE (18) [noun] A confection made from a paste of almonds, sugar and egg white as a binder. MARGARINE (12) [noun] A spread, manufactured from a blend of vegetable oils (some of which are hydrogenated), emulsifiers etc, mostly used as a substitute for butter. | [noun] The solid ingredient of human fat, olive oil, etc. MARGARINS (12) MARGARITA (12) [noun] A cocktail made with tequila, an orange-flavoured liqueur, and lemon or lime juice, often served with salt encrusted on the rim of the glass. MARGARITE (12) MARGENTED (13) MARGINATE (12) [verb] To provide with margins. | [adjective] With a well marked edge or margin. MARGINING (13) [verb] To add a margin to. | [verb] To enter (notes etc.) into the margin. MARGRAVES (15) [noun] A feudal era military-administrative officer of comital rank in the Carolingian empire and some successor states, originally in charge of a border area. | [noun] A hereditary ruling prince in certain feudal states of the Holy Roman Empire and elsewhere; the titular equivalent became known as marquis or marquess. MARIACHIS (16) [noun] A traditional form of Mexican music, either sung or purely instrumental. | [noun] A group that plays mariachi music. | [noun] A member of such a group. MARIGOLDS (13) [noun] (genericised brand name, usually plural, sometimes with capital) A rubber glove, especially one for use in household cleaning. | [noun] Any of the Old World plants, of the genus Calendula, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers. | [noun] Any of the New World plants, of the genus Tagetes, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers. MARIHUANA (14) [noun] A drug smoked or ingested for euphoric effect, cannabis. | [noun] The hemp plant itself, Cannabis sativa. MARIJUANA (18) [noun] A drug smoked or ingested for euphoric effect, cannabis. | [noun] The hemp plant itself, Cannabis sativa. MARIMBIST (15) MARINADED (13) [verb] To marinate. MARINADES (12) [noun] A seasoned, often acidic liquid mixture in which food is marinated, or soaked, usually to flavor and prepare it for cooking. | [verb] To marinate. MARINARAS (11) [noun] A marinara sauce. MARINATED (12) [verb] To allow a sauce or flavoring mixture to absorb into something; to steep or soak something in a marinade to flavor or prepare it for cooking. MARINATES (11) [verb] To allow a sauce or flavoring mixture to absorb into something; to steep or soak something in a marinade to flavor or prepare it for cooking. MARIPOSAS (13) MARITALLY (14) MARJORAMS (20) MARKDOWNS (19) [noun] A reduction in price in order to stimulate sales. MARKETEER (15) [noun] A specialist in marketing. MARKETERS (15) [noun] One who designs and executes marketing campaigns. | [noun] One who sells goods at a market. MARKETING (16) [verb] To make (products or services) available for sale and promote them. | [verb] To sell | [verb] To deal in a market; to buy or sell; to make bargains for provisions or goods. MARKHOORS (18) MARLSTONE (11) MARMALADE (14) [noun] Citrus fruit variant of jam but distinguished by being made slightly bitter by the addition of the peel and by partial caramelisation during manufacture. Most commonly made with Seville oranges, and usually qualified by the name of the fruit when made with other types of fruit. | [verb] To spread marmalade on. MARMOREAL (13) [adjective] Resembling marble or a marble statue. MARMOREAN (13) MARMOSETS (13) [noun] A small monkey, now specifically a Central and South American monkey of the genera Callithrix, Mico, Cebuella, or Callibella, with claws instead of nails, and a rather primitive layout. | [noun] A hideous figure; a grotesque. | [noun] An unappealing or foolish man. MAROCAINS (13) MAROONING (12) [verb] To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a desert island. | [noun] An act of abandoning a person in a remote, deserted place. MARQUETRY (23) [noun] A decorative technique in which veneers of wood, ivory, metal etc. are inlaid into a wood surface to form intricate designs. | [noun] An example of this work MARQUISES (20) [noun] A nobleman in England, France, and Germany, of a rank next below that of duke, but above a count. Originally, the marquis was an officer whose duty was to guard the marches or frontiers of the kingdom. The office has ceased, and the name is now a mere title conferred by letters patent or letters close. | [noun] Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the Asian genus Bassarona. | [noun] A marchioness, especially one who is French. MARRIAGES (12) [noun] The state of being married. | [noun] A union of two or more people that creates a family tie and carries legal, social, and/or religious rights and responsibilities. | [noun] A homosexual relationship between male prisoners. MARROWFAT (17) MARROWING (15) MARSHALCY (19) MARSHALED (15) [verb] To arrange (troops, etc.) in line for inspection or a parade. | [verb] (by extension) To arrange (facts, etc.) in some methodical order. | [verb] To ceremoniously guide, conduct or usher. MARSHALLS (14) MARSHIEST (14) [adjective] Of, or resembling a marsh; boggy. | [adjective] Growing in marshy ground. MARSHLAND (15) [noun] Marshy land; bog or fen MARSUPIAL (13) [noun] A mammal of which the female has a pouch in which it rears its young, which are born immature, through early infancy, such as the kangaroo or koala, or else pouchless members of the Marsupialia like the shrew opossum. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a marsupial. | [adjective] Of or relating to a marsupium. MARSUPIUM (15) [noun] The external pouch in which female marsupials rear and feed the young. | [noun] A brood pouch in some fishes, crustaceans and insects in the family Monophlebidae. MARTAGONS (12) MARTELLOS (11) [noun] Martello tower MARTIALLY (14) MARTINETS (11) [noun] A strict disciplinarian. | [noun] Anyone who lays stress on a rigid adherence to the details of discipline, or to forms and fixed methods or rules. | [noun] A martin; a swift. MARTYRDOM (17) [noun] The condition of a martyr; the death of a martyr; the suffering of death on account of adherence to the Christian faith, or to any cause. | [noun] Extreme suffering, affliction; torment; torture, especially without reason. MARTYRIES (14) [noun] A shrine in honor of a (usually religious, notably Christian) martyr, possibly at his grave. I | [noun] A shrine at a site which "bears witness" to a crucial religious event not related to a tomb. MARTYRING (15) [verb] To make someone into a martyr by putting him or her to death for adhering to, or acting in accordance with, some belief, especially religious; to sacrifice on account of faith or profession. | [verb] To persecute. | [verb] To torment; to torture. MARTYRIZE (23) [verb] To make a martyr of (someone). MARVELING (15) [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. | [verb] To marvel at. | [verb] (used impersonally) To cause to marvel or be surprised. MARVELLED (15) [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. | [verb] To marvel at. | [verb] (used impersonally) To cause to marvel or be surprised. MARVELOUS (14) [adjective] Exciting wonder or surprise; astonishing; wonderful; delightful. MARYJANES (21) MARZIPANS (22) [noun] A confection made from a paste of almonds, sugar and egg white as a binder. MASCARAED (14) MASCULINE (13) [noun] (grammar) The masculine gender. | [noun] (grammar) A word of the masculine gender. | [noun] That which is masculine. MASOCHISM (18) [noun] The enjoyment of receiving pain or humiliation. MASOCHIST (16) [noun] Someone who enjoys pain or humiliation, or who derives pleasure from harming oneself or being harmed by others. MASONRIES (11) MASSACRED (14) [verb] To kill in considerable numbers where little or no resistance can be made, with indiscriminate violence, without necessity, and contrary to civilized norms. (Often limited to the killing of human beings.) | [verb] To win so decisively it is in the manner of so slaughtering one's opponent. | [verb] To give a performance so poorly it is in the manner of so slaughtering the musical piece, play etc being performed. MASSACRER (13) MASSACRES (13) [noun] The killing of a considerable number (usually limited to people) where little or no resistance can be made, with indiscriminate violence, without necessity, and contrary to civilized norms. | [noun] Murder. | [noun] Any overwhelming defeat, as in a game or sport. MASSAGERS (12) MASSAGING (13) [verb] To rub and knead (someone's body or a part of a body), to perform a massage on (somebody). | [verb] To manipulate (data, a document etc.) to make it more presentable or more convenient to work with. | [verb] To falsify (data or accounts). MASSCULTS (13) MASSETERS (11) [noun] The large muscle which raises the under jaw, and assists in mastication. MASSEUSES (11) [noun] A woman who performs massage; a female masseur. | [noun] A masseur; a man who performs massage. MASSICOTS (13) MASSIVELY (17) [adverb] In a massive manner, in a way that appears large, heavy or imposing. | [adverb] Greatly. MASTABAHS (16) [noun] A wide stone bench built into the wall of a house, shop etc. in the Middle East. | [noun] A rectangular structure with a flat top and slightly sloping sides, built during Ancient Egyptian times above tombs that were situated on flat land. Mastabas were made of wood, mud bricks, stone, or a combination of these materials. Some are solid structures, while others can contain one or more rooms, sometimes decorated with paintings or inscriptions. MASTERFUL (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the manner of a master of an art, technique, profession, or craft; masterly. | [adjective] In the manner of a master; very skillful. | [adjective] Having or showing the qualities of a master vis-a-vis a dependent or subordinate; authoritative; domineering. MASTERIES (11) MASTERING (12) [verb] To be a master. | [verb] To become the master of; to subject to one's will, control, or authority; to conquer; to overpower; to subdue. | [verb] To learn to a high degree of proficiency. MASTHEADS (15) [noun] The top of a mast. | [noun] A list of a newspaper or other periodical's main staff, contributing writers, publisher, circulation, advertising rates etc. | [noun] The title (normally in a large and distinctive font) of a newspaper at the top of the front page MASTICATE (13) [verb] To chew (food). | [verb] To grind or knead something into a pulp. MASTICHES (16) MASTODONS (12) [noun] Extinct elephant-like mammal of the genus Mammut that flourished worldwide from Miocene through Pleistocene times; differs from elephants and mammoths in the form of the molar teeth. MASTODONT (12) MASURIUMS (13) MATAMBALA (15) MATCHABLE (18) MATCHBOOK (22) [noun] A small folded sheet of cardboard containing rows of cardboard matches, generally with a striker on the outside. MATCHLESS (16) [adjective] Having no match; without equal. | [adjective] Having no mate. | [adjective] Without the use of matches for ignition. MATCHLOCK (22) [noun] Early type of firearm, using a smoldering piece of cord to fire the powder in the firing pan. | [noun] The gunlock used in such a weapon, having a slow smouldering match, see: slow match. MATCHWOOD (20) [noun] Wood, often in the form of splinters, suitable for making matches MATELOTES (11) MATERIALS (11) [noun] Matter which may be shaped or manipulated, particularly in making something. | [noun] Text written for a specific purpose. | [noun] A sample or specimens for study. MATERIELS (11) MATERNITY (14) [noun] The state of being a mother; motherhood. | [noun] The state of being pregnant; pregnancy. | [noun] A ward or department in a hospital in which babies are born. MATESHIPS (16) MATEYNESS (14) MATRASSES (11) MATRIARCH (16) [noun] A female leader of a family, a tribe or an ethnic or religious group. | [noun] A female founder of a political or religious movement, an organization or an enterprise. MATRICIDE (14) [noun] The killing of one's mother. | [noun] A person who kills his or her mother. MATRIMONY (16) [noun] Marriage; the state of being married. | [noun] The ceremony of marriage. | [noun] A particular solitaire card game using two decks of cards. MATTERING (12) [verb] To be important. | [verb] (in negative constructions) To care about, to mind; to find important. | [verb] To form pus or matter, as an abscess; to maturate. MATURATED (12) [verb] To bring to ripeness or maturity; to ripen. | [verb] To promote the perfect suppuration of (an abscess). | [verb] To undergo perfect suppuration. MATURATES (11) [verb] To bring to ripeness or maturity; to ripen. | [verb] To promote the perfect suppuration of (an abscess). | [verb] To undergo perfect suppuration. MATUTINAL (11) [adjective] Of, occurring in, or relating to the early morning. MAULSTICK (17) [noun] A short stick with a pad on one end, used by a painter to steady their hand, and to prevent it from accidentally touching the painting. MAUNDERED (13) [verb] To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle. | [verb] To wander or walk aimlessly. | [verb] To beg; to whine like a beggar. MAUNDERER (12) MAUSOLEUM (13) [noun] A large stately tomb or a building housing such a tomb or several tombs. | [noun] (by extension) A gloomy, usually large room or building. MAVERICKS (20) [noun] An unbranded range animal. | [noun] (by extension) Anything dishonestly obtained. | [noun] (by extension) One who is unconventional or does not abide by rules. MAWKISHLY (24) MAXICOATS (20) MAXILLARY (21) [noun] The upper jawbone, or a tooth growing from the upper jawbone. | [adjective] Of or relating to the jaw or jawbone. MAXIMALLY (23) MAXIMISED (21) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMISES (20) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMITES (20) MAXIMIZED (30) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMIZER (29) MAXIMIZES (29) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAYAPPLES (18) [noun] A fruit-bearing flowering plant with poisonous roots, native to eastern North America, taxonomic name Podophyllum peltatum. | [noun] The fruit of the plant Podophyllum peltatum MAYBUSHES (19) MAYFLOWER (20) [noun] Any of several plants that flower in May - especially the hawthorn (in Britain) and the trailing arbutus (in the US). MAYORALTY (17) [noun] The office (or term of office) of a mayor. MAZAEDIUM (23) MAZOURKAS (24) MEALTIMES (13) [noun] The appointed time at which a meal is served or eaten. MEALWORMS (16) [noun] The larval stage of the mealworm beetle (Tenebrio molitor), a species of darkling beetle.. MEALYBUGS (17) [noun] Any of various insects of the family Pseudococcidae, which secrete a powdery wax and are pests of fruit trees. MEANDERED (13) [verb] To wind or turn in a course or passage; to be intricate. | [verb] To wind, turn, or twist; to make flexuous. MEANDROUS (12) MEANINGLY (15) MEANTIMES (13) MEANWHILE (17) [noun] The time between two events. | [adverb] During the time that something is happening. | [adverb] At the same time, but elsewhere. MEASLIEST (11) [adjective] Particularly of pigs or pork: infected with larval tapeworms or trichinae (parasitic roundworms). | [adjective] Of a person: infected with measles. | [adjective] Small (especially contemptibly small) in amount. MEASURERS (11) MEASURING (12) [verb] To ascertain the quantity of a unit of material via calculated comparison with respect to a standard. | [verb] To be of (a certain size), to have (a certain measurement) | [verb] To estimate the unit size of something. MEATBALLS (13) [noun] A ball of minced or ground meat, seasoned and cooked. | [noun] A stupid person. | [noun] An easy pitch to hit, especially thrown right down the middle of the plate. MEATHEADS (15) [noun] An ungainly, dull or stupid person; someone who is lazy, disrespectful and/or whose beliefs and philosophies clash with another. | [noun] A large, muscular, stupid male, especially an athlete. | [noun] A member of the Canadian Forces Military Police. MEATINESS (11) MECHANICS (18) [noun] The branch of physics that deals with the action of forces on material objects with mass | [noun] The design and construction of machines. | [noun] (writing) Spelling and punctuation. | [noun] A manual worker; a labourer or artisan. MECHANISM (18) [noun] (within a machine or machinery) Any mechanical means for the conversion or control of motion, or the transmission or control of power. | [noun] Any combination of cams, gears, links, belts, chains and logical mechanical elements. | [noun] A group of entities, such as objects, that interact together. MECHANIST (16) [noun] A person who takes a mechanical view | [noun] A maker of machines; one skilled in mechanics. MECHANIZE (25) [verb] To equip something with machinery. | [verb] To equip a military unit with tanks and other armed vehicles. | [verb] To make something routine, automatic or monotonous. MECLIZINE (22) MECONIUMS (15) MEDAILLON (12) MEDALISTS (12) [noun] One who has received a medal; one who has medalled. | [noun] An engraver, designer or collector of medals. MEDALLING (13) [verb] To win a medal. | [verb] To award a medal to. MEDALLION (12) [noun] A large medal, usually decorative. | [noun] A cut of meat resembling a medallion. | [noun] A usually round or oval frame (often made of stucco) containing a decoration. MEDALLIST (12) [noun] One who has received a medal; one who has medalled. | [noun] An engraver, designer or collector of medals. MEDIACIES (14) MEDIAEVAL (15) [noun] Someone living in the Middle Ages. | [noun] A medieval example (of something aforementioned or understood from context). | [adjective] Of or relating to the Middle Ages, the period from approximately 500 to 1500 AD. MEDIATELY (15) MEDIATING (13) [verb] To resolve differences, or to bring about a settlement, between conflicting parties. | [verb] To intervene between conflicting parties in order to resolve differences or bring about a settlement. | [verb] To divide into two equal parts. MEDIATION (12) [noun] Negotiation to resolve differences conducted by some impartial party. | [noun] The act of intervening for the purpose of bringing about a settlement. MEDIATIVE (15) MEDIATORS (12) [noun] One who negotiates between parties seeking mutual agreement. | [noun] A chemical substance transmitting information to a targeted cell. MEDIATORY (15) MEDIATRIX (19) MEDICABLE (16) [adjective] Capable of being medicated; admitting of being cured or healed. MEDICAIDS (15) MEDICALLY (17) [adverb] For medical purposes. | [adverb] In a medical manner or context. MEDICARES (14) MEDICATED (15) [verb] To prescribe or administer medication to. MEDICATES (14) [verb] To prescribe or administer medication to. MEDICINAL (14) [noun] Any plant that can be used for medicinal purposes. | [adjective] Having the properties of medicine, or pertaining to medicine; medical. | [adjective] Tending or used to cure disease or relieve pain. MEDICINED (15) MEDICINES (14) [noun] A substance which specifically promotes healing when ingested or consumed in some way. | [noun] A treatment or cure. | [noun] The study of the cause, diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of disease or illness. MEDIEVALS (15) MEDITATED (13) [verb] To contemplate; to keep the mind fixed upon something; to study. | [verb] To sit or lie down and come to a deep rest while still remaining conscious. | [verb] To consider; to reflect on. MEDITATES (12) [verb] To contemplate; to keep the mind fixed upon something; to study. | [verb] To sit or lie down and come to a deep rest while still remaining conscious. | [verb] To consider; to reflect on. MEDITATOR (12) MEDULLARY (15) [adjective] Pertaining to, consisting of, or resembling, marrow or medulla | [adjective] Relating to the medulla oblongata | [adjective] Filled with spongy pith; pithy MEDUSOIDS (13) [noun] Jellyfish MEGABUCKS (20) [noun] A million dollars. MEGABYTES (17) [noun] One million (106) bytes. | [noun] 1,048,576 bytes; a mebibyte. MEGACYCLE (19) MEGADEALS (13) MEGADEATH (16) [noun] One million deaths, especially as a unit of measure in reference to nuclear warfare. MEGADOSES (13) [noun] A dose of drug or vitamin far exceeding the normal or recommended amount, and usually given intentionally. Compare overdose. MEGADYNES (16) MEGAFAUNA (15) [noun] The large animals of a given region or time, considered as a group. | [noun] A treatise on such a group of large animals. MEGAHERTZ (24) [noun] A unit equal to one million cycles per second. MEGALITHS (15) [noun] A construction involving one or several roughly hewn stone slabs of great size. | [noun] A large stone used in such a construction. MEGAPHONE (17) [noun] A portable, usually hand-held, funnel-shaped device that is used to amplify a person’s natural voice toward a targeted direction. | [noun] Mouthpiece or promoter; one who speaks for or publicizes on behalf of another. | [verb] To use a megaphone; to speak through a megaphone. | [noun] A cytotoxic neolignan obtained from the laurel Aniba megaphylla. MEGAPODES (15) [noun] Any of several chicken- or turkey-like birds in the family Megapodiidae, which incubate their eggs by burying them where they receive warmth from decaying vegetation, solar radiation or geothermal heat. MEGASPORE (14) [noun] The larger spore of a heterosporous plant, typically producing a female gametophyte MEGASTARS (12) [noun] A very famous or successful celebrity. MEGAVOLTS (15) [noun] One million (106) volts, abbreviated as MV. MEGAWATTS (15) [noun] One million (1 000 000) watts, abbreviated as MW. MEGILLAHS (15) MELAMINES (13) MELANISMS (13) MELANISTS (11) MELANITES (11) MELANITIC (13) MELANIZED (21) MELANIZES (20) MELANOIDS (12) MELANOMAS (13) [noun] A dark-pigmented, usually malignant tumor arising from a melanocyte and occurring most commonly in the skin. MELANOTIC (13) MELATONIN (11) [noun] A hormone, related to serotonin, that is secreted by the pineal gland, and stimulates colour change in the skin of reptiles, and is involved in the sleep/wake and reproductive cycles in mammals | [noun] Any material similar in its chemistry and effect to the natural hormone. MELILITES (11) MELINITES (11) MELIORATE (11) [verb] To make better; to improve; to solve a problem. | [verb] To become better. MELIORISM (13) [noun] The view or doctrine that the world can be improved through human effort (often understood as an intermediate outlook between optimism and pessimism). MELIORIST (11) MELISMATA (13) [noun] A passage of several notes sung to one syllable of text, as in Gregorian chant. MELLOTRON (11) [noun] An early electronic keyboard instrument that played back prerecorded sounds. MELLOWEST (14) [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. | [adjective] Soft or tender by reason of ripeness; having a tender pulp. MELLOWING (15) [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. | [noun] The process of making or becoming mellow. MELODEONS (12) [noun] A music hall. | [noun] A type of reed organ with a single keyboard. | [noun] An accordion where the melody-side keyboard is limited to the notes of diatonic scales in a small number of keys. MELODICAS (14) [noun] A free-reed keyboard wind instrument. MELODIOUS (12) [adjective] Having a pleasant melody or sound; tuneful. MELODISED (13) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODISES (12) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODISTS (12) [noun] A performer or composer of melodies. MELODIZED (22) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODIZER (21) MELODIZES (21) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODRAMA (14) [noun] A kind of drama having a musical accompaniment to intensify the effect of certain scenes. | [noun] A drama abounding in romantic sentiment and agonizing situations, with a musical accompaniment only in parts which are especially thrilling or pathetic. In opera, a passage in which the orchestra plays a somewhat descriptive accompaniment, while the actor speaks | [noun] Any situation or action which is blown out of proportion. MELPHALAN (16) MELTDOWNS (15) [noun] Severe overheating of the core of a nuclear reactor resulting in the core melting and radiation escaping. | [noun] A situation being likened to a nuclear meltdown; a crisis. | [noun] A tantrum. MELTINGLY (15) MELTWATER (14) [noun] Water from melting ice or snow. MEMBRANED (16) MEMBRANES (15) [noun] A flexible enclosing or separating tissue forming a plane or film and separating two environments (usually in a plant or animal). | [noun] A mechanical, thin, flat flexible part that can deform or vibrate when excited by an external force. | [noun] A flexible or semi-flexible covering or waterproofing whose primary function is to exclude water. MEMENTOES (13) [noun] A keepsake; an object kept as a reminder of a place or event. MEMOIRIST (13) MEMORABLE (15) [adjective] Worthy to be remembered; very important or remarkable. MEMORABLY (18) [adverb] In a memorable manner. MEMORANDA (14) [noun] A short note serving as a reminder. | [noun] A written business communication. | [noun] A brief diplomatic communication. MEMORIALS (13) [noun] Memory; recollection. | [noun] Something, such as a monument, by which someone or something is remembered. | [noun] A chronicle or memoir. MEMORISED (14) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORISES (13) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORITER (13) MEMORIZED (23) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORIZER (22) MEMORIZES (22) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMSAHIBS (18) [noun] (as a respectful term of address) A white European woman in colonial India. MENADIONE (12) [noun] A derivative of naphthoquinone that is a constituent of vitamin K MENAGERIE (12) [noun] A collection of live wild animals on exhibition; the enclosure where they are kept. | [noun] A diverse or miscellaneous group. MENARCHES (16) [noun] The onset of menstruation; a girl's first period. MENDACITY (17) [noun] The fact or condition of being untruthful; dishonesty. | [noun] A deceit, falsehood, or lie. MENDICANT (14) [noun] A pauper who lives by begging. | [noun] A religious friar, forbidden to own personal property, who begs for a living. | [adjective] Depending on alms for a living. MENDICITY (17) [noun] The state of being a beggar; mendicancy or beggary MENHADENS (15) [noun] Any of several species of fish in the genera Brevoortia and Ethmidium, used for fish meal, fish oil, fertilizer, and bait. MENINGEAL (12) MENOPAUSE (13) [noun] The period in a woman's life when menstruation becomes irregular and less frequent before eventually stopping altogether, usually accompanied by a range of unpleasant symptoms; the period spanning perimenopause up to postmenopause. | [noun] The final menstrual period of a woman after which ovulation no longer occurs. MENSELESS (11) MENSTRUAL (11) [adjective] Of or relating to the menses. | [adjective] Occurring once a month; monthly. | [adjective] Lasting for a month. MENSTRUUM (13) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The menses; menstrual discharge. | [noun] A solvent. | [noun] Any liquid medium. MENTALISM (13) [noun] The doctrine that physical reality exists only because of the mind's awareness. | [noun] Activities such as mind-reading, especially by performers. | [noun] Oppression on the basis of neurological type or perceived intelligence. MENTALIST (11) [noun] A practitioner of mentalism. | [noun] An insane person. | [adjective] Of or relating to mentalism MENTALITY (14) [noun] A mindset; a way of thinking; a set of beliefs. | [noun] The characteristics of a mind described as a system of distinctive structures and processes based in biology, language, or culture, etc.; a mental system. MENTATION (11) [noun] Mental activity; the process of thinking. MENTHENES (14) MENTIONED (12) [verb] To make a short reference to something. | [verb] To utter a word or expression in order to refer to the expression itself, as opposed to its usual referent. MENTIONER (11) MENTORING (12) [verb] To act as someone's mentor | [noun] An arrangement by which one person mentors another. MERBROMIN (15) [noun] A topical antiseptic that is an organomercury derivative of fluorescein MERCAPTAN (15) [noun] Any of a class of organic compounds of sulphur, ( R1.S.R2 ); they tend to be foul-smelling. When R2 is a hydrogen atom, they are termed thiols or thioalcohols. MERCENARY (16) [noun] One motivated by gain, especially monetary. | [noun] A person employed to fight in an armed conflict who is not a member of the state or military group for which they are fighting and whose primary motivation is private gain. | [noun] One hired to engage in a figurative battle, as a corporate takeover, a lawsuit, or a political campaign. MERCERIES (13) MERCERISE (13) MERCERIZE (22) MERCHANTS (16) [noun] A person who traffics in commodities for profit. | [noun] The owner or operator of a retail business. | [noun] A trading vessel; a merchantman. MERCILESS (13) [adjective] Showing no mercy; cruel and pitiless. MERCURATE (13) MERCURIAL (13) [noun] Any of the plants known as mercury, especially the annual mercury or French mercury (Mercurialis annua). | [noun] A person born under the influence of the planet Mercury; hence, a person having an animated, lively, quick-witted or volatile character. | [noun] A chemical compound containing mercury. MERCURIES (13) [noun] A metal. | [noun] Any of several types of plant. MERCUROUS (13) [adjective] Pertaining to or derived from mercury. | [adjective] Of a compound, containing mercury with an oxidation number of 1. MERENGUES (12) MERGANSER (12) [noun] Any of various diving ducks of the genera Mergus or Lophodytes, which feed on fish and have a sharply serrated bill. MERGENCES (14) MERIDIANS (12) [noun] The south. | [noun] Midday, noon. | [noun] A great circle passing through the poles of the celestial sphere and the zenith for a particular point on the earth's surface. MERINGUES (12) [noun] A mixture consisting of beaten egg whites and sugar which is added to the tops of pies then browned. | [noun] A shell made of this mixture which serves as the receptacle for fruit, ice cream or sherbet. MERISTEMS (13) [noun] The plant tissue composed of totipotent cells that allows plant growth. MEROCRINE (13) MEROZOITE (20) MERRIMENT (13) [noun] A state of enjoyable exuberance | [noun] Playful fun MERRINESS (11) MESCALINE (13) [noun] A hallucinogenic and intoxicating compound present in the peyote cactus (Lophophora williamsii), the San Pedro cactus (Echinopsis pachanoi), and the Peruvian torch (Echinopsis peruviana). MESEEMETH (16) MESENTERA (11) MESENTERY (14) [noun] The membrane that attaches the intestines to the wall of the abdomen, maintaining their position in the abdominal cavity, and supplying them with blood vessels, nerves, and lymphatics. MESHUGGAH (19) MESHWORKS (21) [noun] A net; an assembly of meshes. MESMERISE (13) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESMERISM (15) [noun] The method or power of gaining control over someone's personality or actions, as in hypnosis or suggestion. | [noun] The state induced by hypnotic methods (especially that of Mesmer himself). MESMERIST (13) MESMERIZE (22) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESOCARPS (15) [noun] The middle layer of the pericarp of a fruit. In many fruits such as drupes and tomatoes, the mesocarp is fleshy MESODERMS (14) MESOGLEAS (12) MESOGLOEA (12) MESOMERES (13) MESOMORPH (18) [noun] A person with pronounced muscular development and low body fat. | [noun] : Theoretical body type in which a person naturally has lower body fat and greater ability to achieve muscular development than average. MESOPAUSE (13) [noun] In the atmosphere, the boundary between the mesosphere and the ionosphere. It is the atmospheric boundary where the temperature reaches its minimum value. MESOPHYLL (19) [noun] The soft internal parenchyma of a leaf MESOPHYLS (19) MESOPHYTE (19) [noun] Any normal terrestrial plant that grows in environments that have an average supply of water. MESOSCALE (13) [noun] A scale of intermediate size. | [adjective] Of medium size or extent; between microscale and macroscale. | [adjective] (of a weather phenomenon) Roughly 2-200 kilometers in extent; between microscale and synoptic. MESOSOMES (13) MESOTRONS (11) MESQUITES (20) [noun] Any of several deciduous trees of the genus Prosopis found in North America, and used as forage, which have long, beige seed/bean pods which may be dried and ground into a sweet, nutty flour. | [noun] The wood of these trees, used for smoking food, or charcoal made from this wood. | [noun] Country or land dominated by mesquite trees. MESSAGING (13) [verb] To send a message to; to transmit a message to, e.g. as text via a cell phone. | [verb] To send (something) as a message; usually refers to electronic messaging. | [verb] To send a message or messages; to be capable of sending messages. MESSALINE (11) MESSENGER (12) [noun] One who brings messages. | [noun] A light line with which a heavier line may be hauled e.g. from the deck of a ship to the pier. | [noun] The supporting member of an aerial cable (electric power or telephone or data). MESSIANIC (13) [adjective] Of, relating to, or resembling a messiah or the Messiah. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or resembling messianism. MESSIEURS (11) [noun] A man, especially a French gentleman. MESSINESS (11) MESSMATES (13) [noun] An associate with whom one shares a mess (eating place) on a ship | [noun] Any of various eucalypts with rough bark, specifically Eucalyptus obliqua. MESSUAGES (12) [noun] A plot of land as the site for a house; later, a residential building taken together with its outbuildings and assigned land. MESTESOES (11) MESTINOES (11) MESTIZOES (20) MESTRANOL (11) METABOLIC (15) [noun] A nutritional supplement | [adjective] Of or pertaining to metamorphosis; pertaining to, or involving, change. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to metabolism METACARPI (15) [noun] The five bones that form intermediate part of the hand between the fingers and the wrist. METALISED (12) METALISES (11) METALISTS (11) METALIZED (21) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALIZES (20) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLICS (13) [noun] A metallic color. METALLING (12) [verb] To make a road using crushed rock, stones etc. | [noun] A road surface. METALLIZE (20) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLOID (12) [noun] An element, such as silicon or germanium, intermediate in properties between that of a metal and a nonmetal; especially one that exhibits the external characteristics of a metal, but behaves chemically more as a nonmetal. | [noun] The metallic base of a fixed alkali, or alkaline earth; applied to sodium, potassium, and some other metallic substances whose metallic character was supposed to be not well defined. | [adjective] Of or relating to the metalloids. METALMARK (17) [noun] Any butterfly of the family Riodinidae. METALWARE (14) [noun] Any wares made out of metal, such as pots and pans. METALWORK (18) [noun] Objects made of metal. | [noun] The act of shaping metal, metalworking. METAMERES (13) [noun] One of successive or homodynamous parts in animals and plants; one of a series of similar parts that follow one another in a vertebrate or articulate animal, as in an earthworm; a segment or somite. METAMERIC (15) [adjective] Exhibiting metamerism | [adjective] Exhibiting structural isomerism METAPHASE (16) [noun] The stage of mitosis and meiosis, that follows prophase and comes before anaphase, during which condensed chromosomes become aligned before being separated. METAPHORS (16) [noun] The use of a word or phrase to refer to something that it is not, invoking a direct similarity between the word or phrase used and the thing described (but in the case of English without the words like or as, since use of those words would imply a simile); the word or phrase used in this way; an implied comparison. | [noun] The use of an everyday object or concept to represent an underlying facet of the computer and thus aid users in performing tasks. | [verb] To use a metaphor. METATARSI (11) [noun] The part of the foot between the toes and the ankle, especially its five bones. METAXYLEM (23) METAZOANS (20) [noun] Any animal that undergoes development from an embryo stage with three tissue layers, namely the ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. | [noun] Any animal that is multicellular. METEORITE (11) [noun] A metallic or stony object or body that is the remains of a meteoroid. METEOROID (12) [noun] A relatively small (sand- to boulder-sized) fragment of debris in a star system that produces a meteor when it hits the atmosphere METERAGES (12) METESTRUS (11) METHADONE (15) [noun] A synthetic opioid analgesic, used to wean addicts off heroin or other opiate based narcotics, and in chronic pain management. METHADONS (15) METHANOLS (14) METHEGLIN (15) [noun] A spiced mead, originally from Wales. METHODISE (15) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODISM (17) METHODIST (15) [noun] One who follows a method. METHODIZE (24) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHOUGHT (18) METHYLALS (17) METHYLASE (17) METHYLATE (17) [noun] The anion -O-CH3- derived from methanol by loss of a proton; any salt containing this anion | [verb] To add, or treat with methyl alcohol (see methylated spirits) | [verb] To add a methyl group to a compound METHYLENE (17) [noun] The divalent radical CH2< in which the free valencies are part of single bonds. | [noun] The same group, present as a repeating unit, in aliphatic compounds with names such as hexamethylenediamine. | [noun] The unstable carbene CH2: METONYMIC (18) METRICIZE (22) METRIFIED (15) METRIFIES (14) METROLOGY (15) [noun] The science of weights and measures or of measurement. | [noun] A system of weights and measures. METRONOME (13) [noun] A device, containing an inverted pendulum, used to mark time by means of regular ticks at adjustable intervals; an electronic equivalent that emits flashes. MEZEREONS (20) [noun] An ornamental shrub, Daphne mezereum, having purple flowers and bright red fruit. | [noun] The dried bark of this plant, once used as a vesicant. MEZEREUMS (22) MEZQUITES (29) MEZZANINE (29) [noun] A secondary floor, in between the main floors of a building; entresol. | [noun] A small window used to light such a secondary floor. | [noun] The lowest balcony in an auditorium. MEZZOTINT (29) [noun] A form of intaglio etching in which a metal plate is roughened evenly and then smoothed to bring out an image. | [noun] An etching or print made using this method. | [verb] To make such etchings MIASMATIC (15) MICACEOUS (15) MICAWBERS (18) MICRIFIED (17) MICRIFIES (16) MICROBARS (15) MICROBEAM (17) MICROBIAL (15) [noun] A microbe or bacterium. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or caused by microbes or microorganisms. MICROBREW (18) [noun] A beer produced by a small local brewery, or microbrewery. | [verb] To produce beer on a small scale, as a microbrewer. MICROCHIP (20) [noun] Integrated circuit; microprocessor. | [verb] To fit (an animal) with a microchip. MICROCODE (16) [noun] The collective microprograms in a CPU, used to run machine instructions. | [verb] To write or rewrite (program instructions) in microcode, typically to optimize performance. MICROCOPY (20) [noun] A photocopy that is greatly reduced in size. | [noun] Very short copy. | [verb] To copy (a document) at a greatly reduced size. MICROCOSM (17) [noun] Human nature or the human body as representative of the wider universe; man considered as a miniature counterpart of divine or universal nature. | [noun] The human body; a person. | [noun] A smaller system which is seen as representative of a larger one. MICROCYTE (18) [noun] An unusually small red blood cell found in some forms of anemia MICRODOTS (14) [noun] A text or photographic image that has been reduced in size to that of a typographical dot in order to escape detection by unintended recipients. | [noun] A small-sized tablet containing lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD). MICROFILM (18) [noun] A continuous roll of film containing photographs of documents at a greatly reduced size | [verb] To reproduce documents on such film MICROFORM (18) [noun] Microfilm, microfiche or similar materials. | [noun] A microscopic form of life; an animal or vegetable organism of microscopic size. MICROGRAM (16) [noun] A unit of mass equal to one millionth of a gram, or 0.000 001 grams (symbol: μg or mcg). MICROINCH (18) MICROLITH (16) [noun] A small stone tool. | [noun] The microscopic acicular components of rocks. MICROMERE (15) MICROMHOS (18) MICROMINI (15) MICROMOLE (15) MICRONIZE (22) [verb] To reduce in size, often to micrometer scale. MICROPORE (15) [noun] A microscopic pore MICROPYLE (18) [noun] In seed-bearing plants, a small opening in the integuments of the ovule through which sperm are able to access the ovum. | [noun] The hilum of an ovum at the point of attachment to the ovary; any opening in the coverings of an ovum by which spermatozoa may find entrance. MICROSOME (15) [noun] A vesicle formed as an artifact of cell disruption MICROTOME (15) [noun] A special instrument that produces very thin slices of plant and animal tissues, for later examination by light microscope or electron microscope. | [verb] To cut into sections using a microtome MICROTONE (13) [noun] Any interval smaller than a semitone MICROVOLT (16) MICROWATT (16) MICROWAVE (19) [noun] An electromagnetic wave with wavelength between that of infrared light and radio waves. | [verb] To cook (something) in a microwave oven. | [noun] An oven that uses microwave energy to heat food or other items placed within it. MICTURATE (13) [verb] To urinate. MIDBRAINS (14) [noun] A part of the brain located rostral to the pons and caudal to the thalamus and the basal ganglia, composed of the tectum (dorsal portion) and the tegmentum (ventral portion). MIDCOURSE (14) MIDDLEMAN (15) [noun] An intermediary, agent between two (or more) parties. | [noun] An intermediate dealer between the manufacturer and the retailer or customer. | [noun] One who rents land in large tracts, and lets it in small portions to the peasantry. MIDDLEMEN (15) [noun] An intermediary, agent between two (or more) parties. | [noun] An intermediate dealer between the manufacturer and the retailer or customer. | [noun] One who rents land in large tracts, and lets it in small portions to the peasantry. MIDDLINGS (14) [noun] Something of intermediate or average size, position, or quality. | [noun] Commodities that are of intermediate price, quality, or size. | [noun] Partially refined ore or petroleum. MIDDORSAL (13) MIDFIELDS (16) [noun] The middle of the field of play MIDMONTHS (17) MIDNIGHTS (16) [noun] The middle of the night: the sixth temporal hour, equidistant between sunset and sunrise. | [noun] 12 o'clock at night exactly. MIDPOINTS (14) [noun] A point equidistant between two extremes. | [noun] A point which divides a line segment into two lines of equal length. MIDRANGES (13) [noun] The middle portion of a particular range. MIDRASHIC (17) MIDRASHIM (17) MIDSPACES (16) MIDSTREAM (14) [noun] The middle of a stream or river. MIDSUMMER (16) [noun] The period around the summer solstice; about 21st June in the northern hemisphere. | [noun] The first day of summer | [noun] The middle of summer. MIDWEEKLY (22) MIDWIFERY (21) [noun] The practice and science of being a midwife. MIDWIFING (19) [verb] To act as a midwife | [verb] To facilitate the emergence of MIDWINTER (15) [noun] The middle of winter. | [noun] The winter solstice; about December 21st or 22nd. MIDWIVING (19) MIGHTIEST (15) [adjective] Very strong; possessing might. | [adjective] Very heavy and powerful. | [adjective] Very large; hefty. MIGRAINES (12) [noun] A severe, disabling headache, usually affecting only one side of the head, and often accompanied by nausea, vomiting, photophobia and visual disturbances. | [noun] A neurological condition characterised by such headaches. MIGRATING (13) [verb] To relocate periodically from one region to another, usually according to the seasons. | [verb] To change one's geographic pattern of habitation. | [verb] To change habitations across a border; to move from one country or political region to another. MIGRATION (12) [noun] An instance of moving to live in another place for a while. | [noun] Seasonal moving of animals, as mammals, birds or fish, especially between breeding and non-breeding areas. | [noun] Movement in general. MIGRATORS (12) MIGRATORY (15) [adjective] (of birds, etc) Migrating. | [adjective] Roving; wandering; nomadic. MIJNHEERS (21) MILDENING (13) MILDEWING (16) [verb] To taint with mildew. | [verb] To become tainted with mildew. MILEPOSTS (13) [noun] A post on a highway, often with one or more fingerposts, showing the distance in miles to nearby places | [noun] A sign or post beside a railway marking the distance from the (actual or nominal) start of a line (usually the principal terminus or junction with a more major line) MILESIMOS (13) MILESTONE (11) [noun] A stone milepost (or by extension in other materials), one of a series of numbered markers placed along a road at regular intervals, typically at the side of the road or in a median. | [noun] An important event in a person's life or career, in the history of a nation, in the life of some project, etc. | [verb] To place milestones along (a road, etc.). MILIARIAL (11) MILIARIAS (11) MILITANCE (13) MILITANCY (16) [noun] The quality of being militant. MILITANTS (11) [noun] A soldier, a combatant. | [noun] An entrenched or aggressive adherent to a particular cause, now especially a member of a particular ideological faction. | [noun] Specifically, someone who supports the Trotskyist political view expressed in the newspaper Militant, or who engages in aggressive left-wing politics. MILITARIA (11) [noun] Military or police artifacts. MILITATED (12) [verb] To give force or effect toward; to influence. | [verb] To fight. MILITATES (11) [verb] To give force or effect toward; to influence. | [verb] To fight. MILKINESS (15) MILKMAIDS (18) [noun] A girl or young woman who milks the cows on a farm MILKSHEDS (19) MILKWEEDS (19) [noun] Any of several plants that have a milky sap and have pods that split to release seeds with silky tufts. | [noun] A monarch butterfly (Danaus spp). MILKWOODS (19) MILKWORTS (18) [noun] Any of more than 500 species of flowering plants of the genus Polygala that are used as a food source by the larvae of some members of the Lepidoptera order. MILLCAKES (17) MILLENARY (14) [noun] A period of one thousand years; a millennium. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a thousand, especially to a thousand years. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a millennium; millenarian. MILLENNIA (11) [noun] A period of time consisting of one thousand years. | [noun] The period of one thousand years during which Christ will reign on earth (according to Millenarianist interpretations). | [noun] A period of universal happiness, peace or prosperity; a utopia. MILLEPEDS (14) MILLERITE (11) [noun] A nickel sulfide mineral, NiS, that occurs as hairlike tufts MILLIARDS (12) MILLIARES (11) MILLIBARS (13) [noun] A non-SI unit of pressure equal to 100 pascals, used primarily to report atmospheric pressure. MILLIEMES (13) MILLIGALS (12) MILLIGRAM (14) [noun] An SI unit of mass, equivalent to one thousandth of a gram. Symbol: mg MILLIMHOS (16) MILLIMOLE (13) MILLINERS (11) [noun] A person who is involved in the manufacture, design, or sale of hats for women. MILLINERY (14) [noun] Women's hats. | [noun] A shop selling women's hats. | [noun] The business and work that a milliner engages in. MILLIOHMS (16) MILLIONTH (14) [noun] The person or thing in the millionth position. | [noun] One of a million equal parts of a whole. Term ppm (parts per million) is also used. | [adjective] The ordinal form of the number one million. MILLIPEDE (14) [noun] Any of many elongated arthropods, of the class Diplopoda, with cylindrical bodies that have two pairs of legs for each one of their 20 to 100 or more body segments. MILLIPEDS (14) MILLIREMS (13) MILLIVOLT (14) [noun] One thousandth (10-3) of a volt, abbreviated as mV. MILLIWATT (14) [noun] One thousandth ( 10-3 ) of a watt, abbreviated as mW. MILLPONDS (14) [noun] A pond or reservoir produced by damming a river or stream in order to provide a steady source of water for a millrace. MILLRACES (13) [noun] A fast-running water-filled channel diverted from a river or stream used to drive a mill wheel. MILLSTONE (11) [noun] A large round stone used for grinding grain. | [noun] A coarse-grained sandstone used for making such stones; millstone grit. | [noun] Often in a millstone round one's neck (referring to Matthew 18:6 in the Bible): a heavy responsibility that is difficult to bear. MILLWORKS (18) MIMESISES (13) MIMETITES (13) MIMICKERS (19) [noun] One who mimics. MIMICKING (20) [verb] To imitate, especially in order to ridicule. | [verb] To take on the appearance of another, for protection or camouflage. | [noun] Mimicry MIMICRIES (15) [noun] The act or ability to simulate the appearance of someone or something else. MINCEMEAT (15) [noun] A mixture of fruit, spices and sugar used as a filling for mince pies. | [noun] Minced meat, mince. | [noun] (by analogy) A badly cut-up body or parts of a body. MINCINGLY (17) MINDFULLY (18) MINEFIELD (15) [noun] An area in which land mines have been laid. | [noun] (by extension) A dangerous situation. | [noun] A pitch that has dried out and crumbled and on which the ball is bouncing and spinning unpredictably. MINELAYER (14) [noun] A ship capable of laying mines. MINIATURE (11) [noun] Greatly diminished size or form; reduced scale. | [noun] A small version of something; a model of reduced scale. | [noun] A small, highly detailed painting, a portrait miniature. MINIBIKER (17) MINIBIKES (17) MINIBUSES (13) [noun] A small bus, especially one used as transport for small groups. | [noun] A-sixteen seater vehicle used as a taxi. A kombi. | [noun] A small four-wheeled carriage. MINICAMPS (17) [noun] A short training session for members of a professional sports team, held before the main preseason training MINIFYING (18) MINIMALLY (16) [adverb] In a minimal way; to the least extent. MINIMAXES (20) [noun] In decision theory, game theory, etc. a decision rule used for minimizing the maximum possible loss, or maximizing the minimum gain. | [verb] To find the optimum play, or decision, to achieve minimizing the maximum loss. MINIMILLS (13) MINIMISED (14) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMISES (13) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMIZED (23) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMIZER (22) MINIMIZES (22) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIPARKS (17) MINISCULE (13) [adjective] Written in minuscules, lowercase. | [adjective] Written in minuscule handwriting style. | [adjective] Very small, tiny. MINISHING (15) MINISKIRT (15) [noun] A short skirt with its hemline well above the knees, generally at mid-thigh level. MINISTATE (11) MINISTERS (11) [noun] A person who is trained to preach, to perform religious ceremonies, and to afford pastoral care at a Protestant church. | [noun] A politician who heads a ministry (national or regional government department for public service). | [noun] At a diplomacy, the rank of diplomat directly below ambassador. MINOXIDIL (19) [noun] A compound used orally as a vasodilator to treat hypertension and topically to reverse baldness. MINSTRELS (11) [noun] A medieval traveling entertainer who would sing and recite poetry, often to his own musical accompaniment. | [noun] One of a troupe of entertainers who wore black makeup (blackface) to present a so-called minstrel show, being a variety show of song, dance and banjo music. MINUSCULE (13) [noun] A lowercase letter. | [noun] Either of the two medieval handwriting styles minuscule cursive and Caroline minuscule. | [noun] A letter in these styles. MINUTEMAN (13) [noun] During the American War for Independence, a citizen-soldier who would fight for the Patriots at a minute's notice. | [noun] A man who reaches orgasm undesirably quickly during sexual intercourse. | [noun] The cyclist starting one minute ahead of, or behind, another rider in a time trial. MINUTEMEN (13) [noun] During the American War for Independence, a citizen-soldier who would fight for the Patriots at a minute's notice. | [noun] A man who reaches orgasm undesirably quickly during sexual intercourse. | [noun] The cyclist starting one minute ahead of, or behind, another rider in a time trial. MIQUELETS (20) MIRACIDIA (14) [noun] A free-living motile form of a trematode, covered with cilia, which settles in a mollusc intermediate host to become a sporocyst MIRLITONS (11) [noun] A pear-shaped vegetable or its vine; the chayote. | [noun] The eunuch flute, a kind of kazoo or membranophone. | [noun] An 18th-century hussar hat resembling a slightly conical shako or tall fez. MIRRORING (12) [verb] Of an event, activity, behaviour, etc, to be identical to, to be a copy of. | [verb] To create something identical to (a web site, etc.). | [verb] To reflect, as in a mirror. MIRTHLESS (14) [adjective] Lacking mirth; devoid of joy. MISACTING (14) MISADAPTS (14) MISADDING (14) MISADJUST (19) MISADVISE (15) MISAGENTS (12) MISAIMING (14) MISALIGNS (12) MISALLIED (12) MISALLIES (11) MISALTERS (11) MISASSAYS (14) MISATONED (12) MISATONES (11) MISAWARDS (15) MISBECAME (17) MISBECOME (17) MISBEGINS (14) MISBEHAVE (19) [verb] To act or behave in an inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected manner. MISBELIEF (16) [noun] An erroneous belief | [noun] A heresy; an unorthodox belief MISBIASED (14) MISBIASES (13) MISBILLED (14) MISBRANDS (14) MISBUILDS (14) MISBUTTON (13) MISCALLED (14) [verb] To call (someone) bad names; to insult, abuse. | [verb] To call (something) by the wrong name. | [verb] To make a wrong call; to announce (one's hand of cards) incorrectly. MISCHANCE (18) [noun] Bad luck, misfortune. | [noun] A mishap, an unlucky circumstance. | [verb] To undergo (a misfortune); to suffer (something unfortunate). MISCHARGE (17) MISCHIEFS (19) [noun] Conduct that playfully causes petty annoyance. | [noun] A playfully annoying action. | [noun] (collective) A group or a pack of rats. MISCHOICE (18) MISCITING (14) MISCLAIMS (15) MISCODING (15) MISCOINED (14) MISCOLORS (13) MISCOOKED (18) MISCOPIED (16) [verb] To copy incorrectly; to copy with mistakes. MISCOPIES (15) [noun] An imperfect copy. | [verb] To copy incorrectly; to copy with mistakes. MISCOUNTS (13) [verb] To incorrectly count or add up. MISCREANT (13) [noun] One who has behaved badly, or illegally. | [noun] One not restrained by moral principles; an unscrupulous villain. | [noun] One who holds a false religious belief; a misbeliever. MISCREATE (13) MISDATING (13) [verb] To date incorrectly; to mark with the wrong date. MISDEEMED (15) MISDEFINE (15) MISDIALED (13) [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDIRECT (14) [verb] To direct something wrongly | [verb] To direct attention away from covert actions or intended targets. | [verb] To put the incorrect address on a mail item MISDOINGS (13) [noun] An act of misdoing; a misdeed. MISDOUBTS (14) [verb] To doubt the existence or reality of. | [verb] To have suspicions about. MISDRIVEN (15) MISDRIVES (15) MISEATING (12) MISEDITED (13) MISEMPLOY (18) [verb] To employ incorrectly; to misuse. MISENROLL (11) MISENROLS (11) MISENTERS (11) MISERABLE (13) [noun] A miserable person; a wretch. | [adjective] In a state of misery: very sad, ill, or poor. | [adjective] Very bad (at something); unskilled, incompetent. MISERABLY (16) [adverb] In a miserable manner MISERERES (11) [noun] A prayer for mercy. | [noun] An expression of lamentation or complaint. | [noun] A medieval dagger, used for the mercy stroke to a wounded foe; misericord. MISESTEEM (13) MISEVENTS (14) MISFAITHS (17) MISFEASOR (14) MISFIELDS (15) [noun] A failure to field the ball properly. | [verb] To field the ball clumsily or ineptly; in cricket this can result in the batsman scoring another run. MISFILING (15) [verb] To file incorrectly; to file in the wrong place or the wrong way. | [noun] An incorrect filing. MISFIRING (15) [verb] To fail to discharge properly. | [verb] (of an engine) To fail to ignite in the proper sequence. | [verb] (by extension) To fail to achieve the anticipated result. MISFITTED (15) MISFORMED (17) MISFRAMED (17) MISFRAMES (16) MISGAUGED (14) MISGAUGES (13) MISGIVING (16) [noun] Doubt, apprehension, a feeling of dread MISGOVERN (15) [verb] To govern badly or wrongly. MISGRADED (14) MISGRADES (13) MISGRAFTS (15) MISGUIDED (14) [verb] To guide poorly or incorrectly. | [verb] To lead astray; to lead into error. | [adjective] Ill-conceived or not thought through MISGUIDER (13) MISGUIDES (13) [verb] To guide poorly or incorrectly. | [verb] To lead astray; to lead into error. MISHANDLE (15) [noun] Rough manipulation which causes physical damage. | [noun] Ineffective or incorrect deal. | [noun] Improper, wrong, or bad usage or treatment; abuse. MISHANTER (14) MISINFERS (14) MISINFORM (16) [verb] To give or deliver false, fake, or misleading information. MISINTERS (11) MISJOINED (19) MISJUDGED (21) [verb] To make an error in judging, to incorrectly assess. MISJUDGES (20) [verb] To make an error in judging, to incorrectly assess. MISKICKED (22) [verb] To kick incorrectly or badly. MISLABELS (13) [verb] To label incorrectly. MISLABORS (13) MISLAYERS (14) MISLAYING (15) [verb] To leave or lay something in the wrong place and then forget where one put it. MISLEADER (12) MISLEARED (12) MISLEARNS (11) MISLEARNT (11) MISLIGHTS (15) MISLIKERS (15) MISLIKING (16) [verb] To displease. | [verb] To dislike; to disapprove of; to have aversion to. | [noun] Dislike; disapproval MISLIVING (15) MISLOCATE (13) MISLODGED (14) MISLODGES (13) MISMAKING (18) MISMANAGE (14) [verb] To manage an area of responsibility in a way which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. | [verb] To behave, in a management capacity, in a manner which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. MISMARKED (18) MISMATING (14) [verb] To mate or match wrongly or unsuitably; mismatch. | [noun] An unsuitable or incorrect mating between organisms. MISMOVING (17) MISNAMING (14) [verb] To call by a wrong name. | [verb] To give an unsuitable or injurious name to; name incorrectly. | [noun] The act of calling something by its wrong name MISNOMERS (13) [noun] A use of a term that is misleading; a misname. | [noun] A term that is misleading. | [noun] A term whose sense in common usage conflicts with a technical sense. MISOGYNIC (17) MISONEISM (13) MISORDERS (12) MISORIENT (11) MISPAGING (15) MISPAINTS (13) MISPARSED (14) MISPARSES (13) MISPARTED (14) MISPENNED (14) MISPLACED (16) [verb] To put something somewhere and then forget its location; to mislay | [verb] To apply one's talents inappropriately. | [verb] To put something in the wrong location. MISPLACES (15) [verb] To put something somewhere and then forget its location; to mislay | [verb] To apply one's talents inappropriately. | [verb] To put something in the wrong location. MISPLANTS (13) MISPLAYED (17) [verb] To play incorrectly or poorly. MISPLEADS (14) MISPOINTS (13) MISPOISED (14) MISPOISES (13) MISPRICED (16) MISPRICES (15) MISPRINTS (13) [noun] An accidental mistake in print. | [verb] To make a misprint. MISPRIZED (23) [verb] To despise or hold in contempt; to undervalue. MISPRIZES (22) [verb] To despise or hold in contempt; to undervalue. MISQUOTED (21) [verb] To incorrectly recite a quote. | [verb] To incorrectly record a quote. MISQUOTES (20) [noun] An incorrect recitation of a quote. | [noun] An incorrect recording of a quote. | [verb] To incorrectly recite a quote. MISRAISED (12) MISRAISES (11) MISRATING (12) MISRECKON (17) MISRECORD (14) MISREFERS (14) MISRELATE (11) MISRELIED (12) MISRELIES (11) MISRENDER (12) [verb] To render incorrectly. MISREPORT (13) [verb] To report erroneously; to give an incorrect account of. | [noun] A false report. MISROUTED (12) [verb] To route incorrectly; to send the wrong way. MISROUTES (11) [verb] To route incorrectly; to send the wrong way. MISRULING (12) [verb] Of a trial judge, to make a bad decision in court. | [verb] To rule badly; to misgovern. | [noun] A bad or wrong ruling. MISSAYING (15) MISSEATED (12) MISSENSES (11) MISSHAPED (17) [verb] To shape badly or incorrectly. MISSHAPEN (16) [adjective] Having a bad, ugly or awkward shape; deformed; malformed. | [adjective] Morally or intellectually warped. MISSHAPES (16) [verb] To shape badly or incorrectly. MISSILEER (11) MISSILERY (14) [noun] The science of missiles. MISSIONED (12) MISSIONER (11) [noun] A missionary. MISSORTED (12) MISSOUNDS (12) MISSPACED (16) MISSPACES (15) MISSPEAKS (17) [verb] To fail to pronounce, utter, or speak correctly. | [verb] To speak insultingly or disrespectfully. MISSPELLS (13) [verb] To spell incorrectly. MISSPENDS (14) [verb] To spend poorly, incorrectly or unwisely. MISSPOKEN (17) [verb] To fail to pronounce, utter, or speak correctly. | [verb] To speak insultingly or disrespectfully. MISSTARTS (11) MISSTATED (12) [verb] To make a statement that is in error, inadvertently; to say incorrectly, through a slip of the tongue. MISSTATES (11) [verb] To make a statement that is in error, inadvertently; to say incorrectly, through a slip of the tongue. MISSTEERS (11) MISSTRIKE (15) MISSTRUCK (17) MISSTYLED (15) MISSTYLES (14) MISSUITED (12) MISTAKERS (15) MISTAKING (16) [verb] To understand wrongly, taking one thing or person for another. | [verb] To misunderstand (someone). | [verb] To commit an unintentional error; to do or think something wrong. MISTAUGHT (15) [verb] To teach incorrectly. MISTENDED (13) MISTERMED (14) MISTHINKS (18) MISTHROWN (17) MISTHROWS (17) MISTIMING (14) [verb] To do at the wrong time; especially to misjudge the timing of coordinated events. | [noun] Incorrect timing. MISTINESS (11) MISTITLED (12) [verb] To title incorrectly; to give the wrong name to. MISTITLES (11) [verb] To title incorrectly; to give the wrong name to. MISTLETOE (11) [noun] Any of several hemiparasitic evergreen plants of the order Santalales with white berries that grow in the crowns of apple trees, oaks, and other trees, such as the European mistletoe (Viscum album) and American mistletoe or eastern mistletoe (Phoradendron leucarpum). | [noun] A sprig of one such plant used as a Christmas decoration, associated with the custom that a man may kiss any woman standing beneath it. MISTRACED (14) MISTRACES (13) MISTRAINS (11) MISTREATS (11) [verb] To treat someone, or something roughly or badly. MISTRIALS (11) [noun] A trial that has been declared invalid because of an error in procedure, or because of hung jury. MISTRUSTS (11) [verb] To have no confidence in (something or someone). | [verb] To be wary, suspicious or doubtful of (something or someone). | [verb] To suspect, to imagine or suppose (something) to be the case. MISTRUTHS (14) MISTRYSTS (14) MISTUNING (12) MISTUTORS (11) MISTYPING (17) [verb] To type incorrectly, introducing spelling mistakes or other errors. | [verb] To categorize incorrectly. | [noun] A mistyped word. MISUNIONS (11) MISUSAGES (12) MISVALUED (15) MISVALUES (14) MISWORDED (16) MISWRITES (14) MISYOKING (19) MITERWORT (14) MITICIDAL (14) MITICIDES (14) MITIGATED (13) [verb] To reduce, lessen, or decrease; to make less severe or easier to bear. | [verb] To downplay. | [adjective] Lessened, reduced, diminished MITIGATES (12) [verb] To reduce, lessen, or decrease; to make less severe or easier to bear. | [verb] To downplay. MITIGATOR (12) [noun] Someone or something that mitigates. MITOGENIC (14) MITOMYCIN (18) MITREWORT (14) MNEMONICS (15) [noun] Anything (especially something in verbal form) used to help remember something. | [noun] The textual, human-readable form of an assembly language instruction, not including operands. | [noun] The study of techniques for remembering anything more easily. MOBILISED (14) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILISES (13) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILIZED (23) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILIZES (22) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBOCRACY (20) [noun] Rule or control by the mob (or by the mass of ordinary people); a mob as a politically powerful force. MOBOCRATS (15) MOCCASINS (15) [noun] A traditional Native North American shoe, usually without a heel or sole, made of a piece of deerskin or other soft leather turned up at the edges which are either stitched together at the top of the shoe, or sewn to a vamp (a piece covering the top of the foot). | [noun] A modern shoe with either a low or no heel resembling a traditional Native American moccasin in that the leather forming the sides of the shoe is stitched at the top. | [noun] A light beige colour, like that of a moccasin. MOCKERIES (17) [noun] The action of mocking; ridicule, derision. | [noun] Something so lacking in necessary qualities as to inspire ridicule; a laughing-stock. | [noun] Something insultingly imitative; an offensively futile action, gesture etc. MOCKINGLY (21) [adverb] Said, written, or done with the intent to mock, or ridicule; with mocking effect. MODELINGS (13) MODELISTS (12) MODELLERS (12) MODELLING (13) [verb] To display for others to see, especially in regard to wearing clothing while performing the role of a fashion model | [verb] To use as an object in the creation of a forecast or model | [verb] To make a miniature model of MODERATED (13) [verb] To reduce the excessiveness of (something) | [verb] To become less excessive | [verb] To preside over (something) as a moderator MODERATES (12) [noun] One who holds an intermediate position between extremes, as in politics. | [noun] One of a party in Scottish Church history dominant in the 18th century, lax in doctrine and discipline, but intolerant of evangelicalism and popular rights. It caused the secessions of 1733 and 1761, and its final resultant was the Disruption of 1843. MODERATOR (12) [noun] Someone who moderates | [noun] The person who presides over a synod of a Presbyterian Church | [noun] A substance (often water or graphite) used to decrease the speed of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor and hence increase likelihood of fission MODERATOS (12) [noun] A tempo mark directing that a passage is to be played at a moderate tempo. | [noun] A passage having this mark MODERNEST (12) MODERNISE (12) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNISM (14) [noun] Modern or contemporary ideas, thought, practices, etc. | [noun] Anything that is characteristic of modernity. | [noun] Any of several styles of art, architecture, literature, philosophy, etc., that flourished in the 20th century. MODERNIST (12) [noun] A follower or proponent of modernism. | [adjective] Of, or relating to modernism. | [adjective] Pertaining to the culinary arts of molecular gastronomy MODERNITY (15) [noun] The quality of being modern or contemporary. | [noun] Modern times. | [noun] (history) Quality of being of the modern period of contemporary historiography. MODERNIZE (21) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODESTEST (12) MODESTIES (12) [noun] The quality of being modest; having a limited and not overly high opinion of oneself and one's abilities. | [noun] Moderate behaviour; reserve. | [noun] (specifically) Pudency, avoidance of sexual explicitness. MODIFIERS (15) [noun] One who, or that which, modifies. | [noun] (grammar) A word, phrase, or clause that limits or qualifies the sense of another word or phrase. | [noun] A keyword that qualifies the meaning of other code. MODIFYING (19) [verb] To change part of. | [verb] To be or become modified. | [verb] To set bounds to; to moderate. MODILLION (12) [noun] A decoratively carved supporting block atop a column. MODULARLY (15) MODULATED (13) [verb] To regulate, adjust or adapt | [verb] To change the pitch, intensity or tone of one's voice or of a musical instrument | [verb] To vary the amplitude, frequency or phase of a carrier wave in proportion to the amplitude etc of a source wave (such as speech or music) MODULATES (12) [verb] To regulate, adjust or adapt | [verb] To change the pitch, intensity or tone of one's voice or of a musical instrument | [verb] To vary the amplitude, frequency or phase of a carrier wave in proportion to the amplitude etc of a source wave (such as speech or music) MODULATOR (12) MOFFETTES (17) MOILINGLY (15) MOISTENED (12) [verb] To make moist or moister. | [verb] To become moist or moister. MOISTENER (11) MOISTNESS (11) MOISTURES (11) MOLDBOARD (15) [noun] A curved piece of metal on a plow or bulldozer that clears the free dirt from the blade. | [noun] (founding) A follow board. MOLDERING (13) [verb] To decay or rot. MOLDINESS (12) MOLDWARPS (17) MOLECULAR (13) [noun] Any compound having a specified (range of) molecular weight(s) | [adjective] Relating to, or consisting of, or produced by molecules. | [adjective] (of an element) Combined with itself and with no other element; elemental. MOLECULES (13) [noun] The smallest particle of a specific element or compound that retains the chemical properties of that element or compound; two or more atoms held together by chemical bonds. | [noun] A tiny amount. MOLEHILLS (14) [noun] A small mound of earth created by a mole's burrowing underneath the surface of the ground. MOLESKINS (15) [noun] The fur of a mole. | [noun] A cotton twill fabric with a heavy velvety nap. | [noun] (by extension, in the plural) Clothing made of this fabric. MOLESTERS (11) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLESTING (12) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLLIFIED (15) [verb] To ease a burden, particularly worry; make less painful; to comfort. | [verb] To appease (anger), pacify, gain the good will of. | [verb] To soften; to make tender MOLLIFIES (14) [verb] To ease a burden, particularly worry; make less painful; to comfort. | [verb] To appease (anger), pacify, gain the good will of. | [verb] To soften; to make tender MOLLUSCAN (13) MOLLUSKAN (15) MOLYBDATE (17) [noun] The anion MoO42−. | [noun] Any salt of molybdic acid. MOMENTARY (16) [adjective] Lasting for only a moment. | [adjective] Happening at every moment; perpetual. | [adjective] Ephemeral or relatively short-lived. MOMENTOES (13) MOMENTOUS (13) [adjective] Outstanding in importance, of great consequence. MOMENTUMS (15) MONACHISM (18) MONADISMS (14) MONADNOCK (18) [noun] A hill or mountain standing isolated above a predominantly flat plain. MONARCHAL (16) MONARCHIC (18) MONASTERY (14) [noun] Building for housing monks or others who have taken religious vows MONASTICS (13) [noun] A person with monastic ways; a monk. MONATOMIC (15) [adjective] Of an element, consisting of a single atom in the molecule, for example, the noble gases. Note: Strictly speaking, a molecule has at least two atoms. MONAZITES (20) [noun] Any of a range of reddish-brown minerals that are mixed phosphates of the lighter rare earth elements lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, promethium, samarium, europium, gadolinium and yttrium MONECIOUS (13) MONELLINS (11) MONETISED (12) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETISES (11) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETIZED (21) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETIZES (20) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONEYBAGS (17) [noun] A bag, normally with a drawstring, used for holding money. | [noun] (in the plural) A wealthy person. | [noun] A wealthy person. MONEYWORT (17) [noun] A European vine, Lysimachia nummularia, having yellow flowers; creeping Jenny, creeping Charlie. MONGERING (13) MONGOLISM (14) [noun] Down syndrome MONGOLOID (13) [noun] A member of the racial classification of humanity composed of peoples native to North Asia, East Asia, Pacific Oceania, and the Americas, as well as their diaspora in other parts of the world. | [noun] A person with Down syndrome. | [noun] Idiot, retard; a general term of abuse, due to association with Down syndrome. MONGOOSES (12) [noun] Any of several species of generalist predatory Carnivores in the family Herpestidae; the various species range in size from rats to large cats. The Indian mongoose is noted as a predator of venomous snakes, though other mongoose species have similar habits. | [noun] Any species of Malagasy mongoose; only distantly related to the Herpestidae, these are members of the family Eupleridae; they resemble mongooses in appearance and habits, but have larger ears and ringed tails. MONICKERS (17) [noun] A personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute. | [noun] A signature. | [noun] An object (structured item of data) used to associate the name of an object with its location. MONISHING (15) MONITIONS (11) [noun] A caution or warning. | [noun] A legal notification of something. | [noun] A sign of impending danger; an omen. MONITORED (12) [verb] To watch over; to guard. MONKERIES (15) MONKEYING (19) [verb] To meddle; to mess (with). | [verb] To mimic; to ape. MONKEYPOD (21) MONKHOODS (19) MONKSHOOD (19) [noun] Any of various poisonous plants, of the genus Aconitum, with blue or white flowers in the shape of a hood | [noun] The dried leaves or flowers of these plants formerly used as a source of medicinal alkaloids MONOACIDS (14) MONOAMINE (13) [noun] Any compound having a single amino functional group, especially a neurotransmitter. MONOBASIC (15) [adjective] (of an acid) Containing one replaceable hydrogen atom. | [adjective] (of a salt) Having one atom of a univalent metal. | [adjective] Having only one subordinate taxon; monotypic. MONOCARPS (15) MONOCHORD (17) [noun] A musical instrument for experimenting with the mathematical relations of musical sounds, consisting of a single string stretched between two bridges, one or both of which can be moved, and which stand upon a graduated rule for the purpose of changing and measuring the length of the part of the string between them. | [noun] A stringed instrument with only one string. MONOCLINE (13) [noun] A unidirectional dip in strata that is not a part of an anticline or syncline | [noun] A single flexure in otherwise flat-lying strata MONOCOQUE (22) [noun] A structure design in which the frame and body are built as a single integrated structure. MONOCRACY (18) [noun] A form of government in which unlimited power is held by a single individual. | [noun] An instance of this government. MONOCRATS (13) MONOCULAR (13) [noun] A monocle. | [noun] (retronym) A monocular telescope, as opposed to binoculars. | [adjective] Having one eye. MONOCYTES (16) [noun] A type of blood leukocyte that differentiates into a macrophage. MONOCYTIC (18) MONODICAL (14) MONODISTS (12) MONODRAMA (14) [noun] A play in the form of a monologue MONOECIES (13) MONOECISM (15) MONOESTER (11) MONOFUELS (14) MONOGAMIC (16) MONOGENIC (14) [noun] A derivative of a monogenic function | [adjective] Of or relating to monogenesis or to monogenism | [adjective] Regulated by a single gene MONOGLOTS (12) [noun] A person capable of speaking only a single language. MONOGRAMS (14) [noun] A picture drawn in line only, before the colour and/or shading is applied; an outline sketch. | [noun] A sentence consisting of only one line, or an epigram consisting of only one verse, of poetry. | [noun] A design composed of one or more letters, often intertwined, used as an identifying mark of an individual or institution. MONOGRAPH (17) [noun] A scholarly book or a treatise on a single subject or a group of related subjects, usually written by one person. | [verb] To write a monograph on (a subject). | [verb] Of the FDA: to publish a standard that authorizes the use of (a substance). MONOHULLS (14) [noun] A boat that has a single hull. MONOLAYER (14) [noun] A layer of material that is one molecule thick | [noun] A layer of tissue that is one cell thick MONOLITHS (14) [noun] A large, single block of stone which is a natural feature; or a block of stone or other similar material used in architecture and sculpture, especially one carved into a monument in ancient times. | [noun] Anything massive, uniform, and unmovable, especially a towering and impersonal cultural, political, or social organization or structure. | [noun] A substrate having many tiny channels that is cast as a single piece, which is used as a stationary phase for chromatography, as a catalytic surface, etc. MONOLOGUE (12) [noun] (authorship) A long speech by one person in a play; sometimes a soliloquy; other times spoken to other characters. | [noun] A long series of comic stories and jokes as an entertainment. | [noun] A long, uninterrupted utterance that monopolizes a conversation. MONOMANIA (13) [noun] Excessive interest or concentration on a singular object or subject. | [noun] A pathological obsession with one person, thing or idea. MONOMERIC (15) MONOMETER (13) [noun] A line of verse containing a single metrical foot. MONOMIALS (13) [noun] A single term consisting of a product of numbers and variables with positive integer exponents. MONOPHAGY (20) MONOPHONY (19) MONOPHYLY (22) MONOPLANE (13) [noun] An airplane that has a single pair of wings | [verb] To fly in a monoplane. MONOPLOID (14) [noun] An organism having a single set of chromosomes. | [adjective] Having a single set of chromosomes. MONOPODES (14) MONOPOLES (13) [noun] An appellation owned by a single winery. | [noun] A magnetic monopole. | [noun] A monopole antenna. MONOPSONY (16) [noun] A market situation in which there is only one buyer for a product. | [noun] A buyer with disproportionate power. MONORAILS (11) [noun] A railroad system where the trains run on one rail | [noun] A train running on a single rail MONORCHID (17) [noun] An individual having only one testicle within the scrotum. | [adjective] Having only one testicle within the scrotum. MONORHYME (19) MONOSOMES (13) [noun] The chromosome whose homologous counterpart is missing in monosomy. MONOSOMIC (15) MONOSTELE (11) MONOSTELY (14) MONOTINTS (11) [noun] A monochrome print. MONOTONES (11) [noun] A single unvaried tone of speech or a sound. | [noun] A piece of writing in one strain throughout. MONOTONIC (13) [adjective] Of or using the Greek system of diacritics which discards the breathings and employs a single accent to indicate stress. It replaced polytonic system in 1982. | [adjective] Said of a function that either never decreases or never increases as its independent variable increases. | [adjective] Uttered in a monotone; monotonous. MONOTREME (13) [noun] A mammal that lays eggs and has a single urogenital and digestive orifice. Only the echidnas and platypuses are included in this group | [adjective] (of a pollen grain) Having a single trema, or aperture. MONOTYPES (16) [noun] A print made by creating the design using oil paint or printer's ink on metal or glass, then transferring the image directly to paper. | [noun] The technique of making such prints. | [noun] A monotypic taxon. MONOTYPIC (18) [adjective] Relating to or exhibiting monotypy. MONOVULAR (14) MONOXIDES (19) [noun] Any oxide containing a single oxygen atom in each molecule or formula unit MONSIGNOR (12) [noun] An ecclesiastic title bestowed on some Roman Catholic clerics by the Pope MONSOONAL (11) MONSTERAS (11) [noun] Any of the plants of the genus Monstera. MONSTROUS (11) [adjective] Hideous or frightful. | [adjective] Enormously large. | [adjective] Freakish or grotesque. MONTADALE (12) MONTAGING (13) MONTEITHS (14) [noun] A bowl used for the cooling or washing of wine glasses. | [noun] A large 18th-century punchbowl, usually of silver, fluted and scalloped. | [noun] A cotton handkerchief with white spots on a coloured background. MONTHLIES (14) [noun] A publication that is published once a month. | [noun] The menstrual period. MONTHLONG (15) [adjective] Which lasts a month, or approximately so MONUMENTS (13) [noun] A structure built for commemorative or symbolic reasons, or as a memorial; a commemoration. | [noun] An important site owned by the community as a whole. | [noun] An exceptional or proud achievement. MONZONITE (20) [noun] An intrusive igneous rock composed mostly of plagioclase and orthoclase MOODINESS (12) MOONBEAMS (15) [noun] A shaft of moonlight. | [noun] Moonlight generally. | [noun] Any of various Australasian lycaenid butterflies of the genus Philiris. MOONDUSTS (12) MOONFACED (17) MOONISHLY (17) MOONLIGHT (15) [noun] (sometimes attributive) The light reflected from the Moon. | [verb] To work on the side (at a secondary job), often in the evening or during the night. | [verb] (by extension) To engage in an activity other than what one is known for. MOONPORTS (13) MOONQUAKE (24) [noun] A seismic event occurring on the moon; the lunar equivalent of an earthquake. MOONRISES (11) [noun] The time of day or night when the moon begins to rise over the horizon. MOONSAILS (11) MOONSCAPE (15) [noun] A view of an area of the Moon | [noun] (by extension) A desolate or devastated landscape. MOONSEEDS (12) [noun] A twining plant of the genera Menispermum or Cocculus, in the family Menispermaceae. MOONSHINE (14) [noun] The light of the moon; moonlight. | [noun] High-proof alcohol (especially whiskey) that is often, but not always, produced illegally. | [noun] Nonsense. MOONSHOTS (14) [noun] The launching of a spacecraft or an object to orbit or land on the Moon. | [noun] An act of throwing or hitting a ball with a high trajectory. | [noun] An expensive, hard, or unlikely task of great potential impact. MOONSTONE (11) [noun] A translucent gemstone, an orthoclase feldspar, that has a pearly lustre. MOONWALKS (18) [noun] An exploration of the Moon's surface on foot (by an astronaut). | [noun] A dance move in which the dancer slides backwards though the feet move as if walking forwards; the backslide. | [noun] A dance style in which the dancer appears to be moving in a low gravity environment. MOONWORTS (14) [noun] A small fern, Botrychium lunaria (lesser moonwort); later, any member of the genus. | [noun] Lunaria annua (greater moonwort); also known as Honesty and Actual Honesty. MOORCOCKS (19) [noun] The red grouse. MOORFOWLS (17) MOORLANDS (12) [noun] Open land that has an acidic peaty soil and is mostly covered with heather or bracken. MOORWORTS (14) MOPBOARDS (16) [noun] A skirting board (to protect a wall from wet mops) MOQUETTES (20) MORALISED (12) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALISES (11) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALISMS (13) MORALISTS (11) [noun] One who bases all decisions on perceived morals, especially one who enforces them with censorship. | [noun] A teacher of morals. MORALIZED (21) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALIZER (20) MORALIZES (20) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORATORIA (11) [noun] An authorization to a debtor, permitting temporary suspension of payments. | [noun] A suspension of an ongoing activity. MORBIDITY (17) [noun] The quality of being unhealthful or diseased, sometimes including the cause. | [noun] The quality of being morbid; an attitude or state of mind marked by gloom. | [noun] The incidence of a disease, as a rate of a population which is affected. MORDANTED (13) [verb] To subject to the action of, or imbue with, a mordant. MORDANTLY (15) MORESQUES (20) MORGANITE (12) [noun] A gemstone of pegmatite deposits. Morganite is a transparent pink variety of beryl. MORONISMS (13) MORPHEMES (18) [noun] The smallest linguistic unit within a word that can carry a meaning. MORPHEMIC (20) MORPHINES (16) MORPHOGEN (17) [noun] Any substance that governs the movement and development of cells during morphogenesis by forming a concentration gradient in the developing tissue. MORSELING (12) MORSELLED (12) MORTALITY (14) [noun] The state or quality of being mortal. | [noun] The number of deaths. | [noun] Death. MORTARING (12) [verb] To use mortar or plaster to join two things together. | [verb] To pound in a mortar. | [verb] To fire a mortar (weapon). MORTGAGED (14) [verb] To borrow against a property, to obtain a loan for another purpose by giving away the right of seizure to the lender over a fixed property such as a house or piece of land; to pledge a property in order to get a loan. | [verb] To pledge and make liable; to make subject to obligation; to achieve an immediate result by paying for it in the long term. MORTGAGEE (13) [noun] One who provides a loan secured upon the borrowers' property, the lender in a mortgage agreement. MORTGAGER (13) [noun] One who uses property they own as security for a loan; the borrower in a mortgage agreement. MORTGAGES (13) [noun] A special form of secured loan where the purpose of the loan must be specified to the lender, to purchase assets that must be fixed (not movable) property, such as a house or piece of farm land. The assets are registered as the legal property of the borrower but the lender can seize them and dispose of them if they are not satisfied with the manner in which the repayment of the loan is conducted by the borrower. Once the loan is fully repaid, the lender loses this right of seizure and the assets are then deemed to be unencumbered. | [noun] State of being pledged. | [verb] To borrow against a property, to obtain a loan for another purpose by giving away the right of seizure to the lender over a fixed property such as a house or piece of land; to pledge a property in order to get a loan. MORTGAGOR (13) [noun] One who uses property they own as security for a loan; the borrower in a mortgage agreement. MORTICIAN (13) [noun] An undertaker or funeral director. MORTICING (14) [verb] To cut a mortise in. | [verb] To join by a mortise and tenon. | [verb] To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters; to kern. MORTIFIED (15) [adjective] Acutely embarrassed. | [verb] To discipline (one's body, appetites etc.) by suppressing desires; to practise abstinence on. | [verb] (usually used passively) To embarrass, to humiliate. To injure one's dignity. MORTIFIES (14) [verb] To discipline (one's body, appetites etc.) by suppressing desires; to practise abstinence on. | [verb] (usually used passively) To embarrass, to humiliate. To injure one's dignity. | [verb] To kill. MORTISERS (11) MORTISING (12) [verb] To cut a mortise in. | [verb] To join by a mortise and tenon. | [verb] To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters; to kern. MORTMAINS (13) MOSAICISM (15) [noun] The condition in which more than one genetically distinct population of cells coexist within one individual. MOSAICIST (13) MOSAICKED (18) [adjective] Composed of a mosaic | [adjective] Formed from a "mosaic" of images MOSASAURS (11) [noun] A large extinct marine reptile in the family Mosasauridae, dominant marine predator of the Cretaceous. Mosasaurs are considred to be in squmata, the same group that includes lizards and snakes. MOSQUITOS (20) [noun] A small flying insect of the family Culicidae, the females of which bite humans and animals and suck blood, leaving an itching bump on the skin, and sometimes carrying diseases like malaria and yellow fever. | [verb] To fly close to the ground, seemingly without a course. MOSSBACKS (19) [noun] A turtle that, because of its age, has a growth of algae on its back. | [noun] An old fish. | [noun] (by extension) A very conservative or reactionary person, especially one with old-fashioned views. MOTHBALLS (16) [noun] (usually in plural) A small ball of chemical pesticide (typically naphthalene) and deodorant placed in or around clothing and other articles susceptible to damage from mold or moth larvae in order to protect them from this damage. MOTHERING (15) [verb] To give birth to or produce (as its female parent) a child. (Compare father.) | [verb] To treat as a mother would be expected to treat her child; to nurture. | [verb] To cause to contain mother. MOTHPROOF (19) [verb] To apply odoriferous materials intended to repel moths from clothing. | [adjective] Resistant to being eaten by moths. MOTIONERS (11) MOTIONING (12) [verb] To gesture indicating a desired movement. | [verb] To introduce a motion in parliamentary procedure. | [verb] To make a proposal; to offer plans. MOTIVATED (15) [verb] To provide someone with an incentive to do something; to encourage. | [verb] To animate; to propel; to cause to take action | [adjective] Enthusiastic, especially about striving toward a goal. MOTIVATES (14) [verb] To provide someone with an incentive to do something; to encourage. | [verb] To animate; to propel; to cause to take action MOTIVATOR (14) [noun] Agent noun of motivate; one who motivates. MOTLEYEST (14) MOTOCROSS (13) [noun] A form of off-road motorbike racing. | [noun] An event where such racing takes place. MOTORBIKE (17) [noun] A motorcycle. | [noun] A small and light motorcycle. | [verb] To ride a motorbike; to travel by motorbike. MOTORBOAT (13) [noun] Any vessel driven by an engine (either inboard or outboard), but especially a small one. | [verb] To press one's face between a woman's breasts. MOTORCADE (14) [noun] A procession of cars carrying VIPs, especially political figures. | [verb] To travel in a motorcade. MOTORCARS (13) [noun] An enclosed passenger vehicle powered by an engine. MOTORDOMS (14) MOTORINGS (12) MOTORISED (12) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORISES (11) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORISTS (11) [noun] One who drives a motor vehicle. MOTORIZED (21) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORIZES (20) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORLESS (11) MOTORWAYS (17) [noun] (parts of Australia) A broad highway designed for high speed traffic, having restrictions on the vehicle types permitted and merging lanes instead of cross traffic; in parts of the United States and other places called freeway. MOUCHOIRS (16) [noun] A handkerchief. MOUFFLONS (17) [noun] A species of wild sheep, Ovis orientalis musimon, syn. Ovis aries musimon, endemic to Sardinia and Corsica. MOULDERED (13) [verb] To decay or rot. MOULDIEST (12) [adjective] Covered with mould. | [adjective] Neglected. | [adjective] Worthless; lousy; rotten MOULDINGS (13) [noun] The act or process of shaping in or on a mold, or of making molds; the art or occupation of a molder. | [noun] Anything cast in a mold, or which appears to be so, as grooved or ornamental bars of wood or metal. | [noun] A plane, or curved, narrow surface, either sunk or projecting, used for decoration by means of the lights and shades upon its surface and to conceal joints, especially between unlike materials. MOUNTABLE (13) MOUNTAINS (11) [noun] An elevation of land of considerable dimensions rising more or less abruptly, forming a conspicuous figure in the landscape, usually having a small extent of surface at its summit. | [noun] Something very large in size or quantity; a huge amount; a great heap. | [noun] Of, belonging to, relating to, or found on a mountain; like a mountain in size; (of living things) growing or living on a mountain. MOUNTAINY (14) MOUNTINGS (12) [noun] Something mounted; an attachment. | [noun] The act of one who mounts. MOURNINGS (12) MOUSETRAP (13) [noun] A device for capturing or killing mice and other rodents. | [noun] A website designed to open another copy of itself when the user tries to close the webpage. Frequently used by advertisers and pornographers. | [noun] Ordinary, everyday cheese. MOUSINESS (11) MOUSSAKAS (15) [noun] A dish consisting of layers of minced lamb or beef, sliced aubergine (eggplant) or potatoes, tomatoes and béchamel sauce, baked in the oven. MOUSTACHE (16) [noun] A growth of facial hair between the nose and the upper lip. MOUTHFULS (17) [noun] The amount that will fit in a mouth. | [noun] Quite a bit. | [noun] Something difficult to pronounce or say. MOUTHIEST (14) [adjective] Overly talkative, insolent, and loud. MOUTHLIKE (18) MOUTHPART (16) [noun] (usually in plural) An appendage-like structure on the outside of an insect's or other arthropod's mouth, serving to manipulate and masticate food. MOUTHWASH (20) [noun] A liquid used to clean one's mouth. MOVEABLES (16) [noun] Something which is movable; an article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of property not fixed, or not a part of real estate; generally, in the plural, goods; wares; furniture. MOVEMENTS (16) [noun] Physical motion between points in space. | [noun] A system or mechanism for transmitting motion of a definite character, or for transforming motion, such as the wheelwork of a watch. | [noun] The impression of motion in an artwork, painting, novel etc. MOVIEDOMS (17) MOVIEGOER (15) [noun] Person who regularly frequents movie theaters. MOVIEOLAS (14) MOZZETTAS (29) MRIDANGAM (15) [noun] A percussion instrument used in southern Indian music, consisting of a two-sided drum whose body is usually made from a hollowed piece of jackfruit wood. MRIDANGAS (13) MUCHACHOS (21) [noun] An informal term of address, especially to a young man; similar to man, chap, dude, etc. MUCILAGES (14) MUCKLUCKS (23) MUCKRAKED (22) [verb] To search for and expose corruption or scandal, especially as a form of investigative journalism. MUCKRAKER (21) MUCKRAKES (21) [verb] To search for and expose corruption or scandal, especially as a form of investigative journalism. MUCKWORMS (22) MUCOLYTIC (18) MUCRONATE (13) [adjective] Terminating in a mucro (an abruptly tapering point or a sharp spine) such as at the end of a leaf. MUDCAPPED (19) MUDDINESS (13) MUDFISHES (18) [noun] Any of many fish that frequent muddy water or burrow in mud, including: MUDGUARDS (14) [noun] A cover over the wheels of a vehicle, or a flap behind that wheel, to prevent water and mud being projected. MUDSLIDES (13) [noun] A geological event in which viscous mud flows down an incline. | [noun] A mixed drink consisting of vodka, Kahlua and Bailey's. MUDSTONES (12) [noun] A fine-grained sedimentary rock whose original constituents were clays or muds. MUENSTERS (11) MUFFLERED (18) MUGGINESS (13) MUJAHEDIN (22) MULATTOES (11) [noun] A person of mixed black and white descent, especially a person with one black and one white parent. MULETEERS (11) [noun] A mule driver. MULLAHISM (16) MULLIGANS (12) [noun] Mulligan stew. | [noun] An unpenalized chance to re-take a stroke that went awry. | [noun] An opportunity (sometimes penalized) for a player to reshuffle their cards and draw a new initial hand at the beginning of a game. MULLIONED (12) MULTIATOM (13) MULTIBAND (14) MULTIBANK (17) MULTICELL (13) MULTICITY (16) MULTICOPY (18) MULTIDRUG (13) MULTIFOLD (15) [adjective] Many; very diverse; manifold. MULTIFORM (16) [noun] An organism, folktale, etc. that appears in more than one form. | [adjective] Having more than one shape or appearance. MULTIGERM (14) MULTIGRID (13) MULTIHUED (15) MULTIHULL (14) [noun] A boat with two or more hulls. MULTILANE (11) [adjective] (of a road or of vehicular traffic) Having more than one lane of traffic traveling in at least one direction. MULTILINE (11) MULTIMODE (14) [adjective] Having, or employing multiple modes. MULTIPAGE (14) MULTIPART (13) MULTIPATH (16) MULTIPEDS (14) MULTIPION (13) MULTIPLES (13) [noun] A whole number that can be divided by another number with no remainder. | [noun] Price-earnings ratio. | [noun] One of a set of the same thing; a duplicate. MULTIPLET (13) [noun] A spectral line that has multiple components. | [noun] A compound peak produced in several forms of spectroscopy. | [noun] Any of several groupings of subatomic particles that share most properties, but have different charges. MULTIPLEX (20) [noun] A building or a place where several activities occur in multiple units concurrently or different times. | [noun] (by extension) A large cinema complex comprising many (typically more than five, and often over ten) movie theatres or houses. | [noun] Throwing motion where more than one ball is thrown with one hand at the same time. MULTIPOLE (13) [noun] Any of a several forms of static or oscillating distributions of charge or magnetization MULTIROOM (13) MULTISITE (11) [adjective] Occupying, or occurring at, multiple physical sites. | [adjective] Of or relating to more than one web site. MULTISIZE (20) MULTISTEP (13) MULTITONE (11) MULTITUDE (12) [noun] A great amount or number, often of people; abundance, myriad, profusion. | [noun] The mass of ordinary people; the masses, the populace. MULTIUNIT (11) MULTIUSER (11) [adjective] Of a operating system, etc., having capabilities for serving many users simultaneously. MULTIWALL (14) MULTIYEAR (14) MUMMERIES (15) [noun] Mumming; disguising oneself to perform as a mummer, or to take part in some other festivities or performance. | [noun] A ridiculous or ostentatious ceremony, formerly especially of a religious nature; extravagant or hypocritical performance. MUMMICHOG (21) [noun] A hardy killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus, found in brackish and coastal waters of the United States and Canada. MUMMIFIED (19) [adjective] Preserved, for a dead body, by mummification. | [verb] To make into a mummy, by preserving a dead body. | [verb] To become a mummy. MUMMIFIES (18) [verb] To make into a mummy, by preserving a dead body. | [verb] To become a mummy. MUNCHKINS (20) [noun] A domestic cat breed with short legs. | [noun] The empty space in the center of a donut. | [noun] A small ball-shaped pastry, made in the same manner as a donut, roughly the size of the hole in a donut. MUNDANELY (15) MUNDANITY (15) MUNDUNGOS (13) MUNDUNGUS (13) MUNGOOSES (12) MUNICIPAL (15) [noun] A financial instrument issued by a municipality. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a municipality (a city or a corporation having the right of administering local government). | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the internal affairs of a nation. MUNIMENTS (13) [noun] A deed, or other official document kept as proof of ownership or rights or privileges; an archived document. | [noun] (in the plural) Things which a person or place is equipped with; effects, furnishings, accoutrements. | [noun] Something used as a defence. MUNITIONS (11) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Materials of war: armaments, weapons and ammunition. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural, NATO) Bombs, rockets, missiles (complete explosive devices, in contrast to e.g. guns). | [noun] A tower or fortification. MURAENIDS (12) MURALISTS (11) MURDEREES (12) MURDERERS (12) [noun] A person who commits murder. MURDERESS (12) MURDERING (13) [verb] To deliberately kill (a person or persons) without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To kick someone's ass or chew someone out (used to express one’s anger at somebody). MURDEROUS (12) [adjective] Of, characterized by, or pertaining to murder or murderers. | [adjective] Of a person: intending or likely to commit murder; bloodthirsty, homicidal. | [adjective] Of an object: used to commit murder; capable of causing death; deadly, fatal. MURKINESS (15) MURMURERS (13) MURMURING (14) [verb] To grumble; to complain in a low, muttering voice, or express discontent at or against someone or something. | [verb] To speak or make low, indistinguishable noise; to mumble, mutter. | [verb] To say (something) indistinctly, to mutter. MURMUROUS (13) MURRELETS (11) [noun] Any of several species of small seabirds, in the genera Brachyramphus and Synthliboramphus of the auk family, found in the North Pacific. MURTHERED (15) [verb] To deliberately kill (a person or persons) without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To kick someone's ass or chew someone out (used to express one’s anger at somebody). MUSCADELS (14) [noun] Muscatel (wine or grape) MUSCADETS (14) [noun] A white grape grown chiefly in the Loire valley of France, or a dry white wine made from this grape MUSCADINE (14) [noun] An American vine of the subgenus Vitis subg. Muscadinia, Vitis rotundifolia | [noun] A grape variety from this vine. | [noun] A wine produced from these grapes. MUSCARINE (13) [noun] An extremely poisonous alkaloid, obtained from fly agaric, that disrupts the action of acetylcholine neurotransmitter. MUSCATELS (13) [noun] A muscat grape or raisin, especially one from southern Spain. | [noun] A sweet wine made from these grapes. MUSCOVITE (16) [noun] A pale brown mineral of the mica group, being a basic potassium aluminosilicate with the chemical formula KAl2(Si3Al)O10(OH,F)2; used as an electrical insulator etc. MUSEOLOGY (15) [noun] The design, organization, and management of museums. MUSHINESS (14) MUSHROOMS (16) [noun] Any of the fleshy fruiting bodies of fungi typically produced above ground on soil or on their food sources (such as decaying wood). | [noun] A fungus producing such fruiting bodies. | [noun] Champignon or Agaricus bisporus, the mushroom species most commonly used in cooking. MUSICALES (13) [noun] A musical entertainment, usually private and typically involving classical music MUSICALLY (16) [adverb] In a musical manner. | [adverb] In terms of music. MUSICIANS (13) [noun] A composer, conductor, or performer of music; specifically, a person who sings and/or plays a musical instrument as a hobby, an occupation, or a profession. MUSKETEER (15) [noun] A foot soldier armed with a musket. | [noun] In 17th- and 18th-century France, a member of the royal household bodyguard. | [noun] A comrade or fellow. MUSKINESS (15) MUSKMELON (17) [noun] A type of melon, Cucumis melo subsp. melo, with sweet orange flesh and a rough skin resembling netting. MUSSINESS (11) MUSTACHED (17) MUSTACHES (16) [noun] A growth of facial hair between the nose and the upper lip. MUSTACHIO (16) [noun] A mustache, especially a large or lush one. | [verb] To adorn with a mustachio, or something that resembles a mustachio. MUSTERING (12) [verb] To show, exhibit. | [verb] To be gathered together for parade, inspection, exercise, or the like (especially of a military force); to come together as parts of a force or body. | [verb] To collect, call or assemble together, such as troops or a group for inspection, orders, display etc. MUSTINESS (11) MUTAGENIC (14) MUTATIONS (11) [noun] Any alteration or change. | [noun] Any heritable change of the base-pair sequence of genetic material. | [noun] A mutant. MUTCHKINS (20) [noun] A unit of fluid capacity approximately equal to three-quarters of an imperial pint (0.43 litres) MUTILATED (12) [verb] To physically harm as to impair use, notably by cutting off or otherwise disabling a vital part, such as a limb. | [verb] To destroy beyond recognition. | [verb] To render imperfect or defective. MUTILATES (11) [verb] To physically harm as to impair use, notably by cutting off or otherwise disabling a vital part, such as a limb. | [verb] To destroy beyond recognition. | [verb] To render imperfect or defective. MUTILATOR (11) MUTINEERS (11) [noun] Someone who participates in mutiny. MUTINYING (15) [verb] To commit mutiny. | [noun] An act of mutiny or rebellion. MUTTERERS (11) MUTTERING (12) [verb] To utter words, especially complaints or angry expressions, indistinctly or with a low voice and lips partly closed; to say under one's breath. | [verb] To speak softly and incoherently, or with imperfect articulations. | [verb] To make a sound with a low, rumbling noise. MUTUALISM (13) [noun] Any interaction between two species that benefits both; typically involves the exchange of substances or services. | [noun] An economic theory and anarchist school of thought that advocates a society where each person might possess a means of production, either individually or collectively, with trade representing equivalent amounts of labor in the free market. MUTUALIST (11) MUTUALITY (14) [noun] The property of being mutual. MUTUALIZE (20) [verb] To make, or to become mutual | [verb] To organize a business (especially a financial business) so that it is owned by its customers (or its employees) MUZZINESS (29) MYCETOMAS (18) MYCOFLORA (19) MYCOPHAGY (25) MYCOPHILE (21) MYCOTOXIN (23) [noun] Any substance, produced by a mold or fungus, that is injurious to vertebrates upon ingestion, inhalation or skin contact MYDRIASES (15) MYDRIASIS (15) [noun] The condition of having abnormally large and dilated pupils due to disease or drugs, particularly stimulants such as (meth)amphetamines, cocaine, etc. MYDRIATIC (17) MYELOCYTE (19) MYELOMATA (16) [noun] A malignant tumour arising from cells of the bone marrow, specifically plasma cells. MYLONITES (14) [noun] Any rock that has undergone modifications due to dynamic recrystallization following plastic flow; a schist created by crushed or ground rock. MYOBLASTS (16) MYOCARDIA (17) MYOCLONIC (18) MYOCLONUS (16) [noun] The brief, involuntary twitching of a muscle or group of muscles. MYOFIBRIL (19) [noun] Any of the cylindrical organelles, found within muscle cells, that are the contractile unit of muscles. MYOGLOBIN (17) [noun] A small globular protein, containing a heme group, that carries oxygen to muscles. MYOGRAPHS (20) MYOLOGIES (15) MYOMATOUS (16) MYONEURAL (14) MYOPATHIC (21) MYOSCOPES (18) MYOTONIAS (14) MYRIAPODS (17) [noun] Any arthropod (such as centipedes and millipedes) of the subphylum Myriapoda MYRIOPODS (17) MYRMIDONS (17) [noun] A soldier or a subordinate civil officer who executes orders of a superior without protest or pity (sometimes applied to bailiffs, constables, etc). MYROBALAN (16) [noun] A plum-like fruit from various trees of the genus Terminalia, formerly used in medicine and now in the dyeing industry; also, the tree itself. MYSTAGOGS (16) MYSTAGOGY (19) MYSTERIES (14) [noun] A number of secret societies or cults | [noun] Something secret or unexplainable; an unknown. | [noun] Someone or something with an obscure or puzzling nature. MYSTICISM (18) [noun] The beliefs, ideas, or thoughts of mystics. | [noun] A doctrine of direct communication or spiritual intuition of divine truth. | [noun] A transcendental union of soul or mind with the divine reality or divinity. MYSTIFIED (18) [adjective] Puzzled or confused | [adjective] State of enchantment as concerns person or event | [verb] To thoroughly confuse, befuddle, or bewilder. MYSTIFIER (17) MYSTIFIES (17) [verb] To thoroughly confuse, befuddle, or bewilder. MYSTIQUES (23) MYTHICIZE (28) [verb] To make into a myth. | [verb] To interpret in terms of mythology. MYTHMAKER (23) MYTHOLOGY (21) [noun] The collection of myths of a people, concerning the origin of the people, history, deities, ancestors and heroes. | [noun] A similar body of myths concerning an event, person or institution. | [noun] Pervasive elements of a fictional universe that resemble a mythological universe. MYXEDEMAS (24) MYXOCYTES (26) MYXOVIRAL (24) MYXOVIRUS (24) [noun] Any of a group of RNA viruses of the Orthomyxoviridae and Paramyxoviridae families. NABOBISMS (15) NAMEPLATE (13) [noun] A plate or plaque inscribed with a name. | [noun] The masthead of a newspaper. NAMESAKES (15) [noun] One who is named after another or for whom another is named. | [noun] (by extension) A ship or a building that is named after someone or something. | [noun] A person with the same name as another. NANOGRAMS (12) [noun] A unit of mass equal to 0.000 000 001 grams. Symbol: ng NANOMETER (11) [noun] An SI subunit of length equal to 10-9 metres. Symbol: nm NAPALMING (14) [verb] To spray or attack with this substance. NATIVISMS (14) NATURISMS (11) NAUMACHIA (16) NEMATODES (12) [noun] A worm of the large phylum Nematoda, such as a roundworm or threadworm. NEMERTEAN (11) [noun] Any of several unsegmented, brightly-coloured worms, of the phylum Nemertea; the ribbon worms NEMERTINE (11) [noun] Any ribbon worm of the phylum Nemertea NEMOPHILA (16) NEODYMIUM (17) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Nd) with an atomic number of 60: a hard, slightly malleable silvery metal that quickly tarnishes in air and moisture. | [noun] A single atom of this element. NEOLOGISM (12) [noun] A word or phrase which has recently been coined; a new word or phrase. | [noun] The act or instance of coining, or uttering a new word. | [noun] The newly coined, meaningless words or phrases of someone with a psychosis, usually schizophrenia. NEOMORPHS (16) NEOMYCINS (16) NEOPLASMS (13) [noun] An abnormal new growth of disorganized tissue in animals or plants. NEPHRISMS (16) NEPOTISMS (13) NEPTUNIUM (13) [noun] The transuranic chemical element with atomic number 93 and symbol Np. NETMINDER (12) [noun] A goalkeeper or goaltender. NEUROMATA (11) [noun] A tumour composed of nerve cells. NEVERMORE (14) [adverb] Never again. NEWCOMERS (16) [noun] One who has recently come to a community; a recent arrival. | [noun] A new participant in some activity; a neophyte. NEWMARKET (18) NEWSROOMS (14) [noun] The office of a news organisation, especially that part of it where the journalists work and news stories are processed. | [noun] A room where newspapers and magazines are available for reading. NEWSWOMAN (17) [noun] A female reporter or newsreader. NEWSWOMEN (17) [noun] A female reporter or newsreader. NGULTRUMS (12) NIALAMIDE (12) NICKNAMED (18) [verb] To give a nickname to (a person or thing). NICKNAMER (17) NICKNAMES (17) [noun] A familiar, invented given name for a person or thing used instead of the actual name of the person or thing. | [noun] A kind of byname that describes a person by a characteristic of that person. NIGHTMARE (15) [noun] A demon or monster, thought to plague people while they slept and cause a feeling of suffocation and terror during sleep. | [noun] Sleep paralysis. | [noun] A very bad or frightening dream. NIGHTTIME (15) [noun] The hours of darkness between sunset and sunrise; the night. | [adjective] Pertaining to nighttime; appropriate to the night. | [adjective] Happening during the night. NIHILISMS (14) NIMIETIES (11) NIZAMATES (20) NOBELIUMS (13) NOISOMELY (14) NOMADISMS (14) NOMINALLY (14) [adverb] In a nominal manner. | [adverb] Slightly | [adverb] As a noun. NOMINATED (12) [verb] To name someone as a candidate for a particular role or position, including that of an office. | [verb] To entitle, confer a name upon. | [adjective] Having received a nomination. NOMINATES (11) [verb] To name someone as a candidate for a particular role or position, including that of an office. | [verb] To entitle, confer a name upon. NOMINATOR (11) NOMOGRAMS (14) [noun] A diagram in which the relationship between three variables is represented by a straight line or curve for each variable; the value of the third variable corresponding to particular values of the first two is obtained by drawing a straight line through the points on the first two curves that represent particular values of the first two variables and noting the point at which the line intersects the third line or curve. NOMOGRAPH (17) [noun] A nomogram. NONANIMAL (11) NONATOMIC (13) NONCAMPUS (15) NONCOMBAT (15) NONCRIMES (13) NONEXEMPT (20) NONFAMILY (17) NONFARMER (14) NONFORMAL (14) [adjective] Not formal. NONIMMUNE (13) NONIMPACT (15) NONLEGUME (12) NONMAJORS (18) NONMANUAL (11) [adjective] Not manual. NONMARKET (15) NONMEMBER (15) [noun] Someone who is not a member (of a club, institution, etc.) NONMENTAL (11) NONMETALS (11) [noun] An element, such as phosphorus or chlorine, that does not have the chemical or physical properties of a metal. NONMETRIC (13) NONMOBILE (13) NONMOTILE (11) NONMOVING (15) NONMUSICS (13) NONMUTANT (11) NONRANDOM (12) [adjective] Not at random, caused or manipulated, arranged. NONSMOKER (15) [noun] Somebody who does not smoke tobacco. | [noun] A railway carriage where smoking tobacco is not permitted. NONSYSTEM (14) NOONTIMES (11) NORMALISE (11) [verb] To make normal, to make standard. | [verb] To format in a standardized manner, to make consistent. | [verb] To reduce to variations by excluding irrelevant aspects. NORMALITY (14) [noun] The state of being normal or usual; normalcy. | [noun] The concentration of a solution expressed in gram equivalent weights of solute per litre of solution. | [noun] A measure of how well an observed distribution approximates a normal distribution. NORMALIZE (20) [verb] To make normal, to make standard. | [verb] To format in a standardized manner, to make consistent. | [verb] To reduce to variations by excluding irrelevant aspects. NORMATIVE (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a norm or standard. | [adjective] Conforming to a norm or norms. | [adjective] Attempting to establish or prescribe a norm. NUMBERERS (13) NUMBERING (14) [verb] To label (items) with numbers; to assign numbers to (items). | [verb] To total or count; to amount to. | [noun] A sequence of numbers indicating order or otherwise used for identification. NUMBINGLY (17) NUMBSKULL (17) [noun] A dunce, mentally dull or stupid person. | [noun] A person who refuses to learn or grow mentally. | [noun] A traditional name for a fool who serves as the butt of jokes about stupidity. NUMERABLE (13) [adjective] Able to be counted; countable. | [adjective] In one to one correspondence with the set of natural integers. | [adjective] Numerous NUMERALLY (14) NUMERATED (12) NUMERATES (11) NUMERATOR (11) [noun] The number or expression written above the line in a fraction (such as 1 in ½). | [noun] An enumerator; someone who counts things. NUMERICAL (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to numbers | [adjective] The same in number; hence, identically the same; identical. NUMSKULLS (15) [noun] A dunce, mentally dull or stupid person. | [noun] A person who refuses to learn or grow mentally. | [noun] A traditional name for a fool who serves as the butt of jokes about stupidity. NURSEMAID (12) [noun] A woman or girl employed to care for children | [verb] To tend to as a nursemaid. | [verb] To care for or look after. NUTRIMENT (11) [noun] A source of nourishment; food. | [noun] Something that promotes growth or development; a nutrient. NYMPHALID (20) [noun] Any butterfly of the family Nymphalidae. NYMPHETTE (19) [noun] A small nymph. | [noun] A sexually attractive girl or young woman. NYSTAGMIC (17) NYSTAGMUS (15) [noun] Rapid involuntary eye movement, usually lateral OAKMOSSES (15) OARSWOMAN (14) [noun] A female oarsman. OARSWOMEN (14) [noun] A female oarsman. OBEAHISMS (16) OCCULTISM (15) OCTAMETER (13) [noun] A line of verse containing eight metrical feet ODDSMAKER (17) [noun] A person who sets odds for gambling ODOMETERS (12) [noun] An instrument attached to the wheel of a vehicle, to measure the distance traveled. | [noun] A wheel used by surveyors, which registers distance traveled. OGHAMISTS (15) OHMICALLY (19) OHMMETERS (16) [noun] A portable device for measuring relatively small values of electrical resistance. OINTMENTS (11) [noun] A viscous preparation of oils and/or fats, usually containing medication, used as a treatment or as an emollient. | [noun] A substance used to anoint, as in religious rituals. OLIBANUMS (13) OLIGOMERS (12) [noun] A compound intermediate between a monomer and a polymer, normally having a specified number of units between about five and a hundred. OLYMPIADS (17) [noun] A period of four years, by which the ancient Greeks reckoned time, being the interval from one celebration of the Olympic games to another, beginning with the victory of Corbus in the foot race, which took place in the year 776 BC; as, the era of the olympiads. | [noun] An occurrence of the Olympic games. | [noun] A competition or series of competitions resembling an Olympiad, especially in science. OMBUDSMAN (16) [noun] An appointed official whose duty is to investigate complaints, generally on behalf of individuals such as consumers or taxpayers, against institutions such as companies and government departments. | [noun] A designated internal mediator in an organization whose duty is to assist members with conflict resolution and other problems and to serve as an independent consultant to recommend changes to policies or procedures to improve organization effectiveness, efficiency, and humaneness. OMBUDSMEN (16) [noun] An appointed official whose duty is to investigate complaints, generally on behalf of individuals such as consumers or taxpayers, against institutions such as companies and government departments. | [noun] A designated internal mediator in an organization whose duty is to assist members with conflict resolution and other problems and to serve as an independent consultant to recommend changes to policies or procedures to improve organization effectiveness, efficiency, and humaneness. OMELETTES (11) [noun] A dish made with beaten eggs cooked in a frying pan without stirring, flipped over to cook on both sides, and sometimes filled or topped with cheese, chives or other foodstuffs. | [noun] A form of shellcode that searches the address space for multiple small blocks of data ("eggs") and recombines them into a larger block to be executed. OMINOUSLY (14) [adverb] In an ominous manner; with sinister foreboding. OMISSIBLE (13) OMISSIONS (11) [noun] The act of omitting. | [noun] The act of neglecting to perform an action one has an obligation to do. | [noun] Something deleted or left out. OMMATIDIA (14) [noun] One of the conical substructures which make up the eyes of invertebrates with compound eyes. OMNIARCHS (16) OMNIBUSES (13) [noun] A vehicle set up to carry many people (now usually called a bus). | [noun] An anthology of previously released material linked together by theme or author, especially in book form. | [noun] A broadcast programme consisting of all of the episodes of a serial that have been shown in the previous week. OMNIRANGE (12) [noun] A short-range radio navigation system for aircraft, based on a network of fixed radio beacons on the ground. OMNIVORES (14) [noun] An animal which is able to consume both plants (like a herbivore) and meat (like a carnivore). ONCIDIUMS (14) ONCOMINGS (14) ONDOGRAMS (13) ONOMASTIC (13) [adjective] Of or relating to a personal or place name. | [adjective] Of or relating to onomastics. OOGAMETES (12) OOGONIUMS (12) OOMPAHING (17) [verb] To produce an oom-pah sound. OPERCULUM (15) [noun] A covering flap in animals, such as a gill cover. | [noun] The lidlike portion of a moss sporangium or of a fruit that detaches to allow the dispersal of spores or seeds. | [noun] A gum flap covering (part of) a partially erupted tooth, usually a wisdom tooth. OPIUMISMS (15) OPTIMALLY (16) [adverb] In an optimal manner. OPTIMISED (14) [verb] (originally intransitive) To act optimistically or as an optimist. | [verb] To make (something) optimal. | [verb] To make (something) more efficient, such as a computer program. OPTIMISES (13) [verb] (originally intransitive) To act optimistically or as an optimist. | [verb] To make (something) optimal. | [verb] To make (something) more efficient, such as a computer program. OPTIMISMS (15) OPTIMISTS (13) [noun] A person who expects a favourable outcome | [noun] A believer in optimism OPTIMIZED (23) [verb] (originally intransitive) To act optimistically or as an optimist. | [verb] To make (something) optimal. | [verb] To make (something) more efficient, such as a computer program. OPTIMIZER (22) OPTIMIZES (22) [verb] (originally intransitive) To act optimistically or as an optimist. | [verb] To make (something) optimal. | [verb] To make (something) more efficient, such as a computer program. OPTOMETRY (16) [noun] The art and science of vision and eye care. OPUSCULUM (15) [noun] An opuscule; a short work. ORGANISMS (12) [noun] A discrete and complete living thing, such as animal, plant, fungus or microorganism. | [noun] (by extension) Any complex thing with properties normally associated with living things. ORIFLAMME (16) [noun] (history) The red silk banner of St Denis, which the abbot of St Denis gave to French kings as they rode to war. | [noun] Any banner, idea or principle which serves as a rallying point for those involved in a struggle. | [noun] Something resembling the banner of St Denis; a bright, shining object. ORIGANUMS (12) [noun] Any herbaceous plant of the genus Origanum ORNAMENTS (11) [noun] An element of decoration; that which embellishes or adorns. | [noun] A Christmas tree decoration. | [noun] A musical flourish that is unnecessary to the overall melodic or harmonic line, but serves to decorate or "ornament" that line. OROMETERS (11) ORPIMENTS (13) OSMETERIA (11) OSMOMETER (13) [noun] Any of various devices used to measure osmotic pressure. OSMOMETRY (16) OSTEOMATA (11) OSTRACISM (13) [noun] In ancient Athens (and some other cities), the temporary banishment by popular vote of a citizen considered dangerous to the state. | [noun] Banishment by some general consent. | [noun] Temporary exclusion from a community or society. OUTBEAMED (14) OUTBLOOMS (13) OUTCHARMS (16) OUTCLIMBS (15) OUTDREAMS (12) OUTDREAMT (12) OUTERMOST (11) [adjective] Outside; external. | [adjective] Farther from the centre of the inside. | [noun] That which is outermost; the surface; the outside. OUTFUMBLE (16) OUTHOMERS (14) [verb] To score more home runs than another player. OUTHUMORS (14) OUTJUMPED (21) [verb] To jump better than; particularly higher than, or further than. OUTMANNED (12) [verb] To have more people than (one's competitor); to outnumber in men. | [verb] To outdo in manliness. OUTMODING (13) OUTMOVING (15) OUTMUSCLE (13) [verb] To surpass in a contest involving strength. OUTNUMBER (13) [verb] (stative) to be more in number than somebody or something. OUTSCHEME (16) OUTSHAMED (15) OUTSHAMES (14) OUTSMARTS (11) [verb] To beat in a competition of wits. OUTSMILED (12) OUTSMILES (11) OUTSMOKED (16) OUTSMOKES (15) OUTTRUMPS (13) OVALBUMIN (16) [noun] A glycoprotein which is the primary constituent of egg white. OVERCLAIM (16) OVERCOMER (16) OVERCOMES (16) [verb] To surmount (a physical or abstract obstacle); to prevail over, to get the better of. | [verb] To win or prevail in some sort of battle, contest, etc. | [verb] To come or pass over; to spread over. OVERCRAMS (16) OVEREMOTE (14) OVERMATCH (19) [noun] A match in which one opponent is greatly superior to the other. | [noun] An opponent who is more than a match for another; one who cannot be defeated. | [verb] To match more than intended. OVERMELTS (14) OVERMILKS (18) OVERMINED (15) OVERMINES (14) OVERMIXED (22) OVERMIXES (21) OVERPUMPS (18) OVERSMOKE (18) OVERTIMED (15) OVERTIMES (14) OVERTRIMS (14) OVERTRUMP (16) [verb] To play a higher trump card than the previous one in a trick OVERWARMS (17) OVERWHELM (20) [noun] The state or condition of being overwhelmed. | [verb] To engulf, surge over and submerge. | [verb] To overpower, crush. OXAZEPAMS (29) OYSTERMAN (14) OYSTERMEN (14) PACEMAKER (19) [noun] One who sets the pace in a race, to guide the others. | [noun] A set of nerves which stimulate the heart to beat. | [noun] (hence) A medical implement that is used to stimulate a heart to beat by simulating the action of the natural pacemaker. PACHADOMS (19) PACHYDERM (22) [noun] A member of the obsolete taxonomic order Pachydermata, grouping of thick-skinned, hoofed animals such as the rhinoceros, hippopotamus, elephant, pig and horse. | [noun] An elephant | [noun] A person with thick skin; someone who is not affected by or does not care what others say about him or her. PACIFISMS (18) PAEANISMS (13) PAGANDOMS (15) PAGANISMS (14) PALLADIUM (14) [noun] A safeguard. | [noun] A chemical element (symbol Pd) with an atomic number of 46: a rare, lustrous silvery-white metal. | [noun] A single atom of this element. PALMATELY (16) PALMATION (13) PALMETTES (13) [noun] A motif in decorative art resembling the fan-shaped leaves of a palm tree. PALMETTOS (13) [noun] Any member of either of two closely related genera of New World palms, of the family Arecaceae: | [noun] A hat made of palmetto leaves. | [noun] A native or resident of the US state of South Carolina. PALMISTRY (16) [noun] Telling fortunes from the lines on the palms of the hand. | [noun] A book on palmistry; a system of palmistry. | [noun] A dexterous use or trick of the hand. PALMITATE (13) [noun] Any salt or ester of palmitic acid PALMITINS (13) PALOMINOS (13) [noun] A horse with a golden-colored coat and a white or cream-colored mane and tail. PALUDISMS (14) PAMPERERS (15) PAMPERING (16) [verb] To treat with excessive care, attention or indulgence. | [verb] To feed luxuriously. | [noun] The act by which somebody is pampered. PAMPHLETS (18) [noun] A small booklet of printed informational matter, often unbound, having only a paper cover. PANDEMICS (16) [noun] A pandemic disease; a disease that affects a wide geographical area and a large proportion of the population. PANMICTIC (17) [adjective] Of, or pertaining to panmixia. PANMIXIAS (20) PANORAMAS (13) [noun] An unbroken view of an entire surrounding area. | [noun] A picture or series of pictures representing a continuous scene. | [noun] A comprehensive survey. PANORAMIC (15) [noun] A panoramic image. | [adjective] With a wide view PANTHEISM (16) [noun] The belief that the Universe is in some sense divine and should be revered. Pantheism identifies the universe with God but denies any personality or transcendence of such a God. | [noun] The belief in all gods; omnitheism. PANTOMIME (15) [noun] A Classical comic actor, especially one who works mainly through gesture and mime. | [noun] The drama in ancient Greece and Rome featuring such performers; or (later) any of various kinds of performance modelled on such work. | [noun] A traditional theatrical entertainment, originally based on the commedia dell'arte, but later aimed mostly at children and involving physical comedy, topical jokes, call and response, and fairy-tale plots. PANTRYMAN (16) [noun] A person in charge of the pantry, or food store, on a ship, train, or other transport where food is kept for passengers and crew. Also in a hospital, school, or hotel, etc. PANTRYMEN (16) [noun] A person in charge of the pantry, or food store, on a ship, train, or other transport where food is kept for passengers and crew. Also in a hospital, school, or hotel, etc. PAPILLOMA (15) [noun] An epithelial tumour, usually benign, with the appearance of a papilla PARADIGMS (15) [noun] A pattern, a way of doing something, especially a pattern of thought, a system of beliefs, a conceptual framework. | [noun] An example serving as the model for such a pattern. | [noun] A set of all forms which contain a common element, especially the set of all inflectional forms of a word or a particular grammatical category. PARAFORMS (16) PARAMECIA (15) [noun] An oval-shaped protozoan organism of the genus Paramecium. PARAMEDIC (16) [noun] An individual trained to medically stabilize people through various interventions, victims of trauma or medical events outside of a hospital setting and preparing them for transport to a medical facility. | [noun] An individual who is licensed at the state or national level to practice medical interventions in an emergency pre-hospital setting. PARAMENTA (13) PARAMENTS (13) PARAMETER (13) [noun] A value kept constant during an experiment, equation, calculation or similar, but varied over other versions of the experiment, equation, calculation, etc. | [noun] A variable that describes some system (material, object, event etc.) or some aspect thereof | [noun] An input variable of a procedure definition, that gets an actual value (argument) at execution time (formal parameter). PARAMOUNT (13) [noun] A chief or superior. | [adjective] Supreme; highest; chief. | [adjective] Of the highest importance. PARAMOURS (13) [noun] (somewhat obsolete) An illicit lover, either male or female. | [noun] The Virgin Mary or Jesus Christ (when addressed by a person of the opposite sex). PARAMYLUM (18) PARANYMPH (21) PARCHMENT (18) [noun] Material, made from the polished skin of a calf, sheep, goat or other animal, used like paper for writing. | [noun] A document made on such material. | [noun] A diploma (traditionally written on parchment). PARECISMS (15) PAROXYSMS (23) [noun] A random or sudden outburst (of activity). | [noun] An explosive event during a volcanic eruption. | [noun] A sudden recurrence of a disease, such as a seizure or a coughing fit. PARSIMONY (16) [noun] Great reluctance to spend money unnecessarily. | [noun] (by extension) The principle of using the fewest resources or explanations to solve a problem. PASHADOMS (17) PASSIVISM (16) PASTRAMIS (13) PASTROMIS (13) PATRIMONY (16) [noun] A right or estate inherited from one's father; or, in a larger sense, from any ancestor. | [noun] Formerly, a church estate or endowment. PATROLMAN (13) [noun] A police officer, especially a junior officer assigned patrol duty instead of detection or supervision. PATROLMEN (13) [noun] A police officer, especially a junior officer assigned patrol duty instead of detection or supervision. PATTAMARS (13) PAUPERISM (15) PAVEMENTS (16) [noun] (now chiefly in technical contexts) A paved surface; a hard covering on the ground. | [noun] The paved part of a road or other thoroughfare; the roadway. | [noun] A paved footpath, especially at the side of a road. PAYMASTER (16) [noun] An official in charge of payments to employees, troops, etc. | [noun] A person or body which demands loyalty or services in return for payment (especially as paid in advance). PEACETIME (15) [noun] The period of time when a nation or people is at peace, not fighting a war. PEARMAINS (13) [noun] A type of pear. | [noun] Any of various types of apple, having an elongated shape and often with streaky skin. PEDIMENTS (14) [noun] A classical architectural element consisting of a triangular section or gable found above the horizontal superstructure (entablature) which lies immediately upon the columns; fronton. PEDOMETER (14) [noun] A device, often electronic, that measures the number of steps taken, and thus estimates the distance walked. | [noun] Device used to measure the weight and height of a child PEGMATITE (14) [noun] A coarsely crystalline igneous or plutonic rock composed primarily of feldspar and quartz, normally with muscovite and/or biotite mica. PELLMELLS (13) PEMMICANS (17) PEMOLINES (13) PEMPHIGUS (19) [noun] A severe autoimmune skin disease characterized by pustules and painful blisters, and which can be fatal. PEMPHIXES (25) PENDULUMS (14) [noun] A body suspended from a fixed support so that it swings freely back and forth under the influence of gravity, commonly used to regulate various devices such as clocks. | [noun] A lamp, etc. suspended from a ceiling. | [noun] A watch's guard-ring by which it is attached to a chain. PENSTEMON (13) [noun] Any of the genus Penstemon, the beardtongues. PENTAGRAM (14) [noun] The shape of a five-pointed star constructed of five intersecting lines meeting at the vertices, such that a central pentagon and five surrounding isosceles triangles are formed; often with magical connotations; a 5/2 (or 5/3) star polygon. PENULTIMA (13) PENUMBRAE (15) [noun] A partially shaded area around the edges of a shadow, especially an eclipse. | [noun] A region around the edge of a sunspot, darker than the sun's surface but lighter than the middle of the sunspot. | [noun] An area of uncertainty or intermediacy between two mutually exclusive states or categories. PENUMBRAL (15) PENUMBRAS (15) [noun] A partially shaded area around the edges of a shadow, especially an eclipse. | [noun] A region around the edge of a sunspot, darker than the sun's surface but lighter than the middle of the sunspot. | [noun] An area of uncertainty or intermediacy between two mutually exclusive states or categories. PEPEROMIA (15) [noun] Any plant of the genus Peperomia, some of which are popular houseplants PEPONIUMS (15) PERFORMED (17) [verb] To do something; to execute. | [verb] To do (something) in front of an audience, such as acting or music, often in order to entertain. PERFORMER (16) [noun] One who performs for, or entertains, an audience. | [noun] One who performs or does anything. PERFUMERS (16) [noun] A person who makes or sells perfume. | [noun] One who perfumes something. PERFUMERY (19) [noun] A shop selling perfumes. | [noun] A factory where perfume is made. | [noun] The manufacture of perfume. PERFUMING (17) [verb] To apply perfume to; to fill or impregnate with a perfume; to scent. PERIBLEMS (15) PERIDERMS (14) [noun] The outer layer of plant tissue comprising the phellem, phellogen and the phelloderm. | [noun] The perisarc; the hard outer layer of hydroids and other marine animals. PERILYMPH (21) [noun] An extracellular fluid found in the scala tympani and scala vestibuli of the cochlea. PERIMETER (13) [noun] The sum of the distance of all the lengths of the sides of an object. | [noun] The length of such a boundary. | [noun] The outer limits of an area. PERIMYSIA (16) PERISTOME (13) [noun] One or two rings of tooth-like appendages surrounding the opening of the capsule of many mosses. | [noun] The parts of or surrounding the mouths of numerous invertebrates. | [noun] The lip, or edge of the aperture, of a spiral shell. PERMANENT (13) [noun] A chemical hair treatment imparting or removing curliness, whose effects typically last for a period of weeks; a perm. | [noun] Given an n \times n matrix a_{ij} \,, the sum over all permutations \pi \, of \prod_{i=1}^n{a_{i\pi(i)}}. | [noun] (trading card games) A card whose effects persist beyond the turn on which it is played. PERMEABLE (15) [adjective] That absorbs or allows the passage of fluids PERMEASES (13) PERMEATED (14) [verb] To pass through the pores or interstices of; to penetrate and pass through without causing rupture or displacement; applied especially to fluids which pass through substances of loose texture | [verb] To enter and spread through; to pervade. PERMEATES (13) [verb] To pass through the pores or interstices of; to penetrate and pass through without causing rupture or displacement; applied especially to fluids which pass through substances of loose texture | [verb] To enter and spread through; to pervade. PERMITTED (14) [verb] To allow (something) to happen, to give permission for. | [verb] To allow (someone) to do something; to give permission to. | [verb] To allow for, to make something possible. PERMITTEE (13) [noun] One who receives a permit. PERMITTER (13) PERMUTING (14) [verb] Change the order of | [verb] Make a permutation of PERSIMMON (15) [noun] A type of fruit, of orange colour, very sweet, quite astringent when immature. | [noun] The tree this fruit grows on, generally one of two species of ebony: Diospyros kaki (Asian) or Diospyros virginiana (North American). PESSIMISM (15) [noun] A general belief that bad things will happen. | [noun] The doctrine that this world is the worst of all possible worlds. | [noun] The condition of being pessimal. PESSIMIST (13) [noun] Someone who habitually expects the worst outcome; one who looks on the dark side of things. PETROLEUM (13) [noun] A flammable liquid ranging in color from clear to very dark brown and black, consisting mainly of hydrocarbons, occurring naturally in deposits under the Earth's surface PHALLISMS (16) PHANTASMA (16) PHANTASMS (16) [noun] Something seen but having no physical reality; a phantom or apparition. PHENOMENA (16) [noun] A thing or being, event or process, perceptible through senses; or a fact or occurrence thereof. | [noun] (by extension) A knowable thing or event (eg by inference, especially in science) | [noun] A kind or type of phenomenon (sense 1 or 2) PHEROMONE (16) [noun] A chemical secreted by an animal, especially an insect, that affects the development or behavior of other members of the same species, functioning often as a means of attracting a member of the opposite sex. PHILOMELS (16) PHLEGMIER (17) PHONEMICS (18) [noun] The study of phonemes and their written representations. PHONOGRAM (17) [noun] A character or symbol (grapheme) that represents a sound, as opposed to logograms and determinatives. | [noun] An audio recording, regardless of physical format. PHOTOGRAM (17) [noun] A photograph made without using a camera; normally by placing an object in contact with photosensitive paper and exposing it to light PHOTOMAPS (18) [noun] A map made by the superimposition of aerial photographs onto grid lines, contours and other normal map features PHOTOMASK (20) [noun] A transparent quartz block marked with many high-resolution images; a series of them are used in the photolithography of integrated circuits, one for each layer PHYLLOMES (19) PICLORAMS (15) PICOGRAMS (16) PICOMOLES (15) PICTOGRAM (16) [noun] A picture that represents a word or an idea by illustration. PIECEMEAL (15) [noun] A fragment; a scrap. | [verb] To divide or distribute piecemeal; dismember. | [adjective] Made or done in pieces or one stage at a time. PIEDMONTS (14) [noun] Any region of foothills of a mountain range. PIGMENTED (15) [verb] To add color or pigment to something. PIMIENTOS (13) [noun] A red sweet pepper, a cultivar of Capsicum annuum, used to make relish, stuffed into olives, or used as spice. | [noun] A tropical berry used to make allspice. | [noun] The tree on which it grows. PIMPERNEL (15) [noun] A plant of the genus Pimpinella, especially burnet saxifrage, Pimpinella saxifraga. | [noun] Any of various plants of the genus Anagallis, having small red, white or purple flowers, especially the scarlet pimpernel, Anagallis arvensis. | [noun] Sanguisorba spp. PIMPLIEST (15) PIPESTEMS (15) PIROPLASM (15) PISIFORMS (16) [noun] A small bone in the wrist at the junction of the ulna and the carpus PLACEMENT (15) [noun] The act of placing or putting in place; the act of locating or positioning; the state of being placed. | [noun] A location or position. | [noun] The act of matching a person with a job PLAINSMAN (13) [noun] A native, inhabitant or settler of a plains region, but especially of the United States prairies PLAINSMEN (13) [noun] A native, inhabitant or settler of a plains region, but especially of the United States prairies PLANFORMS (16) [noun] The shape and layout of a fixed-wing aircraft's fuselage and wing. PLANTSMAN (13) [noun] An expert on the identification and cultivation of plants. PLANTSMEN (13) [noun] An expert on the identification and cultivation of plants. PLASMAGEL (14) PLASMASOL (13) PLASMATIC (15) PLASMODIA (14) [noun] A mass of cytoplasm, containing many nuclei, created by the aggregation of amoeboid cells of slime molds during their vegetative phase. When capitalised as a proper name, Plasmodium is a genus of protozoan parasites responsible for such diseases as malaria PLASMOIDS (14) PLASTRUMS (13) PLATFORMS (16) [noun] A raised stage from which speeches are made and on which musical and other performances are made. | [noun] A raised floor for any purpose, e.g. for workmen during construction, or formerly for military cannon. | [noun] A place or an opportunity to express one's opinion; a tribune. PLATINUMS (13) PLAYMAKER (20) [noun] A playwright. | [noun] A sportsman who leads attacks for his team and creates chances to score. PLAYMATES (16) [noun] A companion for someone (especially a child) to play with. | [noun] A female who has appeared as the centerfold in Playboy magazine. | [noun] A person's lover. PLAYROOMS (16) [noun] A room, allocated as a children's play area, in which noisy or boisterous activities are tolerated. | [noun] (BDSM) A room dedicated to sadomasochistic sexual activity. PLAYTIMES (16) [noun] Time for play or diversion. | [noun] A time when children can play outside during the school day. | [noun] A duration of time when one is not as serious as they could be, especially in a conflict of sorts. PLECTRUMS (15) [noun] A small piece of plastic, metal, ivory, etc., for plucking the strings of a guitar, lyre, mandolin, etc. | [noun] A projection of bone or other stiff tissue, such as the ridges in some insects' stridulatory organs. PLEONASMS (13) PLEXIFORM (23) [noun] Plexiform neurofibroma | [adjective] Having the form of a plexus PLIMSOLES (13) [noun] A rubber-soled lace-up canvas shoe for sports or onboard ships; a precursor of trainers. | [noun] The plimsoll symbol ⦵ (or o) that is used as a superscript in the notation of thermodynamics to indicate an arbitrarily chosen non-zero reference point. PLIMSOLLS (13) [noun] A rubber-soled lace-up canvas shoe for sports or onboard ships; a precursor of trainers. | [noun] The plimsoll symbol ⦵ (or o) that is used as a superscript in the notation of thermodynamics to indicate an arbitrarily chosen non-zero reference point. PLUMBAGOS (16) [noun] A plant of the genus Plumbago; leadwort. | [noun] Graphite. PLUMBINGS (16) PLUMBISMS (17) PLUMELETS (13) PLUMERIAS (13) [noun] Frangipani PLUMIPEDS (16) PLUMMETED (16) [verb] To drop swiftly, in a direct manner; to fall quickly. PLUMMIEST (15) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or characteristic of plums | [adjective] Desirable; profitable; advantageous | [adjective] (of a voice) rich, mellow and carefully articulated, especially with an upper-class accent PLUMPENED (16) PLUMPNESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being plump. PLURALISM (13) [noun] The quality or state of being plural, or in the plural number. | [noun] The state of a pluralist; the holding of more than one ecclesiastical living at a time. | [noun] A social system that permits smaller groups within a society to maintain their individual cultural identities. PLUTONIUM (13) [noun] A sanctuary dedicated to the Ancient Greek and Roman god Pluto, usually at a location producing poisonous emissions, believed to represent an entrance to the underworld. | [noun] The transuranic chemical element with atomic number 94 and symbol Pu: a silvery-gray radioactive actinide metal that tarnishes when exposed to air. PNEUMATIC (15) [noun] A vehicle, such as a bicycle, whose wheels are fitted with pneumatic tyres. | [noun] (gnosticism) In the gnostic theologian Valentinus' triadic grouping of man, the highest type; a person focused on spiritual reality (the other two being hylic and psychic). | [adjective] Of, relating to, or resembling air or other gases PNEUMONIA (13) [noun] An acute or chronic inflammation of the lungs caused by viruses, bacteria or other microorganisms, or sometimes by physical or chemical irritants. PNEUMONIC (15) POCKMARKS (23) [noun] A mark or scar in the skin caused by a pock. | [noun] A crater in the seafloor caused by erupting gas or liquid. PODOMERES (14) POETICISM (15) [noun] Poetic style; lyricism. | [noun] A poetic phrase, utterance, etc. POGROMING (15) POGROMIST (14) POLEMICAL (15) [noun] A diatribe or polemic. | [adjective] Related to argument or controversy; containing polemic, being polemic POLEMISTS (13) POLEMIZED (23) POLEMIZES (22) POLICEMAN (15) [noun] One who enforces. | [noun] The member of a group, especially of a gang, charged with keeping dissident members obedient. | [noun] A player tasked with physically intimidating or confronting the opposition. POLICEMEN (15) [noun] One who enforces. | [noun] The member of a group, especially of a gang, charged with keeping dissident members obedient. | [noun] A player tasked with physically intimidating or confronting the opposition. POLLINIUM (13) [noun] A coherent mass of pollen, as in the milkweed and most orchids, which is dispersed as a single unit during pollination. POLONIUMS (13) POLYAMIDE (17) [noun] Any of a range of polymers containing amide (or peptide) repeat units; examples include proteins and nylon. POLYAMINE (16) POLYGAMIC (19) POLYGONUM (17) [noun] Any of many plants, of the family Polygonaceae, embracing a large number of species, including bistort, knotweed, smartweed, etc. POLYMATHS (19) [noun] A person with extraordinarily broad and comprehensive knowledge. POLYMATHY (22) POLYMERIC (18) POLYMORPH (21) [noun] Any organism that shows polymorphism. | [noun] Any substance or mineral that forms different types of crystal. | [noun] The transformation of an item or creature into something different by magic. POLYMYXIN (26) [noun] Any of several toxic antibiotics, derived from the soil bacterium Bacillus polymyxa, used to treat infections by gram-negative bacteria POLYSOMES (16) [noun] A polyribosome POMACEOUS (15) POMANDERS (14) [noun] A mixture of aromatic substances, made into a ball and carried by a person to impart a sweet smell or as a protection against infection. | [noun] A small case in which an aromatic ball was carried. | [noun] A perforated container filled with pot-pourri for placing in a drawer, wardrobe, room, etc., to provide a sweet smell. POMMELING (16) [verb] To pound or beat. POMMELLED (16) [verb] To pound or beat. | [adjective] (often in combination) Having a pommel. POMPADOUR (16) [noun] A women's hairstyle in which the hair is swept upwards from the face and worn high over the forehead. | [noun] A men's hairstyle of the 1950s. | [noun] A crimson or pink colour. POMPOSITY (18) [noun] The quality of being pompous; self-importance. POMPOUSLY (18) POOLROOMS (13) [noun] A room with pool tables where pool can be played, usually for a fee. POPULISMS (15) POSTFORMS (16) POSTMARKS (17) [noun] A marking made by a postal service on a letter, package, postcard or the like, usually indicating the place where and the date and time when the item was received or processed for the first time, and often serving to cancel a postage stamp. | [verb] To apply a postmark on. POTASSIUM (13) [noun] A soft, waxy, silvery reactive metal that is never found unbound in nature; an element (symbol K) with an atomic number of 19 and atomic weight of 39.0983. The symbol is derived from the Latin kalium. | [noun] A single atom of this element. POTOMETER (13) PRACTICUM (17) [noun] A college course designed to give a student supervised practical knowledge of a subject previously studied theoretically. | [noun] A science exam in which students are questioned about specimens or other objects placed in front of them. PRAENOMEN (13) [noun] An ancient Roman first name. | [noun] The throne name of a pharaoh, the fourth of the five names of the royal titulary, traditionally encircled by a cartouche and preceded by the title nswt-bjtj. | [noun] The genus name put before the species name. PRAGMATIC (16) [noun] A man of business. | [noun] A busybody. | [noun] A public decree. PREADMITS (14) PREAMBLES (15) [noun] A short preliminary statement or remark, especially an explanatory introduction to a formal document or statute. | [noun] A syncword. | [verb] To speak or write a preamble; to provide a preliminary statement or set of remarks. PREARMING (14) PREATOMIC (15) PREEMPTED (16) [verb] To appropriate something (before someone else does). | [verb] To displace something, or take precedence over something. | [verb] To secure (land, etc.) by the right of preemption. PREEMPTOR (15) PREFORMAT (16) PREFORMED (17) [verb] To shape something before some other operation. | [adjective] Formed, constructed or assembled in advance PREHUMANS (16) [noun] One of the human-like creatures prior to Homo sapiens. PRELIMITS (13) PREMARKET (17) PREMATURE (13) [noun] An infant born prematurely | [adjective] Occurring before a state of readiness or maturity has arrived | [adjective] Taking place earlier than anticipated, prepared for, or desired PREMEDICS (16) PREMERGER (14) PREMIERED (14) [verb] To perform, display or exhibit for the first time. | [verb] To govern in the role of premier. | [verb] Of a film or play, to play for the first time. PREMIERES (13) [noun] The first showing of a film, play or other form of entertainment, often held as a special event with celebrity guests. | [noun] The first episode of a television show or a particular season of that show. | [noun] In a series of narrative works, the installment that is chronologically set first. PREMISING (14) [verb] To state or assume something as a proposition to an argument. | [verb] To make a premise. | [verb] To set forth beforehand, or as introductory to the main subject; to offer previously, as something to explain or aid in understanding what follows. PREMISSES (13) [noun] A proposition antecedently supposed or proved; something previously stated or assumed as the basis of further argument; a condition; a supposition. | [noun] Any of the first propositions of a syllogism, from which the conclusion is deduced. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Matters previously stated or set forth; especially, that part in the beginning of a deed, the office of which is to express the grantor and grantee, and the land or thing granted or conveyed, and all that precedes the habendum; the thing demised or granted. PREMIXING (21) [verb] To blend in advance. | [noun] Mixing prior to use or sale PREMODERN (14) PREMODIFY (20) [verb] To modify in advance PREMOLARS (13) [noun] A tooth situated in front of the molar teeth; especially a tooth in humans with two cusps which is between the canines and the molars (Latin: singular dens premolaris, plural dentes premolares) PREMOLDED (15) PREMONISH (16) [verb] To warn of something in advance PRENOMENS (13) PRENOMINA (13) PRENUMBER (15) PRESIDIUM (14) [noun] A permanent executive committee, used primarily in Communist countries, with the power to act for a larger governing body when the latter is in recess. | [noun] Such an executive committee headed by the President of the Supreme Soviet. PRESSMARK (17) [noun] The logo of a publishing press. PRESSROOM (13) PRESTAMPS (15) PRESUMERS (13) PRESUMING (14) [verb] With infinitive object: to be so presumptuous as (to do something) without proper authority or permission. | [verb] To perform, do (something) without authority; to lay claim to without permission. | [verb] To assume or suggest to be true (without proof); to take for granted, to suppose. PRESUMMIT (15) PRETERMIT (13) [verb] To intentionally disregard something, allow it to go unnoticed, or change the subject in response to someone's comment; to omit or fail to carry out something; to prematurely terminate or interrupt something. PREWARMED (17) PRIAPISMS (15) PRIGGISMS (15) PRIMACIES (15) PRIMALITY (16) PRIMARIES (13) [noun] A primary election; a preliminary election to select a political candidate of a political party. | [noun] The first year of grade school. | [noun] A base or fundamental component; something that is irreducible. PRIMARILY (16) [adverb] (focus) Of a primary or central nature, first and foremost PRIMATALS (13) PRIMATIAL (13) PRIMENESS (13) PRIMIPARA (15) [noun] A woman or female animal during or after her first pregnancy. | [noun] (specifically) A woman or female animal that has carried a first pregnancy to a viable gestational age. PRIMITIVE (16) [noun] An original or primary word; a word not derived from another, as opposed to derivative. | [noun] A member of a primitive society. | [noun] A simple-minded person. PRIMORDIA (14) [noun] An aggregation of cells that is the first stage in the development of an organ. PRIMROSES (13) [noun] A flowering plant of the genus Primula. | [noun] A plant of the family Primulaceae. | [noun] A plant of the genus Oenothera, better known as an evening primrose. PRINCEDOM (16) PRISMATIC (15) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a prism; having the form of a prism; containing one or more prisms. | [adjective] Separated or distributed by, or as if by, a transparent prism; formed by a prism; varied or brilliant in color. PRISMOIDS (14) [noun] A prismatoid that has planar sides, and the same number of vertices in both of its parallel planes. | [noun] An antiprism. PRIVATISM (16) [noun] Concern only with issues inasmuch as they affect one as an individual; self-interest. PROCAMBIA (17) PROCLAIMS (15) [verb] To announce or declare. PRODROMAL (14) [adjective] Relating to prodrome; indicating an early stage of a disease. PRODROMES (14) [noun] A precursor or harbinger; also a warning event. | [noun] An introductory or preliminary book or treatise. | [noun] An early symptom warning of the onset of a disease. PROENZYME (25) [noun] Any inactive precursor of an enzyme that is converted to an enzyme by proteolysis; a zymogen PROGRAMED (15) PROGRAMER (14) [noun] One who writes computer programs; a software developer. | [noun] One who decides which programs will be shown on a television station, or which songs will be played on a radio station. | [noun] A device that installs or controls a software program in some other machine. PROGRAMME (16) [noun] A set of structured activities. | [noun] A leaflet listing information about a play, game or other activity. | [noun] A performance of a show or other broadcast on radio or television. PROLAMINE (13) PROLAMINS (13) PROMENADE (14) [noun] A prom (dance). | [noun] A walk taken for pleasure, display, or exercise; a stroll. | [noun] A place where one takes a walk for leisurely pleasure, or for exercise, especially a terrace by the seaside. PROMINENT (13) [adjective] Standing out, or projecting; jutting; protuberant | [adjective] Likely to attract attention from its size or position; conspicuous | [adjective] Eminent; distinguished above others PROMISEES (13) [noun] A person who receives a promise. PROMISERS (13) PROMISING (14) [verb] To commit to (some action or outcome), or to assure (a person) of such commitment; to make an oath or vow. | [verb] To give grounds for expectation, especially of something good. | [noun] The act of making a promise. PROMISORS (13) [noun] One who engages or undertakes; a promiser. PROMOTERS (13) [noun] One who promotes, particularly with respect to entertainment events or goods. | [noun] The section of DNA that controls the initiation of RNA transcription as a product of a gene. | [noun] An accelerator of catalysis that is not itself a catalyst. PROMOTING (14) [verb] To raise (someone) to a more important, responsible, or remunerative job or rank. | [verb] To advocate or urge on behalf of (something or someone); to attempt to popularize or sell by means of advertising or publicity. | [verb] To encourage, urge or incite. PROMOTION (13) [noun] An advancement in rank or position. | [noun] Dissemination of information in order to increase its popularity. | [noun] An event intended to increase the reach or image of a product or brand. PROMOTIVE (16) PROMPTERS (15) [noun] The person who does the prompting. PROMPTEST (15) PROMPTING (16) [verb] To lead (someone) toward what they should say or do. | [verb] To show or tell an actor/person the words they should be saying, or actions they should be doing. | [verb] To initiate; to cause or lead to. PROMULGED (15) [verb] To promulgate; to publish or teach. PROMULGES (14) [verb] To promulgate; to publish or teach. PROOFROOM (16) PROSAISMS (13) PROSIMIAN (13) [noun] A primate that is not a monkey or an ape, generally nocturnal with large eyes and ears. Such primates were formerly grouped in the suborder Prosimii, but are now considered a paraphyletic group and not a clade. | [adjective] Of or from the prosimian suborder of primates. PROSTOMIA (13) PROTAMINE (13) [noun] Any of a class of proteins, rich in arginine, found in the sperm of fish; used medicinally to control the action of insulin PROTAMINS (13) PROTODERM (14) PROTONEMA (13) PROXEMICS (22) [noun] The study of the effects of the physical distance between people in different cultures and societies. PROXIMATE (20) [noun] A grammatical marker in the Algonquian (and some other) languages for a principal third person. | [adjective] Close or closest; adjacent. | [adjective] Immediately preceding or following in a chain of causation. PROXIMITY (23) [noun] Closeness; the state of being near as in space, time, or relationship. PSALMBOOK (19) [noun] A book of psalms. PSALMISTS (13) [noun] A composer of psalms | [noun] (capitalized) A composer of one of the Biblical Psalms PSAMMITES (15) PSEUDONYM (17) [noun] A fictitious name, as those used by writers and movie stars. PSYLLIUMS (16) [noun] Any of several plants of the subgenus Plantago subg. Psyllium, whose seeds are used commercially for the production of mucilage and their laxative properties. | [noun] Synonym of psyllium (seed) husk, especially as a dietary supplement PTARMIGAN (14) [noun] Any of three species of small grouse in the genus Lagopus found in subarctic tundra areas of North America and Eurasia. PTERYGIUM (17) PTOMAINES (13) [noun] Any of various amines formed by putrefactive bacteria. | [noun] Food poisoning. PTYALISMS (16) PUERILISM (13) PUGILISMS (14) PULMONARY (16) [adjective] Pertaining to, having, or affecting the lungs. PULMONATE (13) [noun] A gastropod of the order Pulmonata. | [adjective] Having lungs or similar organs. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or belonging to the gastropod order Pulmonata (slugs and snails). PULMOTORS (13) PUMICEOUS (15) PUMICITES (15) PUMMELING (16) [verb] To hit or strike heavily and repeatedly. | [noun] A beating. PUMMELLED (16) [verb] To hit or strike heavily and repeatedly. PUPPYDOMS (21) PUROMYCIN (18) [noun] An antibiotic that is a strong inhibitor of protein translation PYCNIDIUM (19) PYGMYISMS (22) PYODERMAS (17) PYRAMIDAL (17) [noun] One of the carpal bones | [adjective] Pyramid-shaped. | [adjective] Tetragonal. PYRAMIDED (18) [verb] To build up or be arranged in the form of a pyramid. | [verb] To combine (a series of genes) into a single genotype. | [verb] To employ, or take part in, a pyramid scheme. PYRETHRUM (19) [noun] Any of several daisy-like perennial African plants of the genus Tanacetum, especially Tanacetum cinerariifolium. | [noun] Anacyclus pyrethrum (pellitory of Spain) | [noun] Any of several insecticides obtained from these plants; pyrethrin. PYROMANCY (21) PYROMANIA (16) [noun] A compulsive disorder characterised by obsession with fire or uncontrollable urges to start fires. PYROMETER (16) [noun] A thermometer designed to measure high temperatures. | [noun] An instrument for measuring the thermal expansion of solids. PYROMETRY (19) QUACKISMS (26) QUAGMIRES (21) [noun] A swampy, soggy area of ground. | [noun] A perilous, mixed up and troubled situation; a hopeless tangle; a predicament. | [verb] To embroil (a person, etc.) in complexity or difficulty. QUALMIEST (20) QUAMASHES (23) [noun] Any of the North American flowering plants of the genus Camassia. QUARRYMAN (23) [noun] A man involved in quarrying (mining for stone). QUARRYMEN (23) [noun] A man involved in quarrying (mining for stone). QUEENDOMS (21) QUICKLIME (26) [noun] Calcium oxide, which is produced by heating (calcining) limestone and gives slaked lime on treatment with water. | [verb] To treat with quicklime. QUIETISMS (20) QUITCLAIM (22) [noun] A renunciation of claims. | [noun] A deed that is a renunciation of claims to a parcel of real property and a transfer of one's claims to another. | [verb] To relinquish or release (a claim, title etc.); to transfer (an interest in property). QUIXOTISM (27) RABBINISM (15) RACEMATES (13) [noun] A racemic mixture | [noun] Any salt or ester of racemic acid RACEMISMS (15) RACEMIZED (23) [verb] To convert (an enantiomer) into a racemic mixture. RACEMIZES (22) [verb] To convert (an enantiomer) into a racemic mixture. RACIALISM (13) [noun] Tribalism, nationalism | [noun] Racism, political ideology advocating superiority and exclusive rights based on race RADIOGRAM (13) [noun] A message, like a telegram, transmitted by radio rather than wires. | [noun] An entertainment device that combined a radio and a record player or gramophone. | [noun] A radiograph RAINMAKER (15) [noun] Someone or something that causes or attempts to cause rain to fall. | [noun] (originally Canada) A person having the ability to generate business, raise funds, or otherwise engineer success for a company, organization, etc. | [noun] A batted ball that is hit very high into the air. RAINSTORM (11) [noun] A storm characterized by substantial, heavy rainfall. RAMBUTANS (13) [noun] A tree, Nephelium lappaceum, of Southeast Asia. | [noun] The fruit of this tree. RAMEQUINS (20) RAMIFYING (18) [verb] To divide into branches or subdivisions. | [verb] To spread or diversify into multiple fields or categories. RAMILLIES (11) RAMPAGERS (14) RAMPAGING (15) [verb] To move about wildly or violently. | [noun] The act of one who rampages. RAMPANTLY (16) RAMPARTED (14) [adjective] Provided with a rampart. RAMRODDED (14) [verb] To force. RAMSHORNS (14) RANDOMIZE (21) [verb] To arrange randomly; to make random RANSOMERS (11) RANSOMING (12) [verb] (14th century) To deliver, especially in context of sin or relevant penalties. | [verb] To pay a price to set someone free from captivity or punishment. | [verb] To exact a ransom for, or a payment on. RATEMETER (11) RAVELMENT (14) READYMADE (16) [noun] A ready-made object. | [adjective] Pre-existing or made previously and suitable for use without (further) preparation or modification; comparable with regard to the amount of preparation required. | [adjective] Made in advance to a standard specification. REAFFIRMS (17) [verb] To affirm again. | [verb] To bolster or support. REANIMATE (11) [adjective] Being animate again. | [verb] To animate again. REARMOUSE (11) REASSUMED (12) [verb] To resume, to carry on (a practice, thought, occupation etc.) again. | [verb] To take on or adopt again. | [verb] To take back into one's possession. REASSUMES (11) [verb] To resume, to carry on (a practice, thought, occupation etc.) again. | [verb] To take on or adopt again. | [verb] To take back into one's possession. REATTEMPT (13) [noun] Another attempt. | [verb] To attempt again. REBAPTISM (15) REBELDOMS (14) REBLOOMED (14) RECAMIERS (13) RECLAIMED (14) [verb] To return land to a suitable condition for use. | [verb] To obtain useful products from waste; to recycle. | [verb] To claim something back; to repossess. RECOMBINE (15) [verb] To combine again, especially to reassemble the parts of something previously taken apart in a different manner. | [verb] To undergo recombination. RECOMBING (16) RECOMMEND (16) [verb] To bestow commendation on; to represent favourably; to suggest, endorse or encourage as an appropriate choice. | [verb] To make acceptable; to attract favor to. | [verb] To advise, propose, counsel favorably RECOMMITS (15) [verb] Commit again RECOMPILE (15) [noun] An act of recompiling code. | [verb] To compile again. RECOMPOSE (15) [verb] To compose or construct again. | [verb] To bring (oneself) back to a state of calm. RECOMPUTE (15) RECONFIRM (16) [verb] To confirm again; to establish more firmly | [verb] (travel) To advise an airline of your intention to use a reservation, or risk cancellation. RECUMBENT (15) [noun] A bicycle or tricycle that places the rider in a reclined posture. | [adjective] Lying down. | [adjective] Inactive; idle. REDAMAGED (14) REDAMAGES (13) REDEEMERS (12) [noun] One who redeems; one who provides redemption. REDEEMING (13) [verb] To recover ownership of something by buying it back. | [verb] To liberate by payment of a ransom. | [verb] To set free by force. REDEMANDS (13) REDREAMED (13) REEMBARKS (17) REEMERGED (13) [verb] To emerge again, to come into view after having hidden. | [verb] To come out of a situation, object or a liquid after having entered it. REEMERGES (12) [verb] To emerge again, to come into view after having hidden. | [verb] To come out of a situation, object or a liquid after having entered it. REEMITTED (12) REEMPLOYS (16) [verb] To employ again. REEXAMINE (18) [verb] To examine again. REFILMING (15) REFORMATE (14) REFORMATS (14) [verb] To format anew or again, generally erasing a previous format. REFORMERS (14) [noun] One who reforms, or who works for reform. | [noun] (history) One who was involved in the Reformation. | [noun] (chemical engineering, fuel cells) A device which converts hydrocarbons into a hydrogen-rich mixture of gases. REFORMING (15) [verb] To put into a new and improved form or condition; to restore to a former good state, or bring from bad to good; to change from worse to better | [verb] To return to a good state; to amend or correct one's own character or habits | [verb] To form again or in a new configuration. REFORMISM (16) REFORMIST (14) [noun] One who advocates reform (of an institution). | [noun] Specifically, one who advocates reform of society and the gradual accumulation of small changes, as opposed to revolutionary action. | [noun] (17th C.) An advocate of reform in the Church of England; a Reformer. REFRAMING (15) [verb] To frame again. | [verb] To redescribe, from a different perspective; to relabel. | [noun] Framing anew or again. REGIMENTS (12) [noun] A unit of armed troops under the command of an officer, and consisting of several smaller units; now specifically, usually composed of two or more battalions. | [noun] Rule or governance over a person, place etc.; government, authority. | [noun] The state or office of a ruler; rulership. REGROOMED (13) REHAMMERS (16) REHEMMING (17) REHOBOAMS (16) [noun] A bottle of Champagne or Burgundy wine containing 4.5 liters of fluid, six times the volume of a standard bottle. REIMAGINE (12) [verb] To imagine or conceive something in a new way REIMAGING (13) REIMBURSE (13) [verb] To compensate with payment; especially, to repay money spent on one's behalf. REIMMERSE (13) REIMPLANT (13) REIMPORTS (13) [noun] The act or practice of importing again, or back to a place of origin; reimportation. | [noun] A product which has been reimported. | [verb] To import again. REIMPOSED (14) [verb] To impose again, a further time. REIMPOSES (13) [verb] To impose again, a further time. REINFORMS (14) RELUMINED (12) RELUMINES (11) REMAILING (12) REMAINDER (12) [noun] A part or parts remaining after some has/have been removed. | [noun] The amount left over after subtracting the divisor as many times as possible from the dividend without producing a negative result. If (n) (dividend) and d (divisor) are integers, then (n) can always be expressed in the form n = dq + r, where q (quotient) and r (remainder) are also integers and 0 ≤ r < d. | [noun] The number left over after a simple subtraction REMAINING (12) [verb] To stay behind while others withdraw; to be left after others have been removed or destroyed; to be left after a number or quantity has been subtracted or cut off; to be left as not included or comprised. | [verb] To continue unchanged in place, form, or condition, or undiminished in quantity; to abide; to stay; to endure; to last. | [verb] To await; to be left to. REMANDING (13) [verb] To send a prisoner back to custody. | [verb] To send a case back to a lower court for further consideration. | [verb] To send back. REMANENCE (13) REMANNING (12) [verb] To supply with new personnel. REMAPPING (16) [verb] To assign differently; to relabel or repurpose. | [verb] To map again. | [noun] A new mapping. REMARKERS (15) REMARKETS (15) REMARKING (16) [verb] To mark again. | [verb] To make a remark or remarks; to comment. | [verb] To express in words or writing; to state; to make a comment REMARQUES (20) REMARRIED (12) [noun] A person who has remarried. | [verb] To marry a second or subsequent time. REMARRIES (11) [verb] To marry a second or subsequent time. REMASTERS (11) [verb] To produce a new version of a recording by remixing the original master recordings. | [verb] To create a new master copy by enhancing sound or picture quality of an older recording. | [verb] To produce a new version of a video game with updated graphics, often re-recorded music, and added features and content. REMATCHED (17) REMATCHES (16) [noun] A repeated contest staged between the same opponents or teams which played a previous contest. | [verb] To bring opponents together for such a contest. | [verb] To stage such a contest. REMEASURE (11) [verb] To measure again. REMEDIATE (12) [verb] To correct or improve (a deficiency or problem). | [adjective] Intended to correct or improve deficient skills in some subject. | [adjective] Remedial. REMEDYING (16) [verb] To provide or serve as a remedy for. REMEETING (12) REMELTING (12) REMEMBERS (15) [verb] To reconstitute or reassemble that which has been dismembered. | [verb] To recall from one's memory; to have an image in one's memory. | [verb] To memorize; to put something into memory. REMENDING (13) REMERGING (13) REMINDERS (12) [noun] Someone or something that reminds. | [noun] Writing that reminds of open payments. REMINDFUL (15) [adjective] That serves to remind one of something; reminiscent. REMINDING (13) [verb] To cause one to experience a memory (of someone or something); to bring to the notice or consideration (of a person). | [noun] The act by which somebody is reminded of something. REMINISCE (13) [noun] An act of reminiscence. | [verb] To recall the past in a private moment, often fondly or nostalgically. | [verb] To talk or write about memories of the past, especially pleasant memories. REMINTING (12) REMISSION (11) [noun] A pardon of a sin; the forgiveness of an offence, or relinquishment of a (legal) claim or a debt. | [noun] A lessening of amount due, as in either money or work, or intensity of a thing. | [noun] An act of remitting, returning, or sending back. REMITMENT (13) REMITTALS (11) [noun] Anything remitted; remittance. REMITTENT (11) [noun] A remittent fever. | [adjective] Alternately increasing and decreasing in severity or intensity. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to remission of the severity of symptoms. REMITTERS (11) REMITTING (12) [verb] To transmit or send (e.g. money in payment); to supply. | [verb] To forgive, pardon (a wrong, offence, etc.). | [verb] To refrain from exacting or enforcing. REMITTORS (11) REMODELED (13) [verb] To change the appearance, layout, or furnishings of. REMOISTEN (11) REMOLADES (12) REMOLDING (13) [verb] Mold again, apply a new mold to | [noun] An act of molding again. REMOTIONS (11) REMOUNTED (12) [verb] To go up again; to rise another time. | [verb] To help (someone) back on a horse. | [verb] To get back on a horse, bicycle etc. REMOVABLE (16) [noun] Something that can be removed. | [adjective] Able to be removed. REMOVABLY (19) RENOGRAMS (12) RENUMBERS (13) [verb] To number again, to assign new numbers to. REPAIRMAN (13) [noun] A man whose job is to repair things REPAIRMEN (13) [noun] A man whose job is to repair things REPAYMENT (16) [noun] The act of repaying. | [noun] The money or other resource that is repaid. REPLUMBED (16) REPRIMAND (14) [noun] A severe, formal or official reproof; reprehension, rebuke, private or public. | [verb] To reprove in a formal or official way. REPROGRAM (14) [verb] To program anew or differently. | [verb] (by extension) To make a fundamental change to the behaviour or habits of. | [verb] To shift funds appropriated for one government program to a different government program. REPUMPING (16) REREMINDS (12) REREMOUSE (11) RESAMPLED (14) RESAMPLES (13) RESEMBLED (14) [verb] To be like or similar to (something); to represent as similar. | [verb] To compare; to regard as similar, to liken. | [verb] To counterfeit; to imitate. RESEMBLES (13) [verb] To be like or similar to (something); to represent as similar. | [verb] To compare; to regard as similar, to liken. | [verb] To counterfeit; to imitate. RESIDUUMS (12) RESMELTED (12) RESMOOTHS (14) RESPONSUM (13) RESTAMPED (14) RESTROOMS (11) [noun] A room containing a public toilet: a public lavatory. RESUBMITS (13) [verb] To submit again. RESUMMONS (13) RETEAMING (12) RETEMPERS (13) RETICULUM (13) [noun] A network. | [noun] A pattern of interconnected objects. | [noun] The second compartment of the stomach of a cow or other ruminant. RETRIMMED (14) REVAMPERS (16) REVAMPING (17) [verb] To renovate, revise, improve or renew. | [noun] (gerund of revamp) An act in which something is revamped REVETMENT (14) [noun] A layer of stone, concrete, or other hard material supporting the side of an embankment. | [noun] An armoured building that provides protection against bombs. REWARMING (15) RHABDOMES (17) [noun] In sponges, the shaft of a cladose rhabdus, bearing the cladome. RHAMNOSES (14) RHAMNUSES (14) RHEOMETER (14) [noun] A device used to measure the flow properties of fluids with variable viscosity. | [noun] A device used to measure the flow of electric current: an ammeter. | [noun] A flowmeter, especially for water or blood. RHEUMATIC (16) [noun] A person suffering from rheumatism | [adjective] Resembling or relating to rheumatism. | [adjective] Derived from, or having the character of, rheum; rheumic. RHEUMATIZ (23) RHEUMIEST (14) [adjective] Of, relating to, or producing rheum from the mucous membranes; watery RHIZOBIUM (25) [noun] Any of various bacteria, of the genus Rhizobium, that form nodules on the roots of legumes and fix nitrogen. RHIZOMATA (23) RHIZOTOMY (26) RHODAMINE (15) [noun] Any of a class of pink to red polycyclic fluorone dyes. RHODAMINS (15) RHOMBOIDS (17) [noun] A parallelogram which is neither a rhombus nor a rectangle | [noun] Any of several muscles that control the shoulders | [noun] A solid shape which has rhombic faces RHOMBUSES (16) [noun] A parallelogram having all sides of equal length. | [noun] In early Greek religion, an instrument whirled on the end of a string similar to a bullroarer. | [noun] Any of several flatfishes, including the brill and turbot, once considered part of the genus Rhombus, now in Scophthalmus. RHUMBAING (17) [verb] To dance the rumba RHYMELESS (17) RHYMESTER (17) [noun] A rhymer; a poetaster RHYTHMICS (22) RHYTHMIST (20) RHYTHMIZE (29) RHYTIDOME (18) RIBOSOMAL (13) RIBOSOMES (13) [noun] A small organelle found in all cells; involved in the production of proteins by translating messenger RNA. RIFAMPINS (16) RIGHTISMS (15) RIGHTMOST (15) [adjective] Furthest to the right. RIGMAROLE (12) [noun] A long and complicated procedure that seems tiresome or pointless. | [noun] Nonsense; confused and incoherent talk. | [adjective] Prolix; tedious. RIGORISMS (12) RIMESTERS (11) RINGWORMS (15) RITUALISM (11) [noun] The belief that it is necessary for rites or repeated sets of actions to be carried out. ROBOTISMS (13) ROLAMITES (11) ROMANCERS (13) [noun] One who romances. | [noun] (entertainment industry) A romantic film or television show. ROMANCING (14) [verb] To woo; to court. | [verb] To write or tell romantic stories, poetry, letters, etc. | [verb] To talk extravagantly and imaginatively; to build castles in the air. ROMANISED (12) [verb] To put letters or words written in another writing system into the Latin (Roman) alphabet. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To bring under the authority or influence of Rome. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To make or become Roman in character or style. ROMANISES (11) [verb] To put letters or words written in another writing system into the Latin (Roman) alphabet. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To bring under the authority or influence of Rome. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To make or become Roman in character or style. ROMANIZED (21) [verb] To put letters or words written in another writing system into the Latin (Roman) alphabet. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To bring under the authority or influence of Rome. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To make or become Roman in character or style. ROMANIZES (20) [verb] To put letters or words written in another writing system into the Latin (Roman) alphabet. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To bring under the authority or influence of Rome. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To make or become Roman in character or style. ROMANTICS (13) [noun] A person with romantic character (a character like those of the knights in a mythic romance). | [noun] A person who is behaving romantically (in a manner befitting someone who feels an idealized form of love). ROMELDALE (12) ROOMETTES (11) [noun] A small private compartment, for one person, in a railroad sleeping car ROOMINESS (11) ROOMMATES (13) [noun] A person with whom one shares a room, as at university etc. | [noun] A person (UK: flatmate, housemate, AU: sharemate) sharing the same home (sharehome). ROSARIUMS (11) [noun] A rose-garden. ROSTELLUM (11) ROTAMETER (11) ROUNDSMAN (12) [noun] A worker who makes rounds, especially in order to deliver goods. | [noun] A policeman who acts as inspector. ROUNDSMEN (12) [noun] A worker who makes rounds, especially in order to deliver goods. | [noun] A policeman who acts as inspector. ROUNDWORM (15) [noun] An invertebrate animal of the phylum Nematoda and other similar phyla. Many species of roundworms are parasites. ROUSEMENT (11) ROWDYISMS (18) ROYALISMS (14) RUBIDIUMS (14) RUDIMENTS (12) [noun] (often in the plural) A fundamental principle or skill, especially in a field of learning. | [noun] (often in the plural) Something in an undeveloped form. | [noun] A body part that no longer has a function RUMBLINGS (14) [noun] A muted sound of complaint or discontent. | [noun] A deep low noise. RUMINANTS (11) [noun] An artiodactyl ungulate mammal which chews cud, such as a cow or deer. RUMINATED (12) [verb] To chew cud. (Said of ruminants.) Involves regurgitating partially digested food from the rumen. | [verb] To meditate or reflect. | [verb] To meditate or ponder over; to muse on. RUMINATES (11) [verb] To chew cud. (Said of ruminants.) Involves regurgitating partially digested food from the rumen. | [verb] To meditate or reflect. | [verb] To meditate or ponder over; to muse on. RUMINATOR (11) RUMMAGERS (14) RUMMAGING (15) [verb] To arrange (cargo, goods, etc.) in the hold of a ship; to move or rearrange such goods. | [verb] To search a vessel for smuggled goods. | [verb] To search something thoroughly and with disregard for the way in which things were arranged. RUMOURING (12) [verb] (usually used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip. RUMPLIEST (13) RUMRUNNER (11) RURALISMS (11) RUTHENIUM (14) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Ru) with an atomic number of 44. | [noun] An atom of this element. SACRAMENT (13) [noun] A sacred act or ceremony in Christianity. In Catholic theology, a sacrament is defined as "an outward sign instituted by Christ to give grace." | [noun] (in particular) The Eucharist. | [noun] The consecrated Eucharist (especially the bread). SACRARIUM (13) [noun] In Ancient Rome, a place where sacred objects were kept, either in a temple (the adytum) or in a house (holding the penates) | [noun] The area surrounding the altar of a Christian church; the sanctuary or piscina. Sometimes specifically a drain directly to the earth, perhaps including reference to a basin, for washing vessels from consecration. | [noun] The complex sacrum of any bird. SAFETYMAN (17) SAFETYMEN (17) SAGAMORES (12) [noun] A chief of one or several Native American tribe(s), especially of the Algonquians. | [noun] A juice used in medicine. SAINTDOMS (12) SALAAMING (12) [verb] To perform a salaam (to someone). SALARYMAN (14) [noun] (Engrish) An employee, a worker; now especially a Japanese white-collar worker who works long hours and has an insignificant position within the corporate hierarchy. SALARYMEN (14) [noun] (Engrish) An employee, a worker; now especially a Japanese white-collar worker who works long hours and has an insignificant position within the corporate hierarchy. SALEROOMS (11) [noun] A room in which items for sale are displayed; a showroom | [noun] A room in which items are auctioned SALESROOM (11) [noun] The room where sales are made SALMONIDS (12) [noun] A fish of the Salmonidae family. SALMONOID (12) [noun] Any of these fish. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the family Salmonidae of salmon and close relatives. SALOMETER (11) SAMARITAN (11) [noun] A Good Samaritan SAMARIUMS (13) SAMIZDATS (21) SAMPHIRES (16) [noun] One of several salt-tolerant plants, some edible SAMPLINGS (14) [noun] The process or technique of obtaining a representative sample. | [noun] A sample. | [noun] The analysis of a group by determining the characteristics of a significant percentage of its members chosen at random. SANDSTORM (12) [noun] A strong wind carrying clouds of sand and dust through the air. SANDWORMS (15) SAPPHISMS (18) SAPREMIAS (13) SARCOMATA (13) [noun] A type of malignant tumor of the bone, cartilage, fat, muscle, blood vessels, or other connective or supportive tissue. SARCOMERE (13) [noun] The contractile unit of the myofibril of a striated muscle. SARCOSOME (13) SARGASSUM (12) [noun] Any of many brown algae of the genus Sargassum; gulfweed SARMENTUM (13) SATANISMS (11) SATURNISM (11) [noun] Lead poisoning SAVAGISMS (15) SAWTIMBER (16) SCALOGRAM (14) SCAMPERED (16) [verb] To run quickly and lightly, especially in a playful or undignified manner. | [adjective] Achieved by a scampering motion. SCANDIUMS (14) SCHEMATIC (18) [noun] A simplified line drawing used by scientists, engineers, technologists and others to illustrate a system at an abstract level. Schematic drawings often use standard symbols for clarity. | [adjective] Represented too simply or in an overly formulaic way, reflecting a shallow or incomplete understanding of complex subject matter | [adjective] Sketchy, incomplete SCHLEMIEL (16) [noun] A loser or a fool. | [noun] A person who is clumsy or who hurts others emotionally. SCHLUMPED (19) SCHMALTZY (28) [adjective] Overly sentimental, emotional, maudlin or bathetic. SCHMALZES (25) SCHMEERED (17) [verb] To spread something, often a bagel spread. | [verb] To bribe. SCHMELZES (25) SCHMOOSED (17) SCHMOOSES (16) SCHMOOZED (26) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SCHMOOZES (25) [noun] A casual conversation, especially one held in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. | [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SCHOLIUMS (16) SCHOOLMAN (16) [noun] A medieval writer, scholar or teacher of the subjects taught at early European universities (such as theology, metaphysics and logic); a scholastic. SCHOOLMEN (16) [noun] A medieval writer, scholar or teacher of the subjects taught at early European universities (such as theology, metaphysics and logic); a scholastic. SCIENTISM (13) [noun] The belief that the scientific method and the assumptions and research methods of the physical sciences are applicable to all other disciplines (such as the humanities and social sciences), or that those other disciplines are not as valuable. | [noun] The belief that all truth is exclusively discovered through science. SCIMETARS (13) SCIMITARS (13) [noun] A sword of Persian origin that features a curved blade. | [noun] A long-handled billhook. SCIMITERS (13) SCIOLISMS (13) SCOLIOMAS (13) SCOMBROID (16) [noun] Any fish of the family Scombridae, of which the mackerel (Scomber) is the type. | [adjective] Pertaining to mackerel. SCOTOMATA (13) [noun] An area of impaired or lost vision within a field of vision otherwise in a good (or at least healthy) state. SCRAMBLED (16) [verb] To move hurriedly to a location, especially by using all limbs against a surface. | [verb] To proceed to a location or an objective in a disorderly manner. | [verb] (of food ingredients, usually including egg) To thoroughly combine and cook as a loose mass. SCRAMBLER (15) [noun] Someone or something that scrambles (in various senses). | [noun] A vine that does not attach itself to its supports. | [noun] A device that makes messages intentionally, but reversibly, unintelligible for reasons of privacy or security. SCRAMBLES (15) [noun] A rush or hurry, especially making use of the limbs against a surface. | [noun] An emergency defensive air force mission to intercept attacking enemy aircraft. | [noun] A motocross race. SCRAMJETS (20) [noun] A jet engine capable of propelling an aircraft at hypersonic speeds; combustion of the fuel/air mixture occurs at supersonic speeds. SCRAMMING (16) [verb] To use the shutdown or safety device of a nuclear reactor. | [verb] (by extension) To use any emergency shutdown. | [verb] Leave in a hurry, go away. SCREAMERS (13) [noun] One who screams; one who shouts; one who sings harshly. | [noun] Any bird in the taxonomic family Anhimidae, endemic to South America, being large, bulky birds with a small downy head, long legs and large feet. | [noun] A healthy, vigorous animal. SCREAMING (14) [verb] To cry out with a shrill voice; to utter a sudden, sharp outcry, or shrill, loud cry, as in fright or extreme pain; to shriek; to screech. | [verb] To move quickly; to race. | [verb] To be very indicative of; clearly having the characteristics of. SCREWWORM (19) [noun] The larva of the fly Cochliomyia hominivorax (New World screwworm) or Chrysomya bezziana (Old World screwworm). The larvae are parasitic in humans and animals and are distinctive in eating living flesh of mammals, unlike most maggots, which eat only dead flesh. SCRIMMAGE (16) [noun] A rough fight. | [noun] In some team sports, especially soccer, a practice game which does not count on a team's record. | [noun] In American football or Canadian football, a play that begins with a snap from the center while opposing teams are on either side of a line of scrimmage. SCRIMPERS (15) SCRIMPIER (15) SCRIMPING (16) [verb] To make too small or short. | [verb] To limit or straiten; to put on short allowance. | [verb] To be frugal. SCRIMSHAW (19) [noun] The manufacture of handicrafts by sailors on long voyages, especially as whittled from wood or bone. | [noun] An item produced by scrimshaw. | [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. SCRUMMAGE (16) [noun] An ordered formation of forwards, typically bending down, binding to one another with their arms, and pushing opponents shoulder to shoulder, in which each side aims to gain control of the ball; a scrum. | [noun] A scrimmage. | [verb] To engage in an ordered formation of forwards in which each side aims to gain control of the ball, as described above. SCRUMMING (16) SCUMBLING (16) [verb] To apply an opaque glaze to an area of a painting to make it softer or duller. | [noun] An application of scumbling; an opaque glaze. SCUMMIEST (15) SCUTELLUM (13) [noun] Any of several shield-shaped structures in insects, grasses etc SEADROMES (12) SEAMINESS (11) SEAMOUNTS (11) [noun] A mountain that rises from the floor of the ocean and does not breach the water's surface. SEAMSTERS (11) SEATMATES (11) SEDIMENTS (12) [noun] A collection of small particles, particularly dirt, that precipitates from a river or other body of water. | [verb] To deposit material as a sediment. | [verb] To be deposited as a sediment. SEEDTIMES (12) SEEMINGLY (15) [adverb] As it appears; apparently. | [adverb] In a seemly manner; decorously; with propriety. SEEMLIEST (11) [adjective] (of behavior) Appropriate; suited to the occasion or purpose; becoming. SEGMENTAL (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, or constructed from segments SEGMENTED (13) [verb] To divide into segments or sections. | [adjective] Having or made of segments. SEISMISMS (13) SELAMLIKS (15) SELECTMAN (13) [noun] Any of a board of municipal officers elected to manage some New England towns. SELECTMEN (13) [noun] Any of a board of municipal officers elected to manage some New England towns. SELENIUMS (11) SEMANTICS (13) [noun] A branch of linguistics studying the meaning of words. | [noun] The study of the relationship between words and their meanings. | [noun] The individual meanings of words, as opposed to the overall meaning of a passage. SEMAPHORE (16) [noun] Any equipment used for visual signalling by means of flags, lights, or mechanically moving arms, which are used to represent letters of the alphabet, or words. | [noun] A visual system for transmitting information using the above equipment; especially, by means of two flags held one in each hand, using an alphabetic and numeric code based on the position of the signaller's arms; flag semaphore. | [noun] A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes. SEMBLABLE (15) [noun] Something similar; likeness; representation | [adjective] Similar | [adjective] Apparent SEMBLABLY (18) SEMBLANCE (15) [noun] Likeness, similarity; the quality of being similar. | [noun] The way something looks; appearance; form SEMEIOTIC (13) SEMESTERS (11) [noun] Half of a school year or academic year such as fall or spring semester. | [noun] A period or term of six months. SEMESTRAL (11) SEMIBREVE (16) [noun] A musical note four beats long in 4/4 time; a whole note (US) SEMICOLON (13) [noun] The punctuation mark ;. SEMICOMAS (15) SEMIDEIFY (18) SEMIDOMED (15) SEMIDOMES (14) SEMIDWARF (18) SEMIERECT (13) SEMIFINAL (14) [noun] A playoff in the round with only four players or teams left, the stage before the final. | [noun] (general) A competition that narrows a field of contestants (semifinalists) to a set of finalists, for a subsequent final. SEMIFLUID (15) [noun] Any substance with properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. | [adjective] Having properties intermediate between liquids and solids SEMIGLOSS (12) SEMIGROUP (14) SEMIHOBOS (16) SEMILUNAR (11) [noun] The lunate bone, or semilunar bone. | [adjective] Shaped like a half-moon; crescent-shaped. SEMIMATTE (13) SEMIMETAL (13) [noun] A metalloid. SEMIMICRO (15) SEMIMOIST (13) SEMINALLY (14) SEMINOMAD (14) SEMIOLOGY (15) [noun] Semiotics, the study of signs. | [noun] The science of the signs or symptoms of disease; symptomatology. | [noun] The art of using signs in signalling. SEMIOTICS (13) [noun] The study of signs and symbols, especially as means of language or communication. | [noun] The study of medical signs and symptoms; symptomatology. SEMIRIGID (13) [adjective] Partially rigid SEMIRURAL (11) SEMISOLID (12) [noun] Any substance with such properties. | [adjective] Having properties that partially resemble those of a solid; having properties between those of a solid and those of a liquid. SEMISWEET (14) [adjective] Partially sweet or sweetened, but having a distinct bitter component. Especially used to describe dark chocolate that is much less sugary than milk chocolate. SEMITISTS (11) SEMITONAL (11) SEMITONES (11) [noun] The musical interval equal (exactly or approximately) to half a tone or one-twelfth of an octave | [noun] Any of the pitches of the chromatic scale SEMITONIC (13) SEMIVOWEL (17) [noun] A sound in speech which has some qualities of a consonant and some qualities of a vowel. | [noun] A letter which represents a semivowel sound, such as w or y in English. SEMIWORKS (18) SEMOLINAS (11) SENSILLUM (11) [noun] Any of several sensory organs in some arthropods SENSORIUM (11) [noun] The entire sensory apparatus of an organism. | [noun] The central part of a nervous system that receives and coordinates all stimuli. | [noun] The brain or mind in relation to the senses. SENTIMENT (11) [noun] A general thought, feeling, or sense. | [noun] Feelings, especially tender feelings, as apart from reason or judgment, or of a weak or foolish kind. SEPTARIUM (13) [noun] A flattened concretionary nodule, usually of limestone, intersected within by cracks which are often filled with calcite, barite, or other minerals. SERAPHIMS (16) SERIALISM (11) [noun] Music, especially from the 20th century, in which themes are based on a definite order of notes of an equal-tempered scale. SERMONIZE (20) [verb] To speak in the manner of a sermon; to preach; to propagate one's morality or opinions with speech. | [verb] To preach a sermon to (somebody); to give (somebody) instruction or admonishment on the basis of one's morality or opinions. | [verb] To say in the manner of a sermon or lecture. SESAMOIDS (12) [noun] A sesamoid bone or sesamoid cartilage. SHAMANISM (16) SHAMANIST (14) SHAMBLING (17) [verb] To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet. | [noun] An awkward, irregular gait. | [adjective] Who walks while dragging or shuffling the feet. SHAMBOLIC (18) [adjective] Chaotic, disorganised or mismanaged. SHAMEFAST (17) SHAMELESS (14) [adjective] Having no shame, no guilt nor remorse over something considered wrong; immodest; unable to feel disgrace. SHAMMASIM (18) SHAMMOSIM (18) SHAMMYING (20) SHAMOYING (18) SHAMPOOED (17) [verb] To wash one's own hair with shampoo. | [verb] To wash (i.e. the hair, carpet, etc.) with shampoo. | [verb] To press or knead the whole surface of the body of (a person), and at the same time to stretch the limbs and joints, in connection with the hot bath. SHAMPOOER (16) SHAMROCKS (20) [noun] The trefoil leaf of any small clover, especially Trifolium repens, or such a leaf from a clover-like plant, commonly used as a symbol of Ireland. | [noun] Any of several small plants, forms of clover, with trefoil leaves, especially Trifolium repens. SHANTYMAN (17) [noun] The sailor who sings the main line of a sea shanty (the other sailors singing the responses or choruses) SHANTYMEN (17) [noun] The sailor who sings the main line of a sea shanty (the other sailors singing the responses or choruses) SHEIKDOMS (19) SHEIKHDOM (22) SHIMMERED (17) [verb] To shine with a veiled, tremulous, or intermittent light; to gleam faintly. SHIMMYING (20) [verb] To perform a shimmy (dance movement involving thrusting the shoulders back and forth alternately). | [verb] To climb something (e.g. a pole) gradually (e.g. using alternately one's arms then one's legs). | [verb] To vibrate abnormally, as a broken wheel. SHIPMATES (16) [noun] A fellow sailor serving on the same ship as another. | [noun] Any sailor (when used as a form of address by a sailor). SHIPMENTS (16) [noun] A load of goods that is transported by any method (not just by ship) | [noun] The act of transporting goods SHIPWORMS (19) [noun] Any of several wormlike marine mollusks (not true worms) of the family Teredinidae, that bore through the wooden hulls of ships and other woody material immersed in salt water. SHLEMIEHL (17) SHLEMIELS (14) [noun] A loser or a fool. | [noun] A person who is clumsy or who hurts others emotionally. SHLUMPING (17) SHMALTZES (23) SHMOOZING (24) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SHOEMAKER (18) [noun] A person who makes shoes | [noun] The threadfish. | [noun] A fish, Elagatis pinnulatis, the runner. SHOWROOMS (17) [noun] A room in a business set aside for the display of the company's products. | [noun] A room or apartment where a show is exhibited. SHRIMPERS (16) [noun] One who fishes for or catches shrimp. | [noun] A boat used in fishing for shrimp. SHRIMPIER (16) SHRIMPING (17) [verb] To fish for shrimp. | [verb] To contract; to shrink. SICKLEMIA (17) SICKROOMS (17) [noun] A room to be used by someone who is ill. SIEROZEMS (20) SIGMOIDAL (13) SIGNALMAN (12) [noun] Somebody employed to operate the signals and points of a railway. | [noun] A member of the armed forces responsible for signalling. | [noun] Somebody employed to direct rigging or crane operations by providing a different point of view. SIGNALMEN (12) [noun] Somebody employed to operate the signals and points of a railway. | [noun] A member of the armed forces responsible for signalling. | [noun] Somebody employed to direct rigging or crane operations by providing a different point of view. SILICIUMS (13) SILKWORMS (18) [noun] Any of various caterpillars of moths that produce silk cocoons, especially Bombyx mori, the source of most commercial silk. SIMARUBAS (13) SIMAZINES (20) SIMILARLY (14) [adverb] (manner) In a like style or manner. | [adverb] Used to link similar items SIMMERING (14) [verb] To cook or undergo heating slowly at or below the boiling point. | [verb] To cause to cook or to cause to undergo heating slowly at or below the boiling point. | [verb] To be on the point of breaking out into anger; to be agitated. SIMOLEONS (11) [noun] A dollar. SIMONIACS (13) [noun] One who carries on or is guilty of simony. SIMONISTS (11) SIMONIZED (21) [verb] To polish with a wax-like substance. | [verb] To commit simony SIMONIZES (20) [verb] To polish with a wax-like substance. | [verb] To commit simony SIMPATICO (15) [adjective] (of a person) Having a compatible temperament or pleasing qualities. SIMPERERS (13) SIMPERING (14) [verb] To smile in a foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, coy, or smug manner. | [verb] To glimmer; to twinkle. | [noun] The act of one who simpers. SIMPLETON (13) [noun] A simple-minded person lacking common sense. SIMPLEXES (20) [noun] An analogue in any dimension of the triangle or tetrahedron: the convex hull of n+1 points in n-dimensional space. | [noun] A simple word, one without affixes. SIMPLICES (15) SIMPLICIA (15) SIMPLISMS (15) SIMPLISTS (13) SIMULACRA (13) [noun] An image or representation. | [noun] A faint trace or semblance. SIMULACRE (13) SIMULANTS (11) [noun] Something that simulates something else such as, for example, a gemstone. SIMULATED (12) [verb] To model, replicate, duplicate the behavior, appearance or properties of. | [adjective] Invented in imitation of a particular thing or of a specific condition; artificial. SIMULATES (11) [verb] To model, replicate, duplicate the behavior, appearance or properties of. SIMULATOR (11) [noun] One who simulates or feigns. | [noun] A machine or system that simulates an environment (such as an aircraft cockpit), often for training purposes. SIMULCAST (13) [noun] A program or event that is broadcast across more than one medium or service at the same time. | [verb] To broadcast a program or event across more than one medium or service at the same time. SINAPISMS (13) SITZMARKS (24) [noun] An indentation in the snow made by a fallen skier. SIXTEENMO (18) [noun] Sextodecimo (as a paper size in printing). SJAMBOKED (25) SKIAGRAMS (16) SKIMMINGS (18) SKIMOBILE (17) [noun] Snowmobile SKIMPIEST (17) [adjective] Small or inadequate; not generous, or of a garment, very small, light, or revealing. SLALOMING (12) [verb] To race in a slalom. | [verb] To move in a slalom-like manner. SLIMEBALL (13) [noun] A round lump made up of or coated with slime or a slime-like substance such as mucus. | [noun] (originally United States) A person who is regarded as slimy (that is, sneaky or underhanded) or otherwise undesirable. SLIMINESS (11) SLIMPSIER (13) SLIMSIEST (11) SLIPFORMS (16) [noun] A type of process for setting concrete which uses moveable forms that are moved and reused once the concrete is stiff enough to retain its shape under its own weight. | [noun] A moveable form used when setting concrete using the slipform technique. | [verb] To use the slipform technique when creating a concrete structure. SLOWWORMS (17) SLUMBERED (14) [verb] To be in a very light state of sleep, almost awake. | [verb] To be inactive or negligent. | [verb] To lay to sleep. SLUMBERER (13) SLUMBROUS (13) SLUMLORDS (12) [noun] A person who makes money by renting housing that is kept in poor condition. SLUMMIEST (13) [adjective] Like a slum; run-down, dirty, decrepit. SMALLAGES (12) SMALLNESS (11) [noun] The state or quality of being small. | [noun] The result or product of being small. SMALTINES (11) SMALTITES (11) SMARAGDES (13) SMARMIEST (13) [adjective] Falsely earnest, smug, or ingratiating. | [adjective] Unctuous, greasy, as hair from pomade SMARTENED (12) [verb] To make smarter in appearance; to refurbish or spruce up. | [verb] To increase the speed of (one's travel on foot, etc.). | [verb] To augment with computer technology. SMARTNESS (11) SMARTWEED (15) [noun] Any of a number of plants in the genus Persicaria (formerly Polygonum). SMATTERED (12) SMATTERER (11) [noun] One who smatters; one who dabbles in or experiments with a little bit of everything, especially knowledge. SMEARCASE (13) SMEARIEST (11) SMECTITES (13) [noun] Any of many clay phyllosilicate minerals that have a relatively open structure. SMECTITIC (15) SMELLIEST (11) [adjective] Having a bad smell. | [adjective] Having a quality that arouses suspicion. | [adjective] (in extreme programming) Having signs that suggest a design problem; having a code smell. SMIDGEONS (13) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMIERCASE (13) SMILELESS (11) SMILINGLY (15) SMIRCHING (17) [verb] To dirty; to make dirty. | [verb] To harm the reputation of; to smear or slander. SMIRKIEST (15) [adjective] Smirking, or as if smirking | [adjective] Smart; spruce. SMOCKINGS (18) SMOGGIEST (13) SMOKEABLE (17) SMOKEJACK (28) SMOKELESS (15) [adjective] Without smoke. SMOKELIKE (19) SMOKEPOTS (17) SMOKINESS (15) SMOLDERED (13) [verb] To burn with no flame and little smoke. | [verb] To show signs of repressed anger or suppressed mental turmoil or other strong emotion, such as passion. | [verb] To exist in a suppressed or hidden state. SMOOCHING (17) [verb] To kiss. | [verb] To soil, stain or smudge. SMOOTHENS (14) [verb] To make smooth. | [verb] To become smooth. SMOOTHERS (14) [noun] One who, or that which, smooths. | [noun] In glass-cutting, an abrading-wheel for polishing the aces of the grooves cut by another wheel. | [noun] A flatterer. SMOOTHEST (14) [verb] To make smooth or even. | [verb] To make straightforward or easy. | [verb] To calm or palliate. SMOOTHIES (14) [noun] A smooth-talking person. | [noun] A drink made from whole fruit, thus thicker than fruit juice. | [noun] A member of the mod subculture who is relatively non-violent and wears expensive clothing. SMOOTHING (15) [verb] To make smooth or even. | [verb] To make straightforward or easy. | [verb] To calm or palliate. SMOTHERED (15) [verb] To suffocate; stifle; obstruct, more or less completely, the respiration of something or someone. | [verb] To extinguish or deaden, as fire, by covering, overlaying, or otherwise excluding the air. | [verb] To reduce to a low degree of vigor or activity; suppress or do away with; extinguish SMOULDERS (12) [verb] To burn with no flame and little smoke. | [verb] To show signs of repressed anger or suppressed mental turmoil or other strong emotion, such as passion. | [verb] To exist in a suppressed or hidden state. SMUDGIEST (13) [adjective] Marked with smudges. | [adjective] Like a thick smoke (such as is emitted by a smudge pot). SMUGGLERS (13) [noun] One who smuggles things. | [noun] A vessel employed in smuggling. SMUGGLING (14) [verb] To import or export, illicitly or by stealth, without paying lawful customs charges or duties | [verb] To bring in surreptitiously | [verb] To fondle or cuddle. SMUTCHIER (16) SMUTCHING (17) SMUTTIEST (11) [adjective] Soiled with smut; blackened, dirty. | [adjective] Obscene, indecent. | [adjective] Affected with the smut fungus. SNOBBISMS (15) SNOWMAKER (18) SNOWMELTS (14) SNOWMOLDS (15) SNOWSTORM (14) [noun] Bad weather involving blowing winds and snow, or blowing winds and heavy snowfall amount. | [noun] A snow globe. SOCIALISM (13) [noun] Any of various economic and political theories advocating collective or governmental ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods. | [noun] The intermediate phase of social development between capitalism and communism in Marxist theory in which the state has control of the means of production. | [noun] Any left-wing ideology, government regulations, or policies promoting a welfare state, nationalisation, etc. SOCIOGRAM (14) SODAMIDES (13) SODOMISTS (12) SODOMITES (12) [noun] One who practices sodomy; a sodomist. | [noun] A native or inhabitant of Sodom SODOMITIC (14) SODOMIZED (22) [verb] To perform anal or oral sex upon a person, especially if against his or her will. | [verb] To perform sexual intercourse with an animal. SODOMIZES (21) [verb] To perform anal or oral sex upon a person, especially if against his or her will. | [verb] To perform sexual intercourse with an animal. SOLARISMS (11) SOLARIUMS (11) [noun] An establishment with sunbeds in it or where one can rent sunbeds. | [noun] A room, with many windows, exposed to the sun. | [noun] A sundial. SOLECISMS (13) [noun] An erroneous or improper usage. | [noun] (grammar) Error in the use of language. | [noun] A faux pas or breach of etiquette; a transgression against the norms of expected behavior. SOLEMNEST (11) SOLEMNIFY (17) SOLEMNITY (14) [noun] The quality of being deeply serious and sober or solemn. | [noun] An instance or example of solemn behavior; a rite or ceremony performed with reverence. | [noun] A feast day of the highest rank celebrating a mystery of faith such as the Trinity, an event in the life of Jesus, the Virgin Mary, or another important saint. SOLEMNIZE (20) [verb] To make solemn, or official, through ceremony or legal act. | [verb] To make grave, serious, and reverential. SOLIPSISM (13) [noun] The theory that the self is all that exists or that can be proven to exist. | [noun] Self-absorption, an unawareness of the views or needs of others; self-centeredness; egoism. SOMBREROS (13) [noun] A kind of hat with a high conical or cylindrical crown and a saucer-shaped brim, highly embroidered, made of plush felt. | [noun] A mixed drink with coffee liqueur and cream. | [noun] A series of four consecutive strikes. SOMEPLACE (15) [noun] An unspecified location. | [adverb] Somewhere. SOMERSETS (11) SOMETHING (15) [noun] An object whose nature is yet to be defined. | [noun] An object whose name is forgotten by, unknown or unimportant to the user, e.g., from words of a song. Also used to refer to an object earlier indefinitely referred to as 'something' (pronoun sense). | [verb] Applied to an action whose name is forgotten by, unknown or unimportant to the user, e.g. from words of a song. SOMETIMES (13) [adjective] Former; sometime. | [adverb] On certain occasions, or in certain circumstances, but not always. | [adverb] On a certain occasion in the past; once. SOMEWHATS (17) SOMEWHERE (17) [noun] Unspecified or unknown (unlocated) place or location. | [adverb] In an uncertain or unspecified location. | [adverb] To an uncertain or unspecified location. SOMMELIER (13) [noun] The member of staff at a restaurant who keeps the wine cellar and advises the guests on a choice of wines; a wine steward / stewardess, a wine waiter / waitress / server. | [verb] To act as a sommelier. SOMNOLENT (11) [adjective] Drowsy or sleepy. | [adjective] Causing literal or figurative sleepiness; soporific. SONGSMITH (15) [noun] A writer of songs. SONOGRAMS (12) [noun] A medical image produced by ultrasound echo | [noun] A spectrogram SOPHOMORE (16) [noun] A second-year undergraduate student in a college or university, or a second-year student in a four-year secondary school or high school. | [noun] A three-year-old horse. | [adjective] The second in a series, especially, the second of an artist’s albums or the second of four years in a high school (tenth grade) or university. SOVIETISM (14) SPANWORMS (16) [noun] A measuring worm or inchworm (Lepidoptera, Geometridae) SPASMODIC (16) [noun] A medicine for suppressing spasms. | [adjective] Of or relating to a spasm; resembling a sudden contraction of the muscles. | [adjective] Convulsive; consisting of spasms. SPEARMINT (13) [noun] Mentha spicata, A herb of the mint family, commonly used in herb tea, candy and to treat mild stomach ache. SPECIMENS (15) [noun] An individual instance that represents a class; an example. | [noun] A sample, especially one used for diagnostic analysis. | [noun] (often preceded with “fine”) An eligible man. SPECTRUMS (15) [noun] A range; a continuous, infinite, one-dimensional set, possibly bounded by extremes. | [noun] Specifically, a range of colours representing light (electromagnetic radiation) of contiguous frequencies; hence electromagnetic spectrum, visible spectrum, ultraviolet spectrum, etc. | [noun] The autism spectrum. SPECULUMS (15) SPERMATIA (13) SPERMATIC (15) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or resembling sperm | [adjective] Producing, conveying or containing sperm; seminiferous | [adjective] Generative SPERMATID (14) [noun] A haploid cell, produced by meiosis of a spermatocyte, that develops into a spermatozoon SPERMINES (13) SPHAGNUMS (17) SPIRILLUM (13) [noun] Any of various aerobic bacteria of the genus Spirillum, having an elongated spiral form and bearing a tuft of flagella. | [noun] Any of various other spiral-shaped microorganisms. SPIRITISM (13) [noun] Spiritualism | [noun] Alternative form of Spiritism SPODUMENE (14) [noun] A greenish, yellowish or pinkish mineral, a lithium pyroxene (LiAl(SiO3)2) that is an ore of lithium, and a gemstone. SPOILSMAN (13) [noun] A politician who serves only for a share of the spoils. SPOILSMEN (13) [noun] A politician who serves only for a share of the spoils. SPOKESMAN (17) [noun] One who speaks as the voice of a group of people. SPOKESMEN (17) [noun] One who speaks as the voice of a group of people. SPORTSMAN (13) [noun] A man who engages in sports; a male athlete. | [noun] A man who engages in country sports, such as hunting or fishing. SPORTSMEN (13) [noun] A man who engages in sports; a male athlete. | [noun] A man who engages in country sports, such as hunting or fishing. SPYMASTER (16) [noun] The leader of a group of spies. SQUAMOSAL (20) [noun] The platelike part of the temporal bone | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the platelike part of the temporal bone SQUEAMISH (23) [adjective] Easily bothered or upset; tending to be nauseated or nervous; oversensitive | [adjective] Averse or reluctant SQUIRMERS (20) SQUIRMIER (20) SQUIRMING (21) [verb] To twist one's body with snakelike motions. | [verb] To twist in discomfort, especially from shame or embarrassment. | [verb] To evade a question, an interviewer etc. STABLEMAN (13) [noun] A person employed to take care of horses in a stable. STABLEMEN (13) [noun] A person employed to take care of horses in a stable. STALEMATE (11) [noun] The state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves, resulting in a draw. | [noun] Any situation that has no obvious possible movement, but does not involve any personal loss. | [verb] To bring about a state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves. STAMINATE (11) [adjective] Having functional stamens, but (typically) no pistils. STAMMERED (14) [verb] To keep repeating a particular sound involuntarily during speech. | [verb] To utter with a stammer, or with timid hesitancy. | [adjective] Of speech: irregular or halting. STAMMERER (13) STAMPEDED (15) [verb] To run away in a panic; said of cattle, horses, etc., also of armies. | [verb] To disperse by causing sudden fright, as a herd or drove of animals. | [verb] (of people) To move rapidly in a mass. STAMPEDER (14) STAMPEDES (14) [noun] A wild, headlong scamper, or running away, of a number of animals; usually caused by fright; hence, any sudden flight or dispersion, as of a crowd or an army in consequence of a panic. | [noun] A situation in which many people in a crowd are trying to go in the same direction at the same time. | [noun] Any sudden unconcerted moving or acting together of a number of persons, as from some common impulse. STAMPLESS (13) STATEMENT (11) [noun] A declaration or remark. | [noun] A presentation of opinion or position. | [noun] A document that summarizes financial activity. | [verb] To provide an official document of a proposition, especially in the UK a Statement of Special Educational Needs. STATEROOM (11) [noun] An apartment in a palace or great house for use on ceremonial occasions. | [noun] A superior cabin for a ship's officer or captain. | [noun] A private cabin in a ship or train. STATESMAN (11) [noun] A man who is a leader in national or international affairs. | [noun] A male political leader who promotes the public good or who is recognized for probity, leadership, or the qualities necessary to govern a state. | [noun] In the dialect of the English Lake District and nearby, a man who lives on a landed estate; a small landholder. STATESMEN (11) [noun] A man who is a leader in national or international affairs. | [noun] A male political leader who promotes the public good or who is recognized for probity, leadership, or the qualities necessary to govern a state. | [noun] In the dialect of the English Lake District and nearby, a man who lives on a landed estate; a small landholder. STAUMRELS (11) STEAMBOAT (13) [noun] A boat or vessel propelled by steam power. | [noun] Hot pot (Chinese dish). | [verb] To travel by steamboat. STEAMERED (12) STEAMIEST (11) [adjective] Warm and humid; full of steam | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of steam | [adjective] Erotic STEAMROLL (11) [verb] To flatten, as if with a steamroller. | [verb] To ruthlessly crush or overwhelm. STEAMSHIP (16) [noun] A ship or vessel propelled by steam power. STEERSMAN (11) [noun] One who steers a ship or other vessel; the helmsman. STEERSMEN (11) [noun] One who steers a ship or other vessel; the helmsman. STEMMATIC (15) STEMMIEST (13) STEMWARES (14) STEPDAMES (14) STERIGMAS (12) STERNMOST (11) STIGMATIC (14) [noun] One who has been branded as punishment. | [noun] One who has been marked or deformed by nature. | [noun] One who displays stigmata, the five wounds of Christ. STILLROOM (11) [noun] A room containing a still (for distillation). | [noun] A pantry adjoining a kitchen where drinks etc were stored or prepared. STIMULANT (11) [noun] A substance that acts to increase physiological or nervous activity in the body. | [noun] Something that promotes activity, interest, or enthusiasm. | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) Acting as a stimulant. STIMULATE (11) [verb] To encourage into action. | [verb] To arouse an organism to functional activity. STOCKROOM (17) [noun] A room where a store keeps its stock of merchandise. STOICISMS (13) STOMACHED (17) [verb] To tolerate (something), emotionally, physically, or mentally; to stand or handle something. | [verb] To be angry. | [verb] To resent; to remember with anger; to dislike. STOMACHER (16) [noun] A type of men's waistcoat. | [noun] An ornamental cloth, often embellished with embroidery or jewelry, worn over the chest by women beneath their bodices or by men and women as the central part of an open shirt, blouse, or jacket. | [noun] A blow to the stomach. STOMACHIC (18) [noun] A medicine for the stomach. | [adjective] Of or relating to the stomach. | [adjective] Beneficial to the stomach or to digestion. STOMODAEA (12) STOMODEAL (12) STOMODEUM (14) STOREROOM (11) [noun] A room used for storage. STORMIEST (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to storms. | [adjective] Characterized by, or proceeding from, a storm; subject to storms; agitated with strong winds and heavy rain. | [adjective] Proceeding from violent agitation or fury. STRATAGEM (12) [noun] A tactic or artifice designed to gain the upper hand, especially one involving underhanded dealings or deception. STREAMBED (14) STREAMERS (11) [noun] A long, narrow flag, or piece of material used or seen as a decoration. | [noun] Strips of paper or other material used as confetti. | [noun] A newspaper headline that runs along the top of a page. STREAMIER (11) STREAMING (12) [verb] To flow in a continuous or steady manner, like a liquid. | [verb] To extend; to stretch out with a wavy motion; to float in the wind. | [verb] To discharge in a stream. | [noun] Movement as a stream. STREAMLET (11) [noun] A small stream. STREWMENT (14) STRONGMAN (12) [noun] Someone who performs feats of strength, sometimes in competitions or in a circus. | [noun] A forceful or brutal person, usually a ruler or tyrant. STRONGMEN (12) [noun] Someone who performs feats of strength, sometimes in competitions or in a circus. | [noun] A forceful or brutal person, usually a ruler or tyrant. STRONTIUM (11) [noun] The metallic chemical element (symbol Sr) with an atomic number of 38. It is a soft, reactive, silvery alkaline earth metal. | [noun] A single atom of this element. STRUMMERS (13) STRUMMING (14) [verb] To play (a guitar or other stringed instrument) using various strings simultaneously. | [noun] The action of the verb to strum STRUMPETS (13) [noun] A female prostitute | [noun] A woman who is very sexually active. | [noun] A female adulterer. STUMBLERS (13) STUMBLING (14) [verb] To trip or fall; to walk clumsily. | [verb] To make a mistake or have trouble. | [verb] To cause to stumble or trip. STUMPAGES (14) STUMPIEST (13) [adjective] Like or resembling a stump; short and cut off. | [adjective] Full of stumps. STYLIFORM (17) STYMIEING (15) [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. | [verb] To bring into the position of, or impede by, a stymie. SUBATOMIC (15) [adjective] Relating to particles that are constituents of the atom, or are smaller than an atom; such as proton, neutron, electron, etc. | [adjective] Relating to any length or mass that is smaller in scale than a the diameter of a hydrogen atom. SUBCLIMAX (22) SUBDERMAL (14) SUBFAMILY (19) [noun] A taxonomic category ranking between a family and a genus; formerly called a tribe SUBFRAMES (16) [noun] A subsidiary frame (chunk of data). | [noun] A structural component of a vehicle, such as an automobile or aircraft, that uses a discrete, separate structure within a larger body-on-frame or unit body to carry certain components, such as the engine, drivetrain, or suspension. | [noun] One of the HTML frames that make up a frameset. SUBHUMANS (16) [noun] Anything which is less than human. SUBLIMATE (13) [noun] A product obtained by sublimation. | [verb] To change state from a solid to a gas without passing through the liquid state. | [verb] To purify or refine a substance through such a change of state. SUBLIMELY (16) SUBLIMERS (13) SUBLIMEST (13) [adjective] Noble and majestic. | [adjective] Impressive and awe-inspiring, yet simple. | [adjective] Lifted up; high in place; exalted aloft; uplifted; lofty. SUBLIMING (14) [verb] To sublimate. | [verb] To raise on high. | [verb] To exalt; to heighten; to improve; to purify. SUBLIMITY (16) SUBMARINE (13) [noun] A boat that can go underwater. | [noun] A kind of sandwich made in a long loaf of bread. | [noun] Pitch delivered with an underhand motion. SUBMARKET (17) SUBMERGED (15) [verb] To sink out of sight. | [verb] To put into a liquid; to immerse; to plunge into and keep in. | [verb] To be engulfed in or overwhelmed by something. SUBMERGES (14) [verb] To sink out of sight. | [verb] To put into a liquid; to immerse; to plunge into and keep in. | [verb] To be engulfed in or overwhelmed by something. SUBMERSED (14) [verb] To submerge. SUBMERSES (13) [verb] To submerge. SUBMICRON (15) SUBMITTAL (13) SUBMITTED (14) [verb] To yield or give way to another. | [verb] To yield (something) to another, as when defeated. | [verb] To enter or put forward for approval, consideration, marking etc. SUBMUCOSA (15) [noun] A layer of connective tissue beneath a mucous membrane SUBNORMAL (13) [noun] A person whose abilities are less than normal. | [noun] That part of the axis of a curved line which is intercepted between the ordinate and the normal. | [adjective] Less than normal. SUBPHYLUM (21) [noun] A taxonomic category below phylum and above class SUBSAMPLE (15) [noun] A smaller portion of an original sample, created by trimming, subdividing, splitting or discrete collection of the original sample. | [noun] A portion of the original sample that is representative in nature to that of the original sample, thereby assuring equivalency in results from tests and analysis either upon the subsample or the original material, independent of their size. | [verb] To take subsamples from. SUBSUMING (14) [verb] To place (any one cognition) under another as belonging to it; to include or contain something else. | [verb] To consider an occurrence as part of a principle or rule; to colligate SUBSYSTEM (16) [noun] A group of related components that are part of a larger system. SUBTHEMES (16) SUCCUMBED (18) [verb] To yield to an overpowering force or overwhelming desire. | [verb] To give up, or give in. | [verb] To die. SUGARPLUM (14) [noun] A round or oval sweet/piece of candy made of boiled sugar. | [noun] A piece of flattery. | [noun] Term of endearment: sweetheart, darling. SULFONIUM (14) SUMMARIES (13) [noun] An abstract or a condensed presentation of the substance of a body of material. SUMMARILY (16) [adverb] (manner) In a summary manner. | [adverb] (duration) Over a short period of time, briefly. SUMMARISE (13) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMARIZE (22) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMATING (14) SUMMATION (13) [noun] A summarization. | [noun] An adding up of a series of items. SUMMATIVE (16) SUMMERIER (13) SUMMERING (14) [verb] To spend the summer, as in a particular place on holiday. | [noun] An instance of spending the summer, as for a vacation or for cooler weather. SUMMITEER (13) [noun] Someone who reaches a summit. | [noun] A mountain climber. | [noun] Someone who attends a conference denoted as a summit. SUMMITING (14) [verb] (hiking) To reach the summit of a mountain. SUMMONERS (13) SUMMONING (14) [verb] To call people together; to convene. | [verb] To ask someone to come; to send for. | [verb] To order (goods) and have delivered SUMMONSED (14) [verb] To serve someone with a summons. SUMMONSES (13) [noun] A call to do something, especially to come. | [noun] A notice summoning someone to appear in court, as a defendant, juror or witness. | [noun] A demand for surrender. SUMPTUARY (16) [adjective] Relating to expense; regulating expense or expenditure. | [adjective] (of a law, regulation, etc.) Intended to restrain or limit the expenditure of citizens in apparel, food, furniture, etc.; to regulate the prices of commodities and the wages of labor; or to forbid or restrict the use of certain articles, as of luxurious apparel. SUMPTUOUS (13) [adjective] Magnificent, luxurious, splendid. SUMPWEEDS (17) SUPERBOMB (17) SUPERFARM (16) SUPERFIRM (16) SUPERMALE (13) SUPERMIND (14) SUPERMINI (13) [noun] A small motor car, especially a hatchback, which is powerful for its size or class | [noun] A superminicomputer SUPERMOMS (15) [noun] A mother who looks after her home and children whilst being in full-time employment SUPERPIMP (17) SUPREMACY (18) [noun] The quality of being supreme. | [noun] Power over all others. | [noun] (in combination) The ideology that a specified group is superior to others or should have supreme power over them. SUPREMELY (16) [adverb] To the greatest, highest, or utmost degree. SUPREMEST (13) SURMISERS (11) SURMISING (12) [verb] To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises. | [noun] The act of making surmises. SURMOUNTS (11) [verb] To get over; to overcome. | [verb] To cap; to sit on top off. SURNAMERS (11) SURNAMING (12) [verb] To give a surname to. | [verb] To call by a surname. SWAMPIEST (16) [adjective] Soggy and marshy; wet like a swamp. | [adjective] Flowing smoothly with no harsh tones but possibly including muddy tones. SWAMPLAND (17) [noun] Low-lying land that is regularly flooded; especially such land that is drier than a bog or a marsh. | [noun] The set of all possible string theories. SWEETMEAT (14) [noun] A sweet delicacy; a confection SWIMMABLE (18) SWIMMERET (16) [noun] In decapods such as lobsters, one of the legs primarily used for swimming but also used for brooding the eggs (except in prawns) and catching food. SWIMMIEST (16) SWIMMINGS (17) SWIMSUITS (14) [noun] A garment worn for swimming. | [noun] A tight-fitting one-piece garment worn by women and girls. SWITCHMAN (19) [noun] A person who operates railway switches which route trains onto rail tracks. | [noun] A person whose job is to help in the switching of railcars in a railway yard. SWITCHMEN (19) [noun] A person who operates railway switches which route trains onto rail tracks. | [noun] A person whose job is to help in the switching of railcars in a railway yard. SWORDSMAN (15) [noun] A person skilled at using swords in sport or combat; a fencer. | [noun] A person who fights with a sword. | [noun] A man who is a skillful or enthusiastic practitioner of sexual intercourse. SWORDSMEN (15) [noun] A person skilled at using swords in sport or combat; a fencer. | [noun] A person who fights with a sword. | [noun] A man who is a skillful or enthusiastic practitioner of sexual intercourse. SYCAMINES (16) [noun] A tree, mentioned in Luke's Gospel, and thought to be the black mulberry. SYCAMORES (16) [noun] Any of several North American plane trees, of the genus Platanus, especially Platanus occidentalis (American sycamore). | [noun] A large British and European species of maple, Acer pseudoplatanus, known in North America as the sycamore maple. | [noun] A large tree bearing edible fruit, Ficus sycomorus, allied to the common fig and found in Egypt and Syria; also called the sycamore fig or the fig-mulberry; the Biblical sycomore. SYCOMORES (16) [noun] A type of fig, Ficus sycomorus, native to the Middle East; the sycamore tree of the Bible. SYLLOGISM (15) [noun] An argument whose conclusion is supported by two premises, of which one contains the term that is the predicate of the conclusion, and the other contains the term that is the subject of the conclusion; common to both premises is a term that is excluded from the conclusion. | [noun] A trick, artifice; an extremely subtle, sophisticated, or deceptive argument; a sophism. SYMBIONTS (16) [noun] An organism that lives in a symbiotic relationship; a symbiote. SYMBIOSES (16) [verb] To take part in symbiosis. | [noun] A relationship of mutual benefit, especially among different species. | [noun] A close, prolonged association between two or more organisms of different species, regardless of benefit to the members. SYMBIOSIS (16) [noun] A relationship of mutual benefit, especially among different species. | [noun] A close, prolonged association between two or more organisms of different species, regardless of benefit to the members. | [noun] (possibly obsolete) The state of people living together in a community. SYMBIOTES (16) [noun] An organism in a partnership with another such that each profits from their being together; a symbiont SYMBIOTIC (18) [noun] Symbiotic star | [adjective] Of, or relating to symbiosis; living together. | [adjective] Of a relationship with mutual benefit between two individuals or organisms. SYMBOLING (17) [verb] To symbolize. SYMBOLISE (16) [verb] To be symbolic of; to represent. | [verb] To use symbols; to represent ideas symbolically. | [verb] To resemble each other in qualities or properties; to correspond; to harmonize. SYMBOLISM (18) [noun] Representation of a concept through symbols or underlying meanings of objects or qualities. | [noun] A combining together of parts or ingredients. SYMBOLIST (16) SYMBOLIZE (25) [verb] To be symbolic of; to represent. | [verb] To use symbols; to represent ideas symbolically. | [verb] To resemble each other in qualities or properties; to correspond; to harmonize. SYMBOLLED (17) [verb] To symbolize. SYMBOLOGY (20) [noun] The study or use of symbols. | [noun] An encoding scheme, particularly for barcodes. SYMMETRIC (18) [adjective] Symmetrical. | [adjective] Of a relation R on a set S, such that xRy if and only if yRx for all members x and y of S (that is, if the relation holds between any element and a second, it also holds between the second and the first). | [adjective] Using the same key (or keys that are trivially related) for both encryption and decryption. SYMPATHIN (19) SYMPATRIC (18) [adjective] Occurring in the same, or in overlapping, territory, especially of species that do not interbreed. SYMPETALY (19) SYMPHONIC (21) [adjective] Characteristic of a symphony SYMPHYSES (22) [noun] The process of two originally separate bones growing together as the subject matures, as with the pubic bones or lower jawbones in humans. | [noun] A line, discernable on an X-ray, showing such fusion. | [noun] The cartilaginous material that adjoins and facilitates the junction of such bones, with or without synovia. SYMPHYSIS (22) [noun] The process of two originally separate bones growing together as the subject matures, as with the pubic bones or lower jawbones in humans. | [noun] A line, discernable on an X-ray, showing such fusion. | [noun] The cartilaginous material that adjoins and facilitates the junction of such bones, with or without synovia. SYMPODIAL (17) SYMPODIUM (19) [noun] A pattern of branching, similar to dichotomous branching, where the axis or stem is morphologically made up of a series of superposed branches imitating a simple stem. SYMPOSIUM (18) [noun] A conference or other meeting for discussion of a topic, especially one in which the participants make presentations. | [noun] A drinking party in Ancient Greece, especially one with intellectual discussion. SYNCYTIUM (19) [noun] A mass of cytoplasm containing many nuclei SYNDROMES (15) [noun] A recognizable pattern of signs, symptoms and/or behaviours, especially of a disease or medical or psychological condition. | [noun] Any set of characteristics regarded as identifying a certain type, condition, etc., usually adverse. SYNERGISM (15) [noun] Synergy | [noun] The theological doctrine that salvation is brought about by a combination of human will and divine grace SYNGAMIES (15) SYNONYMES (17) SYNONYMIC (19) SYNTAGMAS (15) [noun] A constituent segment within a text, such as a word or a phrase that forms a syntactic unit. | [noun] An arrangement of units that together bears a meaning. | [noun] (history) A Macedonian phalanx fighting formation consisting of 256 men with long spears (sarissae). SYSTEMICS (16) SYSTEMIZE (23) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. | [verb] To engage in a cognitive process described as the drive to analyze and construct systems. TABLEMATE (13) [noun] Someone with whom one shares a table. TACAMAHAC (18) [noun] A bitter balsamic resin or resinous exudation obtained from tropical American trees of the family Burseraceae (Bursera tomentosa and Icica tacamahaca), from East Indian trees of the genus Calophyllum or from the balsam poplar (Populus balsamifera). | [noun] Any tree yielding tacamahac resin, especially, in North America, the balsam poplar or balm of Gilead (Populus balsamifera). TACHISMES (16) TAILLAMPS (13) [noun] A taillight. TALISMANS (11) [noun] A magical object providing protection against ill will, or the supernatural, or conferring the wearer with a boon such as good luck, good health, or power(s). TALLAISIM (11) TALLITHIM (14) TALMUDISM (14) TAMANDUAS (12) [noun] An anteater of the genus Tamandua. TAMARACKS (17) [noun] Any of several North American larches, of the genus Larix. | [noun] The wood from such a tree. TAMARILLO (11) [noun] A small tree or shrub (Solanum betaceum syn. Cyphomandra betacea) which bears edible fruits. | [noun] A fruit of that tree. TAMARINDS (12) [noun] A tropical tree, Tamarindus indica. | [noun] The fruit of this tree; the pulp is used as spice in Asian cooking and in Worcestershire sauce. | [noun] Other similar species: TAMARISKS (15) [noun] Any of several shrubs, of the genus Tamarix, native to arid regions in Eurasia and Africa, often invasive in other arid regions. TAMBOURAS (13) [noun] A type of long-necked lute-like stringed instrument found throughout the world but originating in the traditional music of India. TAMBOURED (14) TAMBOURER (13) TAMOXIFEN (21) [noun] A nonsteroidal estrogen antagonist used in the treatment of advanced breast cancer. TAMPERERS (13) TAMPERING (14) [verb] To make unauthorized or improper alterations, sometimes causing deliberate damage; to meddle (with something). | [verb] To try to influence someone, usually in an illegal or devious way; to try to deal (with someone). | [verb] To meddle (with something) in order to corrupt or pervert it. TAMPONING (14) [verb] To plug (a wound) with a tampon or compress. | [noun] The application of a tampon or plug. TANTALUMS (11) TAPEWORMS (16) [noun] Any parasitical worm of the class or infraclass Cestoda, which infest the intestines of animals, including humans, often infecting different host species during their life cycle. | [noun] Infection by tapeworms. TAPHONOMY (19) [noun] The study of the fate of the remains of organisms after they die, especially the study of fossilization. TARANTISM (11) [noun] An extreme urge to dance, popularly thought to have been caused by the bite of a tarantula (Lycosa tarantula) and prevalent in southern Italy in the 15th through 17th centuries. TAUTOMERS (11) [noun] Any of the multiple forms of a tautomeric compound. TAUTONYMS (14) [noun] A binomial name consisting of the same word twice, such as Bison bison. | [noun] A word or term made from two identical parts or syllables, such as bonbon or dada. | [noun] Absolute synonym TAUTONYMY (17) TAXIDERMY (22) [noun] The art of stuffing and mounting the skins of dead animals for exhibition in a lifelike state. | [verb] To stuff and mount the skin of a dead animal. TAXIMETER (18) [noun] A device installed in a taxicab that calculates the fare based upon distance travelled and waiting time. TAXONOMIC (20) [adjective] Of, or relating to taxonomy. TEAMAKERS (15) TEAMMATES (13) [noun] One who is on the same team. TEAMSTERS (11) [noun] A person who drives a team of animals (such as horses or oxen). | [noun] A person who drives a cargo truck (see Teamster). TEAMWORKS (18) TECTONISM (13) TEEMINGLY (15) TEETOTUMS (11) [noun] A toy (spinning top) similar to a dreidel. | [noun] A working men's club conducted under religious influences, as an alternative to drinking in the saloon. TEGMENTAL (12) TEGMENTUM (14) [noun] The ventral portion of the midbrain, divided from the tectum by the cerebral aqueduct and the periaqueductal grey | [noun] Containing the following nuclei: red nucleus, substantia nigra, ventral tegmental area TEGUMENTS (12) [noun] Something which covers; a covering or coating. | [noun] A natural covering of the body or of a bodily organ; an integument. TELAMONES (11) [noun] A figure of a man (often Atlas) used as a pillar for support. TELEFILMS (14) [noun] A film made for television. TELEGRAMS (12) [noun] A message transmitted by telegraph. | [verb] To send a telegram. | [verb] To send a telegram to (a person). TELEMARKS (15) [noun] Telemark skiing, a method of skiing using the telemark turn and a binding that only connects the boot to the ski at the toes. | [noun] A telemark turn. | [noun] (ski jumping) A telemark landing. TELEMETER (11) [noun] Any measuring device used in telemetry. | [noun] A device used for rangefinding, especially of military targets. | [verb] To transmit by telemetry. TELEMETRY (14) [noun] (applied sciences) the science, and associated technology, of the automatic recording and transmission of data from a remote source to a receiving station for analysis TELEONOMY (14) TELLURIUM (11) [noun] The chemical element with atomic number 52. Symbol: Te. A rare, brittle, mildly toxic, silver-white metalloid. | [noun] A single atom of this element. | [noun] A variant spelling of tellurion. TELOMERES (11) [noun] Either of the sequences of DNA at each end of a eukaryotic chromosome. TEMBLORES (13) TEMPERATE (13) [verb] To render temperate; to moderate | [adjective] Moderate; not excessive | [adjective] Moderate in the indulgence of the natural appetites or passions TEMPERERS (13) TEMPERING (14) [verb] To moderate or control. | [verb] To strengthen or toughen a material, especially metal, by heat treatment; anneal. | [verb] To sauté spices in ghee or oil to release essential oils for flavouring a dish in South Asian cuisine. TEMPESTED (14) TEMPLATES (13) [noun] A physical object whose shape is used as a guide to make other objects. | [noun] A generic model or pattern from which other objects are based or derived. | [noun] A macromolecule which provides a pattern for the synthesis of another molecule. TEMPORALS (13) TEMPORARY (16) [noun] One serving for a limited time; short-term employee. | [adjective] Not permanent; existing only for a period or periods of time. | [adjective] Existing only for a short time or short times; transient, ephemeral. TEMPORISE (13) [verb] To deliberately act evasively or prolong a discussion in order to gain time or postpone a decision, sometimes in order to reach a compromise or simply to make a conversation more temperate; to stall for time. | [verb] To apply a temporary piece of dental work that will later be removed. | [verb] To comply with the time or occasion; to humor, or yield to, the current of opinion or circumstances; also, to trim, as between two parties. TEMPORIZE (22) [verb] To deliberately act evasively or prolong a discussion in order to gain time or postpone a decision, sometimes in order to reach a compromise or simply to make a conversation more temperate; to stall for time. | [verb] To apply a temporary piece of dental work that will later be removed. | [verb] To comply with the time or occasion; to humor, or yield to, the current of opinion or circumstances; also, to trim, as between two parties. TEMPTABLE (15) TEMPTRESS (13) [noun] An alluring woman who seduces or exploits men. | [noun] A woman considered sexually attractive by men. TENACULUM (13) [noun] A medical instrument consisting of a sharp hook attached to a handle; used mainly for taking up arteries and the like. TENEBRISM (13) [noun] A style of painting using very pronounced chiaroscuro, with darkness a dominating feature of the image. TENEMENTS (11) [noun] A building that is rented to multiple tenants, especially a low-rent, run-down one. | [noun] Any form of property that is held by one person from another, rather than being owned. | [noun] Dwelling; abode; habitation. TERATISMS (11) TERATOMAS (11) [noun] A benign or malignant tumour, especially of the gonads, that arises from germ cells and consists of different types of tissue such as skin, hair, or muscle. TERMAGANT (12) [noun] A quarrelsome, scolding woman, especially one who is old and shrewish. | [noun] A boisterous, brawling, turbulent person, whether male or female. | [adjective] Quarrelsome and scolding or censorious; shrewish. TERMINALS (11) [noun] A building in an airport where passengers transfer from ground transportation to the facilities that allow them to board airplanes. | [noun] A harbour facility where ferries embark and disembark passengers and load and unload vehicles. | [noun] A rail station where service begins and ends; the end of the line. For example: Grand Central Terminal in New York City. TERMINATE (11) [verb] To end, especially in an incomplete state. | [verb] To set or be a limit or boundary to. | [verb] To kill. TERMITARY (14) [noun] An anthill built and occupied by termites. TERMTIMES (13) TERRARIUM (11) [noun] An enclosure wherein very small animals are displayed humanely, often with some plants, in a naturalistic setting. | [noun] A partially enclosed glass container for displaying plants, especially plants that need high humidity. TERRORISM (11) [noun] The deliberate commission of an act of violence to create public fear through the suffering of the victims in the furtherance of a political or social agenda. | [noun] The use of unlawful violence against people or property to achieve political objectives. | [noun] A form of psychological manipulation through warfare to the purpose of political or religious gains, by means of deliberately creating a climate of fear amongst the inhabitants of a specific geographical region. TESTAMENT (11) [noun] A solemn, authentic instrument in writing, by which a person declares his or her will as to disposal of his or her inheritance (estate and effects) after his or her death, benefiting specified heir(s). | [noun] One of the two parts to the scriptures of the Christian religion: the New Testament, considered by Christians to be a continuation of the Hebrew scriptures, and the Hebrew scriptures themselves, which they refer to as the Old Testament. | [noun] A tangible proof or tribute. TESTIMONY (14) [noun] Statements made by a witness in court. | [noun] An account of first-hand experience. | [noun] In a church service, a personal account, such as of one's conversion. TETRAMERS (11) [noun] An oligomer having four subunits THALLIUMS (14) THEMATICS (16) [noun] A postage stamp that is part of a thematic collection. THEREFROM (17) [adverb] From that; from him, her, or it. THEREMINS (14) [noun] An electronic musical instrument that generates sound of varying pitch and volume depending on the proximity of the musician’s hands to two antennae mounted on the instrument. THERMALLY (17) THERMIONS (14) [noun] An electrically charged particle, either an electron or an ion, emitted by a conducting material at high temperatures THERMITES (14) THERMOSES (14) [noun] A bottle, flask or similar vessel having a vacuum between its inner and outer silvered walls; designed to maintain the temperature of its contents THERMOSET (14) THIAMINES (14) THINGUMMY (20) [noun] A thing (used in a vague way to refer to something whose name one cannot recall). | [noun] Penis. | [noun] A person whose name is either unknown or forgotten THRALDOMS (15) THRALLDOM (15) THREESOME (14) [noun] A group of three people or things. | [noun] An instance of sexual activity involving three people. THROMBINS (16) THRUMMERS (16) THRUMMIER (16) THRUMMING (17) [verb] To cause a steady rhythmic vibration, usually by plucking. | [verb] To make a monotonous drumming noise. | [verb] To furnish with thrums; to insert tufts in; to fringe. THUMBHOLE (19) THUMBKINS (20) THUMBNAIL (16) [noun] The fingernail on the thumb. | [noun] A rough sketch (e.g., the size of one's thumbnail). | [noun] A small picture, used as a compact representation of a larger image. THUMBNUTS (16) THUMBTACK (22) [noun] A small nail-like tack with a slightly rounded head that can be pressed into place with light pressure from the thumb; used for hanging light articles on a wall or noticeboard. | [verb] To fix or attach something with a thumbtack. THYMIDINE (18) [noun] The nucleoside consisting of a combination of deoxyribose and thymine THYMOCYTE (22) [noun] A lymphocyte, produced in the thymus, that develops into a T cell THYMOSINS (17) TIDEMARKS (16) [noun] A line (of seaweed or differently coloured sand etc) on the shore showing the level of high or low tide | [noun] (by extension) any mark showing the limit of some past activity | [noun] A line of scum left on a bath tub when the water is drained away TILLERMAN (11) TILLERMEN (11) TILTMETER (11) TIMBERING (14) [verb] To fit with timbers. | [verb] To construct, frame, build. | [verb] To light or land on a tree. TIMBERMAN (15) [noun] A lumberman | [noun] A timber dealer | [noun] A person who installs timbers in a mine TIMBERMEN (15) [noun] A lumberman | [noun] A timber dealer | [noun] A person who installs timbers in a mine TIMECARDS (14) TIMELIEST (11) [adjective] Done at the proper time or within the proper time limits; prompt. | [adjective] Happening or appearing at the proper time. | [adjective] Keeping time or measure. TIMELINES (11) [noun] A graphical representation of a chronological sequence of events (past or future); a chronology. | [noun] A schedule of activities; a timetable. | [noun] An individual universe or reality, especially a parallel/alternate one in which events differ from actual history, or differ from the established canon of a fictional world. TIMEOUSLY (14) TIMEPIECE (15) [noun] Any device that measures or registers time; a clock or watch, especially one lacking a chime or other striking mechanism. TIMESCALE (13) [noun] A series of events used as a rough measure of duration. TIMETABLE (13) [noun] A tabular schedule of events with the times at which they occur, especially times of arrivals and departures | [verb] To arrange a specific time for (an event, a class, etc). TIMEWORKS (18) TIMIDNESS (12) TIMOCRACY (18) [noun] (Platonism) A form of government in which ambition for honor, power and military glory motivates the rulers. | [noun] (Aristotelianism) A form of government in which civic honor or political power increases with the amount of property one owns. TIMOTHIES (14) TIMPANIST (13) TIMPANUMS (15) TINSMITHS (14) [noun] A person who makes or repairs things with tin or similar alloys. | [noun] A dealer in tin goods. TIRAMISUS (11) TITANISMS (11) TITANIUMS (11) TOADYISMS (15) TOKENISMS (15) TOKONOMAS (15) [noun] A recess in a domestic interior in which a hanging scroll and a flower arrangement is displayed TOMAHAWKS (21) [noun] An ax used by Native American warriors. | [noun] A dunk in which the person dunking the ball does so with his arm behind his head. | [noun] A geometric construction consisting of a semicircle and two line segments that serves as a tool for trisecting an angle; so called from its resemblance to the American Indian axe. TOMALLEYS (14) [noun] The hepatopancreas of a crustacean. TOMATILLO (11) [noun] A plant of the nightshade family originating in Mexico, Physalis philadelphica, cultivated for its tomato-like green to green-purple fruit surrounded by a thin papery skin. TOMBOYISH (19) TOMBSTONE (13) [noun] A headstone marking a person's grave. | [noun] The symbol "∎" marking the end of a proof. | [noun] A marker that takes the place of deleted data, allowing for replication of the deletion across servers etc. TOMCATTED (14) [verb] To prowl for sexual gratification. TOMENTOSE (11) TOMMYROTS (16) TOMOGRAMS (14) [noun] A two-dimensional image produced by tomography, representing a slice or section through a three-dimensional object. TOMORROWS (14) [noun] The day after the present day. TONOMETER (11) [noun] An instrument used to measure tension or pressure, especially inside the eye. TONOMETRY (14) TOOLMAKER (15) [noun] A skilled machinist who makes and repairs tools. TOOLROOMS (11) TOOTHSOME (14) [adjective] Delicious. | [adjective] Sexually attractive. | [adjective] Having a pleasing texture when bitten. TOPMINNOW (16) [noun] Any of the ray-finned fish in the taxonomic family Fundulidae. TOPONYMIC (18) TORMENTED (12) [verb] To cause severe suffering to (stronger than to vex but weaker than to torture.) | [adjective] Miserable or anguished, especially with anxiety or guilt. | [adjective] Damned; accursed. TORMENTER (11) TORMENTIL (11) [noun] A low-growing herb (Potentilla erecta, syn. Potentilla tormentilla). TORMENTOR (11) [noun] One who torments; a person, animal, or object that causes suffering. | [noun] Something abstract that causes suffering. | [noun] One of a pair of narrow curtains just behind the front curtain and teaser that mask the areas on the sides of the stage and can be adjusted to the desired width. TOTALISMS (11) TOTEMISMS (13) TOTEMISTS (11) TOTEMITES (11) TOUCHMARK (20) TOWNHOMES (17) [noun] A townhouse or row house. TOXAEMIAS (18) TRACHOMAS (16) TRADEMARK (16) [noun] A word, symbol, or phrase used to identify a particular company's product and differentiate it from other companies' products. | [noun] Any proprietary business, product or service name. | [noun] The aspect for which someone or something is best known; a hallmark or typical characteristic. TRADESMAN (12) [noun] A skilled manual worker (implied male). | [noun] One who trades; a shopkeeper. TRADESMEN (12) [noun] A skilled manual worker (implied male). | [noun] One who trades; a shopkeeper. TRAMELING (12) TRAMELLED (12) TRAMLINES (11) [noun] The rails that a tram runs on. | [noun] Either of the two pairs of sidelines marked on a tennis court which mark the outside of the singles and doubles playing areas. | [noun] A scratch on a film, usually vertical, that extends through multiple frames. TRAMMELED (14) [verb] To entangle, as in a net. | [verb] To confine; to hamper; to shackle. TRAMPLERS (13) TRAMPLING (14) [verb] To crush something by walking on it. | [verb] (by extension) To treat someone harshly. | [verb] To walk heavily and destructively. TRAMROADS (12) [noun] A road designed for use by trams or wagons. TRANSFORM (14) [noun] An operation (often an integration) that converts one function into another. | [noun] A function so produced. | [verb] To change greatly the appearance or form of. TRANSMITS (11) [verb] To send or convey something from one person, place or thing to another. | [verb] To spread or pass on something such as a disease or a signal. | [verb] To impart, convey or hand down something by inheritance or heredity. TRANSMUTE (11) [verb] To change, transform or convert one thing to another, or from one state or form to another. TRAPEZIUM (22) [noun] A four-sided polygon with two sides parallel | [noun] A four-sided polygon with no parallel sides and no sides equal; a simple convex irregular quadrilateral. | [noun] The trapezium bone of the wrist. TRAUMATIC (13) [adjective] Of, caused by, or causing trauma. | [adjective] Of or relating to wounds; applied to wounds. | [adjective] Adapted to the cure of wounds; vulnerary. | [noun] A medicine for wounds; a vulnerary. TREADMILL (12) [noun] A piece of indoor sporting equipment used to allow for the motions of running or walking while staying in one place. | [noun] A mill worked by persons treading upon steps on the periphery of a wide wheel having a horizontal axis. It is used principally as a means of prison discipline. | [noun] A mill worked by horses, dogs, etc., treading an endless belt. TREATMENT (11) [noun] The process or manner of treating someone or something. | [noun] Medical care for an illness or injury. | [noun] The use of a substance or process to preserve or give particular properties to something. TREMATODE (12) [noun] A parasitic flatworm of the class Trematoda. TREMBLERS (13) [noun] One who, or that which, trembles. | [noun] Any of various New World passerine birds of the family Mimidae. | [noun] The vibrating hammer, or spring contact piece of a hammer break, as of the electric ignition apparatus for an internal combustion engine. TREMBLIER (13) [adjective] In a trembling or shaking state TREMBLING (14) [verb] To shake, quiver, or vibrate. | [verb] To fear; to be afraid. | [noun] A tremble TREMOLITE (11) [noun] A pale grey/green amphibole mineral, a type of asbestos, that is a mixed calcium and magnesium silicate, with the chemical formula Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2; sometimes used in place of common asbestos. TREMULANT (11) TREMULOUS (11) [adjective] Trembling, quivering, or shaking. | [adjective] Timid, hesitant; lacking confidence. TREPONEMA (13) [noun] Any of many anaerobic spirochetes, of the genus Treponema, many of which cause infectious diseases. TREPONEME (13) [noun] Any of the bacterium of the genus Treponema TRIADISMS (12) TRIATOMIC (13) [adjective] (of a molecule etc.) Consisting of three atoms. TRIBALISM (13) [noun] The condition of being tribal. | [noun] A feeling of identity and loyalty to one's tribe. TRIBESMAN (13) [noun] A (usually male) member of a tribe. TRIBESMEN (13) [noun] A (usually male) member of a tribe. TRICHOMES (16) [noun] A hair- or scale-like extension of the epidermis of a plant. | [noun] Hairlike structures found in some microscopic organisms and algae. | [noun] A row of cells formed by successive cell divisions. TRIENNIUM (11) [noun] A period of three years. TRIFOLIUM (14) TRIFORIUM (14) [noun] The gallery of arches above the side-aisle vaulting in the nave of a church. TRILLIUMS (11) [noun] Any of several perennial flowering plants, of the genus Trillium, having flowers with three petals TRIMARANS (11) [noun] A type of boat with three parallel hulls. TRIMEROUS (11) [adjective] Organized in threes; having parts in numbers that are multiples of three. | [adjective] Having three joints. TRIMESTER (11) [noun] A period of three months or about three months; quarter. | [noun] One of the terms of an academic year in those learning institutions that divide their teaching in three roughly equal terms, each about three months long. Compare semester. TRIMETERS (11) [noun] A line in a poem having three metrical feet. | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has three feet. TRIMMINGS (14) [noun] The act of someone who trims. | [noun] Material that is removed by someone trimming something, as a piece of steak. | [noun] An ornamental accessory to a dress or other piece of clothing. TRIMORPHS (16) TRIMOTORS (11) TRINOMIAL (11) [noun] An expression consisting of three terms. | [adjective] Consisting of three names or parts or terms. TRISMUSES (11) TRISOMICS (13) TRISOMIES (11) [noun] The presence of three copies, instead of the normal two, of a particular chromosome of an organism. TRITHEISM (14) [noun] A belief in three gods. | [noun] Any of several forms of Christianity that deny the Trinity. TRITICUMS (13) TRIUMPHAL (16) [noun] A token of victory. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or being a triumph. | [adjective] That celebrates or commemorates a triumph or victory. TRIUMPHED (17) [verb] To celebrate victory with pomp; to rejoice over success; to exult in an advantage gained; to exhibit exultation. | [verb] To prevail over rivals, challenges, or difficulties. | [verb] To succeed, win, or attain ascendancy. TRIUMVIRI (14) [noun] One member of a triumvirate TRIUMVIRS (14) [noun] One member of a triumvirate TROILISMS (11) TROMBONES (13) [noun] A musical instrument in the brass family, having a cylindrical bore, and usually a sliding tube (but sometimes piston valves, and rarely both). Most often refers to the tenor trombone, which is the most common type of trombone and has a fundamental tone of B♭ˌ (contra B♭). | [noun] The common European bittern. TRUMPETED (14) [verb] To sound loudly, be amplified | [verb] To play the trumpet. | [verb] Of an elephant, to make its cry. TRUMPETER (13) [noun] Someone who plays a trumpet. | [noun] Any of three species of bird in the family Psophiidae from South America named for the trumpeting threat call of the males. | [noun] Any of a number of breeds of fancy pigeon (variety of domestic pigeon (Columba livia), originally bred for their peculiar gurgling voice, a prolonged coo called "trumpeting" or "drumming"). TULAREMIA (11) [noun] An infectious disease caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis. TULAREMIC (13) TUMBLEBUG (16) [noun] A dung beetle. TUMBLINGS (14) TUMEFYING (18) [verb] To cause to swell. | [verb] To swell; to rise into a tumour. TUMESCENT (13) [adjective] Swollen or distended with fluid, as of erectile tissue. | [adjective] Inflated or overblown. TUMORLIKE (15) TUMPLINES (13) [noun] A strap used to carry objects tied to its ends by placing the broadened or cushioned middle of the strap over the head just above the forehead. TUMULUSES (11) TUNESMITH (14) [noun] A composer of tunes. TURMERICS (13) TURMOILED (12) TWELVEMOS (17) [noun] Duodecimo, or 12mo, a paper size, so called because it is cut 12 to a (huge, originally made) sheet | [noun] A page, book etc. of that size TYMPANIES (16) TYMPANIST (16) TYMPANUMS (18) [noun] A triangular space between the sides of a pediment. | [noun] The space within an arch, and above a lintel or a subordinate arch, spanning the opening below the arch. | [noun] The middle ear. TYRAMINES (14) TZADDIKIM (26) [noun] A very righteous person, especially a Hassidic spiritual leader. UDOMETERS (12) ULTIMATED (12) ULTIMATES (11) [noun] The most basic or fundamental of a set of things | [noun] The final or most distant point; the conclusion | [noun] The greatest extremity; the maximum ULTIMATUM (13) [noun] A final statement of terms or conditions made by one party to another, especially one that expresses a threat of reprisal or war. ULTRAISMS (11) UMANGITES (12) UMBELLATE (13) UMBELLETS (13) UMBILICAL (15) [noun] A cord connecting an astronaut to a spacecraft, or a craft to ground control prior to launch, etc. | [adjective] Of, or relating to, the navel (umbilicus) or the umbilical cord. | [adjective] Such that the curvatures of normal sections are all equal to each other. UMBILICUS (15) [noun] Navel | [noun] Hilum | [noun] A depression or opening in the center of the base of many spiral shells. UMBRELLAS (13) [noun] Cloth-covered frame used for protection against rain or sun. | [noun] Generally, anything that provides protection. | [noun] Something that covers a wide range of concepts, purposes, groups, etc. UMBRETTES (13) UMLAUTING (12) [verb] To place an umlaut over (a vowel). | [verb] To modify (a word) so that an umlaut is required in it. UMPIRAGES (14) UMPTEENTH (16) [adjective] (often slightly derogatory) Occurring in a relatively large but unspecified position in a sequence. UNADMIRED (13) UNAMENDED (13) [adjective] Without amendments. UNAMIABLE (13) [adjective] Not amiable; not likable. UNAMUSING (12) UNANIMITY (14) [noun] The condition of agreement by all parties, the state of being unanimous. UNANIMOUS (11) [adjective] Based on unanimity, assent or agreement. | [adjective] Sharing the same views or opinions, and being in harmony or accord. UNARMORED (12) UNASHAMED (15) [adjective] Feeling or showing no shame, embarrassment or remorse UNAWESOME (14) UNBEMUSED (14) UNBOSOMED (14) [verb] To tell someone about (one's troubles), and thus obtain relief. | [verb] To free (oneself) of the burden of one's troubles by telling of them. | [verb] To confess a misdeed. UNCIFORMS (16) UNCLAIMED (14) [adjective] Not claimed. UNCLAMPED (16) [adjective] Not clamped. | [verb] To remove a clamp from. UNCRUMPLE (15) [verb] To return something that has been crumpled closer to its original state. | [verb] Having been crumpled, to return closer to its original state. UNDAMAGED (14) [adjective] Not damaged, harmed or injured UNDERARMS (12) [noun] The armpit. | [noun] Old-fashioned and now outlawed style of bowling in which the arm is not swung over the shoulder. UNDERBRIM (14) UNDERMINE (12) [verb] To dig underneath (something), to make a passage for destructive or military purposes; to sap. | [verb] To weaken or work against; to hinder, sabotage. | [verb] To erode the base or foundation of something, e.g. by the action of water. UNDERMOST (12) UNDREAMED (13) [adjective] Not dreamed; not dreamt. UNDYNAMIC (17) UNFREEDOM (15) UNGUENTUM (12) UNHELMING (15) UNIFORMED (15) [verb] To clothe in a uniform. | [adjective] Dressed in a uniform. | [adjective] In an occupation that requires a uniform, such as the police force or military. UNIFORMER (14) UNIFORMLY (17) [adverb] In a uniform manner, consistently. UNIMPEDED (15) [adjective] Free from obstructions. UNIONISMS (11) UNLIMBERS (13) [verb] To deploy an artillery piece for firing (ie, to detach it from its limber). | [verb] (by extension) To clumsily put into employ a large weapon or object. | [verb] To unsling something, as a backpack, carried on the body with a strap; to bring something carried into the hands for use. UNLIMITED (12) [adjective] Limitless or without bounds; unrestricted UNMANAGED (13) [adjective] Not managed. UNMANNING (12) [verb] To castrate; to remove the manhood of. | [verb] To sap (a person) of the strength, whether physical or emotional, required to deal with a situation. | [verb] To deprive of men. UNMARRIED (12) [noun] An unmarried person. | [adjective] Having no husband or wife. UNMASKERS (15) UNMASKING (16) [verb] To remove a mask from someone. | [verb] To expose, or reveal the true character of someone. | [verb] To remove one's mask. UNMATCHED (17) [verb] To separate a matching pair. | [adjective] (of a pair of things) not matched; odd | [adjective] (of a single thing) not matched with anything else UNMEANING (12) [adjective] Having no meaning or significance UNMERITED (12) [adjective] Not merited. UNMESHING (15) UNMINDFUL (15) [adjective] Lacking awareness; oblivious. | [adjective] Failing to remember, recognize, or pay attention to something; heedless of. UNMINGLED (13) UNMINGLES (12) UNMITERED (12) UNMITRING (12) UNMIXABLE (20) UNMOLDING (13) UNMOORING (12) [verb] To unfix or unsecure (a moored boat). | [verb] To weigh anchor. UNMOUNTED (12) [verb] To reverse a mount operation; to instruct the operating system that the file system should be disassociated from its mount point, making it no longer accessible. | [adjective] Not mounted (in various senses). UNMOVABLE (16) UNMUFFLED (18) [adjective] Not muffled. UNMUFFLES (17) UNMUSICAL (13) [adjective] Not musical: lacking in musical ability. | [adjective] Not musical: unmelodic. UNMUZZLED (30) [verb] Remove a muzzle from | [adjective] Not wearing a muzzle. UNMUZZLES (29) [verb] Remove a muzzle from UNPLUMBED (16) [adjective] Not measured for depth, as if with a plumb. UNSEAMING (12) UNSMILING (12) [adjective] Not smiling; serious or grave UNTAMABLE (13) [adjective] Incapable of being controlled, subdued, or tamed. UNTIMEOUS (11) UNTRIMMED (14) [adjective] Not trimmed; not made tidy by cutting. | [adjective] Not adorned with trimmings. UNWELCOME (16) [verb] To treat as unwelcome. | [adjective] Not welcome. UNWISDOMS (15) UNWOMANLY (17) [adjective] Not womanly; unfeminine. | [adverb] In a manner unbecoming a woman. UPCLIMBED (18) UPMANSHIP (18) UPPERMOST (15) [adjective] At a higher level, rank or position. | [adjective] Situated on higher ground, further inland, or more northerly. | [adjective] (of strata or geological time periods) younger, more recent URBANISMS (13) UREDINIUM (12) URINEMIAS (11) UROCHROME (16) UROPYGIUM (17) [noun] The posterior part of a bird's body from which the tailfeathers grow. UTTERMOST (11) [noun] The utmost; the highest or greatest degree; the farthest extent. | [adjective] Outermost. | [adjective] Extreme; utmost; of the farthest, greatest, or highest degree. VACUUMING (17) [verb] To clean (something) with a vacuum cleaner. | [verb] To use a vacuum cleaner. | [verb] To optimise a database or database table by physically removing deleted tuples. VAMBRACES (18) [noun] The piece of armor designed to protect the arm from the elbow to the wrist. | [noun] The pieces of armor protecting the arm from the shoulder to the wrist. VAMOOSING (15) [verb] To run away (from); to flee. | [verb] To hurry. | [verb] To be expelled. VAMPIRISH (19) VAMPIRISM (18) [noun] Systemic lupus erythematosus (autoimmune disease) | [noun] The state of being a vampire | [noun] Practices associated with vampires, in particular blood-drinking and the draining of a victim's life-force. VANADIUMS (15) VANDALISM (15) [noun] Willful damage to or destruction of any property, such as graffiti or defacement. VARIORUMS (14) [noun] An edition of a written work (especially the complete works of a classical writer) showing the notes and readings of a variety of different editors or commentators. VAROOMING (15) VASCULUMS (16) VASECTOMY (19) [noun] The surgical incision of all or part of the vas deferens as a means of male sterilization. VASOMOTOR (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the regulation of the diameter of blood vessels. VASOSPASM (16) [noun] Spasm of the blood vessels, leading to vasoconstriction and potentially tissue ischemia and necrosis. VEGANISMS (15) VEHEMENCE (19) [noun] An intense concentration, force or power. | [noun] A wild or turbulent ferocity or fury. | [noun] Eagerness, fervor, excessive strong feeling. VELODROME (15) [noun] An indoor arena, having an oval banked track for bicycle racing. VENIREMAN (14) VENIREMEN (14) VENOGRAMS (15) [noun] An X-ray of a vein that has been injected with an opaque material VERAPAMIL (16) [noun] A calcium blocker used to treat angina and heart failure VERATRUMS (14) [noun] Any of various poisonous herbs of the genus Veratrum VERBALISM (16) [noun] The expression of a concept in words; the wording used in such an expression | [noun] The excessive use of words, often with little meaning VERMICIDE (17) [noun] Any substance used to kill worms, especially parasitic intestinal worms VERMIFORM (19) [adjective] In the shape of a worm. VERMIFUGE (18) [noun] A drug that causes the expulsion or death of intestinal worms, such as tapeworms. | [adjective] Referring to something that acts as a drug to cause expulsion or death of intestinal worms. VERMILION (14) [noun] A vivid red synthetic pigment made of mercury sulfide. | [noun] A bright orange-red colour. | [noun] A type of red dye worn in the parting of the hair by married Hindu women. VERMINOUS (14) VERMOUTHS (17) [noun] A dry, or sweet apéritif wine flavored with aromatic herbs, and often used in mixed drinks. | [noun] An aperitif wine that matches the general description of vermouth. VESTIGIUM (15) VESTMENTS (14) [noun] A robe, gown, or other article of clothing worn as an indication of office. | [noun] Any of the special articles of clothing worn by members of the clergy etc., especially a garment worn at the celebration of the Eucharist. | [noun] (in plural) Clothing. VESTRYMAN (17) [noun] A member of a parochial vestry VESTRYMEN (17) [noun] A member of a parochial vestry VIATICUMS (16) VIBURNUMS (16) [noun] Any of many shrubs and trees, of the genus Viburnum, native to the Northern Hemisphere that have showy clusters of flowers VICTIMISE (16) [verb] To make someone a victim or sacrifice. | [verb] To punish someone unjustly. | [verb] To swindle or defraud someone. VICTIMIZE (25) [verb] To make someone a victim or sacrifice. | [verb] To punish someone unjustly. | [verb] To swindle or defraud someone. VIGESIMAL (15) [noun] A twentieth part. | [adjective] Occurring in intervals of twenty. | [adjective] To the base twenty. VILLADOMS (15) VILLIFORM (17) VINCULUMS (16) VIOMYCINS (19) VIRILISMS (14) VITALISMS (14) VITAMINES (14) VIVARIUMS (17) VOCALISMS (16) [noun] Speaking or singing. | [noun] The vowel sounds used in a language. VOLCANISM (16) [noun] Any of the natural phenomena and processes associated with the action of volcanos, geysers and fumaroles VOLTAISMS (14) VOLTMETER (14) [noun] An instrument for measuring electric potential in volts. VOLUMETER (14) VOMITIVES (17) VOMITUSES (14) VOODOOISM (15) VORTICISM (16) [noun] A short-lived modernist movement in British art and poetry of the early 20th century, incorporating elements of cubism and futurism. VOYEURISM (17) [noun] The derivation of sexual satisfaction by watching people secretly, especially when those being watched are undressed or engaging in sexual activity. | [noun] (by extension) The derivation of satisfaction by obsessively watching or following sensational or sordid subjects. VULCANISM (16) [noun] Any of the natural phenomena and processes associated with the action of volcanos, geysers and fumaroles | [noun] Alternative spelling of Vulcanism VULGARISM (15) [noun] (grammar) A word or term that is considered offensive or vulgar. | [noun] A spelling, word, or phrase used in common speech that is considered improper or incorrect for formal communication. WAMBLIEST (16) WAMPISHED (20) WAMPISHES (19) WARDROOMS (15) [noun] The living quarters of a ship designated for the commissioned officers other than the captain. | [noun] The commissioned officers of a ship, excluding the captain. WAREROOMS (14) WARMAKERS (18) WARMONGER (15) [noun] Someone who advocates war; a militarist. | [verb] To advocate war. WARMOUTHS (17) WASHERMAN (17) [noun] A man who washes laundry for payment. WASHERMEN (17) [noun] A man who washes laundry for payment. WASHROOMS (17) [noun] A room intended to wash the face and hands. | [noun] A room with a toilet, particularly a public toilet. WASHWOMAN (20) WASHWOMEN (20) WATERMARK (18) [noun] A translucent design impressed on the surface of paper and visible when the paper is held to the light. | [noun] (by extension) A logo superimposed on a digital image, a television broadcast, etc. | [noun] A value stored in a datafile to ensure its integrity, so that if the file's contents are changed then the watermark will no longer match the contents. WATTMETER (14) [noun] An instrument for measuring electric power in watts. WAVEFORMS (20) [noun] The shape of a wave function represented by a graph showing some dependent variable as function of an independent variable. | [noun] The shape of a physical wave, such as sound, electric current or electromagnetic radiation, or its representation obtained by plotting a characteristic of the phenomenon (such as voltage) versus another variable, often time. WEARISOME (14) [adjective] Tiresome, tedious or causing fatigue. WELCOMELY (19) WELCOMERS (16) WELCOMING (17) [adjective] Hospitable, accessible and cordial. | [verb] To affirm or greet the arrival of someone, especially by saying "Welcome!". | [verb] To accept something willingly or gladly. | [noun] An act of giving welcome. WELDMENTS (15) WELFARISM (17) [noun] The belief in or support of the welfare state. WHEELSMAN (17) [noun] Helmsman WHEELSMEN (17) [noun] Helmsman WHEREFROM (20) [adverb] From which; whence WHIMBRELS (19) [noun] A large migratory wading bird, Numenius phaeopus, of the family Scolopacidae, with a long downcurved bill. WHIMPERED (20) [verb] To cry or sob softly and intermittently. | [verb] To cry with a low, whining, broken voice; to whine; to complain. | [verb] To say something in a whimpering manner. WHIMSICAL (19) [adjective] Given to whimsy. WHIPWORMS (22) [noun] Any of the genus Trichuris of roundworms that infect certain mammals | [noun] Trichuriasis, infection by members of the genus Trichuris. WHOLESOME (17) [adjective] Promoting good physical health and well-being. | [adjective] Promoting moral and mental well-being. | [adjective] Favourable to morals, religion or prosperity; sensible; conducive to good; salutary; promoting virtue or being virtuous. WHOREDOMS (18) WIGMAKERS (19) WILLEMITE (14) [noun] A rare mineral, zinc silicate, Zn2SiO4, that is a minor ore of zinc. WIMPINESS (16) [noun] The state or condition of being wimpy. WINDMILLS (15) [noun] A machine which translates linear motion of wind to rotational motion by means of adjustable vanes called sails. | [noun] The structure containing such machinery. | [noun] A child's toy consisting of vanes mounted on a stick that rotate when blown by a person or by the wind. WINDSTORM (15) [noun] A storm in which there are strong, violent winds but no precipitation. WINSOMELY (17) WINSOMEST (14) WIREWORMS (17) [noun] The larva of the click beetle. WISEWOMAN (17) WISEWOMEN (17) WITTICISM (16) [noun] A witty remark WOMANHOOD (18) [noun] The state or condition of being an adult female human being, as distinguished from a child or a man Compare adulthood. Contrast manhood and childhood. | [noun] All of the adult female human beingss of a given locality, region, district, country, nation or state, or all of the adult female humans pertaining to a given human subgroup (culture, ethnicity, race, etc.), regarded collectively | [noun] The idealized nature of an adult female human: all of the characteristics traditionally and ideally ascribed to womanliness, as regarded collectively WOMANISED (15) [verb] (said of a man) To flirt with and/or seduce, or attempt to seduce, women, especially lecherously. | [verb] (usually figurative) To turn into a woman; to feminize. WOMANISES (14) [verb] (said of a man) To flirt with and/or seduce, or attempt to seduce, women, especially lecherously. | [verb] (usually figurative) To turn into a woman; to feminize. WOMANIZED (24) [verb] (said of a man) To flirt with and/or seduce, or attempt to seduce, women, especially lecherously. | [verb] (usually figurative) To turn into a woman; to feminize. WOMANIZER (23) [noun] A man who habitually flirts with and seduces, or attempts to seduce, women. WOMANIZES (23) [verb] (said of a man) To flirt with and/or seduce, or attempt to seduce, women, especially lecherously. | [verb] (usually figurative) To turn into a woman; to feminize. WOMANKIND (19) [noun] Women, taken collectively. WOMANLESS (14) WOMANLIER (14) WOMANLIKE (18) WOMENFOLK (21) [noun] Women collectively. | [noun] The adult female members of a community. WOMENKIND (19) [noun] All women around the world viewed as one entity. WOODWORMS (18) [noun] Any of many beetle larvae that bore into wood. | [noun] A shipworm, a worm-like mollusk in the family Teredinidae that feeds on wood underwater in saltwater. WORDSMITH (18) [noun] One who uses words skillfully. | [verb] To apply craftsman-like skills to word use. WORKMANLY (21) WORKMATES (18) [noun] Somebody with whom one works; a coworker. WORKROOMS (18) [noun] A room, such as a workshop or studio, where work is done. WORKWOMAN (21) WORKWOMEN (21) WORMHOLES (17) [noun] A hole burrowed by a worm | [noun] A hypothetical shortcut between two points in spacetime, permitting faster-than-light travel and sometimes time travel. | [noun] A location in a monitor program containing the address of a routine, allowing the user to substitute different functionality. WORMROOTS (14) WORMSEEDS (15) [noun] An aromatic tropical plant (Dysphania ambrosioides, syn. Chenopodium ambrosioides) that yields an anthelmintic oil | [noun] Santonica or Levant wormseed, Seriphidium cinum, syn. Artemisia cina, an Asian plant related to wormwood. WORMWOODS (18) [noun] An intensely bitter herb (Artemisia absinthium and similar plants in genus Artemisia) used in medicine, in the production of absinthe and vermouth, and as a tonic. | [noun] Something that causes bitterness or affliction; a cause of mortification or vexation. WORRIMENT (14) [noun] The act of worrying; anxiety. | [noun] A worrying situation or thing. WORRISOME (14) [adjective] Causing worry; perturbing or vexing. | [adjective] (of a person) Inclined to worry. XANTHOMAS (21) [noun] A small, yellow nodule, rich in cholesterol and other lipids, that occurs in the skin, often near a joint YACHTSMAN (19) [noun] A man who sails a yacht. YACHTSMEN (19) [noun] A man who sails a yacht. YAHOOISMS (17) YAMMERERS (16) YAMMERING (17) [verb] To complain peevishly. | [verb] To talk loudly and persistently. | [verb] To repeat on and on, usually loudly or in complaint. YARMELKES (18) YARMULKES (18) [noun] A skullcap worn by religious Jewish males (especially during prayer). YAWMETERS (17) YOHIMBINE (19) [noun] A toxic crystalline compound obtained from the bark of the yohimbe tree, used as an adrenergic blocking agent and also as an aphrodisiac in the treatment of impotence. YOKEMATES (18) YTTERBIUM (16) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Yb) with an atomic number of 70. | [noun] A single atom of this element. ZAMINDARI (21) [noun] In British India, a system used to collect revenues from the ryots (cultivators of agricultural land) indirectly through the zamindars, as opposed to ryotwari, where revenues were collected directly. | [noun] The office or jurisdiction of a zamindar. | [noun] The land possessed by a zamindar. ZAMINDARS (21) [noun] (Bangladesh) An Indian landowner who collected local taxes and paid them to the British government. ZEMINDARS (21) [noun] (Bangladesh) An Indian landowner who collected local taxes and paid them to the British government. ZEMINDARY (24) ZIRCONIUM (22) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Zr) with an atomic number of 40, a strong, lustrous, grey-white transition metal mainly used as a refractory and opacifier. ZOMBIFIED (26) [adjective] Having been made into a zombie, or induced to behave in a zombie-like fashion. | [verb] (fictional) To turn into a zombie (a member of the living dead or undead). | [verb] To take control of (a computer) in order to use it covertly and illicitly. ZOMBIFIES (25) [verb] (fictional) To turn into a zombie (a member of the living dead or undead). | [verb] To take control of (a computer) in order to use it covertly and illicitly. ZOMBIISMS (24) ZONETIMES (20) ZOOMANIAS (20) ZOOMORPHS (25) ZOOSPERMS (22) ZOOTOMIES (20) [noun] The dissection or anatomy of animals. ZYGOMATIC (26) ZYMOGENES (24) ZYMOGRAMS (26) ZYMURGIES (24)

10-Letter Words (5168)

ABASEMENTS (14) ABASHMENTS (17) ABATEMENTS (14) ABNORMALLY (17) [adverb] In an abnormal manner; in a way that deviates from a standard, norm, or average. ABOMINABLE (16) [adjective] Worthy of, or causing, abhorrence, as a thing of evil omen; odious in the utmost degree; very hateful; detestable; loathsome; execrable. | [adjective] Excessive, large (used as an intensifier). | [adjective] Very bad or inferior. ABOMINABLY (19) [adverb] In an abominable manner; very odiously; detestably. ABOMINATED (15) [verb] To feel disgust towards; to loathe or detest thoroughly; to hate in the highest degree, as if with religious dread. | [verb] To dislike strongly. ABOMINATES (14) [verb] To feel disgust towards; to loathe or detest thoroughly; to hate in the highest degree, as if with religious dread. | [verb] To dislike strongly. ABOMINATOR (14) ABRIDGMENT (16) [noun] The act of abridging; reduction or deprivation | [noun] The state of being abridged or lessened. | [noun] An epitome or compend, as of a book; a shortened or abridged form; an abbreviation. ABSOLUTISM (14) [noun] Doctrine of preordination; doctrine of absolute decrees; doctrine that God acts in an absolute manner. | [noun] The principles or practice of absolute or arbitrary government; despotism. | [noun] Belief in a metaphysical absolute; belief in Absolute. ABSTEMIOUS (14) [adjective] Refraining from freely consuming food or strong drink; sparing in diet; abstinent, temperate. | [adjective] Sparing in the indulgence of the appetite or passions. | [adjective] Sparingly used; used with temperance or moderation. ABSURDISMS (15) [noun] Plural of absurdism, a philosophical movement that emphasizes the conflict between human desire to find meaning and the apparent meaninglessness of the universe. ACADEMICAL (17) [noun] Academic dress, consisting of a cap and gown. | [adjective] Belonging to the school of Plato; believing in Plato's philosophy; sceptical . | [adjective] Pertaining to a university or other form of higher education. ACADEMISMS (17) [noun] Plural of academism; adherence to traditional academic methods, styles, or principles, especially in art or literature. | [noun] Academic theories, practices, or conventions that are often considered rigid or formulaic. ACCLAIMERS (16) [noun] People who applaud or praise someone or something enthusiastically. ACCLAIMING (17) [verb] To shout; to call out. | [verb] To express great approval (for). | [verb] To salute or praise with great approval; to compliment; to applaud; to welcome enthusiastically. ACCLIMATED (17) [verb] To habituate to a climate not native; to acclimatize. | [verb] To adjust to a new environment; not necessarily a wild, natural, earthy one. | [verb] To become accustomed to a new climate or environment. ACCLIMATES (16) [verb] To habituate to a climate not native; to acclimatize. | [verb] To adjust to a new environment; not necessarily a wild, natural, earthy one. | [verb] To become accustomed to a new climate or environment. ACCOMPLICE (20) [noun] An associate in the commission of a crime; a participator in an offense, whether a principal or an accessory. | [noun] A cooperator. ACCOMPLISH (21) [verb] To finish successfully. | [verb] To complete, as time or distance. | [verb] To execute fully; to fulfill; to complete successfully. ACCRUEMENT (16) [noun] The process of accumulating or the thing accumulated; accrual. ACCUMULATE (16) [verb] To heap up in a mass; to pile up; to collect or bring together (either literally or figuratively) | [verb] To grow or increase in quantity or number; to increase greatly. | [verb] To take a higher degree at the same time with a lower degree, or at a shorter interval than usual. ACCUSTOMED (17) [adjective] (of a person) Familiar with something through repeated experience; adapted to existing conditions. | [adjective] (of a thing, condition, activity, etc.) Familiar through use; usual; customary. | [adjective] Frequented by customers. ACETABULUM (16) [noun] The bony cup of the pelvis which receives the head of the femur. | [noun] The cavity in which the leg of an insect is inserted at its articulation with the body. | [noun] A sucker of the sepia or cuttlefish and related animals. ACETAMIDES (15) [noun] Organic compounds derived from acetic acid, containing the functional group COCH-NH, used in pharmaceuticals and industrial applications. ACHROMATIC (19) [adjective] Free from color; transmitting light without color-related distortion. | [adjective] Containing components such as achromatic lenses and prisms, designed to prevent color-related distortion. | [adjective] Uncolored; not absorbing color from a fluid; -- said of tissue ACIDIMETER (15) [noun] An instrument used to measure the acidity or concentration of an acid in a solution. ACIDIMETRY (18) [noun] The measurement of the strength of acids, especially by a chemical process based on the law of chemical combinations, or the fact that, to produce a complete reaction, a certain definite weight of reagent is required. ACOELOMATE (14) [adjective] (of an animal) lacking a body cavity or coelom between the body wall and internal organs. ACRIMONIES (14) [noun] Plural of acrimony; harsh or bitter speech, manner, or tone. ACROMEGALY (18) [noun] A chronic disease marked by enlargement of the bones of the extremities, face, and jaw that is caused by over-activity of the pituitary gland. ACRYLAMIDE (18) [noun] The amide of acrylic acid, CH2=CH.CONH2; used in the manufacture of polyacrylamides. ACTOMYOSIN (17) [noun] A protein complex composed of actin and myosin, found in muscle fibres. ADAMANCIES (15) [noun] Plural of adamancy; the quality of being adamant; inflexible determination or refusal to be persuaded. | [noun] Plural of adamant; an imaginary stone of impenetrable hardness, or a very hard substance. ADAMANTINE (13) [adjective] Made of adamant, or having the qualities of adamant; incapable of being broken, dissolved, or penetrated. | [adjective] Like the diamond in hardness or luster. ADJUSTMENT (20) [noun] The action of adjusting something | [noun] The result of adjusting something; a small change; a minor correction; a modification or alteration | [noun] The settling or balancing of a financial account ADMEASURED (14) [verb] Past tense of admeasure; to measure out or apportion. ADMEASURES (13) [verb] To measure out or apportion; to determine the proper proportions or dimensions of something. ADMINISTER (13) [verb] To cause to ingest (a drug), either by openly offering or through deceit. | [verb] To apportion out, distribute. | [verb] To manage or supervise the conduct, performance or execution of; to govern or regulate the parameters for the conduct, performance or execution of; to work in an administrative capacity. ADMIRATION (13) [noun] A positive emotion including wonder and approbation; the regarding of another as being wonderful | [noun] Wondering or questioning (without any particular positive or negative attitude to the subject). | [noun] Cause of admiration; something to excite wonder, or pleased surprise. ADMIRINGLY (17) [adverb] In an admiring manner. ADMISSIBLE (15) [adjective] Capable or deserving to be admitted, accepted or allowed; allowable, permissible, acceptable. | [adjective] Describing a heuristic that never overestimates the cost of reaching a goal. ADMISSIONS (13) [noun] The act or practice of admitting. | [noun] Permission to enter, or the entrance itself; admittance; entrance; access | [noun] The granting of an argument or position not fully proved; the act of acknowledging something asserted; acknowledgement; concession. ADMITTANCE (15) [noun] The act of admitting. | [noun] Permission to enter, the power or right of entrance. | [noun] Actual entrance, reception. ADMITTEDLY (17) [adverb] As is acknowledged to be true; by general admission; confessedly. ADMIXTURES (20) [noun] An instance of admixing, a mixing in of something. | [noun] A mixture, in some contexts ADMONISHED (17) [verb] To warn or notify of a fault; to reprove gently or kindly, but seriously; to exhort. | [verb] To counsel against wrong practices; to caution or advise; to warn against danger or an offense; — followed by of, against, or a subordinate clause. | [verb] To instruct or direct; to inform; to notify. ADMONISHER (16) [noun] One who admonishes; a person who warns or reprimands someone. ADMONISHES (16) [verb] To warn or notify of a fault; to reprove gently or kindly, but seriously; to exhort. | [verb] To counsel against wrong practices; to caution or advise; to warn against danger or an offense; — followed by of, against, or a subordinate clause. | [verb] To instruct or direct; to inform; to notify. ADMONITION (13) [noun] Gentle or friendly reproof; counseling against fault or oversight; warning. ADMONITORY (16) [adjective] Of or pertaining to an admonition; serving to reprove, warn or advise. ADORNMENTS (13) [noun] A decoration; that which adorns. | [noun] The act of decorating. ADUMBRATED (16) [verb] To foreshadow vaguely. | [verb] To give a vague outline. | [verb] To obscure or overshadow. ADUMBRATES (15) [verb] To foreshadow vaguely. | [verb] To give a vague outline. | [verb] To obscure or overshadow. ADVISEMENT (16) [noun] Consideration or deliberation. | [noun] Advice, counsel. AERENCHYMA (20) [noun] A spongy, airy tissue found especially in the roots of aquatic plants AERODROMES (13) [noun] An airfield: | [noun] A flying machine composed of aeroplanes. An aeroplane, particularly one constructed by or according to the design of Samuel Pierpont Langley and Charles M. Manly. AEROGRAMME (15) [noun] A wireless message. | [noun] A telegram whose transmission included at least one segment sent via airplane. | [noun] A thin piece of foldable and gummed paper for writing a letter and serving as its own envelope for transit via airmail. AEROMETERS (12) [noun] Instruments that measure the weight or density of air or gases. AERONOMERS (12) [noun] Scientists who study aeronomy, the branch of atmospheric science dealing with the upper atmosphere and its chemical and physical processes. AERONOMIES (12) [noun] The branch of science that studies the physics and chemistry of the upper atmosphere, particularly the ionosphere and thermosphere. AERONOMIST (12) [noun] A scientist who studies the atmosphere, particularly the upper atmosphere and its chemical and physical properties. AFFIRMABLE (20) AFFIRMANCE (20) [noun] The act of affirming or confirming a judgment, decree, or decision by a higher court. | [noun] Legal confirmation or ratification of a lower court's decision. AFFIXMENTS (25) [noun] The plural of affixment, meaning the act or process of attaching or fastening something to another object. | [noun] Things that are attached or affixed to a surface or structure. AFTERIMAGE (16) [noun] An image which persists or remains in negative after the original stimulation has ended. AFTERMATHS (18) [noun] A second mowing; the grass which grows after the first crop of hay in the same season. | [noun] That which happens after, that which follows, usually of strongly negative connotation in most contexts, implying a preceding catastrophe. AFTERTIMES (15) [noun] Future times; times that come after. | [noun] Descendants or future generations. AGREEMENTS (13) [noun] An understanding between entities to follow a specific course of conduct. | [noun] A state whereby several parties share a view or opinion; the state of not contradicting one another. | [noun] A legally binding contract enforceable in a court of law. AGRIMONIES (13) [noun] Any of several perennial herbaceous plants, of the genus Agrimonia, that have spikes of yellow flowers. | [noun] Any of several unrelated plants of a similar appearance. AGRONOMIES (13) [noun] The plural of agronomy, the science and practice of soil management and crop production. AGRONOMIST (13) [noun] A scientist whose speciality is agronomy. AIRMAILING (13) [verb] To send mail by air. | [verb] To (unintentionally) throw the ball well over a fielder's head where that fielder is unable to make a play on the ball. AIRMANSHIP (17) [noun] Skill in and knowledge of the work of navigating and operating an aircraft. AIRSTREAMS (12) [noun] A flow or current of air. | [noun] The flow of air around an object. ALARMINGLY (16) [adverb] In an alarming way, frighteningly. | [adverb] Causing fear or concern. | [adverb] To an extent that causes alarm. ALBUMINOUS (14) [adjective] Relating to, containing, or having the properties of albumen or albumin. ALCHEMICAL (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the medieval chemical science and philosophy of alchemy. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to an unexplainable transmutation. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the creation of something special out of a common material. ALCHEMISTS (17) [noun] One who practices alchemy. | [noun] One who blends material or substances in the nature or supposed nature of alchemy. ALCHEMIZED (27) [verb] To change something's properties by means of alchemy. ALCHEMIZES (26) [verb] To change something's properties by means of alchemy. ALCOHOLISM (17) [noun] A chronic disease caused by compulsive and uncontrollable consumption of alcoholic beverages, leading to addiction and deterioration in health and social functioning. | [noun] Acute alcohol poisoning. ALDERMANIC (15) ALDERWOMAN (16) [noun] A female alderman. ALDERWOMEN (16) [noun] A female alderman. ALGORITHMS (16) [noun] A collection of ordered steps that solve a mathematical problem. A precise step-by-step plan for a computational procedure that possibly begins with an input value and yields an output value in a finite number of steps. | [noun] Calculation with Arabic numerals; algorism. ALIGHTMENT (16) ALIGNMENTS (13) [noun] An arrangement of items in a line. | [noun] The process of adjusting a mechanism such that its parts are aligned; the condition of having its parts so adjusted. | [noun] An alliance of factions. ALIMENTARY (15) [adjective] Of, or relating to food, nutrition or digestion. | [adjective] Nourishing; nutritious. ALIMENTING (13) ALINEMENTS (12) ALLEMANDES (13) [noun] A popular instrumental dance form in Baroque music, and a standard element of a suite, generally the first or second movement. | [verb] To perform this dance. ALLOGAMIES (13) ALLOGAMOUS (13) ALLOMETRIC (14) ALLOMORPHS (17) [noun] Any of the different crystalline forms of a substance. | [noun] Any of the different phonological representations of a morpheme. ALLOTMENTS (12) [noun] The act of allotting. | [noun] Something allotted; a share, part, or portion granted or distributed | [noun] The allowance of a specific amount of money or other credit of a particular thing to a particular person. ALLUREMENT (12) ALMANDINES (13) [noun] A type of garnet having a deep red color, inclining to purple, with the chemical formula Fe3Al2(SiO4)3. ALMANDITES (13) ALMSGIVERS (16) ALMSGIVING (17) [noun] The act of voluntarily giving alms, of making donations to the poor, charity. ALMSHOUSES (15) [noun] A building of residence for the poor, sick or elderly of a parish. Originally founded by the Church. Usually a charity relying on donations for funding. ALPHAMERIC (19) ALTAZIMUTH (24) [noun] A telescope or surveying instrument that has a mount permitting both horizontal and vertical rotation ALTIMETERS (12) [noun] An apparatus for measuring altitude. ALTOCUMULI (14) [noun] A fleecy cloud formation consisting of large whitish or greyish globular cloudlets with shaded portions, often grouped in flocks or rows. (Abbreviated Ac.) ALUMINATES (12) ALUMINIUMS (14) ALUMINIZED (22) [verb] To coat with a layer of aluminium. ALUMINIZES (21) [verb] To coat with a layer of aluminium. AMALGAMATE (15) [verb] To merge, to combine, to blend, to join. | [verb] To make an alloy of a metal and mercury. | [verb] To combine (free groups) by identifying respective isomorphic subgroups. AMANTADINE (13) AMANUENSES (12) [noun] One employed to take dictation, or copy manuscripts. | [noun] A clerk, secretary or stenographer, or scribe. AMANUENSIS (12) [noun] One employed to take dictation, or copy manuscripts. | [noun] A clerk, secretary or stenographer, or scribe. AMASSMENTS (14) [noun] The act of amassing. | [noun] That which is amassed; a large quantity (of something). AMATEURISH (15) [adjective] Suggesting or reflecting the efforts of an amateur; not seeming professional or polished. AMATEURISM (14) [noun] Amateur beliefs and practices generally. | [noun] The opinion or conviction that sports ought not to be played for money. AMAZEMENTS (23) AMAZONITES (21) AMBASSADOR (15) [noun] A minister of the highest rank sent to a foreign court to represent there his sovereign or country. (Sometimes called ambassador-in-residence) | [noun] An official messenger and representative. | [noun] A corporate representative, often the public face of the company. AMBERJACKS (27) [noun] Any of several large food and game yellowtail fishes of the genus Seriola, found in warm waters of all oceans. AMBISEXUAL (21) [noun] An ambisexual person. | [adjective] Bisexual: attracted to persons of either sex. | [adjective] Unisex: fit for persons of either sex. AMBITIONED (15) AMBIVALENT (17) [adjective] Simultaneously experiencing or expressing opposing or contradictory feelings, beliefs, or motivations. | [adjective] Alternately having one opinion or feeling, and then the opposite. AMBLYOPIAS (19) AMBROTYPES (19) AMBULACRAL (16) AMBULACRUM (18) [noun] (of an echinoderm) A row of pores for the protrusion of appendages such as tube feet. AMBULANCES (16) [noun] An emergency vehicle designed for transporting seriously ill or injured people to a hospital. | [noun] A mobile field hospital. | [noun] A prairie wagon. AMBULATING (15) [verb] To walk; to relocate oneself under the power of one's own legs. AMBULATION (14) AMBULATORY (17) [noun] The round walkway encircling the altar in many cathedrals. | [noun] Any part of a building intended for walking in; a corridor. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or adapted to walking AMBUSCADED (18) [verb] To lie in wait for, or to attack from a covert or lurking place; to waylay. AMBUSCADER (17) AMBUSCADES (17) [noun] An ambush; a trap laid for an enemy. | [noun] The place in which troops lie hidden for an ambush. | [noun] The body of troops lying in ambush. AMBUSHMENT (19) AMEBOCYTES (19) AMELIORATE (12) [verb] To make better, or improve, something perceived to be in a negative condition. | [verb] To become better; improve. AMELOBLAST (14) AMENDATORY (16) AMENDMENTS (15) [noun] An alteration or change for the better; correction of a fault or of faults; reformation of life by quitting vices. | [noun] In public bodies, any alteration made or proposed to be made in a bill or motion that adds, changes, substitutes, or omits. | [noun] Correction of an error in a writ or process. AMENORRHEA (15) [noun] Absence of menstrual discharge. AMERCEMENT (16) [noun] A non-statutory monetary penalty or forfeiture. AMERCIABLE (16) AMERICIUMS (16) AMETROPIAS (14) AMIABILITY (17) [noun] Friendliness, especially easy approachability owing to a cheerful and pleasant disposition. AMIANTUSES (12) AMMONIACAL (16) [adjective] Pertaining to or containing ammonia. AMMONIATED (15) [verb] To treat with ammonia. AMMONIATES (14) [verb] To treat or combine with ammonia or ammonium compounds. | [verb] To impregnate with ammonia gas. AMMONIFIED (18) [verb] Past tense of ammonify; converted into ammonia or ammonium compounds through the action of bacteria or other agents. AMMONIFIES (17) [verb] To convert organic nitrogen compounds into ammonia or ammonium salts, typically through bacterial decomposition. AMMUNITION (14) [noun] Articles used in charging firearms and ordnance of all kinds; as powder, balls, shot, shells, percussion caps, rockets, etc. | [noun] Military stores, or provisions of all kinds for attack or defense. | [noun] Arguments and information that can be used against the other party in a conflict AMNESTYING (16) [verb] To grant a pardon (to a group) AMOEBIASES (14) [noun] Plural of amoebiasis, a disease caused by infection with amoebas, particularly Entamoeba histolytica, characterized by dysentery and intestinal inflammation. AMOEBIASIS (14) [noun] An infectious disease caused by the parasitic protozoan Entamoeba histolytica; amoebic dysentery. AMOEBOCYTE (19) [noun] A type of cell found in sponges that can move about and engulf food particles, functioning similarly to an amoeba. AMORALISMS (14) AMORTISING (13) [verb] To alienate (property) in mortmain. | [verb] To wipe out (a debt, liability etc.) gradually or in installments. | [verb] To even out the costs of running an algorithm over many iterations, so that high-cost iterations are much less frequent than low-cost iterations, which lowers the average running time. AMORTIZING (22) [verb] To alienate (property) in mortmain. | [verb] To wipe out (a debt, liability etc.) gradually or in installments. | [verb] To even out the costs of running an algorithm over many iterations, so that high-cost iterations are much less frequent than low-cost iterations, which lowers the average running time. AMPERSANDS (15) [noun] The symbol "&". AMPHIBIANS (19) [noun] An animal of the Amphibia; any four-legged vertebrate that does not have amniotic eggs, living both on land and in water. | [noun] A vehicle which can operate on land and water. See Wikipedia article on "Amphibious aircraft" AMPHIBIOUS (19) [adjective] Capable of functioning on land or in water. | [adjective] Occurring on both land and water. AMPHIBOLES (19) [noun] Any of a large group of structurally similar hydrated double silicate minerals, containing various combinations of sodium, calcium, magnesium, iron, and aluminium/aluminum AMPHIBRACH (24) [noun] A metrical foot in ancient Greek or Latin consisting of two short syllables surrounding one long one (e.g. amāta). | [noun] A metrical foot in modern prosody, consisting of three syllables, the middle one of which is stressed (e.g. Jamaica). AMPHIMACER (21) [noun] A metrical foot consisting of three syllables with the stress on the first and third syllables, used in classical poetry. AMPHIMIXES (26) [noun] Plural of amphimixis, the union of two gametes in sexual reproduction. AMPHIMIXIS (26) [noun] Sexual reproduction | [noun] The union of a male and female gamete AMPHIPHILE (22) [noun] A molecule with both hydrophilic (water-loving) and hydrophobic (water-repelling) regions, commonly found in surfactants and cell membranes. AMPHIPLOID (20) [noun] An organism that contains chromosome sets from two or more different species, typically arising from hybridization followed by chromosome doubling. AMPHOTERIC (19) [adjective] Having the characteristics of both an acid and a base, and capable of reacting as either; amphiprotic. AMPICILLIN (16) [noun] A broad-spectrum antibiotic having a beta-lactam structure. AMPLEXUSES (21) [noun] Plural of amplexus, the mating position of amphibians in which the male clasps the female from behind to fertilize eggs as they are laid. AMPLIDYNES (18) [noun] A type of electrical amplifier or generator used in control systems that amplifies small electrical signals to produce larger output currents or voltages. AMPLIFIERS (17) [noun] Anything that amplifies, or makes something larger or more intense. | [noun] An adverb that adds intensity, such as "really" or "totally". | [noun] An appliance or circuit that increases the strength of a weak electrical signal without changing the other characteristics of the signal. AMPLIFYING (21) [verb] To render larger, more extended, or more intense. | [verb] To enlarge by addition or commenting; to treat copiously by adding particulars, illustrations, etc.; to expand. | [verb] To increase the amplitude of something, especially of an electric current. AMPLITUDES (15) [noun] The measure of something's size, especially in terms of width or breadth; largeness, magnitude. | [noun] The maximum absolute value of the vertical component of a curve or function, especially one that is periodic. | [noun] The maximum absolute value of some quantity that varies. AMPUTATING (15) [verb] To surgically remove a part of the body, especially a limb AMPUTATION (14) [noun] Surgical removal of all or part of a limb, etc. | [noun] The loss of a limb, etc. through trauma AMUSEMENTS (14) [noun] Entertainment. | [noun] An activity that is entertaining or amusing, such as dancing, gunning, or fishing. AMYGDALINS (17) [noun] Naturally occurring cyanogenic glycosides found in plants such as almonds and apple seeds, which release cyanide when broken down. AMYGDALOID (18) [noun] A variety of trap or basaltic rock, containing small cavities, occupied, wholly or in part, by nodules or geodes of different minerals, especially agates, quartz, calcite, and the zeolites. When the imbedded minerals are detached or removed by decomposition, it is porous, like lava. | [adjective] Shaped like an almond | [adjective] Relating to the amygdala AMYLOLYTIC (20) [adjective] Relating to or capable of breaking down starch into simpler sugars through enzymatic action. AMYLOPLAST (17) [noun] A plastid in plant cells that stores starch. AMYLOPSINS (17) [noun] Enzymes that break down starch into sugars, found in saliva and the pancreas; amylase enzymes. AMYOTONIAS (15) [noun] Plural of amyotonia; a condition characterized by lack of muscle tone or weakness in muscles. ANABAPTISM (16) [noun] A religious movement of the 16th century that rejected infant baptism and advocated for the baptism of believers only. ANABOLISMS (14) [noun] The plural of anabolism, referring to metabolic processes that build up complex molecules from simpler ones, typically requiring energy and resulting in growth and repair of body tissues. ANADROMOUS (13) [adjective] (of a migratory fish) That lives in the sea and breeds in fresh water. | [adjective] Of a fern in which the first veins in a frond segment are produced towards the apex of the frond. ANAGRAMMED (16) [verb] Past tense of anagram; to rearrange the letters of a word or phrase to form another word or phrase. | [adjective] Formed by rearranging letters from another word or phrase. ANALEMMATA (14) [noun] Plural of analemma, a figure-eight curve traced by the sun's position in the sky at the same clock time throughout a year, used in sundial design and astronomy. ANAMNESTIC (14) [adjective] That aids memory; mnemonic | [adjective] Of or pertaining to anamnesis ANAMORPHIC (19) [adjective] Producing various optically distorted images. | [adjective] Of or relating to the anamorph, an asexual stage in the development of certain fungi. ANARCHISMS (17) [noun] Plural of anarchism; political or social philosophies that reject hierarchical authority and advocate for societies organized without coercive government. ANASTIGMAT (13) [noun] An anastigmatic lens. ANASTOMOSE (12) [verb] (of streams and rivers, blood vessels, etc) To join (two or more things) by anastomosis, to interconnect forming a network. | [verb] (of rivers, blood vessels, etc) To join by anastomosis. | [adjective] Joined or run together. Interconnected ANATHEMATA (15) [noun] Plural of anathema; things or people that are cursed, denounced, or regarded with disgust and hatred. | [noun] In Christian liturgy, formal curses or excommunications pronounced by the church. ANATOMICAL (14) [adjective] Of or relating to anatomy or dissection. ANATOMISED (13) [verb] To inspect or investigate by dissection. | [verb] To scrutinize down to the most minute detail. ANATOMISES (12) [verb] To inspect or investigate by dissection. | [verb] To scrutinize down to the most minute detail. ANATOMISTS (12) [noun] One who studies, teaches, writes on, or does research on anatomy and anatomical structures. ANATOMIZED (22) [verb] To inspect or investigate by dissection. | [verb] To scrutinize down to the most minute detail. ANATOMIZES (21) [verb] To inspect or investigate by dissection. | [verb] To scrutinize down to the most minute detail. ANDROECIUM (15) [noun] The set of a flower's stamens. ANDROMEDAS (14) [noun] Any shrub of the genus Pieris (family Ericaceae), having leathery leaves and small flowers. | [noun] Bog rosemary. ANEMICALLY (17) [adverb] In a manner characterized by anemia or lacking in color, vitality, or force; weakly or feebly. ANEMOGRAPH (18) [noun] An anemometer that makes a graphical recording. ANEMOMETER (14) [noun] An instrument for measuring and recording the speed of the wind, a windmeter. ANEMOMETRY (17) [noun] The science and practice of measuring the speed and direction of wind using instruments called anemometers. ANEURYSMAL (15) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of an aneurysm; abnormally enlarged or dilated. ANGIOGRAMS (14) [noun] An X-ray image of the blood vessels gained after the injection of a radiopaque contrast medium. ANGIOSPERM (15) [noun] Any plant of the clade Angiosperms, characterized by having ovules enclosed in an ovary; a flowering plant. ANGLEWORMS (16) [noun] Earthworms, particularly those used as fishing bait. ANGLICISMS (15) [noun] A word or other feature originating in the English language that has been borrowed by another language. | [noun] A Briticism. | [noun] A cultural aspect typical of the English people. ANIMADVERT (16) [verb] To criticise, to censure. | [verb] To consider. | [verb] To turn judicial attention (to); to criticise or punish. ANIMALCULA (14) [noun] Microscopic or extremely small animals, especially those visible only under a microscope; plural of animalculum. ANIMALCULE (14) [noun] A small animal. | [noun] A microscopic aquatic animal or protozoan. | [noun] A spermatozoon. ANIMALIERS (12) [noun] Artists who specialize in depicting animals in their work, particularly in painting and sculpture. ANIMALISMS (14) [noun] Plural of animalism; the doctrine or practice of emphasizing animal nature or appetites over intellectual or spiritual concerns. | [noun] Artistic or literary movements that emphasize animal subjects or characteristics. ANIMALIZED (22) [verb] To represent in the form of an animal. | [verb] To brutalize. | [verb] To convert or produce material rich in animal substance. ANIMALIZES (21) [verb] To represent in the form of an animal. | [verb] To brutalize. | [verb] To convert or produce material rich in animal substance. ANIMALLIKE (16) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of an animal; having qualities similar to those of animals rather than humans. ANIMATEDLY (16) [adverb] In a lively, spirited, or enthusiastic manner. ANIMATIONS (12) [noun] The act of animating, or giving life or spirit. | [noun] (in the sense of a cartoon) The technique of making inanimate objects or drawings appear to move in motion pictures or computer graphics; the object (film, computer game, etc.) so produced | [noun] The state of being lively, brisk, or full of spirit and vigor; vivacity; spiritedness ANNULMENTS (12) [noun] An act or instance of annulling. | [noun] The state of having been annulled. | [noun] An invalidation of something, especially a legal contract. ANOINTMENT (12) [noun] The act or ceremony of anointing, especially as a religious rite. | [noun] The oil or ointment used in anointing. ANTAGONISM (13) [noun] A strong natural dislike or hatred; antipathy. ANTEBELLUM (14) [adjective] Of the time period prior to a war. | [adjective] In the United States of America, of the period prior to the American Civil War, especially in reference to the culture of the southern states. ANTEMORTEM (14) [adjective] Having been inflicted or having occurred before death. ANTHURIUMS (15) [noun] Any of several tropical American evergreen plants, of the genus Anthurium, grown for their ornamental leaves and spathes ANTIANEMIA (12) ANTIASTHMA (15) [adjective] Effective against or used to treat asthma. ANTICLIMAX (21) [noun] A failed or reverse climax, particularly: ANTIDROMIC (15) [adjective] (of a nerve impulse) flowing in the opposite direction from normal ANTIEMETIC (14) [noun] A drug that combats nausea and vomiting | [adjective] That combats nausea and vomiting ANTIFAMILY (18) ANTIFEMALE (15) ANTIMARKET (16) ANTIMATTER (12) [noun] Matter that is composed of the antiparticles of those that constitute normal matter. | [noun] A form of matter that has a key property, such as charge, opposite to that of ordinary matter. ANTIMERGER (13) ANTIMODERN (13) ANTIMONIAL (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing antimony. | [noun] A substance containing antimony, especially used historically in medicine. ANTIMONIDE (13) [noun] A binary compound of antimony with a more electropositive element or radical. ANTIMONIES (12) [noun] Plural of antimony, a brittle silvery-white metallic element. | [noun] Direct contradictions or conflicts between principles, laws, or statements. ANTIMYCINS (17) [noun] Plural of antimycin, a type of antibiotic compound that inhibits cellular respiration by blocking electron transport in mitochondria. ANTINOMIAN (12) [noun] One who embraces antinomianism. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to antinomianism. | [adjective] Rejecting moral authority. ANTINOMIES (12) [noun] An apparent contradiction between valid conclusions; a paradox ANTIRACISM (14) [noun] Opposition to racism | [adjective] Acting to combat or prevent racism ANTIREFORM (15) ANTISERUMS (12) [noun] Plural of antiserum; blood serum containing antibodies against a specific antigen, used for immunization or treatment. ANTISMOKER (16) ANTONYMIES (15) [noun] Plural of antonymy; the relationship between words with opposite meanings, or words that are antonyms of each other. ANTONYMOUS (15) [adjective] Expressing or containing antonyms; characterized by opposite meanings or words of contrary significance. APARTMENTS (14) [noun] A complete domicile occupying only part of a building, especially one for rent; a flat. | [noun] A suite of rooms within a domicile, designated for a specific person or persons and including a bedroom. | [noun] A division of an enclosure that is separate from others; a compartment APOENZYMES (26) [noun] Protein molecules that lack their prosthetic groups or coenzymes and are therefore catalytically inactive. APOPHTHEGM (23) [noun] A short, witty, instructive saying; an aphorism or maxim. APOSEMATIC (16) [adjective] (of a coloration or marking) That serves as a warning to predators, as of toxicity, especially falsely. APOTHECIUM (19) [noun] A cup-shaped or disc-shaped fruiting body in lichens and fungi that contains asci or spores. | [noun] In fungi, a structure that produces and releases spores. AQUAMARINE (21) [noun] The bluish-green colour of the sea. | [noun] A bluish-green variety of beryl. | [adjective] Of a bluish-green colour. ARBORETUMS (14) [noun] A place where many varieties of tree are grown for research, educational, and ornamental purposes. ARGUMENTUM (15) ARITHMETIC (17) [noun] The mathematics of numbers (integers, rational numbers, real numbers, or complex numbers) under the operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or using arithmetic; arithmetical. | [adjective] Of a progression, mean, etc, computed solely using addition. ARMADILLOS (13) [noun] Any of the burrowing mammals covered with bony, jointed, protective plates, order Cingulata, found in the Americas, especially in South America. ARMATURING (13) ARMIGEROUS (13) [adjective] Bearing or entitled to bear heraldic arms; of noble or gentle birth. ARMISTICES (14) [noun] A (short) cessation of combat; a ceasefire, a truce. | [noun] A formal agreement, especially between nations, to end combat. ARMORIALLY (15) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of heraldic armor or coats of arms. AROMATIZED (22) [verb] To make aromatic, fragrant, or spicy. | [verb] To convert into an aromatic compound by means of a chemical reaction. AROMATIZES (21) [verb] To make aromatic, fragrant, or spicy. | [verb] To convert into an aromatic compound by means of a chemical reaction. ARRESTMENT (12) [noun] The action of arresting (in any sense) | [noun] The process that prohibits a debtor from making payment to the creditor until another debt due to the person making use of the arrestment by such creditor is paid. ARRHYTHMIA (21) [noun] An irregular heartbeat. | [noun] A disease entity involving such beats, such as atrial fibrillation, ventricular tachycardia, AV nodal reentrant tachycardia, or others. ARRHYTHMIC (23) [adjective] Without rhythm. | [adjective] Suffering from cardiac arrhythmia. ARROWWORMS (18) [noun] Marine animals of the phylum Chaetognatha, small transparent predatory worms found in ocean waters. ARTEMISIAS (12) [noun] Any of many aromatic flowering plants of the genus Artemisia, including wormwood, sagebrush, and tarragon. ASCETICISM (16) [noun] The principles and practices of an ascetic; extreme self-denial and austerity. ASCOGONIUM (15) [noun] The female reproductive structure in ascomycete fungi that produces asci after fertilization. ASCOMYCETE (19) [noun] Any fungus of the phylum Ascomycota, characterized by the production of a sac, or ascus, which contains non-motile spores. ASPARTAMES (14) [noun] Plural of aspartame, an artificial sweetener used as a sugar substitute in food and beverages. ASPHALTUMS (17) [noun] Plural of asphaltum, a natural or artificial bituminous substance used in paving and roofing materials. ASSEMBLAGE (15) [noun] The process of assembling or bringing together. | [noun] A collection of things which have been gathered together or assembled. | [noun] A gathering of people. ASSEMBLERS (14) [noun] A program that reads source code written in assembly language and produces executable machine code, possibly together with information needed by linkers, debuggers and other tools. | [noun] Assembly language. | [noun] One who assembles items. ASSEMBLIES (14) [noun] A set of pieces that work together in unison as a mechanism or device. | [noun] The act of putting together a set of pieces, fragments, or elements. | [noun] A congregation of people in one place for a purpose. ASSEMBLING (15) [verb] To put together. | [verb] To gather as a group. | [verb] To translate from assembly language to machine code ASSESSMENT (12) [noun] The act of assessing or an amount (of tax, levy or duty etc) assessed. | [noun] An appraisal or evaluation. ASSIGNMENT (13) [noun] The act of assigning; the allocation of a job or a set of tasks. | [noun] The categorization of something as belonging to a specific category. | [noun] An assigned task. ASSIMILATE (12) [noun] Something that is or has been assimilated. | [verb] To incorporate nutrients into the body, especially after digestion. | [verb] To incorporate or absorb (knowledge) into the mind. ASSOILMENT (12) [noun] The act of absolving or freeing from guilt or blame; acquittal or exoneration. ASSORTMENT (12) [noun] A collection of varying but related items. ASSUMPSITS (14) [noun] Plural of assumpsit, a legal action for breach of an express or implied contract. | [noun] Contracts or promises made by one person to another. ASSUMPTION (14) [noun] The act of assuming, or taking to or upon oneself; the act of taking up or adopting. | [noun] The act of taking for granted, or supposing a thing without proof; a supposition; an unwarrantable claim. | [noun] The thing supposed; a postulate, or proposition assumed; a supposition. ASSUMPTIVE (17) [adjective] Held as true or valid without evidence. | [adjective] Forward or presumptuous. | [adjective] (of arms) Originally, being arms which a person had a right to assume, in consequence of an exploit; now, those assumed without sanction of the Heralds' College. ASTHMATICS (17) [noun] A person who suffers from asthma. ASTIGMATIC (15) [adjective] Relating to or affected by astigmatism, a refractive error of the eye in which the cornea or lens has an irregular shape, causing blurred vision at all distances. ASTRODOMES (13) [noun] A transparent dome in the fuselage of an aircraft or spacecraft through which navigational observations may be made ASTROMETRY (15) [noun] The branch of astronomy that deals with the measurement of the positions and motions of celestial bodies, particularly stars. ASTRONOMER (12) [noun] One who studies astronomy, the stars or the physical universe; a scientist whose area of research is astronomy or astrophysics ASTRONOMIC (14) [adjective] Extremely large in number or amount; relating to astronomy or astronomers. ASYMMETRIC (19) [adjective] Not symmetric. | [adjective] Not involving a mutual exchange of keys between the sender and receiver. | [adjective] Of a relation R on a set S: having the property that for any two elements of S (not necessarily distinct), at least one is not related to the other via R. ASYMPTOTES (17) [noun] A straight line which a curve approaches arbitrarily closely, as they go to infinity. The limit of the curve, its tangent "at infinity". | [noun] (by extension) Anything which comes near to but never meets something else. ASYMPTOTIC (19) [adjective] Approaching a value or curve but never quite reaching it, as a line that gets progressively closer to a curve or axis without intersecting it. ATHENAEUMS (15) [noun] Plural of athenæum; institutions or literary clubs, often housing libraries and reading rooms, named after the Athenaeum in ancient Rome. | [noun] Reading rooms or literary institutions devoted to scientific and literary pursuits. ATHEROMATA (15) [noun] Plural of atheroma; deposits of fatty substances in artery walls that characterize atherosclerosis. | [noun] Abnormal accumulations of lipids and other substances in tissues or organs. ATMOMETERS (14) [noun] Instruments that measure the rate of evaporation of water from a surface into the atmosphere. ATMOSPHERE (17) [noun] The gases surrounding the Earth or any astronomical body. | [noun] The air in a particular place. | [noun] The apparent mood felt in an environment. ATOMICALLY (17) [adverb] In a manner relating to or consisting of atoms. | [adverb] In a way that cannot be broken down into smaller parts; indivisibly. ATONALISMS (12) [noun] The plural of atonalism, a compositional technique in music that deliberately avoids establishing a tonal center or key. | [noun] Artistic or philosophical practices that reject or avoid tonality or traditional harmonic structures. ATONEMENTS (12) [noun] Making amends to restore a damaged relationship; expiation. | [noun] (often with capitalized initial) The reconciliation of God and mankind through the death of Jesus. | [noun] Reconciliation; restoration of friendly relations; concord. ATTACHMENT (17) [noun] The act or process of (physically or figuratively) attaching. | [noun] A strong bonding with or fondness for someone or something. | [noun] A dependence, especially a strong one. ATTAINMENT (12) [noun] The act of attaining; the act of arriving at or reaching; the act of obtaining by exertion or effort. | [noun] That which is attained, or obtained by exertion; acquisition; acquirement. ATTEMPERED (15) [verb] Past tense of attemper; to moderate or regulate the temperature or consistency of something, especially in metallurgy or music. ATTEMPTING (15) [verb] To try. | [verb] To try to move, by entreaty, by afflictions, or by temptations; to tempt. | [verb] To try to win, subdue, or overcome. ATTORNMENT (12) [noun] The consent of a tenant to the transfer of his relationship to his landlord to another person. ATTUNEMENT (12) [noun] The act of bringing into harmony or accord with something. | [noun] A sympathetic understanding or relationship between people or things. AUDIOGRAMS (14) [noun] A graphical representation of the hearing ability of a person AUDIOMETER (13) [noun] An instrument used to measure hearing ability and detect hearing loss by producing sounds of varying frequencies and intensities. AUDIOMETRY (16) [noun] The quantitative assessment of a person's hearing ability, especially by means of an audiometer. AUDITORIUM (13) [noun] A large room for public meetings or performances. | [noun] (in a theater, etc.) The space where the audience is located. AUGMENTERS (13) [noun] Plural of augmenter; things or people that augment or increase something. | [noun] In grammar or linguistics, elements that add to or modify the meaning of other elements. AUGMENTING (14) [verb] To increase; to make larger or supplement. | [verb] To grow; to increase; to become greater. | [verb] To slow the tempo or meter, e.g. for a dramatic or stately passage. AUGMENTORS (13) [noun] Plural of augmentor; one who or that which augments or increases something. | [noun] In gaming contexts, items or abilities that enhance or boost character stats or performance. AUSFORMING (16) [noun] A heat treatment process in which austenite steel is deformed while cooling, resulting in improved mechanical properties. AUTOECISMS (14) [noun] Plural of autoecism; a condition in rust fungi where both the pycnial and aecial stages occur on the same host plant species. AUTOGAMIES (13) [noun] The fertilization of a flower by its own pollen; self-fertilization in plants. AUTOGAMOUS (13) [adjective] Capable of self-fertilization or reproducing by means of its own pollen or spores without cross-pollination. AUTOIMMUNE (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to autoimmunity. AUTOMAKERS (16) [noun] One who manufactures automobiles; typically used to refer to a large corporation such as General Motors. AUTOMATICS (14) [noun] A car with automatic transmission. | [noun] A semi-automatic pistol. AUTOMATING (13) [verb] To replace or enhance human labor with machines. AUTOMATION (12) [noun] The act or process of converting the controlling of a machine or device to a more automatic system, such as computer or electronic controls. AUTOMATISM (14) [noun] Acting automatically or involuntarily. | [noun] The power of initiating vital processes from within the cell, organ, or organism, independent of external stimulus. | [noun] The doctrine that animals are automata, operating according to mechanical laws. AUTOMATIST (12) [noun] A person who practices automatism, especially in art or writing, allowing the subconscious mind to express itself without conscious control. AUTOMATIZE (21) [verb] To make or become automatic. | [verb] To cause to be automated; to automate. AUTOMATONS (12) [noun] A machine or robot designed to follow a precise sequence of instructions. | [noun] A person who acts like a machine or robot, often defined as having a monotonous lifestyle and lacking in emotion. | [noun] A formal system, such as finite automaton. AUTOMOBILE (14) [noun] A type of vehicle designed to move on the ground under its own stored power and intended to carry a driver, a small number of additional passengers, and a very limited amount of other load. A car or motorcar. | [verb] To travel by automobile. | [adjective] Self-moving; self-propelled. AUTOMOTIVE (15) [noun] A shop or company that sells motor vehicle parts | [adjective] Having the ability to move by itself; self-propelled or self-propelling. | [adjective] Of, or relating to motor vehicles. AUTONOMIES (12) [noun] Self-government; freedom to act or function independently. | [noun] The capacity to make an informed, uncoerced decision. | [noun] The capacity of a system to make a decision about its actions without the involvement of another system or operator. AUTONOMIST (12) [noun] A person who advocates for or supports autonomy or self-government, especially in political contexts. | [noun] A member of an autonomist movement seeking independence or self-rule for a region or group. AUTONOMOUS (12) [adjective] Self-governing. Intelligent, sentient, self-aware, thinking, feeling, governing independently. | [adjective] Acting on one's own or independently; of a child, acting without being governed by parental or guardian rules. | [adjective] (Celtic linguistics, of a verb form) Used with no subject, indicating an unknown or unspecified agent; used in similar situations as the passive in English (the difference being that the theme in the English passive construction is the subject, while in the Celtic autonomous construction the theme is the object and there is no subject). AUTOTOMIES (12) [noun] The act or process of an animal shedding or casting off a body part, such as a lizard dropping its tail when threatened. | [noun] In medical terminology, the surgical removal or amputation of a limb or body part. AUTOTOMIZE (21) [verb] To cast off or shed a body part, such as a limb or tail, as a defense mechanism or means of escape. AUTOTOMOUS (12) [adjective] Capable of or relating to autotomy, the ability of an animal to voluntarily detach or sever a body part to escape danger. AUTUMNALLY (15) [adverb] In a manner characteristic of or relating to autumn; during the autumn season or in an autumnal way. AVGOLEMONO (16) [noun] A Greek soup made with chicken or meat broth, eggs, and lemon juice, typically thickened with rice or pasta. AVOUCHMENT (20) [noun] The act of avouching; a solemn assertion or avowal. | [noun] Something that is avouched or asserted as true. AXIOMATIZE (28) [verb] To establish a set of axioms that describe or govern certain phenomena AXOPLASMIC (23) [adjective] Relating to or composed of axoplasm, the cytoplasm of an axon. BABBLEMENT (18) BACKGAMMON (23) [noun] A board game for two players in which each has 15 stones which move between 24 triangular points according to the roll of a pair of dice; the object is to move all of one's pieces around, and bear them off the board. | [noun] A victory in the game when the loser has not borne off a stone, and still has one or more stones in the winner's inner home row or on the bar. | [verb] To win at a backgammon game with the opponent having one or more pieces in the winner’s inner home row or on the bar. BACTEREMIA (16) [noun] The medical condition of having bacteria in the bloodstream. BACTEREMIC (18) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by bacteremia, a condition in which bacteria are present in the bloodstream. BADMINTONS (15) [noun] The plural form of badminton, referring to multiple games or instances of the sport played with rackets and a shuttlecock. BADMOUTHED (19) [verb] To criticize or malign, especially unfairly or spitefully. BAFFLEMENT (20) [noun] The state of being confused or bewildered. | [noun] Something that confuses or perplexes. BALMACAANS (16) [noun] A loose overcoat of a certain type, with raglan sleeves BAMBOOZLED (26) [verb] To con, defraud, trick, to make a fool of, to humbug or impose on someone. | [verb] To confuse, frustrate or perplex. BAMBOOZLES (25) [verb] To con, defraud, trick, to make a fool of, to humbug or impose on someone. | [verb] To confuse, frustrate or perplex. BANDMASTER (15) [noun] The conductor of a musical ensemble, especially a brass or military band. BANISHMENT (17) [noun] The act of banishing. | [noun] The state of being banished, exile. BARBARISMS (16) [noun] A barbaric act. | [noun] The condition of existing barbarically. | [noun] A word hybridizing Ancient Greek and Latin or other heterogeneous roots. BARNSTORMS (14) [noun] A series of appearances in small country towns, as by a politician or a travelling theatre group. | [verb] To travel around the countryside making political speeches etc. | [verb] To appear at fairs and carnivals in exhibitions of stunt flying, sporting events, or theater. BAROMETERS (14) [noun] An instrument for measuring atmospheric pressure. | [noun] (by extension) Anything used as a gauge or indicator. BAROMETRIC (16) [adjective] Relating to or measured by a barometer; indicating changes in atmospheric pressure. | [adjective] Serving as an indicator or measure of something's condition or trend. BARRAMUNDA (15) [noun] A large freshwater fish native to Australia and Southeast Asia, known for its ability to breathe air and migrate between freshwater and saltwater environments. BARRAMUNDI (15) [noun] A species of diadromous fish, Lates calcarifer, of the Centropomidae family, order Perciformes. BATHYMETRY (23) [noun] The measurement of the depths of the seas. BATTEMENTS (14) [noun] A ballet move involving a beating action with an extended leg | [noun] A thumping or beating sensation BATTLEMENT (14) [noun] In fortification: an indented parapet, formed by a series of rising members called cops or merlons, separated by openings called crenelles or embrasures, the soldier sheltering himself behind the merlon while he fires through the embrasure or through a loophole in the battlement. | [noun] Any high wall for defense. | [noun] The towering roof of heaven. BEACHCOMBS (23) [verb] To search a beach for shells, sea glass, or other items of interest. | [noun] Plural of beachcomb; people who search beaches for collectible items. BECHARMING (20) BECLAMORED (17) BECOMINGLY (20) [adverb] In a manner that is attractive, flattering, or appropriate to one's appearance or station. | [adverb] In a way that is fitting or suitable to the circumstances. BEDCHAMBER (22) [noun] A bedroom. BEDIMPLING (18) BEDLAMITES (15) [noun] Inmates or patients of Bedlam, a historical psychiatric hospital in London, or people who are considered mad or chaotic. | [noun] Chaotic or frenzied people; those who behave wildly or recklessly. BEFORETIME (17) BEGLAMORED (16) BEGLAMOURS (15) BEGLOOMING (16) BEGRIMMING (18) [verb] Present participle of begrim; to make or become grimy or dirty. BEJUMBLING (24) BELEMNITES (14) [noun] Any member of the extinct order †Belemnitida of Mesozoic marine cephalopods, very similar in many ways to the modern squid and closely related to the modern cuttlefish. BEMADAMING (18) BEMADDENED (17) [verb] Past tense of bemadden; driven to madness or made extremely angry. BEMEDALLED (16) [adjective] Decorated with or wearing medals, especially military decorations. BEMINGLING (16) BEMUDDLING (17) [verb] Present participle of bemuddle; to confuse or bewilder someone. | [adjective] In a state of confusion or bewilderment. BEMURMURED (17) BEMUSEMENT (16) [noun] The state of being bemused. BEMUZZLING (33) [verb] Present participle of bemuzzle; to put a muzzle on or to silence someone or something. BENCHMARKS (23) [noun] A standard by which something is evaluated or measured. | [noun] A surveyor's mark made on some stationary object and shown on a map; used as a reference point. | [noun] A computer program that is executed to assess the performance of the runtime environment. BEPIMPLING (19) BERKELIUMS (18) [noun] Plural of berkelium, a synthetic radioactive element with atomic number 97. BERYLLIUMS (17) [noun] Plural of beryllium, a hard, lightweight metallic element with atomic number 4. BESETMENTS (14) [noun] Plural of besetment; the state of being beset or harassed persistently. | [noun] Persistent troubles, difficulties, or annoyances that surround or afflict someone. BESMEARING (15) [verb] To smear over; smear all over; sully. BESMIRCHED (20) [verb] To make dirty. | [verb] To tarnish something, especially someone's reputation. BESMIRCHES (19) [verb] To make dirty. | [verb] To tarnish something, especially someone's reputation. BESMOOTHED (18) BESMUDGING (17) [verb] Present participle of besmudge; to make smudged or dirty with marks or stains. BESMUTTING (15) [verb] Present participle of besmut; to soil or blacken with smut or soot. BESWARMING (18) BETHUMPING (20) BETTERMENT (14) [noun] An improvement. | [noun] An improvement to a property that adds to its value. BEVOMITING (18) BIBLICISMS (18) [noun] Expressions, phrases, or linguistic features characteristic of or derived from the Bible or biblical language. BICHROMATE (19) [noun] A salt or ester of dichromic acid, containing the dichromate ion (Cr₂O₇²⁻), commonly used as an oxidizing agent in chemistry. BIGAMOUSLY (18) [adverb] In a manner involving or characterized by bigamy; while married to more than one person at the same time. BIGEMINIES (15) [noun] A cardiac arrhythmia in which every other heartbeat is a premature contraction, resulting in a pattern of two beats followed by a pause. BIGMOUTHED (19) [adjective] Loudmouthed or inclined to talk too much; characterized by indiscreet or boastful speech. BIMANUALLY (17) [adverb] Using both hands simultaneously or in a coordinated manner. BIMETALLIC (16) [noun] Anything (especially a nanoparticle) composed of two metals | [adjective] Pertaining to the use of gold and silver to create legal currency. | [adjective] More generally, consisting of two metals. BIMODALITY (18) [noun] The state or quality of having two distinct modes or peaks in a distribution or dataset. BINOMIALLY (17) [adverb] In a manner relating to or expressed as a binomial; according to binomial principles or distribution. BIOCHEMIST (19) [noun] A chemist whose speciality is biochemistry BIODYNAMIC (20) [adjective] Relating to an organic farming method that treats soil, plants, and animals as a unified and interrelated system, using specific preparations and timing based on lunar cycles. | [adjective] Of or relating to the application of biodynamic principles to agriculture or viticulture. BIOLOGISMS (15) [noun] Plural of biologism; theories or doctrines that emphasize biological factors as determinants of social, cultural, or behavioral phenomena. BIOMEDICAL (17) [noun] A product of the biomedicine industry. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to biomedicine. BIOMETRICS (16) [noun] The automated measurement of biological data. | [noun] The automated recognition of individuals based on their behavioural and biological characteristics. BIOMETRIES (14) [noun] The plural of biometry; the statistical analysis of biological data. | [noun] Measurements and statistical analysis of biological characteristics, such as fingerprints or iris patterns, used for identification purposes. BIOMIMETIC (18) [adjective] Of, related to, or produced by biomimetics BIOMORPHIC (21) [adjective] Resembling or suggestive of living organisms in form or design. BIOPOLYMER (19) [noun] Any macromolecule of a living organism that is formed from the polymerization of smaller entities; a polymer that occurs in a living organism or results from life. BIORHYTHMS (23) [noun] Any cyclic biological or physiological pattern or activity | [noun] (pseudoscience) Any of three sinusoidal graphs, normally plotted by computer, having a person's birthdate as origin, that that are supposed to give meaningful information about emotional levels, physical energy levels, and mental/psychic sensitivity. BIPEDALISM (17) [noun] The practice or condition of walking on two legs as the primary form of locomotion. BIPYRAMIDS (20) [noun] Plural of bipyramid; geometric solids formed by joining two pyramids base-to-base, having two apexes and a polygonal middle section. BIRDLIMING (16) [verb] The act of catching birds by coating twigs or branches with a sticky substance called birdlime. | [noun] The practice or technique of trapping birds using birdlime. BIRTHMARKS (21) [noun] A mark on the skin formed before birth. BITUMINIZE (23) [verb] To treat with bitumen BITUMINOUS (14) [noun] Bituminous coal. | [noun] A type or grade of bituminous coal. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to bitumen. BLACKAMOOR (20) [noun] A person with dark skin, especially one from north Africa | [noun] A blackamoor slave, a blackamoor servant; and hence any slave, servant, inferior, or child | [noun] A stylized Negro BLACKMAILS (20) [verb] To extort money or favors from (a person) by exciting fears of injury other than bodily harm, such as injury to reputation, distress of mind, false accusation, etc. | [verb] (Kenya) To speak ill of someone; to defame someone. BLACKSMITH (23) [noun] A person who forges iron. | [noun] A person who shoes horses. | [noun] A blackish fish of the Pacific coast (Chromis punctipinnis). BLAMEFULLY (20) [adverb] In a manner deserving or involving blame; culpably or reprehensibly. BLANCMANGE (17) [noun] A simple dessert made by cooking sweetened milk with cornstarch and vanilla. | [noun] A dish, eaten in the Middle Ages, generally consisting of chicken (or sometimes capon or fish), milk or almond milk, rice and sugar. BLASPHEMED (20) [verb] To commit blasphemy; to speak against God or religious doctrine. | [verb] To speak of, or address, with impious irreverence; to revile impiously (anything sacred). | [verb] To calumniate; to revile; to abuse. BLASPHEMER (19) [noun] A person who speaks irreverently or disrespectfully about religion or sacred things. BLASPHEMES (19) [verb] To commit blasphemy; to speak against God or religious doctrine. | [verb] To speak of, or address, with impious irreverence; to revile impiously (anything sacred). | [verb] To calumniate; to revile; to abuse. BLASTEMATA (14) [noun] Plural of blastema; groups of undifferentiated cells capable of developing into organs or body parts during regeneration or embryonic development. BLASTMENTS (14) BLASTODERM (15) [noun] The germination point in an ovum from which the embryo develops. BLASTOMATA (14) [noun] Plural of blastoma, a type of tumor that arises from embryonic tissue or immature cells. BLASTOMERE (14) [noun] Any cell that results from division of a fertilized egg BLEMISHING (18) [verb] To spoil the appearance of. | [verb] To tarnish (reputation, character, etc.); to defame. BLIMPISHLY (22) [adverb] In a manner characteristic of a blimp; in an inflated, pompous, or obtuse way. BLINDWORMS (18) [noun] Anguis fragilis (slowworm), a small species of legless lizard. BLITHESOME (17) [adjective] Happy or spriteful; carefree. BLOODWORMS (18) [noun] The larva of a chironomid (family Chironomidae). | [noun] Any member of the genus Glycera. | [noun] The blackworm (Lumbriculus variegatus). BLOOMERIES (14) [noun] A forge in which wrought iron is made straight from ore. BLOSSOMING (15) [verb] To have, or open into, blossoms; to bloom. | [verb] To begin to thrive or flourish. | [noun] The act or process by which something blossoms. BOARDROOMS (15) [noun] The room where a group of people (especially the board of a company or organization) conducts its meetings | [noun] Corporations or corporate management considered as a section of society BOLOMETERS (14) [noun] A sensitive device for detecting and measuring the energy of electromagnetic radiation. BOLOMETRIC (16) [adjective] Relating to the measurement of radiant energy or heat, especially in astronomy and physics. BOLSHEVISM (20) [noun] The strategy used by the Bolsheviks in attempting to gain power in Russia. | [noun] The Communist political ideology adopted by the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics; Marxism-Leninism. BOMBARDIER (17) [noun] A bomber crew member who sights and releases bombs. | [noun] A non-commissioned officer rank in artillery, equivalent to corporal. Abbreviated Bdr. | [noun] An artilleryman; a gunner. BOMBARDING (18) [verb] To continuously attack something with bombs, artillery shells or other missiles or projectiles. | [verb] To attack something or someone by directing objects at them. | [verb] To direct at a substance an intense stream of high-energy particles, usually sub-atomic or made of at most a few atoms. BOMBARDONS (17) [noun] A brass instrument, the bass version of the tuba. | [noun] A bass instrument of the shawm family | [noun] A organ pedal stop at 32' pitch which imitates the sound of the above mentioned instruments. BOMBAZINES (25) [noun] A twilled fabric of silk and wool or cotton, typically dyed black, formerly used especially for mourning clothes. BOMBINATED (17) [verb] To buzz or hum BOMBINATES (16) [verb] To buzz or hum BOMBSHELLS (19) [noun] A bomb or artillery shell designed to explode on impact. | [noun] Something that is very surprising, shocking, amazing or sensational. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who is very attractive; sex symbol. BOMBSIGHTS (20) [noun] A device which allows bombs to be accurately dropped from moving aircraft so as to hit a desired target. BOOKMAKERS (22) [noun] A person who prints or binds books. | [noun] A person who compiles books from the writings of others. | [noun] A person (or a business) who calculates odds and accepts bets, especially on horse racing; a bookie. BOOKMAKING (23) [noun] The practice of taking bets on sporting events and calculating odds and payouts. | [noun] The craft of binding sheets of paper together to form a book. BOOKMARKER (22) [noun] A person or device that marks or saves a place in a book. | [noun] In web browsers, a saved link to a website for quick access. BOOKMOBILE (20) [noun] A mobile library; especially, a large van designed to transport a portion of some library's collection. BOOMERANGS (15) [noun] A flat curved airfoil, that spins about an axis perpendicular to the direction of flight, that was originally used in various parts of the world as hunting weapons or, in returnable types, for sports or training. | [noun] A breakdancing move in which the performer walks on his or her hands while keeping the legs raised off the ground. | [verb] To return or rebound unexpectedly, especially when the result is undesired; to backfire. BOOSTERISM (14) [noun] Promotion of a city, organisation, etc. in order to improve public opinion. BORBORYGMI (20) [noun] A gurgling or rumbling noise produced by gas in the bowels. | [noun] A gurgling or rumbling. | [noun] A rumbling sound made by the movement of gas in the intestines. BOTHERSOME (17) [adjective] Causing bother or perplexity. BOTTOMLAND (15) [noun] Flat land along a river, lying few feet above normal high water, often consisting of alluvial deposits and naturally fertile. BOTTOMLESS (14) [adjective] Having no bottom. | [adjective] Extremely deep. | [adjective] Having no bounds; limitless. BOTTOMMOST (16) [adjective] Lowest, closest to the bottom. BOTTOMRIES (14) [noun] A form of maritime loan in which a ship or cargo is pledged as security, with the lender taking on the risk of loss at sea. BOTULINUMS (14) [noun] Plural of botulinum, a bacterium (Clostridium botulinum) that produces botulinum toxin, the most potent biological toxin known. BOURBONISM (16) BRAINSTORM (14) [noun] A sudden thought, particularly one that solves a long-standing problem. | [noun] A session of brainstorming, investigating a problem to try to find solutions. | [noun] An unexpected mental error. BRAMBLIEST (16) [adjective] Superlative form of brambly; most full of brambles or thorny bushes. BRIDEGROOM (16) [noun] A man in the context of his own wedding; one who is going to marry or has just been married. BRIDESMAID (16) [noun] A woman who attends a bride during her wedding ceremony, as part of the main wedding party. | [noun] (entertainment) A person or team that perennially finishes well, but never first. | [verb] To act as a bridesmaid for; to attend a bride during her wedding ceremony. BRIMSTONES (14) [noun] The sulfur of Hell; Hell, damnation. | [noun] Sulfur. | [noun] A whore. BROADLOOMS (15) [noun] A wide loom. | [noun] A carpet woven on a wide loom. BROMEGRASS (15) [noun] A type of grass of the genus Bromus, commonly used for pasture and forage in temperate regions. BROMELAINS (14) [noun] Protein-digesting enzymes found in pineapple plants, used in food processing and meat tenderization. BROMELIADS (15) [noun] Any of various tropical or subtropical New World herbaceous plants in the family Bromeliaceae. BROMINATED (15) [verb] To treat or react with bromine or hydrobromic acid, to introduce bromine into a compound. | [adjective] Treated or reacted with bromine or hydrobromic acid. | [adjective] Formally derived from another compound by the replacement of one or more atoms of hydrogen with bromine. BROMINATES (14) [verb] To treat or react with bromine or hydrobromic acid, to introduce bromine into a compound. BROODMARES (15) [noun] Female horses kept for breeding purposes. | [noun] Women regarded as existing solely to produce children. BROOMBALLS (16) BROOMCORNS (16) [noun] The plural of broomcorn, a variety of sorghum whose fibers are used to make brooms and brushes. BROOMRAPES (16) [noun] Any of various plants, of the genus Orobanche, that are parasitic on the roots of other plants. BROOMSTICK (20) [noun] The handle of a broom (sweeping tool). | [noun] A broom imbued with magic, enabling one to fly astride the handle. | [noun] Like plain broom, a gun. BRUMMAGEMS (19) BUBBLEGUMS (19) [noun] Plural of bubblegum, a type of chewing gum that can be blown into bubbles. BUCKRAMING (21) BUMBLEBEES (18) [noun] Any of several species of large bee in the genus Bombus BUMBLINGLY (20) [adverb] In a clumsy, awkward, or confused manner; without skill or grace. BUMPKINISH (23) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a bumpkin; awkward, unsophisticated, or rustic in manner or appearance. BUNGLESOME (15) BURDENSOME (15) [adjective] Characteristic of a burden; arduous or demanding BUSHMASTER (17) [noun] A venomous pit viper, Lachesis muta, from tropical America BUTTERMILK (18) [noun] The liquid left over after producing butter from full cream milk by the churning process, also called traditional buttermilk. | [noun] Cultured buttermilk, a fermented dairy product produced from cow's milk, with a characteristically sour taste. CABLEGRAMS (17) [noun] A telegram transmitted via a submarine cable. CACIQUISMS (25) [noun] The plural of caciquism, referring to systems of political control or dominance exercised by a cacique (a local chief or leader, particularly in Spanish-speaking regions). CACODEMONS (17) [noun] An evil or malevolent spirit. | [noun] The twelfth astrological House, from which only evil prognostics are alleged to proceed. CACOMISTLE (16) [noun] The ring-tailed cat, Bassariscus astutus. CADDISWORM (19) [noun] The aquatic larva of a caddisfly, typically found in freshwater streams and used as fish bait. | [noun] An alternative spelling of caddis worm, referring to the same larval stage of caddisflies. CAFETORIUM (17) [noun] A room or building that serves as both a cafeteria and an auditorium or multipurpose space. CAIRNGORMS (15) CAJOLEMENT (21) [noun] The act of persuading someone with flattery or gentle urging; coaxing. | [noun] Flattery or wheedling used to persuade someone. CALAMANDER (15) [noun] A valuable furniture wood from India and Ceylon, of a hazel-brown color, with black stripes, very hard in texture. It is a kind of ebony obtained from species of Diospyros, especially the Diospyros quaesita. CALAMARIES (14) CALAMINING (15) CALAMITIES (14) [noun] An event resulting in great loss. | [noun] The distress that results from some disaster. CALAMITOUS (14) [adjective] Concerning or involving calamity, disastrous. CALAMONDIN (15) [noun] A small decorative evergreen citrus tree, of the hybrid Citrus × microcarpa, syn. ×Citrofortunella mitis, sometimes cultivated for its fruit. | [noun] The fruit of this tree. CALCIMINED (17) [verb] To coat with this substance. CALCIMINES (16) [noun] A form of whitewash (inexpensive white paint) made from calcium carbonate, glue and water, used to coat wooden or plaster surfaces. | [verb] To coat with this substance. CALLITHUMP (19) [noun] A noisy, boisterous parade or procession, typically involving satirical or mocking demonstrations. CALMATIVES (17) [noun] A drug with calming effects. CALMNESSES (14) [noun] The plural form of calmness; the quality or state of being calm, peaceful, or tranquil. CALMODULIN (15) [noun] A calcium-binding protein found in all nucleated cells CALUMNIATE (14) [verb] To make hurtful untrue comments about. | [verb] To levy a false charge against, especially of a vague offense, with the intent to damage someone's reputation or standing. CALUMNIOUS (14) [adjective] Possessing the traits of calumny. CAMARILLAS (14) [noun] A secret, usually sinister, group of conspiring advisors close to the leadership; a cabal. CAMCORDERS (17) [noun] A portable electronic device for recording images and audio on to a storage device, hence functioning as a camera and a recorder in a single unit CAMELBACKS (22) [noun] The backs of camels. | [noun] A flexible water container worn on the back. | [noun] A house with a second storey that does not completely cover the ground floor. CAMELOPARD (17) [noun] A giraffe. CAMERLENGO (15) [noun] The papal official in charge of the finances and temporal affairs of the Roman Catholic Church during a papal vacancy. CAMISADOES (15) [noun] Surprise night attacks by soldiers wearing white shirts over their armor to identify themselves. | [noun] The white shirts or garments worn during such attacks. CAMORRISTA (14) [noun] A member of the Camorra, a Neapolitan secret society or mafia organization. CAMORRISTI (14) [noun] Members of the Camorra, a Neapolitan organized crime syndicate. CAMOUFLAGE (18) [noun] A disguise or covering up. | [noun] The act of disguising. | [noun] The use of natural or artificial material on personnel, objects, or tactical positions with the aim of confusing, misleading, or evading the enemy. CAMPAIGNED (18) [verb] To take part in a campaign. | [verb] Consistently ride in races for a racing season. CAMPAIGNER (17) [noun] A person who has served in a military campaign. | [noun] (by extension) A military veteran. | [noun] A person who campaigns for a person running for political office or works, or supports, in an organised and active way towards a goal . CAMPANILES (16) [noun] A bell tower (now especially when freestanding), often associated with a church or other public building, especially in Italy. CAMPANULAS (16) [noun] Any plant of the genus Campanula. CAMPCRAFTS (21) CAMPESINOS (16) [noun] An agricultural worker in Latin America. CAMPESTRAL (16) [adjective] Of or relating to fields or open countryside; rural or pastoral. CAMPGROUND (18) [noun] An area where tents are pitched. | [noun] An area where a camp meeting (a retreat) (trail ride and party) is held. CAMPHORATE (19) [verb] To treat or impregnate with camphor. | [adjective] Containing or treated with camphor. CANKERWORM (21) [noun] Either of two caterpillars, the larvae of geometrid moths, that are destructive to fruit, buds and leaves. | [noun] A corrupting or destructive force. CANTONMENT (14) [noun] Temporary military living quarters. | [noun] A town or village, or part of a town or village, assigned to a body of troops for quarters. | [noun] A permanent military station. CAPITALISM (16) [noun] A socio-economic system based on private ownership of resources or capital. | [noun] An economic system based on private ownership of the means of production and their operation for profit. | [noun] (economic liberalism) A socio-economic system based on private property rights, including the private ownership of resources or capital, with economic decisions made largely through the operation of a market unregulated by the state. CARAMBOLAS (16) [noun] A tree species native of southern Asia, Averrhoa carambola. | [noun] The fruit of this tree, more commonly known as star fruit. | [noun] A yellow colour, like that of a carambola. CARAMELISE (14) [verb] To convert (sugar) into caramel. | [verb] To brown (sugar) by means of heat. | [verb] To undergo this kind of conversion or browning. CARAMELIZE (23) [verb] To convert (sugar) into caramel. | [verb] To brown (sugar) by means of heat. | [verb] To undergo this kind of conversion or browning. CARBAMATES (16) [noun] Any salt or ester of carbamic acid. CARBAMIDES (17) [noun] Plural of carbamide; organic compounds containing the NH-CO-NH group, commonly known as ureas. CARCINOMAS (16) [noun] An invasive malignant tumor derived from epithelial tissue that tends to metastasize to other areas of the body. CARDIOGRAM (16) [noun] The visual output an electrocardiograph produces CAREERISMS (14) [noun] Plural of careerism; the practice of advancing one's career with selfishness or ambition, often at the expense of principles or others. CARMAGNOLE (15) [noun] A lively dance that was popular during the French Revolution. | [noun] The music or song accompanying this dance. CASSIMERES (14) [noun] A twilled woolen fabric used for making trousers and jackets, typically of a higher quality than kersey. CASTOREUMS (14) [noun] A strong-smelling substance secreted by beavers from glands near the anus, historically used in perfumes and medicines. | [noun] Plural of castoreum. CATABOLISM (16) [noun] Destructive metabolism, usually including the release of energy and breakdown of materials. CATACLYSMS (19) [noun] A sudden, violent event. | [noun] A sudden and violent change in the earth's crust. | [noun] A great flood. CATAMARANS (14) [noun] A twin-hulled ship or boat. | [noun] A quarrelsome woman; a scold. | [noun] A raft of three pieces of wood lashed together, the middle piece being longer than the others, and serving as a keel on which the rower squats while paddling. CATAMENIAL (14) [adjective] Relating to or occurring during menstruation. CATAMOUNTS (14) [noun] A wild animal of the family Felidae, especially cougar, puma or lynx. CATAPLASMS (16) [noun] A poultice or plaster, spread over one's skin as medical treatment. CATCHMENTS (19) [noun] Any structure or land feature which catches and holds water; the collection of such water. | [noun] A catchment area, or the people it serves. CATECHISMS (19) [noun] A book, in question and answer form, summarizing the basic principles of Christianity. | [noun] A basic manual in some subject. | [noun] A set of questions designed to determine knowledge. CATECHUMEN (19) [noun] A convert to Christianity under instruction before baptism; a young or recent Christian preparing for confirmation. CAVALRYMAN (20) [noun] A soldier who serves on horseback; a member of a cavalry unit. CAVALRYMEN (20) [noun] Plural of cavalryman; soldiers who fight on horseback or in mounted units. CEILOMETER (14) [noun] An instrument that measures the height of clouds above the ground by using a light beam directed upward. CEMENTITES (14) [noun] A hard, brittle iron carbide (Fe₃C) that forms in steel and cast iron, used in metallurgy and materials science. CEMETERIES (14) [noun] A place where the dead are buried; a graveyard or memorial park. CENTESIMAL (14) [adjective] Divided into a hundred parts | [adjective] Describing a hundredth part CENTESIMOS (14) [noun] A unit of currency constituting one hundredth of a lira. | [noun] A monetary unit worth one-hundredth of the main currency in Uruguay, Panama and (formerly) Chile. CENTIGRAMS (15) [noun] An SI unit of mass equal to 10-2 grams. Symbol: cg CENTIMETER (14) [noun] An SI unit of length equal to 10-2 metres. Symbol: cm CENTRALISM (14) [noun] A system that centralizes, especially an administration of some kind. CENTROMERE (14) [noun] The central region of a eukaryotic chromosome where the kinetochore is assembled. CENTROSOME (14) [noun] An organelle, near the nucleus in the cytoplasm of most organisms, that controls the organization of its microtubules CERAMICIST (16) [noun] A person who makes or works with ceramic pottery and clay objects. CEREBELLUM (16) [noun] Part of the hindbrain in vertebrates. In humans it lies between the brainstem and the cerebrum. It plays an important role in sensory perception, motor output, balance and posture. CEREMONIAL (14) [noun] A ceremony, or series of ceremonies, prescribed by ritual. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or used in a ceremony. | [adjective] Observant of ceremony, ritual, or social forms. CEREMONIES (14) [noun] A ritual, with religious or cultural significance. | [noun] An official gathering to celebrate, commemorate, or otherwise mark some event. | [noun] A formal socially established behaviour, often in relation to people of different ranks; formality. CERUMINOUS (14) [adjective] Relating to or resembling cerumen; of or pertaining to earwax. CHAIRMANED (18) CHAIRWOMAN (20) [noun] A female chairperson | [noun] A charwoman CHAIRWOMEN (20) [noun] A female chairperson | [noun] A charwoman CHAMBERING (20) [verb] To enclose in a room. | [verb] To reside in or occupy a chamber or chambers. | [verb] To place in a chamber, as a round of ammunition. CHAMELEONS (17) [noun] A small to mid-size reptile, of the family Chamaeleonidae, and one of the best known lizard families able to change color and project its long tongue. | [noun] A person with inconstant behavior; one able to quickly adjust to new circumstances. | [noun] A hypothetical scalar particle with a non-linear self-interaction, giving it an effective mass that depends on its environment: the presence of other fields. CHAMFERING (21) [verb] To cut off the edge or corner of something. | [verb] To cut a groove in something. | [noun] A chamfer. CHAMOISING (18) [verb] To soften and make pliable (leather or fabric) by treating it with oil or other conditioning agents, similar to the process used for chamois leather. CHAMOMILES (19) [noun] Composite plant with a fragrance reminiscent of apples: | [noun] Any of several other similar plants. (See below) | [noun] Short for camomile tea. CHAMPAGNES (20) [noun] A sparkling white wine made from a blend of grapes, especially Chardonnay and pinot, produced in Champagne, France, by the méthode champenoise. | [noun] Any sparkling wine made by the méthode champenoise. | [noun] Any sparkling white wine. CHAMPAIGNS (20) [noun] Open countryside, or an area of open countryside. | [noun] A battlefield. CHAMPIGNON (20) [noun] Agaricus bisporus, a species of mushroom commonly used in cooking CHAMPIONED (20) [verb] To promote, advocate, or act as a champion for (a cause, etc.). | [verb] To challenge. CHAMPLEVES (22) [noun] A decorative technique in which grooves or channels are cut into a metal surface and filled with enamel or other material. | [noun] Plural of champleve, artwork created using this enameling technique. CHARISMATA (17) [noun] A power or authority, generally of a spiritual nature, believed to be a freely given gift by the grace of God. | [noun] Personal charm or magnetism | [noun] An extraordinary power granted by the Holy Spirit CHARMEUSES (17) [noun] Plural of charmeuse, a soft, lightweight fabric with a smooth finish, typically made from silk or synthetic materials. CHARMINGER (18) CHARMINGLY (21) [adverb] In a charming manner. CHAUVINISM (20) [noun] Excessive patriotism, eagerness for national superiority; jingoism. | [noun] Unwarranted bias, favoritism, or devotion to one's own particular group, cause, or idea. CHECKMARKS (27) [noun] A mark (✓) made to indicate agreement, correctness or acknowledgement. | [noun] In long jump, javelin and similar events, little mark alongside the runway which helps the athlete to set their steps just right for their performance. CHECKMATED (24) [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. | [verb] (by extension) To place in a losing situation that has no escape. | [adjective] Having a king in check with no possible move to escape check, thus losing the game. CHECKMATES (23) [noun] The conclusive victory in a game of chess that occurs when an opponent's king is threatened with unavoidable capture. | [noun] (by extension) Any losing situation with no escape; utter defeat. | [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. CHECKROOMS (23) [noun] A room where outdoor clothing or luggage may be temporarily stored. CHEMICALLY (22) [adverb] Using a chemical reaction, process or operation. | [adverb] According to the principles of chemistry. | [adjective] Reminiscent of chemicals. CHEMISETTE (17) [noun] An item of women's clothing, popular in the 1860s and 1870s, worn to fill in the front and neckline of any garment. CHEMISORBS (19) [verb] To undergo or cause chemisorption, a process in which a substance is bonded to a surface through chemical reactions rather than physical adhesion. CHEMOTAXES (24) [noun] The plural of chemotaxis, referring to the movement of organisms or cells in response to chemical stimuli. CHEMOTAXIS (24) [noun] The movement of a cell or an organism in response to a chemical stimulant. CHEMURGIES (18) [noun] The branch of chemistry dealing with the industrial use of organic raw materials, especially agricultural products, to manufacture chemicals and other products. CHEONGSAMS (18) [noun] A tight-fitting formal woman's dress, usually brightly coloured, patterned and/or embroidered, with a split at the thigh. | [noun] A plain coloured, tight-fitting dress with a short split at the thigh, worn as a school uniform by schoolgirls. | [noun] A long formal dress-like garment or robe worn by Asian men. CHERIMOYAS (20) [noun] A subtropical tree, Annona cherimola, native to mountainous areas of South America. | [noun] A conical fruit with white flesh from that tree. CHERNOZEMS (26) [noun] A fertile black soil containing a very high percentage of humus (3% to 15%) and high percentages of phosphoric acids, phosphorus and ammonia. CHIASMATIC (19) [adjective] Relating to or involving a chiasma, particularly the crossing of nerve fibers or chromosomes during meiosis. CHIMAERISM (19) [noun] The state or condition of being a chimera; the existence of genetically distinct cell populations derived from different zygotes in one organism. | [noun] In biology, the occurrence of two or more genetically distinct tissues in one individual. CHIMERICAL (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a chimera. | [adjective] Being a figment of the imagination; fantastic (in the archaic sense). | [adjective] Inherently fantastic; wildly fanciful. CHIMERISMS (19) [noun] The plural of chimerism, a condition where an organism contains two or more genetically distinct cell populations originating from different zygotes. | [noun] In genetics, instances of genetic mosaicism or the presence of cells with different genetic makeups in a single individual. CHIMPANZEE (28) [noun] A species of great ape in the genus Pan, native to Africa, and believed by biologists to be the closest extant relative to humans. CHIRIMOYAS (20) [noun] A subtropical tree, Annona cherimola, native to mountainous areas of South America. | [noun] A conical fruit with white flesh from that tree. CHIROMANCY (22) [noun] Divination performed by examining the lines in the palms. CHIRONOMID (18) [noun] Any of the non-biting midges or Chironomidae, a family of true flies within the order Diptera. CHLAMYDIAE (21) [noun] Any of several common, often asymptomatic, sexually transmitted diseases caused by the microorganism Chlamydia trachomatis. | [noun] Any of various coccoid microorganisms of the genus Chlamydia that are pathogenic to humans and other animals. CHLAMYDIAL (21) [adjective] Relating to or caused by chlamydia, a genus of parasitic bacteria that cause various infectious diseases in humans and animals. CHLOASMATA (17) [noun] Plural of chloasma, a medical condition characterized by patches of hyperpigmentation or discoloration on the skin, typically on the face. CHLORAMINE (17) [noun] Any of a class of unstable compounds of nitrogen and chlorine R1R2NCl; also the parent compound NH2Cl, used to manufacture hydrazine, and as the antiseptic chloramine-T CHLOROFORM (20) [noun] A halogenated hydrocarbon, trichloromethane, CHCl3; it is a volatile, sweet-smelling liquid, used extensively as a solvent and formerly as an anesthetic. | [verb] To treat with chloroform, or to render unconscious with chloroform. CHOREIFORM (20) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of chorea, a neurological disorder characterized by involuntary jerky movements. CHROMAFFIN (23) [adjective] Having an affinity for (and thus being stained brownish yellow) by chromium salts. CHROMATICS (19) [noun] The study or science of colors and their properties. | [noun] In music, the use of notes outside the diatonic scale to create chromatic effects. CHROMATIDS (18) [noun] After DNA replication either of the two connected double-helix strands of a metaphase chromosome that separate during mitosis CHROMATINS (17) [noun] Plural of chromatin, the complex of DNA and proteins found in eukaryotic cell nuclei that condenses to form chromosomes. CHROMIZING (27) [verb] The process of coating or treating a surface with chromium or chromium compounds to increase hardness and corrosion resistance. CHROMOGENS (18) [noun] Any substance that lacks colour, but can be converted into a pigment or dye. | [noun] A strongly pigmented organelle or organism. CHROMOMERE (19) [noun] A bead-like or granular structure visible on a chromosome during cell division, representing a localized region of chromatin. CHROMONEMA (19) [noun] A threadlike structure within a chromosome, consisting of a single strand of DNA or protein fibers, visible during cell division. CHROMOPHIL (22) [adjective] Staining readily with dyes; having an affinity for chromatic stains. | [noun] A cell or tissue that readily absorbs dyes. CHROMOSOME (19) [noun] A linear arrangement of condensed DNA and associated proteins (such as chaperone proteins) which contains the genetic material (genome) of an organism. CHRONOGRAM (18) [noun] A sentence or inscription in which certain letters represent numerals that form a date when added together. | [noun] A representation of time in a work of art or literature. CHUMMINESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being chummy; friendly intimacy or familiarity between people. CICISBEISM (18) [noun] The practice of a man courting or flirting with a married woman with the husband's knowledge and tacit approval, particularly in 18th-century Italian society. | [noun] The role or position of a cicisbeo, a man who acts as a devoted attendant to a married woman. CIMETIDINE (15) [noun] A histamine H2-receptor antagonist that inhibits the production of acid in the stomach, mainly used to treat heartburn and peptic ulcers, but notorious for causing male impotence. CINCHONISM (19) [noun] A toxic condition caused by excessive use of quinine or cinchona alkaloids, characterized by symptoms such as headache, dizziness, and hearing loss. CINEMAGOER (15) [noun] One who visits a cinema in order to watch a film. CINEMATIZE (23) [verb] To adapt or convert a written work into a film or cinematic production. | [verb] To present or depict something in a manner suitable for cinema or film. CINERARIUM (14) [noun] A place or receptacle for depositing the ashes of cremated people. CIRCUMCISE (18) [verb] To surgically remove the foreskin (prepuce) from a penis (male). | [verb] (sometimes proscribed) To surgically remove the clitoris (clitoridectomy), clitoral hood, or labia (female). CIRCUMFLEX (26) [noun] A diacritical mark (ˆ) placed over a vowel in the orthography or transliteration of many languages to change its pronunciation; while in some other languages over a consonant. | [verb] To mark or pronounce with a circumflex. | [adjective] Having a circumflex mark. CIRCUMFUSE (19) [verb] To pour round; to spread round, as a fluid. | [verb] To spread round; to surround. CIRCUMVENT (19) [verb] To avoid or get around something; to bypass | [verb] To surround or besiege | [verb] To outwit or outsmart CLADOGRAMS (16) [noun] A branching treelike graphical representation of the phylogenetic relationships between organisms showing which taxa have branched from common ancestors. | [noun] A phylogenetic tree that is strictly the outcome of a cladistic analysis. CLAMBERERS (16) [noun] Plural of clamberer; those who clamber or climb awkwardly or laboriously. | [noun] Animals or creatures that climb using their limbs. CLAMBERING (17) [verb] To climb (something) with some difficulty, or in a haphazard fashion. | [noun] The act of one who clambers. CLAMMINESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being clammy; moistness and coldness, typically of skin. CLAMOURING (15) [verb] To cry out and/or demand. | [verb] To demand by outcry. | [verb] To become noisy insistently. CLAMPDOWNS (20) [noun] A sudden repressive or punitive restriction or control CLAMSHELLS (17) [noun] The shell of a clam. | [noun] A dredging bucket with hinges like the shell of a clam. | [noun] In food service, the closing box (usually styrofoam but sometimes cardboard) given to consumers with take-out food. CLASSICISM (16) [noun] All the classical traditions of the art and architecture of ancient Greece and Rome, especially the aspects of simplicity, elegance and proportion. | [noun] Classical scholarship. | [noun] A Latin or Ancient Greek expression used in an English sentence. CLASSMATES (14) [noun] A student who is in the same class at school. | [noun] (by extension) A member of a different sort of class, such as locomotives etc. CLASSROOMS (14) [noun] A room, often in a school, where classes take place CLAWHAMMER (22) [noun] A hammer with two prongs protruding back from the head to allow for removing nails from wood. | [noun] A fingerpicking technique primarily used by banjo players, but also by some guitarists. CLEMATISES (14) [noun] Any plant of the genus Clematis, vigorous climbing lianas found throughout the temperate zones. CLEMENCIES (16) [noun] Plural of clemency; acts of mercy or leniency, especially the granting of pardons or reduced sentences by a person in authority. CLIMAXLESS (21) CLINOMETER (14) [noun] An apparatus for measuring a vertical angle, a slope, or the height of a large object (e.g. a tree). CLIOMETRIC (16) [adjective] Relating to cliometrics, the application of statistical and quantitative methods to the study of history. CLOAKROOMS (18) [noun] A room intended for holding guests' cloaks and other heavy outerwear, as at a theater. | [noun] A room intended for holding luggage, as at an airport. | [noun] A private lounge next to a legislative chamber. CLOMIPHENE (19) [noun] A drug used to stimulate ovulation in cases of female infertility CLUMSINESS (14) [noun] A lack of coordination or elegance; the condition or quality of being clumsy. COADMIRING (16) COADMITTED (16) [verb] Past tense of coadmit; to admit jointly or together with another person or entity. COASSUMING (15) COATIMUNDI (15) [noun] The ring-tailed coati, Nasua nasua, a South American carnivore. COBALAMINS (16) [noun] Any of several forms of vitamin B12 depending on the upper axial ligand of the cobalt ion. COCHAIRMAN (19) [noun] A person who shares the position of chairman with another person; a joint chairman. COCHAIRMEN (19) [noun] Plural of cochairman; two or more people who jointly chair a meeting, organization, or committee. COCHAMPION (21) [noun] A person who shares a championship title or honor with another person or persons. COCKALORUM (20) [noun] A menial yet self-important person; a person who makes empty boasts. | [noun] Boastful speech, crowing. | [noun] A game similar to leapfrog. COCKAMAMIE (22) [noun] A decal, a design that can be transferred to a surface. | [noun] A foolish or ridiculous person. | [adjective] Foolish, ill-considered, silly, unbelievable. COCKNEYISM (23) [noun] The characteristics, manners, or dialect of a Cockney. | [noun] A Cockney phrase or idiom. COCKSCOMBS (24) [noun] The fleshy red crest of a rooster | [noun] A red cap once worn by court jesters | [noun] A yellow rattle, Rhinanthus minor (flowering plant native to Eurasia) COCOMPOSER (18) CODOMINANT (15) [adjective] (genetics) Relating to alleles that are both fully expressed in a heterozygous organism without blending or one being recessive. COELOMATES (14) [noun] Animals that possess a coelom, a body cavity lined with mesoderm that houses internal organs. COEMBODIED (18) COEMBODIES (17) [verb] Third person singular present tense of coembody; to embody or represent together with something else. COEMPLOYED (20) COENAMORED (15) COFFERDAMS (21) [noun] A temporary watertight structure that is pumped dry to enclose an area underwater and allow construction work on a ship, bridge, or rig to be carried out; a caisson. | [noun] An empty space that acts as a protective barrier between two floors or bulkheads on a ship. COGNOMINAL (15) [adjective] Having the same name or a related name; sharing a name or cognomen. COHOMOLOGY (21) [noun] A mathematical concept in algebraic topology that assigns algebraic structures to topological spaces to study their properties. COLCHICUMS (21) [noun] Any of several flowers of the genus Colchicum. | [noun] The dried seed of the poisonous meadow saffron, Colchicum autumnale, used medicinally. COLEMANITE (14) [noun] A white, grey or colorless mineral form of calcium borate; a principal source of boron. COLLEGIUMS (15) [noun] Plural of collegium; associations or societies of colleagues, particularly in academic or professional contexts, or governing bodies in some organizations. COLLIMATED (15) [verb] To focus into a narrow beam or column; to adjust a focusing device so that it produces a narrow beam. | [adjective] (of a light beam) Composed of rays that are parallel, thus having a wavefront that is planar. COLLIMATES (14) [verb] To focus into a narrow beam or column; to adjust a focusing device so that it produces a narrow beam. COLLIMATOR (14) [noun] An optical device that generates a parallel beam of light. Often used to compensate for laser beam divergence. | [noun] A similar device that produces a parallel beam of particles such as neutrons. | [noun] A small telescope attached to a larger one, used to point it in the correct general direction. COLLOQUIUM (23) [noun] A colloquy; a meeting for discussion. | [noun] An academic meeting or seminar usually led by a different lecturer and on a different topic at each meeting. | [noun] An address to an academic meeting or seminar. COLLUVIUMS (17) [noun] A loose accumulation of rock and soil debris at the foot of a slope COLLYRIUMS (17) [noun] A medicinal preparation applied to the eyes; an eye salve or lotion. | [noun] Plural of collyrium, an ancient eye wash or ointment. COLOBOMATA (16) [noun] Plural of coloboma, a congenital absence or defect of part of the eye structure, typically affecting the iris, retina, or optic nerve. COLOSSEUMS (14) [noun] A large theatre, cinema, or stadium. | [noun] A large, often circular building, for indoor sporting events, exhibitions, concerts, etc.; arena. COLOSTRUMS (14) [noun] The plural of colostrum, the first milk produced by a mammal after giving birth, rich in antibodies and nutrients. | [noun] In veterinary and medical contexts, instances or samples of this nutrient-rich secretion. COLOTOMIES (14) [noun] Plural of colotomy, a surgical procedure involving an incision into the colon. COLUMBARIA (16) [noun] A large, sometimes architecturally impressive building for housing a large colony of pigeons or doves, particularly those of ancien regime France. | [noun] A pigeonhole in such a dovecote. | [noun] A building, a vault or a similar place for the respectful and usually public storage of cinerary urns containing cremated remains. COLUMBINES (16) [noun] Any plant of the genus Aquilegia, having distinctive bell-shaped flowers with spurs on each petal. COLUMBITES (16) [noun] A black mineral that is a mixed iron and manganese niobate and tantalate, and is the main ore of niobium and tantalum. COLUMBIUMS (18) [noun] Plural of columbium, the former name for the chemical element niobium. COLUMELLAE (14) [noun] Any of various small structures in plants or animals that are columnar in shape. | [noun] The skin at the end of the septum which separates the nostrils. | [noun] (comparative anatomy) In birds, reptiles, and amphibians, the small bone which carries vibration from the tympanum to the inner ear. COLUMELLAR (14) [adjective] Relating to or resembling a columella, which is a small column-like structure found in mollusks, birds, or plants. COLUMNISTS (14) [noun] A regular writer of a column, such as in a magazine or newspaper COMANAGERS (15) [noun] Plural of comanager; two or more persons who jointly manage a business, organization, or project. COMANAGING (16) [verb] Present participle of comanage; managing jointly or together with another person or entity. COMBATANTS (16) [noun] A person engaged in combat, often armed. COMBATTING (17) [verb] To fight; to struggle against. | [verb] To fight (with); to struggle for victory (against). COMBINABLE (18) [adjective] Able to be combined or mixed together. COMBUSTING (17) [verb] To burn; to catch fire. | [verb] To erupt with enthusiasm or boisterousness. COMBUSTION (16) [noun] The act or process of burning. | [noun] A process where two chemicals are combined to produce heat. | [noun] A process wherein a fuel is combined with oxygen, usually at high temperature, releasing heat. COMBUSTIVE (19) [adjective] Relating to or capable of combustion; tending to catch fire easily. | [adjective] Tending to provoke heated argument or strong emotion; inflammatory. COMBUSTORS (16) [noun] Devices or chambers in which combustion occurs, such as in jet engines or furnaces. COMEDIENNE (15) [noun] A female comedian. COMELINESS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being comely; attractiveness or pleasing appearance. COMESTIBLE (16) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Anything that can be eaten; food. | [adjective] Suitable to be eaten; edible. COMFORTERS (17) [noun] A person who comforts someone who is suffering. | [noun] A padded cover for a bed, duvet, continental quilt. | [noun] A woollen scarf for winter. COMFORTING (18) [verb] To relieve the distress or suffering of; to provide comfort to. | [verb] To make comfortable. | [verb] To make strong; to invigorate; to fortify; to corroborate. COMICALITY (19) [noun] The state of being comical. | [noun] Something comical. COMINGLING (16) [verb] Mixing or blending together of different elements, substances, or groups. | [verb] The combining of funds or property from different sources into one common fund. COMMANDANT (17) [noun] A commanding officer, usually of a specific force or division. COMMANDEER (17) [verb] To seize for military use. | [verb] To force into military service. | [verb] To take arbitrarily or by force. COMMANDERS (17) [noun] One who exercises control and direction of a military or naval organization. | [noun] A naval officer whose rank is above that of a lieutenant commander and below that of captain. | [noun] One who exercises control and direction over a group of persons. COMMANDERY (20) [noun] The residence or headquarters of a commander of an order of knights. | [noun] A district or estate controlled by a commander of a medieval military order. COMMANDING (18) [verb] To order, give orders; to compel or direct with authority. | [verb] To have or exercise supreme power, control or authority over, especially military; to have under direction or control. | [verb] To require with authority; to demand, order, enjoin. COMMANDOES (17) [noun] Plural of commando; soldiers or fighters trained to carry out raids or sabotage missions. | [noun] Members of military units specializing in surprise attacks and guerrilla warfare. COMMENCERS (18) [noun] Plural of commencer; those who commence or begin something. COMMENCING (19) [verb] To begin, start. | [verb] To begin to be, or to act as. | [verb] To take a degree at a university. COMMENDERS (17) [noun] Plural of commender; people who praise or express approval of someone or something. COMMENDING (18) [verb] To congratulate or reward. | [verb] To praise or acclaim. | [verb] To entrust or commit to the care of someone else. COMMENSALS (16) [noun] An organism partaking in a commensal relationship. | [noun] One who eats at the same table. COMMENTARY (19) [noun] A series of comments or annotations; especially, a book of explanations or expositions on the whole or a part of some other work | [noun] (usually in the plural) a brief account of transactions or events written hastily, as if for a memorandum | [noun] An oral relation of an event, especially broadcast by television or radio, as it occurs COMMENTATE (16) [verb] To provide a commentary; to act as a commentator; to maintain a stream of comments about some event. COMMENTING (17) [verb] To remark. | [verb] (with "on" or "about") To make remarks or notes. | [verb] To comment or remark on. COMMERCIAL (18) [noun] An advertisement in a common media format, usually radio or television. | [noun] A commercial trader, as opposed to an individual speculator. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to commerce. COMMERCING (19) COMMINGLED (18) [verb] To mix, to blend. | [verb] To become mixed or blended. COMMINGLES (17) [verb] To mix, to blend. | [verb] To become mixed or blended. COMMINUTED (17) [verb] To pulverize; to smash. | [verb] To cause fragmentation (of bone). | [verb] To break into smaller portions. COMMINUTES (16) [verb] To reduce to minute particles or fine powder by grinding or crushing. COMMISSARS (16) [noun] An official of the Communist Party, often attached to a military unit, who was responsible for political education. | [noun] In the early Soviet Union, the head of a commissariat. COMMISSARY (19) [noun] A store primarily serving persons in an institution, most often soldiers or prisoners. | [noun] A cafeteria at a movie studio. | [noun] One to whom is committed some charge, duty, or office, by a superior power; a commissioner. COMMISSION (16) [noun] A sending or mission (to do or accomplish something). | [noun] An official charge or authority to do something, often used of military officers. | [noun] The thing to be done as agent for another. COMMISSURE (16) [noun] The joint between two bones. | [noun] A band of nerve tissue connecting the hemispheres of the brain, the two sides of the spinal cord, etc. | [noun] The line where the upper and lower lips or eyelids meet. COMMITMENT (18) [noun] The act or an instance of committing, putting in charge, keeping, or trust, especially: | [noun] Promise or agreement to do something in the future, especially: | [noun] Being bound emotionally or intellectually to a course of action or to another person or persons. COMMITTALS (16) [noun] The act of entrusting something to someone. | [noun] The act of committing someone to confinement; an order for someone's imprisonment. | [noun] The act of perpetrating an offence. COMMITTEES (16) [noun] A body of one or more persons convened for the accomplishment of some specific purpose, typically with formal protocols. | [noun] A guardian; someone in charge of another person deemed to be unable to look after himself or herself. COMMITTING (17) [verb] To give in trust; to put into charge or keeping; to entrust; to consign; used with to or formerly unto. | [verb] To put in charge of a jailer; to imprison. | [verb] To have (a person) enter an establishment, such as a hospital or asylum, as a patient. COMMIXTURE (23) [noun] A mixture or blending of different elements or substances together. COMMODIOUS (17) [adjective] Advantageous; profitable. | [adjective] Comfortable, free from hardship. | [adjective] Spacious and convenient; roomy and comfortable. COMMODORES (17) [noun] A naval officer holding a rank between captain and rear admiral. | [noun] A (temporary) commander over a collection of ships who is not an admiral. | [noun] The leading ship in a fleet of merchantmen. COMMONAGES (17) [noun] Plural of commonage; the right to pasture animals on common land, or the land itself held in common by a community. COMMONALTY (19) [noun] The common people; the commonality. | [noun] A group of things having similar characteristics. | [noun] A class composed of persons lacking clerical or noble rank; commoners. COMMONNESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being common; frequency of occurrence or widespread prevalence. | [noun] Lack of refinement or elegance; ordinariness or mediocrity. COMMONWEAL (19) [noun] The common good; public wellbeing or prosperity | [noun] The body politic; republic COMMOTIONS (16) [noun] A state of turbulent motion. | [noun] An agitated disturbance or a hubbub. | [noun] Sexual excitement. COMMUNALLY (19) [adverb] In a manner involving or shared by all members of a community; jointly or collectively. COMMUNARDS (17) [noun] A person who lives in a commune COMMUNIONS (16) [noun] A joining together of minds or spirits. | [noun] Holy Communion | [noun] A form of ecclesiastical unity between the Roman Church and another, so that the latter is considered part of the former. COMMUNIQUE (25) [noun] An official report or statement, such as a government press release or the report of a conference. COMMUNISED (17) [verb] To make something the property of a community. | [verb] To impose Communist ideals on people. | [verb] To become or be made communistic. COMMUNISES (16) [verb] To make something the property of a community. | [verb] To impose Communist ideals on people. | [verb] To become or be made communistic. COMMUNISMS (18) [noun] Plural of communism; multiple forms or instances of a political and economic ideology based on common ownership of property and the absence of social classes. COMMUNISTS (16) [noun] An advocate of a society based on the common ownership of property; a proponent of communism. | [noun] Any revolutionary or subversive radical. COMMUNIZED (26) [verb] To make something the property of a community. | [verb] To impose Communist ideals on people. | [verb] To become or be made communistic. COMMUNIZES (25) [verb] To make something the property of a community. | [verb] To impose Communist ideals on people. | [verb] To become or be made communistic. COMMUTABLE (18) [adjective] Capable of being commuted. COMMUTATED (17) [verb] To reverse the direction of (a current). | [verb] To convert from being or using an alternating current into being or using a direct current. | [verb] To commute; to be invariant under a reversal of the positions of operands. COMMUTATES (16) [verb] To reverse the direction of (a current). | [verb] To convert from being or using an alternating current into being or using a direct current. | [verb] To commute; to be invariant under a reversal of the positions of operands. COMMUTATOR (16) [noun] An electrical switch, in a generator or motor, that periodically reverses the direction of an electric current. | [noun] A binary map in a given group G, given by [g, h] = ghg−1h−1, where g and h are elements of G, which yields the group's identity if and only if the group operation commutes for g and h. | [noun] A binary map in a given ring R, given by [a, b] = ab − ba, where a and b are elements of R, which yields the ring's zero element if and only if the multiplication operation commutes for a and b. COMONOMERS (16) [noun] Monomers that can undergo polymerization together to form a copolymer. | [noun] Individual molecular units that combine with other monomers in a copolymerization reaction. COMPACTERS (18) [noun] Plural of compacter; machines or devices that compress or condense materials into a more compact form. COMPACTEST (18) [adjective] Superlative form of compact; most compact or densest in form or arrangement. COMPACTING (19) [verb] To make more dense; to compress. | [verb] To unite or connect firmly, as in a system. COMPACTION (18) [noun] The process of compacting something, or something that has been compacted. COMPACTORS (18) [noun] Machines or devices that compress waste materials, soil, or other substances into smaller, denser forms. | [noun] Plural of compactor, referring to multiple such machines. COMPANIONS (16) [noun] A friend, acquaintance, or partner; someone with whom one spends time or keeps company | [noun] A person employed to accompany or travel with another. | [noun] The framework on the quarterdeck of a sailing ship through which daylight entered the cabins below. COMPANYING (20) [verb] To accompany, keep company with. | [verb] To associate. | [verb] To be a lively, cheerful companion. COMPARABLE (18) [noun] Something suitable for comparison. | [adjective] (often with to) Able to be compared (to). | [adjective] (often with to) Similar (to); like. COMPARABLY (21) [adverb] In a comparable manner. COMPARATOR (16) [noun] Any device for comparing a physical property of two objects, or an object with a standard. | [noun] An electronic device that compares two voltages, currents or streams of data. | [noun] Anything that serves comparison COMPARISON (16) [noun] The act of comparing or the state or process of being compared. | [noun] An evaluation of the similarities and differences of one or more things relative to some other or each-other. | [noun] With a negation, the state of being similar or alike. COMPARTING (17) COMPASSING (17) [verb] To surround; to encircle; to environ; to stretch round. | [verb] To go about or round entirely; to traverse. | [verb] To accomplish; to reach; to achieve; to obtain. COMPASSION (16) [noun] Deep awareness of the suffering of another, coupled with the wish to relieve it. | [verb] To pity. COMPATIBLE (18) [noun] Something that is compatible with something else. | [adjective] Capable of easy interaction. | [adjective] Able to get along well. COMPATIBLY (21) [adverb] In a manner that is able to exist or work together without conflict or contradiction. COMPATRIOT (16) [noun] Somebody from one's own country. | [adjective] Of the same country; having a common sentiment of patriotism. COMPEERING (17) [verb] Present or participate as a companion or equal. | [verb] Act as a master of ceremonies or host. COMPELLING (17) [verb] To drive together, round up | [verb] To overpower; to subdue. | [verb] To force, constrain or coerce. COMPENDIUM (19) [noun] A short, complete summary; an abstract. | [noun] A list or collection of various items. COMPENSATE (16) [verb] To do (something good) after (something bad) happens | [verb] To pay or reward someone in exchange for work done or some other consideration. | [verb] To make up for; to do something in place of something else; to correct, satisfy; to reach an agreement such that the scales are literally or (metaphorically) balanced; to equalize or make even. COMPETENCE (18) [noun] The quality or state of being competent, i.e. able or suitable for a general role. | [noun] The quality or state of being able or suitable for a particular task; the quality or state of being competent for a particular task. | [noun] The system of linguistic knowledge possessed by native speakers of a language, as opposed to its actual use in concrete situations (performance), cf. :w:linguistic competence. COMPETENCY (21) [noun] A sufficient supply (of). | [noun] A sustainable income. | [noun] The ability to perform some task; competence. COMPETITOR (16) [noun] A person or organization against whom one is competing. | [noun] A participant in a competition, especially in athletics. COMPLACENT (18) [adjective] Uncritically satisfied with oneself or one's achievements; smug. | [adjective] Apathetic with regard to an apparent need or problem. COMPLAINED (17) [verb] To express feelings of pain, dissatisfaction, or resentment. | [verb] To make a formal accusation or bring a formal charge. | [verb] To creak or squeak, as a timber or wheel. COMPLAINER (16) [noun] One who complains, or is known for their complaints. COMPLAINTS (16) [noun] The act of complaining. | [noun] A grievance, problem, difficulty, or concern. | [noun] In a civil action, the first pleading of the plaintiff setting out the facts on which the claim is based; The purpose is to give notice to the adversary of the nature and basis of the claim asserted. COMPLECTED (19) [verb] To join by weaving. | [verb] To embrace. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified complexion; complexioned. COMPLEMENT (18) [noun] A protective substance that exists in the serum or other bodily fluid and is capable of killing microorganisms; complement. | [noun] Something (or someone) that completes; the consummation. | [noun] The act of completing something, or the fact of being complete; completion, completeness, fulfilment. COMPLETELY (19) [adverb] (manner) In a complete manner | [adverb] (degree) To the fullest extent or degree; totally. COMPLETEST (16) [verb] To finish; to make done; to reach the end. | [verb] To make whole or entire. | [verb] To call from the small blind in an unraised pot. COMPLETING (17) [verb] To finish; to make done; to reach the end. | [verb] To make whole or entire. | [verb] To call from the small blind in an unraised pot. COMPLETION (16) [noun] The act or state of being or making something complete; conclusion, accomplishment. | [noun] The conclusion of an act of conveyancing concerning the sale of a property. | [noun] A forward pass that is successfully caught by the intended receiver. COMPLETIVE (19) [adjective] Making complete. COMPLEXEST (23) [adjective] Superlative form of complex; the most complex or most complicated. COMPLEXIFY (29) COMPLEXING (24) [verb] To form a complex with another substance | [verb] To complicate. | [noun] The formation of a complex; complexation COMPLEXION (23) [noun] The combination of humours making up one's physiological "temperament", being either hot or cold, and moist or dry. | [noun] The quality, colour, or appearance of the skin on the face. | [noun] The outward appearance of something. COMPLEXITY (26) [noun] The state of being complex; intricacy; entanglement. | [noun] That which is and renders complex; intricacy; complication. COMPLIANCE (18) [noun] An act of complying. | [noun] The state of being compliant. | [noun] The tendency of conforming with or agreeing to the wishes of others. COMPLIANCY (21) [noun] The condition of being compliant; compliance, complaisance COMPLICACY (23) COMPLICATE (18) [verb] To make complex; to modify so as to make something intricate or difficult. | [verb] To involve in a convoluted matter. | [adjective] Intertwined. COMPLICITY (21) [noun] The state of being complicit; involvement as a partner or accomplice, especially in a crime or other wrongdoing. | [noun] Complexity. COMPLIMENT (18) [noun] An expression of praise, congratulation, or respect. | [noun] Complimentary language; courtesy, flattery. | [verb] To pay a compliment (to); to express a favorable opinion (of). COMPLOTTED (17) [verb] Past tense of complot; to plot or conspire together. COMPONENTS (16) [noun] A smaller, self-contained part of a larger entity. Often refers to a manufactured object that is part of a larger device. COMPORTING (17) [verb] To tolerate, bear, put up (with). | [verb] To be in agreement (with); to be of an accord. | [verb] To behave (in a given manner). COMPOSEDLY (20) [adverb] In a calm, controlled, and composed manner; without agitation or disturbance. COMPOSITED (17) [verb] To make a composite. COMPOSITES (16) [noun] A mixture of different components. | [noun] A structural material that gains its strength from a combination of complementary materials. | [noun] A plant belonging to the family Asteraceae, syn. Compositae. COMPOSITOR (16) [noun] A person who sets type; a typesetter. | [noun] One who, or that which, composes or sets in order. COMPOSTING (17) [verb] To produce compost, let organic matter decay into fertilizer. COMPOSURES (16) [noun] Plural of composure; the state of being calm and in control of emotions. | [noun] States of mental tranquility or self-possession. COMPOUNDED (18) [verb] To form (a resulting mixture) by combining different elements, ingredients, or parts. | [verb] To assemble (ingredients) into a whole; to combine, mix, or unite. | [verb] To modify or change by combination with some other thing or part; to mingle with something else. COMPOUNDER (17) [noun] A person who compounds (mixes ingredients, and tests the result) | [noun] One who attempts to bring persons or parties to terms of agreement, or to accomplish ends by compromises. | [noun] One who compounds a debt, obligation, or crime. COMPRADORE (17) [noun] An intermediary. | [noun] A native of a colonised country who acts as the agent of the coloniser. | [noun] A ship's chandler in the Far East. COMPRADORS (17) [noun] An intermediary. | [noun] A native of a colonised country who acts as the agent of the coloniser. | [noun] A ship's chandler in the Far East. COMPREHEND (20) [verb] To include, comprise; to contain. | [verb] To understand or grasp fully and thoroughly. COMPRESSED (17) [verb] To make smaller; to press or squeeze together, or to make something occupy a smaller space or volume. | [verb] To be pressed together or folded by compression into a more economic, easier format. | [verb] To condense into a more economic, easier format. COMPRESSES (16) [verb] To make smaller; to press or squeeze together, or to make something occupy a smaller space or volume. | [verb] To be pressed together or folded by compression into a more economic, easier format. | [verb] To condense into a more economic, easier format. COMPRESSOR (16) [noun] A device that produces pressure, such as a gas compressor that produces pressurized gas. | [noun] A device that squeezes (compresses). | [noun] (audio) A device that reduces the dynamic range of an audio signal. COMPRISING (17) [verb] To be made up of; to consist of (especially a comprehensive list of parts). | [verb] To contain or embrace. | [verb] (sometimes proscribed, usually in the passive) To compose, to constitute. See usage note below. COMPRIZING (26) [verb] Present participle of comprise, meaning to consist of or be made up of; to include or contain as parts of a whole. COMPROMISE (18) [noun] The settlement of differences by arbitration or by consent reached by mutual concessions. | [noun] A committal to something derogatory or objectionable; a prejudicial concession; a surrender. | [noun] In data security, a violation of the security system such that an unauthorized disclosure or loss of sensitive information may have occurred, or the unauthorized disclosure or loss itself. COMPULSION (16) [noun] An irrational need or irresistible urge to perform some action, often despite negative consequences. | [noun] The use of authority, influence, or other power to force (compel) a person or persons to act. | [noun] The lawful use of violence (i.e. by the administration). COMPULSIVE (19) [noun] One who exhibits compulsive behaviours. | [adjective] Uncontrolled or reactive and irresistible. | [adjective] Having power to compel; exercising or applying compulsion. COMPULSORY (19) [noun] Something that is compulsory or required. | [adjective] Required; obligatory; mandatory. | [adjective] Having the power of compulsion; constraining. COMPUTABLE (18) [adjective] Able to be computed or calculated; capable of being determined by mathematical or logical means. CONCRETISM (16) CONDEMNERS (15) [noun] Plural of condemner; those who express disapproval or judgment against someone or something. | [noun] Those who pronounce sentence or declare someone guilty. CONDEMNING (16) [verb] To strongly criticise or denounce; to excoriate the perpetrators of. | [verb] To judicially pronounce (someone) guilty. | [verb] To confer eternal divine punishment upon. CONDEMNORS (15) [noun] Plural of condemnor; persons or entities that condemn or express strong disapproval. | [noun] In law, parties who condemn property for public use. CONDIMENTS (15) [noun] Something used to enhance the flavor of food; for example, salt or pepper. CONDYLOMAS (18) [noun] A wartlike growth on the skin or a mucous membrane, caused by certain types of HPV viruses, usually occurring in the genital area CONFERMENT (17) [noun] The act of conferring or granting something, such as a degree or honor. | [noun] A conference or meeting for discussion. CONFIRMAND (18) [noun] A candidate for confirmation or affirmation of baptism. CONFIRMING (18) [verb] To strengthen; to make firm or resolute. | [verb] To administer the sacrament of confirmation on (someone). | [verb] To assure the accuracy of previous statements. CONFORMERS (17) [noun] Any of a set of stereoisomers characterised by a conformation that corresponds to a distinct potential energy minimum. | [noun] A particular folded state or conformation of a protein, especially an abnormal conformation of a prion | [noun] A person who conforms; a conformist. CONFORMING (18) [verb] (of persons, often followed by to) To act in accordance with expectations; to behave in the manner of others, especially as a result of social pressure. | [verb] (of things, situations, etc.) To be in accordance with a set of specifications or regulations, or with a policy or guideline. | [verb] To make similar in form or nature; to make suitable for a purpose; to adapt. CONFORMISM (19) [noun] Compliance with established standards, conventions, or practices; the tendency to conform to social norms and expectations. CONFORMIST (17) [noun] Someone who tries to conform to the mainstream. | [adjective] Conforming to established customs, etc. CONFORMITY (20) [noun] The state of things being similar or identical. | [noun] A point of resemblance; a similarity. | [noun] The state of being conforming, of complying with a set of rules, with a norm or standard. CONOMINEES (14) CONSORTIUM (14) [noun] An association or combination of businesses, financial institutions, or investors, for the purpose of engaging in a joint venture. | [noun] A similar arrangement among non-commercial institutions or organizations. | [noun] An association or society. CONSUMABLE (16) [noun] A material or product that is produced for consumption. | [adjective] That is consumed or depleted upon use. | [adjective] That may be eaten. CONSUMEDLY (18) CONSUMMATE (16) [verb] To bring (a task, project, goal etc.) to completion; to accomplish. | [verb] To make perfect, achieve, give the finishing touch. | [verb] To make (a marriage) complete by engaging in first sexual intercourse. CONTEMNERS (14) [noun] Plural of contemner; people who treat someone or something with contempt or scorn. | [noun] Those who show disregard or disdain for something. CONTEMNING (15) [verb] To disdain; to value at little or nothing; to treat or regard with contempt. | [verb] To commit an offence of contempt, such as contempt of court; to unlawfully flout (e.g. a ruling). CONTEMNORS (14) [noun] Plural of contemnor; persons who treat something with contempt or scorn, or those who disobey a court order. CONTINUUMS (14) [noun] Plural of continuum; a continuous sequence in which adjacent elements are not perceptibly different from each other, although the extremes are quite distinct. | [noun] A range of similar items or ideas arranged in order or degree. CONUNDRUMS (15) [noun] A difficult question or riddle, especially one using a play on words in the answer. | [noun] A difficult choice or decision that must be made. COPOLYMERS (19) [noun] A polymer derived from more than one species of monomer. COPROMOTER (16) [noun] A promoter who works jointly with another promoter in promoting a product, event, or enterprise. COREDEEMED (16) CORMORANTS (14) [noun] Any of various medium-large black seabirds of the family Phalacrocoracidae, especially the great cormorant, Phalacrocorax carbo. | [noun] A voracious eater. COROMANDEL (15) [noun] Calamander. CORYNEFORM (20) COSMICALLY (19) COSMOGENIC (17) [adjective] Produced by cosmic rays | [adjective] Cosmogenetic COSMOGONIC (17) COSMONAUTS (14) [noun] An astronaut, especially a Russian or Soviet one. COSMOPOLIS (16) [noun] An important city, such as a capital city, inhabited by people from a diverse range of cultural backgrounds. COSTMARIES (14) [noun] An aromatic plant, Tanacetum balsamita, once used to flavour ale (prior to the use of hops) COSTUMIERS (14) [noun] A person who supplies or designs costumes. COULOMETER (14) COULOMETRY (17) COUNCILMAN (16) [noun] A male member of a council, especially a city council. COUNCILMEN (16) [noun] A male member of a council, especially a city council. COUNTERMAN (14) [noun] A man who serves behind a counter, especially in a diner. COUNTERMEN (14) [noun] A man who serves behind a counter, especially in a diner. COUNTRYMAN (17) [noun] Somebody from a certain country. | [noun] Somebody from one's own country; a fellow countryman; compatriot. | [noun] A country dweller, especially a follower of country pursuits. COUNTRYMEN (17) [noun] Somebody from a certain country. | [noun] Somebody from one's own country; a fellow countryman; compatriot. | [noun] A country dweller, especially a follower of country pursuits. COUPLEMENT (16) COURTROOMS (14) [noun] The room where a judge presides over hearings and trials, sometimes with a jury. CRAMOISIES (14) CRANIOTOMY (17) [noun] The surgical procedure for removing a part of the skull, called a bone flap, prior to a treatment. The bone flap is replaced at the end of the operation. CREAMERIES (14) [noun] A place where dairy products are prepared or sold. | [noun] An ice cream parlour. CREAMINESS (14) CREAMWARES (17) CREMATIONS (14) [noun] A burning; especially the act or practice of cremating the dead, burning a corpse. CREMATORIA (14) [noun] A place where the bodies of dead people are cremated CRETINISMS (14) CRIBRIFORM (19) [adjective] Perforated, as in the manner of a sieve. CRIMINALLY (17) [adverb] In a criminal manner. CRIMINATED (15) CRIMINATES (14) CRIMSONING (15) [verb] To become crimson or deep red; to blush. | [verb] To dye with crimson or deep red; to redden. CRITERIUMS (14) CRITICISMS (16) [noun] The act of criticising; a critical judgment passed or expressed | [noun] A critical observation or detailed examination and review. CRUCIFORMS (19) [noun] A cross shape in DNA; a Holliday junction. | [noun] Any emblem in the shape of a cross. CRUMBLIEST (16) [adjective] Easy to break into small fragments; brittle or friable. CRUMBLINGS (17) CRUMMINESS (16) CRUMPLIEST (16) CRYPTOGAMS (20) [noun] Any plant that reproduces using spores (rather than seeds), formerly placed in the taxonomic group Cryptogamae, which included ferns, mosses, algae, fungi, lichens and liverworts. CRYPTOGRAM (20) [noun] Encrypted text. | [noun] (games) A type of word puzzle in which text encoded by a simple cipher is to be decoded. CRYPTONYMS (22) [noun] A secret name, a code name. CUDDLESOME (16) [adjective] Characterised or marked by cuddling; cuddly. CULMINATED (15) [verb] Of a heavenly body, to be at the highest point, reach its greatest altitude. | [verb] To reach the (physical) summit, highest point, peak etc. | [verb] To reach a climax; to come to the decisive point (especially as an end or conclusion). CULMINATES (14) [verb] Of a heavenly body, to be at the highest point, reach its greatest altitude. | [verb] To reach the (physical) summit, highest point, peak etc. | [verb] To reach a climax; to come to the decisive point (especially as an end or conclusion). CUMBERBUND (19) CUMBERSOME (18) [adjective] Burdensome or hindering, as a weight or drag; vexatious | [adjective] Not easily managed or handled; awkward; clumsy. | [adjective] Hard, difficult, demanding to handle or get around with. CUMBROUSLY (19) CUMMERBUND (19) [noun] A broad sash, especially one that is pleated lengthwise and worn as an article of formal dress, as around a man's waist together with a tuxedo or dinner jacket. CUMULATING (15) [verb] To accumulate; to amass. | [verb] To be accumulated. CUMULATION (14) CUMULATIVE (17) [adjective] Incorporating all current and previous data up to the present or at the time of measuring or collating | [adjective] That is formed by an accumulation of successive additions | [adjective] That tends to accumulate CUMULIFORM (19) CUNEIFORMS (17) CURMUDGEON (16) [noun] A miser. | [noun] An ill-tempered person full of stubborn ideas or opinions. CURRICULUM (16) [noun] The set of courses, coursework, and their content, offered at a school or university. | [noun] A racecourse; a place for running. CURRYCOMBS (21) CUSTOMISED (15) CUSTOMISES (14) [verb] To build or alter according to personal preferences or specifications. CUSTOMIZED (24) [verb] To build or alter according to personal preferences or specifications. CUSTOMIZER (23) CUSTOMIZES (23) [verb] To build or alter according to personal preferences or specifications. CYANAMIDES (18) CYCLAMATES (19) [noun] Any salt or ester of cyclamic acid, especially the sodium and calcium salts, which have been used as artificial sweeteners CYCLOMETER (19) [noun] A device that counts the revolutions of a bicycle wheel in order to indicate distance travelled. | [noun] An instrument for measuring circular arcs. | [noun] A machine used to decrypt Enigma machine ciphers. CYCLORAMAS (19) [noun] A display consisting of a continuous series of pictures placed on the walls of a circular room so as to appear in natural perspective by a person standing in the middle; a circular or semi-circular display. | [noun] A large curtain or wall, often concave, hung upstage, in a theatre. CYCLORAMIC (21) CYCLOSTOME (19) [noun] Any of various primitive jawless fish of the class Cyclostomata, such as the lamprey or hagfish. CYCLOTOMIC (21) CYMBALISTS (19) CYMBIDIUMS (22) [noun] Any orchid of the genus Cymbidium. CYMOPHANES (22) CYSTEAMINE (17) CYTOCHROME (22) [noun] Any of various related hemoproteins found in the cells of most organisms, which are an important part of cell respiration. CYTOPLASMS (19) DAIRYMAIDS (17) [noun] A woman who works in a dairy. DALMATIANS (13) [noun] One of a breed of dog with a short, white coat with dark spots. | [noun] (demonym) A native or inhabitant of Dalmatia. DAMAGINGLY (18) DAMASCENED (16) [adjective] Decorated with wavy patterns of inlay or etching DAMASCENES (15) [verb] To decorate (metalwork) with a peculiar marking or water produced in the process of manufacture, or with designs produced by inlaying or encrusting with another metal, such as silver or gold, or by etching, etc.; to damask. DAMNATIONS (13) DAMNEDESTS (14) DAMNIFYING (20) [verb] To damage physically; to injure. | [verb] To cause injuries or loss to. DAMPNESSES (15) DAMSELFISH (19) [noun] Any of a number of fish in the Pomacentridae family. DAUNOMYCIN (18) DAYDREAMED (18) [verb] To have such a series of thoughts; to woolgather. DAYDREAMER (17) DEAMINASES (13) DEAMINATED (14) DEAMINATES (13) DEBARMENTS (15) DEBASEMENT (15) [noun] The act of debasing or the state of being debased; a lowering or degradation, especially in character or quality. | [noun] The lowering of the value of a currency by reducing the amount of valuable metal in the coins. DEBATEMENT (15) DECAMETERS (15) [noun] An SI unit of length equal to 10-1 metres. Symbol: dam | [noun] A line in a poem having ten metrical feet. | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has ten feet. DECAMETRIC (17) DECAMPMENT (19) DECEMVIRAL (18) DECENNIUMS (15) [noun] A period of ten years. DECIMALIZE (24) [verb] : To convert to the decimal system. DECIMATING (16) [verb] To kill one-tenth of a group, (specifically) as a military punishment in the Roman army selected by lot, usually carried out by the surviving soldiers. | [verb] To destroy or remove one-tenth of anything. | [verb] To devastate: to reduce or destroy significantly but not completely. DECIMATION (15) [noun] (strictly) The killing or punishment of every tenth person, usually by lot. | [noun] (generally) The killing or destruction of any large portion of a population. | [noun] A tithe or the act of tithing. DECIMETERS (15) [noun] An SI unit of length equal to 10-1 metres. Symbol: dm DECLAIMERS (15) DECLAIMING (16) [verb] To object to something vociferously; to rail against in speech. | [verb] To recite, e.g., poetry, in a theatrical way; to speak for rhetorical display; to speak pompously, noisily, or theatrically; bemouth; to make an empty speech; to rehearse trite arguments in debate; to rant. | [verb] To speak rhetorically; to make a formal speech or oration; specifically, to recite a speech, poem, etc., in public as a rhetorical exercise; to practice public speaking. DECOMPOSED (18) [verb] To separate or break down something into its components; to disintegrate or fragment | [verb] To rot, decay or putrefy DECOMPOSER (17) [noun] Any organism that feeds off decomposing organic material, especially such a bacterium or fungus DECOMPOSES (17) [verb] To separate or break down something into its components; to disintegrate or fragment | [verb] To rot, decay or putrefy DECOMPOUND (18) DECOMPRESS (17) [verb] To relieve the pressure or compression on something. | [verb] To bring someone (such as a diver) back to normal atmospheric pressure after being exposed to high pressure. | [verb] To restore (compressed data) to its original form. DECREMENTS (15) [verb] To decrease a value by a basic quantity unit. DEFACEMENT (18) [noun] An act of defacing; an instance of visibly marring or disfiguring something. | [noun] An act of voiding or devaluing; nullification of the face value. | [noun] (vexillology) A symbol added to a flag or coat of arms to change it or make it different from another. DEFAMATION (16) [noun] The act of injuring another person's reputation by any slanderous communication, written or oral; the wrong of maliciously injuring the good name of another. DEFAMATORY (19) [adjective] Damaging to someone's reputation, especially if untrue DEFEATISMS (16) DEFEMINIZE (25) [verb] To lose, or to remove feminine characteristics or qualities DEFENCEMAN (18) [noun] In ice hockey and lacrosse, a player position with a primary responsibility to prevent the opposing team from scoring goals; same as defender in many other ballgames. DEFENCEMEN (18) [noun] In ice hockey and lacrosse, a player position with a primary responsibility to prevent the opposing team from scoring goals; same as defender in many other ballgames. DEFENSEMAN (16) [noun] In ice hockey and lacrosse, a player position with a primary responsibility to prevent the opposing team from scoring goals; same as defender in many other ballgames. DEFENSEMEN (16) [noun] In ice hockey and lacrosse, a player position with a primary responsibility to prevent the opposing team from scoring goals; same as defender in many other ballgames. DEFERMENTS (16) [noun] An act or instance of deferring or putting off. | [noun] Officially sanctioned postponement of compulsory military service. DEFILEMENT (16) [noun] The act of defiling. | [noun] The state of being defiled. | [noun] The protection of the interior walls of a fortification from enfilading fire, as by covering them, or by a high parapet on the exposed side. DEFINEMENT (16) DEFORMABLE (18) DEHUMANIZE (25) [verb] To take away humanity; to remove or deny human qualities, characteristics, or attributes; to impersonalize. DEHUMIDIFY (23) [verb] To reduce the moisture in a body of air; to lower the humidity. DEKAMETERS (17) [noun] An SI unit of length equal to 10-1 metres. Symbol: dam | [noun] A line in a poem having ten metrical feet. | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has ten feet. DEKAMETRIC (19) DELAMINATE (13) [verb] To cause (something assembled by lamination) to come apart into the layers that make it up. | [verb] To come apart into its component layers. DELIMITERS (13) DELIMITING (14) [verb] To mark or fix the limits of. | [verb] To demarcate. | [adjective] That serves to delimit DELPHINIUM (18) [noun] A cultivated plant, belonging to the genus Delphinium, with tall blue-colored spikes containing flowers. | [noun] A shade of blue, named for the flowers. DEMAGOGIES (15) DEMAGOGING (16) DEMAGOGUED (16) [verb] To speak or act in the manner of a demagogue; to speak about (an issue) in the manner of a demagogue. DEMAGOGUES (15) [noun] A political orator or leader who gains favor by pandering to or exciting the passions and prejudices of the audience rather than by using rational argument. | [noun] A leader of the people. | [verb] To speak or act in the manner of a demagogue; to speak about (an issue) in the manner of a demagogue. DEMANDABLE (16) DEMANDANTS (14) DEMANTOIDS (14) [noun] A green garnet. DEMARCATED (16) [verb] To mark the limits or boundaries of something; to delimit. | [verb] To mark the difference between two causes of action; to distinguish. DEMARCATES (15) [verb] To mark the limits or boundaries of something; to delimit. | [verb] To mark the difference between two causes of action; to distinguish. DEMEANOURS (13) [noun] The social, non-verbal behaviours (such as body language and facial expressions) that are characteristic of a person. DEMENTEDLY (17) DEMERGERED (15) DEMERITING (14) DEMIMONDES (16) [noun] A class of women maintained by wealthy protectors; female courtesans or prostitutes as a group. | [noun] (by extension) A group having little respect or reputation. | [noun] (by extension) A member of such a class or group of persons. DEMISSIONS (13) [noun] Resignation; abdication. DEMITASSES (13) [noun] A small cup of strong black coffee. | [noun] The cup in which this coffee is served. DEMIWORLDS (17) DEMOBILIZE (24) [verb] To release someone from military duty, especially after a war. | [verb] To disband troops, or remove them from a war footing. DEMOCRATIC (17) [adjective] Pertaining to democracy; favoring democracy, or constructed upon the principle of government by the people. | [adjective] Relating to a political party so called; usually, Democratic. | [adjective] Exhibiting social equality, egalitarian (see online Oxford). DEMODULATE (14) [verb] To reverse modulate, undo the effects of modulation. DEMOGRAPHY (22) [noun] The study of human populations and how they change. DEMOISELLE (13) [noun] A damselfly of the family Calopterygidae. | [noun] A young lady; a damsel; a lady's maid. | [noun] The Numidian crane (Grus virgo). DEMOLISHED (17) [verb] To destroy. | [verb] To defeat or consume utterly (as a theory, belief or opponent). DEMOLISHER (16) DEMOLISHES (16) [verb] To destroy. | [verb] To defeat or consume utterly (as a theory, belief or opponent). DEMOLITION (13) [noun] The process of demolishing or destroying buildings or other structures. DEMONESSES (13) DEMONETIZE (22) [verb] To withdraw the status of legal tender from a coin (etc.) and remove it from circulation. | [verb] To declare ineligible or worthless as a medium of exchange or as legal tender. | [verb] To demote (published content, or its creator) so that it is no longer eligible to earn money for its publisher. DEMONIACAL (15) [adjective] Pertaining to, characteristic of, or produced by a demon or evil spirit; devilish or fiendish. DEMONISING (14) [verb] To turn into a demon. | [verb] To describe or represent as evil or diabolic. DEMONIZING (23) [verb] To turn into a demon. | [verb] To describe or represent as evil or diabolic. DEMONOLOGY (17) [noun] The study of demons, especially the incantations required to summon and control them. DEMORALIZE (22) [verb] To destroy the morale of; to dishearten. DEMOUNTING (14) [verb] To remove from its mounting; to take down from a mounted position. | [verb] To dismount. DEMULCENTS (15) [noun] A soothing medication used to relieve pain in inflamed tissues. DEMURENESS (13) DEMURRAGES (14) DENDRIFORM (17) DENDROGRAM (15) [noun] A tree-like diagram used to show the ancestors and descendents of species DENOMINATE (13) [verb] To name; to designate. | [verb] To express in a monetary unit. DENOTEMENT (13) DENOUEMENT (13) [noun] (authorship, often used metaphorically) The conclusion or resolution of a plot. DENUDEMENT (14) DEPARTMENT (15) [noun] A part, portion, or subdivision. | [noun] A distinct course of life, action, study, or the like. | [noun] A subdivision of an organization. DEPLOYMENT (18) [noun] An arrangement or classification of things. | [noun] An implementation, or putting into use, of something. | [noun] The distribution of military forces prior to battle. DEPORTMENT (15) [noun] Bearing; manner of presenting oneself. | [noun] Conduct; public behavior. | [noun] Apparent level of schooling or training. DEPROGRAMS (16) [verb] To counteract the effects of previous programming or brainwashing, especially in an attempt to persuade (a person) to abandon allegiance to a cult. DERAILMENT (13) [noun] The action of a locomotive or train leaving the rails along which it runs. | [noun] A pattern of discourse (in speech or writing) that is a sequence of unrelated or only remotely related ideas. | [noun] An instance of diverting a conversation or debate from its original topic. DERMATITIS (13) [noun] Inflammation of the skin. DERMATOGEN (14) DERMATOMAL (15) DERMATOMES (15) [noun] An instrument used surgically to remove a thin slice of skin for grafting | [noun] An area of skin which is innervated by afferent nerve fibers coming to a single posterior spinal root. Compare: myotome. | [noun] The cutis plate. DERMATOSES (13) [noun] Any disease of the skin. DERMATOSIS (13) [noun] Any disease of the skin. DERMESTIDS (14) [noun] Any beetle of the family Dermestidae, most of which are scavengers that feed on dry animal or plant material. DESIGNMENT (14) DESMOSOMAL (15) DESMOSOMES (15) [noun] A structural unit that functions in the adhesion of cells to form tissue DESPOTISMS (15) [noun] Government by a singular authority, either a single person or tight-knit group, which rules with absolute power, especially in a cruel and oppressive way. DESQUAMATE (22) [verb] To shed or peel. DETACHMENT (18) [noun] The action of detaching; separation. | [noun] The state of being detached or disconnected; insulation. | [noun] Indifference to the concerns of others; disregard; nonchalance; aloofness. DETAINMENT (13) DETERMENTS (13) DETERMINED (14) [verb] To set the boundaries or limits of. | [verb] To ascertain definitely; to figure out, find out, or conclude by analyzing, calculating, or investigating. | [verb] To fix the form or character of; to shape; to prescribe imperatively; to regulate; to settle. DETERMINER (13) [noun] (grammar) A member of a class of words functioning in a noun phrase to identify or distinguish a referent without describing or modifying it. | [noun] (grammar) A dependent function in a noun phrase marking the NP as definite or indefinite. This function is usually filled by words in the determinative class but may be filled by other elements such as a genitive pronoun. | [noun] Something that determines, or helps someone to determine, something else. DETERMINES (13) [verb] To set the boundaries or limits of. | [verb] To ascertain definitely; to figure out, find out, or conclude by analyzing, calculating, or investigating. | [verb] To fix the form or character of; to shape; to prescribe imperatively; to regulate; to settle. DETRIMENTS (13) [noun] Harm, hurt, damage. | [noun] A charge made to students and barristers for incidental repairs of the rooms they occupy. DEUTERIUMS (13) DEUTOPLASM (15) DEVILMENTS (16) DEVOTEMENT (16) [noun] The state of being devoted, or set apart by a vow. DIABOLISMS (15) DIADROMOUS (14) DIAGRAMING (15) [verb] To represent or indicate something using a diagram. | [verb] To schedule the operations of a locomotive or train according to a diagram. DIAGRAMMED (17) [verb] To represent or indicate something using a diagram. | [verb] To schedule the operations of a locomotive or train according to a diagram. DIAMONDING (15) DIAPHRAGMS (19) [noun] In mammals, a sheet of muscle separating the thorax from the abdomen, contracted and relaxed in respiration to draw air into and expel air from the lungs; also called thoracic diaphragm. | [noun] Any of various membranes or sheets of muscle or ligament which separate one cavity from another. | [noun] A contraceptive device consisting of a flexible cup, used to cover the cervix during intercourse. DIASTEMATA (13) [noun] A gap or space between two adjacent teeth, especially the upper front incisors (in humans). | [noun] Any abnormal space, fissure, or cleft in an organ or part of the body. | [noun] The modified protoplasm at the equator of a cell, existing before mitotic division. DIATHERMIC (18) DIATOMITES (13) DIAZONIUMS (22) DICHROISMS (18) DICHROMATE (18) [noun] Any salt of dichromic acid; in solution the orange dichromate anion (Cr2O72-) is in equilibrium with the yellow chromate anion (CrO42-), the relative amount of each ion depending on the pH; they are both very powerful oxidizing agents DICHROMATS (18) DICOUMARIN (15) DICOUMAROL (15) DICROTISMS (15) DICTYOSOME (18) DICUMAROLS (15) DIDYNAMIES (17) DILEMMATIC (17) DIMENSIONS (13) [noun] A single aspect of a given thing. | [noun] A measure of spatial extent in a particular direction, such as height, width or breadth, or depth. | [noun] A construct whereby objects or individuals can be distinguished. DIMERIZING (23) [verb] To produce, or to undergo dimerization DIMETHOATE (16) [noun] A particular organophosphate insecticide. DIMINISHED (17) [verb] To make smaller. | [verb] To become smaller. | [verb] To lessen the authority or dignity of; to put down; to degrade; to abase; to weaken; to nerf (in gaming). DIMINISHES (16) [verb] To make smaller. | [verb] To become smaller. | [verb] To lessen the authority or dignity of; to put down; to degrade; to abase; to weaken; to nerf (in gaming). DIMINUENDO (14) [noun] A dynamic mark directing that a passage is to be played gradually more softly | [noun] A passage having this mark | [noun] (metaphoric) The gradual dying away of something. DIMINUTION (13) [noun] A lessening, decrease or reduction. | [noun] The act or process of making diminutive. | [noun] A compositional technique where the composer shortens the melody by shortening its note values. DIMINUTIVE (16) [noun] (grammar) A word form expressing smallness, youth, unimportance, or endearment. | [adjective] Very small. | [adjective] Serving to diminish. DIMORPHISM (20) DIMORPHOUS (18) [adjective] Dimorphic; occurring or existing in two different forms. DINNERTIME (13) [noun] The time when dinner takes place. | [noun] The time when dinner is ready. | [noun] The midday break in English schools (some areas), lunchtime. DIPLOMAING (16) DIPLOMATES (15) [noun] A professional who has earned a diploma. | [verb] To award a diploma to. DIPLOMATIC (17) [noun] The science of diplomas, or the art of deciphering ancient writings and determining their age, authenticity, etc.; paleography. | [adjective] Concerning the relationships between the governments of countries. | [adjective] Exhibiting diplomacy; exercising tact or courtesy; using discussion to avoid hard feelings, fights or arguments. DIPSOMANIA (15) [noun] Addiction to alcohol. | [noun] Specifically periodic alcoholism, characterized by bouts of heavy drinking rather than continuous indulgence in alcohol. DIRIGISMES (14) DISAFFIRMS (19) [verb] To deny, contradict or repudiate DISBARMENT (15) DISBOSOMED (16) DISCLAIMED (16) [verb] To renounce all claim to; to deny ownership of or responsibility for; to disown; to disavow; to reject. | [verb] To deny, as a claim; to refuse. | [verb] To relinquish or deny having a claim; to disavow another's claim; to decline accepting, as an estate, interest, or office. DISCLAIMER (15) [noun] One who disclaims, disowns, or renounces. | [noun] A public disavowal, as of responsibility, pretensions, claims, opinions, etc. | [noun] A denial, disavowal, or renunciation, as of a title, claim, interest, estate, or trust; relinquishment or waiver of an interest or estate. DISCOMFITS (18) [verb] To defeat completely; to rout. | [verb] To defeat the plans or hopes of; to frustrate; disconcert. | [verb] To embarrass greatly; to confuse; to perplex; to disconcert. DISCOMFORT (18) [noun] Mental or bodily distress. | [noun] Something that disturbs one’s comfort; an annoyance. | [verb] To cause annoyance or distress to. DISCOMMEND (18) DISCOMMODE (18) [verb] To cause inconvenience to (someone). DISCOMPOSE (17) [verb] To destroy the composure of; to disturb or agitate. | [verb] To disarrange, or throw into a state of disorder. DISCONFIRM (18) [verb] To establish the falsity of a claim or belief; to show or to tend to show that a theory or hypothesis is not valid. DISECONOMY (18) [noun] A financial drawback or cost arising from a process DISEMBARKS (19) [verb] To remove from on board a vessel; to put on shore | [verb] To go ashore out of a ship or boat; to leave a train or airplane DISEMBOGUE (16) [verb] To come out into the open sea from a river etc. | [verb] (of a river or waters) To pour out, to debouch; to flow out through a narrow opening into a larger space. DISEMBOWEL (18) [verb] To take or let out the bowels or interior parts of; to eviscerate. | [verb] To take or draw from the body, as the web of a spider. DISESTEEMS (13) [verb] To hold little or no esteem for; to consider worthless. DISHARMONY (19) [noun] The absence of harmony or concordance. DISHELMING (17) DISLIMNING (14) DISMALNESS (13) DISMANTLED (14) [verb] To divest, strip of dress or covering. | [verb] To remove fittings or furnishings from. | [verb] To take apart; to disassemble; to take to pieces. DISMANTLES (13) [verb] To divest, strip of dress or covering. | [verb] To remove fittings or furnishings from. | [verb] To take apart; to disassemble; to take to pieces. DISMASTING (14) [verb] To break off the mast (of a ship), especially by gunfire. | [noun] The act by which a ship is dismasted. DISMEMBERS (17) [verb] To remove the limbs of. | [verb] To cut or otherwise divide something into pieces. DISMISSALS (13) [noun] The act of sending someone away. | [noun] Deprivation of office; the fact or process of being fired from employment or stripped of rank. | [noun] A written or spoken statement of such an act. DISMISSING (14) [verb] To discharge; to end the employment or service of. | [verb] To order to leave. | [verb] To dispel; to rid one’s mind of. DISMISSION (13) DISMISSIVE (16) [adjective] Showing disregard, indicating rejection, serving to dismiss. DISMOUNTED (14) [verb] To (cause to) get off (something). | [verb] To make (a mounted drive) unavailable for use. | [verb] To come down; to descend. DISOWNMENT (16) DISPLUMING (16) [verb] To deprive of feathers or plumes. | [verb] To strip of an award. DISSEMBLED (16) [verb] To disguise or conceal something. | [verb] To feign. | [verb] To deliberately ignore something; to pretend not to notice. DISSEMBLER (15) DISSEMBLES (15) [verb] To disguise or conceal something. | [verb] To feign. | [verb] To deliberately ignore something; to pretend not to notice. DISSIMILAR (13) [adjective] Not similar; unalike; different DISTEMPERS (15) [verb] To temper or mix unduly; to make disproportionate; to change the due proportions of. | [verb] To derange the functions of, whether bodily, mental, or spiritual; to disorder; to disease. | [verb] To deprive of temper or moderation; to disturb; to ruffle; to make disaffected, ill-humoured, or malignant. DISULFIRAM (16) [noun] A drug, 1-(diethylthiocarbamoyldisulfanyl)- N,N-diethyl-methanethioamide, used to treat chronic alcoholism DITHYRAMBS (21) [noun] A choral hymn sung in ancient Athens in honor of the god Dionysus. | [noun] A poem or oration in the same style. DIVEBOMBED (21) [verb] (of an aircraft) To bomb whilst in a steep dive. | [verb] (of a bird) To attack (especially the head of) a person or animal that strays into their territory. | [verb] (of a motorist) To overtake slower traffic by way of a more circuitous route, such as a pair of freeway exit and entrance ramps. DIVESTMENT (16) [noun] The sale or other disposal of some kind of asset. DOCKMASTER (19) DOCUDRAMAS (16) [noun] A type of drama (a film, a television show, or a play) that combines elements of documentary and drama, to some extent showing real events and to some extent using actors performing recreations of documented events. DOCUMENTAL (15) DOCUMENTED (16) [verb] To record in documents. | [verb] To furnish with documents or papers necessary to establish facts or give information. DOCUMENTER (15) DOGMATICAL (16) DOGMATISMS (16) DOGMATISTS (14) DOGMATIZED (24) [verb] To treat something as dogma. | [verb] To speak or write dogmatically. DOGMATIZER (23) DOGMATIZES (23) [verb] To treat something as dogma. | [verb] To speak or write dogmatically. DOLOMITIZE (22) DOMICILING (16) [verb] To have a domicile in a particular place. DOMINANCES (15) DOMINANTLY (16) DOMINATING (14) [verb] To govern, rule or control by superior authority or power | [verb] To exert an overwhelming guiding influence over something or someone | [verb] To enjoy a commanding position in some field DOMINATION (13) [noun] A lid. | [noun] Area or situation which screens a person or thing from view. | [noun] The front and back of a book, magazine, CD package, etc. DOMINATIVE (16) DOMINATORS (13) DOMINATRIX (20) [noun] A dominating woman; a female dominator. | [noun] A dominant female in sadomasochistic practices. DOMINEERED (14) [verb] To rule over or control arbitrarily or arrogantly; to tyrannize. DOMINICKER (19) DOMINIQUES (22) DOOMSAYERS (16) [noun] One who makes dire predictions about the future; one who predicts doom. DOOMSAYING (17) DOOMSDAYER (17) DORMANCIES (15) [noun] The state or characteristic of being dormant; quiet, inactive restfulness. DORONICUMS (15) [noun] Any of several plants of the genus Doronicum, including some called leopardsbane. DOSIMETERS (13) [noun] A device used to measure a dose of ionizing radiation. DOSIMETRIC (15) DOWNSTREAM (16) [verb] To stream downward. | [adjective] Lower down, in relation to a river, stream or flow of fluid | [adjective] In the direction from the server to the client. DRAMATISED (14) [verb] To adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television | [verb] To present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner DRAMATISES (13) [verb] To adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television | [verb] To present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner DRAMATISTS (13) [noun] A writer and creator of theatrical plays. DRAMATIZED (23) [verb] To adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television | [verb] To present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner DRAMATIZES (22) [verb] To adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television | [verb] To present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner DRAMATURGE (14) [noun] Someone who writes or adapts theater plays, a playwright, dramatist, especially one connected with a specific theater or company. | [noun] A literary adviser or editor in a theater, opera, or film company that researches, selects, adapts, edits, and interprets scripts, libretti, texts, and printed programs (or helps others with these tasks), consults with authors, and does public relations work. | [verb] To act as a dramaturge. DRAMATURGS (14) [noun] Someone who writes or adapts theater plays, a playwright, dramatist, especially one connected with a specific theater or company. | [noun] A literary adviser or editor in a theater, opera, or film company that researches, selects, adapts, edits, and interprets scripts, libretti, texts, and printed programs (or helps others with these tasks), consults with authors, and does public relations work. DRAMATURGY (17) [noun] The art of dramatic composition for the stage. DREAMFULLY (19) DREAMINESS (13) DREAMLANDS (14) [noun] An imaginary world experienced while dreaming. | [noun] An imagined world that is ideal yet unrealistic; a fantasy. DREAMTIMES (15) DREAMWORLD (17) [noun] An imaginary world, such as experienced while dreaming. DRESSMAKER (17) [noun] A person who makes tailor-made women's clothes. DRUGMAKERS (18) [noun] A pharmaceutical manufacturer DRUMBEATER (15) DRUMFISHES (19) [noun] Any fish of the family Sciaenidae; they make a loud noise by means of an air bladder. DRUMSTICKS (19) [noun] A stick used to play drums. | [noun] The second joint of the legbone of a chicken or other fowl, especially as an item of food. | [noun] The moringa or drumstick tree, Moringa oleifera, especially its slender, cylindrical pods. DULCIMORES (15) DUMBFOUNDS (19) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. DUMBNESSES (15) DUMBSTRUCK (21) [adjective] So shocked as to be unable to speak DUMBWAITER (18) [noun] A small elevator used to move food etc. from one floor of a building to another. | [noun] A table or set of trays on rollers used for serving food. | [noun] A lazy Susan. DUMFOUNDED (18) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. | [adjective] Shocked and speechless. DUODECIMAL (16) [noun] A number system that uses twelve as its base. | [adjective] Of a number, expressed in base twelve. DUODECIMOS (16) [noun] A size of paper, so called because it is originally made by folding and cutting a single sheet from a printing press into 12 leaves; (5 by 7¾ inches): 6.5 to 7.5 inches high, approximately 4.5 inches wide. | [noun] A sheet or page of that size. | [noun] A book having pages of that size. DURALUMINS (13) DUROMETERS (13) DUUMVIRATE (16) [noun] Rule by two people. | [noun] A state under the rule of two people. | [noun] Any of several offices of the Roman Republic held by two joint magistrates known as duumvirs. DYNAMISTIC (18) DYNAMITERS (16) DYNAMITING (17) [verb] To blow up with dynamite or other high explosive. | [noun] The act of blowing something up with dynamite. DYNAMOTORS (16) DYSPHEMISM (23) [noun] The use of a derogatory, offensive or vulgar word or phrase to replace a (more) neutral original. | [noun] A word or phrase that is used to replace another in this way. DYSPROSIUM (18) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Dy) with atomic number 66: a rare earth element with a metallic silver lustre. EARMARKING (17) [verb] To mark (as of sheep) by slitting the ear. | [verb] (by extension) To specify or set aside for a particular purpose, to allocate. | [noun] An earmark (identifying mark on the ear of an animal). EARTHMOVER (18) [noun] A vehicle designed to excavate or transport earth in large quantities. EARTHWORMS (18) [noun] A worm that lives in the ground. | [noun] A worm of the family Lumbricidae, or, more generally, of the suborder Lumbricina. | [noun] A contemptible person; a groveller. ECCHYMOSES (22) [noun] A skin discoloration caused by bleeding underneath the skin; a bruise. | [noun] The leaking of blood into the tissues of the body as a result of a bruise. ECCHYMOSIS (22) [noun] A skin discoloration caused by bleeding underneath the skin; a bruise. | [noun] The leaking of blood into the tissues of the body as a result of a bruise. ECCHYMOTIC (24) ECHINODERM (18) [noun] An animal of the phylum Echinodermata, comprising radially symmetric, spiny-skinned marine animals including seastars, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, crinoids, and sand dollars. ECLAMPSIAS (16) ECONOMICAL (16) [adjective] Careful with money so as not to spend too much; prudent; thrifty. | [adjective] Saving money or resources. | [adjective] Relating to economy in any other sense. ECONOMISED (15) [verb] To practice being economical (by using things sparingly or in moderation, and by avoiding waste or extravagance). | [verb] To use frugally. ECONOMISES (14) [verb] To practice being economical (by using things sparingly or in moderation, and by avoiding waste or extravagance). | [verb] To use frugally. ECONOMISTS (14) [noun] An expert in economics, especially one who studies economic data and extracts higher-level information or proposes theories. | [noun] One concerned with political economy. | [noun] One who manages a household. ECONOMIZED (24) [verb] To practice being economical (by using things sparingly or in moderation, and by avoiding waste or extravagance). | [verb] To use frugally. ECONOMIZER (23) [noun] A person who avoids waste | [noun] A heat exchange device in a boiler that improves efficiency and saves fuel ECONOMIZES (23) [verb] To practice being economical (by using things sparingly or in moderation, and by avoiding waste or extravagance). | [verb] To use frugally. ECOSYSTEMS (17) [noun] A system formed by an ecological community and its environment that functions as a unit. | [noun] The interconnectedness of organisms (plants, animals, microbes) with each other and their environment. | [noun] A set of interconnected products and services. ECOTOURISM (14) [noun] Responsible travel to natural areas supporting the fauna, flora, and local economy ECTODERMAL (15) ECTOMORPHS (19) [noun] Someone with a lean, only slightly muscular body | [noun] : Theoretical body type in which a person has a high metabolism. Such a person can easily maintain a low fat physique, but does not add muscle or body weight easily. ECTOPLASMS (16) ECTOTHERMS (17) [noun] An animal, such as an amphibian, fish, reptile, or arthropod, which has a limited ability to regulate its body temperature and whose body temperature thus depends on the ambient temperature. ECUMENICAL (16) [adjective] Pertaining to the universal Church, representing the entire Christian world; interdenominational; sometimes by extension, interreligious. | [adjective] General, universal, worldwide. ECUMENISMS (16) ECUMENISTS (14) ECZEMATOUS (23) EFFACEMENT (20) EFFEMINACY (23) EFFEMINATE (18) [noun] An effeminate person. | [verb] To make womanly; to unman. | [verb] To become womanly. EFFLUVIUMS (21) EGOMANIACS (15) [noun] A person obsessed with their own (supposed) importance. EIGENMODES (14) EJECTMENTS (21) ELASTOMERS (12) [noun] Any polymer having the elastic properties of rubber ELBOWROOMS (17) ELECAMPANE (16) [noun] A tall Eurasian herb, Inula helenium, whose roots have been used medicinally ELEMENTALS (12) [noun] (theosophy) A creature (usually a spirit) that is attuned with, or composed of, one of the classical elements: air, earth, fire and water or variations of them like ice, lightning, etc. They sometimes have unique proper names and sometimes are referred to as Air, Earth, Fire, or Water. ELEMENTARY (15) [noun] An elementary school | [noun] (mysticism) A supernatural being which is associated with the elements. | [adjective] Relating to the basic, essential or fundamental part of something. ELIMINATED (13) [verb] To completely remove, get rid of, put an end to. | [verb] To kill (a person or animal). | [verb] To excrete (waste products). ELIMINATES (12) [verb] To completely remove, get rid of, put an end to. | [verb] To kill (a person or animal). | [verb] To excrete (waste products). ELIMINATOR (12) ELOPEMENTS (14) EMACIATING (15) EMACIATION (14) [noun] The act of making very lean. | [noun] The state of being emaciated or reduced to excessive leanness; an excessively lean condition. EMALANGENI (13) [noun] The currency of Swaziland. EMANATIONS (12) [noun] The act of flowing or proceeding (of something, quality, or feeling) from a source or origin. | [noun] That which issues, flows, or proceeds from any object as a source; efflux; an effluence. | [noun] The element radon. EMANCIPATE (16) [verb] To set free from the power of another; to liberate; as: | [verb] To free from any controlling influence, especially from anything which exerts undue or evil influence | [adjective] Freed; set at liberty. EMARGINATE (13) EMASCULATE (14) [verb] To deprive of virile or procreative power; to castrate, to geld. | [verb] To deprive of masculine vigor or spirit; to weaken; to render effeminate; to vitiate by unmanly softness. | [verb] Of a flower: to deprive of the anthers. EMBALMMENT (18) EMBANKMENT (20) [noun] A long mound of earth, stone, or similar material, usually built for purposes such as to hold back or store water, for protection from weather or enemies, or to support a road or railway. EMBARGOING (16) [verb] To impose an embargo on trading certain goods with another country. | [verb] To impose an embargo on a document. EMBARKMENT (20) EMBASSAGES (15) [noun] An embassy. | [noun] Message; errand. EMBATTLING (15) [verb] To arrange in order of battle; to array for battle | [verb] To prepare or arm for battle; to equip as for battle. | [verb] To be arrayed for battle. EMBAYMENTS (19) [noun] A bay. (the water) | [noun] The shoreline of a bay, an indentation in a shoreline. (the land, not the water) | [noun] A topographical feature that used to be a bay, like the Mississippi embayment. EMBEDDINGS (17) EMBEDMENTS (17) EMBEZZLERS (32) EMBEZZLING (33) [verb] To steal or misappropriate money that one has been trusted with, especially to steal money from the organisation for which one works. | [noun] Embezzlement EMBITTERED (15) [verb] To cause to be bitter. EMBLAZONED (24) [verb] To adorn with prominent markings. | [verb] To inscribe upon. | [verb] To draw (a coat of arms). EMBLAZONER (23) EMBLAZONRY (26) EMBLEMATIC (18) [adjective] Serving as, or relating to a symbol, emblem or illustration of a type. | [adjective] Typical. EMBLEMENTS (16) [noun] Annual crops produced by cultivation. Emblements are treated as personal property. EMBODIMENT (17) [noun] The process of embodying. | [noun] A physical entity typifying an abstract concept. EMBOLDENED (16) [verb] To render (someone) bolder or more courageous. | [verb] To encourage, inspire, or motivate. | [verb] To format text in boldface. EMBOLISMIC (18) EMBONPOINT (16) [noun] Plumpness, stoutness, especially when voluptuous. | [adjective] Plump, chubby, buxom. EMBORDERED (16) EMBOSOMING (17) [verb] To draw to or into one's bosom; to treasure. | [verb] To enclose, surround, or protect. EMBOSSABLE (16) EMBOSSMENT (16) EMBOUCHURE (19) [noun] The use of the lips, facial muscles, tongue, and teeth when playing a wind instrument. | [noun] The mouth of a river or valley. EMBOWELING (18) [verb] To enclose or bury. | [verb] To remove the bowels; disembowel. | [noun] An act of disembowelment. EMBOWELLED (18) [verb] To enclose or bury. | [verb] To remove the bowels; disembowel. EMBOWERING (18) [verb] To enclose something or someone as if in a bower; shelter with foliage. | [verb] To lodge or rest in or as in a bower. | [verb] To form a bower. EMBRACEORS (16) EMBRANGLED (16) EMBRANGLES (15) EMBRASURES (14) [noun] Any of the indentations between the merlons of a battlement. | [noun] The slanting indentation in a wall for a door or window, such that the space is larger on the inside than the outside. | [noun] An embrace. EMBRITTLED (15) [verb] To become or make brittle. EMBRITTLES (14) [verb] To become or make brittle. EMBROIDERS (15) [verb] To stitch a decorative design on fabric with needle and thread of various colours. | [verb] To add imaginary detail to a narrative to make it more interesting or acceptable. EMBROIDERY (18) [noun] The ornamentation of fabric using needlework. | [noun] A piece of embroidered fabric. | [noun] The elaboration of an account etc. with details, especially when fictitious. EMBROILING (15) [verb] To draw into a situation; to cause to be involved. | [verb] To implicate in confusion; to complicate; to jumble. EMBROWNING (18) EMBRYOGENY (21) EMBRYOLOGY (21) [noun] The scientific study of embryos. EMENDATING (14) EMENDATION (13) [noun] The act of altering for the better, or correcting what is erroneous or faulty; correction; improvement. | [noun] Alteration by editorial criticism, as of a text so as to give a better reading; removal of errors or corruptions from a document. | [noun] An intentional change in the spelling of a scientific name, which is usually not allowed. EMERGENCES (15) EMETICALLY (17) EMIGRATING (14) [verb] To leave the country in which one lives, especially one's native country, in order to reside elsewhere. EMIGRATION (13) [noun] The act of emigrating; movement of a person or persons out of a country or national region, for the purpose of permanent relocation of residence. | [noun] A body of emigrants; emigrants collectively EMINENCIES (14) EMISSARIES (12) [noun] An agent sent on a mission to represent the interests of someone else. | [noun] A venous channel in the skull. | [noun] An underground channel by which the water of a lake escapes. EMISSIVITY (18) EMITTANCES (14) EMOLLIENTS (12) [noun] Something which softens or lubricates the skin; moisturizer. | [noun] Anything soothing the mind, or that makes something more acceptable. EMOLUMENTS (14) [noun] Payment for an office or employment; compensation for a job, which is usually monetary. EMPANELING (15) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. EMPANELLED (15) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. EMPATHETIC (19) [adjective] Showing empathy for others, and recognizing their feelings; empathic EMPATHISED (18) [verb] To feel empathy for another person EMPATHISES (17) [verb] To feel empathy for another person EMPATHIZED (27) [verb] To feel empathy for another person EMPATHIZES (26) [verb] To feel empathy for another person EMPENNAGES (15) [noun] The tail assembly of an aircraft. | [noun] The feathers of an arrow or the tail fins of a bomb or rocket used to stabilize the longitudinal axis of the projectile parallel to the flight path. EMPHASISED (18) [verb] To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something). EMPHASISES (17) [verb] To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something). EMPHASIZED (27) [verb] To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something). EMPHASIZES (26) [verb] To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something). EMPHYSEMAS (22) EMPHYSEMIC (24) EMPIRICISM (18) [noun] A pursuit of knowledge purely through experience, especially by means of observation and sometimes by experimentation. | [noun] A doctrine which holds that the only or, at least, the most reliable source of human knowledge is experience, especially perception by means of the physical senses. (Often contrasted with rationalism.) | [noun] A practice of medicine founded on mere experience, without the aid of science or a knowledge of principles; ignorant and unscientific practice; the method or practice of an empiric. EMPIRICIST (16) [noun] An advocate or supporter of empiricism EMPLOYABLE (19) [noun] A person who is fit for employment. | [adjective] (especially of a person) Able to be employed. EMPLOYMENT (19) [noun] The work or occupation for which one is used, and often paid | [noun] The act of employing | [noun] A use, purpose EMPOISONED (15) EMPOWERING (18) [verb] To give permission, power, or the legal right to do something. | [verb] To give someone more confidence and/or strength to do something, often by enabling them to increase their control over their own life or situation. | [adjective] That empowers. EMPURPLING (17) [verb] To make purple. | [verb] To enrage or anger, referring to making the face purple or red with blood. | [verb] Of writing, to make overly flowery or showy; to embellish unduly. EMULATIONS (12) [noun] The endeavor or desire to equal or excel someone else in qualities or actions. | [noun] Jealous rivalry; envy; envious contention. | [noun] Running a program or other software designed for a different system, by simulating parts of the other system. EMULSIFIED (16) [verb] To make into an emulsion. EMULSIFIER (15) [noun] A substance that helps an emulsion form, or helps keep an emulsion from separating. EMULSIFIES (15) [verb] To make into an emulsion. EMULSOIDAL (13) ENACTMENTS (14) [noun] The act of enacting, or the state of being enacted. | [noun] A piece of legislation that has been properly authorized by a legislative body. ENAMELISTS (12) ENAMELLING (13) [verb] To coat or decorate with enamel. | [verb] To variegate with colours, as if with enamel. | [verb] To form a glossy surface like enamel upon. ENAMELWARE (15) [noun] Articles coated with decorative enamel | [noun] Cooking utensils that have a corrosion resistant layer of enamel fused to the surface ENAMOURING (13) [verb] (mostly in the passive, followed by "of" or "with") To cause to be in love. | [verb] (mostly in the passive) To captivate. ENANTIOMER (12) [noun] One of a pair of stereoisomers that is the mirror image of the other, but may not be superimposed on this other stereoisomer. Almost always, a pair of enantiomers contain at least one chiral center, and a sample of either enantiomer will be optically active. ENCAMPMENT (18) [noun] A campsite. | [noun] A group of temporary living quarters and/or other temporary structures. ENCASEMENT (14) ENCASHMENT (17) ENCOMIASTS (14) [noun] A person who delivers an encomium or eulogy. ENCRIMSONS (14) ENCUMBERED (17) [verb] To load down something with a burden | [verb] To restrict or block something with a hindrance or impediment | [verb] To burden with a legal claim or other obligation ENCYSTMENT (17) ENDAMAGING (15) ENDAMOEBAE (15) ENDAMOEBAS (15) ENDEARMENT (13) [noun] The act or process of endearing, of causing (something or someone) to be loved or to be the object of affection. | [noun] The state or characteristic of being endeared. | [noun] An expression of affection. ENDEMICITY (18) ENDODERMAL (14) ENDODERMIS (14) [noun] In a plant stem or root, a cylinder of cells that separates the outer cortex from the central core. The endodermis controls flow of water and minerals within the plant. In most plants, this tissue is restricted to the roots. | [noun] The deepest layer of the skin. ENDOENZYME (25) ENDOGAMIES (14) ENDOGAMOUS (14) ENDOLYMPHS (21) ENDOMETRIA (13) ENDOMORPHS (18) [noun] A mineral, especially a crystal, enclosed within another | [noun] A person of the endomorphic physical type, characterised by big bones, round face, large trunk and thighs and a naturally high degree of body fat, especially around the midsection. | [noun] A person having a theoretical body type with slow metabolism in which weight is gained easily, but fat levels are hard to reduce. Endomorphic bodybuilders tend to be the most massive. ENDOMORPHY (21) ENDOPLASMS (15) ENDOSMOSES (13) ENDOSPERMS (15) [noun] Tissue surrounding the embryo of flowering plant seeds, that provides nutrition to the developing embryo; usually triploid ENDOTHERMS (16) [noun] An animal that maintains a constant body temperature ENDOTHERMY (19) ENDOWMENTS (16) [noun] Something with which a person or thing is endowed. | [noun] Property or funds invested for the support and benefit of a person or not-for-profit institution. | [noun] Endowment assurance or pure endowment. ENGAGEMENT (14) [noun] An appointment, especially to speak or perform. | [noun] Connection or attachment. | [noun] (by extension, about human emotional state) The feeling of being compelled, drawn in, connected to what is happening, interested in what will happen next. ENGULFMENT (16) ENHARMONIC (17) [adjective] Describing two or more identical or almost identical notes that are written differently when in different keys. (Whether they are identical depends on the tuning method used.) | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a tetrachord. ENJAMBMENT (23) [noun] A technique in poetry whereby a sentence is carried over to the next line without pause. ENJOYMENTS (22) [noun] The condition of enjoying anything. | [noun] An enjoyable state of mind. | [noun] An activity that gives pleasure. ENLACEMENT (14) ENLISTMENT (12) [noun] The act of enlisting. ENMESHMENT (17) ENORMITIES (12) [noun] Deviation from what is normal or standard; irregularity, abnormality. | [noun] Deviation from moral normality; extreme wickedness, nefariousness, or cruelty. | [noun] A breach of law or morality; a transgression, an act of evil or wickedness. ENORMOUSLY (15) [adverb] Extremely, greatly: to an enormous degree. | [adverb] Shockingly. ENRICHMENT (17) [noun] The act of enriching or something enriched. | [noun] The process of making enriched uranium. | [noun] The addition of sugar to grape juice used to make wine; chaptalization. ENROLLMENT (12) [noun] The act of enrolling or the state of being enrolled. | [noun] The people enrolled, considered as a group. | [noun] The number of people enrolled. ENSERFMENT (15) ENTAILMENT (12) ENTAMOEBAE (14) [noun] Any of many parasitic amoebas, of the genus Entamoeba, that cause dysentery etc. ENTAMOEBAS (14) [noun] Any of many parasitic amoebas, of the genus Entamoeba, that cause dysentery etc. ENTHUSIASM (15) [noun] Possession by a god; divine inspiration or frenzy. | [noun] Intensity of feeling; excited interest or eagerness. | [noun] Something in which one is keenly interested. ENTHYMEMES (20) [noun] A by and large statement, a maxim, a less-than-100% argument. | [noun] A syllogism with a required but unstated assumption. ENTICEMENT (14) [noun] The act or practice of enticing, of alluring or tempting | [noun] That which entices, or incites to evil; means of allurement; an alluring object ENTODERMAL (13) ENTODERMIC (15) ENTOMBMENT (16) [noun] The act of entombing or the state of being entombed | [noun] The decommissioning of a radioactive site by encasing it in concrete ENTOMOLOGY (16) [noun] The scientific study of insects, and (informally) of other arthropods (and occasionally other invertebrates). ENTRAPMENT (14) [noun] The state of being entrapped. | [noun] Action by law enforcement personnel to lead an otherwise innocent person to commit a crime, in order to arrest and prosecute that person for the crime. | [noun] A method of isolating specific cells or molecules from a mixture, especially by immobilization on a gel. ENUMERABLE (14) [adjective] Capable of being enumerated; countable. ENUMERATED (13) [verb] To specify each member of a sequence individually in incrementing order. | [verb] To determine the amount of. ENUMERATES (12) [verb] To specify each member of a sequence individually in incrementing order. | [verb] To determine the amount of. ENUMERATOR (12) [noun] A person who, or a thing that enumerates; a counter or iterator. | [noun] A census taker. ENVENOMING (16) [verb] To poison, to put or inject venom onto or into. | [verb] To acerbate. | [noun] The act by which an individual is envenomed. ENZYMOLOGY (28) [noun] The branch of science that studies enzymes. EPHEMERALS (17) [noun] Something which lasts for a short period of time. EPHEMERIDS (18) EPICARDIUM (17) [noun] The layer of tissue between the pericardium and the heart. EPICENISMS (16) EPICURISMS (16) EPIDEMICAL (17) EPIDENDRUM (16) EPIDERMOID (16) EPIDIDYMAL (19) EPIDIDYMIS (19) [noun] A narrow, tightly-coiled tube connecting the efferent ducts from the rear of each testicle to its vas deferens, where sperm are stored during maturation. EPIGONISMS (15) EPILIMNION (14) [noun] The surface layer of a liquid body, used in reference to a reservoir or body of water EPIMERASES (14) EPINEURIUM (14) EPIPHRAGMS (20) EPIPHYTISM (22) EPISIOTOMY (17) [noun] A surgical incision through the perineum made to enlarge the vagina and assist childbirth. EPISOMALLY (17) EPITHELIUM (17) [noun] A membranous tissue composed of one or more layers of cells which forms the covering of most internal and external surfaces of the body and its organs: internally including the lining of vessels and other small cavities, and externally being the skin. EPITOMICAL (16) EPITOMISED (15) [verb] To make an epitome of; to shorten; to condense. | [verb] To be an epitome of. EPITOMISES (14) [verb] To make an epitome of; to shorten; to condense. | [verb] To be an epitome of. EPITOMIZED (24) [verb] To make an epitome of; to shorten; to condense. | [verb] To be an epitome of. EPITOMIZES (23) [verb] To make an epitome of; to shorten; to condense. | [verb] To be an epitome of. EQUANIMITY (24) [noun] The state of being calm, stable and composed, especially under stress. EQUIPMENTS (23) EQUISETUMS (21) [noun] The horsetail (plant of genus Equisetum) EREMITICAL (14) EREMITISMS (14) ERGOMETERS (13) [noun] A dynamometer used to measure the work done by muscles | [noun] A rowing machine or ergocycle ERGOMETRIC (15) ERGONOMICS (15) [noun] The science of the design of equipment, especially so as to reduce operator fatigue, discomfort and injury. | [noun] Political economy. ERGONOMIST (13) ERGOTAMINE (13) [noun] An alkaloid, extracted from ergot, that causes constriction of blood vessels and has been used to treat migraine; it is related to lysergic acid. EROTICISMS (14) ERRATICISM (14) ERYTHREMIA (18) ERYTHRISMS (18) ESCAPEMENT (16) [noun] The contrivance in a timepiece (winding wristwatch) which connects the train of wheel work with the pendulum or balance, giving to the latter the impulse by which it is kept in vibration. | [noun] A mechanism found in devices such as a typewriter or printer which controls lateral motion of the carriage. | [noun] An escape or means of escape. ESCARPMENT (16) [noun] A steep descent or declivity; steep face or edge of a ridge; ground about a fortified place, cut away nearly vertically to prevent hostile approach. ESTAMINETS (12) [noun] A small café or bar. | [noun] A restaurant where smoking is allowed. ESTIMATING (13) [verb] To calculate roughly, often from imperfect data. | [verb] To judge and form an opinion of the value of, from imperfect data. ESTIMATION (12) [noun] The process of making an estimate. | [noun] The amount, extent, position, size, or value reached in an estimate. | [noun] Esteem or favourable regard. ESTIMATIVE (15) ESTIMATORS (12) [noun] A person who estimates, especially one who estimates costs | [noun] A function of a random sample of a population used to estimate some parameter of the whole population ETHAMBUTOL (17) [noun] A bacteriostatic antimycobacterial drug prescribed to treat tuberculosis. EUDIOMETER (13) [noun] A graduated glass tube, closed at one end, that is used for measuring the change in the volume of gases during a chemical reaction. EUHEMERISM (17) EUHEMERIST (15) EUNUCHISMS (17) EUONYMUSES (15) [noun] Any of many (often decorative) trees, shrubs and woody vines, of the genus Euonymus. EUPHEMISED (18) [verb] To utter one or more euphemisms; to speak euphemistically. | [verb] To describe in euphemistic terms. EUPHEMISES (17) [verb] To utter one or more euphemisms; to speak euphemistically. | [verb] To describe in euphemistic terms. EUPHEMISMS (19) [noun] The use of a word or phrase to replace another with one that is considered less offensive, blunt or vulgar than the word or phrase which it replaces. | [noun] A word or phrase that is used to replace another in this way. EUPHEMISTS (17) EUPHEMIZED (27) [verb] To utter one or more euphemisms; to speak euphemistically. | [verb] To describe in euphemistic terms. EUPHEMIZER (26) EUPHEMIZES (26) [verb] To utter one or more euphemisms; to speak euphemistically. | [verb] To describe in euphemistic terms. EUPHONIUMS (17) [noun] A valved brass instrument, a sax horn, the tenor of the tuba family of instruments, having the appearance very similar to that of a tuba. It is similar to and often used instead of a "Baritone" horn. (A true Baritone has a cylindrical tubing, while the Euphonium tubing is conical, though they both cover the same range of tones. This relationship is also between the Trumpet [cylindrical] and Cornet [conical] respectively.) EURHYTHMIC (23) [adjective] Harmonious EURYTHMICS (20) [noun] A rhythmic interpretation of music with graceful, free-style dance movements EURYTHMIES (18) EVANGELISM (16) [noun] Sharing news of something in order to convince someone to join or otherwise accept it. | [noun] The process of evangelizing. EVERYWOMAN (21) [noun] In fiction, drama, or allegory, the archetypical ordinary woman. EVERYWOMEN (21) EVOLVEMENT (18) EVONYMUSES (18) EXAMINABLE (21) EXAMINANTS (19) [noun] One who examines; an examiner. | [noun] One who is to be examined. EXANTHEMAS (22) EXCITEMENT (21) [noun] The state of being excited (emotionally aroused). | [noun] Something that excites. EXCLAIMERS (21) EXCLAIMING (22) [verb] To cry out suddenly, from some strong emotion. | [verb] To say suddenly and with strong emotion. | [noun] Exclamation EXCREMENTS (21) EXEMPTIONS (21) [noun] An act of exempting. | [noun] The state of being exempt; immunity. | [noun] A deduction from the normal amount of taxes. EXHUMATION (22) [noun] The act of digging up that which has been buried. EXOENZYMES (31) [noun] Any enzyme, generated by a cell, that functions outside of that cell. EXOTHERMAL (22) EXOTHERMIC (24) [adjective] (of a reaction) That releases energy in the form of heat. | [adjective] (of a compound) That releases heat during its formation, and absorbs it during its decomposition | [adjective] Of an animal: whose body temperature is regulated by external factors; cold-blooded. EXOTICISMS (21) EXPERIMENT (21) [noun] A test under controlled conditions made to either demonstrate a known truth, examine the validity of a hypothesis, or determine the efficacy of something previously untried. | [noun] Experience, practical familiarity with something. | [verb] To conduct an experiment. EXPERTISMS (21) EXPRESSMAN (21) EXPRESSMEN (21) EXTEMPORAL (21) EXTERMINED (20) EXTERMINES (19) EXTOLMENTS (19) EXTRAMURAL (19) [adjective] Taking place outside the walls of an institution, especially a school or university. | [adjective] Describing teaching of students who are not resident at such an institution. EXTREMISMS (21) [noun] Extreme ideas or actions. EXTREMISTS (19) [noun] A person who holds extreme views, especially one who advocates such views; a radical or fanatic. FACSIMILES (17) [noun] A copy or reproduction. | [noun] A fax, a machine for making and sending copies of printed material and images via radio or telephone network. | [noun] The image sent by the machine itself. FACTUALISM (17) FAMILIARLY (18) FAMILISTIC (17) FAMISHMENT (20) FAMOUSNESS (15) FANATICISM (17) [noun] The characteristic or practice of being a fanatic. FARMERETTE (15) FARMHOUSES (18) [noun] A farmer's residence. FARMSTEADS (16) [noun] The main building of a farm. | [noun] A farm, including its buildings. FARMWORKER (22) [noun] A person hired to work on the farm or in the agricultural industry. FATHOMABLE (20) FATHOMLESS (18) [adjective] Very deep (especially of water deeper than a lead line can measure); bottomless. | [adjective] (by extension) unfathomable or incomprehensible. FAVORITISM (18) [noun] The unfair favouring of one person or group at the expense of another. FEARSOMELY (18) FEDERALISM (16) [noun] A system of national government in which power is divided between a central authority and a number of regions with delimited self-governing authority. | [noun] Advocacy of such a system. | [noun] Covenantalism. FELLMONGER (16) [noun] Someone who sells or works with animal hides and skins. | [verb] To prepare animal skin for tanning. FEMALENESS (15) FEMINACIES (17) FEMININELY (18) FEMININITY (18) [noun] The sum of all attributes that are feminine or convey womanhood. FEMINISING (16) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. | [adjective] Tending to make more feminine. FEMINISTIC (17) FEMINITIES (15) FEMINIZING (25) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. | [adjective] Tending to make more feminine. FEOFFMENTS (21) [noun] The grant of a feud or fee. | [noun] A gift or conveyance in fee of land or other corporeal hereditaments, accompanied by actual delivery of possession. | [noun] The instrument or deed by which corporeal hereditaments are conveyed. FERMENTERS (15) [noun] Any organism, such as a yeast, that causes fermentation. | [noun] A fermentor; a vessel in which fermentation takes place. FERMENTING (16) [verb] To react, using fermentation; especially to produce alcohol by aging or by allowing yeast to act on sugars; to brew. | [verb] To stir up, agitate, cause unrest or excitement in. FERMENTORS (15) [noun] The vessel in which fermentation takes place FETICHISMS (20) FETISHISMS (18) [noun] The belief that natural objects have supernatural powers, or that something created by people has power over people. | [noun] A form of paraphilia where the object of attraction is an inanimate object or a part of a person's body. FEUDALISMS (16) FILMICALLY (20) FILMMAKERS (21) [noun] A producer or director of films/movies. FILMMAKING (22) [noun] The activity of preparing edited video works, formerly principally films, whether for entertainment or other purposes. FILMSETTER (15) FILMSTRIPS (17) [noun] A length of film containing individual photographs or diagrams intended to be shown in sequence as instruction or as a visual aid. | [noun] A file containing a sequence of images or video frames. FIMBRIATED (18) [adjective] Having a fringed border. | [adjective] Bordered with hair or hair-like material. | [adjective] Having a narrow borderline of another tincture. FIREBOMBED (20) [verb] To attack with a firebomb. FIRESTORMS (15) [noun] A fire whose intensity is greatly increased by inrushing winds. | [noun] An intense or violent altercation. FIRMAMENTS (17) [noun] (usually uncountable) The vault of the heavens, where the clouds, sun, moon, and stars can be seen; the heavens, the sky. | [noun] The field or sphere of an activity or interest. | [noun] In the geocentric Ptolemaic system, the eighth celestial sphere which carried the fixed stars; (by extension) any celestial sphere. FIRMNESSES (15) FISHMONGER (19) [noun] A person who sells fish. | [noun] A fishmonger's, a fishmonger's shop: a shop that sells fish. | [noun] A pimp. FLAGELLUMS (16) FLAMBOYANT (20) [noun] The royal poinciana (Delonix regia), a showy tropical tree. | [adjective] Showy, bold or audacious in behaviour, appearance, etc. | [adjective] Referring to the final stage of French Gothic architecture from the 14th to the 16th centuries. FLAMEPROOF (20) [verb] To make flameproof. | [adjective] Resistant to catching fire. FLAMINGOES (16) [noun] A wading bird of the family Phoenicopteridae. | [noun] A deep pink color tinged with orange, like that of a flamingo. FLAMMABLES (19) FLASHLAMPS (20) [noun] A kind of lamp that uses an electric current to start powder burning and produce a brief sudden burst of bright light. It was formerly used in flash photography. FLAVORSOME (18) [adjective] Characterised or marked by flavor(s); flavorful. FLEMISHING (19) FLESHMENTS (18) FLEXITIMES (22) FLIMSINESS (15) FLOWMETERS (18) [noun] Any of various devices used to measure the flow of a fluid through a pipe, etc. FLUMMERIES (17) [noun] A custard; any of several bland, gelatinous foodstuffs, usually made from stewed fruit and thickened with oatmeal, cornstarch or flour. | [noun] Empty or meaningless talk, especially when used to flatter. | [noun] Pretentious trappings, useless ornaments used to impress. FLUMMOXING (25) [verb] To confuse; to fluster; to flabbergast. FOAMFLOWER (21) FORAMINOUS (15) [adjective] Covered with holes or foramina. FORCEMEATS (17) FOREARMING (16) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To arm in preparation. FOREDOOMED (17) [verb] To predestine to a doom. FOREIGNISM (16) FOREMOTHER (18) [noun] A female ancestor. FORETOPMAN (17) FORETOPMEN (17) FORMALISED (16) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALISES (15) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALISMS (17) [noun] Strict adherence to a given form of conduct, practice etc. | [noun] One of several alternative computational paradigms for a given theory. | [noun] An approach to interpretation and/or evaluation focused on the (usually linguistic) structure of a literary work rather than on the contexts of its origin or reception. FORMALISTS (15) [noun] An overly formal person, especially one who adheres to current forms; a stickler | [noun] An advocate of formalism FORMALIZED (25) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALIZER (24) FORMALIZES (24) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALNESS (15) FORMAMIDES (18) [noun] The amide of formic acid HCO-NH2 or any N-substituted derivative; they are used in the synthesis of pharmaceuticals FORMATIONS (15) [noun] Something possessing structure or form. | [noun] The act of assembling a group or structure. | [noun] The process during which something comes into being and gains its characteristics. FORMATIVES (18) [noun] (grammar) A language unit that has morphological function. FORMATTERS (15) FORMATTING (16) [verb] To create or edit the layout of a document. | [verb] Change a document so it will fit onto a different type of page. | [verb] To prepare a mass storage medium for initial use, erasing any existing data in the process. FORMIDABLE (18) [adjective] Causing fear, dread, awe, or discouragement as a result of size, strength, or some other impressive feature; commanding respect; causing wonder or astonishment. | [adjective] Difficult to defeat or overcome. FORMIDABLY (21) FORMLESSLY (18) FORMULATED (16) [verb] To reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression. FORMULATES (15) [verb] To reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression. FORMULATOR (15) FORMULIZED (25) FORMULIZES (24) FORTISSIMI (15) [noun] The dynamic sign indicating that the piece should be played fortissimo. Abbreviation: ff. FORTISSIMO (15) [noun] The dynamic sign indicating that the piece should be played fortissimo. Abbreviation: ff. | [adverb] Indicating that the piece is played very loud. FRAGMENTAL (16) [noun] A fragmentary rock. | [adjective] Consisting of fragments FRAGMENTED (17) [verb] To break apart. | [verb] To cause to be broken into pieces. | [verb] To break up and disperse (a file) into non-contiguous areas of a disk. FRAMBESIAS (17) FRAMBOISES (17) FRAMESHIFT (21) FRAMEWORKS (22) [noun] A support structure comprising joined parts or conglomerated particles and intervening open spaces of similar or larger size. | [noun] The arrangement of support beams that represent a building's general shape and size. | [noun] The larger branches of a tree that determine its shape. FREEDWOMAN (19) FREEDWOMEN (19) FREEMARTIN (15) [noun] A female calf, born as twin with a bull calf, but sexually imperfect (often infertile). | [noun] Any female animal born sterile or otherwise infertile. FREMITUSES (15) FROLICSOME (17) [adjective] Characterised or marked by frolicking; playful. FROMENTIES (15) FRUMENTIES (15) FULFILMENT (18) [noun] The act of fulfilling. | [noun] The state or quality of being fulfilled; completion; realization. | [noun] The act of consummating a desire or promise. FULMINATED (16) [verb] To make a verbal attack. | [verb] To issue as a denunciation. | [verb] To thunder or make a loud noise. FULMINATES (15) [noun] Any salt or ester of fulminic acid, mostly explosive. | [verb] To make a verbal attack. | [verb] To issue as a denunciation. FUMATORIES (15) FUMBLINGLY (21) FUMIGATING (17) [verb] To disinfect, purify, or rid of vermin with the fumes of certain chemicals. FUMIGATION (16) [noun] The act of fumigating, or applying smoke or vapor, as for disinfection. | [noun] Vapor raised in the process of fumigating. FUMIGATORS (16) FUMITORIES (15) [noun] A plant of the taxonomic genus Fumaria, which are annual herbaceous flowering plants in the family Papaveraceae, native to temperate Europe and Asia. FUNDAMENTS (16) [noun] Foundation. | [noun] The bottom; the buttocks or anus. | [noun] The underlying basis or principle for a theoretical or mathematical system. FUNNELFORM (18) FURMENTIES (15) FUROSEMIDE (16) [noun] A diuretic used in the treatment of congestive heart failure and edema. GADOLINIUM (14) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Gd) with atomic number 64: a ductile silvery-white metal. GALLAMINES (13) GALLICISMS (15) [noun] A loanword borrowed from French. GALUMPHING (19) [verb] To move heavily and clumsily, or with a sense of prancing and triumph. GALVANISMS (16) GAMBOLLING (16) [verb] To move about playfully; to frolic. | [verb] To do a forward roll. | [noun] The act of one who gambols. GAMEKEEPER (19) [noun] A person employed to maintain the game for hunting and all associated materials and effects. Often shortened to keeper. GAMENESSES (13) GAMESOMELY (18) GAMETANGIA (14) [noun] A gamete-producing organ or cell found in many multicellular protists, algae and fungi, and in the gametophytes of plants. GAMETOCYTE (18) [noun] A diploid germ cell that divides by meiosis into a gamete GAMINESSES (13) GARBAGEMAN (16) [noun] Someone, usually male, whose job it is to collect refuse from people's homes and take it to be processed. GARBAGEMEN (16) [noun] Someone, usually male, whose job it is to collect refuse from people's homes and take it to be processed. GARMENTING (14) GASOMETERS (13) [noun] An apparatus used to store or measure gas or the flow of gas, particularly in a laboratory setting. | [noun] A large tank or reservoir for storing gas; a gasholder. GASTRONOME (13) [noun] A lover of good food; a connoisseur or gourmet GASTRONOMY (16) [noun] The art of preparing and eating good food. | [noun] The study of the relationship between food and culture. GELSEMIUMS (15) [noun] Any of several flowering plants, of the genus Gelsemium, many of which are poisonous. GEMINATING (14) [verb] To arrange in pairs. | [verb] To occur in pairs. GEMINATION (13) GEMMATIONS (15) GEMOLOGIES (14) GEMOLOGIST (14) GENDARMERY (17) GENTAMICIN (15) GENTEELISM (13) [noun] A nicer word used instead of a vulgar or distasteful word GEOCHEMIST (18) [noun] A chemist or geologist who specializes in geochemistry GEOMANCERS (15) GEOMANCIES (15) GEOMETRICS (15) [noun] A design made from geometric figures | [noun] The geometric characteristics of something GEOMETRIDS (14) [noun] Any of the family Geometridae of moths. | [noun] A larva of such moth, which when walking alternate legs and prolegs, giving the appearance of measuring. GEOMETRIES (13) [noun] The branch of mathematics dealing with spatial relationships. | [noun] (often qualified in combination) A mathematical system that deals with spatial relationships and that is built on a particular set of axioms; a subbranch of geometry which deals with such a system or systems. | [noun] The observed or specified spatial attributes of an object, etc. GEOMETRISE (13) GEOMETRIZE (22) GEOMORPHIC (20) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the shape or structure of the surface of the Earth | [adjective] Of or pertaining to geomorphology GEOTHERMAL (16) [adjective] Pertaining to heat energy extracted from reservoirs in the earth's interior GEOTROPISM (15) [noun] The movement of a plant in response to gravity (either downwards or upwards). GERMANDERS (14) [noun] A Mediterranean herb, Teucrium chamaedrys, historically grown for medicinal use but now mostly as an ornamental miniature hedge in herb gardens. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Teucrium, some with small, pink, white, or pale purple flowers and a small upper lip. GERMANIUMS (15) GERMANIZED (23) GERMANIZES (22) GERMICIDAL (16) GERMICIDES (16) [noun] An agent that kills pathogenic organisms; a disinfectant. GERMINALLY (16) GERMINATED (14) [verb] Of a seed, to begin to grow, to sprout roots and leaves. | [verb] To cause to grow; to produce. GERMINATES (13) [verb] Of a seed, to begin to grow, to sprout roots and leaves. | [verb] To cause to grow; to produce. GIGANTISMS (14) GIMBALLING (16) GIMMICKING (22) [verb] To rig or set up with a trick or device. GLADSOMELY (17) GLADSOMEST (14) GLAMORISED (14) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMORISES (13) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMORIZED (23) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMORIZER (22) GLAMORIZES (22) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMOURING (14) GLAMOURIZE (22) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMOUROUS (13) GLASSMAKER (17) GLIMMERING (16) [verb] To shine with a faint, unsteady light. | [noun] A glimmer. GLOBALISMS (15) GLOCHIDIUM (19) [noun] The larva or young of the mussel. | [noun] A glochid, or cactus spine. GLOMERULAR (13) [adjective] Of, pertaining to or affecting a glomerulus. GLOMERULES (13) GLOMERULUS (13) [noun] A small intertwined group of capillaries within nephrons of the kidney that filter the blood to make urine | [noun] A structure in the olfactory bulb central to olfactory sensory transduction, composed of receptor neuron axons and mitral neuron dendrites and organized by odor type. | [noun] Any of several other similar intertwined masses of things GLOOMINESS (13) GLUMNESSES (13) GLUTAMATES (13) [noun] Any salt or ester of glutamic acid. GLUTAMINES (13) GNOSTICISM (15) [noun] A wide variety of Jewish and early Christian sects having an interest in gnosis, or divine knowledge, and generally holding the belief that there is a god greater than the Demiurge, or the creator of the world. GOALMOUTHS (16) [noun] The area in front of the goal. | [noun] The space between the goalposts through which the ball, puck, etc has to pass in order to score GODDAMMING (18) GODDAMNING (16) GODMOTHERS (17) [noun] A woman present at the christening of a baby who promises to help raise the child in a Christian manner; a female godparent who sponsors the baptism of a child. GOLDSMITHS (17) [noun] A person who makes, repairs or sells things out of gold, especially jewelry. | [noun] A banker (because the goldsmiths of London used to receive money on deposit, being equipped to keep it safely). GONIOMETER (13) [noun] A device used to measure the angles of joints commonly used in orthopedics and physical therapy. | [noun] A device used to measure the angles of crystals. | [noun] A radio direction finder. GONIOMETRY (16) GORMANDISE (14) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GORMANDIZE (23) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GOVERNMENT (16) [noun] The body with the power to make and/or enforce laws to control a country, land area, people or organization. | [noun] (grammar) The relationship between a word and its dependents. | [noun] The state and its administration viewed as the ruling political power. GRADUALISM (14) [noun] The belief that evolution proceeds at a steady pace, without the sudden development of new species or biological features from one generation to the next. | [noun] (transferred sense) The belief that some phenomenon occurs gradually over a long period of time. | [noun] The belief that change ought to be brought about in small, discrete increments rather than in abrupt strokes such as revolutions or uprisings. GRAMERCIES (15) GRAMICIDIN (16) [noun] A heterogeneous combination of six antibiotic peptides; the individual peptides themselves GRAMINEOUS (13) GRAMMARIAN (15) [noun] A person who studies grammar. GRAMOPHONE (18) [noun] A record player. GRANGERISM (14) GRANULOMAS (13) [noun] An inflammatory nodule found in many diseases, consisting of histiocytes (macrophages) attempting to wall off substances they perceive as foreign but are unable to eliminate, such as certain infectious organisms as well as other materials such as suture fragments | [noun] (medicine, less specific) any small nodule GRAPHEMICS (20) GRAVIMETER (16) [noun] An instrument used to measure local variations in the gravitational field. | [noun] A hydrometer. GRAVIMETRY (19) [noun] The measurement of gravity (the strength of the gravitational field). | [noun] The measurement of specific gravity; hydrometry. GREENMAILS (13) GREENROOMS (13) [noun] In a television studio, theatre or concert hall, the room where performers await their entrance. | [noun] The inside of a tube (i.e. of a wave making a tube). GREWSOMEST (16) GRILLROOMS (13) GRIMALKINS (17) [noun] A cat, especially an elderly female. | [noun] A bad-tempered old woman; a crone. GRIMNESSES (13) GRISTMILLS (13) [noun] A mill that grinds grain, especially grain brought by a farmer to be exchanged for the flour (less a percentage) GROUNDMASS (14) [noun] The matrix of fine-grained crystalline material in which larger crystals are embedded. GROUNDSMAN (14) [noun] A male groundskeeper. GROUNDSMEN (14) [noun] A male groundskeeper. GRUESOMELY (16) GRUESOMEST (13) GRUMPINESS (15) GUACAMOLES (15) GUARDROOMS (14) [noun] A room used by soldiers when on guard. | [noun] A jail cell in which military prisoners are kept. GUILLEMETS (13) [noun] Either of the punctuation marks « or », used in several languages to indicate passages of speech. Similar to typical quotation marks used in the English language such as “ and ”. GUILLEMOTS (13) [noun] Any seabird belonging to the genera Uria and Cepphus of the auk family Alcidae. They have black and white bodies and are good at swimming and diving. GUMSHOEING (17) GYMNASIUMS (18) [noun] A large room or building for indoor sports. | [noun] A type of secondary school in some European countries which typically prepares students for university. | [noun] A public place or building where Ancient Greek youths took exercise, with running and wrestling grounds, baths, and halls for conversation. GYMNASTICS (18) [noun] A sport involving the performance of sequences of movements requiring physical strength, flexibility, and kinesthetic awareness. | [noun] Complex intellectual or artistic exercises or feats of physical agility. GYMNOSPERM (20) [noun] Any plant such as a conifer whose seeds are not enclosed in an ovary. HABILIMENT (17) [noun] Clothes, especially clothing appropriate for someone's job, status, or to an occasion. | [noun] Equipment or furnishings characteristic of a place or being; trappings. HACKAMORES (21) [noun] A kind of bridle with no bit. HACKMATACK (27) [noun] A larch, a tree of the species Larix laricina. | [noun] A balsam poplar, a tree of the species Populus balsamifera. HAEMATITES (15) [noun] An iron ore, mainly peroxide of iron, Fe2O3. HAILSTORMS (15) [noun] A storm characterized by lots of large hail. HALLMARKED (20) [verb] To provide or stamp with a hallmark. | [adjective] Stamped with a hallmark HAMADRYADS (20) [noun] A wood-nymph who was physically a part of her tree; she would die if her tree were felled. | [noun] The king cobra. | [noun] A kind of baboon, Papio hamadryas, venerated by the ancient Egyptians. HAMANTASCH (20) HAMBURGERS (18) [noun] A hot sandwich consisting of a patty of cooked ground beef or a meat substitute, in a sliced bun, sometimes also containing salad vegetables, condiments, or both. | [noun] The patty used in such a sandwich. | [noun] Ground beef, especially that intended to be made into hamburgers. HAMMERHEAD (21) [noun] The portion of a hammer containing the metal striking face (also including the claw or peen if so equipped). | [noun] Any of various sharks of the genus Sphyrna or Zygaena having the eyes set on projections from the sides of the head, which gives it a hammer shape. | [noun] A fresh-water fish; the stone-roller, in the minnow family Cyprinidae. HAMMERLESS (17) HAMMERLOCK (23) [noun] A hold, in wrestling, in which an opponent's arm is twisted up behind his back; an armlock HAMMERTOES (17) [noun] A medical condition where a toe is permanently bent down. | [noun] A toe suffering from such condition. HAMSTRINGS (16) [noun] One of the great tendons situated in each side of the ham, or space back of the knee, and connected with the muscles of the back of the thigh. | [noun] The biceps femoris, semimembranosus, and semitendinosus muscles. | [verb] To lame or disable by cutting the tendons of the ham or knee; to hough. HANDMAIDEN (17) [noun] A maid that waits at hand; a female servant or attendant. HANDSOMELY (19) [adverb] In a handsome or attractive manner. | [adverb] Generously. | [adverb] Impressively, thoroughly. HANDSOMEST (16) [adjective] (of people, things, etc) Having a good appearance; good-looking. | [adjective] Good, appealing, appropriate. | [adjective] Generous or noble in character. HARASSMENT (15) [noun] Persistent attacks and criticism causing worry and distress. | [noun] Deliberate pestering or annoying. | [noun] Excessive intimidation. HARDIMENTS (16) HARMATTANS (15) HARMLESSLY (18) [adverb] In a harmless manner. HARMONICAS (17) [noun] A musical wind instrument with a series of holes for the player to blow into, each hole producing a different note | [noun] A musical instrument, consisting of a series of hemispherical glasses which, by touching the edges with the dampened finger, give forth the tones. | [noun] A toy instrument of strips of glass or metal hung on two tapes, and struck with hammers. HARMONIOUS (15) [adjective] Showing accord in feeling or action. | [adjective] Having components pleasingly or appropriately combined. | [adjective] Melodious; in harmony. HARMONISED (16) [verb] To be in harmonious agreement. | [verb] To play or sing in harmony. | [verb] To provide parts to. HARMONISES (15) [verb] To be in harmonious agreement. | [verb] To play or sing in harmony. | [verb] To provide parts to. HARMONIUMS (17) [noun] A small keyboard instrument that consists of a series of reed pipes, which sound when one of the keys is pressed to open a valve that allows air to pass through. HARMONIZED (25) [verb] To be in harmonious agreement. | [verb] To play or sing in harmony. | [verb] To provide parts to. HARMONIZER (24) HARMONIZES (24) [verb] To be in harmonious agreement. | [verb] To play or sing in harmony. | [verb] To provide parts to. HARRUMPHED (21) [verb] To dislike, protest, or dismiss. HARUMPHING (21) HARVESTMAN (18) [noun] A field-worker who works to gather in the harvest. | [noun] An order of terrestrial, non-venomous arachnids with often very long legs: Opiliones. HARVESTMEN (18) [noun] A field-worker who works to gather in the harvest. | [noun] An order of terrestrial, non-venomous arachnids with often very long legs: Opiliones. HATCHMENTS (20) [noun] An escutcheon of a deceased person, placed within a black lozenge and hung on a wall HAUSTELLUM (15) [noun] A sucking organ, in the form of a proboscis, in many insects and crustaceans HAUSTORIUM (15) [noun] A root of a parasitic plant modified to take nourishment from its host. | [noun] A cellular structure, growing into or around another structure to absorb water or nutrients, such as a cotyledon. HEADMASTER (16) [noun] A male school principal. HEADSTREAM (16) [noun] A stream that is the source of a river HEARTWORMS (18) [noun] A parasitic organism that afflicts dogs, the roundworm Dirofilaria immitis. | [noun] The condition caused by this organism. HEATHENDOM (19) HEATHENISM (18) HEBDOMADAL (19) [adjective] Lasting seven days. | [adjective] Weekly, occurring once a week. HECTOGRAMS (18) [noun] An SI unit of mass equal to 102 grams. Symbol: hg HECTOMETER (17) [noun] An SI unit of length equal to 102 metres. Symbol: hm HEGEMONIES (16) [noun] Domination, influence, or authority over another, especially by one political group over a society or by one nation over others. | [noun] Dominance of one social group over another, such that the ruling group or hegemon acquires some degree of consent from the subordinate, as opposed to dominance purely by force. HEGUMENIES (16) HELIOMETER (15) [noun] An astronomical instrument, based on a telescope, for measuring the diameter of the sun; now used to measure the angular distance between stars and other celestial bodies. HELMETLIKE (19) HELMINTHIC (20) HEMANGIOMA (18) [noun] A congenital, benign tumor of endothelial cells. HEMATINICS (17) HEMATOCRIT (17) [noun] The percentage (by volume) of packed red blood cells in a centrifuged sample of blood | [noun] A centrifuge used to analyze the relative amount of red blood cells and plasma in blood HEMATOLOGY (19) [noun] The scientific study of blood and blood-producing organs. HEMATOMATA (17) [noun] A swelling of blood, usually clotted, which forms as a result of broken blood vessels. HEMATURIAS (15) HEMELYTRON (18) HEMIACETAL (17) HEMICYCLES (22) [noun] Semicircle | [noun] A semicircular structure HEMIHEDRAL (19) HEMIPLEGIA (18) [noun] Total or partial inability to move one side of the body. HEMIPLEGIC (20) HEMIPTERAN (17) [noun] A hemipter. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the Hemiptera order; hemipterous HEMISPHERE (20) [noun] Half of the celestial sphere, as divided by either the ecliptic or the celestial equator . | [noun] A realm or domain of activity . | [noun] Half of the Earth, such as the Northern Hemisphere, Southern Hemisphere, Western Hemisphere or Eastern Hemisphere, Land Hemisphere, Water Hemisphere etc. . HEMISTICHS (20) [noun] An approximate half-line of verse, separated from another by a caesura, often for dramatic effect | [noun] An unfinished line of verse HEMIZYGOUS (28) HEMOCYANIN (20) [noun] A blue copper-containing respiratory pigment (a metalloprotein) found in most molluscs, and some arthropods HEMOGLOBIN (18) [noun] The iron-containing substance in red blood cells that transports oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body; it consists of a protein (globulin), and haem (a porphyrin ring with an atom of iron at its centre). HEMOLYMPHS (25) HEMOLYSINS (18) HEMOLYZING (28) HEMOPHILIA (20) [noun] Any of several hereditary illnesses that impair the body's ability to control bleeding, usually passed from mother to son. HEMOPHILIC (22) HEMOPTYSES (20) HEMOPTYSIS (20) [noun] Expectoration (coughing up) of blood from the respiratory system HEMORRHAGE (19) [noun] A heavy release of blood within or from the body. | [verb] To bleed copiously. | [verb] To lose (something) in copious quantities. HEMORRHOID (19) [noun] (often in the plural) An engorged, dilated and easily broken varicosity in the perianal area, often accompanied by intense itching and throbbing pain: piles. HEMOSTASES (15) HEMOSTASIS (15) [noun] The process of keeping blood inside a damaged vessel to stop bleeding. HEMOSTATIC (17) HENOTHEISM (18) [noun] Belief in or worship of one deity without denying the existence of other deities. HEPATOMATA (17) [noun] A cancer originating in the liver. HEPTAMETER (17) [noun] A line or verse containing seven metrical feet HERMATYPIC (22) HERMETICAL (17) HERMETISMS (17) HERMETISTS (15) HERMITAGES (16) [noun] A house or dwelling where a hermit lives. | [noun] A place of seclusion. | [noun] A period of seclusion. HERMITISMS (17) HERMITRIES (15) HEROICOMIC (19) HEROINISMS (15) HETEROATOM (15) HETEROGAMY (19) [noun] The state of conjugating gametes that are different in size, structure and function. | [noun] Marriage or similar union between people of different sexes, or social strata, such as races. HETERONOMY (18) HETERONYMS (18) [noun] A word having the same spelling as another, but a different pronunciation and meaning. | [noun] A fictitious character created by an author for the purpose of writing in a different style. HEXAMETERS (22) [noun] A line in a poem having six metrical feet | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has six feet HIGHWAYMAN (25) [noun] A person usually mounted on horseback who robbed travelers on public roads. HIGHWAYMEN (25) [noun] A person usually mounted on horseback who robbed travelers on public roads. HIPPIEDOMS (20) HIPPOCAMPI (23) [noun] A mythological creature with the front head and forelimbs of a horse and the rear of a dolphin. | [noun] A part of the brain located inside the temporal lobe, consisting mainly of grey matter. It is a component of the limbic system and plays a role in memory and emotion. HIPPODROME (20) [noun] A horse racing course. | [noun] A fraudulent sporting contest with a predetermined winner. | [noun] A circus with equestrian performances. HIPSTERISM (17) HIRSUTISMS (15) HISPANISMS (17) HISTAMINES (15) HISTOGRAMS (16) [noun] A graphical display of numerical data in the form of upright bars, with the area of each bar representing frequency. HITHERMOST (18) HOLOENZYME (27) [noun] A haloenzyme. HOLOGAMIES (16) HOMEBODIES (18) [noun] A person who prefers to remain at home, rather than participate in social events elsewhere. HOMECOMING (20) [noun] The act or event of returning home. | [noun] In colleges and high schools, a tradition centred around a football game, a parade and the "coronation" of a Homecoming Queen. HOMELINESS (15) HOMEMAKERS (21) [noun] A person who maintains the administration and upkeep of his or her residence, especially one who is not employed outside the home; one who runs the household. HOMEMAKING (22) [noun] The management of a household considered as an occupation. HOMEOBOXES (24) [noun] A short sequence of DNA that is shared by several genes involved in the morphogenesis of many organisms. HOMEOPATHS (20) [noun] A person who practices homeopathy. HOMEOPATHY (23) [noun] A system of treating diseases with small amounts of substances which, in larger amounts, would produce the observed symptoms. HOMEOTHERM (20) [noun] A creature that maintains a stable internal body temperature regardless of external influence. HOMEPORTED (18) HOMESCHOOL (20) [noun] A school within a private domestic place, rather than in a public facility or private institution. | [noun] A boarding school. | [verb] To educate children at home, that is, at a private domestic place, in lieu of sending them to a public school or private educational institution. HOMESTEADS (16) [noun] A house together with surrounding land and buildings, especially on a farm; the property comprising these. | [noun] The place that is one's home. | [noun] A cluster of several houses occupied by an extended family. HOMILETICS (17) [noun] The art of preaching (especially the application of rhetoric in theology). HOMINESSES (15) HOMINIZING (25) HOMOCERCAL (19) [adjective] Describing the symmetric tail of a fish that has two lobes extending from the end of the vertebral column. HOMOEROTIC (17) [adjective] Arousing a homosexual desire. | [adjective] Pertaining to homosexual love or desire | [adjective] Homosexual HOMOGAMIES (18) HOMOGAMOUS (18) HOMOGENATE (16) [noun] Any material obtained by homogenization | [noun] The slurry of tissues and cells which results when cell structure has been mechanically disrupted. HOMOGENIES (16) HOMOGENISE (16) [verb] To make homogeneous, to blend or puree. | [verb] Specifically, to treat milk so that the cream no longer separates. HOMOGENIZE (25) [verb] To make homogeneous, to blend or puree. | [verb] Specifically, to treat milk so that the cream no longer separates. HOMOGENOUS (16) [adjective] Of the same kind; alike, similar. | [adjective] Having the same composition throughout; of uniform make-up. | [adjective] In the same state of matter. HOMOGONIES (16) HOMOGRAFTS (19) [noun] An allograft HOMOGRAPHS (21) [noun] A word that is spelled the same as another word, usually having a different etymology. | [noun] A text character or string that looks identical to another when rendered. HOMOLOGATE (16) [verb] To confirm, ratify or approve, especially officially or legally. HOMOLOGIES (16) [noun] A homologous relationship. | [noun] A theory associating a system of groups to each topological space. | [noun] A certain system of groups associated to a chain complex. HOMOLOGIZE (25) [verb] To make something homologous. | [verb] To become homologous. HOMOLOGOUS (16) [adjective] Showing a degree of correspondence or similarity. HOMOLOGUES (16) [noun] Something homologous; a homologous organ or part, chemical compound or a chromosome. | [noun] A word shared by two languages or dialects. | [noun] One of a group of similar DNA sequences that share a common ancestry. HOMONYMIES (20) HOMONYMOUS (20) HOMOOUSIAN (15) [noun] One of those, in the 4th century, who accepted the Nicene Creed and maintained that the Son had the same essence or substance with the Father. | [adjective] Having the same essence or substance, especially with reference to the first and second persons of the Trinity HOMOPHOBES (22) [noun] A person who is prejudiced against homosexuals and homosexuality. | [noun] A person who fears sameness. | [noun] A person who fears men. HOMOPHOBIA (22) [noun] Fear of, dislike of or prejudice against homosexuals. | [noun] (individual occurrences) A pathological fear of mankind. HOMOPHOBIC (24) [noun] A homophobe. | [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of homophobia or homophobes. HOMOPHONES (20) [noun] A word which is pronounced the same as another word but differs in spelling or meaning or origin. | [noun] A letter or group of letters which are pronounced the same as another letter or group of letters. HOMOPHONIC (22) [adjective] Having the same sound; being homophones. | [adjective] Having a single, accompanied, melodic line; not polyphonic. HOMOPTERAN (17) [noun] Any insect (a true bug) of the order Homoptera. HOMOSEXUAL (22) [noun] A person who is attracted solely or primarily to others of the same sex. | [adjective] (of a person or animal) Possessing sexual and/or emotional attraction towards members of the same sex. Examples being a male androphile or a female gynephile. (Sometimes used in the sense of sole/exclusive attraction.) | [adjective] (of a romantic or sexual act or relationship) Between two people of the same gender-area; gay. HOMOSOCIAL (17) [adjective] Pertaining to homosociality, to social interaction with the same sex. HOMOZYGOTE (28) [noun] A diploid individual that has equal alleles at one or more genetic loci. HOMOZYGOUS (28) [adjective] Of an organism in which both copies of a given gene have the same allele HOMUNCULUS (17) [noun] A miniature man, once imagined by spermists to be present in human sperm. | [noun] The nerve map of the human body that exists on the parietal lobe of the human brain. HONEYCOMBS (22) [noun] A structure of hexagonal cells made by bees primarily of wax, to hold their larvae and for storing the honey to feed the larvae and to feed themselves during winter. | [noun] (by extension) Any structure resembling a honeycomb. | [noun] Voids left in concrete resulting from failure of the mortar to effectively fill the spaces among coarse aggregate particles. HONEYMOONS (18) [noun] The period of time immediately following a marriage. | [noun] A trip taken by a newly married couple during this period. | [noun] A period of goodwill at the beginning of a new term or relationship (e.g. towards a newly elected politician or in respect of a new business arrangement). HONORARIUM (15) [noun] Compensation for services that do not have a predetermined value. HOODLUMISH (19) HOODLUMISM (18) HOODOOISMS (16) HORMOGONIA (16) HORMONALLY (18) HORSEMINTS (15) [noun] A coarse American plant of the mint family (Monarda punctata). | [noun] The wild mint (Mentha sylvestris, now Mentha longifolia). | [noun] An aromatic plant of the mint family, Agastache urticifolia. HORSEWOMAN (18) [noun] A woman who is skilled with horses, a female equestrian HORSEWOMEN (18) [noun] A woman who is skilled with horses, a female equestrian HOUSEMAIDS (16) [noun] A female domestic worker attached to the non-servant quarter part of the house, as opposed to a scullery maid. | [noun] A housewife. | [verb] To be a housemaid. HOUSEMATES (15) [noun] Someone living in the same house. HOUSEROOMS (15) HUMANENESS (15) HUMANISING (16) [verb] To make human; to give or cause to have the fundamental properties of a human. | [verb] To make sympathetic or relatable. | [verb] To become humane or civilized. HUMANISTIC (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to humanism. HUMANITIES (15) [noun] The study of Ancient Greek and Latin, their literature, history, etc., sometimes inclusive of the study of the ancient Mediterranean generally. | [noun] The study of language, literature, the arts, and philosophy, sometimes including religion | [noun] Mankind; human beings as a group. HUMANIZERS (24) HUMANIZING (25) [verb] To make human; to give or cause to have the fundamental properties of a human. | [verb] To make sympathetic or relatable. | [verb] To become humane or civilized. HUMBLENESS (17) HUMBLINGLY (21) HUMBUGGERY (22) HUMBUGGING (20) [verb] To play a trick on someone, to cheat, to swindle, to deceive. | [verb] (African American Vernacular) To fight; to act tough. | [verb] To waste time talking. HUMDINGERS (17) [noun] Something that is particularly outstanding, unusual, or exceptional. HUMECTANTS (17) [noun] Any substance that promotes the retention of water, especially one used to keep a food product moist. HUMIDIFIED (20) [adjective] Modified by humidification | [verb] To increase the humidity in the air. HUMIDIFIER (19) [noun] A device that is used to increase the humidity of the air. HUMIDIFIES (19) [verb] To increase the humidity in the air. HUMIDISTAT (16) [noun] A device that measures, or controls, the relative humidity of a gas. HUMIDITIES (16) [noun] Dampness, especially that of the air. | [noun] The amount of water vapour in the air. HUMILIATED (16) [verb] To injure the dignity and self-respect of. | [verb] To make humble; to lower in condition or status. | [adjective] Deprived of dignity or self-respect HUMILIATES (15) [verb] To injure the dignity and self-respect of. | [verb] To make humble; to lower in condition or status. HUMILITIES (15) HUMMOCKING (24) HUMORESQUE (24) [noun] A composition that is playful in attitude and tone. HUMORISTIC (17) HUMOROUSLY (18) [adverb] In a humorous manner; jocularly HUMPBACKED (26) HUSBANDMAN (18) [noun] A person who raises crops and tends animals; a farmer HUSBANDMEN (18) [noun] A person who raises crops and tends animals; a farmer HYALOPLASM (20) HYBRIDISMS (21) HYBRIDOMAS (21) HYDROMANCY (24) HYDROMETER (19) [noun] An instrument that floats in a liquid and measures its specific gravity on a scale. HYDRONIUMS (19) HYGROMETER (19) [noun] An instrument that measures the humidity of the air or other gases, especially the relative humidity. HYLOZOISMS (27) HYMENEALLY (21) HYPANTHIUM (23) [noun] The bowl-shaped part of a flower on which the sepals, petals, and stamens are borne HYPEREMIAS (20) HYPERMANIA (20) HYPERMANIC (22) HYPERMEDIA (21) [noun] The use of text, data, graphics, audio and video as elements of an extended hypertext system in which all elements are linked so that the user can move among them at will HYPERMETER (20) HYPNOTISMS (20) HYPOCORISM (22) HYPODERMAL (21) HYPODERMIC (23) [noun] A hypodermic syringe, needle or injection | [adjective] Of, or relating to the hypodermis, the layer beneath the dermis HYPODERMIS (21) HYPOLIMNIA (20) [noun] The perpetually cold layer of water that lies beneath the thermocline of a thermally stratified lake. HYPOMANIAS (20) HYPOMORPHS (25) HYPOSTOMES (20) HYPOXEMIAS (27) HYPSOMETER (20) [noun] An instrument that measures altitude indirectly by measuring the boiling point of water (which varies with atmospheric pressure). ICHNEUMONS (17) [noun] The Egyptian mongoose, Herpestes ichneumon, found in Africa and southern Europe. | [noun] The ichneumon wasp. ICONOCLASM (16) [noun] The belief in, participation in, or sanction of destroying religious icons and other symbols or monuments, usually with religious or political motives. IDEMPOTENT (15) [noun] An idempotent element. | [noun] An idempotent structure. | [adjective] Said of a function: describing an action which, when performed multiple times on the same subject, has no further effect on its subject after the first time it is performed. IDEOGRAMIC (16) IGNIMBRITE (15) [noun] A deposit left by the pyroclastic flow from a volcano, consisting of ash, pumice lapilli, and lithic fragments. IGNOMINIES (13) [noun] Great dishonor, shame, or humiliation. ILLUMINANT (12) [noun] Something that illuminates. | [adjective] That illuminates. ILLUMINATE (12) [noun] Someone thought to have an unusual degree of enlightenment. | [verb] To shine light on something. | [verb] To decorate something with lights. ILLUMINATI (12) ILLUMINING (13) [verb] To illuminate. | [verb] To light up. | [noun] Illumination ILLUMINISM (14) ILLUMINIST (12) [noun] Someone who subscribes to the doctrine of illuminism, or who claims to have achieved spiritual illumination; one of the Illuminati. IMAGINABLE (15) [adjective] Able to be imagined; conceivable IMAGINABLY (18) IMBALANCED (17) IMBALANCES (16) [noun] The property of not being in balance. IMBECILITY (19) IMBIBITION (16) [noun] The act of imbibing. IMBITTERED (15) IMBOLDENED (16) IMBOSOMING (17) IMBOWERING (18) IMBRICATED (17) [adjective] Overlapping, like scales or roof-tiles; intertwined. IMBRICATES (16) [verb] To overlap in a regular pattern. | [verb] To undergo or cause to undergo imbrication. IMBROGLIOS (15) [noun] A complicated situation; an entanglement. IMBROWNING (18) IMIDAZOLES (22) IMIPRAMINE (16) [noun] A synthetic compound (trademark Tofranil) used to treat depression. IMITATIONS (12) [noun] The act of imitating. | [noun] (attributive) A copy or simulation; something that is not the real thing. IMMACULACY (21) IMMACULATE (16) [adjective] Having no stain or blemish; spotless, undefiled, clear, clean, pure. | [adjective] Lacking spots, blotches, or other markings; spotless; unspotted. IMMANENCES (16) IMMANENTLY (17) IMMATERIAL (14) [adjective] Having no matter or substance. | [adjective] So insubstantial as to be irrelevant. IMMATURELY (17) IMMATURITY (17) [noun] Youth; the condition of being immature or not fully grown IMMEMORIAL (16) [adjective] That is beyond memory; ancient. | [adjective] (positive) Ancient beyond memory. IMMERSIBLE (16) IMMERSIONS (14) IMMIGRANTS (15) [noun] A non-native person who comes to a country from another country in order to permanently settle there. | [noun] A plant or animal that establishes itself in an area where it previously did not exist. IMMIGRATED (16) [verb] To move into a foreign country to stay permanently. IMMIGRATES (15) [verb] To move into a foreign country to stay permanently. IMMINENCES (16) [noun] The state or condition of being about to happen; imminent quality. IMMINENTLY (17) [adverb] In an imminent manner. IMMINGLING (16) IMMISCIBLE (18) [adjective] (of two or more liquids) That are not mutually soluble; unmixable. IMMITTANCE (16) [noun] Either the impedance or the admittance of an electrical network, considered as alternatives. IMMIXTURES (21) [noun] The act, or the result of immixing IMMOBILISM (18) [noun] Political or economic inactivity, often a result of ultraconservative policies IMMOBILITY (19) [noun] The quality of not moving. | [noun] The state or condition of being unable to change one's location, move or be moved. IMMOBILIZE (25) [verb] To render motionless; to stop moving or stop from moving. | [verb] To modify a surface such that things will not stick to it IMMODERACY (20) IMMODERATE (15) [adjective] Not moderate; excessive. IMMODESTLY (18) IMMOLATING (15) [verb] To kill as a sacrifice. | [verb] To destroy, especially by fire. IMMOLATION (14) IMMOLATORS (14) IMMORALISM (16) [noun] A philosophy that does not accept moral principles. IMMORALIST (14) IMMORALITY (17) [noun] The state or quality of being immoral; vice. | [noun] An immoral act or practice. IMMORTALLY (17) IMMORTELLE (14) [noun] Any of various papery flowers, often dried and used as decoration. | [noun] Any of various trees of the genus Erythrina. IMMOVABLES (19) [noun] That which can not be moved; something which is immovable IMMUNISING (15) [verb] To make someone or something immune to something. | [verb] To inoculate someone, and thus produce immunity from a disease. IMMUNITIES (14) [noun] The state of being insusceptible to something; notably: | [noun] A resistance to a specific thing. IMMUNIZING (24) [verb] To make someone or something immune to something. | [verb] To inoculate someone, and thus produce immunity from a disease. | [adjective] That immunizes IMMUNOBLOT (16) IMMUNOGENS (15) IMMUNOLOGY (18) [noun] The branch of medicine that concerns the body's immune system. IMMUREMENT (16) IMPACTIONS (16) [noun] Compression; the packing together of loose matter | [noun] Something packed together tightly; a mass of densely-packed matter | [noun] A solid, immobile bulk of stool IMPAINTING (15) IMPAIRMENT (16) [noun] The result of being impaired | [noun] A deterioration or weakening | [noun] A disability or handicap IMPALEMENT (16) IMPALPABLE (18) [adjective] Not able to be perceived by the senses (especially by touch); intangible or insubstantial. | [adjective] Not easily grasped or understood. IMPALPABLY (21) IMPANELING (15) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. IMPANELLED (15) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. IMPARADISE (15) IMPARITIES (14) IMPARTIBLE (16) IMPARTIBLY (19) IMPARTMENT (16) IMPASSABLE (16) [adjective] (of a route, terrain, etc.) Incapable of being passed over, crossed, or negotiated. | [adjective] (of an obstacle) Incapable of being overcome or surmounted. | [adjective] (of currency) Not usable as legal tender. IMPASSABLY (19) IMPASSIBLE (16) [adjective] Unable to suffer, or feel pain. | [adjective] Unable to feel emotion; impassive. | [adjective] Incapable of suffering injury or detriment. IMPASSIBLY (19) IMPASSIONS (14) [verb] Make passionate, instill passion in IMPATIENCE (16) [noun] The quality of being impatient; lacking patience; restlessness and intolerance of delays; anxiety and eagerness, especially to begin something. IMPEACHING (20) [verb] To hinder, impede, or prevent. | [verb] To bring a legal proceeding against a public official. | [verb] To charge with impropriety; to discredit; to call into question. IMPEARLING (15) IMPECCABLE (20) [adjective] Perfect, without faults, flaws or errors | [adjective] Incapable of wrongdoing or sin; immaculate IMPECCABLY (23) [adverb] In a perfect or flawless manner. IMPEDANCES (17) [noun] The act of impeding; that which impedes; a hindrance. | [noun] A measure of the opposition to the flow of an alternating current in a circuit; the aggregation of its resistance, and inductive and capacitive reactances; the ratio of voltage to current treated as complex quantities. | [noun] A quantity analogous to electrical impedance in some other energy domain IMPEDIMENT (17) [noun] A hindrance; that which impedes or obstructs progress. | [noun] A disability, especially one affecting the hearing or speech. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Baggage, especially that of an army; impedimenta. IMPENITENT (14) [noun] One who is not penitent. | [adjective] Not penitent; not repent one's sins IMPERATIVE (17) [noun] (grammar) The grammatical mood expressing an order (see jussive). In English, the imperative form of a verb is the same as that of the bare infinitive. | [noun] (grammar) A verb in imperative mood. | [noun] An essential action, a must: something which is imperative. IMPERATORS (14) [noun] An emperor. IMPERFECTS (19) IMPERIALLY (17) IMPERILING (15) [verb] To put into peril; to place in danger. | [verb] To risk or hazard. IMPERILLED (15) [verb] To put into peril; to place in danger. | [verb] To risk or hazard. IMPERSONAL (14) [noun] (grammar) An impersonal word or construct. | [adjective] Not personal; not representing a person; not having personality. | [adjective] Lacking warmth or emotion; cold. IMPERVIOUS (17) [adjective] Unaffected or unable to be affected by something. | [adjective] Preventive of any penetration; impenetrable, impermeable, particularly of water. | [adjective] Immune to damage or effect. IMPETRATED (15) [verb] To obtain by asking; to procure upon request. | [verb] To ask for; to demand. IMPETRATES (14) [verb] To obtain by asking; to procure upon request. | [verb] To ask for; to demand. IMPISHNESS (17) IMPLACABLE (18) [adjective] Not able to be placated or appeased. | [adjective] Impossible to prevent or stop; inexorable, unrelenting, unstoppable. | [adjective] Adamant; immovable. IMPLACABLY (21) IMPLANTERS (14) IMPLANTING (15) [verb] To fix firmly or set securely or deeply. | [verb] To insert (something) surgically into the body. | [verb] Of an embryo, to become attached to and embedded in the womb. IMPLEADING (16) [verb] To sue in court, raise an action against a defendant IMPLEDGING (17) IMPLEMENTS (16) [noun] A tool or instrument for working with. | [verb] To bring about; to put into practice | [verb] To carry out; to do IMPLICATED (17) [verb] (with “in”) To show to be connected or involved in an unfavorable or criminal way. | [verb] To imply, to have as a necessary consequence or accompaniment. | [verb] To imply without entailing; to have as an implicature. IMPLICATES (16) [verb] (with “in”) To show to be connected or involved in an unfavorable or criminal way. | [verb] To imply, to have as a necessary consequence or accompaniment. | [verb] To imply without entailing; to have as an implicature. IMPLICITLY (19) [adverb] In an implicit or implied manner. IMPLOSIONS (14) [noun] The inrush of air in forming a suction stop. | [noun] The action of imploding. | [noun] The act or action of bringing to or as if to a center. IMPLOSIVES (17) IMPOLICIES (16) IMPOLITELY (17) IMPORTABLE (16) IMPORTANCE (16) [noun] The quality or condition of being important or worthy of note. | [noun] Significance or prominence. | [noun] Personal status or standing. IMPORTANCY (19) IMPORTUNED (15) [verb] To bother, trouble, irritate. | [verb] To harass with persistent requests. | [verb] To approach to offer one's services as a prostitute, or otherwise make improper proposals. IMPORTUNER (14) IMPORTUNES (14) [verb] To bother, trouble, irritate. | [verb] To harass with persistent requests. | [verb] To approach to offer one's services as a prostitute, or otherwise make improper proposals. IMPOSINGLY (18) IMPOSITION (14) [noun] The act of imposing, laying on, affixing, enjoining, inflicting, obtruding, and the like. | [noun] That which is imposed, levied, or enjoined. | [noun] An excessive, arbitrary, or unlawful exaction; hence, a trick or deception put or laid on others. IMPOSSIBLE (16) [noun] An impossibility | [adjective] Not possible; not able to be done or happen. | [adjective] (of a person) Very difficult to deal with. IMPOSSIBLY (19) [adverb] Not possibly; in an impossible manner. | [adverb] To the point of impossibility. | [adverb] Contrary to what had been thought possible. IMPOSTHUME (19) [noun] An abscess. | [noun] A person suffering from an abscess. | [verb] To form an abscess. IMPOSTUMES (16) [noun] An abscess. IMPOSTURES (14) [noun] The act or conduct of an impostor; deception practiced under a false or assumed character; fraud or imposition IMPOTENCES (16) [noun] Powerlessness; incapacity. | [noun] Inability to copulate or beget children; sterility, erectile dysfunction, etc. IMPOTENTLY (17) IMPOUNDING (16) [verb] To shut up or place in an enclosure called a pound | [verb] To hold back (for example water by a dam) | [verb] To hold in the custody of a court or its delegate IMPOVERISH (20) [verb] To make poor. | [verb] To weaken in quality; to deprive of some strength or richness. | [verb] To become poor. IMPOWERING (18) IMPRECATED (17) [verb] To call down by prayer, as something hurtful or calamitous. IMPRECATES (16) [verb] To call down by prayer, as something hurtful or calamitous. IMPREGNANT (15) IMPREGNATE (15) [verb] To cause to become pregnant. | [verb] To fertilize. | [verb] To saturate, or infuse. IMPREGNING (16) IMPRESARIO (14) [noun] A manager or producer in the entertainment industry, especially music or theatre. IMPRESSING (15) [verb] To affect (someone) strongly and often favourably. | [verb] To make an impression, to be impressive. | [verb] To produce a vivid impression of (something). IMPRESSION (14) [noun] The indentation or depression made by the pressure of one object on or into another. | [noun] The overall effect of something, e.g., on a person. | [noun] A vague recalling of an event, a belief. IMPRESSIVE (17) [adjective] Making, or tending to make, a positive impression; having power to impress | [adjective] Capable of being impressed. | [adjective] Appealing. IMPRESSURE (14) IMPRIMATUR (16) [noun] An official license to publish or print something, especially when censorship applies. | [noun] (by extension) Any mark of official approval. IMPRINTERS (14) IMPRINTING (15) [verb] To leave a print, impression, image, etc. | [verb] To learn something indelibly at a particular stage of life, such as who one's parents are. | [verb] To mark a gene as being from a particular parent so that only one of the two copies of the gene is expressed. IMPRISONED (15) [verb] To put in or as if in prison; confine. IMPROBABLE (18) [adjective] Not likely to be true. | [adjective] Not likely to happen. IMPROBABLY (21) [adverb] In an improbable manner; without probability. IMPROMPTUS (18) [noun] A short musical composition for an informal occasion often with the character of improvisation and usually to be played solo. | [noun] (by extension) Any composition, musical or otherwise, that is created on the spot without preparation. IMPROPERLY (19) [adverb] In an improper manner; not properly IMPROVABLE (19) IMPROVISED (18) [verb] To make something up or invent it as one goes on; to proceed guided only by imagination, instinct, and guesswork rather than by a careful plan. | [adjective] Created by improvisation; impromptu; unrehearsed. IMPROVISER (17) IMPROVISES (17) [verb] To make something up or invent it as one goes on; to proceed guided only by imagination, instinct, and guesswork rather than by a careful plan. IMPROVISOR (17) IMPRUDENCE (17) IMPUDENCES (17) [noun] The quality of being impudent, not showing due respect. | [noun] Impudent language, conduct or behavior. IMPUDENTLY (18) IMPUDICITY (20) [noun] Immodesty; shamelessness IMPUGNABLE (17) IMPUISSANT (14) [adjective] Weak; impotent; feeble IMPULSIONS (14) [noun] The act of impelling or driving onward, or the state of being impelled; the sudden or momentary agency of a body in motion on another body; also, the impelling force, or impulse. | [noun] Influence acting unexpectedly or temporarily on the mind; sudden motive or influence; impulse. IMPUNITIES (14) IMPURENESS (14) IMPURITIES (14) [noun] The condition of being impure; because of contamination, pollution, adulteration or insufficient purification. | [noun] A component or additive that renders something else impure. | [noun] A state of immorality or sin; especially the weakness of the flesh: inchastity. IMPUTATION (14) [noun] The act of imputing or charging; attribution; ascription. | [noun] That which has been imputed or charged. | [noun] Charge or attribution of evil; censure; reproach; insinuation. IMPUTATIVE (17) INAMORATAS (12) [noun] A female lover or woman with whom one is in love; a mistress INCITEMENT (14) [noun] A call to act; encouragement to act, often in an illegal fashion. INCLEMENCY (19) INCOMMODED (18) [verb] To disturb, to discomfort, to hinder. INCOMMODES (17) [verb] To disturb, to discomfort, to hinder. INCOMPLETE (16) [noun] Something incomplete. | [noun] A designation of being incomplete. | [adjective] Not complete; not finished INCREMENTS (14) [noun] The action of increasing or becoming greater. | [noun] The waxing of the moon. | [noun] The amount of increase. INCUMBENCY (21) [noun] The state of being incumbent. | [noun] An obligation or duty | [noun] A tenure INCUMBENTS (16) [noun] The current holder of an office, such as ecclesiastical benefice or an elected office. | [noun] A holder of a position as supplier to a market or market segment that allows the holder to earn above-normal profits. INCUMBERED (17) INDECORUMS (15) INDICTMENT (15) [noun] An official formal accusation for a criminal offence, or the process by which it is brought to a jury. | [noun] The official legal document outlining the charges concerned; bill of indictment. | [noun] An accusation of wrongdoing; a criticism or condemnation. INDUCEMENT (15) [noun] An incentive that helps bring about a desired state. In some contexts, this can imply bribery. | [noun] An introductory statement of facts or background information. | [noun] (shipping) The act of placing a port on a vessel's itinerary because the volume of cargo offered at that port justifies the cost of routing the vessel. INFAMOUSLY (18) [adverb] In an infamous manner. | [adverb] Famously, known for being. INFORMALLY (18) [adverb] In an irregular or informal manner; without the usual forms. INFORMANTS (15) [noun] One who relays confidential information to someone, especially to the police; an informer. | [noun] A native speaker who acts as a linguistic reference for a language being studied. The informant demonstrates native pronunciation, provides grammaticality judgments regarding linguistic well-formedness, and may also explain cultural references and other important contextual information. INFORMEDLY (19) INFRAHUMAN (18) INHARMONIC (17) [adjective] Lacking harmony; discordant; dissonant INHUMANELY (18) INHUMANITY (18) [noun] The lack of compassion. | [noun] An inhuman act. INHUMATION (15) [noun] The act of burial. | [noun] The act of burying vessels in warm earth in order to expose their contents to a steady moderate heat; the state of being thus exposed. | [noun] Arenation INIMICALLY (17) INIMITABLE (14) [adjective] Beyond imitation, surpassing all others, matchless. INIMITABLY (17) INITIALISM (12) [noun] A term formed from the initial letters of several words or parts of words, but which is itself pronounced letter by letter. | [noun] The process of forming words or terms using initial letters of other words. INNERMOSTS (12) INNOMINATE (12) [noun] An innominate bone | [adjective] Having no name; anonymous. INNUMERACY (17) INNUMERATE (12) [noun] One who lacks numeracy skills. | [adjective] Lacking numeracy. INNUMEROUS (12) [adjective] Not capable of being counted or numerated; indefinitely numerous. INSEMINATE (12) [verb] To sow (to disperse or plant seeds). | [verb] To impregnate (to cause to become pregnant). INSOMNIACS (14) [noun] One who suffers an inability or difficulty sleeping; a sufferer from insomnia. INSTALMENT (12) [noun] One of a series of parts, whether equal or unequal to the other parts of the series, of a given entity or a given process, which part presents or is presented at a particular scheduled interval. | [noun] One member of a series of portions of a debt or sum of money, which portions may or may not be equated (depending in part on whether the interest rate is fixed or variable), payment of which portions are serially exacted at regularly scheduled intervals toward satisfaction of the total. Payments of installments are generally mensual, quarterly, triannual, biannual, or annual. | [noun] A part of a published or broadcast serial. INSTRUMENT (12) [noun] A device used to produce music. | [noun] A means or agency for achieving an effect. | [noun] A measuring or displaying device. INSULARISM (12) INTEGUMENT (13) [noun] An outer protective covering such as the feathers or skin of an animal, a rind or shell. | [noun] The outer layer of an ovule, which develops into the seed coat. INTENDMENT (13) [noun] The sense in which the legal system interprets something, especially the intention of legislation INTERMARRY (15) [verb] To marry a member of another group, social stratum, or religion. | [verb] To marry within the same ethnic, social, or family group. INTERMEDIN (13) [noun] A melanocyte-stimulating hormone INTERMENTS (12) [noun] The act of burying a dead body; burial. INTERMEZZI (30) [noun] A short piece of music or act in the interval of the main spectacle; a theatrical interlude. | [noun] A palate cleanser; a small snack with a bright light neutral taste; a fruit; a fresh sparkling wine; or a fruity or milky cocktail; that is served between courses in a meal. INTERMEZZO (30) [noun] A short piece of music or act in the interval of the main spectacle; a theatrical interlude. | [noun] A palate cleanser; a small snack with a bright light neutral taste; a fruit; a fresh sparkling wine; or a fruity or milky cocktail; that is served between courses in a meal. INTERMIXED (20) [verb] To mix together; to intermingle or blend. | [adjective] Mixed together INTERMIXES (19) [noun] An intermixture; the product of mixing together | [verb] To mix together; to intermingle or blend. INTERMODAL (13) [adjective] Relating to more than one mode of transport. INTERNMENT (12) [noun] Confinement within narrow limits, as of foreign troops, to the interior of a country. INTIMACIES (14) [noun] Feeling or atmosphere of closeness and openness towards someone else, not necessarily involving sexuality. | [noun] Intimate relationship. | [noun] (especially plural) Intimate detail, (item of) intimate information. INTIMATELY (15) [adverb] In an intimate manner. INTIMATERS (12) INTIMATING (13) [verb] To suggest or disclose (something) discreetly. | [verb] To notify. INTIMATION (12) [noun] The act of intimating. | [noun] The thing intimated. | [noun] Announcement; declaration. INTIMIDATE (13) [verb] To make timid or afraid; to cause to feel fear or nervousness; to deter, especially by threats of violence INTRAMURAL (12) [noun] A (usually sports) competition between teams belonging to the same school. | [adjective] Within the walls; within one institution, particularly a school. | [adjective] Within the substance of the walls of an organ. INTRAVITAM (15) INUREMENTS (12) INVALIDISM (16) INVESTMENT (15) [noun] The act of investing, or state of being invested. | [noun] A placement of capital in expectation of deriving income or profit from its use or appreciation. | [noun] A vestment. INVOLUCRUM (17) IRIDOSMINE (13) IRONMASTER (12) [noun] A manufacturer of iron | [noun] The proprietor of an ironworks IRONMONGER (13) [noun] A retailer in iron goods and hardware IRREMEABLE (14) ISCHAEMIAS (17) ISOENZYMES (24) [noun] Any of a group of enzymes that catalyze the same reaction but have different structures and physical, biochemical and immunological properties. ISOENZYMIC (26) ISOGAMETES (13) ISOGAMETIC (15) ISOMERASES (12) [noun] Any enzyme which catalyzes the conversion of one isomeric form of a chemical compound to another. ISOMERISMS (14) ISOMERIZED (22) [adjective] Converted from one isomer to another ISOMERIZES (21) [verb] To convert a compound into a different isomeric form ISOMETRICS (14) [noun] A line connecting isometric points. | [noun] Isometric exercise ISOMETRIES (12) ISOMORPHIC (19) [adjective] Related by an isomorphism; having a structure-preserving one-to-one correspondence. | [adjective] Having a similar structure or function to something that is not related genetically or through evolution. | [adjective] Having identical relevant structure; being structure-preserving while undergoing certain invertible transformations. ISOTHERMAL (15) [noun] An isotherm | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a process that takes place at constant temperature | [adjective] Of or pertaining to an isotherm IVERMECTIN (17) [noun] A compound of the avermectin group, used as an anthelmintic in veterinary medicine and as a treatment for river blindness. JACKHAMMER (30) [noun] A portable percussive power tool that combines a hammer and chisel used to drill or break hard matter, for instance rock or concrete. | [verb] To use a jackhammer. | [verb] To break (something) using a jackhammer. JACKSMELTS (25) JAMBALAYAS (24) [noun] Any of various of rice-based dishes common in Louisiana Cajun or Creole cooking; most often with shrimp, oysters, chicken or ham. JESSAMINES (19) [noun] Any of several plants, of the genus Jasminum, mostly native to Asia, having fragrant white or yellow flowers. | [noun] The perfume obtained from these plants. | [noun] Any of several unrelated plants having a similar perfume. JESUITISMS (19) JIMSONWEED (23) [noun] A poisonous plant of the Datura stramonium species, part of the nightshade (Solanaceae) family. A hallucinogen occasionally ingested by those looking for a cheap high. | [noun] (by extension) Any poisonous plant of the Datura genus. JOINTWORMS (22) JOURNALISM (19) [noun] The activity or profession of being a journalist. | [noun] The aggregating, writing, editing, and presenting of news or news articles for widespread distribution, typically in electronic publications and broadcast news media, for the purpose of informing the audience. | [noun] The style of writing characteristic of material in periodical print publications and broadcast news media, consisting of direct presentation of facts or events with an attempt to minimize analysis or interpretation. JOURNEYMAN (22) [noun] A tradesman who has served an apprenticeship and is employed by a master tradesman | [noun] A competent but undistinguished tradesman, especially one who works, and is paid by the day | [noun] A player who plays on many different teams during the course of his career JOURNEYMEN (22) [noun] A tradesman who has served an apprenticeship and is employed by a master tradesman | [noun] A competent but undistinguished tradesman, especially one who works, and is paid by the day | [noun] A player who plays on many different teams during the course of his career JUDGEMENTS (21) [noun] The act of judging. | [noun] The power or faculty of performing such operations; especially, when unqualified, the faculty of judging or deciding rightly, justly, or wisely | [noun] The conclusion or result of judging; an opinion; a decision. JUDGMENTAL (21) [adjective] Of or relating to judgment. | [adjective] (chiefly of a person) Inclined to rashly pass judgment, critical. KAISERDOMS (17) KAISERISMS (16) KANAMYCINS (21) KARYOLYMPH (27) KARYOSOMES (19) KERATOMATA (16) KERSEYMERE (19) [noun] A fine, twilled woollen cloth. KERYGMATIC (22) KETTLEDRUM (17) [noun] A large hemispherical brass percussion instrument (one of the timpani) with a drumhead that can be tuned by adjusting its tension. | [noun] An informal social party at which a light collation is offered, held in the afternoon or early evening. KILOMETERS (16) [noun] (official BIPM spelling, Australian, New Zealand, Irish, Indian and South African spelling) An SI unit of length equal to 103 metres. Symbol: km KIMBERLITE (18) [noun] A variety of peridotite containing a high proportion of carbon dioxide; often contains diamonds. KINEMATICS (18) [noun] The branch of mechanics concerned with objects in motion, but not with the forces involved. KINETOSOME (16) KINGMAKERS (21) [noun] Someone who has strong influence over the choice of a leader. | [noun] A player who is unable to win but powerful enough to decide which of the other viable players will eventually win. KOMONDOROK (21) KRUMMHORNS (21) [noun] A mediaeval and Renaissance wind instrument. | [noun] A stop on an organ. KYMOGRAPHS (25) [noun] A device that gives a graphical representation of a variation in a phenomenon such as blood pressure over time, using a pen on a rotating drum. KYMOGRAPHY (28) LACHRYMOSE (20) [adjective] Tearful, sorrowful, sad, pertaining to tears, weeping, causing tears or crying. LACRIMATOR (14) [noun] Any substance that causes tears, such as tear gas. LAGOMORPHS (18) [noun] A member of the mammalian taxonomic order, Lagomorpha, which includes hares, rabbits, and pikas. LAMASERIES (12) [noun] A monastery for lamas. LAMBASTING (15) [verb] To scold, reprimand or criticize harshly. | [verb] (dated in UK English but not US English) To give a thrashing to; to beat severely. | [noun] A harsh reprimand. LAMBENCIES (16) LAMBREQUIN (23) [noun] A short decorative drapery for a shelf edge or for the top of a window casing; a valance (North America only). | [noun] An ornamental hanging over upper part of window or along the edge of a shelf. | [noun] A border pattern with draped effect used in ceramics. LAMEBRAINS (14) [noun] A fool. LAMENESSES (12) LAMENTABLE (14) [adjective] Causing sorrow, distress or regret; deplorable, pitiful or distressing. LAMENTABLY (17) LAMENTEDLY (16) LAMINARIAN (12) LAMINARIAS (12) LAMINARINS (12) LAMINATING (13) [verb] To assemble from thin sheets glued together. | [verb] To cover something flat, usually paper, in adhesive protective plastic. | [verb] To form, as metal, into a thin plate, as by rolling. LAMINATION (12) LAMINATORS (12) LAMPBLACKS (22) LAMPLIGHTS (18) LAMPOONERS (14) [noun] Someone who lampoons; someone who pokes fun. LAMPOONERY (17) LAMPOONING (15) [verb] To satirize or poke fun at. | [noun] A lampoon. LAMPSHELLS (17) LANDMASSES (13) [noun] A large continuous area of land, either surrounded by sea or contiguous with another landmass. LANTHANUMS (15) LAPAROTOMY (17) [noun] The surgical procedure for making an incision in the abdominal wall to gain access into the abdominal cavity. Performed either as exploratory surgery, or as the first step in an abdominal operation. LARGEMOUTH (16) [noun] A creature of this kind. | [adjective] Applied to various kinds of fish characterized by a large mouth. LATECOMERS (14) [noun] One who has arrived comparatively recently. | [noun] One who arrived late. LATHYRISMS (18) LAUNDRYMAN (16) [noun] A man who is in the business of laundering. LAUNDRYMEN (16) [noun] A man who is in the business of laundering. LAWMAKINGS (20) LAWRENCIUM (17) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Lr, formerly Lw) with atomic number 103. LEBENSRAUM (14) [noun] (chiefly with reference to nations and peoples) Hitherto unoccupied “living space” claimed as one’s rightful domain. LEGITIMACY (18) [noun] The quality of being legitimate or valid; validity. | [noun] Lawfulness of birth or origin; directness of descent as affecting the royal succession. LEGITIMATE (13) [noun] A person born to a legally married couple. | [verb] To make legitimate, lawful, or valid; especially, to put in the position or state of a legitimate person before the law, by legal means. | [adjective] In accordance with the law or established legal forms and requirements. LEGITIMISE (13) [verb] To make legitimate. LEGITIMISM (15) [noun] The principles or plans of legitimists. LEGITIMIST (13) LEGITIMIZE (22) [verb] To make legitimate. LEGUMINOUS (13) [adjective] Of the Leguminosae family of peas, beans etc | [adjective] Resembling a legume LEISHMANIA (15) [noun] A parasite that causes leishmaniasis, a genus trypanosome protozoa, Leishmania. LEITMOTIFS (15) [noun] A melodic theme associated with a particular character, place, thing or idea in an opera. | [noun] A recurring theme. LEITMOTIVS (15) [noun] A melodic theme associated with a particular character, place, thing or idea in an opera. | [noun] A recurring theme. LEMNISCATE (14) LEMONGRASS (13) [noun] One of various species of grass of the genus Cymbopogon, especially Cymbopogon citratus, which have a lemon-like taste and aroma, and are used in cooking, for tea, and for fragrance. | [noun] Sourgrass, Oxalis pes-caprae. LENTAMENTE (12) LENTISSIMO (12) LEPTOSOMES (14) LESBIANISM (14) [noun] Female homosexuality; the state (of a woman) of being attracted to other women. LETTERFORM (15) [noun] The shape of an individual letter | [noun] The design and development of such shapes LEUKAEMIAS (16) [noun] A type of malignancy affecting the blood cells or blood-forming tissues. | [noun] Any specific form or type of cancer of the blood-forming tissues. LIBERALISM (14) [noun] The quality of being liberal. | [noun] Any political movement founded on the autonomy and personal freedom of the individual, progress and reform, and government by law with the consent of the governed. | [noun] An economic ideology in favour of laissez faire and the free market (related to economic liberalism). LIMBERNESS (14) LIMELIGHTS (16) [noun] A type of stage lighting once used in theatres and music halls, producing a bright light by the use of incandescent quicklime. | [noun] (by extension) Attention, notice, a starring or central role, present fame. LIMESTONES (12) [noun] An abundant rock of marine and fresh-water sediments; primarily composed of calcite (CaCO3); it occurs in a variety of forms, both crystalline and amorphous. LIMEWATERS (15) LIMINESSES (12) LIMITATION (12) [noun] The act of limiting or the state of being limited. | [noun] A restriction; a boundary, real or metaphorical, caused by some thing or some circumstance. | [noun] An imperfection or shortcoming that limits something's use or value. LIMITATIVE (15) LIMITINGLY (16) LIMITROPHE (17) LIMNOLOGIC (15) LIMOUSINES (12) [noun] An automobile body with seats and permanent top like a coupe, and with the top projecting over the driver and a projecting front. | [noun] An automobile with such a body. | [noun] A luxury sedan or saloon car, especially one with a lengthened wheelbase or driven by a chauffeur. LIMPIDNESS (15) LIMPNESSES (14) LINCOMYCIN (19) LINEAMENTS (12) [noun] Any distinctive shape or line, etc. | [noun] A distinctive feature that characterizes something, especially the parts of the face of an individual. LIPOMATOUS (14) LITERALISM (12) [noun] Literal interpretation or understanding; adherence to the exact letter or precise significance, as in interpreting or translating. | [noun] The style of art portraying a subject as literally and accurately as possible. LITTERMATE (12) [noun] An animal born in the same litter LOADMASTER (13) [noun] The member of an aircrew responsible for the loading and internal stowage of heavy cargo (so as to minimise the disruption of the aircraft's trim). LOBOTOMIES (14) [noun] A surgical operation on the frontal lobe of the brain intent on treating certain mental illnesses. | [noun] The severing of the prefrontal cortex from the thalamic region of the brain. | [noun] The severing of the sympathetic nerve trunk. LOBOTOMISE (14) [verb] To perform a lobotomy upon. | [verb] To remove the vitality or intelligence from. LOBOTOMIZE (23) [verb] To perform a lobotomy upon. | [verb] To remove the vitality or intelligence from. LOBSTERMAN (14) LOBSTERMEN (14) LOCKSMITHS (21) [noun] One who practices locksmithing | [noun] Someone who only bets when they are sure they will win LOCOMOTING (15) [verb] To move or travel (from one location to another). LOCOMOTION (14) [noun] The ability to move from place to place, or the act of doing so. | [noun] Self-powered motion by which a whole organism changes its location through walking, running, jumping, crawling, swimming or flying. | [noun] (often preceded by definite article) A dance, originally popular in the 1960s, in which the arms are used to mimic the motion of the connecting rods of a steam locomotive. LOCOMOTIVE (17) [noun] The power unit of a train that pulls the coaches or wagons. | [noun] A traction engine | [noun] A cheer characterized by a slow beginning and a progressive increase in speed LOCOMOTORY (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to locomotion. LODGEMENTS (14) [noun] An area used for lodging; a place in which a person or thing is or can be lodged. | [noun] The condition of being lodged. | [noun] The act of lodging or depositing. LOGARITHMS (16) [noun] For a number x, the power to which a given base number must be raised in order to obtain x. Written \log_b x. For example, \log_{10} 1000 = 3 because 10^3 = 1000 and \log_2 16 = 4 because 2^4 = 16. LONESOMELY (15) LONGBOWMAN (18) LONGBOWMEN (18) LONGSOMELY (16) LOUDMOUTHS (16) [noun] One who talks too much or too loudly, especially in a boastful or self-important manner. LOVEMAKING (20) [noun] Sexual intercourse | [noun] Courtship; amorous advances LOXODROMES (20) [noun] A line on a surface (such as the Earth) that cuts all meridians at a constant angle (but not a right angle) – on Earth, the path followed by a ship or aircraft that maintains a constant course by the compass. LUFTMENSCH (20) LUKEWARMLY (22) LUMBERJACK (27) [noun] A person whose work is to fell trees. | [noun] A lumberjacket. | [verb] To work as a lumberjack, cutting down trees. LUMBERYARD (18) [noun] A facility dedicated to the preparation and/or sale of lumber. LUMINAIRES (12) [noun] An electrical device that contains an electric lamp that provides illumination. LUMINANCES (14) LUMINARIAS (12) LUMINARIES (12) [noun] One who is an inspiration to others; one who has achieved success in their chosen field; a leading light. | [noun] A body that gives light; especially, one of the heavenly bodies. | [noun] An artificial light; an illumination. LUMINESCED (15) [verb] To give off light, including in the invisible electromagnetic radiation frequencies, or become luminescent. LUMINESCES (14) [verb] To give off light, including in the invisible electromagnetic radiation frequencies, or become luminescent. LUMINOSITY (15) [noun] The state of being luminous, or a luminous object; brilliance or radiance | [noun] The ratio of luminous flux to radiant flux at the same wavelength; the luminosity factor | [noun] The rate at which a star radiates energy in all directions LUMINOUSLY (15) LUMPECTOMY (21) [noun] The surgical removal of a tumour or cyst from a breast. LUMPFISHES (20) [noun] Lumpsucker LUNCHROOMS (17) [noun] A room designated as a place to eat lunch. | [noun] A diner or small restaurant that serves lunch. LUNCHTIMES (17) [noun] The time or hour at or around which lunch is normally eaten. | [noun] A break in work or school to eat lunch. LYCOPODIUM (20) [noun] Club moss LYMPHATICS (22) [noun] A vessel that transports lymph. LYMPHOCYTE (25) [noun] A type of white blood cell with a spherical nucleus occurring in the lymphatic system, including B cells, T cells and natural killer cells. LYMPHOGRAM (23) LYMPHOKINE (24) [noun] Any of a group of cytokines produced by lymphocytes LYMPHOMATA (22) [noun] A malignant tumor that arises in the lymph nodes or in other lymphoid tissue. LYSIMETERS (15) [noun] An instrument that measures the percolation of water through soil LYSIMETRIC (17) MACADAMIAS (17) [noun] An evergreen tree, of the genus Macadamia, native to Australia and cultivated in Hawaii. | [noun] The fruit of this tree; the macadamia nut. MACADAMIZE (26) MACARONICS (16) [noun] A work of macaronic character. | [noun] A word consisting of a mix of words of two or more languages, one of which is Latin, or a non-Latin stem with a Latin ending. MACARONIES (14) [noun] A type of pasta in the form of short tubes; sometimes loosely, pasta in general. | [noun] A fop, a dandy; especially a young man in the 18th century who had travelled in Europe and who dressed and often spoke in an ostentatiously affected Continental manner. MACEDOINES (15) [noun] A mixture of diced vegetables or fruit served as a salad. | [noun] A medley or mixture. MACERATING (15) [verb] To soften (something) or separate it into pieces by soaking it in a heated or unheated liquid. | [verb] To make lean; to cause to waste away. | [verb] To subdue the appetite by poor or scanty diet; to mortify. MACERATION (14) MACERATORS (14) MACHINABLE (19) [adjective] Able to be made or modified by machine. MACHINATED (18) [verb] To devise a plot or secret plan; to conspire. MACHINATES (17) [verb] To devise a plot or secret plan; to conspire. MACHINATOR (17) MACHINISTS (17) [noun] A constructor of machines and engines; one versed in the principles of machines. | [noun] One skilled in the use of machine tools for fashioning metal parts or tools out of metal. | [noun] A person who operates machinery. MACKINTOSH (21) [noun] A waterproof long coat made of rubberized cloth. | [noun] By extension, any waterproof coat or raincoat. | [noun] Waterproof rubberized cloth. MACROCOSMS (18) [noun] A complex structure, such as a society, considered as a single entity that contains numerous similar, smaller-scale structures. | [noun] (used absolutely) The universe. MACROCYTES (19) MACROCYTIC (21) MACROMERES (16) MACROPHAGE (20) [noun] A white blood cell that phagocytizes necrotic cell debris and foreign material, including viruses, bacteria, and tattoo ink. It presents foreign antigens on MHC II to lymphocytes. Part of the innate immune system. MACROPHYTE (22) [noun] Any normal macroscopic plant, especially an aquatic one. MACROSCALE (16) [noun] A relatively large scale MACULATING (15) [verb] To spot; to stain; to blur. MACULATION (14) MADELEINES (13) [noun] A French type of small gateau or sponge cake, often shaped like an elongated scallop shell. | [noun] Something which brings back a memory; a source of nostalgia or evocative memories. MADREPORES (15) [noun] A coral of the genus Madrepora or of the larger group Madreporaria. | [noun] Any stony coral. MADREPORIC (17) MADRILENES (13) MAELSTROMS (14) [noun] A large and violent whirlpool. | [noun] Any violent or turbulent situation. MAFFICKING (25) MAGAZINIST (22) MAGDALENES (14) MAGISTRACY (18) [noun] The office or dignity of a magistrate. | [noun] The collective body of magistrates. MAGISTRATE (13) [noun] A judicial officer with limited authority to administer and enforce the law. A magistrate's court may have jurisdiction in civil or criminal cases, or both. | [noun] A high official of the state or a municipality in ancient Greece or Rome. | [noun] (by extension) A comparable official in medieval or modern institutions. MAGNESITES (13) MAGNESIUMS (15) MAGNETISED (14) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETISES (13) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETISMS (15) MAGNETITES (13) MAGNETIZED (23) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETIZER (22) MAGNETIZES (22) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETRONS (13) [noun] A device in which electrons are made to resonate in a specially shaped chamber and thus produce microwave radiation; used in radar, and in microwave ovens MAGNIFICAL (18) MAGNIFICAT (18) MAGNIFICOS (18) MAGNIFIERS (16) MAGNIFYING (20) [verb] To praise, glorify (someone or something, especially God). | [verb] To make (something) larger or more important. | [verb] To make (someone or something) appear greater or more important than it is; to intensify, exaggerate. MAGNITUDES (14) [noun] The absolute or relative size, extent or importance of something. | [noun] An order of magnitude. | [noun] A number, assigned to something, such that it may be compared to others numerically MAHARAJAHS (25) [noun] A Hindu monarch ranking above a raja, an emperor. MAHARANEES (15) [noun] The wife of a maharajah; approximately, a queen consort. MAHARISHIS (18) [noun] A teacher of Hindu mysticism MAHLSTICKS (21) [noun] A short stick with a pad on one end, used by a painter to steady their hand, and to prevent it from accidentally touching the painting. MAHOGANIES (16) [noun] Any of various tropical American evergreen trees, of the genus Swietenia, having a valuable hard red-brown wood. | [noun] The wood of these trees, mostly used to make furniture. | [noun] A reddish-brown color, like that of mahogany wood. MAIDENHAIR (16) [noun] A woman's pubic hair | [noun] Either of two species of genus Adiantum of fern with delicate, hair-like stalks, especially Adiantum capillus-veneris | [noun] Designating various types of moss or flowering plants. MAIDENHEAD (17) [noun] Virginity. | [noun] The hymen. MAIDENHOOD (17) [noun] The condition of being a maiden; the time when one is a maiden or young girl. | [noun] A woman's virginity or maidenhead. | [noun] Freshness; newness. MAINFRAMES (17) [noun] A large, powerful computer able to manage very many simultaneous tasks and communicate with very many connected terminals; used by large, complex organizations (such as banks and supermarkets) where continuously sustained operation is vital MAINLANDER (13) MAINLINING (13) [verb] To inject (a drug) directly into a vein. | [verb] To integrate (code, etc.) into the main repository for a software project, rather than separate forks. MAINSHEETS (15) [noun] The rope connected to and controlling the mainsail. MAINSPRING (15) [noun] The principal spring of a clockwork mechanism, which drives it by uncoiling. | [noun] The most important reason for something (Cf. spring "origin of something" (literary) (often in the plural) the springs of her ambition). MAINSTREAM (14) [noun] The principal current in a flow, such as a river or flow of air | [noun] (usually with the) That which is common; the norm. | [verb] To popularize, to normalize, to render mainstream. MAINTAINED (13) [verb] To support (someone), to back up or assist (someone) in an action. | [verb] To keep up; to preserve; to uphold (a state, condition etc.). | [verb] To declare or affirm (a clause) to be true; to assert. MAINTAINER (12) [noun] Someone who keeps or upholds something; a steward. | [noun] A person who does maintenance work. | [noun] A device used to keep teeth in a given position. MAISONETTE (12) [noun] A small house | [noun] An apartment often on two floors MAJORDOMOS (22) [noun] The head servant or official in a royal Spanish or Italian household; later, any head servant in a wealthy household in a foreign country; a leading servant or butler. | [noun] (Southwest) A manager of a hacienda, ranch or estate. | [noun] Any overseer, organizer, person in command. MAJORETTES (19) [noun] A dancer who twirls and performs stunts with a lightweight baton, whether as a solo, in a group of majorettes, or in the company of a marching band. MAJORITIES (19) [noun] More than half (50%) of some group. | [noun] The difference between the winning vote and the rest of the votes. | [noun] Legal adulthood. MAJUSCULAR (21) MAJUSCULES (21) [noun] A capital letter, especially one used in ancient manuscripts. MAKESHIFTS (22) [noun] A temporary (usually insubstantial) substitution. | [noun] A rogue; a shifty person. MAKEWEIGHT (23) [noun] Something of inferior quality which is included in a shipment to make up the weight. | [noun] Something included to add to the apparent weight or force of an argument. MALACHITES (17) MALACOLOGY (18) [noun] The study of molluscs. MALADAPTED (16) [adjective] Of any evolving or learning entity, not well adapted for its environment. MALAGUENAS (13) [noun] A Spanish dance, typical of Malaga, similar to a fandango MALAPERTLY (17) MALAPROPOS (16) [adjective] Out of place; inappropriate | [adverb] Out of place; inappropriately MALATHIONS (15) MALCONTENT (14) [noun] A person who is not satisfied with current conditions; a discontented person, a rebel. | [noun] A state of discontentment or dissatisfaction; something that causes discontent. | [verb] To cause discontent or dissatisfaction. MALEDICTED (16) MALEFACTOR (17) [noun] A criminal or felon. | [noun] An evildoer. MALEFICENT (17) [adjective] Harmful or evil in intent or effect. MALENESSES (12) MALEVOLENT (15) [adjective] Having or displaying ill will; wishing harm on others | [adjective] Having an evil or harmful influence MALIGNANCE (15) [noun] Malignancy MALIGNANCY (18) [noun] The state of being malignant or diseased. | [noun] A malignant cancer; specifically, any neoplasm that is invasive or otherwise not benign. | [noun] That which is malign; evil, depravity, malevolence. MALINGERED (14) [verb] To feign illness, injury, or incapacitation in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. | [verb] To self-inflict real injury or infection (to inflict self-harm) in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. MALINGERER (13) [noun] A person who malingers. MALODOROUS (13) [adjective] Having a bad odor. | [adjective] Highly improper. MALOLACTIC (16) [adjective] Describing a type of fermentation in which malic acid is converted into lactic acid MALTREATED (13) [verb] To treat badly, to abuse. MALTREATER (12) MAMMALIANS (16) MAMMILLARY (19) [noun] (speleology) A carbonate coating formed through the precipitation of calcium carbonate onto existing rock below the water surface in cave pools. | [noun] A mammillary body, one of a pair of small round bodies, located on the undersurface of the brain, that form part of the limbic system. | [adjective] Resembling a breast or nipple in shape or form. MAMMITIDES (17) MAMMOCKING (23) MAMMOGRAMS (19) [noun] An X-ray picture of the breasts (mammaries), used to screen for breast cancer. MAMMONISMS (18) MAMMONISTS (16) MANAGEABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being managed or controlled. | [adjective] Capable of being done or fulfilled; achievable. MANAGEABLY (18) MANAGEMENT (15) [noun] Administration; the use of limited resources combined with forecasting, planning, leadership and execution skills to achieve predetermined specific goals. | [noun] The executives of an organisation, especially senior executives. | [noun] Judicious use of means to accomplish an end. MANAGERESS (13) [noun] A female manager. MANAGERIAL (13) [adjective] Of or relating to a manager or management; involving management-like duties. MANCHINEEL (17) [noun] A tropical American tree, Hippomane mancinella, having apple-like, poisonous fruit, and a sap that causes blisters on contact with the skin MANDAMUSED (16) MANDAMUSES (15) [noun] A common law prerogative writ that compels a court or government officer to perform mandatory or purely ministerial duties correctly. MANDARINIC (15) MANDIBULAR (15) MANDOLINES (13) MANDRAGORA (14) [noun] Mandrake (genus Mandragora); often specifically mandrake root, traditionally used as a narcotic. | [noun] A kind of tiny dragon immune to fire. MANEUVERED (16) [verb] To move (something, or oneself) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position. | [verb] To guide, steer, manage purposefully | [verb] To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme MANEUVERER (15) MANFULNESS (15) MANGANATES (13) [noun] Any compound containing the ion MnO42-. MANGANESES (13) MANGANITES (13) [noun] A dark gray mineral of manganese, MnO(OH), found throughout North America and Europe MANGOSTEEN (13) [noun] A tropical fruit of the tree genus Garcinia. | [noun] The tree on which the fruit grows. MANHANDLED (17) [verb] To move something heavy by force of men, without aid of levers, pulleys, machine, or tackles. | [verb] To assault or beat up a person. | [verb] To mishandle; to handle roughly; to mangle. MANHANDLES (16) [verb] To move something heavy by force of men, without aid of levers, pulleys, machine, or tackles. | [verb] To assault or beat up a person. | [verb] To mishandle; to handle roughly; to mangle. MANHATTANS (15) [noun] A cocktail made from whiskey, sweet vermouth and bitters. | [noun] A bar chart representing the number of runs scored each over (supposed to resemble a skyline of skyscrapers). MANIACALLY (17) MANICURING (15) [verb] To trim the fingernails MANICURIST (14) [noun] A person who performs manicures. MANIFESTED (16) [verb] To show plainly; to make to appear distinctly, usually to the mind; to put beyond question or doubt; to display; to exhibit. | [verb] To exhibit the manifests or prepared invoices of; to declare at the customhouse. MANIFESTER (15) MANIFESTLY (18) [adverb] In a manifest manner; obviously. MANIFESTOS (15) [noun] A public declaration of principles, policies, or intentions, especially that of a political party. | [verb] To issue a manifesto MANIFOLDED (17) MANIFOLDLY (19) MANIPULATE (14) [verb] To move, arrange or operate something using the hands | [verb] To influence, manage, direct, control or tamper with something | [verb] To handle and move a body part, either as an examination or for a therapeutic purpose MANNEQUINS (21) [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes | [noun] A jointed model of the human body used by artists, especially to demonstrate the arrangement of drapery | [noun] An anatomical model of the human body for use in teaching of e.g. CPR MANNERISMS (14) [noun] A noticeable personal habit, a verbal or other (often, but not necessarily unconscious) habitual behavior peculiar to an individual. | [noun] Exaggerated or affected style in art, speech, or other behavior. | [noun] In literature, an ostentatious and unnatural style of the second half of the sixteenth century. In the contemporary criticism, described as a negation of the classicist equilibrium, pre-Baroque, and deforming expressiveness. MANNERISTS (12) MANNERLESS (12) MANOEUVRED (16) [verb] To move (something, or oneself) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position. | [verb] To guide, steer, manage purposefully | [verb] To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme MANOEUVRES (15) [noun] The planned movement of troops, vehicles etc.; a strategic repositioning; (later also) a large training field-exercise of fighting units. | [noun] Any strategic or cunning action; a stratagem. | [noun] A movement of the body, or with an implement, instrument etc., especially one performed with skill or dexterity. MANOMETERS (14) [noun] An instrument to measure pressure in a fluid, especially a double-legged liquid column gauge used to measure the difference in the pressures of two fluids. MANOMETRIC (16) MANSERVANT (15) [noun] A male servant. MANSLAYERS (15) MANSUETUDE (13) [noun] Gentleness, tameness. MANTICORES (14) [noun] A beast with the body of a lion (usually red), the tail of a scorpion, and the head/face of a man with a mouth filled with multiple rows of sharp teeth (like a shark), said to be able to shoot spikes from its tail or mane to paralyse prey. It may be horned, winged, or both; its voice is described as a mixture of pipes and trumpets. MANUBRIUMS (16) [noun] The broad, upper part of the sternum. | [noun] The tube extending from the central underside of a jellyfish and ending in a mouth. | [noun] A knob or handle that controls the stops of an organ. MANUMITTED (15) [verb] To release from slavery, to free. MANUSCRIPT (16) [noun] A book, composition or any other document, written by hand (or manually typewritten), not mechanically reproduced. | [noun] A single, original copy of a book, article, composition etc, written by hand or even printed, submitted as original for (copy-editing and) reproductive publication. | [adjective] Handwritten, or by extension manually typewritten, as opposed to being mechanically reproduced. MANZANITAS (21) [noun] Any evergreen shrub or tree of the genus Arctostaphylos, especially Arctostaphylos manzanita, having smooth red or orange bark and stiff, twisting branches. MAPMAKINGS (21) MAQUILLAGE (22) [noun] Makeup, cosmetics, or its application, especially in theatrical or excessive use. MARASCHINO (17) [noun] A sweet liqueur made from marasca cherries MARASMUSES (14) MARATHONER (15) MARBLEISED (15) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEISES (14) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEIZED (24) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEIZES (23) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARCASITES (14) [noun] The orthorhombic form of iron disulfide, FeS2, occurring as yellow crystals. | [noun] (jewellery) Pyrite. | [noun] Any of various metal sulfides, usually iron sulfide minerals. MARCELLING (15) [verb] To wave (hair) by the marcel method. | [verb] To wave. MARCHPANES (19) MARGARINES (13) [noun] A spread, manufactured from a blend of vegetable oils (some of which are hydrogenated), emulsifiers etc, mostly used as a substitute for butter. | [noun] The solid ingredient of human fat, olive oil, etc. MARGARITAS (13) [noun] A cocktail made with tequila, an orange-flavoured liqueur, and lemon or lime juice, often served with salt encrusted on the rim of the glass. MARGARITES (13) MARGENTING (14) MARGINALIA (13) [noun] Notes in the margin of a document. MARGINALLY (16) [adverb] In a marginal manner, or to a marginal extent; barely sufficiently; slightly. | [adverb] In the margin of a book. MARGINATED (14) [adjective] Having a distinct margin MARGINATES (13) [verb] To provide with margins. MARGRAVATE (16) [noun] The status or rank of margrave. | [noun] A territory governed by a margrave or margravine. MARGRAVIAL (16) MARGRAVINE (16) [noun] The wife of a margrave. | [noun] A woman with the rank and responsibilities of a margrave. MARGUERITE (13) [noun] An oxeye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare). | [noun] A shrub with daisy-like flowers, Argyranthemum frutescens | [noun] The China aster. MARIHUANAS (15) MARIJUANAS (19) MARIMBISTS (16) MARINADING (14) [verb] To marinate. MARINATING (13) [verb] To allow a sauce or flavoring mixture to absorb into something; to steep or soak something in a marinade to flavor or prepare it for cooking. MARINATION (12) MARIONETTE (12) [noun] A puppet, usually made of wood, which is animated by the pulling of strings. | [noun] The buffel duck. | [verb] To control (somebody) as if they were a puppet; to manipulate. MARKEDNESS (17) MARKETABLE (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to marketability; capable of being marketed. | [adjective] Saleable (of goods) or employable (of people) MARKETEERS (16) [noun] A specialist in marketing. MARKETINGS (17) MARKSWOMAN (21) [noun] A woman skilled at hitting targets, as with a firearm, bow, or thrown object. MARKSWOMEN (21) [noun] A woman skilled at hitting targets, as with a firearm, bow, or thrown object. MARLSTONES (12) MARMALADES (15) MARQUESSES (21) [noun] A title of nobility for a man ranking beneath a duke and above an earl. MARQUISATE (21) [noun] The territory held by a marquis, margrave or marchioness. | [noun] The state or rank of a marquis. MARROWBONE (17) [noun] A bone containing edible marrow. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The shins or knees, chiefly in references to kneeling. MARROWFATS (18) MARSHALING (16) [verb] To arrange (troops, etc.) in line for inspection or a parade. | [verb] (by extension) To arrange (facts, etc.) in some methodical order. | [verb] To ceremoniously guide, conduct or usher. MARSHALLED (16) [verb] To arrange (troops, etc.) in line for inspection or a parade. | [verb] (by extension) To arrange (facts, etc.) in some methodical order. | [verb] To ceremoniously guide, conduct or usher. MARSHINESS (15) MARSHLANDS (16) [noun] Marshy land; bog or fen MARSUPIALS (14) [noun] A mammal of which the female has a pouch in which it rears its young, which are born immature, through early infancy, such as the kangaroo or koala, or else pouchless members of the Marsupialia like the shrew opossum. MARTENSITE (12) [noun] A solid solution of carbon in iron; the chief constituent of steel | [noun] Any crystal structure formed by a martensitic transition MARTINGALE (13) [noun] A piece of harness used on a horse to keep it from raising its head above a desired point. | [noun] A spar, or piece of rigging that strengthens the bowsprit. | [noun] A stochastic process for which the conditional expectation of future values given the sequence of all prior values is equal to the current value. MARTYRDOMS (18) [noun] The condition of a martyr; the death of a martyr; the suffering of death on account of adherence to the Christian faith, or to any cause. | [noun] Extreme suffering, affliction; torment; torture, especially without reason. MARTYRIZED (25) [verb] To make a martyr of (someone). MARTYRIZES (24) [verb] To make a martyr of (someone). MARVELLING (16) [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. | [verb] To marvel at. | [verb] (used impersonally) To cause to marvel or be surprised. MARVELLOUS (15) [adjective] Exciting wonder or surprise; astonishing; wonderful. MASCARAING (15) MASCARPONE (16) [noun] A soft, creamy Italian cheese that is not pressed or aged; often used in desserts. MASCULINES (14) [noun] (grammar) The masculine gender. | [noun] (grammar) A word of the masculine gender. | [noun] That which is masculine. MASOCHISMS (19) MASOCHISTS (17) [noun] Someone who enjoys pain or humiliation, or who derives pleasure from harming oneself or being harmed by others. MASQUERADE (22) [noun] An assembly or party of people wearing (usually elaborate or fanciful) masks and costumes, and amusing themselves with dancing, conversation, or other diversions. | [noun] The act of wearing a mask or dressing up in a costume for, or as if for, a masquerade ball. | [noun] An act of living under false pretenses; a concealment of something by a false or unreal show; a disguise, a pretence; also, a pretentious display. MASSACRERS (14) MASSACRING (15) [verb] To kill in considerable numbers where little or no resistance can be made, with indiscriminate violence, without necessity, and contrary to civilized norms. (Often limited to the killing of human beings.) | [verb] To win so decisively it is in the manner of so slaughtering one's opponent. | [verb] To give a performance so poorly it is in the manner of so slaughtering the musical piece, play etc being performed. MASSASAUGA (13) [noun] The rattlesnake Sistrurus catenatus (formerly Crotalinus catenatus) in the family Viperidae, found in three subspecies. MASSETERIC (14) MASTECTOMY (19) [noun] The surgical procedure to remove of all or part of a breast; mammectomy. MASTERMIND (15) [noun] A person with an extraordinary intellect or skill that is markedly superior to his or her peers. | [noun] A person responsible for the highest level of planning and execution of a major operation. | [verb] To act in the role of mastermind. MASTERSHIP (17) MASTERWORK (19) [noun] A piece done to prove possession of skill sufficient to be ranked a master. | [noun] A piece of quality, indicative of having been made by a master; a masterpiece. | [noun] An act of primary importance. MASTHEADED (17) [verb] To send to the masthead as a punishment. MASTICATED (15) [verb] To chew (food). | [verb] To grind or knead something into a pulp. MASTICATES (14) [verb] To chew (food). | [verb] To grind or knead something into a pulp. MASTICATOR (14) [noun] Someone who masticates. | [noun] A machine for cutting meat into fine pieces for toothless people. | [noun] A machine for cutting leather, India rubber, or similar tough substances, into fine pieces, in some processes of manufacture. MASTITIDES (13) MASTODONIC (15) MASTODONTS (13) MASTURBATE (14) [verb] To stimulate oneself sexually, especially by use of one’s hand or a sex toy made for this purpose, often to the point of ejaculation. | [verb] To stimulate someone else sexually without penetration of the penis. | [verb] To stimulate or please oneself by means of anything, not necessarily sexual, that does not get them anywhere; something that wastes their time; something that does not help others or achieve any important goal. MATCHBOARD (20) [noun] A type of wooden board that connects with others using a tongue and groove system | [noun] (sand casting) A thin piece of material (such as wood, plaster, or metal) that forms and aligns the matched parting surfaces for the two parts (the cope and the drag) of a molding box or flask, to which board patterns are attached in some casting methods. MATCHBOOKS (23) [noun] A small folded sheet of cardboard containing rows of cardboard matches, generally with a striker on the outside. MATCHBOXES (26) [noun] A small cardboard box in which matches are kept. | [noun] Any small die-cast toy car, usually collectible. MATCHLOCKS (23) [noun] Early type of firearm, using a smoldering piece of cord to fire the powder in the firing pan. | [noun] The gunlock used in such a weapon, having a slow smouldering match, see: slow match. MATCHMAKER (23) [noun] Someone who finds suitable dates or marriage partners for other people. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who arranges professional boxing matches. | [noun] Someone who makes matchsticks. MATCHSTICK (23) [noun] A small, slender piece of wood or cardboard serving as a component of a match. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Any similarly small and thin piece. MATCHWOODS (21) MATERIALLY (15) [adverb] In a material manner; with regard to physical things or characteristics. | [adverb] To a significant degree. MATERNALLY (15) MATHEMATIC (19) [adjective] Mathematical MATINESSES (12) MATRIARCHS (17) [noun] A female leader of a family, a tribe or an ethnic or religious group. | [noun] A female founder of a political or religious movement, an organization or an enterprise. MATRIARCHY (20) [noun] A social system in which the mother is head of household, having authority over men and children. | [noun] A system of government by females (particularly as a kind of polity). | [noun] The dominance of women in social or cultural systems. MATRICIDAL (15) MATRICIDES (15) [noun] The killing of one's mother. | [noun] A person who kills his or her mother. MATRONYMIC (19) [noun] A surname or byname acquired from the given name of one's mother. | [noun] By extension, a surname or byname acquired from the given name from a female ancestor. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or derived from the given name of one's mother. MATTRASSES (12) MATTRESSES (12) [noun] A pad on which a person can recline and sleep, usually having an inner section of coiled springs covered with foam or other cushioning material then enclosed with cloth fabric. | [noun] A form of retaining wall used to support foundations or an embankment MATURATING (13) [verb] To bring to ripeness or maturity; to ripen. | [verb] To promote the perfect suppuration of (an abscess). | [verb] To undergo perfect suppuration. MATURATION (12) [noun] The process of becoming mature. | [noun] The process of differentiation that produces the adult form of an organism. | [noun] The process of maturating, or suppurating fully. MATURITIES (12) [noun] The state of being mature, ready or ripe. | [noun] When bodily growth has completed and/or reproduction can begin. | [noun] The state of a debt obligation at the end of the term of maturation thereof, once all interest and any applicable fees have accrued to the principal. MAULSTICKS (18) [noun] A short stick with a pad on one end, used by a painter to steady their hand, and to prevent it from accidentally touching the painting. MAUMETRIES (14) MAUNDERERS (13) MAUNDERING (14) [verb] To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle. | [verb] To wander or walk aimlessly. | [verb] To beg; to whine like a beggar. MAUSOLEUMS (14) [noun] A large stately tomb or a building housing such a tomb or several tombs. | [noun] (by extension) A gloomy, usually large room or building. MAVOURNEEN (15) MAXILLIPED (22) [noun] One of the appendages on the heads of centipedes and some crustaceans behind the maxillae, used for feeding. The maxillipeds, known as forcipules, give centipedes their scientific name, Chilopoda (lip-foot). MAXIMALIST (21) [noun] A person with maximalist beliefs or tendencies; someone who prefers redundancy or excess | [adjective] Preferring redundancy; tending to do or provide more rather than less MAXIMISING (22) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMIZERS (30) MAXIMIZING (31) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAYFLOWERS (21) [noun] Any of several plants that flower in May - especially the hawthorn (in Britain) and the trailing arbutus (in the US). MAYONNAISE (15) [noun] A dressing made from vegetable oil, raw egg yolks and seasoning, used on salads, with french fries, in sandwiches etc. | [noun] Any cold dish with that dressing as an ingredient. | [noun] Any cream, for example for moisturizing the face or conditioning the hair, for which the base is egg yolks and oil. MAYORESSES (15) [noun] A female mayor. | [noun] The wife of a (male) mayor. | [noun] A daughter or female friend of a male mayor chosen by him to hold the title mayoress. MAZINESSES (21) MEADOWLAND (17) [noun] A tract of land cultivated as a meadow. MEADOWLARK (20) [noun] The meadow pipit (Anthus pratensis). | [noun] Any of several songbirds of the genera Sturnella and Leistes, native to the Americas. MEAGERNESS (13) [noun] The state of being meager. MEANDERING (14) [verb] To wind or turn in a course or passage; to be intricate. | [verb] To wind, turn, or twist; to make flexuous. | [noun] An instance or period of roaming. MEANINGFUL (16) [adjective] Having meaning, significant. MEANNESSES (12) [noun] The condition, or quality, of being mean (any of its definitions) | [noun] A mean act. MEANWHILES (18) MEASURABLE (14) [noun] That which can be measured; a metric. | [adjective] Able to be measured. | [adjective] Of significant importance. MEASURABLY (17) MEASUREDLY (16) MEATLOAVES (15) MECHANICAL (19) [noun] Manually created layout of artwork that is camera ready for photographic reproduction. | [noun] One who does manual labor, especially one who is similar to Shakespeare's rude mechanicals | [noun] A robot or mechanical creature. MECHANISMS (19) [noun] (within a machine or machinery) Any mechanical means for the conversion or control of motion, or the transmission or control of power. | [noun] Any combination of cams, gears, links, belts, chains and logical mechanical elements. | [noun] A group of entities, such as objects, that interact together. MECHANISTS (17) [noun] A person who takes a mechanical view | [noun] A maker of machines; one skilled in mechanics. MECHANIZED (27) [verb] To equip something with machinery. | [verb] To equip a military unit with tanks and other armed vehicles. | [verb] To make something routine, automatic or monotonous. MECHANIZER (26) MECHANIZES (26) [verb] To equip something with machinery. | [verb] To equip a military unit with tanks and other armed vehicles. | [verb] To make something routine, automatic or monotonous. MECLIZINES (23) MEDAILLONS (13) MEDALLIONS (13) [noun] A large medal, usually decorative. | [noun] A cut of meat resembling a medallion. | [noun] A usually round or oval frame (often made of stucco) containing a decoration. MEDALLISTS (13) [noun] One who has received a medal; one who has medalled. | [noun] An engraver, designer or collector of medals. MEDDLESOME (16) [adjective] Characterised or marked by meddling; inclined or having a tendency to meddle or interfere in other people's business. MEDEVACKED (23) [verb] To transport (patients) by medevac. MEDIAEVALS (16) MEDIAGENIC (16) [adjective] Thought of by the news media as an attractive subject MEDIASTINA (13) [noun] The region in mammals between the pleural sacs, containing the heart and all of the thoracic viscera except the lungs. MEDIATIONS (13) [noun] Negotiation to resolve differences conducted by some impartial party. | [noun] The act of intervening for the purpose of bringing about a settlement. MEDICAMENT (17) [noun] A medicine, medication or drug. MEDICATING (16) [verb] To prescribe or administer medication to. MEDICATION (15) [noun] A medicine, or all the medicines regularly taken by a patient. | [noun] The administration of medicine. MEDICINALS (15) [noun] Any plant that can be used for medicinal purposes. MEDICINING (16) MEDIEVALLY (19) MEDIOCRITY (18) [noun] The quality of being intermediate between two extremes; a mean. | [noun] A middle course of action; moderation, balance. | [noun] The condition of being mediocre; having only an average degree of quality, skills etc.; no better than standard. MEDITATING (14) [verb] To contemplate; to keep the mind fixed upon something; to study. | [verb] To sit or lie down and come to a deep rest while still remaining conscious. | [verb] To consider; to reflect on. MEDITATION (13) [noun] A devotional exercise of, or leading to contemplation. | [noun] A contemplative discourse, often on a religious or philosophical subject. | [noun] A musical theme treated in a meditative manner. MEDITATIVE (16) [adjective] Of or pertaining to meditation. | [adjective] Thoughtful; pensive. MEDITATORS (13) MEDIUMSHIP (20) MEDULLATED (14) MEEKNESSES (16) MEERSCHAUM (19) [noun] A soft white mineral, chiefly used for smoking-pipes and cigar holders. | [noun] A smoking-pipe made from meerschaum. MEETNESSES (12) MEGACITIES (15) [noun] A very large city; a megalopolis. MEGACYCLES (20) MEGADEATHS (17) [noun] One million deaths, especially as a unit of measure in reference to nuclear warfare. MEGAFAUNAE (16) MEGAFAUNAL (16) MEGAFAUNAS (16) MEGAGAMETE (16) [noun] A macrogamete. MEGALITHIC (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to megaliths, to the people who made them, or to the period when they were made. MEGALOPSES (15) MEGAPARSEC (17) MEGAPHONED (19) [verb] To use a megaphone; to speak through a megaphone. MEGAPHONES (18) [noun] A portable, usually hand-held, funnel-shaped device that is used to amplify a person’s natural voice toward a targeted direction. | [noun] Mouthpiece or promoter; one who speaks for or publicizes on behalf of another. | [verb] To use a megaphone; to speak through a megaphone. MEGAPHONIC (20) MEGASCOPIC (19) MEGASPORES (15) [noun] The larger spore of a heterosporous plant, typically producing a female gametophyte MEGASPORIC (17) MEITNERIUM (14) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Mt) with atomic number 109. MELANCHOLY (20) [noun] Black bile, formerly thought to be one of the four "cardinal humours" of animal bodies. | [noun] Great sadness or depression, especially of a thoughtful or introspective nature. | [adjective] Affected with great sadness or depression. MELANISTIC (14) MELANIZING (22) MELANOCYTE (17) [noun] A cell in the skin that produces the pigment melanin. MELANOMATA (14) MELANOSOME (14) MELATONINS (12) MELIORATED (13) [verb] To make better; to improve; to solve a problem. | [verb] To become better. | [adjective] Made better; improved MELIORATES (12) [verb] To make better; to improve; to solve a problem. | [verb] To become better. MELIORATOR (12) MELIORISMS (14) MELIORISTS (12) MELISMATIC (16) MELLOPHONE (17) [noun] A brass instrument frequently used in place of the French horn in marching bands and similar performance groups MELLOTRONS (12) [noun] An early electronic keyboard instrument that played back prerecorded sounds. MELLOWNESS (15) MELODISING (14) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODIZERS (22) MELODIZING (23) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODRAMAS (15) [noun] A kind of drama having a musical accompaniment to intensify the effect of certain scenes. | [noun] A drama abounding in romantic sentiment and agonizing situations, with a musical accompaniment only in parts which are especially thrilling or pathetic. In opera, a passage in which the orchestra plays a somewhat descriptive accompaniment, while the actor speaks | [noun] Any situation or action which is blown out of proportion. MELPHALANS (17) MELTWATERS (15) [noun] Water from melting ice or snow. MEMBERSHIP (21) [noun] The state of being a member of a group or organization. | [noun] The body of members of an organization. | [noun] The fact of being a member of a set. MEMBRANOUS (16) MEMOIRISTS (14) MEMORANDUM (17) [noun] A short note serving as a reminder. | [noun] A written business communication. | [noun] A brief diplomatic communication. MEMORIALLY (17) MEMORISING (15) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORIZERS (23) MEMORIZING (24) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MENACINGLY (18) [adverb] In a menacing manner. MENADIONES (13) MENAGERIES (13) [noun] A collection of live wild animals on exhibition; the enclosure where they are kept. | [noun] A diverse or miscellaneous group. MENARCHEAL (17) MENDACIOUS (15) [adjective] (of a person) Lying, untruthful or dishonest. | [adjective] (of a statement, etc) False or untrue. MENDICANCY (20) MENDICANTS (15) [noun] A pauper who lives by begging. | [noun] A religious friar, forbidden to own personal property, who begs for a living. MENINGIOMA (15) [noun] A common tumour of the central nervous system, occurring in the meninges, usually benign. MENINGITIC (15) MENINGITIS (13) [noun] Inflammation of the meninges, characterized by headache, neck stiffness and photophobia and also fever, chills, vomiting and myalgia. MENISCUSES (14) MENOLOGIES (13) [noun] (often capitalized) A service book of the Eastern Orthodox Church that corresponds, though very roughly, to the proprium sanctorum of the Latin breviary. They include all the movable parts of the services connected with the commemoration of saints and in particular the canons sung in the Orthros, the office which corresponds with Catholic lauds, including the synaxaries, i. e. the historical notices regarding the saints of the day. | [noun] The tables of scriptural lessons, arranged according to months and saints' days, which are often found at the beginning of manuscripts of the gospels or other lectionaries. The saints' days are briefly named and the readings indicated beside each. | [noun] A collection of long lives of the saints of the Eastern Orthodox Church, whenever these lives, are arranged according to months and days of the year. MENOPAUSAL (14) [adjective] Of, or pertaining to the menopause MENOPAUSES (14) [noun] The period in a woman's life when menstruation becomes irregular and less frequent before eventually stopping altogether, usually accompanied by a range of unpleasant symptoms; the period spanning perimenopause up to postmenopause. | [noun] The final menstrual period of a woman after which ovulation no longer occurs. MENSTRUATE (12) [verb] To stain with or as if with menses. | [verb] To undergo menstruation, to have a period. | [adjective] Menstrual. MENSTRUUMS (14) MENSURABLE (14) [adjective] Measurable | [adjective] Having a fixed rhythm. MENTALISMS (14) MENTALISTS (12) [noun] A practitioner of mentalism. | [noun] An insane person. MENTATIONS (12) [noun] Mental activity; the process of thinking. MENTIONERS (12) MENTIONING (13) [verb] To make a short reference to something. | [verb] To utter a word or expression in order to refer to the expression itself, as opposed to its usual referent. MENTORSHIP (17) [noun] State of being a mentor MEPERIDINE (15) [noun] The opioid analgesic drug pethidine (INN). MEPHITISES (17) [noun] A poisonous or foul-smelling gas, especially as emitted from the earth; an unpleasant smell. | [noun] A dilution of fluids derived from skunks or polecats. MERBROMINS (16) MERCANTILE (14) [adjective] Concerned with the exchange of goods for profit. | [adjective] Of or relating to mercantilism. MERCAPTANS (16) [noun] Any of a class of organic compounds of sulphur, ( R1.S.R2 ); they tend to be foul-smelling. When R2 is a hydrogen atom, they are termed thiols or thioalcohols. MERCERISED (15) [verb] To treat cotton fabric with sodium hydroxide to make it more lustrous and accepting of dyes. MERCERISES (14) MERCERIZED (24) [verb] To treat cotton fabric with sodium hydroxide to make it more lustrous and accepting of dyes. MERCERIZES (23) MERCHANTED (18) MERCIFULLY (20) [adverb] In a merciful manner. | [adverb] Thankfully MERCURATED (15) MERCURATES (14) MERCURIALS (14) [noun] Any of the plants known as mercury, especially the annual mercury or French mercury (Mercurialis annua). | [noun] A person born under the influence of the planet Mercury; hence, a person having an animated, lively, quick-witted or volatile character. | [noun] A chemical compound containing mercury. MERGANSERS (13) [noun] Any of various diving ducks of the genera Mergus or Lophodytes, which feed on fish and have a sharply serrated bill. MERIDIONAL (13) [noun] An inhabitant of a southern region, especially the south of France | [adjective] Located in the south, southern; later especially, pertaining to the south of France or other southern parts of Europe. | [adjective] Along a north-south direction, or relative to a meridian; or relating to meridians or a meridian MERITOCRAT (14) [noun] An advocate of meritocracy. | [noun] A person who has authority allegedly based on ability. MEROMYOSIN (17) MEROZOITES (21) MERRIMENTS (14) MERRYMAKER (21) MESCALINES (14) MESENCHYME (22) [noun] That part of the mesoderm of an embryo that develops into connective tissue, bone, cartilage, etc. MESENTERIC (14) MESENTERON (12) [noun] The midgut. MESMERISED (15) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESMERISES (14) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESMERISMS (16) MESMERISTS (14) MESMERIZED (24) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. | [adjective] Spellbound or enthralled. MESMERIZER (23) MESMERIZES (23) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESNALTIES (12) MESODERMAL (15) MESOGLOEAS (13) MESOMORPHS (19) [noun] A person with pronounced muscular development and low body fat. | [noun] : Theoretical body type in which a person naturally has lower body fat and greater ability to achieve muscular development than average. MESOMORPHY (22) MESOPAUSES (14) [noun] In the atmosphere, the boundary between the mesosphere and the ionosphere. It is the atmospheric boundary where the temperature reaches its minimum value. MESOPHYLLS (20) MESOPHYTES (20) [noun] Any normal terrestrial plant that grows in environments that have an average supply of water. MESOPHYTIC (22) MESOSPHERE (17) [noun] The layer of the Earth's atmosphere that is directly above the stratosphere and directly below the thermosphere. | [noun] The part of the Earth's mantle below the asthenosphere and above the outer core. MESOTHELIA (15) [noun] A membrane of flat epithelial cells that lines the body cavity of embryos and forms the squamous cells of the peritoneum, pericardium, and pleura MESOTHORAX (22) [noun] The middle of the three segments of the thorax of an insect, carrying the second pair of legs, and the forewings when present. MESSALINES (12) MESSENGERS (13) [noun] One who brings messages. | [noun] A light line with which a heavier line may be hauled e.g. from the deck of a ship to the pier. | [noun] The supporting member of an aerial cable (electric power or telephone or data). MESSIANISM (14) MESTRANOLS (12) METABOLISM (16) [noun] The chemical processes that occur within a living organism in order to maintain life. | [noun] (by extension) The processes that maintain any dynamic system. METABOLITE (14) [noun] Any substance produced by, or taking part in, a metabolic reaction. METABOLIZE (23) [verb] To undergo metabolism. | [verb] To cause a substance to undergo metabolism. | [verb] To produce a substance using metabolism. METACARPAL (16) [noun] Any of the bones of the metacarpus. | [adjective] Of the metacarpus. METACARPUS (16) [noun] The five bones that form intermediate part of the hand between the fingers and the wrist. METACENTER (14) [noun] A midway point between a ship's centre of buoyancy when upright and its centre of buoyancy when tilted; it must be above the centre of gravity to enable a tilting ship to return to an upright position. METAETHICS (17) METAGALAXY (23) METALISING (13) METALIZING (22) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLIZED (22) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLIZES (21) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLOIDS (13) [noun] An element, such as silicon or germanium, intermediate in properties between that of a metal and a nonmetal; especially one that exhibits the external characteristics of a metal, but behaves chemically more as a nonmetal. | [noun] The metallic base of a fixed alkali, or alkaline earth; applied to sodium, potassium, and some other metallic substances whose metallic character was supposed to be not well defined. METALLURGY (16) [noun] The science of metals; their extraction from ores, purification and alloying, heat treatment, and working. METALMARKS (18) [noun] Any butterfly of the family Riodinidae. METALSMITH (17) METALWARES (15) [noun] Any wares made out of metal, such as pots and pans. METALWORKS (19) METAMERISM (16) METAPHASES (17) METAPHORIC (19) [adjective] Like a metaphor. METAPHRASE (17) [noun] A literal, word-for-word translation. | [noun] An answering phrase; repartee. | [verb] To make such a literal translation. METAPHYSIC (22) [noun] The field of study of metaphysics. | [noun] The metaphysical system of a particular philosopher or of a particular school of thought. | [noun] A fundamental principle or key concept. METAPLASIA (14) [noun] The conversion of one type of tissue into another. METASTABLE (14) [noun] A particle, etc. in the metastable state. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a physical or chemical state that is relatively long-lived, but may decay to a lower energy state when slightly perturbed or through a quantum transition. METASTABLY (17) METASTASES (12) [noun] A change in nature, form, or quality. | [noun] The transference of a bodily function or disease to another part of the body, specifically the development of a secondary area of disease remote from the original site, as with some cancers. | [noun] The spread of a harmful event to another location, like the metastasis of a cancer. METASTASIS (12) [noun] A change in nature, form, or quality. | [noun] The transference of a bodily function or disease to another part of the body, specifically the development of a secondary area of disease remote from the original site, as with some cancers. | [noun] The spread of a harmful event to another location, like the metastasis of a cancer. METASTATIC (14) [adjective] Relating to, or producing metastasis METATARSAL (12) [noun] Any of the bones of the metatarsus. | [adjective] Of the metatarsus. METATARSUS (12) [noun] The part of the foot between the toes and the ankle, especially its five bones. METATHESES (15) [noun] The transposition of letters, syllables or sounds within a word, such as in ask as /æks/. | [noun] The double decomposition of inorganic salts. | [noun] The breaking and reforming of double bonds in olefins in which substituent groups are swapped. METATHESIS (15) [noun] The transposition of letters, syllables or sounds within a word, such as in ask as /æks/. | [noun] The double decomposition of inorganic salts. | [noun] The breaking and reforming of double bonds in olefins in which substituent groups are swapped. METATHETIC (17) METATHORAX (22) [noun] The hindmost of the three sections of the thorax of an insect, carrying the posterior pair of legs and the hindwings when present. METAXYLEMS (24) METEORITES (12) [noun] A metallic or stony object or body that is the remains of a meteoroid. METEORITIC (14) METEOROIDS (13) [noun] A relatively small (sand- to boulder-sized) fragment of debris in a star system that produces a meteor when it hits the atmosphere METERSTICK (18) METHADONES (16) METHEDRINE (16) [noun] Methamphetamine METHEGLINS (16) METHIONINE (15) [noun] A lipotropic, sulphur-containing essential amino acid, C5H11NO2S, found in most protein. METHODICAL (18) [adjective] In an organized manner; proceeding with regard to method; systematic. | [adjective] Arranged with regard to method; disposed in a suitable manner, or in a manner to illustrate a subject, or to facilitate practical observation. METHODISED (17) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODISES (16) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODISMS (18) METHODISTS (16) [noun] One who follows a method. METHODIZED (26) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODIZES (25) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHYLASES (18) METHYLATED (19) [verb] To add, or treat with methyl alcohol (see methylated spirits) | [verb] To add a methyl group to a compound | [verb] To add a methyl group to a nucleic acid as part of the process of gene expression METHYLATES (18) [noun] The anion -O-CH3- derived from methanol by loss of a proton; any salt containing this anion | [verb] To add, or treat with methyl alcohol (see methylated spirits) | [verb] To add a methyl group to a compound METHYLATOR (18) METHYLDOPA (21) METHYLENES (18) METICULOUS (14) [adjective] Characterized by very precise, conscientious attention to details. | [adjective] Timid, fearful, overly cautious. METONYMIES (17) [noun] The use of a single characteristic or part of an object, concept or phenomenon to identify the entire object, concept, phenomenon or a related object. | [noun] A metonym. METRICALLY (17) [adverb] In a metrical manner. METRICIZED (24) METRICIZES (23) METRIFYING (19) METRITISES (12) METRONOMES (14) [noun] A device, containing an inverted pendulum, used to mark time by means of regular ticks at adjustable intervals; an electronic equivalent that emits flashes. METRONOMIC (16) METROPOLIS (14) [noun] (history) The mother (founding) polis (city state) of a colony. | [noun] A large, busy city, especially as the main city in an area or country or as distinguished from surrounding rural areas. | [noun] (canon law) The see of a metropolitan archbishop, ranking above its suffragan diocesan bishops. METTLESOME (14) [adjective] Marked by mettle or bravery; courageous. MEZZANINES (30) [noun] A secondary floor, in between the main floors of a building; entresol. | [noun] A small window used to light such a secondary floor. | [noun] The lowest balcony in an auditorium. MEZZOTINTS (30) [noun] A form of intaglio etching in which a metal plate is roughened evenly and then smoothed to bring out an image. | [noun] An etching or print made using this method. MICRIFYING (21) MICROBEAMS (18) MICROBREWS (19) [noun] A beer produced by a small local brewery, or microbrewery. MICROBURST (16) [noun] A strong downdraft, of less than 2.5 miles in diameter, that can cause damaging winds. MICROBUSES (16) MICROCHIPS (21) [noun] Integrated circuit; microprocessor. | [verb] To fit (an animal) with a microchip. MICROCLINE (16) [noun] A common feldspar of igneous, plutonic, and metamorphic rocks, made of potassium aluminum silicate, with the chemical formula KAlSi3O8. MICROCOCCI (20) [noun] Any of a group of spherical, aerobic, gram-positive bacteria, of the genus Micrococcus, that are wide-ranging and harmless. MICROCODES (17) MICROCOSMS (18) [noun] Human nature or the human body as representative of the wider universe; man considered as a miniature counterpart of divine or universal nature. | [noun] The human body; a person. | [noun] A smaller system which is seen as representative of a larger one. MICROCURIE (16) MICROCYTES (19) [noun] An unusually small red blood cell found in some forms of anemia MICROCYTIC (21) MICROFARAD (18) [noun] One millionth ( 10-6 ) of a farad, abbreviated as µF. MICROFAUNA (17) [noun] The smallest of the faunal size divisions, including mainly microorganisms but also sometimes applied to the tiniest species of animal groups such as ticks, insects, etc. MICROFICHE (22) [noun] A sheet of microfilm, six by four inches, holding several hundred reduced images of document pages; read using a microfiche reader or microfilm reader. | [noun] A device used to magnify and read these sheets. MICROFILMS (19) [noun] A continuous roll of film containing photographs of documents at a greatly reduced size | [verb] To reproduce documents on such film MICROFLORA (17) [noun] Microscopic plant life, especially the bacterial colonies found in the gut of normal, healthy animals and humans. MICROFORMS (19) [noun] Microfilm, microfiche or similar materials. | [noun] A microscopic form of life; an animal or vegetable organism of microscopic size. MICROFUNGI (18) [noun] A fungus of microscopic size. MICROGRAMS (17) [noun] A unit of mass equal to one millionth of a gram, or 0.000 001 grams (symbol: μg or mcg). MICROGRAPH (20) [noun] An image such as a photograph that presents the microscopic at a macroscopic scale; an image produced with a microscope | [noun] A pantograph instrument for executing minute writing or engraving. | [verb] To produce such an image by micrography. MICROIMAGE (17) MICROLITER (14) [noun] A unit of fluid measure being one millionth (10−6) of a litre. Symbol: μl MICROLITHS (17) [noun] A small stone tool. | [noun] The microscopic acicular components of rocks. MICROLUCES (16) MICROLUXES (21) MICROMERES (16) MICROMETER (16) [noun] An SI/MKS unit of measure, the length of one millionth of a meter. Symbols: µm, um, rm. | [noun] A device used to measure distance very precisely but within a limited range, especially depth, thickness, and diameter. MICROMINIS (16) MICROMOLAR (16) MICROMOLES (16) MICRONIZED (24) [verb] To reduce in size, often to micrometer scale. MICRONIZES (23) [verb] To reduce in size, often to micrometer scale. MICROPHAGE (20) [noun] A small phagocyte, especially a polymorphonuclear leucocyte MICROPHONE (19) [noun] A device (transducer) used to convert sound waves into a varying electric current; normally fed into an amplifier and either recorded or broadcast. | [verb] To put one or more microphones on or in. MICROPHYLL (22) [noun] A leaf having a single unbranched vein, or a structure that is derived from such a leaf. | [noun] A very small leaf MICROPIPET (18) [noun] A very small pipette. MICROPORES (16) [noun] A microscopic pore MICROPRISM (18) [noun] Any of many very small prisms used, either to form a reflective surface, or to form an area in a camera's viewfinder that blurs if the image is not precisely in focus MICROPROBE (18) [noun] An instrument used to determine the chemical composition at a point on a solid surface, such as that of a mineral. It analyzes the X-rays emitted when a beam of electrons are focused on the sample. MICROPYLAR (19) MICROPYLES (19) [noun] In seed-bearing plants, a small opening in the integuments of the ovule through which sperm are able to access the ovum. | [noun] The hilum of an ovum at the point of attachment to the ovary; any opening in the coverings of an ovum by which spermatozoa may find entrance. MICROQUAKE (27) MICROSCALE (16) [noun] A very small or microscopic scale | [noun] The scale of microanalysis | [noun] A scale of physical consideration or of bounds having a characteristic dimension typically ranging from 1 to 999 µm (under 1 mm) MICROSCOPE (18) [noun] An optical instrument used for observing small objects. | [noun] Any instrument for imaging very small objects (such as an electron microscope). | [verb] To examine with a microscope, to put under a microscope (literally or figuratively). MICROSCOPY (21) [noun] The study of microscopes, their design and manufacture. | [noun] The use of microscopes. MICROSEISM (16) [noun] A faint earth tremor caused by natural phenomena, such as wind. MICROSOMAL (16) MICROSOMES (16) [noun] A vesicle formed as an artifact of cell disruption MICROSPORE (16) [noun] The smaller of the two spores produced by plants; compare megaspore. | [noun] One of the numerous tiny spore-like elements produced through the encystment and subdivision of many monads MICROSTATE (14) [noun] A country that has a very small population and land area | [noun] The specific detailed microscopic configuration of a system. MICROTOMES (16) [noun] A special instrument that produces very thin slices of plant and animal tissues, for later examination by light microscope or electron microscope. MICROTONAL (14) [adjective] Of, relating to, or written using microtones. MICROTONES (14) [noun] Any interval smaller than a semitone MICROVILLI (17) [noun] Any of many fingerlike extensions on the surfaces of many cells, consisting of the proteins actin, fimbrin, and villin. MICROVOLTS (17) MICROWATTS (17) MICROWAVED (21) [verb] To cook (something) in a microwave oven. MICROWAVES (20) [noun] An electromagnetic wave with wavelength between that of infrared light and radio waves. | [verb] To cook (something) in a microwave oven. | [noun] An oven that uses microwave energy to heat food or other items placed within it. MICROWORLD (18) MICRURGIES (15) MICTURATED (15) [verb] To urinate. MICTURATES (14) [verb] To urinate. MIDDLEBROW (19) [noun] A person or thing that is neither highbrow nor lowbrow, but in between. | [adjective] Neither highbrow or lowbrow, but somewhere in between. MIDDLINGLY (18) MIDFIELDER (17) [noun] A player who operates behind the attackers and in front of the defence. MIDNIGHTLY (20) MIDRASHOTH (19) MIDSECTION (15) [noun] The middle section of something. | [noun] The midriff; the section of the human torso, from below the chest to above the waist. MIDSHIPMAN (20) [noun] An officer of the lowest rank in several navies; especially, a trainee officer. | [noun] A midshipman fish. MIDSHIPMEN (20) [noun] An officer of the lowest rank in several navies; especially, a trainee officer. | [noun] A midshipman fish. MIDSTORIES (13) MIDSTREAMS (15) MIDSUMMERS (17) [noun] The period around the summer solstice; about 21st June in the northern hemisphere. | [noun] The first day of summer | [noun] The middle of summer. MIDWATCHES (21) MIDWINTERS (16) [noun] The middle of winter. | [noun] The winter solstice; about December 21st or 22nd. MIGHTINESS (16) MIGNONETTE (13) [noun] A plant, Reseda odorata, having greyish-green flowers with orange-coloured stamens, and exhaling a delicious fragrance. In Africa it is a low shrub, but further north it is usually an annual herb. | [noun] A mignonette tree (Lawsonia inermis), source of the dye henna. | [noun] A mignonette vine MIGRAINOUS (13) MIGRATIONS (13) [noun] An instance of moving to live in another place for a while. | [noun] Seasonal moving of animals, as mammals, birds or fish, especially between breeding and non-breeding areas. | [noun] Movement in general. MILDNESSES (13) MILESTONES (12) [noun] A stone milepost (or by extension in other materials), one of a series of numbered markers placed along a road at regular intervals, typically at the side of the road or in a median. | [noun] An important event in a person's life or career, in the history of a nation, in the life of some project, etc. MILITANCES (14) MILITANTLY (15) MILITARIES (12) [noun] Armed forces. MILITARILY (15) [adverb] In a military or martial manner; not peaceably. | [adverb] By way of military or otherwise belligerent means. MILITARISE (12) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARISM (14) [noun] An ideology which claims that the military is the foundation of a society's security, and thereby its most important aspect. | [noun] A focus on, or excessive use of, military force. MILITARIST (12) [noun] One who believes in the use of military force. MILITARIZE (21) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITATING (13) [verb] To give force or effect toward; to influence. | [verb] To fight. MILITIAMAN (14) [noun] A member of a militia. MILITIAMEN (14) [noun] A member of a militia. MILKFISHES (22) [noun] Chanos chanos, an important food fish in southeast Asia. MILLEFIORI (15) [noun] A decorative glassware technique using a mosaic of coloured beads. MILLEFLEUR (15) MILLENNIAL (12) [noun] A demographic term for a person from the generation born from around the early 1980s to the mid 1990s or early 2000s; individuals who reached adulthood early in the 3rd millennium, C.E. | [adjective] Referring to the 1,000th anniversary of an event or happening. | [adjective] Occurring every thousand years. MILLENNIUM (14) [noun] A period of time consisting of one thousand years. | [noun] The period of one thousand years during which Christ will reign on earth (according to Millenarianist interpretations). | [noun] A period of universal happiness, peace or prosperity; a utopia. MILLERITES (12) MILLESIMAL (14) [adjective] Thousandth; consisting of thousandth parts MILLIARIES (12) MILLICURIE (14) MILLIGRAMS (15) [noun] An SI unit of mass, equivalent to one thousandth of a gram. Symbol: mg MILLIHENRY (18) MILLILITER (12) [noun] A unit of measure of capacity, being one thousandth of a litre. Symbol: ml MILLILUCES (14) MILLILUXES (19) MILLIMETER (14) [noun] An SI/MKS unit of measure, the length of 1/1000 of a meter. Symbol: mm MILLIMOLAR (14) MILLIMOLES (14) MILLIONTHS (15) [noun] The person or thing in the millionth position. | [noun] One of a million equal parts of a whole. Term ppm (parts per million) is also used. MILLIOSMOL (14) MILLIPEDES (15) [noun] Any of many elongated arthropods, of the class Diplopoda, with cylindrical bodies that have two pairs of legs for each one of their 20 to 100 or more body segments. MILLIVOLTS (15) [noun] One thousandth (10-3) of a volt, abbreviated as mV. MILLIWATTS (15) [noun] One thousandth ( 10-3 ) of a watt, abbreviated as mW. MILLSTONES (12) [noun] A large round stone used for grinding grain. | [noun] A coarse-grained sandstone used for making such stones; millstone grit. | [noun] Often in a millstone round one's neck (referring to Matthew 18:6 in the Bible): a heavy responsibility that is difficult to bear. MILLSTREAM (14) [noun] The water that runs through a millrace to power a mill. MILLWRIGHT (19) [noun] A person who designed, erected and built mills and milling machinery. | [noun] A person engaged in the erection of machinery. MIMEOGRAPH (20) [noun] A machine for making printed copies using typed stencil, eventually superseded by photocopying. | [verb] To make mimeograph copies. MINACITIES (14) MINAUDIERE (13) MINCEMEATS (16) MINDBLOWER (18) MINDEDNESS (14) MINDLESSLY (16) [adverb] In a mindless manner. MINEFIELDS (16) [noun] An area in which land mines have been laid. | [noun] (by extension) A dangerous situation. | [noun] A pitch that has dried out and crumbled and on which the ball is bouncing and spinning unpredictably. MINELAYERS (15) [noun] A ship capable of laying mines. MINERALISE (12) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALIZE (21) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALOGY (16) [noun] The branch of petrology that studies minerals. | [noun] Its mineral materials. | [noun] A treatise on mineralogy. MINESTRONE (12) [noun] Any of many thick Italian vegetable soups. MINIATURES (12) [noun] Greatly diminished size or form; reduced scale. | [noun] A small version of something; a model of reduced scale. | [noun] A small, highly detailed painting, a portrait miniature. MINIBIKERS (18) MINIBUSSES (14) MINICOURSE (14) MINIMALISM (16) [noun] A style of art that emphasises extreme simplicity of form. | [noun] A style of music that emphasises extreme simplicity of rhythms and melodic forms to achieve a trancelike effect. MINIMALIST (14) [noun] One who believes in or seeks a minimal state; one who seeks to minimize or reduce to a minimum. | [adjective] Believing in or seeking a minimal state; seeking to minimize or reduce to a minimum. MINIMISING (15) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMIZERS (23) MINIMIZING (24) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINISCHOOL (17) MINISCULES (14) MINISERIES (12) [noun] A radio or television series with a small number of episodes not intended to last a complete season. | [noun] A relatively short comic book series with a predetermined number of instalments. MINISKIRTS (16) [noun] A short skirt with its hemline well above the knees, generally at mid-thigh level. MINISTATES (12) MINISTERED (13) [verb] To attend to (the needs of); to tend; to take care (of); to give aid; to give service. | [verb] To function as a clergyman or as the officiant in church worship | [verb] To afford, to give, to supply. MINISTRANT (12) MINISTRIES (12) [noun] Government department, at the administrative level normally headed by a minister (or equivalent rank, e.g. secretary of state), who holds it as portfolio, especially in a constitutional monarchy, but also as a polity | [noun] The complete body of government ministers (whether or not they are in cabinet) under the leadership of a head of government (such as a prime minister) | [noun] A ministration MINORITIES (12) [noun] The state of being a minor; youth, the period of a person's life prior to reaching adulthood. | [noun] Any subgroup that does not form a numerical majority. | [noun] (used attributively of a party, government, etc.) Empowered by or representing a minority (usually a plurality) of votes cast, legislative seats, etc., rather than an outright majority thereof. MINOXIDILS (20) MINSTRELSY (15) [noun] The musical and other art and craft of a minstrel. | [noun] A group of minstrels. | [noun] Any similar modern group performing song and verse. MINUSCULES (14) [noun] A lowercase letter. | [noun] Either of the two medieval handwriting styles minuscule cursive and Caroline minuscule. | [noun] A letter in these styles. MINUTENESS (12) MIRACIDIAL (15) MIRACIDIUM (17) [noun] A free-living motile form of a trematode, covered with cilia, which settles in a mollusc intermediate host to become a sporocyst MIRACULOUS (14) [adjective] By supernatural or uncommon causes, e.g. by a god; that cannot be explained in terms of normal events. | [adjective] Very surprising; amazing. MIRINESSES (12) MIRRORLIKE (16) [adjective] Resembling a mirror; reflective MIRTHFULLY (21) MISADAPTED (16) MISADDRESS (14) [verb] To address (a letter, etc.) incorrectly. MISADJUSTS (20) MISADVISED (17) MISADVISES (16) MISALIGNED (14) [verb] To align incorrectly | [adjective] Out of alignment. MISALLYING (16) MISALTERED (13) MISANDRIES (13) MISAPPLIED (17) [verb] To apply incorrectly; to misuse. MISAPPLIES (16) [verb] To apply incorrectly; to misuse. MISASSAYED (16) MISATONING (13) MISAVERRED (16) MISAWARDED (17) MISBALANCE (16) MISBECOMES (18) MISBEHAVED (21) [verb] To act or behave in an inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected manner. MISBEHAVER (20) MISBEHAVES (20) [verb] To act or behave in an inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected manner. MISBELIEFS (17) [noun] An erroneous belief | [noun] A heresy; an unorthodox belief MISBELIEVE (17) MISBIASING (15) MISBIASSED (15) MISBIASSES (14) MISBILLING (15) MISBINDING (16) MISBRANDED (16) MISBUTTONS (14) MISCALLING (15) [verb] To call (someone) bad names; to insult, abuse. | [verb] To call (something) by the wrong name. | [verb] To make a wrong call; to announce (one's hand of cards) incorrectly. MISCAPTION (16) MISCARRIED (15) [verb] To have an unfortunate accident of some kind; to be killed, or come to harm. | [verb] To go astray; to do something wrong. | [verb] To have a miscarriage; to abort a foetus, usually without intent to do so. MISCARRIES (14) [verb] To have an unfortunate accident of some kind; to be killed, or come to harm. | [verb] To go astray; to do something wrong. | [verb] To have a miscarriage; to abort a foetus, usually without intent to do so. MISCASTING (15) [verb] To cast or reckon incorrectly. | [verb] To cast or direct erroneously or improperly. | [verb] To cast an actor in an inappropriate role. MISCATALOG (15) MISCELLANY (17) [noun] Miscellaneous items. | [noun] A collection of writings on various subjects or topics; an anthology. MISCHANCES (19) [noun] Bad luck, misfortune. | [noun] A mishap, an unlucky circumstance. MISCHANNEL (17) MISCHARGED (19) MISCHARGES (18) MISCHOICES (19) MISCLAIMED (17) MISCLASSED (15) MISCLASSES (14) MISCOINING (15) MISCOLORED (15) MISCOMPUTE (18) MISCONDUCT (17) [noun] Behavior that is considered to be unacceptable. | [verb] To mismanage. | [verb] To behave inappropriately, to misbehave. MISCONNECT (16) MISCOOKING (19) MISCOPYING (20) [verb] To copy incorrectly; to copy with mistakes. MISCOUNTED (15) [verb] To incorrectly count or add up. MISCREANTS (14) [noun] One who has behaved badly, or illegally. | [noun] One not restrained by moral principles; an unscrupulous villain. | [noun] One who holds a false religious belief; a misbeliever. MISCREATED (15) [verb] To create wrongly or poorly | [adjective] Misshapen, deformed; created unnaturally or wrongly. MISCREATES (14) MISCUTTING (15) MISDEALING (14) [verb] To deal or distribute wrongly. | [noun] Fraudulent dealing MISDEEMING (16) MISDEFINED (17) MISDEFINES (16) MISDEVELOP (18) MISDIALING (14) [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. | [noun] An instance of reaching an unintended phone number due to an error in dialing or in using a keypad. MISDIALLED (14) [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDIRECTS (15) [verb] To direct something wrongly | [verb] To direct attention away from covert actions or intended targets. | [verb] To put the incorrect address on a mail item MISDOUBTED (16) [verb] To doubt the existence or reality of. | [verb] To have suspicions about. MISDRAWING (17) MISDRIVING (17) MISEDITING (14) MISEDUCATE (15) [verb] To educate wrongly. MISEMPLOYS (19) [verb] To employ incorrectly; to misuse. MISENROLLS (12) MISENTERED (13) MISENTRIES (12) MISERABLES (14) MISERICORD (15) [noun] Relaxation of monastic rules. | [noun] The room in a monastery for monks granted such relaxation. | [noun] A ledge, sometimes ornately carved, attached to a folding church seat to provide support for a person standing for long periods; a subsellium. MISESTEEMS (14) MISFEASORS (15) MISFIELDED (17) [verb] To field the ball clumsily or ineptly; in cricket this can result in the batsman scoring another run. MISFITTING (16) MISFOCUSED (18) MISFOCUSES (17) MISFORMING (18) MISFORTUNE (15) [noun] Bad luck | [noun] An undesirable event such as an accident MISFRAMING (18) MISGAUGING (15) MISGIVINGS (17) [noun] Doubt, apprehension, a feeling of dread MISGOVERNS (16) [verb] To govern badly or wrongly. MISGRADING (15) MISGRAFTED (17) MISGROWING (17) MISGUESSED (14) MISGUESSES (13) MISGUIDERS (14) MISGUIDING (15) [verb] To guide poorly or incorrectly. | [verb] To lead astray; to lead into error. MISHANDLED (17) [verb] To manipulate something roughly, causing physical damage. | [verb] To deal with a situation incorrectly or ineffectively; to make a mistake in handling a situation. MISHANDLES (16) [verb] To manipulate something roughly, causing physical damage. | [verb] To deal with a situation incorrectly or ineffectively; to make a mistake in handling a situation. MISHANTERS (15) MISHEARING (16) [verb] To hear wrongly. | [verb] To misunderstand. | [noun] The act of hearing something incorrectly. MISHITTING (16) [verb] To incorrectly or badly hit. MISHMASHES (20) [noun] A collection containing a variety of miscellaneous things. MISHMOSHES (20) MISINFORMS (17) [verb] To give or deliver false, fake, or misleading information. MISJOINDER (20) MISJOINING (20) MISJUDGING (22) [verb] To make an error in judging, to incorrectly assess. MISKEEPING (19) MISKICKING (23) [verb] To kick incorrectly or badly. MISKNOWING (20) MISLABELED (15) [verb] To label incorrectly. MISLABORED (15) MISLEADERS (13) MISLEADING (14) [verb] To lead astray, in a false direction. | [verb] To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. | [verb] To deceptively trick into something wrong. MISLEARNED (13) MISLIGHTED (17) MISLOCATED (15) MISLOCATES (14) MISLODGING (15) MISMANAGED (16) [verb] To manage an area of responsibility in a way which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. | [verb] To behave, in a management capacity, in a manner which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. MISMANAGES (15) [verb] To manage an area of responsibility in a way which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. | [verb] To behave, in a management capacity, in a manner which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. MISMARKING (19) MISMATCHED (20) [verb] To match unsuitably; to fail to match | [adjective] Unsuitably matched; ill joined. MISMATCHES (19) [verb] To match unsuitably; to fail to match | [noun] Something that does not match; something dissimilar, inappropriate or unsuitable. MISMEETING (15) MISNOMERED (15) MISOGAMIES (15) MISOGAMIST (15) MISOGYNIES (16) MISOGYNIST (16) [noun] One who professes misogyny; a hater of women. | [noun] One who displays prejudice against or looks down upon women. | [adjective] Misogynistic: relating to or exhibiting misogyny. MISOLOGIES (13) MISONEISMS (14) MISORDERED (14) MISORIENTS (12) MISPACKAGE (21) MISPAINTED (15) MISPARSING (15) MISPARTING (15) MISPATCHED (20) MISPATCHES (19) MISPENNING (15) MISPLACING (17) [verb] To put something somewhere and then forget its location; to mislay | [verb] To apply one's talents inappropriately. | [verb] To put something in the wrong location. MISPLANNED (15) MISPLANTED (15) MISPLAYING (18) [verb] To play incorrectly or poorly. MISPLEADED (16) MISPOINTED (15) MISPOISING (15) MISPRICING (17) MISPRINTED (15) [verb] To make a misprint. MISPRISION (14) [noun] Criminal neglect of duty or wrongful execution of official duties. | [noun] The failure to give information about a crime that one knows to be taking place. | [noun] Misinterpretation or misunderstanding. MISPRIZING (24) [verb] To despise or hold in contempt; to undervalue. MISPROGRAM (17) MISQUOTING (22) [verb] To incorrectly recite a quote. | [verb] To incorrectly record a quote. MISRAISING (13) MISREADING (14) [verb] To read wrongly, normally by accident; misconstrue; misinterpret; mistake the sense or significance of. | [noun] An incorrect reading MISRECKONS (18) MISRECORDS (15) MISRELATED (13) MISRELATES (12) MISRELYING (16) MISRENDERS (13) [verb] To render incorrectly. MISREPORTS (14) [verb] To report erroneously; to give an incorrect account of. MISROUTING (13) [verb] To route incorrectly; to send the wrong way. MISSEATING (13) MISSENDING (14) MISSETTING (13) MISSHAPING (18) [verb] To shape badly or incorrectly. MISSILEERS (12) MISSILEMAN (14) MISSILEMEN (14) MISSILRIES (12) MISSIOLOGY (16) [noun] The area of practical theology which studies the mandate, message and work of the Christian missionary. MISSIONARY (15) [noun] One who is sent on a mission. | [noun] A person who travels attempting to spread a religion or a creed. | [noun] A religious messenger. MISSIONERS (12) [noun] A missionary. MISSIONING (13) MISSIONIZE (21) MISSORTING (13) MISSOUNDED (14) MISSPACING (17) MISSPELLED (15) [verb] To spell incorrectly. MISSTARTED (13) MISSTATING (13) [verb] To make a statement that is in error, inadvertently; to say incorrectly, through a slip of the tongue. MISSTEERED (13) MISSTOPPED (17) MISSTRIKES (16) MISSTYLING (16) MISSUITING (13) MISTAKABLE (18) MISTAKENLY (19) [adverb] Wrongly, erroneously | [adverb] By accident, by mistake, in error (without intention to do so) MISTEACHES (17) [verb] To teach incorrectly. MISTENDING (14) MISTERMING (15) MISTHOUGHT (19) MISTITLING (13) [verb] To title incorrectly; to give the wrong name to. MISTLETOES (12) [noun] Any of several hemiparasitic evergreen plants of the order Santalales with white berries that grow in the crowns of apple trees, oaks, and other trees, such as the European mistletoe (Viscum album) and American mistletoe or eastern mistletoe (Phoradendron leucarpum). | [noun] A sprig of one such plant used as a Christmas decoration, associated with the custom that a man may kiss any woman standing beneath it. MISTOUCHED (18) MISTOUCHES (17) MISTRACING (15) MISTRAINED (13) MISTREATED (13) [verb] To treat someone, or something roughly or badly. MISTRESSES (12) [noun] A woman, specifically one with great control, authority or ownership | [noun] A female teacher | [noun] The other woman in an extramarital relationship, generally including sexual relations MISTRUSTED (13) [verb] To have no confidence in (something or someone). | [verb] To be wary, suspicious or doubtful of (something or someone). | [verb] To suspect, to imagine or suppose (something) to be the case. MISTRYSTED (16) MISTUTORED (13) MISVALUING (16) MISWORDING (17) MISWRITING (16) MISWRITTEN (15) MITERWORTS (15) MITHRIDATE (16) [noun] A supposed universal antidote against poison. MITIGATING (14) [verb] To reduce, lessen, or decrease; to make less severe or easier to bear. | [verb] To downplay. | [adjective] That serves to mitigate MITIGATION (13) [noun] A reduction or decrease of something harmful or unpleasant. MITIGATIVE (16) MITIGATORS (13) [noun] Someone or something that mitigates. MITIGATORY (16) MITOMYCINS (19) MITREWORTS (15) MITTIMUSES (14) [noun] (obsolete outside the United States) A warrant issued for someone to be taken into custody. | [noun] A writ for moving records from one court to another. | [noun] A formal dismissal from a situation. MIXOLOGIES (20) MIXOLOGIST (20) [noun] A person who creates cocktails; a bartender. | [noun] A disc jockey. MIZZENMAST (32) [noun] The aftmost mast on a ship having three or more masts. | [noun] The second mast of a ship having two masts where the second one is shorter, such as a ketch or yawl. MOBILISING (15) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILITIES (14) MOBILIZING (24) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBOCRATIC (18) MODALITIES (13) [noun] The fact of being modal. | [noun] The classification of propositions on the basis on whether they claim possibility, impossibility, contingency or necessity; mode. | [noun] The inflection of a verb that shows how its action is conceived by the speaker; mood MODERATELY (16) [adverb] In a moderate manner. | [adverb] To a moderate extent or degree. MODERATING (14) [verb] To reduce the excessiveness of (something) | [verb] To become less excessive | [verb] To preside over (something) as a moderator MODERATION (13) [noun] The state or quality of being moderate; avoidance of extremes | [noun] An instance of moderating: bringing something away from extremes, especially in a beneficial way | [noun] The process of moderating a discussion MODERATORS (13) [noun] Someone who moderates | [noun] The person who presides over a synod of a Presbyterian Church | [noun] A substance (often water or graphite) used to decrease the speed of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor and hence increase likelihood of fission MODERNISED (14) [adjective] That has undergone modernisation. | [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNISES (13) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNISMS (15) MODERNISTS (13) [noun] A follower or proponent of modernism. MODERNIZED (23) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNIZER (22) MODERNIZES (22) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNNESS (13) MODIFIABLE (18) MODILLIONS (13) [noun] A decoratively carved supporting block atop a column. MODISHNESS (16) MODULARITY (16) MODULATING (14) [verb] To regulate, adjust or adapt | [verb] To change the pitch, intensity or tone of one's voice or of a musical instrument | [verb] To vary the amplitude, frequency or phase of a carrier wave in proportion to the amplitude etc of a source wave (such as speech or music) MODULATION (13) [noun] The process of applying a signal to a carrier, modulating. | [noun] The variation and regulation of a population, physiological response, etc. | [noun] A change in key. MODULATORS (13) MODULATORY (16) MOISTENERS (12) MOISTENING (13) [verb] To make moist or moister. | [verb] To become moist or moister. | [noun] The act of making something moist. MOISTURISE (12) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURIZE (21) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOLALITIES (12) MOLARITIES (12) MOLASSESES (12) MOLDBOARDS (16) [noun] A curved piece of metal on a plow or bulldozer that clears the free dirt from the blade. | [noun] (founding) A follow board. MOLLIFYING (19) [verb] To ease a burden, particularly worry; make less painful; to comfort. | [verb] To appease (anger), pacify, gain the good will of. | [verb] To soften; to make tender MOLYBDATES (18) [noun] The anion MoO42−. | [noun] Any salt of molybdic acid. MOLYBDENUM (20) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Mo) with an atomic number of 42: a silvery metal, not found as a free element, used in steel alloys. | [noun] A single atom of this element. MONACHISMS (19) MONADNOCKS (19) [noun] A hill or mountain standing isolated above a predominantly flat plain. MONANDRIES (13) MONARCHIAL (17) MONARCHIES (17) [noun] A government in which sovereignty is embodied within a single, today usually hereditary head of state (whether as a figurehead or as a powerful ruler). | [noun] The territory ruled over by a monarch; a kingdom. | [noun] A form of government where sovereignty is embodied by a single ruler in a state and his high aristocracy representing their separate divided lands within the state and their low aristocracy representing their separate divided fiefs. MONARCHISM (19) [noun] Rule by a monarchy. | [noun] The advocacy of such a political system. MONARCHIST (17) [noun] An advocate of, or believer in, monarchy. MONAURALLY (15) MONESTROUS (12) MONETARILY (15) MONETARISM (14) [noun] The doctrine that economic systems are controlled by variations in the supply of money. | [noun] The political doctrine that a nation's economy can be controlled by regulating the money supply. MONETARIST (12) MONETISING (13) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETIZING (22) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONEYMAKER (21) [noun] Someone or something that earns or makes money; anything lucrative or profitable. | [noun] (usually a woman's) butt, ass, rear end | [noun] A lady’s breast. MONEYWORTS (18) [noun] A European vine, Lysimachia nummularia, having yellow flowers; creeping Jenny, creeping Charlie. MONGOLISMS (15) MONGOLOIDS (14) [noun] A member of the racial classification of humanity composed of peoples native to North Asia, East Asia, Pacific Oceania, and the Americas, as well as their diaspora in other parts of the world. | [noun] A person with Down syndrome. | [noun] Idiot, retard; a general term of abuse, due to association with Down syndrome. MONGRELIZE (22) [verb] To breed a mongrel | [verb] To cross-breed MONILIASES (12) MONILIASIS (12) MONILIFORM (17) [adjective] Having a form resembling a string of beads, where the component parts or segments are more or less uniform in size and are spherical or rounded in shape. MONITORIAL (12) MONITORIES (12) [noun] A written letter giving admonition MONITORING (13) [verb] To watch over; to guard. | [noun] The carrying out of surveillance on, or continuous or regular observation of, an environment or people in order to detect signals, movements or changes of state or quality. MONKEYPODS (22) MONKFISHES (22) [noun] Any large bottom-dwelling anglerfish of the genus Lophius, such as Lophius piscatorius, of the Atlantic, having a large head and mouth. | [noun] Angel sharks of the genus Squatina. MONKSHOODS (20) [noun] Any of various poisonous plants, of the genus Aconitum, with blue or white flowers in the shape of a hood | [noun] The dried leaves or flowers of these plants formerly used as a source of medicinal alkaloids MONOACIDIC (17) MONOAMINES (14) [noun] Any compound having a single amino functional group, especially a neurotransmitter. MONOCARPIC (18) [adjective] (of a plant) That flowers and bears fruit only once before dying. MONOCHASIA (17) [noun] A type of cyme on which each single axis bears one flower. MONOCHORDS (18) [noun] A musical instrument for experimenting with the mathematical relations of musical sounds, consisting of a single string stretched between two bridges, one or both of which can be moved, and which stand upon a graduated rule for the purpose of changing and measuring the length of the part of the string between them. | [noun] A stringed instrument with only one string. MONOCHROME (19) [noun] A black and white image, especially such a photograph. | [noun] A painting executed in shades of a single colour. | [noun] A ceramic glaze of a single colour; an object so glazed. MONOCLINES (14) [noun] A unidirectional dip in strata that is not a part of an anticline or syncline | [noun] A single flexure in otherwise flat-lying strata MONOCLINIC (16) [adjective] Having three unequal axes with two perpendicular and one oblique intersections. MONOCLONAL (14) [noun] Something produced from a single clone, especially a monoclonal antibody | [adjective] Genetically engineered from a single clone; used especially of a protein or antibody MONOCOQUES (23) [noun] A structure design in which the frame and body are built as a single integrated structure. MONOCRATIC (16) MONOCULARS (14) [noun] A monocle. | [noun] (retronym) A monocular telescope, as opposed to binoculars. MONOCYCLIC (21) [noun] Any monocyclic compound. | [adjective] Having a single cycle of development or activity. | [adjective] Having a single ring of atoms in the molecule; such as benzene or cyclopropane. MONODRAMAS (15) [noun] A play in the form of a monologue MONOECIOUS (14) [adjective] (invertebrate) Having both the male and female reproductive organs in the same individual, either in different flowers or in the same or different flowers; hermaphrodite. MONOECISMS (16) MONOESTERS (12) MONOGAMIES (15) MONOGAMIST (15) MONOGAMOUS (15) [adjective] Being married to one person at a time. | [adjective] Having only one sexual partner at a time. | [adjective] Monogamic; having a simple flower with united anthers. MONOGENEAN (13) [noun] Any of the many trematode flatworms of the class Monogenea, mostly ectoparasites on fish MONOGENIES (13) MONOGRAMED (16) MONOGRAPHS (18) [noun] A scholarly book or a treatise on a single subject or a group of related subjects, usually written by one person. MONOGYNIES (16) MONOGYNOUS (16) [adjective] Exhibiting or relating to monogyny. | [adjective] Of or relating to the Monogynia; having only one style or stigma. MONOHYBRID (21) [noun] A hybrid between two species that only have a difference of one gene. MONOHYDRIC (21) [adjective] Having a single replaceable hydrogen atom | [adjective] Having a single hydroxy group MONOLAYERS (15) [noun] A layer of material that is one molecule thick | [noun] A layer of tissue that is one cell thick MONOLITHIC (17) [adjective] Of or resembling a monolith. | [adjective] Having a massive, unchanging structure that does not permit individual variation. | [adjective] (said of an operating system's kernel) consisting of a single program using a single memory-addressing space MONOLOGIES (13) MONOLOGIST (13) [noun] A person who performs a monologue or monologues. MONOLOGUES (13) [noun] (authorship) A long speech by one person in a play; sometimes a soliloquy; other times spoken to other characters. | [noun] A long series of comic stories and jokes as an entertainment. | [noun] A long, uninterrupted utterance that monopolizes a conversation. MONOMANIAC (16) [noun] A person who is obsessed with a single thing, to the exclusion of other concerns. | [adjective] Focused on one thing above all others. MONOMANIAS (14) [noun] Excessive interest or concentration on a singular object or subject. | [noun] A pathological obsession with one person, thing or idea. MONOMETERS (14) [noun] A line of verse containing a single metrical foot. MONOPHONIC (19) [adjective] (of sound reproduction) having a single channel; monaural (compare stereophonic) | [adjective] Having a single melodic line and no harmony (compare polyphonic) | [adjective] Having simple one-to-one mapping between letters and phonemes MONOPLANES (14) [noun] An airplane that has a single pair of wings MONOPLOIDS (15) MONOPODIAL (15) MONOPODIES (15) MONOPOLIES (14) [noun] A situation, by legal privilege or other agreement, in which solely one party (company, cartel etc.) exclusively provides a particular product or service, dominating that market and generally exerting powerful control over it. | [noun] An exclusive control over the trade or production of a commodity or service through exclusive possession. | [noun] The privilege granting the exclusive right to exert such control. MONOPOLISE (14) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLIST (14) [noun] One who has, or attempts to acquire, a monopoly on something. MONOPOLIZE (23) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONORCHIDS (18) [noun] An individual having only one testicle within the scrotum. MONORHYMED (21) MONORHYMES (20) MONOSOMICS (16) MONOSOMIES (14) MONOSTELES (12) MONOSTELIC (14) MONOTHEISM (17) [noun] The belief in a single deity (one god or goddess); especially within an organized religion. MONOTHEIST (15) MONOTONIES (12) MONOTONOUS (12) [adjective] Having an unvarying tone or pitch. | [adjective] Tedious, repetitious or lacking in variety. MONOTREMES (14) [noun] A mammal that lays eggs and has a single urogenital and digestive orifice. Only the echidnas and platypuses are included in this group MONOVALENT (15) [adjective] Univalent. MONSIGNORI (13) MONSIGNORS (13) MONSTRANCE (14) [noun] An ornamental, often precious receptacle, either open or with a transparent cover, in which the sacramental bread is placed for veneration. MONTADALES (13) MONTAGNARD (14) MONUMENTAL (14) [adjective] In the manner of a monument. | [adjective] Large, grand and imposing. | [adjective] Taking a great amount of time and effort to complete. MONZONITES (21) [noun] An intrusive igneous rock composed mostly of plagioclase and orthoclase MOONCALVES (17) [noun] An abnormal mass within the uterus; a false conception. | [noun] A poorly-conceived idea or plan. | [noun] A dreamer, someone absent-minded or distracted; a fool, simpleton. MOONFISHES (18) [noun] Any of various flat, oval marine fish species. MOONFLOWER (18) [noun] Any of several plants that flower at night: MOONLIGHTS (16) [verb] To work on the side (at a secondary job), often in the evening or during the night. | [verb] (by extension) To engage in an activity other than what one is known for. | [verb] (by extension, of an inanimate object) To perform a secondary function substantially different from its supposed primary function, as in protein moonlighting. MOONQUAKES (25) [noun] A seismic event occurring on the moon; the lunar equivalent of an earthquake. MOONSCAPES (16) [noun] A view of an area of the Moon | [noun] (by extension) A desolate or devastated landscape. MOONSHINER (15) [noun] Someone who makes or distributes moonshine MOONSHINES (15) MOONSTONES (12) [noun] A translucent gemstone, an orthoclase feldspar, that has a pearly lustre. MOONSTRUCK (18) [adjective] Crazy or insane when affected by the phases of the Moon. | [adjective] (by extension) Showing irrational behaviour, especially of a romantic or sentimental nature. | [adjective] Made sick, or (like fishes) unsuitable for food, by the supposed influence of the Moon. MORALISING (13) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALISTIC (14) [adjective] Characteristic of or relating to a narrow-minded concern of the morals of others; self-righteous MORALITIES (12) [noun] Recognition of the distinction between good and evil or between right and wrong; respect for and obedience to the rules of right conduct; the mental disposition or characteristic of behaving in a manner intended to produce morally good results. | [noun] A set of social rules, customs, traditions, beliefs, or practices which specify proper, acceptable forms of conduct. | [noun] A set of personal guiding principles for conduct or a general notion of how to behave, whether respectable or not. MORALIZERS (21) MORALIZING (22) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORATORIUM (14) [noun] An authorization to a debtor, permitting temporary suspension of payments. | [noun] A suspension of an ongoing activity. MORBIDNESS (15) MORDANCIES (15) MORDANTING (14) [verb] To subject to the action of, or imbue with, a mordant. | [noun] The use of mordant to fix a dye to a fibre. MORGANATIC (15) [adjective] Designating a marriage (or the wife involved) between a man of higher rank and a woman of lower rank, often having various legal repercussions (typically that such a wife has no claim on the husband's possessions or title). It was not an aspect of English law, but was common in other royal houses, especially in Germany. MORGANITES (13) [noun] A gemstone of pegmatite deposits. Morganite is a transparent pink variety of beryl. MORONITIES (12) MOROSENESS (12) MOROSITIES (12) MORPHACTIN (19) MORPHEMICS (21) [noun] The study of morphemes, or of the morphemic structure of a language. MORPHINISM (19) [noun] Morphine addiction. | [noun] Disease caused by excessive usage of morphine. MORPHOGENS (18) [noun] Any substance that governs the movement and development of cells during morphogenesis by forming a concentration gradient in the developing tissue. MORPHOLOGY (21) [noun] A scientific study of form and structure, usually without regard to function. Especially: | [noun] The form and structure of something. | [noun] A description of the form and structure of something. MORSELLING (13) MORTADELLA (13) [noun] A smooth-textured Italian pork sausage with lumps of fat, flavoured with spices; eaten cold. MORTARLESS (12) MORTGAGEES (14) [noun] One who provides a loan secured upon the borrowers' property, the lender in a mortgage agreement. MORTGAGERS (14) [noun] One who uses property they own as security for a loan; the borrower in a mortgage agreement. MORTGAGING (15) [verb] To borrow against a property, to obtain a loan for another purpose by giving away the right of seizure to the lender over a fixed property such as a house or piece of land; to pledge a property in order to get a loan. | [verb] To pledge and make liable; to make subject to obligation; to achieve an immediate result by paying for it in the long term. | [noun] The act by which something is mortgaged. MORTGAGORS (14) [noun] One who uses property they own as security for a loan; the borrower in a mortgage agreement. MORTICIANS (14) [noun] An undertaker or funeral director. MORTIFYING (19) [verb] To discipline (one's body, appetites etc.) by suppressing desires; to practise abstinence on. | [verb] (usually used passively) To embarrass, to humiliate. To injure one's dignity. | [verb] To kill. MORTUARIES (12) [noun] A place where dead bodies are stored prior to burial or cremation. | [noun] A sort of ecclesiastical heriot, a customary gift claimed by, and due to, the minister of a parish on the death of a parishioner. MORULATION (12) MOSAICALLY (17) MOSAICISMS (16) MOSAICISTS (14) MOSAICKING (19) [noun] A process in which a mosaic (of images) is constructed MOSAICLIKE (18) MOSQUITOES (21) [noun] A small flying insect of the family Culicidae, the females of which bite humans and animals and suck blood, leaving an itching bump on the skin, and sometimes carrying diseases like malaria and yellow fever. MOSQUITOEY (24) MOSSBACKED (21) MOTHBALLED (18) [verb] To store or shelve something no longer used. | [verb] To stop using (something), but keep it in good condition. | [adjective] (of something out of use) Kept in good condition for possible future use. MOTHERHOOD (19) [noun] The state of being a mother. | [noun] Mothers, considered as a group. MOTHERLAND (16) [noun] The country of one's ancestors. | [noun] The country of one's birth. | [noun] Country of origin. MOTHERLESS (15) [adjective] Without a (living) mother. | [adjective] Without mother (mucilaginous substance in fermenting liquid). | [adjective] Without a history or predecessor. MOTHPROOFS (20) [verb] To apply odoriferous materials intended to repel moths from clothing. MOTILITIES (12) MOTIONLESS (12) [adjective] At rest, stationary, immobile, not moving. MOTIVATING (16) [verb] To provide someone with an incentive to do something; to encourage. | [verb] To animate; to propel; to cause to take action | [adjective] Effectively providing an incentive. MOTIVATION (15) [noun] Willingness of action especially in behavior. | [noun] The action of motivating. | [noun] Something which motivates. MOTIVATIVE (18) MOTIVATORS (15) [noun] Agent noun of motivate; one who motivates. MOTIVELESS (15) MOTIVITIES (15) MOTONEURON (12) [noun] A motor neuron. MOTORBIKED (19) MOTORBIKES (18) [noun] A motorcycle. | [noun] A small and light motorcycle. | [verb] To ride a motorbike; to travel by motorbike. MOTORBOATS (14) [noun] Any vessel driven by an engine (either inboard or outboard), but especially a small one. | [verb] To press one's face between a woman's breasts. MOTORBUSES (14) [noun] A motorised bus, or coach. MOTORCADED (16) MOTORCADES (15) [noun] A procession of cars carrying VIPs, especially political figures. MOTORCYCLE (19) [noun] An open-seated motor vehicle with handlebars instead of a steering wheel, and having two (or sometimes three) wheels. | [verb] To ride a motorcycle. MOTORISING (13) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORIZING (22) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORMOUTH (17) [noun] One who talks very fast or incessantly; a chatty or loquacious person. | [verb] To talk very fast or incessantly. MOTORTRUCK (18) MOULDERING (14) [verb] To decay or rot. | [adjective] That moulders; decaying MOUNTEBANK (18) [noun] One who sells dubious medicines. | [noun] One who sells by deception; a con artist; a charlatan. | [noun] An acrobat. MOURNFULLY (18) MOURNINGLY (16) MOUSETRAPS (14) [noun] A device for capturing or killing mice and other rodents. | [noun] A website designed to open another copy of itself when the user tries to close the webpage. Frequently used by advertisers and pornographers. | [noun] Ordinary, everyday cheese. MOUSSELINE (12) [noun] A very fine, semi-opaque fabric similar to muslin, typically made of silk, wool or cotton. | [noun] A soft, light sweet or savoury mousse. | [noun] A hollandaise sauce that has been made frothy with whipped cream or egg white, served mainly with fish or asparagus. MOUSTACHES (17) [noun] A growth of facial hair between the nose and the upper lip. MOUSTACHIO (17) MOUTHPARTS (17) [noun] (usually in plural) An appendage-like structure on the outside of an insect's or other arthropod's mouth, serving to manipulate and masticate food. MOUTHPIECE (19) [noun] A part of any device that functions in or near the mouth, especially: | [noun] A spokesman; one who speaks on behalf of someone else. | [noun] A lawyer for the defense. MOVABILITY (20) MOVELESSLY (18) MOVIEGOERS (16) [noun] Person who regularly frequents movie theaters. MOVIEGOING (17) MOVIEMAKER (21) [noun] A person who makes movies as a profession; a cinematographer MOZZARELLA (30) [noun] Soft Italian cheese made from cow's or buffalo's milk and commonly used as a pizza topping and in salads etc. | [noun] Money. MRIDANGAMS (16) [noun] A percussion instrument used in southern Indian music, consisting of a two-sided drum whose body is usually made from a hollowed piece of jackfruit wood. MUCHNESSES (17) MUCIDITIES (15) MUCKRAKERS (22) MUCKRAKING (23) [verb] To search for and expose corruption or scandal, especially as a form of investigative journalism. MUCOSITIES (14) MUDCAPPING (20) MUDPUPPIES (19) [noun] An aquatic salamander of the family Proteidae. MUDSKIPPER (21) [noun] Any of various gobies of the subfamily Oxudercinae that are able to survive out of water by breathing through their skins and having strong pectoral fins that act as simple legs. MUDSLINGER (14) MUJAHEDEEN (23) MUJAHIDEEN (23) [noun] A Muslim engaging in jihad, especially armed jihad; a jihadist. MULBERRIES (14) [noun] Any of several trees, of the genus Morus, having edible fruits. | [noun] The fruit of this tree. | [noun] A dark purple colour tinted with red. MULIEBRITY (17) [noun] The state or quality of being a woman; the features of a woman's nature; femininity, womanhood. | [noun] The state of attainment of womanhood following maidenhood. | [noun] The state of puberty in a female. MULISHNESS (15) MULLAHISMS (17) MULLIONING (13) MULTIARMED (15) MULTIAXIAL (19) [adjective] Having more than one axis MULTICHAIN (17) MULTICOLOR (14) [noun] A display of many colors. | [adjective] Having, resembling, or pertaining to many colors. MULTICURIE (14) MULTIFLASH (18) MULTIFOCAL (17) [adjective] Arising from or occurring in more than one focus or location. | [adjective] (of an eyeglass lens) having several focusing areas that correct for both nearsightedness and farsightedness. MULTIGENIC (15) MULTIGRADE (14) [adjective] Having the characteristics of multiple grades of a product (especially of a lubricating oil) | [adjective] Relating to students of differing grade levels MULTIGRAIN (13) [adjective] (of a food) Containing multiple types of grain, usually in processed form MULTIGROUP (15) MULTIHULLS (15) [noun] A boat with two or more hulls. MULTILAYER (15) [adjective] Any system of multiple layers, especially of multiple monolayers MULTILEVEL (15) [adjective] Having several levels or floors. MULTILOBED (15) MULTIMEDIA (15) [noun] The combined use of sound, video, and text to present an idea. | [adjective] Of, or relating to this combined use of media | [adjective] Of, or relating to an application that can combine such media into an integrated package MULTIMODAL (15) [adjective] Having, or employing multiple modes MULTIPANED (15) MULTIPARTY (17) [adjective] Involving several different political parties. | [adjective] Having multiple parties (involved persons). MULTIPHASE (17) [adjective] That generates, or employs, multiple alternating current supplies with the same voltage but different phase angles MULTIPIECE (16) MULTIPLANT (14) MULTIPLETS (14) [noun] A spectral line that has multiple components. | [noun] A compound peak produced in several forms of spectroscopy. | [noun] Any of several groupings of subatomic particles that share most properties, but have different charges. MULTIPLIED (15) [verb] To increase the amount, degree or number of (something). | [verb] (with by) To perform multiplication on (a number). | [verb] To grow in number. MULTIPLIER (14) [noun] A number by which another (the multiplicand) is to be multiplied. | [noun] (grammar) An adjective indicating the number of times something is to be multiplied. | [noun] A ratio used to estimate total economic effect for a variety of economic activities. MULTIPLIES (14) [noun] An act or instance of multiplying. | [verb] To increase the amount, degree or number of (something). | [verb] (with by) To perform multiplication on (a number). MULTIPOLAR (14) [noun] An electromagnetic machine in which several magnetic poles exist. | [adjective] Having more than two poles. | [adjective] Of or relating to an international system in which a number of states wield most of the cultural, economic, and political influence. MULTIPOWER (17) MULTIRANGE (13) MULTISENSE (12) MULTISIDED (14) MULTISPEED (15) MULTISPORT (14) MULTISTAGE (13) [adjective] Having more than one step or phase. | [adjective] (of a rocket) Composed of multiple detachable parts. MULTISTATE (12) MULTISTORY (15) [adjective] (of a building) Having more than one storey. MULTITRACK (18) [verb] To record on multiple tracks simultaneously (typically with each performer or instrument having its own track) | [adjective] Having or involving more than one track. MULTITUDES (13) [noun] A great amount or number, often of people; abundance, myriad, profusion. | [noun] The mass of ordinary people; the masses, the populace. MULTIUNION (12) MUMMICHOGS (22) [noun] A hardy killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus, found in brackish and coastal waters of the United States and Canada. MUMMIFYING (23) [verb] To make into a mummy, by preserving a dead body. | [verb] To become a mummy. MUNICIPALS (16) MUNIFICENT (17) [adjective] (of a person or group) Very liberal in giving or bestowing. | [adjective] (of a gift, donation, etc.) Very generous; lavish. MUNITIONED (13) [verb] To supply with munitions. MURTHERING (16) [verb] To deliberately kill (a person or persons) without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To kick someone's ass or chew someone out (used to express one’s anger at somebody). MUSCADINES (15) [noun] An American vine of the subgenus Vitis subg. Muscadinia, Vitis rotundifolia | [noun] A grape variety from this vine. | [noun] A wine produced from these grapes. MUSCARINES (14) MUSCARINIC (16) [adjective] Of or pertaining to muscarine MUSCOVITES (17) [noun] A pale brown mineral of the mica group, being a basic potassium aluminosilicate with the chemical formula KAl2(Si3Al)O10(OH,F)2; used as an electrical insulator etc. MUSCULARLY (17) MUSHROOMED (18) [verb] To grow quickly to a large size. | [verb] To gather mushrooms. | [verb] To form the shape of a mushroom. MUSICALISE (14) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICALITY (17) [noun] The condition of being musical. | [noun] Talent or sensitivity in the playing of music. MUSICALIZE (23) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICIANLY (17) MUSICOLOGY (18) [noun] The scholarly or scientific study of music, as in historical research, musical theory, or the physical nature of sound. MUSKETEERS (16) [noun] A foot soldier armed with a musket. | [noun] In 17th- and 18th-century France, a member of the royal household bodyguard. | [noun] A comrade or fellow. MUSKETRIES (16) MUSKMELONS (18) [noun] A type of melon, Cucumis melo subsp. melo, with sweet orange flesh and a rough skin resembling netting. MUSQUASHES (24) [noun] The muskrat, Ondatra zibethicus. MUSTACHIOS (17) [noun] A mustache, especially a large or lush one. | [verb] To adorn with a mustachio, or something that resembles a mustachio. MUTABILITY (17) [noun] The quality or state of being mutable. MUTATIONAL (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or the result of mutation MUTENESSES (12) MUTILATING (13) [verb] To physically harm as to impair use, notably by cutting off or otherwise disabling a vital part, such as a limb. | [verb] To destroy beyond recognition. | [verb] To render imperfect or defective. MUTILATION (12) [noun] The act of mutilating or the state of being mutilated. MUTILATORS (12) MUTINEERED (13) MUTINOUSLY (15) MUTTONFISH (18) MUTUALISMS (14) MUTUALISTS (12) MUTUALIZED (22) [verb] To make, or to become mutual | [verb] To organize a business (especially a financial business) so that it is owned by its customers (or its employees) MUTUALIZES (21) [verb] To make, or to become mutual | [verb] To organize a business (especially a financial business) so that it is owned by its customers (or its employees) MYASTHENIA (18) [noun] Abnormal weakness of the muscles; but especially myasthenia gravis. MYASTHENIC (20) MYCETOMATA (19) MYCETOZOAN (26) MYCOFLORAE (20) MYCOFLORAS (20) MYCOLOGIES (18) MYCOLOGIST (18) MYCOPHILES (22) MYCOPLASMA (21) [noun] Any infectious bacterium of the genus Mycoplasma, often specifically Mycoplasma pneumoniae MYCORRHIZA (29) [noun] A symbiosis between the mycelium of a fungus and the roots of a plant. MYCOTOXINS (24) [noun] Any substance, produced by a mold or fungus, that is injurious to vertebrates upon ingestion, inhalation or skin contact MYDRIATICS (18) MYELINATED (16) [adjective] Of nerves, having a coating of myelin. MYELITIDES (16) MYELOBLAST (17) MYELOCYTES (20) MYELOCYTIC (22) MYELOPATHY (23) [noun] A disorder in which the tissue of the spinal cord is diseased or damaged. | [noun] A disturbance or disease of the spinal cord. MYOCARDIAL (18) [adjective] Relating to the myocardium, the thick muscular wall of the heart. MYOCARDIUM (20) [noun] The muscular substance of the heart; the middle of the three layers forming the outer wall of the human heart. MYOFIBRILS (20) [noun] Any of the cylindrical organelles, found within muscle cells, that are the contractile unit of muscles. MYOGLOBINS (18) MYOPATHIES (20) [noun] Any of several diseases of muscle that are not caused by nerve disorders MYOPICALLY (22) MYOSITISES (15) MYOSOTISES (15) [noun] Any plant of the genus Myosotis, the forget-me-nots. MYROBALANS (17) [noun] A plum-like fruit from various trees of the genus Terminalia, formerly used in medicine and now in the dyeing industry; also, the tree itself. MYSTAGOGUE (17) [noun] A person who prepares an initiate for entry into a mystery cult, or who teaches mystical doctrines | [noun] One who keeps and shows church relics. MYSTERIOUS (15) [adjective] Of unknown origin. | [adjective] Having unknown qualities. | [adjective] Difficult to understand. MYSTICALLY (20) MYSTICISMS (19) MYSTIFIERS (18) MYSTIFYING (22) [verb] To thoroughly confuse, befuddle, or bewilder. | [adjective] Very hard to understand; baffling. MYTHICALLY (23) MYTHICIZED (30) [verb] To make into a myth. | [verb] To interpret in terms of mythology. MYTHICIZER (29) MYTHICIZES (29) [verb] To make into a myth. | [verb] To interpret in terms of mythology. MYTHMAKERS (24) MYTHMAKING (25) MYTHOLOGER (19) MYTHOLOGIC (21) MYTHOMANIA (20) [noun] A compulsion to tell lies and exaggerate the truth. MYTHOPOEIA (20) [noun] Creation of any myth. MYTHOPOEIC (22) MYXOMATOUS (24) MYXOMYCETE (29) [noun] Any protozoan of the phylum Myxomycota; the slime molds NAMELESSLY (15) NAMEPLATES (14) [noun] A plate or plaque inscribed with a name. | [noun] The masthead of a newspaper. NANOMETERS (12) [noun] An SI subunit of length equal to 10-9 metres. Symbol: nm NARCISSISM (14) [noun] Excessive love of oneself. | [noun] Sexual desire for one's own body. NASTURTIUM (12) [noun] The popular name of any of the plants in the Tropaeolum genus of flowering plants native to south and central America. | [noun] A plant in this genus, Tropaeolum majus. | [noun] Any of the plants in the genus, Nasturtium, that includes watercress. NATATORIUM (12) [noun] A swimming pool, especially an indoor one; a building housing one or more swimming pools. NATURALISM (12) [noun] A state of nature; conformity to nature. | [noun] The doctrine that denies a supernatural agency in the miracles and revelations recorded in religious texts and in spiritual influences. | [noun] Any system of philosophy which refers the phenomena of nature as a blind force or forces acting necessarily or according to fixed laws, excluding origination or direction by a will. NAUMACHIAE (17) NAUMACHIAS (17) NAUMACHIES (17) NECROMANCY (19) [noun] Divination involving the dead or death. | [noun] Loosely, any sorcery or witchcraft, especially involving death or the dead, particularly sorcery involving raising or reanimating the dead. | [noun] Synonym of necroposting NEGATIVISM (16) [noun] A persistent pessimistic or skeptical attitude. | [noun] A stubborn tendency to do the opposite of what one is asked. NEMATICIDE (15) [noun] Any pesticide designed to kill nematodes (roundworms). NEMATOCIDE (15) [noun] Any pesticide designed to kill nematodes (roundworms). NEMATOCYST (17) [noun] A capsule, in certain cnidarians, containing a barbed, threadlike tube that delivers a paralyzing sting NEMATOLOGY (16) [noun] The branch of biology that studies nematode roundworms NEMERTEANS (12) [noun] Any of several unsegmented, brightly-coloured worms, of the phylum Nemertea; the ribbon worms NEMERTINES (12) [noun] Any ribbon worm of the phylum Nemertea NEMOPHILAS (17) NEODYMIUMS (18) NEOLOGISMS (13) [noun] A word or phrase which has recently been coined; a new word or phrase. | [noun] The act or instance of coining, or uttering a new word. | [noun] The newly coined, meaningless words or phrases of someone with a psychosis, usually schizophrenia. NEOREALISM (12) [noun] A movement in art, literature and (especially in Italy) cinema, shortly after the Second World War, that concentrated on real life. | [noun] A theory of international relations based on the idea that power is the most important factor. NEPHRIDIUM (18) [noun] A tubular excretory organ in some invertebrates | [noun] The embryonic excretory organ that develops into the kidney NEPTUNIUMS (14) NETHERMOST (15) [adjective] Farthest down; lowest. NETMINDERS (13) [noun] A goalkeeper or goaltender. NETTLESOME (12) [adjective] (of a person, thing, situation, etc.) Causing irritation, annoyance, or discomfort; bothersome, irksome. | [adjective] (of a task, problem, etc.) Thorny; difficult to deal with, especially due to being complex or tricky. NEURILEMMA (14) [noun] The outer membranous covering of a nerve fiber. NEUROHUMOR (15) NEUTRALISM (12) [noun] The state of being neutral; neutrality. | [noun] A political policy of nonalignment in a situation of conflict. | [noun] The neutral theory of molecular evolution, holding that at the molecular level most evolutionary changes and variation within and between species are caused not by natural selection but by genetic drift of mutant alleles that are neutral. NEWMARKETS (19) NEWSMONGER (16) [noun] Gossiper | [noun] Journalist NIALAMIDES (13) NICKNAMERS (18) NICKNAMING (19) [verb] To give a nickname to (a person or thing). NIGHTMARES (16) [noun] A demon or monster, thought to plague people while they slept and cause a feeling of suffocation and terror during sleep. | [noun] Sleep paralysis. | [noun] A very bad or frightening dream. NIGHTTIMES (16) [noun] The hours of darkness between sunset and sunrise; the night. NIMBLENESS (14) [noun] The quality of being nimble. NINCOMPOOP (18) [noun] A foolish or silly person. NOBLEWOMAN (17) [noun] A woman having a noble rank, especially one belonging to the peerage; a Lady. NOBLEWOMEN (17) [noun] A woman having a noble rank, especially one belonging to the peerage; a Lady. NOISEMAKER (16) [noun] A person or device that produces a great deal of noise, especially one used in a celebration or sporting event. | [noun] A device comprising a handle with a ratchet at one end, with the ratchet end contained within a box that serves as an echo chamber, so that swinging or moving the device causes the ratchet to rotate within the box, creating a series of loud clicking sounds NOMARCHIES (17) [noun] Nome NOMINALISM (14) [noun] A doctrine that universals do not have an existence except as names for classes of concrete objects. NOMINALIST (12) NOMINATING (13) [verb] To name someone as a candidate for a particular role or position, including that of an office. | [verb] To entitle, confer a name upon. NOMINATION (12) [noun] An act or instance of nominating. | [noun] A device or means by which a person or thing is nominated. NOMINATIVE (15) [noun] The nominative case. | [noun] A noun in the nominative case. | [adjective] Giving a name; naming; designating. NOMINATORS (12) NOMOGRAPHS (18) [noun] A nomogram. NOMOGRAPHY (21) NOMOLOGIES (13) NOMOTHETIC (17) [adjective] Relating to the underlying laws of a subject NONADMIRER (13) NONCOMPLEX (23) [adjective] Not complex. NONCONFORM (17) NONDORMANT (13) NONENZYMIC (26) NONFARMERS (15) NONLEGUMES (13) NONMARITAL (12) NONMEDICAL (15) [adjective] Not of a medical character; not directly involved with medicine NONMEETING (13) NONMEMBERS (16) [noun] Someone who is not a member (of a club, institution, etc.) NONMIGRANT (13) NONMIMETIC (16) NONMUSICAL (14) NONMUTANTS (12) NONOPTIMAL (14) NONPAYMENT (17) [noun] The failure to make a payment NONPROBLEM (16) NONPROGRAM (15) NONSMOKERS (16) [noun] Somebody who does not smoke tobacco. | [noun] A railway carriage where smoking tobacco is not permitted. NONSMOKING (17) [adjective] Having restrictions on smoking. | [adjective] Using no tobacco products. NONSWIMMER (17) NONSYSTEMS (15) NONTHERMAL (15) NONUNIFORM (15) [adjective] Not uniform. | [adjective] (of a flow) Not having the same instantaneous velocity at all points. | [adjective] (of a polymer) Composed of macromolecular species of differing molar masses. NORMALCIES (14) NORMALISED (13) [verb] To make normal, to make standard. | [verb] To format in a standardized manner, to make consistent. | [verb] To reduce to variations by excluding irrelevant aspects. NORMALISES (12) [verb] To make normal, to make standard. | [verb] To format in a standardized manner, to make consistent. | [verb] To reduce to variations by excluding irrelevant aspects. NORMALIZED (22) [verb] To make normal, to make standard. | [verb] To format in a standardized manner, to make consistent. | [verb] To reduce to variations by excluding irrelevant aspects. NORMALIZER (21) NORMALIZES (21) [verb] To make normal, to make standard. | [verb] To format in a standardized manner, to make consistent. | [verb] To reduce to variations by excluding irrelevant aspects. NOSOCOMIAL (14) [adjective] (chiefly of infections or their causal agents) Arising from hospital treatment or environment. | [adjective] Of, relating to, happening in a hospital. NUCLEOSOME (14) [noun] Any of the subunits that repeat in chromatin; a coil of DNA surrounding a core of eight histones NUMBERABLE (16) NUMBERLESS (14) [adjective] Without number; having too many to count. NUMBFISHES (20) [noun] An electric ray of the family Narcinidae, capable of delivering numbing shocks. NUMBNESSES (14) NUMBSKULLS (18) [noun] A dunce, mentally dull or stupid person. | [noun] A person who refuses to learn or grow mentally. | [noun] A traditional name for a fool who serves as the butt of jokes about stupidity. NUMERACIES (14) NUMERATING (13) NUMERATION (12) [noun] The act of counting or numbering things; enumeration. | [noun] Any system of giving names to numbers. NUMERATORS (12) [noun] The number or expression written above the line in a fraction (such as 1 in ½). | [noun] An enumerator; someone who counts things. NUMEROLOGY (16) [noun] The study of the purported mystical relationship between numbers (or the letters of words, represented by numbers) and the character or action of physical objects and living things. NUMEROUSLY (15) NUMINOUSES (12) NUMISMATIC (16) [adjective] Of or pertaining to currency, especially to coins. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to numismatics. NURSEMAIDS (13) [noun] A woman or girl employed to care for children | [verb] To tend to as a nursemaid. | [verb] To care for or look after. NURSERYMAN (15) [noun] A person who rears and sells plants in a nursery. NURSERYMEN (15) [noun] A person who rears and sells plants in a nursery. NUTRIMENTS (12) [noun] A source of nourishment; food. | [noun] Something that promotes growth or development; a nutrient. NYMPHALIDS (21) [noun] Any butterfly of the family Nymphalidae. NYMPHETTES (20) [noun] A small nymph. | [noun] A sexually attractive girl or young woman. NYMPHOLEPT (22) [noun] A person in a state of nympholepsy. OBTAINMENT (14) OCCULTISMS (16) OCEANARIUM (14) [noun] A park where visitors can see marine mammals and/or fish. OCTAMETERS (14) [noun] A line of verse containing eight metrical feet OCULOMOTOR (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to movement of the eyeball. ODDSMAKERS (18) [noun] A person who sets odds for gambling ODOMETRIES (13) OFTENTIMES (15) [adverb] Frequently | [adverb] Repeatedly OLIGOMERIC (15) OMMATIDIAL (15) OMMATIDIUM (17) [noun] One of the conical substructures which make up the eyes of invertebrates with compound eyes. OMNIFICENT (17) OMNIPOTENT (14) [noun] An omnipotent being. | [adjective] Having unlimited power, force or authority. | [adjective] Describing a cell (especially a stem cell) that is capable of developing into any type of cell or forming any type of tissue (also called a totipotent cell). See also pluripotent. OMNIRANGES (13) [noun] A short-range radio navigation system for aircraft, based on a network of fixed radio beacons on the ground. OMNISCIENT (14) [noun] One who has total knowledge. | [adjective] Having total knowledge. OMNIVOROUS (15) [adjective] Having a diet which is neither exclusively carnivorous nor exclusively herbivorous. | [adjective] Having an interest in a variety of subjects. | [adjective] All-consuming. OMOPHAGIES (18) ONOMASTICS (14) [noun] The branch of lexicology devoted to the study of names and naming, especially the origins of names. OPERCULUMS (16) OPHTHALMIA (20) [noun] Ophthalmitis OPHTHALMIC (22) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the eyes. | [adjective] Visionary, looking to the future. OPPROBRIUM (18) [noun] Disgrace arising from exceedingly shameful conduct; ignominy. | [noun] Scornful reproach or contempt. | [noun] A cause of shame or disgrace. OPTIMALITY (17) OPTIMISING (15) [verb] (originally intransitive) To act optimistically or as an optimist. | [verb] To make (something) optimal. | [verb] To make (something) more efficient, such as a computer program. OPTIMISTIC (16) [adjective] Expecting the best in all possible ways. | [adjective] Allowing other processes to perform transactions on the same data at the same time, and checking for conflicts only when changes need to be written back. OPTIMIZERS (23) OPTIMIZING (24) [verb] (originally intransitive) To act optimistically or as an optimist. | [verb] To make (something) optimal. | [verb] To make (something) more efficient, such as a computer program. OPTOMETRIC (16) ORDAINMENT (13) ORGANICISM (15) [noun] The theory that disease is a result of structural alteration of organs. | [noun] The concept that everything is organic, or forms part of an organic whole. | [noun] The treatment of society or the universe as if it were an organism. ORGANISMAL (13) ORGANISMIC (15) ORIFLAMMES (17) [noun] (history) The red silk banner of St Denis, which the abbot of St Denis gave to French kings as they rode to war. | [noun] Any banner, idea or principle which serves as a rallying point for those involved in a struggle. | [noun] Something resembling the banner of St Denis; a bright, shining object. ORISMOLOGY (16) ORNAMENTAL (12) [noun] An ornamental plant. | [adjective] Serving as an ornament; having no purpose other than to make more beautiful. | [adjective] (of a plant, fish, etc.) Bred for aesthetic or decorative purposes. ORNAMENTED (13) [verb] To decorate. | [verb] To add to. OSMETERIUM (14) OSMIRIDIUM (15) OSMOLALITY (15) [noun] The molality of an ideal solution that would exert the same osmotic pressure as the solution being considered. OSMOLARITY (15) [noun] The osmotic concentration of a solution, normally expressed as osmoles of solute per litre of solution. OSMOMETERS (14) [noun] Any of various devices used to measure osmotic pressure. OSMOMETRIC (16) OSTRACISMS (14) OUTBEAMING (15) OUTBLOOMED (15) OUTCHARMED (18) OUTCLIMBED (17) OUTCOMPETE (16) [verb] To be more successful than a competitor; especially to thrive in the presence of an organism that is competing for resources OUTDREAMED (14) OUTFUMBLED (18) OUTFUMBLES (17) OUTHOMERED (16) [verb] To score more home runs than another player. OUTHUMORED (16) OUTJUMPING (22) [verb] To jump better than; particularly higher than, or further than. OUTMANNING (13) [verb] To have more people than (one's competitor); to outnumber in men. | [verb] To outdo in manliness. OUTMARCHED (18) OUTMARCHES (17) OUTMATCHED (18) [verb] To surpass or be better than something or someone else OUTMATCHES (17) [verb] To surpass or be better than something or someone else OUTMUSCLED (15) [verb] To surpass in a contest involving strength. | [adjective] Overcome by superior strength. OUTMUSCLES (14) [verb] To surpass in a contest involving strength. OUTNUMBERS (14) [verb] (stative) to be more in number than somebody or something. OUTPERFORM (17) [verb] To perform better than something or someone. OUTPROMISE (14) OUTSCHEMED (18) OUTSCHEMES (17) OUTSHAMING (16) OUTSMARTED (13) [verb] To beat in a competition of wits. OUTSMILING (13) OUTSMOKING (17) OUTTRUMPED (15) OVALBUMINS (17) OVARIOTOMY (18) [noun] A surgical removal of an ovary. OVERCLAIMS (17) OVERCOMERS (17) OVERCOMING (18) [verb] To surmount (a physical or abstract obstacle); to prevail over, to get the better of. | [verb] To win or prevail in some sort of battle, contest, etc. | [verb] To come or pass over; to spread over. OVERCOMMIT (19) [noun] Allocation of more resources than are actually available. | [verb] To make excessive commitments, either beyond one's ability or beyond what is reasonable OVEREMOTED (16) OVEREMOTES (15) OVERINFORM (18) OVERMANAGE (16) OVERMANNED (16) [verb] To provide with too many personnel; overstaff. | [adjective] Excessively manned; overstaffed OVERMANTEL (15) [noun] A decorative structure, usually plasterwork or carved wood, and sometimes containing a mirror, over a mantelpiece OVERMASTER (15) [verb] To overpower or overwhelm. OVERMATURE (15) OVERMELTED (16) OVERMIGHTY (22) [adjective] Excessively mighty OVERMILKED (20) OVERMINING (16) OVERMIXING (23) OVERMODEST (16) [adjective] Excessively modest. OVERMUCHES (20) OVERPUMPED (20) OVERSIMPLE (17) [adjective] Excessively simple; lacking the necessary complexity. OVERSIMPLY (20) OVERSMOKED (20) OVERSMOKES (19) OVERTIMING (16) OVERTRUMPS (17) [verb] To play a higher trump card than the previous one in a trick OVERWARMED (19) OVERWHELMS (21) [noun] The state or condition of being overwhelmed. | [verb] To engulf, surge over and submerge. | [verb] To overpower, crush. OXYMORONIC (24) PACEMAKERS (20) [noun] One who sets the pace in a race, to guide the others. | [noun] A set of nerves which stimulate the heart to beat. | [noun] (hence) A medical implement that is used to stimulate a heart to beat by simulating the action of the natural pacemaker. PACEMAKING (21) PACHYDERMS (23) [noun] A member of the obsolete taxonomic order Pachydermata, grouping of thick-skinned, hoofed animals such as the rhinoceros, hippopotamus, elephant, pig and horse. | [noun] An elephant | [noun] A person with thick skin; someone who is not affected by or does not care what others say about him or her. PACIFICISM (21) PALIMONIES (14) PALIMPSEST (16) [noun] A manuscript or document that has been erased or scraped clean, for reuse of the paper, parchment, vellum, or other medium on which it was written. | [noun] Monumental brasses that have been reused by engraving of the blank back side. | [noun] Circular features believed to be lunar craters that have been obliterated by later volcanic activity. PALINDROME (15) [noun] A word, phrase, number or any other sequence of units which has the property of reading the same forwards as it does backwards, character for character, sometimes disregarding punctuation, capitalization and diacritics. | [noun] (by extension) A poetic form in which the sequence of words reads the same in either direction. | [noun] A stretch of DNA in which the sequence of nucleotides on one strand are in the reverse order to that of the complementary strand PALLADIUMS (15) PALMATIONS (14) PALMERWORM (19) PALMETTOES (14) PALMITATES (14) [noun] Any salt or ester of palmitic acid PANCRATIUM (16) PANJANDRUM (22) [noun] An important, powerful or influential person. | [noun] A self-important or pretentious person. | [noun] A massive, rocket-propelled, explosive-laden cart designed by the British military during World War II. PANTHEISMS (17) PANTOMIMED (17) [verb] To make (a gesture) without speaking. | [verb] To entertain others by silent gestures or actions. PANTOMIMES (16) [noun] A Classical comic actor, especially one who works mainly through gesture and mime. | [noun] The drama in ancient Greece and Rome featuring such performers; or (later) any of various kinds of performance modelled on such work. | [noun] A traditional theatrical entertainment, originally based on the commedia dell'arte, but later aimed mostly at children and involving physical comedy, topical jokes, call and response, and fairy-tale plots. PANTOMIMIC (18) PAPERMAKER (20) PAPILLOMAS (16) [noun] An epithelial tumour, usually benign, with the appearance of a papilla PARALOGISM (15) [noun] A fallacious argument or illogical conclusion, especially one committed by mistake, or believed by the speaker to be logical. PARAMAGNET (15) PARAMECIUM (18) [noun] An oval-shaped protozoan organism of the genus Paramecium. PARAMEDICS (17) [noun] An individual trained to medically stabilize people through various interventions, victims of trauma or medical events outside of a hospital setting and preparing them for transport to a medical facility. | [noun] An individual who is licensed at the state or national level to practice medical interventions in an emergency pre-hospital setting. PARAMETERS (14) [noun] A value kept constant during an experiment, equation, calculation or similar, but varied over other versions of the experiment, equation, calculation, etc. | [noun] A variable that describes some system (material, object, event etc.) or some aspect thereof | [noun] An input variable of a procedure definition, that gets an actual value (argument) at execution time (formal parameter). PARAMETRIC (16) [noun] A parametric equation | [adjective] Of, relating to, or defined using parameters PARAMNESIA (14) [noun] An inability to distinguish between real memories and dreams or fantasies. | [noun] An inability to remember the meaning of common words. PARAMOUNTS (14) PARAMYLUMS (19) PARANORMAL (14) [noun] A person to whom paranormal powers are attributed. | [noun] (with "the") Paranormal phenomena collectively, or as a field of study. | [adjective] That (ostensibly) cannot be explained by what scientists know; supernatural; especially of or pertaining to ghosts, spirits, and hypothesized abilities like telepathy. PARANYMPHS (22) PARAPODIUM (17) [noun] Any of the paired unjointed lateral outgrowths used for locomotion by worms such as annelids. | [noun] A lateral expansion on both sides of the foot in some gastropods, often used as a swimming organ. PARASITISM (14) [noun] Interaction between two organisms, in which one organism (the parasite) benefits and the other (the host) is harmed. | [noun] A similar interaction between people. PARCHMENTS (19) [noun] Material, made from the polished skin of a calf, sheep, goat or other animal, used like paper for writing. | [noun] A document made on such material. | [noun] A diploma (traditionally written on parchment). PARENCHYMA (22) [noun] The functional tissue of an organ as distinguished from the connective and supporting tissue. PARLIAMENT (14) [noun] A formal council summoned (especially by a monarch) to discuss important issues. | [noun] In many countries, the legislative branch of government, a deliberative assembly or set of assemblies whose elected or appointed members meet to debate the major political issues of the day, make, amend, and repeal laws, authorize the executive branch of government to spend money, and in some cases exercise judicial powers; a legislature. | [noun] A particular assembly of the members of such a legislature, as convened for a specific purpose or period of time (commonly designated with an ordinal number – for example, first parliament or 12th parliament – or a descriptive adjective – for example, Long Parliament, Short Parliament and Rump Parliament). PARMIGIANA (15) [noun] (in combination) Any dish in which a main ingredient is combined with cheese and coated with tomato sauce before being baked. | [adjective] Cooked or served with Parmesan cheese and tomato sauce. PARMIGIANO (15) PARONYMOUS (17) PAROXYSMAL (24) PASSIVISMS (17) PATRIOTISM (14) [noun] Love of one's country; devotion to the welfare of one's compatriots; passion which inspires one to serve one's country. | [noun] The actions of a patriot | [noun] The desire to compete with other nations; nationalism. PATRONYMIC (19) [noun] A name acquired from one's father. | [noun] (by extension) A name acquired from one's father's, grandfather's or earlier (male) ancestor's first name. Some cultures use a patronymic where other cultures use a surname or family name; other cultures (like Russia) use both a patronymic and a surname. | [adjective] Derived from one's father. PAUPERISMS (16) PAYMASTERS (17) [noun] An official in charge of payments to employees, troops, etc. | [noun] A person or body which demands loyalty or services in return for payment (especially as paid in advance). PEACEMAKER (20) [noun] One who sets the pace in a race, to guide the others. | [noun] A set of nerves which stimulate the heart to beat. | [noun] (hence) A medical implement that is used to stimulate a heart to beat by simulating the action of the natural pacemaker. PEACETIMES (16) PEDIMENTAL (15) PEDIMENTED (16) PEDOMETERS (15) [noun] Device used to measure the weight and height of a child | [noun] A device, often electronic, that measures the number of steps taken, and thus estimates the distance walked. PEGMATITES (15) [noun] A coarsely crystalline igneous or plutonic rock composed primarily of feldspar and quartz, normally with muscovite and/or biotite mica. PEGMATITIC (17) PENMANSHIP (19) [noun] The art or skill of good handwriting; calligraphy. PENSTEMONS (14) [noun] Any of the genus Penstemon, the beardtongues. PENTAGRAMS (15) [noun] The shape of a five-pointed star constructed of five intersecting lines meeting at the vertices, such that a central pentagon and five surrounding isosceles triangles are formed; often with magical connotations; a 5/2 (or 5/3) star polygon. PENTAMETER (14) [noun] A line in a poem having five metrical feet. | [noun] Poetic metre in which each line has five feet. PENTSTEMON (14) PENULTIMAS (14) PEPEROMIAS (16) [noun] Any plant of the genus Peperomia, some of which are popular houseplants PEPPERMINT (18) [noun] A hybrid herb of the mint family (Mentha × piperita), formed by crossing watermint and spearmint, which has a high menthol content and a sharp flavor and is used in cooking, especially in herb teas and in confections. | [noun] A confection containing extract of peppermint. PEREMPTORY (19) [noun] A challenge to the admission of a juror, without the challenger needing to show good cause. | [adjective] Precluding debate or expostulation; not admitting of question or appeal | [adjective] Positive in opinion or judgment; absolutely certain, overconfident, unwilling to hear any debate or argument (especially in a pejorative sense); dogmatic. PERFORMERS (17) [noun] One who performs for, or entertains, an audience. | [noun] One who performs or does anything. PERFORMING (18) [verb] To do something; to execute. | [verb] To do (something) in front of an audience, such as acting or music, often in order to entertain. | [noun] A performance. PERILYMPHS (22) PERIMETERS (14) [noun] The sum of the distance of all the lengths of the sides of an object. | [noun] The length of such a boundary. | [noun] The outer limits of an area. PERIMYSIUM (19) [noun] A layer of connective tissue which surrounds several muscle fibers into bundles PERIOSTEUM (14) [noun] A membrane surrounding a bone. PERISTOMES (14) [noun] One or two rings of tooth-like appendages surrounding the opening of the capsule of many mosses. | [noun] The parts of or surrounding the mouths of numerous invertebrates. | [noun] The lip, or edge of the aperture, of a spiral shell. PERITONEUM (14) [noun] In mammals, the serous membrane lining the cavity of the abdomen and that is folded over the viscera. | [noun] In animals, the membrane lining the coelom cavity. PERMAFROST (17) [noun] Permanently frozen ground, or a specific layer thereof. PERMANENCE (16) [noun] The state of being permanent. | [noun] The reciprocal of magnetic inductance. PERMANENCY (19) PERMANENTS (14) [noun] A chemical hair treatment imparting or removing curliness, whose effects typically last for a period of weeks; a perm. | [noun] Given an n \times n matrix a_{ij} \,, the sum over all permutations \pi \, of \prod_{i=1}^n{a_{i\pi(i)}}. | [noun] (trading card games) A card whose effects persist beyond the turn on which it is played. PERMEATING (15) [verb] To pass through the pores or interstices of; to penetrate and pass through without causing rupture or displacement; applied especially to fluids which pass through substances of loose texture | [verb] To enter and spread through; to pervade. PERMEATION (14) PERMEATIVE (17) PERMETHRIN (17) [noun] A synthetic insecticide, C21H20Cl2O3, used to treat head lice, nits, scabies, and in flea collars. PERMILLAGE (15) PERMISSION (14) [noun] Authorisation; consent (especially formal consent from someone in authority) | [noun] The act of permitting. | [noun] Flags or access control lists pertaining to a file that dictate who can access it, and how. PERMISSIVE (17) [adjective] Giving permission, or predisposed to give it; lenient | [adjective] (of a footpath) open to the public by permission of the landowner | [adjective] That allows the replication of viruses PERMITTEES (14) [noun] One who receives a permit. PERMITTERS (14) PERMITTING (15) [verb] To allow (something) to happen, to give permission for. | [verb] To allow (someone) to do something; to give permission to. | [verb] To allow for, to make something possible. PERMUTABLE (16) [adjective] Able to be permuted PEROXISOME (21) [noun] An intracellular organelle found in all eukaryotes (except Archezoa) which is the source of the enzymes that catalyze the production and breakdown hydrogen peroxide, and are responsible for the oxidation of long-chain fatty acids. PERSIMMONS (16) [noun] A type of fruit, of orange colour, very sweet, quite astringent when immature. | [noun] The tree this fruit grows on, generally one of two species of ebony: Diospyros kaki (Asian) or Diospyros virginiana (North American). PESSIMISMS (16) PESSIMISTS (14) [noun] Someone who habitually expects the worst outcome; one who looks on the dark side of things. PETROLATUM (14) [noun] Petroleum jelly PETROLEUMS (14) PHALLICISM (19) PHANEROGAM (18) [noun] Any plant that produces seeds (rather than spores). PHANTASMAL (17) PHANTASMIC (19) PHARISAISM (17) [noun] The doctrines and practices, or the character and spirit, of the Pharisees. | [noun] Rigid observance of external forms of religion without genuine piety; hypocrisy in religion; a censorious, self-righteous spirit in matters of morals or manners. PHARMACIES (19) [noun] (countable) A place where prescription drugs are dispensed; a dispensary. | [noun] (uncountable) The science of medicinal substances comprising pharmaceutics, pharmaceutical chemistry, pharmacology, phytochemistry and forensics. | [noun] (uncountable) The occupation of a pharmacist. PHARMACIST (19) [noun] A professional who dispenses prescription drugs in a hospital or retail pharmacy. | [noun] (academic) One who studies pharmacy. PHELLODERM (18) PHENOMENAL (17) [adjective] Very remarkable; highly extraordinary; amazing. | [adjective] Perceptible by the senses through immediate experience. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the appearance of the world, as opposed to the ultimate nature of the world as it is in itself. PHENOMENAS (17) PHENOMENON (17) [noun] A thing or being, event or process, perceptible through senses; or a fact or occurrence thereof. | [noun] (by extension) A knowable thing or event (eg by inference, especially in science) | [noun] A kind or type of phenomenon (sense 1 or 2) PHEROMONAL (17) PHEROMONES (17) [noun] A chemical secreted by an animal, especially an insect, that affects the development or behavior of other members of the same species, functioning often as a means of attracting a member of the opposite sex. PHLEBOGRAM (20) PHLEBOTOMY (22) [noun] The opening of a vein, either to withdraw blood or for letting blood; venesection. PHLEGMATIC (20) [noun] One who has a phlegmatic disposition. | [adjective] Not easily excited to action or passion; calm; sluggish. | [adjective] Abounding in phlegm. PHLEGMIEST (18) PHONEMATIC (19) [adjective] Pertaining to phonemes. PHONOGRAMS (18) [noun] A character or symbol (grapheme) that represents a sound, as opposed to logograms and determinatives. | [noun] An audio recording, regardless of physical format. PHOTOGRAMS (18) [noun] A photograph made without using a camera; normally by placing an object in contact with photosensitive paper and exposing it to light PHOTOMASKS (21) [noun] A transparent quartz block marked with many high-resolution images; a series of them are used in the photolithography of integrated circuits, one for each layer PHOTOMETER (17) [noun] Any of several instruments used to measure various aspects of the intensity of light. | [verb] To measure some aspect of light (from a star) using a photometer. PHOTOMETRY (20) PHOTOMURAL (17) [noun] A large photograph (or series of photographs) used as a wall decoration. PHYLLODIUM (21) PIANISSIMI (14) [noun] A dynamic sign indicating that a portion of music should be played pianissimo. | [noun] A portion of music that is played very softly. PIANISSIMO (14) [noun] A dynamic sign indicating that a portion of music should be played pianissimo. | [noun] A portion of music that is played very softly. | [adverb] To be played very softly. PICTOGRAMS (17) [noun] A picture that represents a word or an idea by illustration. PIEZOMETER (23) [noun] An instrument used to measure pressure. PIGMENTARY (18) PIGMENTING (16) [verb] To add color or pigment to something. PILGRIMAGE (16) [noun] A journey made to a sacred place, or a religious journey. | [noun] (by extension) A visit to any site revered or associated with a meaningful event. | [verb] To go on a pilgrimage. PIMPERNELS (16) [noun] A plant of the genus Pimpinella, especially burnet saxifrage, Pimpinella saxifraga. | [noun] Any of various plants of the genus Anagallis, having small red, white or purple flowers, especially the scarlet pimpernel, Anagallis arvensis. | [noun] Sanguisorba spp. PIMPMOBILE (20) [noun] An extravagantly large or ornate automobile, presumably suitable for a pimp. PIROPLASMA (16) PIROPLASMS (16) PITCHWOMAN (22) PITCHWOMEN (22) PLACEMENTS (16) [noun] The act of placing or putting in place; the act of locating or positioning; the state of being placed. | [noun] A location or position. | [noun] The act of matching a person with a job PLAGIARISM (15) [noun] Copying of another person's ideas, text or other creative work, and presenting it as one's own, especially without permission; plagiarizing. | [noun] Text or other work resulting from this act. | [noun] The instance of plagiarism. PLANIMETER (14) [noun] An integrating device used to measure the area of an irregular figure via tracing its outline. PLASMAGELS (15) PLASMAGENE (15) PLASMASOLS (14) PLASMODESM (17) PLASMODIUM (17) [noun] A mass of cytoplasm, containing many nuclei, created by the aggregation of amoeboid cells of slime molds during their vegetative phase. When capitalised as a proper name, Plasmodium is a genus of protozoan parasites responsible for such diseases as malaria PLASMOGAMY (20) PLASMOLYZE (26) [verb] To cause, or to undergo plasmolysis PLATEMAKER (18) [noun] One who produces plates (printing surfaces). PLAYMAKERS (21) [noun] A playwright. | [noun] A sportsman who leads attacks for his team and creates chances to score. PLAYMAKING (22) PLUMBERIES (16) PLUMMETING (17) [verb] To drop swiftly, in a direct manner; to fall quickly. | [noun] A violent or dramatic fall. PLUMPENING (17) PLURALISMS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being plural, or in the plural number. | [noun] The state of a pluralist; the holding of more than one ecclesiastical living at a time. | [noun] A social system that permits smaller groups within a society to maintain their individual cultural identities. PLUTONIUMS (14) PLYOMETRIC (19) PNEUMONIAS (14) POCKMARKED (25) [adjective] Having pockmarks | [adjective] Pitted, or scarred with holes | [adjective] Incomplete, lacking, having holes POETICISMS (16) [noun] Poetic style; lyricism. | [noun] A poetic phrase, utterance, etc. POGROMISTS (15) POLEMICIST (16) [noun] A person who writes polemics | [noun] A person who puts forward controversial views POLEMICIZE (25) [verb] To engage in argument. POLEMIZING (24) POLEMONIUM (16) POLYAMIDES (18) [noun] Any of a range of polymers containing amide (or peptide) repeat units; examples include proteins and nylon. POLYAMINES (17) POLYATOMIC (19) [adjective] (of a molecule or ion) Consisting of three or more atoms. POLYCHROME (22) [noun] Esculin (so called in allusion to its fluorescent solutions) | [adjective] Using multiple colours | [adjective] Executed in the manner of polychromy POLYCHROMY (25) [noun] Polychrome painting | [noun] The painting of statues etc. POLYGAMIES (18) POLYGAMIST (18) [noun] One who practices polygamy, or maintains that it is lawful. POLYGAMIZE (27) POLYGAMOUS (18) [adjective] Of, relating to, or practicing polygamy. | [adjective] Exhibiting polygamy. POLYGONUMS (18) [noun] Any of many plants, of the family Polygonaceae, embracing a large number of species, including bistort, knotweed, smartweed, etc. POLYMATHIC (22) POLYMERASE (17) [noun] Any of various enzymes that catalyze the formation of polymers of DNA or RNA using an existing strand of RNA or DNA respectively as a template. POLYMERISE (17) [verb] To convert a monomer to a polymer by polymerization. | [verb] To undergo polymerization. POLYMERISM (19) POLYMERIZE (26) [verb] To convert a monomer to a polymer by polymerization. | [verb] To undergo polymerization. POLYMORPHS (22) [noun] Any organism that shows polymorphism. | [noun] Any substance or mineral that forms different types of crystal. | [noun] The transformation of an item or creature into something different by magic. POLYMYXINS (27) [noun] Any of several toxic antibiotics, derived from the soil bacterium Bacillus polymyxa, used to treat infections by gram-negative bacteria POLYNOMIAL (17) [noun] (strict sense) An expression consisting of a sum of a finite number of terms, each term being the product of a constant coefficient and one or more variables raised to a non-negative integer power, such as a_n x^n + a_{n-1}x^{n-1} + ... + a_0 x^0. | [noun] A taxonomic designation (such as of a subspecies) consisting of more than two terms. | [adjective] Able to be described or limited by a polynomial. POLYRHYTHM (26) [noun] Music with multiple rhythmic elements played simultaneously. | [noun] A rhythm performed as part of a piece of music with multiple rhythmic elements played simultaneously. | [noun] Music containing two or more conflicting pulses. POLYSEMIES (17) POLYSEMOUS (17) POLYTHEISM (20) [noun] The belief in the existence of multiple gods. POMMELLING (17) [verb] To pound or beat. POMOLOGIES (15) POMOLOGIST (15) POMPADOURS (17) [noun] A women's hairstyle in which the hair is swept upwards from the face and worn high over the forehead. | [noun] A men's hairstyle of the 1950s. | [noun] A crimson or pink colour. PORTAMENTI (14) [noun] A smooth, gliding transition from one note to another; used especially with stringed instruments, and sometimes on brass. PORTAMENTO (14) [noun] A smooth, gliding transition from one note to another; used especially with stringed instruments, and sometimes on brass. POSITIVISM (17) [noun] A doctrine that states that the only authentic knowledge is scientific knowledge, and that such knowledge can only come from positive affirmation of theories through strict scientific method, refusing every form of metaphysics. | [noun] A school of thought in jurisprudence in which the law is seen as separated from moral values; i.e. the law is posited by lawmakers (humans); legal positivism. POSTATOMIC (16) POSTBELLUM (16) [adjective] Of the period following a war. | [adjective] In the United States, of the period following the Civil War, especially used in reference to the South. POSTFORMED (18) POSTHUMOUS (17) [adjective] Born after the death of one's father. | [adjective] After the death of someone | [adjective] Taking place after one's own death POSTIMPACT (18) POSTMARKED (19) [verb] To apply a postmark on. POSTMASTER (14) [noun] The head of a post office. | [noun] The administrator of an electronic mail system. | [noun] A kind of scholar at Merton College, Oxford; portionist. POSTMATING (15) POSTMODERN (15) [noun] A postmodernist. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or having the characteristics of postmodernism, especially as represented in art, architecture, literature, science, or philosophy that reacts against an earlier modernism. POSTMORTEM (16) [noun] An investigation of a corpse to determine the cause of death. | [noun] Any investigation after the conclusion of an activity, particularly when said activity produces an unwanted outcome. POSTPARTUM (16) [noun] The period immediately following childbirth. | [adjective] (of a mother) after giving birth POTASSIUMS (14) POTOMETERS (14) POULTRYMAN (17) [noun] A male poulterer. POULTRYMEN (17) [noun] A male poulterer. PRACTICUMS (18) [noun] A college course designed to give a student supervised practical knowledge of a subject previously studied theoretically. | [noun] A science exam in which students are questioned about specimens or other objects placed in front of them. PRAEMUNIRE (14) [noun] The offence in English law of bringing suit in or obeying a foreign (especially papal) court or authority, thus challenging the supremacy of the Crown. The offence was created by the Statute of Praemunire 1393 (16 Richard II, chapter 5), and abolished by the Criminal Law Act 1967 (chapter 58). | [noun] The writ charging a person with this offence, the writ of praemunire facias. | [noun] (in extended use) Any of a number of criminal offences incurring similar penalties to the original offence of praemunire. PRAENOMENS (14) [noun] An ancient Roman first name. | [noun] The throne name of a pharaoh, the fourth of the five names of the royal titulary, traditionally encircled by a cartouche and preceded by the title nswt-bjtj. | [noun] The genus name put before the species name. PRAENOMINA (14) PRAESIDIUM (15) PRAGMATICS (17) [noun] A man of business. | [noun] A busybody. | [noun] A public decree. PRAGMATISM (17) [noun] The pursuit of practicality over aesthetic qualities; a concentration on facts rather than emotions or ideals. | [noun] The theory that political problems should be met with practical solutions rather than ideological ones. | [noun] The idea that beliefs are identified with the actions of a believer, and the truth of beliefs with success of those actions in securing a believer's goals; the doctrine that ideas must be looked at in terms of their practical effects and consequences. PRAGMATIST (15) [noun] One who acts in a practical or straightforward manner; one who is pragmatic; one who values practicality or pragmatism. | [noun] One who acts in response to particular situations rather than upon abstract ideals; one who is willing to ignore their ideals to accomplish goals. | [noun] One who belongs to the philosophic school of pragmatism; one who holds that the meaning of beliefs are the actions they entail, and that the truth of those beliefs consist in the actions they entail successfully leading a believer to their goals. PREACHMENT (19) [noun] (now chiefly depreciative) Preaching; sermonizing. | [noun] An instance of preaching; a sermon or homily. PRECOMPUTE (18) PREEMBARGO (17) PREEMINENT (14) [adjective] Exceeding others in quality or rank; of outstanding excellence, extremely notable or important. PREEMPTING (17) [verb] To appropriate something (before someone else does). | [verb] To displace something, or take precedence over something. | [verb] To secure (land, etc.) by the right of preemption. PREEMPTION (16) [noun] The purchase of something before it is offered for sale to others. | [noun] The purchase of public land by the occupant. | [noun] The temporary interruption of a task without its cooperation and with the intention of resuming it at a later time. PREEMPTIVE (19) [adjective] Of or relating to preemption. | [adjective] Made so as to deter an anticipated unpleasant situation. | [adjective] (of a high-level bid) Intended to interfere with an opponent's bidding. PREEMPTORS (16) PREFERMENT (17) [noun] Prior claim (on payment, or on purchasing something); the first rights to obtain a particular payment or product. | [noun] The fact of being pushed or advanced to a more favourable situation; furtherance, promotion (of a candidate, action, undertaking etc.). | [noun] Advancement to a higher position or office; promotion. | [noun] A mixture of flour, water and yeast that is allowed to ferment prior to another baking process PREFORMATS (17) PREFORMING (18) [verb] To shape something before some other operation. PREHOMINID (18) PRELIMITED (15) PREMARITAL (14) [adjective] Before marriage; before getting married. PREMATURES (14) PREMAXILLA (21) PREMEASURE (14) PREMEDICAL (17) [adjective] Describing activities prior to, or in preparation for, a study of medicine. PREMEIOTIC (16) PREMIERING (15) [verb] To perform, display or exhibit for the first time. | [verb] To govern in the role of premier. | [verb] Of a film or play, to play for the first time. PREMOISTEN (14) PREMOLDING (16) PREMYCOTIC (21) PRENUMBERS (16) PREPAYMENT (19) PREPRIMARY (19) PREPROGRAM (17) [verb] To program something in advance. | [verb] To predispose to certain thoughts or behaviours. PRESENTISM (14) [noun] The view that neither the future nor the past exist (events and entities that are wholly past or wholly future do not exist at all). | [noun] The belief that only current phenomena are relevant. | [noun] Ahistorically and erroneously interpreting past phenomena in terms of current beliefs and knowledge. PRESIDIUMS (15) [noun] A permanent executive committee, used primarily in Communist countries, with the power to act for a larger governing body when the latter is in recess. | [noun] Such an executive committee headed by the President of the Supreme Soviet. PRESSMARKS (18) [noun] The logo of a publishing press. PRESSROOMS (14) PRESTAMPED (17) PRESUMABLE (16) PRESUMABLY (19) [adverb] Able to be sensibly presumed PRESUMEDLY (18) [adverb] In a way that is presumed; expectedly; presumably. PRETERMITS (14) [verb] To intentionally disregard something, allow it to go unnoticed, or change the subject in response to someone's comment; to omit or fail to carry out something; to prematurely terminate or interrupt something. PRETRIMMED (17) PREWARMING (18) PRIMEVALLY (20) PRIMIPARAE (16) [noun] A woman or female animal during or after her first pregnancy. | [noun] (specifically) A woman or female animal that has carried a first pregnancy to a viable gestational age. PRIMIPARAS (16) PRIMITIVES (17) [noun] An original or primary word; a word not derived from another, as opposed to derivative. | [noun] A member of a primitive society. | [noun] A simple-minded person. PRIMNESSES (14) PRIMORDIAL (15) [noun] A first principle or element. | [adjective] First, earliest or original | [adjective] Characteristic of the earliest stage of the development of an organism, or relating to a primordium PRIMORDIUM (17) [noun] An aggregation of cells that is the first stage in the development of an organ. PRINCEDOMS (17) PRINCIPIUM (18) PRINTMAKER (18) [noun] One who makes prints: copies of works of art. PRISMATOID (15) PRISMOIDAL (15) PRIVATISMS (17) PROCAMBIAL (18) PROCAMBIUM (20) PROCLAIMED (17) [verb] To announce or declare. PROCLAIMER (16) PROCUMBENT (18) [adjective] Prone or prostrate | [adjective] That trails along the ground | [adjective] Inclined towards the lips PRODROMATA (15) PROENZYMES (26) [noun] Any inactive precursor of an enzyme that is converted to an enzyme by proteolysis; a zymogen PROGRAMERS (15) [noun] One who writes computer programs; a software developer. | [noun] One who decides which programs will be shown on a television station, or which songs will be played on a radio station. | [noun] A device that installs or controls a software program in some other machine. PROGRAMING (16) PROGRAMMED (18) [verb] To enter a program or other instructions into (a computer or other electronic device) to instruct it to do a particular task. | [verb] To develop (software) by writing program code. | [verb] To put together the schedule of an event. PROGRAMMER (17) [noun] One who writes computer programs; a software developer. | [noun] One who decides which programs will be shown on a television station, or which songs will be played on a radio station. | [noun] A device that installs or controls a software program in some other machine. PROGRAMMES (17) [noun] A set of structured activities. | [noun] A leaflet listing information about a play, game or other activity. | [noun] A performance of a show or other broadcast on radio or television. PROLAMINES (14) PROMENADED (16) [verb] To walk for amusement, show, or exercise. | [verb] To perform the stylized walk of a square dance. PROMENADER (15) [noun] Agent noun of promenade; one who promenades. | [noun] An attender at, or devotee of, promenade concerts. PROMENADES (15) [noun] A prom (dance). | [noun] A walk taken for pleasure, display, or exercise; a stroll. | [noun] A place where one takes a walk for leisurely pleasure, or for exercise, especially a terrace by the seaside. PROMETHIUM (19) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Pm) with an atomic number of 61. PROMINENCE (16) [noun] The state of being prominent: widely known or eminent. | [noun] Relative importance. | [noun] A bulge: something that bulges out or is protuberant or projects from a form. PROMISSORY (17) [adjective] Containing or consisting of a promise. | [adjective] (of a contractual provision) Stipulating the future actions required of the parties to an insurance policy or other business agreement. PROMONTORY (17) [noun] A high point of land extending into a body of water, headland; cliff. | [noun] A projecting part of the body. PROMOTABLE (16) PROMOTIONS (14) [noun] An advancement in rank or position. | [noun] Dissemination of information in order to increase its popularity. | [noun] An event intended to increase the reach or image of a product or brand. PROMPTBOOK (22) [noun] An annotated copy of a script used by a prompter PROMPTNESS (16) PROMULGATE (15) [verb] To make known or public. | [verb] To put into effect as a regulation. PROMULGING (16) [verb] To promulgate; to publish or teach. PRONOMINAL (14) [noun] (grammar) A phrase that acts as a pronoun. | [adjective] (grammar) Of, pertaining to, resembling, or functioning as a pronoun. PROOFROOMS (17) PROPYLAEUM (19) [noun] A vestibule or entrance, to a temple. PROSCENIUM (16) [noun] The stage area between the curtain and the orchestra. | [noun] The stage area immediately in front of the scene building. | [noun] The row of columns at the front the scene building, at first directly behind the circular orchestra but later upon a stage. PROSEMINAR (14) PROSIMIANS (14) [noun] A primate that is not a monkey or an ape, generally nocturnal with large eyes and ears. Such primates were formerly grouped in the suborder Prosimii, but are now considered a paraphyletic group and not a clade. PROSTATISM (14) PROSTOMIAL (14) PROSTOMIUM (16) PROTAMINES (14) [noun] Any of a class of proteins, rich in arginine, found in the sperm of fish; used medicinally to control the action of insulin PROTODERMS (15) PROTOHUMAN (17) [noun] One of the earliest humans. | [adjective] Pertaining to the first humans or the beginning of humankind. PROTONEMAL (14) PROTOPLASM (16) [noun] The entire contents of a cell comprising the nucleus and the cytoplasm. It is a semi-fluid, transparent substance which is the living matter of plant and animal cells. PROTOSTOME (14) [noun] Any animal, of the taxon Protostomia, in which the mouth is derived from the embryonic blastopore PROTOXYLEM (24) PROVITAMIN (17) [noun] Any biologically inactive compound that may be converted into a vitamin within an animal organism PROXIMALLY (24) PSALMBOOKS (20) [noun] A book of psalms. PSALMODIES (15) PSALTERIUM (14) [noun] An omasum | [noun] A zither-like musical instrument PSEUDONYMS (18) [noun] A fictitious name, as those used by writers and movie stars. PTARMIGANS (15) [noun] Any of three species of small grouse in the genus Lagopus found in subarctic tundra areas of North America and Eurasia. PTERYGIUMS (18) PUERILISMS (14) PUERPERIUM (16) [noun] The period of time lasting around a month immediately following childbirth, when the mother’s uterus shrinks back to its prepartum state. PULMONATES (14) [noun] A gastropod of the order Pulmonata. PUMMELLING (17) [verb] To hit or strike heavily and repeatedly. | [noun] A beating. PUNISHMENT (17) [noun] The act or process of punishing, imposing and/or applying a sanction. | [noun] A penalty to punish wrongdoing, especially for crime. | [noun] A suffering by pain or loss imposed as retribution PURITANISM (14) [noun] Strict and austere religious conduct. | [noun] Extreme strictness regarding moral scruples. PUROMYCINS (19) PUZZLEMENT (32) [noun] The confusing state of being puzzled; bewilderment | [noun] A puzzle. PYCNOMETER (19) PYRAMIDING (19) [verb] To build up or be arranged in the form of a pyramid. | [verb] To combine (a series of genes) into a single genotype. | [verb] To employ, or take part in, a pyramid scheme. PYRETHRUMS (20) [noun] Any of several daisy-like perennial African plants of the genus Tanacetum, especially Tanacetum cinerariifolium. | [noun] Anacyclus pyrethrum (pellitory of Spain) | [noun] Any of several insecticides obtained from these plants; pyrethrin. PYRIMIDINE (18) [noun] A diazine in which the two nitrogen atoms are in the meta- positions; it is the basis of three of the bases found in DNA and RNA: thymine, uracil and cytosine PYROMANIAC (19) [noun] A person suffering from pyromania PYROMANIAS (17) PYROMETERS (17) [noun] A thermometer designed to measure high temperatures. | [noun] An instrument for measuring the thermal expansion of solids. PYROMETRIC (19) QUADRIVIUM (25) [noun] The higher division of the seven liberal arts in the Middle Ages, composed of geometry, astronomy, arithmetic, and music. QUADRUMVIR (25) QUAGMIRIER (22) QUALMISHLY (27) QUICKLIMES (27) QUITCLAIMS (23) [verb] To relinquish or release (a claim, title etc.); to transfer (an interest in property). QUIXOTISMS (28) QUIZMASTER (30) [noun] A person who poses questions to contestants on a quiz show. RABBINISMS (16) RABBLEMENT (16) RACEMIZING (24) [verb] To convert (an enantiomer) into a racemic mixture. RACIALISMS (14) RADICALISM (15) [noun] Any of various radical social or political movements that aim at fundamental change in the structure of society RADIOGRAMS (14) [noun] A message, like a telegram, transmitted by radio rather than wires. | [noun] An entertainment device that combined a radio and a record player or gramophone. | [noun] A radiograph RADIOMETER (13) [noun] A device that measures radiant energy. RADIOMETRY (16) RAGAMUFFIN (19) [noun] A dirty, shabbily-clothed child; an urchin. | [noun] A breed of domestic cat which is an offshoot from the Ragdoll. RAINMAKERS (16) [noun] Someone or something that causes or attempts to cause rain to fall. | [noun] (originally Canada) A person having the ability to generate business, raise funds, or otherwise engineer success for a company, organization, etc. | [noun] A batted ball that is hit very high into the air. RAINMAKING (17) RAINSTORMS (12) [noun] A storm characterized by substantial, heavy rainfall. RAMBLINGLY (18) RAMOSITIES (12) RAMPAGEOUS (15) [adjective] Violent and boisterous; unruly. RAMPANCIES (16) RAMPARTING (15) [verb] To defend with a rampart; fortify or surround with a rampart. RAMRODDING (15) [verb] To force. RAMSHACKLE (21) [verb] To ransack. | [adjective] In disrepair or disorder; poorly maintained; lacking upkeep, usually of buildings or vehicles. RANDOMIZED (23) [verb] To arrange randomly; to make random | [adjective] Obtained by randomization RANDOMIZER (22) RANDOMIZES (22) [verb] To arrange randomly; to make random RANDOMNESS (13) [noun] The property of all possible outcomes being equally likely. | [noun] A type of circumstance or event that is described by a probability distribution. | [noun] A measure of the lack of purpose, logic or objectivity of an event. RATEMETERS (12) RAVAGEMENT (16) RAVELMENTS (15) RAVISHMENT (18) RAZZMATAZZ (48) [noun] Ambiguous or meaningless language. | [noun] Empty and tiresome speculation. | [noun] Something presenting itself in a fanciful and showy, often unrealistic manner, especially when intended to impress and confuse. READMITTED (14) [verb] To admit, or allow to enter, again. READYMADES (17) [noun] A ready-made object. REAFFIRMED (19) [verb] To affirm again. | [verb] To bolster or support. REANIMATED (13) [verb] To animate again. REANIMATES (12) [verb] To animate again. REARGUMENT (13) REARMAMENT (14) [noun] The process of rearming. REASSEMBLE (14) [verb] To assemble again | [verb] To put back together; to reverse the process of disassembly REASSEMBLY (17) [noun] The process of assembling something again. REASSUMING (13) [verb] To resume, to carry on (a practice, thought, occupation etc.) again. | [verb] To take on or adopt again. | [verb] To take back into one's possession. REATTEMPTS (14) [noun] Another attempt. | [verb] To attempt again. REBAPTISMS (16) REBLOOMING (15) RECIDIVISM (18) [noun] Committing new offenses after a crime committed in the past. | [noun] Chronic repetition of criminal or other antisocial behavior. | [noun] (by extension) Returning to a negative behavior after having stopped it for a period of time. RECLAIMING (15) [verb] To return land to a suitable condition for use. | [verb] To obtain useful products from waste; to recycle. | [verb] To claim something back; to repossess. RECOMBINED (17) [verb] To combine again, especially to reassemble the parts of something previously taken apart in a different manner. | [verb] To undergo recombination. | [adjective] Formed by recombination RECOMBINES (16) [verb] To combine again, especially to reassemble the parts of something previously taken apart in a different manner. | [verb] To undergo recombination. RECOMMENCE (18) [verb] To begin again. RECOMMENDS (17) [verb] To bestow commendation on; to represent favourably; to suggest, endorse or encourage as an appropriate choice. | [verb] To make acceptable; to attract favor to. | [verb] To advise, propose, counsel favorably RECOMPENSE (16) [noun] An equivalent returned for anything given, done, or suffered; compensation; reward; amends; requital. | [noun] That which compensates for an injury, or other type of harm or damage. | [verb] To reward or repay (someone) for something done, given etc. RECOMPILED (17) [verb] To compile again. RECOMPILES (16) [verb] To compile again. RECOMPOSED (17) [verb] To compose or construct again. | [verb] To bring (oneself) back to a state of calm. RECOMPOSES (16) [verb] To compose or construct again. | [verb] To bring (oneself) back to a state of calm. RECOMPUTED (17) RECOMPUTES (16) RECONFIRMS (17) [verb] To confirm again; to establish more firmly | [verb] (travel) To advise an airline of your intention to use a reservation, or risk cancellation. RECOUPMENT (16) RECUMBENCY (21) REDAMAGING (15) REDEEMABLE (15) [noun] A financial instrument that can be redeemed. | [adjective] Capable of being redeemed; able to be restored or recovered. | [adjective] Capable of being paid off; subject to a right on the part of the debtor to discharge or of an issuer to repurchase REDEMANDED (15) REDEMPTION (15) [noun] The act of redeeming or something redeemed. | [noun] The recovery, for a fee, of a pawned article. | [noun] Salvation from sin. REDEMPTIVE (18) [adjective] Causing, or relating to, redemption or saving; redeeming. REDEMPTORY (18) REDREAMING (14) REEMBARKED (19) REEMBODIED (16) REEMBODIES (15) REEMERGING (14) [verb] To emerge again, to come into view after having hidden. | [verb] To come out of a situation, object or a liquid after having entered it. REEMISSION (12) REEMITTING (13) REEMPHASES (17) REEMPHASIS (17) REEMPLOYED (18) [verb] To employ again. REESTIMATE (12) REEXAMINED (20) [verb] To examine again. | [adjective] Examined again REEXAMINES (19) [verb] To examine again. REFERENDUM (16) [noun] A direct popular vote on a proposed law or constitutional amendment. The adposition on is usually used before the related subject of the vote. | [noun] An action, choice, etc., which is perceived as passing judgment on another matter. REFINEMENT (15) [noun] The act, or the result of refining; the removal of impurities, or a purified material | [noun] High-class style; cultivation. | [noun] A fine or subtle distinction. REFORMABLE (17) REFORMATES (15) REFORMISMS (17) REFORMISTS (15) [noun] One who advocates reform (of an institution). | [noun] Specifically, one who advocates reform of society and the gradual accumulation of small changes, as opposed to revolutionary action. | [noun] (17th C.) An advocate of reform in the Church of England; a Reformer. REFUGEEISM (16) REGIMENTAL (13) [adjective] Relating to a regiment | [adjective] Overly strict; rigid REGIMENTED (14) [verb] To form soldiers into a regiment. | [verb] To systematize, or put in rigid order. | [adjective] Organised, ordered, formed into regiments. REGROOMING (14) REHAMMERED (18) REHUMANIZE (24) REICHSMARK (21) [noun] The monetary unit in Germany between 1924 and 1948. REIMAGINED (14) [verb] To imagine or conceive something in a new way REIMAGINES (13) [verb] To imagine or conceive something in a new way REIMBURSED (15) [verb] To compensate with payment; especially, to repay money spent on one's behalf. REIMBURSES (14) [verb] To compensate with payment; especially, to repay money spent on one's behalf. REIMMERSED (15) REIMMERSES (14) REIMPLANTS (14) REIMPORTED (15) [verb] To import again. | [verb] To import goods which have previously been exported, particularly pharmaceutical products, back into the country of origin. REIMPOSING (15) [verb] To impose again, a further time. REINFORMED (16) RELATIVISM (15) [noun] The theory, especially in ethics or aesthetics, that conceptions of truth and moral values are not absolute but are relative to the persons or groups holding them. | [noun] A specific such theory, advocated by a particular philosopher or school of thought. RELUMINING (13) REMAINDERS (13) [noun] A part or parts remaining after some has/have been removed. | [noun] The amount left over after subtracting the divisor as many times as possible from the dividend without producing a negative result. If (n) (dividend) and d (divisor) are integers, then (n) can always be expressed in the form n = dq + r, where q (quotient) and r (remainder) are also integers and 0 ≤ r < d. | [noun] The number left over after a simple subtraction REMANENCES (14) REMARKABLE (18) [adjective] Worthy of being remarked or noted; notable | [adjective] Uncommon; unusual REMARKABLY (21) [adverb] (manner) In a remarkable manner. | [adverb] (degree) To a noteworthy extent. | [adverb] (evaluative) Used to draw special attention to a proposition. REMARKETED (17) REMARRIAGE (13) [noun] A second or subsequent marriage REMARRYING (16) [verb] To marry a second or subsequent time. | [noun] A marrying again; remarriage. REMASTERED (13) [verb] To produce a new version of a recording by remixing the original master recordings. | [verb] To create a new master copy by enhancing sound or picture quality of an older recording. | [verb] To produce a new version of a video game with updated graphics, often re-recorded music, and added features and content. REMATCHING (18) REMEASURED (13) [verb] To measure again. REMEASURES (12) [verb] To measure again. REMEDIABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being remedied. REMEDIALLY (16) REMEDIATED (14) [verb] To correct or improve (a deficiency or problem). | [adjective] Corrected; improved REMEDIATES (13) [verb] To correct or improve (a deficiency or problem). REMEDILESS (13) REMEMBERED (17) [verb] To reconstitute or reassemble that which has been dismembered. | [verb] To recall from one's memory; to have an image in one's memory. | [verb] To memorize; to put something into memory. REMEMBERER (16) REMINISCED (15) [verb] To recall the past in a private moment, often fondly or nostalgically. | [verb] To talk or write about memories of the past, especially pleasant memories. | [verb] To remember fondly; to reminisce about. REMINISCER (14) REMINISCES (14) [verb] To recall the past in a private moment, often fondly or nostalgically. | [verb] To talk or write about memories of the past, especially pleasant memories. | [verb] To remember fondly; to reminisce about. REMISSIBLE (14) [adjective] Capable of being remitted or forgiven. REMISSIBLY (17) REMISSIONS (12) REMISSNESS (12) REMITMENTS (14) REMITTABLE (14) REMITTANCE (14) [noun] The act of transmitting money, bills, etc. to a distant place, in return or payment for goods purchased. | [noun] That which is remitted; a payment to a remote recipient. REMOBILIZE (23) REMODELING (14) [verb] To change the appearance, layout, or furnishings of. | [noun] An instance of modification or redecorating. REMODELLED (14) [verb] To change the appearance, layout, or furnishings of. REMODIFIED (17) [verb] To modify again REMODIFIES (16) [verb] To modify again REMOISTENS (12) REMONETIZE (21) [verb] To monetize again. REMORSEFUL (15) [adjective] (of a person) Feeling or filled with remorse. | [adjective] Expressing or caused by remorse. REMOTENESS (12) [noun] The quality of being remote. REMOTIVATE (15) REMOUNTING (13) [verb] To go up again; to rise another time. | [verb] To help (someone) back on a horse. | [verb] To get back on a horse, bicycle etc. REMOVEABLE (17) REMUNERATE (12) [verb] To compensate; to pay. RENOMINATE (12) [verb] To nominate again. RENUMBERED (15) [verb] To number again, to assign new numbers to. REPAYMENTS (17) [noun] The act of repaying. | [noun] The money or other resource that is repaid. REPLUMBING (17) REPRIMANDS (15) [noun] A severe, formal or official reproof; reprehension, rebuke, private or public. | [verb] To reprove in a formal or official way. REPROGRAMS (15) [verb] To program anew or differently. | [verb] (by extension) To make a fundamental change to the behaviour or habits of. | [verb] To shift funds appropriated for one government program to a different government program. REREMINDED (14) RESAMPLING (15) RESEMBLANT (14) RESEMBLING (15) [verb] To be like or similar to (something); to represent as similar. | [verb] To compare; to regard as similar, to liken. | [verb] To counterfeit; to imitate. RESENTMENT (12) [noun] A feeling of anger or displeasure stemming from belief that one has been wronged by others or betrayed; indignation. | [noun] The state of holding something in the mind as a subject of contemplation, or of being inclined to reflect upon it; feeling; impression. | [noun] Satisfaction; gratitude RESMELTING (13) RESMOOTHED (16) RESTAMPING (15) RESUMMONED (15) RESUMPTION (14) [noun] The act of resuming or starting something again. | [noun] Eminent domain RETEMPERED (15) RETIREMENT (12) [noun] An act of retiring; withdrawal. | [noun] The state of being retired; seclusion. | [noun] A place of seclusion or privacy; a retreat. RETRANSMIT (12) [verb] To transmit again. RETRIMMING (15) REVANCHISM (20) [noun] The political policy of endeavouring to regain lost territory. | [noun] Metaphorical endeavouring to regain lost political or cultural territory. REVEALMENT (15) REVETMENTS (15) [noun] A layer of stone, concrete, or other hard material supporting the side of an embankment. | [noun] An armoured building that provides protection against bombs. REVILEMENT (15) REVIVALISM (18) [noun] Advocacy for the revival of a former practice, custom, etc. | [noun] Spiritual fervour of or for a religious revival. RHABDOMERE (18) RHEOMETERS (15) [noun] A device used to measure the flow properties of fluids with variable viscosity. | [noun] A device used to measure the flow of electric current: an ammeter. | [noun] A flowmeter, especially for water or blood. RHEUMATICS (17) [noun] A person suffering from rheumatism | [noun] Rheumatism. RHEUMATISM (17) [noun] Any disorder of the muscles, tendons, joints, bones, nerves, characterized by pain, discomfort and disability. | [noun] Atrophic arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis RHEUMATOID (16) [adjective] Presenting analogies with rheumatism. RHODAMINES (16) [noun] Any of a class of pink to red polycyclic fluorone dyes. RHOMBOIDAL (18) RHOMBOIDEI (18) [noun] Any of the rhomboid muscles. RHYMESTERS (18) [noun] A rhymer; a poetaster RHYTHMICAL (23) RHYTHMISTS (21) RHYTHMIZED (31) RHYTHMIZES (30) RHYTIDOMES (19) RIFAMPICIN (19) [noun] Rifampin RIGAMAROLE (13) RIGMAROLES (13) [noun] A long and complicated procedure that seems tiresome or pointless. | [noun] Nonsense; confused and incoherent talk. RIMINESSES (12) RIMOSITIES (12) RINGMASTER (13) [noun] The person who manages the performers in a circus ring. | [verb] To act as ringmaster. | [verb] To control (a group of people). RITUALISMS (12) ROMANISING (13) [verb] To put letters or words written in another writing system into the Latin (Roman) alphabet. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To bring under the authority or influence of Rome. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To make or become Roman in character or style. ROMANIZING (22) [verb] To put letters or words written in another writing system into the Latin (Roman) alphabet. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To bring under the authority or influence of Rome. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To make or become Roman in character or style. ROMELDALES (13) ROSEMALING (13) [noun] A Norwegian style of stylized floral decoration with scrollwork and geometric elements. ROSEMARIES (12) ROSTELLUMS (12) ROTAMETERS (12) ROUNDWORMS (16) [noun] An invertebrate animal of the phylum Nematoda and other similar phyla. Many species of roundworms are parasites. ROUSEMENTS (12) RUDIMENTAL (13) [adjective] Rudimentary. RUFFIANISM (18) RUMINANTLY (15) RUMINATING (13) [verb] To chew cud. (Said of ruminants.) Involves regurgitating partially digested food from the rumen. | [verb] To meditate or reflect. | [verb] To meditate or ponder over; to muse on. RUMINATION (12) [noun] The act of ruminating; i.e. chewing cud. | [noun] Deep thought or consideration. | [noun] Negative cyclic thinking; persistent and recurrent worrying or brooding. RUMINATIVE (15) [adjective] Causing rumination or prone to it; thoughtful. RUMINATORS (12) RUMRUNNERS (12) RUTHENIUMS (15) SACRAMENTS (14) [noun] A sacred act or ceremony in Christianity. In Catholic theology, a sacrament is defined as "an outward sign instituted by Christ to give grace." | [noun] (in particular) The Eucharist. | [noun] The consecrated Eucharist (especially the bread). SALAMANDER (13) [noun] A long, slender, chiefly terrestrial amphibian of the order Caudata, superficially resembling a lizard. | [noun] A creature much like a lizard that is resistant to and lives in fire (in which it is often depicted in heraldry), hence the elemental being of fire. | [noun] A metal utensil with a flat head which is heated and put over a dish to brown the top. SALESROOMS (12) [noun] The room where sales are made SALESWOMAN (15) [noun] A woman whose occupation it is to sell things. SALESWOMEN (15) [noun] A woman whose occupation it is to sell things. SALMAGUNDI (14) [noun] A food consisting of chopped meat and pickled herring, with oil, vinegar, pepper, and onions. | [noun] Hence, any mixture of various ingredients; an olio or medley; a potpourri; a miscellany. SALMONELLA (12) [noun] Any of several rod-shaped bacteria, of the genus Salmonella, that cause food poisoning and other diseases SALMONOIDS (13) [noun] Any of these fish. SALOMETERS (12) SALVERFORM (18) SAMARITANS (12) [noun] A Good Samaritan SAMARSKITE (16) SAMENESSES (12) SANATORIUM (12) [noun] An institution that treats chronic diseases, and provides supervised recuperation and convalescence. SANCTIMONY (17) [noun] A hypocritical form of excessive piety, considered to be an affectation merely for public show. SANDSTORMS (13) [noun] A strong wind carrying clouds of sand and dust through the air. SANITARIUM (12) [noun] An institution that treats chronic diseases, and provides supervised recuperation and convalescence. SANITORIUM (12) SARCOLEMMA (16) [noun] A thin cell membrane that surrounds a striated muscle fibre SARCOMERES (14) [noun] The contractile unit of the myofibril of a striated muscle. SARCOPLASM (16) [noun] The interfibrillar cytoplasm of striated muscle SARCOSOMAL (14) SARCOSOMES (14) SARGASSUMS (13) SATURNISMS (12) SAWTIMBERS (17) SCALOGRAMS (15) SCAMMONIES (16) [noun] Convolvulus scammonia, a twining perennial bindweed native to the eastern part of the Mediterranean basin, whose juice has been used in medicine as scammonium. | [noun] The cathartic gum resin obtained from this plant. SCAMPERING (17) [verb] To run quickly and lightly, especially in a playful or undignified manner. | [noun] A quick, light running motion. SCARAMOUCH (19) SCEPTICISM (18) [noun] The practice or philosophy of being a skeptic. | [noun] A studied attitude of questioning and doubt | [noun] The doctrine that absolute knowledge is not possible SCHEMATICS (19) [noun] A simplified line drawing used by scientists, engineers, technologists and others to illustrate a system at an abstract level. Schematic drawings often use standard symbols for clarity. SCHEMATISM (19) [noun] A schematic representation; a schema. | [noun] The combination of the heavenly bodies. SCHEMATIZE (26) [verb] To organize according to a scheme. | [verb] To distort and simplify for the purpose of highlighting certain characteristics. | [verb] To make a plan in outline. SCHISMATIC (19) [noun] A person involved in a schism | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a schism | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a schisma SCHLEMIELS (17) [noun] A loser or a fool. | [noun] A person who is clumsy or who hurts others emotionally. SCHLUMPING (20) SCHMALTZES (26) SCHMALZIER (26) SCHMEERING (18) [verb] To spread something, often a bagel spread. | [verb] To bribe. SCHMOOSING (18) SCHMOOZING (27) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SCHOOLMARM (19) [noun] A woman who is a teacher, especially a teacher in a schoolhouse; may carry the connotation she is severe and/or a spinster. | [noun] A person, male or female, who exhibits characteristics attributed to schoolteachers of the old times, such as strict enforcement of arbitrary rules. | [noun] A tree with two or more trunks; a forked tree. SCHOOLMATE (17) [noun] A person who was a fellow attendee at one's school. SCHOOLROOM (17) [noun] A classroom, a room in a school used for instruction. SCHOOLTIME (17) [noun] Time spent in school; classtime | [noun] Time spent at school; schooldays SCIENTISMS (14) SCLEROMATA (14) [noun] Induration of the tissues | [noun] Rhinoscleroma SCLEROTIUM (14) [noun] A compact mass of hardened mycelium stored with reserve food material that, in some higher fungi such as ergot, becomes detached and remains dormant until a favourable opportunity for growth occurs. SCOMBROIDS (17) [noun] Any fish of the family Scombridae, of which the mackerel (Scomber) is the type. SCRAMBLERS (16) [noun] Someone or something that scrambles (in various senses). | [noun] A vine that does not attach itself to its supports. | [noun] A device that makes messages intentionally, but reversibly, unintelligible for reasons of privacy or security. SCRAMBLING (17) [verb] To move hurriedly to a location, especially by using all limbs against a surface. | [verb] To proceed to a location or an objective in a disorderly manner. | [verb] (of food ingredients, usually including egg) To thoroughly combine and cook as a loose mass. SCREWWORMS (20) [noun] The larva of the fly Cochliomyia hominivorax (New World screwworm) or Chrysomya bezziana (Old World screwworm). The larvae are parasitic in humans and animals and are distinctive in eating living flesh of mammals, unlike most maggots, which eat only dead flesh. SCRIMMAGED (18) [verb] To have, or be involved in, a scrimmage. SCRIMMAGER (17) SCRIMMAGES (17) [noun] A rough fight. | [noun] In some team sports, especially soccer, a practice game which does not count on a team's record. | [noun] In American football or Canadian football, a play that begins with a snap from the center while opposing teams are on either side of a line of scrimmage. SCRIMPIEST (16) SCRIMSHAWS (20) [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. | [verb] To engrave fanciful designs on (shells, whales' teeth, etc.). SCRUBWOMAN (19) SCRUBWOMEN (19) SCRUMMAGED (18) [verb] To engage in an ordered formation of forwards in which each side aims to gain control of the ball, as described above. SCRUMMAGES (17) [noun] An ordered formation of forwards, typically bending down, binding to one another with their arms, and pushing opponents shoulder to shoulder, in which each side aims to gain control of the ball; a scrum. | [noun] A scrimmage. | [verb] To engage in an ordered formation of forwards in which each side aims to gain control of the ball, as described above. SEABORGIUM (15) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Sg) with atomic number 106 SEAMANLIKE (16) SEAMANSHIP (17) [noun] Skill in, and knowledge of, the work of navigating, maintaining, and operating a vessel. SEAMLESSLY (15) [adverb] In a seamless manner. SEAMSTRESS (12) [noun] A woman who sews clothes professionally. SECULARISM (14) [noun] Neutrality towards all religions. | [noun] The political belief in the separation of church and state, i.e. the position that religious belief should not influence public and governmental decisions. SECUREMENT (14) SEDIMENTED (14) [verb] To deposit material as a sediment. | [verb] To be deposited as a sediment. | [adjective] (of a strata) Deposited from sediment SEDUCEMENT (15) SEEMLINESS (12) SEGMENTARY (16) SEGMENTING (14) [verb] To divide into segments or sections. SEISMICITY (17) [noun] A measure or a degree of how seismic a region is, how prone it is to earthquakes. SEISMOGRAM (15) [noun] The graphical output from an accelerograph or seismograph. SEISMOLOGY (16) [noun] The study of the vibration of the Earth's interior caused by natural and unnatural sources, such as earthquakes. SEMANTICAL (14) SEMAPHORED (18) [verb] To signal using, or as if using, a semaphore, with the implication that it is done nonverbally. SEMAPHORES (17) [noun] Any equipment used for visual signalling by means of flags, lights, or mechanically moving arms, which are used to represent letters of the alphabet, or words. | [noun] A visual system for transmitting information using the above equipment; especially, by means of two flags held one in each hand, using an alphabetic and numeric code based on the position of the signaller's arms; flag semaphore. | [noun] A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes. SEMBLABLES (16) [noun] Something similar; likeness; representation SEMBLANCES (16) [noun] Likeness, similarity; the quality of being similar. | [noun] The way something looks; appearance; form SEMEIOLOGY (16) [noun] Semiotics, the study of signs. | [noun] The science of the signs or symptoms of disease; symptomatology. | [noun] The art of using signs in signalling. SEMEIOTICS (14) [noun] The study of signs and symbols, especially as means of language or communication. | [noun] The study of medical signs and symptoms; symptomatology. SEMESTRIAL (12) SEMIANNUAL (12) [noun] Something occurring twice each year. | [adjective] Biannual: occurring twice a year SEMIBREVES (17) [noun] A musical note four beats long in 4/4 time; a whole note (US) SEMICIRCLE (16) [noun] Half of a circle. | [noun] An instrument for measuring angles. SEMICOLONS (14) [noun] The punctuation mark ;. SEMICOLONY (17) SEMIDESERT (13) SEMIDIVINE (16) SEMIDRYING (17) SEMIDWARFS (19) SEMIFEUDAL (16) SEMIFINALS (15) [noun] A playoff in the round with only four players or teams left, the stage before the final. | [noun] (general) A competition that narrows a field of contestants (semifinalists) to a set of finalists, for a subsequent final. SEMIFITTED (16) [adjective] Partially fitted (with appliances etc) | [adjective] That partially conforms to the outlines of the body SEMIFLUIDS (16) [noun] Any substance with properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. SEMIFORMAL (17) [adjective] Somewhat formal. SEMIGROUPS (15) SEMIHOBOES (17) SEMILETHAL (15) [adjective] (of a trait) lethal to at least half of all affected organisms SEMILIQUID (22) [noun] Any substance with properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. | [adjective] Having properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. | [adjective] Somewhat liquid; able to flow or change, but not completely freely. SEMIMETALS (14) [noun] A metalloid. SEMINARIAN (12) SEMINARIES (12) [noun] A theological school for the training of rabbis, priests, or ministers. | [noun] A private residential school for girls. | [noun] A class of religious education for youths ages 14–18 that accompanies normal secular education. SEMINARIST (12) SEMINOMADS (15) SEMINUDITY (16) SEMIOPAQUE (23) [adjective] Partially opaque. SEMIPOSTAL (14) SEMIPUBLIC (18) SEMIQUAVER (24) [noun] A sixteenth note, drawn as a crotchet with two tails. SEMISACRED (15) SEMISECRET (14) SEMISOLIDS (13) SEMITROPIC (16) SEMIVOWELS (18) [noun] A sound in speech which has some qualities of a consonant and some qualities of a vowel. | [noun] A letter which represents a semivowel sound, such as w or y in English. SEMIWEEKLY (22) [adjective] Occurring twice a week; occurring once every one-half a week | [noun] A periodical published twice a week. SEMIYEARLY (18) SEMPSTRESS (14) [noun] A seamstress, a woman employed to sew. SENSORIUMS (12) [noun] The entire sensory apparatus of an organism. | [noun] The central part of a nervous system that receives and coordinates all stimuli. | [noun] The brain or mind in relation to the senses. SENSUALISM (12) SENTIMENTS (12) [noun] A general thought, feeling, or sense. | [noun] Feelings, especially tender feelings, as apart from reason or judgment, or of a weak or foolish kind. SEPARATISM (14) [noun] A theory or doctrine which supports a state of separation between organizations, institutions, or other societal groups (e.g. between church and state) or between different political jurisdictions (e.g. a country and its former colony). | [noun] The practice of treating members of different societal groups in a politically, legally, or economically different manner. SEPTICEMIA (16) [noun] A disease caused by the presence of pathogenic organisms, especially bacteria, or their toxins, in the bloodstream, characterised by chills and fever. SEPTICEMIC (18) SEQUESTRUM (21) [noun] A fragment of bone or other dead tissue that has separated during necrosis SERIALISMS (12) SERIOCOMIC (16) [adjective] Having both serious and comedic qualities or tendencies. SERMONETTE (12) [noun] A short sermon. SERMONIZED (22) [verb] To speak in the manner of a sermon; to preach; to propagate one's morality or opinions with speech. | [verb] To preach a sermon to (somebody); to give (somebody) instruction or admonishment on the basis of one's morality or opinions. | [verb] To say in the manner of a sermon or lecture. SERMONIZER (21) SERMONIZES (21) [verb] To speak in the manner of a sermon; to preach; to propagate one's morality or opinions with speech. | [verb] To preach a sermon to (somebody); to give (somebody) instruction or admonishment on the basis of one's morality or opinions. | [verb] To say in the manner of a sermon or lecture. SERVICEMAN (17) [noun] A man who serves in the armed forces. | [noun] A person, especially a man, employed in service and maintenance of equipment. SERVICEMEN (17) [noun] A man who serves in the armed forces. | [noun] A person, especially a man, employed in service and maintenance of equipment. SERVOMOTOR (15) [noun] An electric motor in a servomechanism, especially one which incorporates feedback so it accurately positions the device. SESTERTIUM (12) SETTLEMENT (12) [noun] The act of settling. | [noun] The state of being settled. | [noun] A colony that is newly established; a place or region newly settled. SHADCHANIM (21) [noun] (Jewish) marriage broker, matchmaker SHAGGYMANE (20) SHAMANISMS (17) SHAMANISTS (15) SHAMEFACED (21) [adjective] Bashful, showing modesty or embarrassment. | [adjective] Ashamed, displaying shame, especially by blushing in the face. SHAMEFULLY (21) [adverb] In a shameful manner. | [adverb] Used to express discontent with a situation or occurrence. SHAMMASHIM (22) SHAMPOOERS (17) SHAMPOOING (18) [verb] To wash one's own hair with shampoo. | [verb] To wash (i.e. the hair, carpet, etc.) with shampoo. | [verb] To press or knead the whole surface of the body of (a person), and at the same time to stretch the limbs and joints, in connection with the hot bath. SHEIKHDOMS (23) SHERIFFDOM (22) SHIMMERING (18) [verb] To shine with a veiled, tremulous, or intermittent light; to gleam faintly. | [noun] A gleam or glimmer. SHIPMASTER (17) [noun] The master of a ship; a captain; a commander. SHIRTMAKER (19) SHLEMIEHLS (18) SHMALTZIER (24) SHOEMAKERS (19) [noun] A person who makes shoes | [noun] The threadfish. | [noun] A fish, Elagatis pinnulatis, the runner. SHRIMPIEST (17) SHRIMPLIKE (21) SICKLEMIAS (18) SIDESTREAM (13) [noun] A stream of fluid taken from an intermediate point in a process such as distillation SIGNALMENT (13) SIMILARITY (15) [noun] Closeness of appearance to something else. | [noun] The relation of sharing properties. | [noun] A transformation that preserves angles and the ratios of distances SIMILITUDE (13) [noun] Similarity or resemblance to something else. | [noun] A way in which two people or things share similitude. | [noun] Someone or something that closely resembles another; a duplicate or twin. SIMONIACAL (14) SIMONIZING (22) [verb] To polish with a wax-like substance. | [verb] To commit simony SIMPLENESS (14) SIMPLETONS (14) [noun] A simple-minded person lacking common sense. SIMPLICIAL (16) SIMPLICITY (19) [noun] The state or quality of being simple | [noun] An act or instance of foolishness. SIMPLIFIED (18) [noun] Short for simplified Chinese. | [adjective] Made more simple; having its complexity reduced. | [adjective] Relating to simplified Chinese. SIMPLIFIER (17) SIMPLIFIES (17) [verb] To make simpler, either by reducing in complexity, reducing to component parts, or making easier to understand. | [verb] To become simpler. SIMPLISTIC (16) [adjective] Overly simple. | [adjective] In a manner that simplifies a concept or issue so that its nuance and complexity are lost or important details are overlooked. | [adjective] Of or relating to simples, or medicinal herbs. SIMULACRES (14) SIMULACRUM (16) [noun] An image or representation. | [noun] A faint trace or semblance. SIMULATING (13) [verb] To model, replicate, duplicate the behavior, appearance or properties of. SIMULATION (12) [noun] Something that simulates a system or environment in order to predict actual behaviour. | [noun] The process of simulating. | [noun] A video game designed to convey a more or less realistic experience, as of a sport or warfare. SIMULATIVE (15) SIMULATORS (12) [noun] One who simulates or feigns. | [noun] A machine or system that simulates an environment (such as an aircraft cockpit), often for training purposes. SIMULCASTS (14) [noun] A program or event that is broadcast across more than one medium or service at the same time. | [verb] To broadcast a program or event across more than one medium or service at the same time. SINSEMILLA (12) [noun] A form of cannabis where only the female is allowed to blossom. Without pollen from the male plant, the female blossoms produce no seeds, forming large panicled flowers. SIXTEENMOS (19) [noun] Sextodecimo (as a paper size in printing). SJAMBOKING (26) SKEPTICISM (20) [noun] The practice or philosophy of being a skeptic. | [noun] A studied attitude of questioning and doubt | [noun] The doctrine that absolute knowledge is not possible SKIMOBILES (18) [noun] Snowmobile SKIMPINESS (18) SKIRMISHED (20) [verb] To engage in a minor battle or dispute SKIRMISHER (19) SKIRMISHES (19) [noun] A brief battle between small groups, usually part of a longer or larger battle or war. | [noun] (by extension) Any minor dispute. | [noun] A type of outdoor military style game using paintball or similar weapons. SLIMEBALLS (14) [noun] A round lump made up of or coated with slime or a slime-like substance such as mucus. | [noun] (originally United States) A person who is regarded as slimy (that is, sneaky or underhanded) or otherwise undesirable. SLIMNESSES (12) SLIMPSIEST (14) SLIPFORMED (18) SLIPSTREAM (14) [noun] The low-pressure zone immediately following a rapidly moving object, caused by turbulence. | [noun] A genre of fantastic or non-realistic fiction that crosses conventional genre boundaries. | [verb] To take advantage of the suction produced by a slipstream by travelling immediately behind the slipstream generator. SLUMBERERS (14) SLUMBERING (15) [verb] To be in a very light state of sleep, almost awake. | [verb] To be inactive or negligent. | [verb] To lay to sleep. SLUMBEROUS (14) SMALLMOUTH (17) [noun] A variety of bass (fish) having a small mouth SMALLPOXES (21) SMALLSWORD (16) [noun] A light one-handed sword, designed for thrusting, which evolved out of the longer and heavier rapier of the late Renaissance. SMARAGDINE (14) SMARAGDITE (14) SMARMINESS (14) SMARTASSES (12) [noun] One who is particularly insolent, who tends to make snide remarks or jokes. | [verb] To talk like a smartass, with a lot of snide remarks. SMARTENING (13) [verb] To make smarter in appearance; to refurbish or spruce up. | [verb] To increase the speed of (one's travel on foot, etc.). | [verb] To augment with computer technology. SMARTWEEDS (16) SMASHINGLY (19) SMATTERERS (12) [noun] One who smatters; one who dabbles in or experiments with a little bit of everything, especially knowledge. SMATTERING (13) [noun] A superficial or shallow knowledge of a subject. | [noun] A small number or amount of something. | [verb] To talk superficially; to babble, chatter. SMEARCASES (14) SMELTERIES (12) SMIERCASES (14) SMITHERIES (15) SMOKEHOUSE (19) [noun] A structure used to smoke food to preserve it and to add flavor. | [noun] A structure in which freshly harvested tobacco is cured or preserved by smoking. SMOKEJACKS (29) SMOKESTACK (22) [noun] A conduit or group of conduits atop a structure allowing smoke to flow out. SMOLDERING (14) [verb] To burn with no flame and little smoke. | [verb] To show signs of repressed anger or suppressed mental turmoil or other strong emotion, such as passion. | [verb] To exist in a suppressed or hidden state. SMOOTHBORE (17) [noun] A cannon, gun or other firearm that has an unrifled barrel. | [adjective] Having a bore with a smooth interior, ie. one that has not been rifled SMOOTHENED (16) [verb] To make smooth. | [verb] To become smooth. SMOOTHNESS (15) [noun] The condition of being smooth; the degree or measure of said condition. | [noun] (of a function) The highest order of derivative (the differentiability class) over a given domain. | [noun] (approximation theory, numerical analysis, of a function) The quantity measured by the modulus of smoothness. SMOTHERING (16) [verb] To suffocate; stifle; obstruct, more or less completely, the respiration of something or someone. | [verb] To extinguish or deaden, as fire, by covering, overlaying, or otherwise excluding the air. | [verb] To reduce to a low degree of vigor or activity; suppress or do away with; extinguish SMOULDERED (14) [verb] To burn with no flame and little smoke. | [verb] To show signs of repressed anger or suppressed mental turmoil or other strong emotion, such as passion. | [verb] To exist in a suppressed or hidden state. SMUDGINESS (14) SMUGNESSES (13) SMUTCHIEST (17) SMUTTINESS (12) SNOWMAKERS (19) SNOWMAKING (20) SNOWMOBILE (17) [noun] A vehicle with skis at the front and a caterpillar track at the rear, used for travelling over snow, sometimes as sport | [verb] To ride or race in a snowmobile. SNOWSTORMS (15) [noun] Bad weather involving blowing winds and snow, or blowing winds and heavy snowfall amount. | [noun] A snow globe. SOCIALISMS (14) SOCIOGRAMS (15) SOCIOMETRY (17) [noun] The quantitative study of social interactions, and the measurement of preferences etc. SODOMIZING (23) [verb] To perform anal or oral sex upon a person, especially if against his or her will. | [verb] To perform sexual intercourse with an animal. SOLACEMENT (14) SOLEMNIZED (22) [verb] To make solemn, or official, through ceremony or legal act. | [verb] To make grave, serious, and reverential. SOLEMNIZES (21) [verb] To make solemn, or official, through ceremony or legal act. | [verb] To make grave, serious, and reverential. SOLEMNNESS (12) SOLIDARISM (13) SOLIPSISMS (14) SOMATOLOGY (16) SOMATOTYPE (17) [noun] A body build. | [noun] A type of physique, especially one of the types defined by Sheldon: ectomorphic, endomorphic, mesomorphic. | [verb] To classify (a person) by physical build. SOMBERNESS (14) SOMEBODIES (15) [noun] A recognised or important person, a celebrity. SOMERSAULT (12) [noun] Starting on one's feet, an instance of rotating one's body 360 degree while airborne or on the ground, with one's feet going over one's head. | [verb] To perform a somersault. SOMERSETED (13) SOMEWHERES (18) SOMMELIERS (14) [noun] The member of staff at a restaurant who keeps the wine cellar and advises the guests on a choice of wines; a wine steward / stewardess, a wine waiter / waitress / server. SOMNOLENCE (14) SONGSMITHS (16) [noun] A writer of songs. SOPHOMORES (17) [noun] A second-year undergraduate student in a college or university, or a second-year student in a four-year secondary school or high school. | [noun] A three-year-old horse. SOPHOMORIC (19) [adjective] Of, relating to, or characteristic of a sophomore | [adjective] Conceited and overconfident of knowledge but poorly informed and immature | [adjective] Pretentious; inflated in style or manner SOVIETISMS (15) SPEARMINTS (14) SPECIALISM (16) [noun] Speciality. | [noun] The concentration of one's efforts upon a particular field of study. SPECIESISM (16) [noun] An ethical stance that assigns different worth or rights to beings on the basis of their species membership, such as assigning greater rights to human beings than to other animals. SPERMACETI (16) [noun] A wax obtained from the head of sperm whales and used to make cosmetics etc. SPERMARIES (14) SPERMATIAL (14) SPERMATIDS (15) [noun] A haploid cell, produced by meiosis of a spermatocyte, that develops into a spermatozoon SPERMATIUM (16) SPERMICIDE (17) [noun] A substance used for killing sperm. SPHYGMUSES (21) SPIRITISMS (14) SPIROMETER (14) [noun] An instrument for measuring the air capacity of the lungs. SPIROMETRY (17) SPODUMENES (15) SPOONERISM (14) [noun] A play on words on a phrase in which the initial (usually consonantal) sounds of two or more of the main words are transposed. SPORANGIUM (15) [noun] A case, capsule, or container in which spores are produced by an organism. SPRINGTIME (15) [noun] The season of spring, between winter and summer. SPYMASTERS (17) [noun] The leader of a group of spies. SQUAMATION (21) SQUAMOSALS (21) [noun] The platelike part of the temporal bone SQUAMULOSE (21) SQUIRMIEST (21) STABLEMATE (14) [noun] One (such as a racehorse) from the same stable. | [noun] One from the same organization or background. STALAGMITE (13) [noun] A secondary mineral deposit of calcium carbonate or other mineral, in shapes similar to icicles, that lie on the ground of a cave. STALEMATED (13) [verb] To bring about a state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves. | [verb] To bring about a stalemate, in which no advance in an argument is achieved. STALEMATES (12) [noun] The state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves, resulting in a draw. | [noun] Any situation that has no obvious possible movement, but does not involve any personal loss. | [verb] To bring about a state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves. STAMINODIA (13) STAMMERERS (14) STAMMERING (15) [verb] To keep repeating a particular sound involuntarily during speech. | [verb] To utter with a stammer, or with timid hesitancy. | [noun] The act of one who stammers. STAMPEDERS (15) STAMPEDING (16) [verb] To run away in a panic; said of cattle, horses, etc., also of armies. | [verb] To disperse by causing sudden fright, as a herd or drove of animals. | [verb] (of people) To move rapidly in a mass. STATEMENTS (12) [noun] A declaration or remark. | [noun] A presentation of opinion or position. | [noun] A document that summarizes financial activity. STATEROOMS (12) [noun] An apartment in a palace or great house for use on ceremonial occasions. | [noun] A superior cabin for a ship's officer or captain. | [noun] A private cabin in a ship or train. STEAMBOATS (14) [noun] A boat or vessel propelled by steam power. | [noun] Hot pot (Chinese dish). STEAMERING (13) STEAMINESS (12) STEAMROLLS (12) [verb] To flatten, as if with a steamroller. | [verb] To ruthlessly crush or overwhelm. STEAMSHIPS (17) [noun] A ship or vessel propelled by steam power. STEELMAKER (16) STEMMERIES (14) STENOTHERM (15) STEPFAMILY (20) [noun] Any family having one or more stepchildren or stepparents. | [noun] The family of one's stepfather or stepmother; those immediate family members not related by blood. STEPMOTHER (17) [noun] The wife of one's biological father, other than one's biological mother. | [noun] A viola, especially Viola tricolor, heartsease. STEREOGRAM (13) [noun] An early stereophonic music centre containing a gramophone and radio, and often storage space for records | [noun] A stereoscopic image; a stereograph STERIGMATA (13) [noun] A thin projection of the basidium in those fungi that bear a basidiospore STIGMATICS (15) [noun] One who has been branded as punishment. | [noun] One who has been marked or deformed by nature. | [noun] One who displays stigmata, the five wounds of Christ. STIGMATIST (13) [noun] A person whose body is marked by stigmata; a stigmatic STIGMATIZE (22) [verb] To characterize as disgraceful or ignominious; to mark with a stigma or stigmata. STILLROOMS (12) [noun] A room containing a still (for distillation). | [noun] A pantry adjoining a kitchen where drinks etc were stored or prepared. STIMULANTS (12) [noun] A substance that acts to increase physiological or nervous activity in the body. | [noun] Something that promotes activity, interest, or enthusiasm. STIMULATED (13) [verb] To encourage into action. | [verb] To arouse an organism to functional activity. | [adjective] In a condition or state of stimulation. STIMULATES (12) [verb] To encourage into action. | [verb] To arouse an organism to functional activity. STIMULATOR (12) [noun] A person, device or substance that stimulates. STOCKROOMS (18) [noun] A room where a store keeps its stock of merchandise. STOMACHERS (17) [noun] A type of men's waistcoat. | [noun] An ornamental cloth, often embellished with embroidery or jewelry, worn over the chest by women beneath their bodices or by men and women as the central part of an open shirt, blouse, or jacket. | [noun] A blow to the stomach. STOMACHICS (19) [noun] A medicine for the stomach. STOMACHING (18) [verb] To tolerate (something), emotionally, physically, or mentally; to stand or handle something. | [verb] To be angry. | [verb] To resent; to remember with anger; to dislike. STOMATITIS (12) [noun] An inflammation of parts of the mucous membrane that lines the mouth. STOMATOPOD (15) STOMODAEAL (13) STOMODAEUM (15) STOMODEUMS (15) STONEMASON (12) [noun] One who works in stone STOREROOMS (12) [noun] A room used for storage. STORMBOUND (15) [adjective] (of a ship) Caught in a storm, so that proper navigation is impossible. STORMINESS (12) STRABISMIC (16) STRABISMUS (14) [noun] A defect of vision in which one eye cannot focus with the other on an object because of imbalance of the eye muscles; a squint. STRAMASHES (15) [verb] A noise, an uproar, a disturbance | [verb] To strike, beat, or bang; to break; to destroy. STRAMONIES (12) STRAMONIUM (14) [noun] The jimsonweed plant | [noun] A narcotic drug obtained from the dried leaves of this plant. STRATAGEMS (13) [noun] A tactic or artifice designed to gain the upper hand, especially one involving underhanded dealings or deception. STRATIFORM (15) [adjective] Occurring in layers | [adjective] Descriptive of rocks with extensive horizontal development | [adjective] Descriptive of clouds with extensive horizontal development STREAMBEDS (15) STREAMIEST (12) STREAMINGS (13) [noun] Movement as a stream. | [noun] The transmission of digital audio or video, or the reception or playback of such data without first storing it. | [noun] Division of classes into academic streams. STREAMLETS (12) [noun] A small stream. STREAMLINE (12) [noun] A line that is tangent to the velocity of flow of a fluid; equivalent to the path of a specific particle in that flow. | [noun] On a weather chart, a line that is tangent to the flow of the wind. | [verb] To design and construct the contours of a vehicle etc. so as to offer the least resistance to its flow through a fluid. STREAMSIDE (13) STREETLAMP (14) [noun] A lamp that illuminates a street or sidewalk. STREWMENTS (15) STRONTIUMS (12) STUMBLEBUM (18) [noun] A blundering or awkward person. | [noun] An inept prizefighter. | [noun] A homeless person. STUNTWOMAN (15) [noun] A woman who performs stunts. STUNTWOMEN (15) [noun] A woman who performs stunts. SUBCOMPACT (20) [noun] Something that is smaller than the compact version, especially a very small car. SUBECONOMY (19) SUBKINGDOM (20) [noun] A taxonomic category below kingdom and above superphylum. | [noun] A kingdom that is part of another kingdom, ruled by a subking. SUBLIMABLE (16) SUBLIMATED (15) [verb] To change state from a solid to a gas without passing through the liquid state. | [verb] To purify or refine a substance through such a change of state. | [verb] To modify the natural expression of a sexual or primitive instinct in a socially acceptable manner; to divert the energy of such an instinct into some acceptable activity. SUBLIMATES (14) [noun] A product obtained by sublimation. | [verb] To change state from a solid to a gas without passing through the liquid state. | [verb] To purify or refine a substance through such a change of state. SUBLIMINAL (14) [adjective] (of a stimulus) Below the threshold of conscious perception, especially if still able to produce a response. SUBMANAGER (15) SUBMARINED (15) SUBMARINER (14) SUBMARINES (14) [noun] A boat that can go underwater. | [noun] A kind of sandwich made in a long loaf of bread. | [noun] Pitch delivered with an underhand motion. SUBMARKETS (18) SUBMAXIMAL (23) SUBMEDIANT (15) [noun] The sixth note of a scale, shown as VI. SUBMERGING (16) [verb] To sink out of sight. | [verb] To put into a liquid; to immerse; to plunge into and keep in. | [verb] To be engulfed in or overwhelmed by something. SUBMERSING (15) [verb] To submerge. SUBMERSION (14) [noun] The act of submerging, or the state of being submerged; immersion | [noun] A differentiable map whose differential is everywhere surjective. SUBMINIMAL (16) SUBMISSION (14) [noun] The act of submitting or yielding; surrender. | [noun] The act of submitting or giving e.g. a completed piece of work. | [noun] The thing which has been submitted. | [noun] A subset or component of a mission. SUBMISSIVE (17) [noun] (BDSM) One who submits to a dominant partner in sexual practices. | [noun] One who submits. | [adjective] Meekly obedient or passive. SUBMITTALS (14) SUBMITTING (15) [verb] To yield or give way to another. | [verb] To yield (something) to another, as when defeated. | [verb] To enter or put forward for approval, consideration, marking etc. SUBMUCOSAE (16) [noun] A layer of connective tissue beneath a mucous membrane SUBMUCOSAL (16) SUBMUCOSAS (16) SUBOPTIMAL (16) [adjective] Worse than optimal. SUBOPTIMUM (18) SUBPRIMATE (16) SUBPROBLEM (18) SUBPROGRAM (17) [noun] A program contained within a larger program SUBSAMPLED (17) [adjective] Divided into subsamples SUBSAMPLES (16) [noun] A smaller portion of an original sample, created by trimming, subdividing, splitting or discrete collection of the original sample. | [noun] A portion of the original sample that is representative in nature to that of the original sample, thereby assuring equivalency in results from tests and analysis either upon the subsample or the original material, independent of their size. SUBSEGMENT (15) SUBSTRATUM (14) [noun] A layer that lies underneath another. | [noun] The underlying cause or basis of something. | [noun] A substrate. SUBSUMABLE (16) SUBSYSTEMS (17) [noun] A group of related components that are part of a larger system. SUCCUMBING (19) [verb] To yield to an overpowering force or overwhelming desire. | [verb] To give up, or give in. | [verb] To die. SUDATORIUM (13) [noun] A hot room used to induce sweating, steam room, steam bath, sauna. SUGARPLUMS (15) [noun] A round or oval sweet/piece of candy made of boiled sugar. | [noun] A piece of flattery. | [noun] Term of endearment: sweetheart, darling. SULFONIUMS (15) SUMMARISED (15) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMARISES (14) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMARIZED (24) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMARIZER (23) SUMMARIZES (23) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMATIONS (14) [noun] A summarization. | [noun] An adding up of a series of items. SUMMERIEST (14) SUMMERLIKE (18) SUMMERLONG (15) SUMMERTIME (16) [noun] The period or season of summer. SUMMERWOOD (18) SUMMITEERS (14) [noun] Someone who reaches a summit. | [noun] A mountain climber. | [noun] Someone who attends a conference denoted as a summit. SUMMITRIES (14) SUMMONABLE (16) SUMMONSING (15) [verb] To serve someone with a summons. SUPERBOMBS (18) SUPERFARMS (17) SUPERFIRMS (17) SUPERHUMAN (17) [noun] A human being with remarkable abilities or superpowers. | [adjective] Beyond what is possible for a human being. SUPERJUMBO (23) SUPERMACHO (19) SUPERMALES (14) SUPERMICRO (16) SUPERMINDS (15) SUPERMINIS (14) [noun] A small motor car, especially a hatchback, which is powerful for its size or class | [noun] A superminicomputer SUPERMODEL (15) [noun] A highly paid, famous fashion model. SUPERPIMPS (18) SUPERSMART (14) SUPERWOMAN (17) [noun] A woman who looks after a home and children as well as being employed in a full-time job. | [noun] A woman with superhuman powers. SUPERWOMEN (17) [noun] A woman who looks after a home and children as well as being employed in a full-time job. | [noun] A woman with superhuman powers. SUPPLEMENT (16) [noun] Something added, especially to make up for a deficiency. | [noun] An extension to a document or publication that adds information, corrects errors or brings up to date. | [noun] An additional section of a newspaper devoted to a specific subject. SURMOUNTED (13) [verb] To get over; to overcome. | [verb] To cap; to sit on top off. | [adjective] Of an arch or dome: rising higher than a semicircle. SURREALISM (12) [noun] An artistic movement and an aesthetic philosophy that aims for the liberation of the mind by emphasizing the critical and imaginative powers of the subconscious. SWAMPINESS (17) SWAMPLANDS (18) [noun] Low-lying land that is regularly flooded; especially such land that is drier than a bog or a marsh. | [noun] The set of all possible string theories. SWEETMEATS (15) [noun] A sweet delicacy; a confection SWIMMERETS (17) [noun] In decapods such as lobsters, one of the legs primarily used for swimming but also used for brooding the eggs (except in prawns) and catching food. SWIMMINGLY (21) [adverb] With a gliding motion suggesting swimming. | [adverb] In a very favourable manner; without difficulty; agreeably, successfully. SYBARITISM (17) SYLLOGISMS (16) [noun] An argument whose conclusion is supported by two premises, of which one contains the term that is the predicate of the conclusion, and the other contains the term that is the subject of the conclusion; common to both premises is a term that is excluded from the conclusion. | [noun] A trick, artifice; an extremely subtle, sophisticated, or deceptive argument; a sophism. SYMBOLICAL (19) SYMBOLISED (18) [verb] To be symbolic of; to represent. | [verb] To use symbols; to represent ideas symbolically. | [verb] To resemble each other in qualities or properties; to correspond; to harmonize. SYMBOLISES (17) [verb] To be symbolic of; to represent. | [verb] To use symbols; to represent ideas symbolically. | [verb] To resemble each other in qualities or properties; to correspond; to harmonize. SYMBOLISMS (19) SYMBOLISTS (17) SYMBOLIZED (27) [verb] To be symbolic of; to represent. | [verb] To use symbols; to represent ideas symbolically. | [verb] To resemble each other in qualities or properties; to correspond; to harmonize. SYMBOLIZER (26) SYMBOLIZES (26) [verb] To be symbolic of; to represent. | [verb] To use symbols; to represent ideas symbolically. | [verb] To resemble each other in qualities or properties; to correspond; to harmonize. SYMBOLLING (18) [verb] To symbolize. SYMMETRIES (17) [noun] Exact correspondence on either side of a dividing line, plane, center or axis. | [noun] The satisfying arrangement of a balanced distribution of the elements of a whole. SYMMETRIZE (26) SYMPATHIES (20) [noun] A feeling of pity or sorrow for the suffering or distress of another; compassion. | [noun] The ability to share the feelings of another. | [noun] A mutual relationship between people or things such that they are correspondingly affected by any condition. SYMPATHINS (20) SYMPATHISE (20) [verb] To have, show or express sympathy; to be affected by feelings similar to those of another, in consequence of knowing the person to be thus affected. | [verb] To support, favour, have sympathy (with a political cause or movement, a side in a conflict / in an action). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. SYMPATHIZE (29) [verb] To have, show or express sympathy; to be affected by feelings similar to those of another, in consequence of knowing the person to be thus affected. | [verb] To support, favour, have sympathy (with a political cause or movement, a side in a conflict / in an action). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. SYMPATRIES (17) SYMPHONIES (20) [noun] An extended piece of music of sophisticated structure, usually for orchestra. | [noun] An instrumental introduction or termination to a vocal composition. | [noun] Harmony in music or colour, or a harmonious combination of elements. SYMPHONIST (20) [noun] A composer of symphonies SYMPHYSEAL (23) SYMPHYSIAL (23) SYMPOSIAST (17) [noun] One engaged with others at a banquet or merrymaking. | [noun] A participant in a symposium. SYMPOSIUMS (19) [noun] A conference or other meeting for discussion of a topic, especially one in which the participants make presentations. | [noun] A drinking party in Ancient Greece, especially one with intellectual discussion. SYNCRETISM (17) [noun] The (attempted) reconciliation or fusion of different systems or beliefs. | [noun] The fusion of different inflexional forms. SYNERGISMS (16) [noun] Synergy | [noun] The theological doctrine that salvation is brought about by a combination of human will and divine grace SYNONYMIES (18) [noun] The quality of being synonymous; sameness of meaning. | [noun] A list or collection of synonyms, often compared and contrasted. | [noun] The study of synonyms. SYNONYMIST (18) SYNONYMITY (21) SYNONYMIZE (27) SYNONYMOUS (18) [adjective] (construed with with, narrower sense) having an identical meaning | [adjective] (construed with with, broader sense) having a similar meaning | [adjective] (construed with with) of, or being a synonym SYNTAGMATA (16) [noun] A constituent segment within a text, such as a word or a phrase that forms a syntactic unit. | [noun] An arrangement of units that together bears a meaning. | [noun] (history) A Macedonian phalanx fighting formation consisting of 256 men with long spears (sarissae). SYSTEMATIC (17) [adjective] Carried out using a planned, ordered procedure. | [adjective] Methodical, regular and orderly. | [adjective] Of, or relating to taxonomic classification. SYSTEMIZED (25) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. | [verb] To engage in a cognitive process described as the drive to analyze and construct systems. SYSTEMIZES (24) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. | [verb] To engage in a cognitive process described as the drive to analyze and construct systems. SYSTEMLESS (15) TABLEMATES (14) [noun] Someone with whom one shares a table. TACAMAHACS (19) [noun] A bitter balsamic resin or resinous exudation obtained from tropical American trees of the family Burseraceae (Bursera tomentosa and Icica tacamahaca), from East Indian trees of the genus Calophyllum or from the balsam poplar (Populus balsamifera). | [noun] Any tree yielding tacamahac resin, especially, in North America, the balsam poplar or balm of Gilead (Populus balsamifera). TACHOMETER (17) [noun] A device for measuring the revolutions per minute (RPMs) of a revolving shaft, as with the driveshaft of an automobile. | [noun] A device for measuring or indicating velocity or speed, as of blood, a river, a machine, etc. TALISMANIC (14) [adjective] Of, relating to, or like, a talisman. | [adjective] Possessing or believed to possess protective magical power. TALMUDISMS (15) TAMARILLOS (12) [noun] A small tree or shrub (Solanum betaceum syn. Cyphomandra betacea) which bears edible fruits. | [noun] A fruit of that tree. TAMBOURERS (14) TAMBOURINE (14) [noun] A percussion instrument consisting of a small, usually wooden, hoop closed on one side with a drum frame and featuring jingling metal disks on the tread; it is most often held in the hand and shaken rhythmically; by extension, any frame drum. | [noun] A tambourine dove. | [noun] A kind of Provençal dance. TAMBOURING (15) TAMENESSES (12) TAMOXIFENS (22) TANGLEMENT (13) TANTAMOUNT (12) [noun] Something which has the same value or amount (as something else). (attributive use passing into adjective, below) | [verb] To amount to as much; to be equivalent. | [adjective] Equivalent in meaning or effect; amounting to the same thing in practical terms, even if being technically distinct. TAPHONOMIC (19) TARANTISMS (12) TARMACADAM (17) [noun] A mixture of tar and small stones used in paving. | [verb] To cover or surface with tarmacadam. TASKMASTER (16) [noun] Someone who supervises workers, especially one who imposes hard or burdensome work. | [noun] A source of hard work or responsibility. TASTEMAKER (16) [noun] A trendsetter with respect to taste. TAUTOMERIC (14) TAXIDERMIC (22) TAXIMETERS (19) [noun] A device installed in a taxicab that calculates the fare based upon distance travelled and waiting time. TAXONOMIES (19) [noun] The science or the technique used to make a classification. | [noun] A classification; especially, a classification in a hierarchical system. | [noun] The science of finding, describing, classifying and naming organisms. TAXONOMIST (19) TECHNETIUM (17) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Tc) with an atomic number of 43. TECTONISMS (14) TELEMETERS (12) [noun] Any measuring device used in telemetry. | [noun] A device used for rangefinding, especially of military targets. TELEMETRIC (14) TELEONOMIC (14) TELLURIUMS (12) TEMERITIES (12) TEMPERABLE (16) TEMPERANCE (16) [noun] Habitual moderation in regard to the indulgence of the natural appetites and passions; restrained or moderate indulgence | [noun] Moderation, and sometimes abstinence, in respect to using intoxicating liquors. | [noun] Moderation of passion TEMPESTING (15) TEMPORALLY (17) [adverb] In a temporal manner. TEMPORISED (15) [verb] To deliberately act evasively or prolong a discussion in order to gain time or postpone a decision, sometimes in order to reach a compromise or simply to make a conversation more temperate; to stall for time. | [verb] To apply a temporary piece of dental work that will later be removed. | [verb] To comply with the time or occasion; to humor, or yield to, the current of opinion or circumstances; also, to trim, as between two parties. TEMPORISES (14) [verb] To deliberately act evasively or prolong a discussion in order to gain time or postpone a decision, sometimes in order to reach a compromise or simply to make a conversation more temperate; to stall for time. | [verb] To apply a temporary piece of dental work that will later be removed. | [verb] To comply with the time or occasion; to humor, or yield to, the current of opinion or circumstances; also, to trim, as between two parties. TEMPORIZED (24) [verb] To deliberately act evasively or prolong a discussion in order to gain time or postpone a decision, sometimes in order to reach a compromise or simply to make a conversation more temperate; to stall for time. | [verb] To apply a temporary piece of dental work that will later be removed. | [verb] To comply with the time or occasion; to humor, or yield to, the current of opinion or circumstances; also, to trim, as between two parties. TEMPORIZER (23) TEMPORIZES (23) [verb] To deliberately act evasively or prolong a discussion in order to gain time or postpone a decision, sometimes in order to reach a compromise or simply to make a conversation more temperate; to stall for time. | [verb] To apply a temporary piece of dental work that will later be removed. | [verb] To comply with the time or occasion; to humor, or yield to, the current of opinion or circumstances; also, to trim, as between two parties. TEMPTATION (14) [noun] The act of tempting | [noun] The condition of being tempted. | [noun] Something attractive, tempting or seductive; an inducement or enticement. TEMPTINGLY (18) TENACULUMS (14) TENEBRISMS (14) TENESMUSES (12) TENOTOMIES (12) [noun] The surgical procedure of cutting, or making an incision in, a tendon TERATOMATA (12) [noun] A benign or malignant tumour, especially of the gonads, that arises from germ cells and consists of different types of tissue such as skin, hair, or muscle. TERMAGANTS (13) [noun] A quarrelsome, scolding woman, especially one who is old and shrewish. | [noun] A boisterous, brawling, turbulent person, whether male or female. TERMINABLE (14) [adjective] Having an ending; finite. TERMINABLY (17) TERMINALLY (15) [adverb] In a terminal manner. | [adverb] Leading to death; lasting until death. | [adverb] (of missile guidance) To the target. TERMINATED (13) [verb] To end, especially in an incomplete state. | [verb] To set or be a limit or boundary to. | [verb] To kill. TERMINATES (12) [verb] To end, especially in an incomplete state. | [verb] To set or be a limit or boundary to. | [verb] To kill. TERMINATOR (12) [noun] Someone who terminates or ends something, especially (in later use) an assassin or exterminator. | [noun] The line between the day side and the night side of a moon, planet or other celestial body. | [noun] A DNA sequence which causes RNA transcription to cease and an mRNA transcript to break off. TERMINUSES (12) [noun] The end or final point of something. | [noun] The end point of a transportation system, or the town or city in which it is located. | [noun] A boundary or border, or a post or stone marking such a boundary. TERMITARIA (12) [noun] A termite colony. TERPOLYMER (17) [noun] A copolymer derived from three species of monomer. TERRARIUMS (12) [noun] An enclosure wherein very small animals are displayed humanely, often with some plants, in a naturalistic setting. | [noun] A partially enclosed glass container for displaying plants, especially plants that need high humidity. TERRORISMS (12) TESTAMENTS (12) [noun] A solemn, authentic instrument in writing, by which a person declares his or her will as to disposal of his or her inheritance (estate and effects) after his or her death, benefiting specified heir(s). | [noun] One of the two parts to the scriptures of the Christian religion: the New Testament, considered by Christians to be a continuation of the Hebrew scriptures, and the Hebrew scriptures themselves, which they refer to as the Old Testament. | [noun] A tangible proof or tribute. TETRAMERIC (14) TETRAMETER (12) [noun] A line in a poem having four metrical feet. | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has four feet. THEMSELVES (18) [pronoun] The reflexive case of they, the third-person plural personal pronoun. The group of people, animals or objects previously mentioned, as the object of a verb or following a preposition (also used for emphasis). | [pronoun] The reflexive case of they, the third-person singular personal pronoun. The single person previously mentioned, as the object of a verb or following a preposition (also used for emphasis). THEONOMIES (15) THEONOMOUS (15) THERMALIZE (24) [verb] To lower the velocity and kinetic energy of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor by use of a moderator, and thus increase the efficiency of fission THERMIONIC (17) [adjective] Concerning the emission of electrons from a heated electrode. THERMISTOR (15) [noun] A resistor whose resistance varies rapidly and predictably with temperature and as a result can be used to measure temperature. THERMOFORM (20) THERMOGRAM (18) [noun] The graphical record produced during thermography; a temperature map of the surface of a body THERMOPILE (17) [noun] An electronic device that converts thermal energy into electrical energy. Usually constructed using a series-combination of thermocouples THERMOSETS (15) THERMOSTAT (15) [noun] A device that automatically responds to changes in temperature by activating a heating or cooling system to maintain the temperature at a desired setting. THIAMINASE (15) THIMBLEFUL (20) [noun] As much as a thimble will hold. | [noun] (by extension) A small amount of liquid, especially alcoholic spirits. THIMBLERIG (18) [noun] A game of skill which requires the bettor to guess under which of three small cups (or thimbles) a pea-sized object has been placed after the party operating the game rapidly rearranges them, providing opportunity for sleight-of-hand trickery; a shell game. | [noun] One operating such a game. | [verb] To cheat in the thimblerig game. THIMEROSAL (15) THRALLDOMS (16) THREADWORM (19) [noun] A parasitic roundworm, Strongyloides stercoralis, which causes strongyloidiasis. | [noun] The pinworm. THREESOMES (15) [noun] A group of three people or things. | [noun] An instance of sexual activity involving three people. THROMBOSES (17) [verb] To affect with, or be affected by, thrombosis. | [noun] The formation of thrombi in the blood vessels of a living organism, causing obstruction of the circulation. THROMBOSIS (17) [noun] The formation of thrombi in the blood vessels of a living organism, causing obstruction of the circulation. THROMBOTIC (19) THRUMMIEST (17) THUMBHOLES (20) THUMBNAILS (17) [noun] The fingernail on the thumb. | [noun] A rough sketch (e.g., the size of one's thumbnail). | [noun] A small picture, used as a compact representation of a larger image. THUMBPRINT (19) [noun] A print, mark or impression made by a thumb. THUMBSCREW (22) [noun] A screw that can be turned with the thumb and fingers. | [noun] An instrument of torture used to crush the fingers. | [noun] A weakness that can be taken advantage of. THUMBTACKS (23) [noun] A small nail-like tack with a slightly rounded head that can be pressed into place with light pressure from the thumb; used for hanging light articles on a wall or noticeboard. THUMBWHEEL (23) [noun] A small thumb or finger-operated wheel on a mechanical or electronic device. THYMECTOMY (25) [noun] The surgical removal of the thymus THYMIDINES (19) THYMOCYTES (23) [noun] A lymphocyte, produced in the thymus, that develops into a T cell TIEMANNITE (12) TILTMETERS (12) TIMBERHEAD (18) TIMBERINGS (15) TIMBERLAND (15) [noun] Forested land thought of in terms of its potential and value as timber. TIMBERLINE (14) [noun] The height or limit beyond which trees do not grow in mountainous or Arctic regions. TIMBERWORK (21) TIMBRELLED (15) TIMEKEEPER (18) [noun] A device that shows the time; a timepiece. | [noun] A person who keeps records of the hours of attendance of employees. | [noun] A person who records the time elapsed in a sporting event. TIMELESSLY (15) TIMELINESS (12) [noun] The state of being timely. TIMEPIECES (16) [noun] Any device that measures or registers time; a clock or watch, especially one lacking a chime or other striking mechanism. TIMESAVING (16) [adjective] That saves time, especially by using a shorter route or a more efficient method | [adjective] Prompt or expeditious TIMESCALES (14) [noun] A series of events used as a rough measure of duration. TIMESERVER (15) [noun] Someone who honours their commitments only when it is personally easy to do so. | [noun] A person who conforms to current opinions, especially for reasons of personal advantage; an opportunist. | [noun] Someone who performs a job for the required time only, making a minimum of effort. TIMETABLES (14) [noun] A tabular schedule of events with the times at which they occur, especially times of arrivals and departures TIMEWORKER (19) TIMIDITIES (13) TIMOCRATIC (16) TIMOROUSLY (15) TIMPANISTS (14) TIRESOMELY (15) TOILSOMELY (15) TOMAHAWKED (23) [verb] To strike with a tomahawk. | [adjective] Carrying or bearing a tomahawk. TOMATILLOS (12) [noun] A plant of the nightshade family originating in Mexico, Physalis philadelphica, cultivated for its tomato-like green to green-purple fruit surrounded by a thin papery skin. TOMBSTONES (14) [noun] A headstone marking a person's grave. | [noun] The symbol "∎" marking the end of a proof. | [noun] A marker that takes the place of deleted data, allowing for replication of the deletion across servers etc. TOMCATTING (15) [verb] To prowl for sexual gratification. TOMFOOLERY (18) [noun] Foolish behaviour or speech. | [noun] Jewellery. TOMOGRAPHY (21) [noun] Imaging by sections or sectioning. TONOMETERS (12) [noun] An instrument used to measure tension or pressure, especially inside the eye. TOOLMAKERS (16) [noun] A skilled machinist who makes and repairs tools. TOOLMAKING (17) TOPMINNOWS (17) [noun] Any of the ray-finned fish in the taxonomic family Fundulidae. TOPONYMIES (17) TOPONYMIST (17) TORMENTERS (12) TORMENTILS (12) [noun] A low-growing herb (Potentilla erecta, syn. Potentilla tormentilla). TORMENTING (13) [verb] To cause severe suffering to (stronger than to vex but weaker than to torture.) | [noun] The act by which somebody is tormented. | [adjective] Involving or causing torment. TORMENTORS (12) [noun] One who torments; a person, animal, or object that causes suffering. | [noun] Something abstract that causes suffering. | [noun] One of a pair of narrow curtains just behind the front curtain and teaser that mask the areas on the sides of the stage and can be adjusted to the desired width. TOTEMISTIC (14) TOUCHMARKS (21) TOURMALINE (12) [noun] A complex black or dark-coloured borosilicate mineral, compounded with various chemical elements and considered a semi-precious stone. | [noun] A transparent gemstone cut from it. TOURNAMENT (12) [noun] During the Middle Ages, a series of battles and other contests designed to prepare knights for war. | [noun] A series of games; either the same game played many times, or a succession of games related by a single theme; played competitively to determine a single winning team or individual. | [noun] A digraph obtained by assigning a direction to each edge in an undirected complete graph. TOWNSWOMAN (18) [noun] A woman who is a resident of a town, especially of one's own town. TOWNSWOMEN (18) [noun] A woman who is a resident of a town, especially of one's own town. TOXOPLASMA (21) [noun] Any member of the genus Toxoplasma of parasitic sporozoans. TRADEMARKS (17) [noun] A word, symbol, or phrase used to identify a particular company's product and differentiate it from other companies' products. | [noun] Any proprietary business, product or service name. | [noun] The aspect for which someone or something is best known; a hallmark or typical characteristic. TRAGICOMIC (17) TRAMELLING (13) TRAMMELING (15) [verb] To entangle, as in a net. | [verb] To confine; to hamper; to shackle. | [noun] A hindrance or impediment. TRAMMELLED (15) [verb] To entangle, as in a net. | [verb] To confine; to hamper; to shackle. TRAMONTANE (12) [noun] A dry, cold north wind in Italy and adjacent Mediterranean areas. | [noun] One living beyond the mountains; a foreigner; a stranger. | [adjective] From the far side of the mountains (especially from North of the Alps) TRAMPOLINE (14) [noun] A gymnastic and recreational device consisting of a piece of taut, strong fabric stretched over a steel frame using many coiled springs as anchors. | [noun] Any of a variety of looping or jumping instructions in specific programming languages | [verb] To jump as if on a trampoline. TRANSFORMS (15) [noun] An operation (often an integration) that converts one function into another. | [noun] A function so produced. | [verb] To change greatly the appearance or form of. TRANSMUTED (13) [verb] To change, transform or convert one thing to another, or from one state or form to another. TRANSMUTES (12) [verb] To change, transform or convert one thing to another, or from one state or form to another. TRAUMATISE (12) [verb] To injure, e.g. tissues, by force or by thermal, chemical or other agents. | [verb] To cause a trauma in. TRAUMATISM (14) [noun] A physical or mental injury that is the result of trauma TRAUMATIZE (21) [verb] To injure, e.g. tissues, by force or by thermal, chemical or other agents. | [verb] To cause a trauma in. TRAWLERMAN (15) TRAWLERMEN (15) TREADMILLS (13) [noun] A piece of indoor sporting equipment used to allow for the motions of running or walking while staying in one place. | [noun] A mill worked by persons treading upon steps on the periphery of a wide wheel having a horizontal axis. It is used principally as a means of prison discipline. | [noun] A mill worked by horses, dogs, etc., treading an endless belt. TREATMENTS (12) [noun] The process or manner of treating someone or something. | [noun] Medical care for an illness or injury. | [noun] The use of a substance or process to preserve or give particular properties to something. TREMATODES (13) [noun] A parasitic flatworm of the class Trematoda. TREMBLIEST (14) [adjective] In a trembling or shaking state TREMENDOUS (13) [adjective] Awe-inspiring; terrific. | [adjective] Notable for its size, power, or excellence. | [adjective] Extremely large (in amount, extent, degree, etc.) or great TREMOLITES (12) [noun] A pale grey/green amphibole mineral, a type of asbestos, that is a mixed calcium and magnesium silicate, with the chemical formula Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2; sometimes used in place of common asbestos. TREMOLITIC (14) TREPONEMAL (14) TREPONEMAS (14) [noun] Any of many anaerobic spirochetes, of the genus Treponema, many of which cause infectious diseases. TREPONEMES (14) [noun] Any of the bacterium of the genus Treponema TRIBALISMS (14) TRICHOTOMY (20) [noun] Division or separation into three groups or pieces. | [noun] The property of an order relation whereby, given an ordered pair of elements (of a given algebraic structure), exactly one of these is true: the first element is 'less than' the second one, the second is 'less than' the first, or the two elements are equal. TRICHROMAT (17) TRICLINIUM (14) [noun] A couch for reclining at mealtimes, extending round three sides of a table, and usually in three parts. | [noun] A dining room furnished with such a triple couch. TRIENNIUMS (12) [noun] A period of three years. TRIFOLIUMS (15) TRIGEMINAL (13) TRIGGERMAN (14) TRIGGERMEN (14) TRIMESTERS (12) [noun] A period of three months or about three months; quarter. | [noun] One of the terms of an academic year in those learning institutions that divide their teaching in three roughly equal terms, each about three months long. Compare semester. TRIMNESSES (12) TRIMONTHLY (18) TRIMORPHIC (19) TRINOMIALS (12) [noun] An expression consisting of three terms. TRITHEISMS (15) TRIUMPHANT (17) [adjective] Celebrating victory. TRIUMPHING (18) [verb] To celebrate victory with pomp; to rejoice over success; to exult in an advantage gained; to exhibit exultation. | [verb] To prevail over rivals, challenges, or difficulties. | [verb] To succeed, win, or attain ascendancy. TROMBONIST (14) [noun] A person who plays the trombone. TRUMPERIES (14) [noun] Worthless finery; bric-a-brac or junk. | [noun] Nonsense. | [noun] Deceit; fraud. TRUMPETERS (14) [noun] Someone who plays a trumpet. | [noun] Any of three species of bird in the family Psophiidae from South America named for the trumpeting threat call of the males. | [noun] Any of a number of breeds of fancy pigeon (variety of domestic pigeon (Columba livia), originally bred for their peculiar gurgling voice, a prolonged coo called "trumpeting" or "drumming"). TRUMPETING (15) [verb] To sound loudly, be amplified | [verb] To play the trumpet. | [verb] Of an elephant, to make its cry. TRYPTAMINE (17) [noun] A heterocyclic amine found in both plant and animal tissue, where it is an intermediate in several metabolic schemes. | [noun] Any of a class of neurotransmitters and psychedelic drugs derived from this compound. TULAREMIAS (12) TUMBLEBUGS (17) [noun] A dung beetle. TUMBLEDOWN (18) [adjective] In disrepair; poorly maintained TUMBLERFUL (17) TUMBLEWEED (18) [noun] Any plant which habitually breaks away from its roots in the autumn, and is driven by the wind, as a light, rolling mass, over the fields and prairies; as witch grass, wild indigo, Amaranthus albus, etc. | [noun] Describing unwanted silence and inactivity. Often used of a situation when one makes a statement that is ignored or ill-received by one's audience, as the resultant silence is likened to that of a desolate desert with rolling tumbleweeds. | [noun] A tan colour, like that of a tumbleweed. TUMESCENCE (16) TUMIDITIES (13) TUMULTUARY (15) TUMULTUOUS (12) [adjective] Characterized by loud, confused noise. | [adjective] Causing or characterized by tumult; chaotic, disorderly, turbulent. TUNESMITHS (15) [noun] A composer of tunes. TURMOILING (13) TYMPANISTS (17) TYMPANITES (17) [noun] A distended abdomen as a result of an accumulation of gas. TYMPANITIC (19) UDOMETRIES (13) ULTIMACIES (14) ULTIMATELY (15) [adverb] Indicating the last item. | [adverb] Indicating the most important action. | [adverb] Used to indicate the etymon at which a given etymological derivation terminates. ULTIMATING (13) ULTIMATUMS (14) [noun] A final statement of terms or conditions made by one party to another, especially one that expresses a threat of reprisal or war. ULTRAHUMAN (15) ULTRAMAFIC (17) [noun] A rock with such properties. | [adjective] Describing igneous rocks that contain magnesium and iron and only a very small amount of silica, such as are found in the Earth’s mantle. ULTRAMICRO (14) ULTRASMALL (12) ULTRASMART (12) UMBELLIFER (17) [noun] Any plant of the family Apiaceae, also called Umbelliferae, whose inflorescence is an umbel, such as a carrot or celery. UMBILICALS (16) [noun] A cord connecting an astronaut to a spacecraft, or a craft to ground control prior to launch, etc. UMBILICATE (16) [adjective] Having a navel | [adjective] (of a mushroom etc.) Having a small umbo in a central depression, or a depression in the center of the cap | [adjective] Supported by a central stalk. UMBRAGEOUS (15) UMBRELLAED (15) UNACADEMIC (17) [adjective] Not academic. UNADMITTED (14) UNAMENABLE (14) [adjective] Not amenable UNASSUMING (13) [adjective] Modest and having no pretensions or ostentation UNBECOMING (17) [verb] To misbecome. | [noun] The process by which something unbecomes. | [adjective] Not flattering, attractive or appropriate. UNBOSOMING (15) [verb] To tell someone about (one's troubles), and thus obtain relief. | [verb] To free (oneself) of the burden of one's troubles by telling of them. | [verb] To confess a misdeed. UNCHARMING (18) UNCLAMPING (17) [verb] To remove a clamp from. UNCOMBINED (17) [adjective] Not combined with another UNCOMMONER (16) UNCOMMONLY (19) [adverb] To an uncommon degree; unusually or extremely. | [adverb] Not often; on rare occasions. UNCONSUMED (15) [adjective] Not consumed. UNCRUMPLED (17) [verb] To return something that has been crumpled closer to its original state. | [verb] Having been crumpled, to return closer to its original state. UNCRUMPLES (16) [verb] To return something that has been crumpled closer to its original state. | [verb] Having been crumpled, to return closer to its original state. UNDEFORMED (17) UNDERBRIMS (15) UNDERMINED (14) [verb] To dig underneath (something), to make a passage for destructive or military purposes; to sap. | [verb] To weaken or work against; to hinder, sabotage. | [verb] To erode the base or foundation of something, e.g. by the action of water. UNDERMINES (13) [verb] To dig underneath (something), to make a passage for destructive or military purposes; to sap. | [verb] To weaken or work against; to hinder, sabotage. | [verb] To erode the base or foundation of something, e.g. by the action of water. UNDERWHELM (19) [verb] To fail to impress; to perform disappointingly. UNDISMAYED (17) [adjective] Not dismayed; hopeful; calm. UNDOGMATIC (16) [adjective] Not dogmatic. UNDOMESTIC (15) UNDRAMATIC (15) [adjective] Not dramatic; lacking in dramatic action. UNECONOMIC (16) [adjective] Financially inefficient, costly, wasteful, or loss making UNEMPHATIC (19) [adjective] Not emphatic UNEMPLOYED (18) [noun] Unemployed people. | [adjective] Having no job despite being able and willing to work. | [adjective] Having no use, not doing work UNEXAMINED (20) [adjective] That which has not been examined UNEXAMPLED (22) [adjective] Lacking prior examples; unprecedented. UNFAMILIAR (15) [noun] An unfamiliar person; a stranger. | [adjective] Strange, not familiar. UNFEMININE (15) [adjective] Not feminine; not characteristic of, typical of, or appropriate for a woman. UNFOLDMENT (16) [noun] Unfolding UNFREEDOMS (16) UNGIMMICKY (24) UNHAMPERED (18) [adjective] Not hampered. UNHANDSOME (16) [adjective] Not handsome. UNHUMOROUS (15) UNICAMERAL (14) [adjective] Of, or having, a single legislative chamber. | [adjective] Of a script or typeface: making no distinction between upper and lower case, but rather having only one case. UNIFORMEST (15) UNIFORMING (16) [verb] To clothe in a uniform. UNIFORMITY (18) [noun] The state of being uniform, alike and lacking variety. | [noun] The absence of alternatives or diversity; sameness. UNIMPAIRED (15) [adjective] Not impaired. UNIMPOSING (15) [adjective] Not imposing; not grand or magnificent; modest. UNIMPROVED (18) [adjective] Not improved UNINFORMED (16) [adjective] Not informed; ignorant. | [adjective] Not imbued with life or activity. UNLAMENTED (13) [adjective] Not lamented. UNLIMBERED (15) [verb] To deploy an artillery piece for firing (ie, to detach it from its limber). | [verb] (by extension) To clumsily put into employ a large weapon or object. | [verb] To unsling something, as a backpack, carried on the body with a strap; to bring something carried into the hands for use. UNMANNERED (13) [adjective] Having poor manners or social skills; ill-mannered; rude. UNMANNERLY (15) [adjective] Not mannerly. | [adverb] In a way that is not mannerly; discourteously, rudely. UNMARRIEDS (13) UNMEASURED (13) [adjective] Not having been measured. | [adjective] Beyond measure; vast; measureless. UNMEDIATED (14) [adjective] Not mediated UNMERCIFUL (17) [adjective] Not showing mercy UNMILITARY (15) [adjective] Not military. UNMINGLING (14) UNMITERING (13) UNMODIFIED (17) [adjective] Not modified UNMOLESTED (13) [adjective] Not molested UNMORALITY (15) UNMUFFLING (19) UNMUZZLING (31) [verb] Remove a muzzle from UNNAMEABLE (14) [adjective] That cannot, or should not, be named UNNUMBERED (15) [adjective] Not identified with a number | [adjective] Too numerous to be counted; countless or innumerable UNPROMPTED (17) [adjective] Not prompted UNREDEEMED (14) [verb] To fall from grace; to change from a state of virtuousness to sinfulness or wrongdoing. | [adjective] (of a person) Not redeemed; not granted redemption or salvation; unsaved. | [adjective] (of a coupon or offer) Unspent; not used in a purchase, and thus still usable. UNREFORMED (16) [adjective] Not reformed UNREMARKED (17) [adjective] (often with "upon") Not the subject of any remark | [adjective] Not remarked or noticed; unnoticed. UNRHYTHMIC (23) UNROMANTIC (14) [adjective] Not romantic UNSCRAMBLE (16) [verb] To reverse the process of scrambling, decrypt. | [verb] To put into order or restore to order. UNSEEMLIER (12) [adjective] Inconsistent with established standards of good form or taste. UNSMOOTHED (16) UNTEMPERED (15) [adjective] Not tempered; not conditioned by a process. | [adjective] In the case of a person, inexperienced; untested. UNTIMELIER (12) UNTRIMMING (15) UPCLIMBING (19) UPMANSHIPS (19) UREOTELISM (12) URINOMETER (12) UROCHROMES (17) UROPYGIUMS (18) UTOPIANISM (14) [noun] The belief in a system for an ideal society, usually regarded as unrealistic. UTTERMOSTS (12) VAGINISMUS (16) [noun] A painful muscular contraction of the vagina when attempting to insert something, such as a tampon or a penis, into it. VAGOTOMIES (16) [noun] The surgical resection of the vagus nerve so as to reduce the secretion of acid in the stomach and so control duodenal ulcers. VAMPIRISMS (19) VANDALISMS (16) VARIOMETER (15) [noun] An instrument used to measure variations in a magnetic field. | [noun] A rate-of-climb indicator. VASOSPASMS (17) VASOTOMIES (15) VEHEMENCES (20) [noun] An intense concentration, force or power. | [noun] A wild or turbulent ferocity or fury. | [noun] Eagerness, fervor, excessive strong feeling. VEHEMENTLY (21) [adverb] In a vehement manner; expressing with a strong or forceful attitude. VELODROMES (16) [noun] An indoor arena, having an oval banked track for bicycle racing. VENOMOUSLY (18) VERAPAMILS (17) VERBALISMS (17) [noun] The expression of a concept in words; the wording used in such an expression | [noun] The excessive use of words, often with little meaning VERMICELLI (17) [noun] Long, slender pasta, similar to spaghetti, only thinner. | [noun] Any type of long, thin noodles, as in rice vermicelli. | [noun] Chocolate sprinkles. VERMICIDES (18) [noun] Any substance used to kill worms, especially parasitic intestinal worms VERMICULAR (17) [adjective] Relating to, or having the form of, a worm. VERMIFUGES (19) [noun] A drug that causes the expulsion or death of intestinal worms, such as tapeworms. VERMILIONS (15) VERMILLION (15) [noun] A vivid red synthetic pigment made of mercury sulfide. | [noun] A bright orange-red colour. | [noun] A type of red dye worn in the parting of the hair by married Hindu women. VESTMENTAL (15) VICTIMHOOD (21) [noun] The state or perception of being a victim. VICTIMISED (18) [verb] To make someone a victim or sacrifice. | [verb] To punish someone unjustly. | [verb] To swindle or defraud someone. VICTIMISES (17) [verb] To make someone a victim or sacrifice. | [verb] To punish someone unjustly. | [verb] To swindle or defraud someone. VICTIMIZED (27) [verb] To make someone a victim or sacrifice. | [verb] To punish someone unjustly. | [verb] To swindle or defraud someone. VICTIMIZER (26) VICTIMIZES (26) [verb] To make someone a victim or sacrifice. | [verb] To punish someone unjustly. | [verb] To swindle or defraud someone. VICTIMLESS (17) [adjective] Without a victim. VISCOMETER (17) [noun] An instrument used to measure the viscosity of a liquid. VISCOMETRY (20) VITRECTOMY (20) [noun] The surgical removal of some or all of the vitreous humour from the eye. VOLCANISMS (17) VOLTMETERS (15) [noun] An instrument for measuring electric potential in volts. VOLUMETERS (15) VOLUMETRIC (17) [adjective] Pertaining to measurement by volume. VOLUMINOUS (15) [adjective] Of or pertaining to volume or volumes. | [adjective] Consisting of many folds, coils, or convolutions. | [adjective] Of great volume, or bulk; large. VOMITORIES (15) [noun] The entrance into a theater or other large public venue, where masses of people are disgorged into the stands; a vomitorium | [noun] A substance that induces vomiting; an emetic VOODOOISMS (16) VORTICISMS (17) VOYEURISMS (18) VULCANISMS (17) VULGARISMS (16) [noun] (grammar) A word or term that is considered offensive or vulgar. | [noun] A spelling, word, or phrase used in common speech that is considered improper or incorrect for formal communication. WAMPISHING (21) WAMPUMPEAG (22) WARLORDISM (16) WARMNESSES (15) WARMONGERS (16) [noun] Someone who advocates war; a militarist. | [verb] To advocate war. WATCHMAKER (24) [noun] A person who repairs (and originally made) watches. WATERMARKS (19) [noun] A translucent design impressed on the surface of paper and visible when the paper is held to the light. | [noun] (by extension) A logo superimposed on a digital image, a television broadcast, etc. | [noun] A value stored in a datafile to ensure its integrity, so that if the file's contents are changed then the watermark will no longer match the contents. WATERMELON (15) [noun] A plant of the species Citrullus lanatus, bearing a melon-like fruit. | [noun] The fruit of the watermelon plant, having a green rind and watery flesh that is typically bright red when ripe and contains black pips. | [noun] An environmentalist with socialist leanings (from the similarity to the fruit, being green on the outside, and red (Communist) on the inside). WATTMETERS (15) [noun] An instrument for measuring electric power in watts. WEATHERMAN (18) [noun] A person, especially a male one, who reports the weather conditions or forecasts. WEATHERMEN (18) [noun] A person, especially a male one, who reports the weather conditions or forecasts. WEIMARANER (15) WELFARISMS (18) WHIMPERING (21) [verb] To cry or sob softly and intermittently. | [verb] To cry with a low, whining, broken voice; to whine; to complain. | [verb] To say something in a whimpering manner. WHITESMITH (21) [noun] A person who forges things out of tin or pewter; a tinsmith. | [noun] A worker in iron who finishes or polishes the work, in distinction from one who forges it. WHOMSOEVER (21) [pronoun] Whatever person or persons (as object of a verb or preposition): emphasised or elaborated form of whomever. WILDERMENT (16) WILLEMITES (15) WINDJAMMER (25) [noun] One who plays a wind instrument, especially a bugler in the army. | [noun] A sailing ship; especially a large, iron-hulled, square-rigged ship with three or more masts. | [noun] A member of the crew of a ship of this kind. WINDMILLED (17) [verb] To rotate with a sweeping motion. | [verb] Of a rotating part of a machine, to (become disengaged and) rotate freely. WINDSTORMS (16) [noun] A storm in which there are strong, violent winds but no precipitation. WINTERTIME (15) [noun] The season of winter, between autumn and spring WITTICISMS (17) [noun] A witty remark WOLFRAMITE (18) [noun] A mineral that consists of a tungstate of iron and manganese; (Fe,Mn)WO4. WOMANHOODS (19) WOMANISHLY (21) WOMANISING (16) [verb] (said of a man) To flirt with and/or seduce, or attempt to seduce, women, especially lecherously. | [verb] (usually figurative) To turn into a woman; to feminize. WOMANIZERS (24) [noun] A man who habitually flirts with and seduces, or attempts to seduce, women. WOMANIZING (25) [verb] (said of a man) To flirt with and/or seduce, or attempt to seduce, women, especially lecherously. | [verb] (usually figurative) To turn into a woman; to feminize. WOMANLIEST (15) WOMANPOWER (20) WOMENFOLKS (22) WONDERMENT (16) [noun] A state, arousal, or thing describable by wonder, strange, awe, surprise, marvel, or astonishment. | [noun] A puzzle or curiosity. WORDMONGER (17) WORDSMITHS (19) [noun] One who uses words skillfully. | [verb] To apply craftsman-like skills to word use. WORKINGMAN (20) [noun] A man who works in exchange for payment, especially one that does manual labour. WORKINGMEN (20) [noun] A man who works in exchange for payment, especially one that does manual labour. WORRIMENTS (15) XANTHOMATA (22) [noun] A small, yellow nodule, rich in cholesterol and other lipids, that occurs in the skin, often near a joint XENOGAMIES (20) XYLOTOMIES (22) YARDMASTER (16) YEOMANRIES (15) [noun] A class of small freeholders who cultivated their own land. | [noun] A British volunteer cavalry force organized in 1761 for home defense and later incorporated into the Territorial Army. YOHIMBINES (20) YTTERBIUMS (17) ZAMINDARIS (22) [noun] In British India, a system used to collect revenues from the ryots (cultivators of agricultural land) indirectly through the zamindars, as opposed to ryotwari, where revenues were collected directly. | [noun] The office or jurisdiction of a zamindar. | [noun] The land possessed by a zamindar. ZIRCONIUMS (23) ZOMBIELIKE (27) ZOMBIFYING (30) [verb] (fictional) To turn into a zombie (a member of the living dead or undead). | [verb] To take control of (a computer) in order to use it covertly and illicitly. ZOOMETRIES (21) ZOOMORPHIC (28) [adjective] Having the shape, form, or likeness of an animal. ZYGOMORPHY (33) ZYMOLOGIES (25)

11-Letter Words (4340)

ABANDONMENT (16) [noun] The act of abandoning, or the state of being abandoned; total desertion; relinquishment. | [noun] The voluntary leaving of a person to whom one is bound by a special relation, as a wife, husband or child; desertion. | [noun] An abandoned building or structure. ABDOMINALLY (19) ABNORMALITY (18) [noun] The state or quality of being abnormal; variation; irregularity. | [noun] Something abnormal; an aberration; an abnormal occurrence or feature. ABOLISHMENT (18) ABOMINATING (16) [verb] To feel disgust towards; to loathe or detest thoroughly; to hate in the highest degree, as if with religious dread. | [verb] To dislike strongly. ABOMINATION (15) [noun] An abominable act; a disgusting vice; a despicable habit. | [noun] The feeling of extreme disgust and hatred | [noun] A state that excites detestation or abhorrence; pollution. ABOMINATORS (15) ABRIDGEMENT (17) [noun] The act of abridging; reduction or deprivation | [noun] The state of being abridged or lessened. | [noun] An epitome or compend, as of a book; a shortened or abridged form; an abbreviation. ABRIDGMENTS (17) [noun] The act of abridging; reduction or deprivation | [noun] The state of being abridged or lessened. | [noun] An epitome or compend, as of a book; a shortened or abridged form; an abbreviation. ABSENTEEISM (15) [noun] The state of being absent, especially frequently or without good reason; the practice of an absentee. | [noun] The practice of absenting oneself from the country or district where one's estate is situated. ABSOLUTISMS (15) ACADEMICIAN (18) [noun] A member (especially a senior one) of the faculty at a college or university; an academic. | [noun] A member or follower of an academy, or society for promoting science, art, or literature, such as the French Academy, or the Royal Academy of Arts. ACADEMICISM (20) [noun] (sometimes capitalized) The doctrines of Plato's academy; specifically the skeptical doctrines of the later academy stating that nothing can be known; a tenet of the Academic philosophy; state of being Academic. | [noun] Traditional or orthodox formalism; conventionalism. | [noun] Speculative thoughts and attitudes. ACCLAMATION (17) [noun] A shout of approbation, favor, or assent; eager expression of approval; loud applause. | [noun] The act of winning an election to a post because there were no other candidates. | [noun] A representation, in sculpture or on medals, of people expressing joy. ACCLIMATING (18) [verb] To habituate to a climate not native; to acclimatize. | [verb] To adjust to a new environment; not necessarily a wild, natural, earthy one. | [verb] To become accustomed to a new climate or environment. ACCLIMATION (17) [noun] The process of becoming, or the state of being, acclimated, or habituated to a new climate; acclimatization. | [noun] The adaptation of an organism to its natural climatic environment. ACCLIMATISE (17) [verb] To get used to a new climate. | [verb] To make used to a new climate or one that is different from that which is natural; to inure or habituate to other circumstances; to adapt to the peculiarities of a foreign or strange climate. ACCLIMATIZE (26) [verb] To get used to a new climate. | [verb] To make used to a new climate or one that is different from that which is natural; to inure or habituate to other circumstances; to adapt to the peculiarities of a foreign or strange climate. ACCOMMODATE (20) [verb] To render fit, suitable, or correspondent; to adapt. | [verb] To cause to come to agreement; to bring about harmony; to reconcile. | [verb] To provide housing for. ACCOMPANIED (20) [adjective] Having accompaniment; being part of a group of at least two. | [verb] To go with or attend as a companion or associate; to keep company with; to go along with. | [verb] To supplement with; add to. ACCOMPANIES (19) [verb] To go with or attend as a companion or associate; to keep company with; to go along with. | [verb] To supplement with; add to. | [verb] To perform an accompanying part or parts in a composition. ACCOMPANIST (19) [noun] The performer in music who takes the accompanying part. ACCOMPLICES (21) [noun] An associate in the commission of a crime; a participator in an offense, whether a principal or an accessory. | [noun] A cooperator. ACCRUEMENTS (17) [noun] Things that have been added or accumulated, typically referring to the natural growth or increase of something over time, such as interest accruing on a debt or benefits accumulating to a person. ACCUMULATED (18) [verb] To heap up in a mass; to pile up; to collect or bring together (either literally or figuratively) | [verb] To grow or increase in quantity or number; to increase greatly. | [verb] To take a higher degree at the same time with a lower degree, or at a shorter interval than usual. ACCUMULATES (17) [verb] To heap up in a mass; to pile up; to collect or bring together (either literally or figuratively) | [verb] To grow or increase in quantity or number; to increase greatly. | [verb] To take a higher degree at the same time with a lower degree, or at a shorter interval than usual. ACCUMULATOR (17) [noun] One who, or that which, accumulates. | [noun] A wet-cell storage battery. | [noun] (betting) A collective bet on successive events, with both stake and winnings being carried forward to accumulate progressively. ACCUSTOMING (18) [verb] Present participle of accustom; the process of becoming familiar with or adapted to something through repeated exposure or experience. ACETABULUMS (17) [noun] Plural of acetabulum, a cup-shaped cavity in the hip bone that forms part of the hip joint. | [noun] Cup-shaped structures or cavities in various organisms, such as the suction cups on the arms of cephalopods. ACHIEVEMENT (21) [noun] The act of achieving or performing; a successful performance; accomplishment | [noun] A great or heroic deed or feat; something accomplished by valor or boldness | [noun] An escutcheon or ensign armorial; now generally applied to the funeral shield commonly called hatchment. ACHROMATISM (20) [noun] The quality or state of being achromaticor colorless. | [noun] In optics, the correction of chromatic aberration in lenses to produce images free from color fringing. ACHROMATIZE (27) [verb] To remove color from something; to make achromatic or colorless. ACIDIMETERS (16) [noun] Instruments used to measure the acidity or acid content of a substance. ACIDIMETRIC (18) [adjective] Relating to or involving the measurement of acidity or the titration of acids and bases. ACOELOMATES (15) [noun] Animals that lack a body cavity or coelom between the body wall and internal organs. ACQUIREMENT (24) [noun] (chiefly in plural) Something that has been acquired; an attainment or accomplishment. | [noun] The act or fact of acquiring something; acquisition. ACRIMONIOUS (15) [adjective] Harsh and sharp, or bitter and not pleasant to the taste; acrid, pungent. | [adjective] Angry, acid, and sharp in delivering argumentative replies: bitter, mean-spirited, sharp in language or tone. ACROMEGALIC (18) [adjective] Relating to or affected by acromegaly, a condition characterized by abnormal growth of the hands, feet, and face due to excessive growth hormone production. ACRYLAMIDES (19) [noun] Organic compounds formed by the polymerization of acrylamide monomers, used in various industrial applications including water treatment, paper manufacturing, and soil conditioning. | [noun] Toxic chemical compounds that can form in foods cooked at high temperatures, particularly in starchy foods. ACTINOMETER (15) [noun] A device used to measure the heating power of electromagnetic radiation, especially that of solar radiation. ACTINOMETRY (18) [noun] The measurement of the intensity of radiation, especially solar radiation. ACTINOMYCES (20) [noun] A genus of filamentous bacteria that forms branching filaments and can cause infections in humans and animals. ACTINOMYCIN (20) [noun] An antibiotic compound produced by actinomycete bacteria, used in cancer treatment and research. ACTOMYOSINS (18) [noun] Protein complexes formed by the interaction of actin and myosin filaments, particularly important in muscle contraction and cell motility. ADENOMATOUS (14) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by an adenoma, a benign tumor of glandular tissue. ADJOURNMENT (21) [noun] The state of being adjourned, or action of adjourning. | [noun] Ampliatio. ADJUSTMENTS (21) [noun] The action of adjusting something | [noun] The result of adjusting something; a small change; a minor correction; a modification or alteration | [noun] The settling or balancing of a financial account ADMEASURING (15) [verb] Present participle of admeasure; to measure out or distribute in portions; to ascertain the dimensions or quantity of something. ADMINISTERS (14) [verb] To cause to ingest (a drug), either by openly offering or through deceit. | [verb] To apportion out, distribute. | [verb] To manage or supervise the conduct, performance or execution of; to govern or regulate the parameters for the conduct, performance or execution of; to work in an administrative capacity. ADMIRALTIES (14) [noun] The office or jurisdiction of an admiral. | [noun] The department or officers having authority over naval affairs generally. | [noun] The court which has jurisdiction of maritime questions and offenses. ADMIRATIONS (14) [noun] Plural of admiration; feelings of respect and warm approval toward someone or something. ADMITTANCES (16) [noun] The plural of admittance, referring to the right or permission to enter a place. | [noun] In physics, the reciprocal of impedance, measured in siemens, representing how easily an electrical circuit allows current to flow. ADMONISHERS (17) [noun] Plural of admonisher; people who warn or reprimand someone in a mild and indirect way. ADMONISHING (18) [verb] To warn or notify of a fault; to reprove gently or kindly, but seriously; to exhort. | [verb] To counsel against wrong practices; to caution or advise; to warn against danger or an offense; — followed by of, against, or a subordinate clause. | [verb] To instruct or direct; to inform; to notify. ADMONITIONS (14) [noun] Gentle or friendly reproof; counseling against fault or oversight; warning. ADOPTIANISM (16) [noun] A Christian theological doctrine asserting that Jesus was adopted as the Son of God rather than being naturally divine, or the belief that God adopted humanity through Christ. ADOPTIONISM (16) [noun] A Christian heresy claiming that Jesus was adopted as the Son of God rather than being naturally born as divine. ADUMBRATING (17) [verb] To foreshadow vaguely. | [verb] To give a vague outline. | [verb] To obscure or overshadow. ADUMBRATION (16) [noun] A faint indication or version of something; a shadowy outline or preliminary sketch. | [noun] The act of foreshadowing or hinting at something to come. ADUMBRATIVE (19) [adjective] Faintly sketching or suggesting something without explicitly stating it; giving a dim or shadowy indication of something. ADVANCEMENT (19) [noun] The act of advancing, ; promotion to a higher place or dignity | [noun] The state of being advanced | [noun] An advance of money or value; payment in advance. ADVENTURISM (17) [noun] The behaviour of an adventurer; risk-taking. | [noun] The taking of excessive risks by a government in their political, economic or foreign affairs. ADVISEMENTS (17) [noun] Notices or announcements of important information; formal communications or warnings. AERENCHYMAS (21) [noun] Tissue with air spaces found in aquatic and wetland plants that facilitates gas exchange and buoyancy. | [noun] Plural of aerenchyma, the spongy tissue in plant roots and stems containing large intercellular air spaces. AERODYNAMIC (19) [adjective] Of, or relating to the science of aerodynamics | [adjective] Having a shape that reduces drag when moving through the air AEROGRAMMES (16) [noun] A wireless message. | [noun] A telegram whose transmission included at least one segment sent via airplane. | [noun] A thin piece of foldable and gummed paper for writing a letter and serving as its own envelope for transit via airmail. AEROMEDICAL (16) [adjective] Of or pertaining to aeromedicine. AERONOMICAL (15) [adjective] Relating to aeronomy, the study of the upper atmosphere and its chemical and physical processes. AERONOMISTS (13) [noun] Scientists who study aeronomy, the branch of atmospheric science concerned with the upper atmosphere and its chemical and physical processes. AFFIRMANCES (21) [noun] Plural of affirmance; the act of confirming or ratifying a judgment or decision by a higher court. | [noun] Legal confirmations or approvals of lower court decisions. AFFIRMATION (19) [noun] That which is affirmed; a declaration that something is true. | [noun] The solemn declaration made by Quakers and others incapable of taking an oath. | [noun] A form of self-forced meditation or repetition; autosuggestion. AFFIRMATIVE (22) [noun] Yes; an answer that shows agreement or acceptance. | [noun] (grammar) An answer that shows agreement or acceptance. | [noun] An assertion. AFTERIMAGES (17) [noun] An image which persists or remains in negative after the original stimulation has ended. AFTERMARKET (20) [noun] The market for further goods and services, such as replacement parts and accessories, subsequent to the sale of a product such as an automobile or computer. | [noun] The industry that serves that market. | [noun] Trading activity in a security immediately following its initial offering to the public. AGAMOSPERMY (21) [noun] The asexual production of embryos and seeds. AGGLOMERATE (15) [noun] A collection or mass. | [noun] A mass of angular volcanic fragments united by heat; distinguished from conglomerate. | [noun] An ice cover of floe formed by the freezing together of various forms of ice. AGNOSTICISM (16) [noun] The belief that the existence of God or ultimate reality is unknowable or beyond human comprehension. | [noun] The view that certain knowledge claims, particularly religious ones, cannot be proven or disproven. AGRARIANISM (14) [noun] A social or political movement advocating for the interests of farmers and agrarian reform, or the principles and policies supporting agricultural society and land-based economies. AGRONOMISTS (14) [noun] A scientist whose speciality is agronomy. AIMLESSNESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of having no purpose, direction, or goal. AIRMANSHIPS (18) [noun] The skill, technique, and practice involved in piloting an aircraft; proficiency in flying and handling aircraft. ALBUMINURIA (15) [noun] The presence of albumin in the urine, often a symptom of renal disease ALBUMINURIC (17) ALCHEMISTIC (20) ALCHEMIZING (28) [verb] To change something's properties by means of alchemy. ALCOHOLISMS (18) [noun] The plural form of alcoholism, referring to multiple instances or types of alcohol addiction or dependency disorders. ALGORITHMIC (19) [adjective] Of, relating to, or being an algorithm. ALIGHTMENTS (17) ALKALIMETER (17) [noun] A device used to measure alkalinity. ALKALIMETRY (20) [noun] The process of determining the strength of an alkali. ALLELOMORPH (18) [noun] One of a number of alternative forms of the same gene occupying a given position, or locus, on a chromosome. ALLOMETRIES (13) ALLOMORPHIC (20) ALLUREMENTS (13) ALMSGIVINGS (18) ALTAZIMUTHS (25) [noun] A telescope or surveying instrument that has a mount permitting both horizontal and vertical rotation ALTIMETRIES (13) ALTOCUMULUS (15) [noun] A fleecy cloud formation consisting of large whitish or greyish globular cloudlets with shaded portions, often grouped in flocks or rows. (Abbreviated Ac.) ALUMINIZING (23) [verb] To coat with a layer of aluminium. AMALGAMATED (17) [verb] To merge, to combine, to blend, to join. | [verb] To make an alloy of a metal and mercury. | [verb] To combine (free groups) by identifying respective isomorphic subgroups. AMALGAMATES (16) [verb] To merge, to combine, to blend, to join. | [verb] To make an alloy of a metal and mercury. | [verb] To combine (free groups) by identifying respective isomorphic subgroups. AMALGAMATOR (16) AMANTADINES (14) AMARANTHINE (16) AMARYLLISES (16) [noun] The belladonna lily, Amaryllis belladonna, native to South Africa. | [noun] A similar lily in genus Hippeastrum, such as Hippeastrum puniceum, and cultivars. AMATEURISMS (15) AMATIVENESS (16) AMAZONSTONE (22) AMBASSADORS (16) [noun] A minister of the highest rank sent to a foreign court to represent there his sovereign or country. (Sometimes called ambassador-in-residence) | [noun] An official messenger and representative. | [noun] A corporate representative, often the public face of the company. AMBERGRISES (16) AMBIGUITIES (16) [noun] Something, particularly words and sentences, that is open to more than one interpretation, explanation or meaning, if that meaning etc cannot be determined from its context. | [noun] The state of being ambiguous. AMBIGUOUSLY (19) [adverb] In an ambiguous manner. AMBISEXUALS (22) [noun] An ambisexual person. AMBITIONING (16) AMBITIOUSLY (18) [adverb] In an ambitious manner. AMBIVALENCE (20) [noun] The coexistence of opposing attitudes or feelings (such as love and hate) towards a person, object or idea. | [noun] A state of uncertainty or indecisiveness. AMBIVERSION (18) AMBLYGONITE (19) AMBROSIALLY (18) AMBULATIONS (15) AMBUSCADERS (18) AMBUSCADING (19) [verb] To lie in wait for, or to attack from a covert or lurking place; to waylay. AMBUSHMENTS (20) AMELIORATED (14) [verb] To make better, or improve, something perceived to be in a negative condition. | [verb] To become better; improve. | [adjective] Having had problem(s) improved upon; having been the subject of amelioration. AMELIORATES (13) [verb] To make better, or improve, something perceived to be in a negative condition. | [verb] To become better; improve. AMELIORATOR (13) AMELOBLASTS (15) AMENABILITY (18) AMENORRHEAS (16) AMENORRHEIC (18) AMERCEMENTS (17) [noun] A non-statutory monetary penalty or forfeiture. AMETHYSTINE (19) [adjective] Like amethyst, especially in colour. AMIABLENESS (15) AMICABILITY (20) AMINOPTERIN (15) [noun] A chemical compound used as a drug to inhibit folic acid metabolism, formerly used in cancer chemotherapy and as an immunosuppressant. AMINOPYRINE (18) [noun] A white crystalline compound formerly used as an analgesic and antipyretic drug, now largely discontinued due to safety concerns. AMMONIATING (16) [verb] Present participle of ammoniating; treating or combining with ammonia. AMMONIATION (15) [noun] The process of treating a substance with ammonia or converting it to an ammonium compound. | [noun] In chemistry, the introduction of ammonia into a compound or the formation of ammonia compounds. AMMONIFYING (22) [verb] Converting nitrogen-containing organic matter into ammonia or ammonium compounds, typically through bacterial decomposition in soil. AMMUNITIONS (15) [noun] Bullets, shells, and other projectiles fired from guns or weapons. | [noun] Information or evidence used to support an argument or attack. AMOBARBITAL (17) [noun] A barbiturate drug used as a sedative and hypnotic medication. AMOEBOCYTES (20) [noun] Cells in sponges and other invertebrates that can move about and engulf particles or pathogens. | [noun] Wandering cells in the body cavity of certain animals that function in nutrition and defense. AMONTILLADO (14) [noun] A pale, dry sherry from Montilla. AMORALITIES (13) [noun] The plural of amorality; the state or quality of being amoral, lacking moral sense or principles. | [noun] Instances or examples of amoral behavior or attitudes. AMOROUSNESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being amorous; a tendency to express love or desire, especially in an excessive or sentimental manner. AMORPHOUSLY (21) [adverb] In a manner lacking a clear shape, form, or structure; in an unorganized or shapeless way. AMORTIZABLE (24) [adjective] Capable of being amortized or paid off gradually over time, typically referring to a loan or debt. AMOXICILLIN (22) [noun] A moderate-spectrum, bacteriolytic beta-lactam antibiotic used to treat bacterial infections caused by susceptible microorganisms, with formula C16H19N3O5S. AMOXYCILLIN (25) [noun] A moderate-spectrum, bacteriolytic beta-lactam antibiotic used to treat bacterial infections caused by susceptible microorganisms, with formula C16H19N3O5S. AMPHETAMINE (20) [noun] (proper) The racemic freebase of 1-phenylpropan-2-amine; an equal parts mixture of levoamphetamine and dextroamphetamine in their pure amine forms. | [noun] Any mixture of the two amphetamine enantiomers, dextroamphetamine and levoamphetamine. | [noun] Referring to a substituted amphetamine; a member of the amphetamine class of chemicals. AMPHIBOLIES (20) [noun] (grammar) An ambiguous grammatical construction. AMPHIBOLITE (20) [noun] Any of a class of metamorphic rock composed mainly of amphibole with some quartz etc. AMPHIBOLOGY (24) [noun] Amphiboly. AMPHIBRACHS (25) [noun] A metrical foot in ancient Greek or Latin consisting of two short syllables surrounding one long one (e.g. amāta). | [noun] A metrical foot in modern prosody, consisting of three syllables, the middle one of which is stressed (e.g. Jamaica). AMPHICTYONY (26) [noun] A league or association of ancient Greek states united for religious or political purposes, especially the council that managed the temple of Apollo at Delphi. AMPHIMACERS (22) [noun] Metrical feet consisting of one short syllable between two long syllables, or in modern prosody, one unstressed syllable between two stressed syllables. AMPHIOXUSES (25) [noun] The lancelet, particularly of the genus Branchiostoma. AMPHIPATHIC (25) [adjective] Describing a molecule, such as a detergent, which has both hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups. | [adjective] Of the surface(s) on a protein, particularly an alpha helix, where one surface of the alpha helix has hydrophilic amino acids and the opposite face has hydrophobic (or lipophilic) amino acids. AMPHIPHILES (23) [noun] Molecules or substances that have both hydrophilic (water-loving) and hydrophobic (water-repelling) properties, commonly used in surfactants and emulsifiers. AMPHIPHILIC (25) [adjective] (of a molecule) Being a detergent: having both hydrophilic and hydrophobic (or lipophilic) groups. | [adjective] (of a protein, especially an alpha helix) Having one surface consisting of hydrophilic amino acids and the opposite surface consisting of hydrophobic (or lipophilic) ones. AMPHIPLOIDS (21) [noun] Organisms that contain chromosome sets from two different species, typically resulting from hybridization followed by chromosome doubling. AMPHIPLOIDY (24) [noun] The condition of having chromosome sets from two different species, resulting from hybridization followed by chromosome doubling. AMPHISBAENA (20) [noun] A mythical serpent having a head at each end of its body, able to move in either direction. | [noun] A member of a genus of lizards, native to the Americas, having extremities which are very similar. AMPICILLINS (17) [noun] Plural of ampicillin, a broad-spectrum antibiotic of the penicillin type used to treat bacterial infections. AMPLENESSES (15) [noun] The plural form of ampleness, meaning the quality or state of being ample; abundance or plentifulness. AMPUTATIONS (15) [noun] Surgical removal of all or part of a limb, etc. | [noun] The loss of a limb, etc. through trauma AMUSINGNESS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being amusing; the capacity to entertain or cause laughter. AMYGDALOIDS (19) [noun] A variety of trap or basaltic rock, containing small cavities, occupied, wholly or in part, by nodules or geodes of different minerals, especially agates, quartz, calcite, and the zeolites. When the imbedded minerals are detached or removed by decomposition, it is porous, like lava. AMYLOIDOSES (17) [noun] Plural of amyloidosis; a group of diseases characterized by the abnormal deposition of amyloid protein in body tissues and organs. AMYLOIDOSIS (17) [noun] Any of a group of disorders in which the fibrous protein amyloid is deposited in an organ of the body. AMYLOPECTIN (20) [noun] A highly branched, insoluble form of starch (the soluble form being amylose) AMYLOPLASTS (18) [noun] Plastids in plant cells that synthesize and store starch. ANABAPTISMS (17) [noun] Plural of anabaptism; the beliefs and practices of Anabaptists, a Christian movement emphasizing adult baptism and separation of church and state. ANACHRONISM (18) [noun] A chronological mistake; the erroneous dating of an event, circumstance, or object. | [noun] A person or thing which seems to belong to a different time or period of time. ANAGRAMMING (17) [verb] The act of rearranging the letters of a word or phrase to form a different word or phrase. | [noun] The process or practice of creating anagrams. ANALEMMATIC (17) [adjective] Relating to an analemma, a figure-eight curve showing the sun's position in the sky at the same clock time throughout the year. ANASTIGMATS (14) [noun] An anastigmatic lens. ANASTOMOSED (14) [verb] (of streams and rivers, blood vessels, etc) To join (two or more things) by anastomosis, to interconnect forming a network. | [verb] (of rivers, blood vessels, etc) To join by anastomosis. | [adjective] Joined by anastomosis ANASTOMOSES (13) [verb] (of streams and rivers, blood vessels, etc) To join (two or more things) by anastomosis, to interconnect forming a network. | [verb] (of rivers, blood vessels, etc) To join by anastomosis. | [noun] A cross-connection between two blood vessels. ANASTOMOSIS (13) [noun] A cross-connection between two blood vessels. | [noun] An interconnection between any two channels, passages or vessels. | [noun] The surgical creation of a connecting passage between blood vessels, bowels or other channels. ANASTOMOTIC (15) [adjective] Relating to or involving anastomosis, the surgical or natural connection between two blood vessels, nerves, or other tubular structures. ANATOMISING (14) [verb] To inspect or investigate by dissection. | [verb] To scrutinize down to the most minute detail. ANATOMIZING (23) [verb] To inspect or investigate by dissection. | [verb] To scrutinize down to the most minute detail. ANCHORWOMAN (21) [noun] A female anchorperson. ANCHORWOMEN (21) [noun] A female anchorperson. ANEMOGRAPHS (19) [noun] An anemometer that makes a graphical recording. ANEMOMETERS (15) [noun] An instrument for measuring and recording the speed of the wind, a windmeter. ANGIOMATOUS (14) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by an angioma, a benign tumor formed by a collection of blood vessels or lymph vessels. ANGIOSPERMS (16) [noun] Any plant of the clade Angiosperms, characterized by having ovules enclosed in an ovary; a flowering plant. ANIMADVERTS (17) [verb] To criticise, to censure. | [verb] To consider. | [verb] To turn judicial attention (to); to criticise or punish. ANIMALCULES (15) [noun] A small animal. | [noun] A microscopic aquatic animal or protozoan. | [noun] A spermatozoon. ANIMALCULUM (17) [noun] A microscopic animal or organism, especially a protozoan; an animalcule. ANIMALISTIC (15) [adjective] In the manner of an animal; savage; untamed. ANIMALITIES (13) [noun] The plural of animality; the quality or state of being animal in nature, or the manifestation of animal characteristics or instincts. ANIMALIZING (23) [verb] To represent in the form of an animal. | [verb] To brutalize. | [verb] To convert or produce material rich in animal substance. ANIMATENESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being animate; liveliness or the possession of life or consciousness. ANIMATRONIC (15) [noun] A lifelike robot or mechanical figure programmed to move and perform actions, often used in entertainment or displays. | [adjective] Relating to or operated by animatronics; mechanically animated. ANIMOSITIES (13) [noun] Violent hatred leading to active opposition; active enmity; energetic dislike. ANISOGAMIES (14) [noun] Plural of anisogamy; a form of sexual reproduction in which the male and female gametes are of different sizes or forms. ANISOGAMOUS (14) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by anisogamy, a form of sexual reproduction in which the gametes (especially in algae and fungi) are of unequal size or form. ANOINTMENTS (13) [noun] The plural of anointment; acts or instances of anointing someone with oil or ointment, especially as a religious or ceremonial practice. ANOMALOUSLY (16) [adverb] In a manner that deviates from what is standard, normal, or expected. ANONYMITIES (16) [noun] The quality or state of being anonymous; lack of identification or known authorship. | [noun] Plural of anonymity, referring to multiple instances or aspects of being unnamed or unidentified. ANONYMOUSLY (19) [adverb] In an anonymous manner; without a name. ANTAGONISMS (14) [noun] A strong natural dislike or hatred; antipathy. ANTECHAMBER (20) [noun] A small room used as an entryway or reception area to a larger room. ANTEPENDIUM (16) [noun] A decorative cloth hanging in front of an altar or the front of a church lectern. ANTHERIDIUM (17) [noun] An organ producing male gametes called antherozoids, found in some algae, ferns, and bryophytes. ANTIDUMPING (17) [adjective] Relating to trade policies or measures designed to prevent the practice of selling goods at unfairly low prices in foreign markets. ANTIELITISM (13) ANTIEMETICS (15) [noun] A drug that combats nausea and vomiting ANTIFASCISM (18) [noun] Opposition to fascism and fascist ideologies or movements. ANTIFOAMING (17) [adjective] Designed to prevent or reduce the formation of foam. | [noun] A substance that prevents or reduces foam formation. ANTIJAMMING (23) ANTIMALARIA (13) ANTIMATTERS (13) [noun] Plural of antimatter, the counterpart to ordinary matter composed of antiparticles with opposite charges. ANTIMISSILE (13) [adjective] Designed to detect, intercept, or destroy missiles in flight. ANTIMITOTIC (15) [adjective] Acting against or inhibiting mitosis; preventing or suppressing cell division. ANTIMONIALS (13) [noun] Medicines or remedies containing antimony, used historically as purgatives or emetics. | [adjective] Of or relating to antimony or substances containing antimony. ANTIMONIDES (14) [noun] Compounds formed by the combination of antimony with a more electropositive element or radical. ANTIMUSICAL (15) ANTINOMIANS (13) [noun] One who embraces antinomianism. ANTIRACISMS (15) [noun] Plural of antiracism; the practice, policies, and ideologies opposed to racism and aimed at promoting racial equality and justice. ANTIREALISM (13) [noun] A philosophical position denying the existence of abstract objects or asserting that certain entities (such as mathematical objects, moral facts, or external reality) do not exist independently of human perception or conception. ANTIRRHINUM (16) [noun] Any plant of the genus Antirrhinum of snapdragons. ANTISMOKERS (17) [noun] People who oppose smoking or advocate against the use of tobacco products. ANTISMOKING (18) [adjective] Opposed to or working against smoking and tobacco use. ANTITUMORAL (13) [adjective] Acting against or inhibiting the growth of tumors; used to describe substances or treatments that suppress or destroy cancerous cells. ANTIVITAMIN (16) ANTONOMASIA (13) [noun] The substitution of an epithet or title in place of a proper noun. | [noun] Use of a proper name to suggest its most obvious quality or aspect. APARTMENTAL (15) APOMORPHINE (20) [noun] A particular narcotic used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease. APOPHTHEGMS (24) [noun] A short, witty, instructive saying; an aphorism or maxim. APPEASEMENT (17) [noun] The state of being appeased; the policy of giving in to demands in order to preserve the peace. APPOINTMENT (17) [noun] The act of appointing a person to hold an office or to have a position of trust | [noun] The state of being appointed to a service or office; an office to which one is appointed | [noun] Stipulation; agreement; the act of fixing by mutual agreement. APPROXIMATE (24) [verb] To estimate. | [verb] To come near to; to approach. | [verb] To carry or advance near; to cause to approach. AQUAMARINES (22) [noun] The bluish-green colour of the sea. | [noun] A bluish-green variety of beryl. ARBITRAMENT (15) [noun] The judgement of an arbiter or arbitrator; an arbitration. ARCHDUKEDOM (24) [noun] The domain or territory ruled by an archduke; the rank or dignity of an archduke. ARCHEGONIUM (19) [noun] A multicellular reproductive structure that contains a large, non-motile gamete (egg cell), and within which an embryo will develop. ARCHENEMIES (18) [noun] A principal enemy. | [noun] A supreme and most powerful enemy. ARGUMENTIVE (17) ARITHMETICS (18) AROMATICITY (18) [noun] The property of having an aroma. | [noun] The property of being aromatic, i.e. having at least one conjugated ring. AROMATIZING (23) [verb] To make aromatic, fragrant, or spicy. | [verb] To convert into an aromatic compound by means of a chemical reaction. ARRAIGNMENT (14) [noun] The formal charging of a defendant with an offense. ARRANGEMENT (14) [noun] The act of arranging. | [noun] The manner of being arranged. | [noun] A collection of things that have been arranged. ARRESTMENTS (13) [noun] The action of arresting (in any sense) | [noun] The process that prohibits a debtor from making payment to the creditor until another debt due to the person making use of the arrestment by such creditor is paid. ARRHYTHMIAS (22) [noun] An irregular heartbeat. | [noun] A disease entity involving such beats, such as atrial fibrillation, ventricular tachycardia, AV nodal reentrant tachycardia, or others. ARTERIOGRAM (14) [noun] A radiographic image of an artery or arteries, typically produced by injecting contrast medium and taking X-ray photographs. ASCETICISMS (17) [noun] The plural of asceticism, referring to multiple instances or forms of the practice of self-denial and austere living, often for religious or spiritual purposes. ASCOMYCETES (20) [noun] Any fungus of the phylum Ascomycota, characterized by the production of a sac, or ascus, which contains non-motile spores. ASPERGILLUM (16) [noun] An implement, in the form of a brush, or of a rod with a perforated container, for sprinkling holy water; a holy water sprinkler. ASSEMBLAGES (16) [noun] The process of assembling or bringing together. | [noun] A collection of things which have been gathered together or assembled. | [noun] A gathering of people. ASSEMBLYMAN (20) [noun] A male member of an assembly. | [noun] A member of the lower house of certain US state legislatures. ASSEMBLYMEN (20) [noun] A male member of an assembly. | [noun] A member of the lower house of certain US state legislatures. ASSESSMENTS (13) [noun] The act of assessing or an amount (of tax, levy or duty etc) assessed. | [noun] An appraisal or evaluation. ASSIGNMENTS (14) [noun] The act of assigning; the allocation of a job or a set of tasks. | [noun] The categorization of something as belonging to a specific category. | [noun] An assigned task. ASSIMILABLE (15) [adjective] Able to be assimilated or absorbed, especially of food that can be digested and incorporated into the body, or of information that can be understood and integrated into existing knowledge. ASSIMILATED (14) [verb] To incorporate nutrients into the body, especially after digestion. | [verb] To incorporate or absorb (knowledge) into the mind. | [verb] To absorb (a person or people) into a community or culture. ASSIMILATES (13) [verb] To incorporate nutrients into the body, especially after digestion. | [verb] To incorporate or absorb (knowledge) into the mind. | [verb] To absorb (a person or people) into a community or culture. ASSIMILATOR (13) [noun] A person or thing which assimilates. | [noun] In algae, a filament of cells involved with photosynthesis, usually full of chloroplasts. ASSOILMENTS (13) [noun] The act of absolving or clearing from guilt or blame; absolution. | [noun] In law, the clearing of a defendant from an accusation or charge. ASSORTMENTS (13) [noun] A collection of varying but related items. ASSUAGEMENT (14) [noun] The act of easing or relieving something painful or burdensome, such as grief, anger, or hunger. | [noun] Something that eases or relieves pain or distress. ASSUMPTIONS (15) [noun] The act of assuming, or taking to or upon oneself; the act of taking up or adopting. | [noun] The act of taking for granted, or supposing a thing without proof; a supposition; an unwarrantable claim. | [noun] The thing supposed; a postulate, or proposition assumed; a supposition. ASTIGMATICS (16) [noun] Plural of astigmatic; people who have astigmatism, a refractive error of the eye that causes blurred vision at all distances. | [adjective] Relating to or affected by astigmatism. ASTIGMATISM (16) [noun] A defect of a lens such that light rays coming from a point do not meet at a focal point so that the image is blurred. | [noun] A disorder of the vision, usually due to a misshapen cornea, such that light does not focus correctly on the retina causing a blurred image. ASTROCYTOMA (18) [noun] A type of brain tumor that originates from astrocytes, a type of glial cell in the central nervous system. ASTROMETRIC (15) [adjective] Relating to astrometry, the branch of astronomy that deals with the measurement and positions of celestial bodies. ASTRONOMERS (13) [noun] One who studies astronomy, the stars or the physical universe; a scientist whose area of research is astronomy or astrophysics ASTRONOMIES (13) [noun] The plural of astronomy, referring to multiple systems or studies of celestial objects and space. | [noun] Different branches or schools of astronomical science or practice. ASYMMETRIES (18) [noun] Absence of symmetry or proportion between the parts of a thing, or a distinction that produces such a lack of symmetry. | [noun] The lack of a common measure between two objects or quantities; incommensurability. ATHLETICISM (18) [noun] The state of being an athlete, or of taking part in athletic events. | [noun] A show of athletic prowess. ATMOSPHERED (19) ATMOSPHERES (18) [noun] The gases surrounding the Earth or any astronomical body. | [noun] The air in a particular place. | [noun] The apparent mood felt in an environment. ATMOSPHERIC (20) [adjective] Of, relating to, produced by, or coming from the atmosphere. | [adjective] Translucent or hazy. | [adjective] Evoking a particular emotional or aesthetic quality. ATOMIZATION (22) [noun] The process of breaking something into fine particles or a mist. | [noun] In chemistry, the conversion of a liquid into a fine spray or vapor. ATTACHMENTS (18) [noun] The act or process of (physically or figuratively) attaching. | [noun] A strong bonding with or fondness for someone or something. | [noun] A dependence, especially a strong one. ATTAINMENTS (13) [noun] The act of attaining; the act of arriving at or reaching; the act of obtaining by exertion or effort. | [noun] That which is attained, or obtained by exertion; acquisition; acquirement. ATTEMPERING (16) [verb] Present participle of attempter, meaning to attempt or try. | [verb] In metallurgy, the process of moderating or reducing the hardness of tempered steel by reheating it to a specific temperature. ATTEMPTABLE (17) ATTORNMENTS (13) ATTUNEMENTS (13) [noun] The plural of attunement, meaning the act of tuning or bringing into harmony, or a state of being in accord or sympathy with something. | [noun] In spiritual or metaphysical contexts, adjustments or alignments of one's energy or consciousness to a particular frequency or state. AUDIOMETERS (14) [noun] Plural of audiometer; instruments that measure hearing ability and detect hearing loss by producing sounds at various frequencies and intensities. AUDIOMETRIC (16) [adjective] Relating to or involving the measurement of hearing ability or sound perception. AUDITORIUMS (14) [noun] A large room for public meetings or performances. | [noun] (in a theater, etc.) The space where the audience is located. AUTOEROTISM (13) [noun] Sexual arousal or gratification involving one's own body, typically through masturbation. | [noun] Erotic gratification obtained from one's own body or narcissistic admiration of oneself. AUTOMATABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being made automatic or operated by automation. AUTOMATIONS (13) [noun] The act or process of converting the controlling of a machine or device to a more automatic system, such as computer or electronic controls. AUTOMATISMS (15) [noun] Acting automatically or involuntarily. | [noun] The power of initiating vital processes from within the cell, organ, or organism, independent of external stimulus. | [noun] The doctrine that animals are automata, operating according to mechanical laws. AUTOMATISTS (13) [noun] Plural of automatist; artists or writers who practice automatism, a technique of creating work without conscious deliberation or control. | [noun] People who believe in or advocate for automation or automatic processes. AUTOMATIZED (23) [verb] To make or become automatic. | [verb] To cause to be automated; to automate. AUTOMATIZES (22) [verb] To make or become automatic. | [verb] To cause to be automated; to automate. AUTOMOBILED (16) AUTOMOBILES (15) [noun] A type of vehicle designed to move on the ground under its own stored power and intended to carry a driver, a small number of additional passengers, and a very limited amount of other load. A car or motorcar. | [verb] To travel by automobile. AUTONOMISTS (13) [noun] Persons who advocate for or practice autonomy; individuals who support self-governance or independence. | [noun] Members of a political movement emphasizing local autonomy and decentralization. AUTOSOMALLY (16) [adverb] In a manner relating to or inherited through autosomes (chromosomes other than sex chromosomes). AUTOTOMIZED (23) [verb] Past tense of autotomize; to shed or cast off a body part (such as a tail or limb) as a defense mechanism, typically used of certain animals like lizards or starfish. AUTOTOMIZES (22) [verb] To shed or cast off a body part, such as a limb or tail, as a defense mechanism or survival strategy. AVGOLEMONOS (17) [noun] A Greek soup made with chicken or meat broth, rice or pasta, eggs, and lemon juice. AVOUCHMENTS (21) [noun] Plural of avouchment; declarations or assertions that something is true, or acts of vouching for or guaranteeing something. AWESOMENESS (16) [noun] The quality of being awesome. AXIOMATIZED (30) [verb] To establish a set of axioms that describe or govern certain phenomena AXIOMATIZES (29) [verb] To establish a set of axioms that describe or govern certain phenomena AXISYMMETRY (28) [noun] Symmetry about an axis, where an object or figure is identical on both sides of a central line or plane. AXONOMETRIC (22) [adjective] (technical drawing) Describing a projection in which the horizontal and vertical axes are to the same scale, but the third axis is reduced to allow for perspective AZIMUTHALLY (28) [adverb] In a manner relating to or measured along the azimuth, which is the horizontal angle or direction measured clockwise from north. AZOOSPERMIA (24) [noun] The absence of live sperm in the semen. BABBLEMENTS (19) BACHELORDOM (21) [noun] The state or condition of being a bachelor; unmarried life or status. BACKGAMMONS (24) [noun] A board game for two players in which each has 15 stones which move between 24 triangular points according to the roll of a pair of dice; the object is to move all of one's pieces around, and bear them off the board. | [noun] A victory in the game when the loser has not borne off a stone, and still has one or more stones in the winner's inner home row or on the bar. | [verb] To win at a backgammon game with the opponent having one or more pieces in the winner’s inner home row or on the bar. BACTEREMIAS (17) [noun] Plural of bacteremia; the presence of bacteria in the bloodstream. BADMOUTHING (20) [verb] To criticize or malign, especially unfairly or spitefully. BAFFLEMENTS (21) [noun] Plural of bafflement; states of confusion or bewilderment. | [noun] Things that baffle or perplex. BALLETOMANE (15) [noun] A ballet enthusiast. BALMINESSES (15) [noun] The plural of balminess; the quality or state of being balmy, mild, or soothing. BAMBOOZLING (27) [verb] To con, defraud, trick, to make a fool of, to humbug or impose on someone. | [verb] To confuse, frustrate or perplex. BANDMASTERS (16) [noun] The conductor of a musical ensemble, especially a brass or military band. BANISHMENTS (18) [noun] The act of banishing. | [noun] The state of being banished, exile. BAPTISMALLY (20) [adverb] In a manner relating to or involving baptism; with respect to baptismal practices or beliefs. BARNSTORMED (16) [verb] To travel around the countryside making political speeches etc. | [verb] To appear at fairs and carnivals in exhibitions of stunt flying, sporting events, or theater. | [verb] (of a sports team) To travel from town to town performing in front of small crowds. https//web.archive.org/web/20051201203635/http://www.sportingnews.com/archives/sports2000/numbers/173540.htmlhttps//web.archive.org/web/20070505133024/http://www.hoophall.com/halloffamers/bhof-original-celtics.htmlhttps//web.archive.org/web/20070929004147/http://www.jimthorpe.org/jim_thorpe_athlete.php http//www.nytimes.com/2013/06/17/sports/soccer/to-us-soccer-team-home-field-is-a-many-changing-thing.html?_r=2 BARNSTORMER (15) [noun] A person who travels around performing stunts or shows, especially an aviator who performed aerial tricks in the early 1900s. | [noun] An actor or theatrical performer who travels from town to town. | [noun] A politician who travels around making speeches. BAROMETRIES (15) [noun] Plural of barometry, the science or practice of measuring atmospheric pressure using a barometer. | [noun] Plural instances or measurements taken with a barometer. BARRAMUNDAS (16) [noun] Plural of barramunda, a large Australian freshwater fish also known as barramundi. BARRAMUNDIS (16) [noun] A species of diadromous fish, Lates calcarifer, of the Centropomidae family, order Perciformes. BATHYMETRIC (23) [adjective] Relating to the measurement of depth, especially of ocean floors and underwater topography. BATTLEMENTS (15) [noun] In fortification: an indented parapet, formed by a series of rising members called cops or merlons, separated by openings called crenelles or embrasures, the soldier sheltering himself behind the merlon while he fires through the embrasure or through a loophole in the battlement. | [noun] Any high wall for defense. | [noun] The towering roof of heaven. BEACHCOMBED (25) [verb] Past tense of beachcomb; to search a beach for interesting items such as shells, sea glass, or other objects of value or interest. BEACHCOMBER (24) [noun] A seaman who is not prepared to work but hangs around port areas living off the charity of others. | [noun] Any loafer around a waterfront. | [noun] A person who collects marine salvage at the coast. BECLAMORING (18) BEDCHAMBERS (23) [noun] A bedroom. BEDEVILMENT (19) [noun] The state of being bedeviled; harassment, torment, or trouble caused by persistent problems or annoyances. BEDIZENMENT (25) [noun] The act of dressing up or decorating someone or something in a gaudy or showy manner; excessive ornamentation or embellishment. BEGLAMORING (17) BEGLAMOURED (17) BEGUILEMENT (16) [noun] The act of charming or enchanting someone in a deceptive way; the state of being beguiled. | [noun] Something that beguiles or deludes. BEHAVIORISM (21) [noun] An approach to psychology focusing on observable behavior, denying any independent significance for mind, and usually assuming that behavior is determined by the environment. BEMADDENING (18) BEMURMURING (18) BEMUSEMENTS (17) [noun] The state of being bemused. BENCHWARMER (23) [noun] A player who rarely or never gets to play in the games or matches, and is most often a substitute. BEREAVEMENT (18) [noun] The state of being bereaved; deprivation; especially the loss of a relative by death BESMIRCHING (21) [verb] To make dirty. | [verb] To tarnish something, especially someone's reputation. BESMOOTHING (19) BETTERMENTS (15) [noun] Improvements or additions that increase the value of a property or asset. | [noun] In legal contexts, permanent improvements made to real property by a tenant or lessee. BEWITCHMENT (23) [noun] The act of enchanting or casting a spell over someone. | [noun] A state of being under a spell or magical influence; enchantment. BIBLIOMANIA (17) [noun] A passion for owning valuable books. BICHROMATED (21) [adjective] Treated with or containing potassium dichromate or a similar dichromate compound, particularly in photography or printing processes. BICHROMATES (20) [noun] Plural of bichromate, a chemical compound containing two chromate groups, typically potassium dichromate, used in oxidizing agents and analytical chemistry. BICOMPONENT (19) BIMETALLICS (17) [noun] Metallic strips or objects made from two different metals bonded together, used in thermostats and other temperature-sensitive devices. | [adjective] Of or relating to two metals or a combination of two metallic elements. BIMETALLISM (17) [noun] The use of a monetary standard based upon two different metals, traditionally gold and silver usually in a fixed ratio of values. BIMETALLIST (15) [noun] An advocate of bimetallism, a monetary system in which two metals (typically gold and silver) are used as standard currency with a fixed ratio between them. BIMILLENARY (18) [noun] A two-thousandth anniversary | [adjective] Relating to, or happening every two thousand years BIMOLECULAR (17) [adjective] (of a reaction) involving two molecules | [adjective] Consisting of two layers of molecules | [adjective] Relating to bimolecules BIMONTHLIES (18) [noun] A publication that is published on a bimonthly basis. BIMORPHEMIC (24) BIOCHEMICAL (22) [noun] A chemical substance derived from a biological source | [adjective] Of, or relating to biochemistry | [adjective] Characterized by, produced by, or involving chemical processes in living organisms BIOCHEMISTS (20) [noun] A chemist whose speciality is biochemistry BIOCLIMATIC (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the relationship between living things and climate. | [adjective] Focused on providing a comfortable microclimate. BIOMATERIAL (15) [noun] A nonviable, biocompatible material used in a medical device, intended to interact with biological systems or to evaluate, treat, augment, or replace any tissue, organ, or function of the body. BIOMEDICINE (18) [noun] The application of biology and physiology to clinical medicine. | [noun] The branch of medicine that studies the effects of environmental stress on organisms (most often in space travel). | [noun] A medicine created with the use of living organisms. BIOMETRICAL (17) [adjective] Relating to or denoting the statistical analysis of biological data. | [adjective] Of or relating to biometry, the application of statistical methods to biological data. BIOMIMETICS (19) [noun] The study of biological systems and organisms to solve engineering and design problems through imitation of nature's strategies and structures. BIOMOLECULE (17) [noun] Molecules, such as amino acids, sugars, nucleic acids, proteins, polysaccharides, DNA, and RNA, that occur naturally in living organisms BIOPOLYMERS (20) [noun] Any macromolecule of a living organism that is formed from the polymerization of smaller entities; a polymer that occurs in a living organism or results from life. BIORHYTHMIC (26) [adjective] Relating to or controlled by biorhythms, the recurring cycles of physical, emotional, and intellectual activity in living organisms. BIPEDALISMS (18) [noun] The plural of bipedalism, referring to multiple instances or types of locomotion on two legs, or the philosophical/scientific doctrines related to two-legged movement. BIPYRAMIDAL (21) [adjective] Having the shape of two pyramids joined at their bases, typically used in chemistry to describe molecular geometry or crystal structures. BIRACIALISM (17) BITUMINIZED (25) [verb] To treat with bitumen BITUMINIZES (24) [verb] To treat with bitumen BLACKAMOORS (21) [noun] A person with dark skin, especially one from north Africa | [noun] A blackamoor slave, a blackamoor servant; and hence any slave, servant, inferior, or child | [noun] A stylized Negro BLACKMAILED (22) [verb] To extort money or favors from (a person) by exciting fears of injury other than bodily harm, such as injury to reputation, distress of mind, false accusation, etc. | [verb] (Kenya) To speak ill of someone; to defame someone. BLACKMAILER (21) [noun] Someone who blackmails. BLACKSMITHS (24) [noun] A person who forges iron. | [noun] A person who shoes horses. | [noun] A blackish fish of the Pacific coast (Chromis punctipinnis). BLAMELESSLY (18) [adverb] In a manner free from blame or guilt; without fault or responsibility. BLAMEWORTHY (24) [adjective] Deserving blame or censure; reprehensible. BLANCMANGES (18) [noun] A simple dessert made by cooking sweetened milk with cornstarch and vanilla. | [noun] A dish, eaten in the Middle Ages, generally consisting of chicken (or sometimes capon or fish), milk or almond milk, rice and sugar. BLASPHEMERS (20) [noun] People who speak irreverently or disrespectfully about religious matters or sacred things. BLASPHEMIES (20) [noun] An act of irreverence or contempt toward a god or toward something considered sacred; an impious act, utterance, view, etc. | [noun] (by extension) An act of irreverence towards anything considered inviolable; the act of disregarding a convention. BLASPHEMING (21) [verb] To commit blasphemy; to speak against God or religious doctrine. | [verb] To speak of, or address, with impious irreverence; to revile impiously (anything sacred). | [verb] To calumniate; to revile; to abuse. BLASPHEMOUS (20) [adjective] Lacking piety or respect for the sacred. Resembling blasphemy. BLASTEMATIC (17) [adjective] Relating to or consisting of a blastema, which is a mass of cells capable of developing into an organ or tissue. BLASTODERMS (16) [noun] The germination point in an ovum from which the embryo develops. BLASTOMERES (15) [noun] Any cell that results from division of a fertilized egg BLOODMOBILE (18) [noun] A mobile medical unit equipped to collect blood donations from donors. BLOODSTREAM (16) [noun] The flow of blood through the circulatory system of an animal BOHEMIANISM (20) [noun] The practices, attitudes, and lifestyle of bohemians, characterized by unconventional social habits and often associated with artistic or intellectual communities. | [noun] A disregard for conventional morality and behavior, particularly in matters of social propriety. BOILERMAKER (19) [noun] A person qualified to make or repair boilers. | [noun] A whiskey with a beer chaser. BOLSHEVISMS (21) [noun] The plural form of Bolshevism, referring to multiple instances or aspects of the revolutionary socialist ideology and movement associated with the Bolsheviks in Russia. BOMBARDIERS (18) [noun] A bomber crew member who sights and releases bombs. | [noun] A non-commissioned officer rank in artillery, equivalent to corporal. Abbreviated Bdr. | [noun] An artilleryman; a gunner. BOMBARDMENT (20) [noun] The act of bombing, especially towns or cities | [noun] Heavy artillery fire | [noun] The incidence of an intense stream of high-energy particles directed at a substance BOMBINATING (18) [verb] To buzz or hum BOMBINATION (17) [noun] A humming or buzzing sound, especially that made by bees or other insects. BOOKMAKINGS (24) BOOKMARKERS (23) [noun] People or things that mark the place in a book where reading stopped. | [noun] Software tools or browser features that save and organize links to websites for quick access. BOOKMOBILES (21) [noun] A mobile library; especially, a large van designed to transport a portion of some library's collection. BOOMERANGED (17) [verb] To return or rebound unexpectedly, especially when the result is undesired; to backfire. | [verb] To travel in a curved path. BOOSTERISMS (15) [noun] Plural of boosterism; the practice of promoting or publicly supporting a person, organization, or place with exaggerated enthusiasm. BORBORYGMUS (21) [noun] A rumbling sound made by the movement of gas in the intestines. | [noun] Something resembling borborygmus. BOTTOMLANDS (16) [noun] Flat land along a river, lying few feet above normal high water, often consisting of alluvial deposits and naturally fertile. BOURBONISMS (17) BRAINSTORMS (15) [noun] A sudden thought, particularly one that solves a long-standing problem. | [noun] A session of brainstorming, investigating a problem to try to find solutions. | [noun] An unexpected mental error. BRIDEGROOMS (17) [noun] A man in the context of his own wedding; one who is going to marry or has just been married. BRIDESMAIDS (17) [noun] A woman who attends a bride during her wedding ceremony, as part of the main wedding party. | [noun] (entertainment) A person or team that perennially finishes well, but never first. | [verb] To act as a bridesmaid for; to attend a bride during her wedding ceremony. BROMINATING (16) [verb] To treat or react with bromine or hydrobromic acid, to introduce bromine into a compound. BROMINATION (15) [noun] The chemical process of adding bromine to an organic compound, or the product resulting from this reaction. BROMOURACIL (17) BROOMBALLER (17) BROOMSTICKS (21) [noun] The handle of a broom (sweeping tool). | [noun] A broom imbued with magic, enabling one to fly astride the handle. | [noun] Like plain broom, a gun. BRYOPHYLLUM (26) [noun] A genus of tropical succulent plants known for their ability to produce new plants from their leaves. BULLMASTIFF (21) [noun] A breed of very large mastiff originally bred to immobilize poachers. BUMBERSHOOT (20) [noun] An umbrella, especially when erroneously seen as a stereotypically English accessory. BUMPINESSES (17) [noun] The quality or state of being bumpy; the condition of having many bumps or uneven surfaces. | [noun] Plural of bumpiness, referring to multiple instances or types of bumpy conditions. BUMPTIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a bumptious manner; in a self-assertive, arrogant, or obtrusively confident way. BURGOMASTER (16) [noun] The mayor, or head magistrate, of a town in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany and certain other countries. BUSHMASTERS (18) [noun] A venomous pit viper, Lachesis muta, from tropical America BUSINESSMAN (15) [noun] A man in business, one who works at a commercial institution. BUSINESSMEN (15) [noun] A man in business, one who works at a commercial institution. BUTTERMILKS (19) [noun] The liquid left after churning butter from milk or cream. | [noun] A tangy fermented milk beverage made by adding lactic acid bacteria to milk. BUXOMNESSES (22) [noun] The plural of buxomness; the quality or state of being buxom, characterized by a full-figured or voluptuous appearance. CABBAGEWORM (23) [noun] Any of various lepidopterans whose larvae feed on cabbages and other cole crops. CACODEMONIC (20) CACOMISTLES (17) [noun] The ring-tailed cat, Bassariscus astutus. CADDISWORMS (20) [noun] Aquatic larvae of caddisflies that typically construct protective cases from silk and debris, used as fish bait. CAFETORIUMS (18) [noun] A large room in a school or institution that serves as both a cafeteria and an auditorium. CAJOLEMENTS (22) [noun] Plural of cajolement; the act of persuading someone with flattery or gentle urging. | [noun] Flattering or coaxing words used to persuade someone. CALAMANDERS (16) [noun] A valuable furniture wood from India and Ceylon, of a hazel-brown color, with black stripes, very hard in texture. It is a kind of ebony obtained from species of Diospyros, especially the Diospyros quaesita. CALAMONDINS (16) [noun] A small decorative evergreen citrus tree, of the hybrid Citrus × microcarpa, syn. ×Citrofortunella mitis, sometimes cultivated for its fruit. | [noun] The fruit of this tree. CALCIMINING (18) [verb] To coat with this substance. CALIFORNIUM (18) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Cf) with an atomic number of 98. CALLITHUMPS (20) CALMODULINS (16) [noun] Plural of calmodulin, a calcium-binding protein found in eukaryotic cells that regulates various cellular processes. CALORIMETER (15) [noun] An apparatus for measuring the heat generated or absorbed by either a chemical reaction, change of phase or some other physical change. CALORIMETRY (18) [noun] The measurement of heat produced or absorbed in chemical reactions or physical processes. CALUMNIATED (16) [verb] To make hurtful untrue comments about. | [verb] To levy a false charge against, especially of a vague offense, with the intent to damage someone's reputation or standing. CALUMNIATES (15) [verb] To make hurtful untrue comments about. | [verb] To levy a false charge against, especially of a vague offense, with the intent to damage someone's reputation or standing. CALUMNIATOR (15) [noun] One who calumniates; a person who makes false and damaging statements about another; a slanderer. CAMARADERIE (16) [noun] Close friendship in a group of friends or teammates. | [noun] A spirit of familiarity and closeness CAMELOPARDS (18) [noun] A giraffe. CAMERAWOMAN (20) [noun] A woman who operates any kind of camera. CAMERAWOMEN (20) [noun] A woman who operates any kind of camera. CAMERLENGOS (16) [noun] The plural of camerlengo, a cardinal in the Roman Catholic Church who manages the property and finances of the papal see. CAMOUFLAGED (20) [verb] To hide or disguise something by covering it up or changing the way it looks. | [adjective] Wearing, in, or treated with, camouflage; disguised CAMOUFLAGES (19) [noun] A disguise or covering up. | [noun] The act of disguising. | [noun] The use of natural or artificial material on personnel, objects, or tactical positions with the aim of confusing, misleading, or evading the enemy. CAMOUFLAGIC (21) CAMPAIGNERS (18) [noun] A person who has served in a military campaign. | [noun] (by extension) A military veteran. | [noun] A person who campaigns for a person running for political office or works, or supports, in an organised and active way towards a goal . CAMPAIGNING (19) [verb] To take part in a campaign. | [verb] Consistently ride in races for a racing season. | [noun] The act of taking part in a campaign. CAMPANOLOGY (21) [noun] The study of bells and their casting, tuning, and ringing. CAMPANULATE (17) [adjective] Shaped like a bell. CAMPGROUNDS (19) [noun] An area where tents are pitched. | [noun] An area where a camp meeting (a retreat) (trail ride and party) is held. CAMPHORATED (21) [adjective] Treated or impregnated with camphor. CAMPHORATES (20) [verb] To treat or impregnate with camphor. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of the verb "camphorat," meaning to apply camphor to something. CAMPINESSES (17) [noun] The plural of campiness; the quality of being campy, exaggerated, or deliberately affected in style or manner. CANDELABRUM (18) [noun] A candle holder. CANKERWORMS (22) [noun] Either of two caterpillars, the larvae of geometrid moths, that are destructive to fruit, buds and leaves. | [noun] A corrupting or destructive force. CANNIBALISM (17) [noun] The act of eating another of one's own species. | [noun] An act in which one thing consumes or takes over another of the same kind. | [noun] In speech, the occurrence of one word eliding part or all of the next word, because the syllables are the same. For example, "Look, an MIT shirt" for "Look, an MIT T-shirt". CANTONMENTS (15) [noun] Temporary military living quarters. | [noun] A town or village, or part of a town or village, assigned to a body of troops for quarters. | [noun] A permanent military station. CAPITALISMS (17) [noun] Plural of capitalism, referring to multiple economic systems or instances of capitalism. CAPROLACTAM (19) [noun] A lactam (cyclic amide) manufactured from cyclohexanone and used in the manufacture of nylon. CARAMELISED (16) [verb] To convert (sugar) into caramel. | [verb] To brown (sugar) by means of heat. | [verb] To undergo this kind of conversion or browning. CARAMELISES (15) [verb] To convert (sugar) into caramel. | [verb] To brown (sugar) by means of heat. | [verb] To undergo this kind of conversion or browning. CARAMELIZED (25) [verb] To convert (sugar) into caramel. | [verb] To brown (sugar) by means of heat. | [verb] To undergo this kind of conversion or browning. CARAMELIZES (24) [verb] To convert (sugar) into caramel. | [verb] To brown (sugar) by means of heat. | [verb] To undergo this kind of conversion or browning. CARCINOMATA (17) [noun] An invasive malignant tumor derived from epithelial tissue that tends to metastasize to other areas of the body. CARDIOGRAMS (17) [noun] The visual output an electrocardiograph produces CARMAGNOLES (16) [noun] A lively dance and song of the French Revolution, or a type of short jacket worn during that period. | [noun] Plural of carmagnole. CARMINATIVE (18) [noun] A drug or substance that induces the releasing of gas from the digestive tract | [adjective] Relieving discomfort of gas in the digestive tract CARPOGONIUM (18) [noun] The female reproductive structure in red algae that receives the male gamete during fertilization. CATABOLISMS (17) [noun] Plural of catabolism; the metabolic processes that break down complex molecules into simpler ones, releasing energy in living organisms. CATACLYSMAL (20) [adjective] Relating to or involving a cataclysm; characterized by sudden, violent, and large-scale upheaval or disaster. CATACLYSMIC (22) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a cataclysm; causing great destruction or upheaval; catastrophic. CATADROMOUS (16) [adjective] (of a migratory fish) that lives in fresh water and breeds in the sea | [adjective] Of a fern in which the first veins in a frond segment are produced towards the base of the frond. CATECHISMAL (20) [adjective] Relating to or of the nature of a catechism, a religious instruction manual presented in question-and-answer format. CATECHUMENS (20) [noun] A convert to Christianity under instruction before baptism; a young or recent Christian preparing for confirmation. CAUDILLISMO (16) [noun] A system of government or leadership based on the rule of a caudillo, a military dictator or strongman in Spanish-speaking countries. CAVALIERISM (18) CEILOMETERS (15) [noun] An instrument that measures the height of clouds above the ground by projecting a light beam upward and detecting its reflection. CEMENTATION (15) [noun] The act of cementing | [noun] The impregnation of the surface of a metal with another material; the manufacture of steel by carburizing iron | [noun] The precipitation of mineral matter in the pores of a sediment CENTIMETERS (15) [noun] An SI unit of length equal to 10-2 metres. Symbol: cm CENTIMORGAN (16) [noun] A length of chromosome in which an average of 0.01 crossover occurs per generation. CENTRALISMS (15) [noun] Plural of centralism; the principle or practice of centralizing power or authority in a central government or organization. CENTROMERES (15) [noun] The central region of a eukaryotic chromosome where the kinetochore is assembled. CENTROMERIC (17) [adjective] Relating to or located at the centromere, the specialized region of a chromosome where sister chromatids are held together and where kinetochore proteins attach during cell division. CENTROSOMES (15) [noun] An organelle, near the nucleus in the cytoplasm of most organisms, that controls the organization of its microtubules CERAMICISTS (17) [noun] Plural of ceramicist; artists or craftspeople who create objects from ceramic materials such as clay. CEREBELLUMS (17) [noun] Part of the hindbrain in vertebrates. In humans it lies between the brainstem and the cerebrum. It plays an important role in sensory perception, motor output, balance and posture. CEREMONIALS (15) [noun] A ceremony, or series of ceremonies, prescribed by ritual. CEREMONIOUS (15) [adjective] Fond of ceremony, ritual or strict etiquette; punctilious | [adjective] Characterized by ceremony or rigid formality CHAIRMANING (19) CHAIRMANNED (19) CHAMAEPHYTE (26) [noun] Any low perennial plant whose buds overwinter just above soil level CHAMBERLAIN (20) [noun] An officer in charge of managing the household of a sovereign, especially in the United Kingdom and in Denmark. | [noun] A high officer of state, as currently with the papal camerlengo, but normally now a mainly honorary title. | [noun] An upper servant of an inn. CHAMBERMAID (23) [noun] A maid who handles the chores in a bedroom. CHAMELEONIC (20) CHAMPERTIES (20) [noun] The investing of money into an individual's lawsuit. CHAMPERTOUS (20) CHAMPIGNONS (21) [noun] Agaricus bisporus, a species of mushroom commonly used in cooking CHAMPIONING (21) [verb] To promote, advocate, or act as a champion for (a cause, etc.). | [verb] To challenge. | [noun] The act of one who champions something; fervent support. CHARISMATIC (20) [noun] A member of the Charismatic Movement. | [adjective] Of, related to, or having charisma. | [adjective] Of, related to, or being a member of a form of Christianity that emphasises the role of the Holy Spirit. CHARMINGEST (19) CHAULMOOGRA (19) [noun] A tree found in Southeast Asia, Hydnocarpus wightiana, which yields an oil that was formerly used as a treatment for leprosy. CHAUVINISMS (21) [noun] Excessive patriotism, eagerness for national superiority; jingoism. | [noun] Unwarranted bias, favoritism, or devotion to one's own particular group, cause, or idea. CHECKMARKED (29) CHECKMATING (25) [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. | [verb] (by extension) To place in a losing situation that has no escape. CHEMISETTES (18) [noun] An item of women's clothing, popular in the 1860s and 1870s, worn to fill in the front and neckline of any garment. CHEMISORBED (21) [verb] Past tense of chemisorb; to undergo or cause to undergo chemisorption, a process in which molecules bond to a surface through chemical forces. CHEMISTRIES (18) [noun] The branch of natural science that deals with the composition and constitution of substances and the changes that they undergo as a consequence of alterations in the constitution of their molecules. | [noun] An application of chemical theory and method to a particular substance. | [noun] The mutual attraction between two people; rapport. CHEMOTACTIC (22) [adjective] Relating to or exhibiting chemotaxis, the movement of an organism in response to chemical stimuli. CHERNOZEMIC (29) [adjective] Relating to chernozem, a type of dark, fertile soil rich in organic matter found in temperate grasslands. CHIMAERISMS (20) [noun] Plural of chimaerism, a condition in an organism where tissues or cells from two or more genetically distinct sources are present. | [noun] Impossible or grotesque combinations, particularly in art or fantasy; things that are chimeric in nature. CHIMICHANGA (24) [noun] A deep-fried wet burrito CHIMNEYLIKE (25) CHIMPANZEES (29) [noun] A species of great ape in the genus Pan, native to Africa, and believed by biologists to be the closest extant relative to humans. CHIROMANCER (20) [noun] One who practices chiromancy; a palm reader. CHIRONOMIDS (19) [noun] Any of the non-biting midges or Chironomidae, a family of true flies within the order Diptera. CHLORAMINES (18) [noun] Any of a class of unstable compounds of nitrogen and chlorine R1R2NCl; also the parent compound NH2Cl, used to manufacture hydrazine, and as the antiseptic chloramine-T CHLOROFORMS (21) [verb] To treat with chloroform, or to render unconscious with chloroform. CHOIRMASTER (18) [noun] The musical director of a choir, who conducts performances and supervises rehearsal CHRISMATION (18) [noun] The act of anointing with consecrated oil as part of a religious rite, especially in Eastern Christian churches as part of confirmation or baptism. CHROMATINIC (20) CHROMINANCE (20) [noun] The signal used in video systems to convey the picture's colour information, separately from the accompanying luma signal. CHROMOGENIC (21) [adjective] Describing a process in which a black-and-white image is replaced by a coloured one. | [adjective] Containing or producing chromogen. CHROMOMERES (20) [noun] Distinct segments or beads visible on chromosomes during certain stages of cell division, representing localized regions of chromatin. | [noun] The structural units of a chromosome that appear as dark-staining bodies when viewed under a microscope. CHROMOMERIC (22) CHROMOPHOBE (25) CHROMOPHORE (23) [noun] That part of the molecule of a dye responsible for its colour | [noun] (more generally) the group of atoms in a molecule in which the electronic transition responsible for a given spectral band is located CHROMOPLAST (20) [noun] Any plastid in which a pigment is synthesized or stored CHROMOSOMAL (20) [adjective] Of or relating to chromosomes. CHROMOSOMES (20) [noun] A linear arrangement of condensed DNA and associated proteins (such as chaperone proteins) which contains the genetic material (genome) of an organism. CHRONOGRAMS (19) [noun] Inscriptions or verses in which certain letters, when interpreted as Roman numerals, express a date or chronological information. CHRONOMETER (18) [noun] A device for measuring time, such as a watch or clock. CHRONOMETRY (21) [noun] The science of the measurement of time CHRYSOMELID (22) [noun] Any leaf beetle of the family Chrysomelidae CHUCKLESOME (24) [adjective] Causing chuckles; humorous. CHURCHWOMAN (26) [noun] The female equivalent of a churchman. CHURCHWOMEN (26) [noun] The female equivalent of a churchman. CHYLOMICRON (23) [noun] A microscopic globule of lipoprotein, found in blood and lymph, that is associated with the digestion of fats CICISBEISMS (19) [noun] The plural of cicisbeo, a man who is a lover or devoted male admirer of a married woman in Italian society. | [noun] The practice or custom of maintaining such relationships in Italian aristocratic or upper-class society. CIMETIDINES (16) [noun] Plural of cimetidine, a medication used to reduce stomach acid production and treat ulcers and acid reflux. CINCHONISMS (20) [noun] Plural of cinchonism; a toxic condition caused by excessive use of cinchona or quinine, characterized by symptoms such as ringing in the ears, headache, and visual disturbances. CINEMAGOERS (16) [noun] One who visits a cinema in order to watch a film. CINEMATIZED (25) [verb] Adapted or presented in the style or form of a cinema film; converted into a movie format. CINEMATIZES (24) [verb] To adapt or present something in the form of a film or cinema; to make cinematic. CIRCUMCISED (20) [verb] To surgically remove the foreskin (prepuce) from a penis (male). | [verb] (sometimes proscribed) To surgically remove the clitoris (clitoridectomy), clitoral hood, or labia (female). | [noun] A circumcised person CIRCUMCISER (19) [noun] One who performs circumcision. CIRCUMCISES (19) [verb] To surgically remove the foreskin (prepuce) from a penis (male). | [verb] (sometimes proscribed) To surgically remove the clitoris (clitoridectomy), clitoral hood, or labia (female). CIRCUMFUSED (21) [verb] To pour round; to spread round, as a fluid. | [verb] To spread round; to surround. CIRCUMFUSES (20) [verb] To pour round; to spread round, as a fluid. | [verb] To spread round; to surround. CIRCUMLUNAR (17) [adjective] Surrounding, or travelling around the moon CIRCUMPOLAR (19) [adjective] Located or found throughout a polar region. | [adjective] Of a celestial body, continually visible above the horizon during the entire 360 degrees of daily travel. CIRCUMSPECT (21) [adjective] Carefully aware of all circumstances; considerate of all that is pertinent. CIRCUMVENTS (20) [verb] To avoid or get around something; to bypass | [verb] To surround or besiege | [verb] To outwit or outsmart CIRROCUMULI (17) [noun] Plural of cirrocumulus, a type of high-altitude cloud formation characterized by small, white, rounded masses often arranged in regular patterns. CLAMOROUSLY (18) [adverb] In a loud, insistent, and demanding manner; noisily and vehemently. CLASSICISMS (17) [noun] Plural of classicism; adherence to classical principles in art, literature, or music, or instances of such adherence. | [noun] Classical styles, works, or movements considered collectively. CLEISTOGAMY (19) [noun] The production of flowers which do not open and are self-fertilized in the bud. CLERGYWOMAN (22) [noun] An ordained (female) Christian minister; a female member of the clergy. | [noun] A woman belonging to a clergyman's family. CLERGYWOMEN (22) [noun] An ordained (female) Christian minister; a female member of the clergy. | [noun] A woman belonging to a clergyman's family. CLERICALISM (17) [noun] The political dominance or influence of the clergy in secular matters. | [noun] Excessive adherence to clerical authority or ecclesiastical principles in secular affairs. CLIMACTERIC (19) [noun] A critical stage or decisive point; a turning point. | [noun] A period in human life in which some great change is supposed to take place, calculated in different ways by different authorities (often identified as every seventh or ninth year). | [noun] The period of life that leads up to and follows the end of menstruation in women; the menopause. CLIMATOLOGY (19) [noun] The science that deals with climates, and investigates their phenomena and causes. CLINOMETERS (15) [noun] An apparatus for measuring a vertical angle, a slope, or the height of a large object (e.g. a tree). CLIOMETRICS (17) [noun] The use of econometrics to study economic history CLOMIPHENES (20) [noun] Plural of clomiphene, a synthetic estrogen antagonist drug used to treat infertility by stimulating ovulation in women. CLOSTRIDIUM (16) [noun] Any of several mostly anaerobic gram-positive bacteria, of the genus Clostridium, that are present in the soil and in the intestines of humans and animals and are capable of forming spores COADMITTING (17) [verb] Present participle of coadmit; admitting jointly or together with another. COATIMUNDIS (16) [noun] The ring-tailed coati, Nasua nasua, a South American carnivore. COCHAMPIONS (22) [noun] Plural of cochampion; two or more people or teams that share first place or equal championship status in a competition. COCKALORUMS (21) [noun] A menial yet self-important person; a person who makes empty boasts. | [noun] Boastful speech, crowing. | [noun] A game similar to leapfrog. COCKNEYISMS (24) [noun] The characteristics, manners, or dialect of a Cockney. | [noun] A Cockney phrase or idiom. COCOMPOSERS (19) [noun] Plural of cocomposer; people who compose music or create works jointly together. CODOMINANTS (16) [noun] Alleles or genes that are equally expressed in a heterozygous organism, both contributing fully to the phenotype. | [noun] In ecology, plant species that share dominance in a community, occupying similar ecological niches with comparable influence. COEMBODYING (22) COEMPLOYING (21) COENAMORING (16) COENZYMATIC (29) COFFEEMAKER (25) [noun] Any of several different types of kitchen apparatus used to brew and filter coffee. COLEMANITES (15) [noun] A white, grey or colorless mineral form of calcium borate; a principal source of boron. COLLEMBOLAN (17) [noun] A small wingless arthropod of the class Collembola, commonly known as a springtail. COLLENCHYMA (23) [noun] A living, elongated, mechanical and flexible ground tissue with angular pectin depositions; present just under leaves, tendrils and stems of climbers; formed before vascular differentiation. COLLIMATING (16) [verb] To focus into a narrow beam or column; to adjust a focusing device so that it produces a narrow beam. | [adjective] That collimates, or employs collimation COLLIMATION (15) [noun] The process of aligning optical or mechanical elements along a common axis. | [noun] In astronomy, the adjustment of a telescope to ensure its optical axis is properly aligned. COLLIMATORS (15) [noun] An optical device that generates a parallel beam of light. Often used to compensate for laser beam divergence. | [noun] A similar device that produces a parallel beam of particles such as neutrons. | [noun] A small telescope attached to a larger one, used to point it in the correct general direction. COLLOQUIUMS (24) [noun] A colloquy; a meeting for discussion. | [noun] An academic meeting or seminar usually led by a different lecturer and on a different topic at each meeting. | [noun] An address to an academic meeting or seminar. COLOGARITHM (19) [noun] The logarithm of the reciprocal of a number, equal to the negative of the logarithm of the number itself. COLONIALISM (15) [noun] The colonial domination policy. A colonial system. | [noun] A colonial word, phrase, concept, or habit. | [noun] Colonial life. COLORIMETER (15) [noun] Any of various instruments designed to determine the color of something, by comparison with standard colors or by spectroscopy. | [noun] An analytic instrument that estimates the concentration of a substance in a sample by measuring its color against the solution's complimentary color. COLORIMETRY (18) [noun] The measurement and analysis of color, including its properties such as hue, saturation, and brightness. COLOSTOMIES (15) [noun] An incision into the colon to allow for drainage; the opening produced in such incision. COLUMBARIUM (19) [noun] A large, sometimes architecturally impressive building for housing a large colony of pigeons or doves, particularly those of ancien regime France. | [noun] A pigeonhole in such a dovecote. | [noun] A building, a vault or a similar place for the respectful and usually public storage of cinerary urns containing cremated remains. COLUMNISTIC (17) COMBATIVELY (23) [adverb] In a manner involving or showing aggressive willingness to fight or confront; in a belligerent or confrontational way. COMBINATION (17) [noun] The act of combining, the state of being combined or the result of combining. | [noun] An object formed by combining. | [noun] A sequence of numbers or letters used to open a combination lock. COMBINATIVE (20) [adjective] Relating to or involving combination; capable of being combined or serving to combine elements together. COMBINATORY (20) [adjective] Of, relating to, or derived from a combination or combinations; combinative or combinatorial. | [adjective] Having the ability to combine; combinable, combinational or combining. COMBUSTIBLE (19) [noun] A material that is capable of burning. | [adjective] Capable of burning | [adjective] Easily kindled or excited; quick; fiery; irascible. COMBUSTIBLY (22) [adverb] In a manner that is easily ignited or prone to catching fire; with combustibility. COMBUSTIONS (17) [noun] Plural of combustion; instances of burning or rapid chemical reactions with oxygen that produce heat and light. COMEDICALLY (21) [adverb] In a manner that is funny or amusing; in a way intended to provoke laughter. COMEDIENNES (16) [noun] A female comedian. COMESTIBLES (17) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Anything that can be eaten; food. COMEUPPANCE (21) [noun] Retribution which is justly deserved. COMFORTABLE (20) [noun] A stuffed or quilted coverlet for a bed; a comforter. | [adjective] Providing physical comfort and ease; agreeable. | [adjective] In a state of comfort and content. COMFORTABLY (23) [adverb] In a comfortable manner. | [adverb] Easily; without effort or difficulty. COMFORTLESS (18) [adjective] (of a person) Deprived of comfort; uncomforted. | [adjective] (of a thing) Offering no comfort; uncomforting. COMMANDABLE (20) [adjective] Able to be commanded or ordered; responsive to commands. COMMANDANTS (18) [noun] A commanding officer, usually of a specific force or division. COMMANDEERS (18) [verb] To seize for military use. | [verb] To force into military service. | [verb] To take arbitrarily or by force. COMMANDMENT (20) [noun] A divinely ordained command, especially one of the Ten Commandments. | [noun] Something that must be obeyed; a command or edict. | [noun] The act of commanding; exercise of authority. COMMEMORATE (19) [verb] To honour the memory of someone or something with a ceremony or object. | [verb] To serve as a memorial to someone or something. COMMENDABLE (20) [adjective] Worthy of commendation; deserving praise; admirable, creditable, or meritorious. COMMENDABLY (23) [adverb] In a commendable manner. COMMENSALLY (20) [adverb] In a manner relating to commensalism, a relationship between two organisms where one benefits and the other is unaffected. COMMENTATED (18) [verb] To provide a commentary; to act as a commentator; to maintain a stream of comments about some event. COMMENTATES (17) [verb] To provide a commentary; to act as a commentator; to maintain a stream of comments about some event. COMMENTATOR (17) [noun] A person who comments; especially someone who is paid to give his/her opinions in the media about current affairs, sports, etc. COMMERCIALS (19) [noun] An advertisement in a common media format, usually radio or television. | [noun] A commercial trader, as opposed to an individual speculator. COMMINATION (17) [noun] A formal denunciation; especially one threatening divine punishment, read out in church on Ash Wednesday COMMINATORY (20) [adjective] Of or pertaining to commination. COMMINGLING (19) [verb] To mix, to blend. | [verb] To become mixed or blended. | [noun] A mixing or mixture. COMMINUTING (18) [verb] Reducing something to minute particles or powder by grinding, crushing, or breaking into small fragments. COMMINUTION (17) [noun] (waste management) The breaking or grinding up of a material to form smaller particles. | [noun] The fracture of a bone site in multiple pieces (technically, at least three); crumbling. COMMISERATE (17) [adjective] Commiserating, pitying, lamentful | [verb] To feel or express compassion or sympathy for (someone or something). | [verb] (as the phrasal verb commiserate with) To sympathize; condole. COMMISSIONS (17) [noun] A sending or mission (to do or accomplish something). | [noun] An official charge or authority to do something, often used of military officers. | [noun] The thing to be done as agent for another. COMMISSURAL (17) [adjective] Relating to or involving a commissure, which is a connection or joining between two parts, especially in anatomy or botany. COMMISSURES (17) [noun] The joint between two bones. | [noun] A band of nerve tissue connecting the hemispheres of the brain, the two sides of the spinal cord, etc. | [noun] The line where the upper and lower lips or eyelids meet. COMMITMENTS (19) [noun] The act or an instance of committing, putting in charge, keeping, or trust, especially: | [noun] Promise or agreement to do something in the future, especially: | [noun] Being bound emotionally or intellectually to a course of action or to another person or persons. COMMITTABLE (19) COMMIXTURES (24) [noun] Mixtures or combinations of different substances blended together. | [noun] The act or process of mixing different elements together. COMMODIFIED (22) [adjective] Subjected to commodification | [verb] To make something into a commodity, sometimes at the expense of its intrinsic value. COMMODIFIES (21) [verb] To make something into a commodity, sometimes at the expense of its intrinsic value. COMMODITIES (18) [noun] Anything movable (a good) that is bought and sold. | [noun] Something useful or valuable. | [noun] Raw materials, agricultural and other primary products as objects of large-scale trading in specialized exchanges. COMMONALITY (20) [noun] The common people; the commonalty | [noun] The joint possession of a set of attributes or characteristics. | [noun] Such a shared attribute or characteristic COMMONPLACE (21) [noun] A platitude or cliché. | [noun] Something that is ordinary; something commonly done or occurring. | [noun] A memorandum; something to be frequently consulted or referred to. COMMONSENSE (17) [adjective] Attributive form of common sense COMMONWEALS (20) [noun] Plural of commonwealth; a nation, state, or group of states unified by common interests. | [noun] The common good or welfare of the public. COMMUNALISM (19) [noun] The communal ownership of property. | [noun] Any social system based around a community. COMMUNALIST (17) [noun] A person who advocates for or practices communalism, emphasizing community ownership or collective action. | [noun] A member of a commune or communal group. COMMUNALITY (20) [noun] The quality or state of being common or shared by members of a community. | [noun] In statistics and factor analysis, the proportion of a variable's variance that is explained by common factors. COMMUNALIZE (26) [verb] To take property into communal ownership COMMUNICANT (19) [noun] A person who receives (or is allowed to receive the elements (i.e., bread and wine) of) the sacrament of Holy Communion (compare also the terms: communion, Communion, Lord’s Supper, Mass, Eucharist, Divine Liturgy). | [noun] One who communicates. | [adjective] Communicating. COMMUNICATE (19) [verb] To impart | [verb] To share COMMUNIQUES (26) [noun] Official announcements or statements issued by a government, organization, or military authority. COMMUNISING (18) [verb] To make something the property of a community. | [verb] To impose Communist ideals on people. | [verb] To become or be made communistic. COMMUNISTIC (19) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of communism or communists. COMMUNITIES (17) [noun] A group sharing a common understanding, and often the same language, law, manners, and/or tradition. | [noun] A residential or religious collective; a commune. | [noun] A group of interdependent organisms inhabiting the same region and interacting with each other. COMMUNIZING (27) [verb] To make something the property of a community. | [verb] To impose Communist ideals on people. | [verb] To become or be made communistic. COMMUTATING (18) [verb] To reverse the direction of (a current). | [verb] To convert from being or using an alternating current into being or using a direct current. | [verb] To commute; to be invariant under a reversal of the positions of operands. COMMUTATION (17) [noun] A passing from one state to another; change; alteration; mutation. | [noun] The act of giving one thing for another; barter; exchange. | [noun] Substitution of one thing for another; interchange. | [noun] The process or habit of journeying to and from work on a regular basis; commuting. COMMUTATIVE (20) [adjective] (of a binary operation) Such that the order in which the operands are taken does not affect their image under the operation. | [adjective] (of an algebraic structure) Having a commutative operation. | [adjective] (of a diagram of morphisms) Such that any two sequences of morphisms with the same initial and final positions compose to the same morphism. COMMUTATORS (17) [noun] An electrical switch, in a generator or motor, that periodically reverses the direction of an electric current. | [noun] A binary map in a given group G, given by [g, h] = ghg−1h−1, where g and h are elements of G, which yields the group's identity if and only if the group operation commutes for g and h. | [noun] A binary map in a given ring R, given by [a, b] = ab − ba, where a and b are elements of R, which yields the ring's zero element if and only if the multiplication operation commutes for a and b. COMPACTIBLE (21) COMPACTIONS (19) [noun] The process of compacting something, or something that has been compacted. COMPACTNESS (19) [noun] The state of being compact COMPANIONED (18) [verb] To be a companion to; to attend on; to accompany. | [verb] To qualify as a companion; to make equal. COMPARATIST (17) [noun] A person who carries out a comparative study, especially of language and literary works COMPARATIVE (20) [noun] (grammar) A construction showing a relative quality, in English usually formed by adding more or appending -er. For example, the comparative of green is greener; of evil, more evil. | [noun] (grammar) A word in the comparative form. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Data used to make a comparison. COMPARATORS (17) [noun] Any device for comparing a physical property of two objects, or an object with a standard. | [noun] An electronic device that compares two voltages, currents or streams of data. | [noun] Anything that serves comparison COMPARISONS (17) [noun] The act of comparing or the state or process of being compared. | [noun] An evaluation of the similarities and differences of one or more things relative to some other or each-other. | [noun] With a negation, the state of being similar or alike. COMPARTMENT (19) [noun] A room, or section, or chamber | [noun] One of the parts into which an area is subdivided. | [noun] Part of a protein that serves a specific function. COMPASSABLE (19) [adjective] Able to be compassinated or encompassed; capable of being included or contained within a compass or boundary. COMPASSIONS (17) [noun] Deep awareness of the suffering of another, coupled with the wish to relieve it. COMPATIBLES (19) [noun] Something that is compatible with something else. COMPATRIOTS (17) [noun] Somebody from one's own country. COMPELLABLE (19) [adjective] Capable of being compelled or constrained. COMPENDIOUS (18) [adjective] Containing a subset of words, succinctly described; abridged and summarized | [adjective] Briefly describing a body of knowledge COMPENDIUMS (20) [noun] A short, complete summary; an abstract. | [noun] A list or collection of various items. COMPENSABLE (19) [adjective] Able to be compensated; entitling one to compensation. COMPENSATED (18) [verb] To do (something good) after (something bad) happens | [verb] To pay or reward someone in exchange for work done or some other consideration. | [verb] To make up for; to do something in place of something else; to correct, satisfy; to reach an agreement such that the scales are literally or (metaphorically) balanced; to equalize or make even. COMPENSATES (17) [verb] To do (something good) after (something bad) happens | [verb] To pay or reward someone in exchange for work done or some other consideration. | [verb] To make up for; to do something in place of something else; to correct, satisfy; to reach an agreement such that the scales are literally or (metaphorically) balanced; to equalize or make even. COMPENSATOR (17) [noun] A device or mechanism that counteracts or neutralizes the effect of something else. | [noun] A person who compensates for a deficiency or loss. COMPETENCES (19) [noun] The quality or state of being competent, i.e. able or suitable for a general role. | [noun] The quality or state of being able or suitable for a particular task; the quality or state of being competent for a particular task. | [noun] The system of linguistic knowledge possessed by native speakers of a language, as opposed to its actual use in concrete situations (performance), cf. :w:linguistic competence. COMPETENTLY (20) [adverb] In a competent manner. COMPETITION (17) [noun] The action of competing. | [noun] A contest for a prize or award. | [noun] The competitors in such a contest. COMPETITIVE (20) [adjective] Capable of competing successfully | [adjective] Of or pertaining to competition | [adjective] (of someone's character) inclined to compete COMPETITORS (17) [noun] A person or organization against whom one is competing. | [noun] A participant in a competition, especially in athletics. COMPILATION (17) [noun] The act or process of compiling or gathering together from various sources. | [noun] That which is compiled; especially, a book or document composed of materials gathering from other books or documents. | [noun] Translation of source code into object code by a compiler. COMPLACENCE (21) [noun] Being complacent; a feeling of contentment or satisfaction; complacency. | [noun] Pleasure, delight. | [noun] Complaisance; a willingness to comply with others' wishes. COMPLACENCY (24) [noun] A feeling of contented self-satisfaction, especially when unaware of upcoming trouble. | [noun] An instance of self-satisfaction. COMPLAINANT (17) [noun] The party that brings a civil lawsuit against another; the plaintiff. | [noun] An alleged victim in a criminal investigation or trial. | [noun] One who makes complaint. COMPLAINERS (17) [noun] One who complains, or is known for their complaints. COMPLAINING (18) [verb] To express feelings of pain, dissatisfaction, or resentment. | [verb] To make a formal accusation or bring a formal charge. | [verb] To creak or squeak, as a timber or wheel. COMPLAISANT (17) [adjective] Compliant. | [adjective] Willing to do what pleases others; obliging. | [adjective] Polite; showing respect. COMPLECTING (20) COMPLEMENTS (19) [noun] A protective substance that exists in the serum or other bodily fluid and is capable of killing microorganisms; complement. | [noun] Something (or someone) that completes; the consummation. | [noun] The act of completing something, or the fact of being complete; completion, completeness, fulfilment. COMPLETIONS (17) [noun] The act or state of being or making something complete; conclusion, accomplishment. | [noun] The conclusion of an act of conveyancing concerning the sale of a property. | [noun] A forward pass that is successfully caught by the intended receiver. COMPLEXIONS (24) [noun] The combination of humours making up one's physiological "temperament", being either hot or cold, and moist or dry. | [noun] The quality, colour, or appearance of the skin on the face. | [noun] The outward appearance of something. COMPLEXNESS (24) [noun] The quality or state of being complex; complexity. COMPLIANCES (19) [noun] The plural of compliance; instances of adhering to rules, standards, or requests. | [noun] The state of being compliant or cooperative in meeting requirements or expectations. COMPLIANTLY (20) [adverb] In a manner that complies with or obeys rules, requirements, or requests. COMPLICATED (20) [verb] To make complex; to modify so as to make something intricate or difficult. | [verb] To involve in a convoluted matter. | [adjective] Difficult or convoluted. COMPLICATES (19) [verb] To make complex; to modify so as to make something intricate or difficult. | [verb] To involve in a convoluted matter. COMPLIMENTS (19) [noun] An expression of praise, congratulation, or respect. | [noun] Complimentary language; courtesy, flattery. COMPLOTTING (18) [verb] Present participle of complot; plotting or conspiring together secretly. COMPORTMENT (19) [noun] The manner in which one behaves or conducts oneself | [noun] Deportment, bearing COMPOSITELY (20) [adverb] In a composite manner; in a way that is made up of distinct parts or elements combined together. COMPOSITING (18) [verb] To make a composite. | [noun] Construction of a composite image by combining multiple images and/or other elements. COMPOSITION (17) [noun] The act of putting together; assembly. | [noun] A mixture or compound; the result of composing. | [noun] The proportion of different parts to make a whole. COMPOSITORS (17) [noun] A person who sets type; a typesetter. | [noun] One who, or that which, composes or sets in order. COMPOUNDERS (18) [noun] A person who compounds (mixes ingredients, and tests the result) | [noun] One who attempts to bring persons or parties to terms of agreement, or to accomplish ends by compromises. | [noun] One who compounds a debt, obligation, or crime. COMPOUNDING (19) [verb] To form (a resulting mixture) by combining different elements, ingredients, or parts. | [verb] To assemble (ingredients) into a whole; to combine, mix, or unite. | [verb] To modify or change by combination with some other thing or part; to mingle with something else. COMPRADORES (18) [noun] An intermediary. | [noun] A native of a colonised country who acts as the agent of the coloniser. | [noun] A ship's chandler in the Far East. COMPREHENDS (21) [verb] To include, comprise; to contain. | [verb] To understand or grasp fully and thoroughly. COMPRESSING (18) [verb] To make smaller; to press or squeeze together, or to make something occupy a smaller space or volume. | [verb] To be pressed together or folded by compression into a more economic, easier format. | [verb] To condense into a more economic, easier format. COMPRESSION (17) [noun] An increase in density; the act of compressing, or the state of being compressed; compaction. | [noun] The cycle of an internal combustion engine during which the fuel and air mixture is compressed. | [noun] The process by which data is compressed. COMPRESSIVE (20) [adjective] That compresses COMPRESSORS (17) [noun] A device that produces pressure, such as a gas compressor that produces pressurized gas. | [noun] A device that squeezes (compresses). | [noun] (audio) A device that reduces the dynamic range of an audio signal. COMPROMISED (20) [verb] To bind by mutual agreement. | [verb] To adjust and settle by mutual concessions; to compound. | [verb] To find a way between extremes. COMPROMISER (19) [noun] One who compromises or settles a dispute by making concessions. | [noun] One who is willing to compromise on principles or standards. COMPROMISES (19) [noun] The settlement of differences by arbitration or by consent reached by mutual concessions. | [noun] A committal to something derogatory or objectionable; a prejudicial concession; a surrender. | [noun] In data security, a violation of the security system such that an unauthorized disclosure or loss of sensitive information may have occurred, or the unauthorized disclosure or loss itself. COMPTROLLER (17) [noun] The chief accountant of a company or government. COMPULSIONS (17) [noun] An irrational need or irresistible urge to perform some action, often despite negative consequences. | [noun] The use of authority, influence, or other power to force (compel) a person or persons to act. | [noun] The lawful use of violence (i.e. by the administration). COMPUNCTION (19) [noun] A pricking of conscience or a feeling of regret, especially one which is slight or fleeting. COMPURGATOR (18) [noun] Someone who vouches for another person's innocence, trustworthiness etc. COMPUTATION (17) [noun] The act or process of computing; calculation; reckoning. | [noun] The result of computation; the amount computed. COMPUTERDOM (20) COMPUTERESE (17) [noun] The jargon associated with computers. COMPUTERISE (17) [verb] To convert a manual function or system into a computer system. | [verb] To equip with a computer or a computer system. | [verb] To enter data into such a system. COMPUTERIST (17) COMPUTERIZE (26) [verb] To convert a manual function or system into a computer system. | [verb] To equip with a computer or a computer system. | [verb] To enter data into such a system. COMPUTERNIK (21) COMRADERIES (16) [noun] The plural of comradery; a feeling of friendship and loyalty among people in the same group or situation. COMRADESHIP (21) [noun] The company or friendship of others, or sharing a goal. CONCEALMENT (17) [noun] The practice of keeping secrets. | [noun] The condition of being hidden or concealed. | [noun] Protection from observation or surveillance. CONCERNMENT (17) [noun] The state or quality of being a concern | [noun] That in which one is concerned or interested; concern; affair; interest. | [noun] Importance; moment; consequence CONCOMITANT (17) [noun] Something happening or existing at the same time. | [noun] An invariant homogeneous polynomial in the coefficients of a form, a covariant variable, and a contravariant variable. | [adjective] Accompanying; conjoining; attending; concurrent. CONCRETISMS (17) [noun] Plural of concretism; philosophical or artistic movements emphasizing concrete reality and tangible objects rather than abstract concepts. | [noun] Specific instances or examples of concrete thinking or concrete art forms. CONDEMNABLE (18) [adjective] Deserving or worthy of condemnation; blameworthy or reprehensible. CONDIMENTAL (16) [adjective] Of, relating to, or serving as a condiment; suitable for use as a seasoning or flavoring substance. CONDOMINIUM (18) [noun] Joint sovereignty over a territory by two or more countries. | [noun] A region or territory under such rule. | [noun] A building in which each unit is owned by an individual but the grounds, structure etc are owned jointly. CONDYLOMATA (19) [noun] A wartlike growth on the skin or a mucous membrane, caused by certain types of HPV viruses, usually occurring in the genital area CONFERMENTS (18) [noun] Plural of conferment; the act of conferring or bestowing something such as a degree, honor, or title. CONFINEMENT (18) [noun] The act of confining or the state of being confined. | [noun] Lying-in, time of giving birth. CONFIRMABLE (20) [adjective] Able to be confirmed or verified; capable of being established as true. CONFIRMANDS (19) [noun] A candidate for confirmation or affirmation of baptism. CONFIRMEDLY (22) [adverb] In a manner that has been confirmed or verified; admittedly or certainly. CONFORMABLE (20) [adjective] Having the same shape or form; very similar. | [adjective] Suitable; compliant. CONFORMABLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that conforms or complies with something; in agreement or accordance with a standard, rule, or expectation. CONFORMANCE (20) [noun] The act of conforming; conformity. CONFORMISMS (20) [noun] Plural of conformism; the practice of conforming to established attitudes, standards, or modes of behavior, especially without questioning them. CONFORMISTS (18) [noun] Someone who tries to conform to the mainstream. CONGEALMENT (16) [noun] The act of congealing. | [noun] Something that has congealed; a clot. CONGRESSMAN (16) [noun] A male member of congress. | [noun] A male member of the House of Representatives. CONGRESSMEN (16) [noun] A male member of congress. | [noun] A male member of the House of Representatives. CONSIGNMENT (16) [noun] A collection of goods to be sent, in transit or having been sent | [noun] The act of consigning CONSORTIUMS (15) [noun] An association or combination of businesses, financial institutions, or investors, for the purpose of engaging in a joint venture. | [noun] A similar arrangement among non-commercial institutions or organizations. | [noun] An association or society. CONSUMABLES (17) [noun] A material or product that is produced for consumption. CONSUMERISM (17) [noun] A policy of protecting and informing consumers through honesty in advertising and packaging, improved safety standards etc | [noun] A materialistic attachment to possessions. | [noun] An economic theory that increased consumption is beneficial to a nation's economy in the long run. CONSUMERIST (15) [noun] A proponent of consumerism. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to consumerism; consumeristic. CONSUMMATED (18) [verb] To bring (a task, project, goal etc.) to completion; to accomplish. | [verb] To make perfect, achieve, give the finishing touch. | [verb] To make (a marriage) complete by engaging in first sexual intercourse. CONSUMMATES (17) [verb] To bring (a task, project, goal etc.) to completion; to accomplish. | [verb] To make perfect, achieve, give the finishing touch. | [verb] To make (a marriage) complete by engaging in first sexual intercourse. CONSUMMATOR (17) [noun] One who consummates or completes something, particularly a marriage. CONSUMPTION (17) [noun] The act of eating, drinking or using. | [noun] The amount consumed. | [noun] The act of consuming or destroying. CONSUMPTIVE (20) [noun] A person suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis. | [adjective] Having a tendency to consume; dissipating; destructive; wasteful. | [adjective] Of, or relating to consumption. CONTAINMENT (15) [noun] The state of being contained. | [noun] The state of containing. | [noun] Something contained. CONTAMINANT (15) [noun] That which contaminates; an impurity; foreign matter. CONTAMINATE (15) [verb] To make something dangerous or toxic by introducing impurities or foreign matter. | [verb] To soil, stain, corrupt, or infect by contact or association. | [verb] To make unfit for use by the introduction of unwholesome or undesirable elements. CONTEMPLATE (17) [verb] To look at on all sides or in all its aspects; to view or consider with continued attention; to regard with deliberate care; to meditate on; to study, ponder, or consider. | [verb] To consider as a possibility. CONTENTMENT (15) [noun] The state or degree of being contented or satisfied. | [noun] Happiness in one's situation; satisfaction | [noun] The neurophysiological experience of satisfaction and being at ease in one's situation, body, and/or mind. CONTRETEMPS (17) [noun] An unforeseen, inopportune, or embarrassing event; a hitch | [noun] An ill-timed pass. CONTROLMENT (15) CONTUMACIES (17) [noun] Plural of contumacy; stubborn resistance to authority or rebellious defiance. | [noun] Contemptuous disregard for court orders or legal authority. CONTUMELIES (15) [noun] Offensive and abusive language or behaviour; scorn, insult. COPOLYMERIC (22) [adjective] Relating to or consisting of a copolymer, a polymer made from two or more different monomers chemically bonded together. COPPERSMITH (22) [noun] A person who forges things out of copper. | [noun] A South Asian barbet, Psilopogon haemacephala, with crimson forehead and throat, best known for its metronomic call that has been likened to a coppersmith striking metal with a hammer. COPROMOTERS (17) [noun] Plural of copromoter; individuals or entities that jointly promote a product, event, or venture together with other promoters. COREDEEMING (17) COROMANDELS (16) [noun] Calamander. CORPORATISM (17) [noun] A political system in which society is organized into collective interest groups or "bodies" (Latin corpora) which are subservient to the state and act as organs of political representation. | [noun] A form of capitalism in which the government is lobbied by, or generally heavily favors, corporations at the expense of the general populace. CORRIGENDUM (17) [noun] An error that is to be corrected in a printed work after publication. | [noun] (usually in the plural) A list of errors in a printed work as a separate page of corrections. CORYMBOSELY (23) COSMETICIAN (17) [noun] A person skilled at applying cosmetics. | [noun] A person who manufactures or sells cosmetics. COSMETICIZE (26) COSMETOLOGY (19) [noun] The science of cosmetics | [noun] The profession of a cosmetologist or beautician COSMOGONIES (16) [noun] The study of the origin, and sometimes the development, of the universe or the solar system, in astrophysics, religion, and other fields. | [noun] Any specific theory, model, myth, or other account of the origin of the universe. | [noun] The creation of the universe. COSMOGONIST (16) COSMOGRAPHY (24) [noun] The creation of maps of the universe. | [noun] The study of the size and geometry of the universe and changes in those with cosmic time. COSMOLOGIES (16) [noun] The study of the physical universe, its structure, dynamics, origin and evolution, and fate. | [noun] A metaphysical study into the origin and nature of the universe. | [noun] A particular view (cultural or religious) of the structure and origin of the universe. COSMOLOGIST (16) COSMOPOLITE (17) [noun] One who is at home in every place; a citizen of the world; a cosmopolitan person. | [noun] The butterfly painted lady (Vanessa cardui). | [adjective] Of or relating to cosmopolites; cosmopolitan. COSTUMERIES (15) COTERMINOUS (15) [adjective] Meeting end to end or at the ends. | [adjective] Having matching boundaries; or, adjoining and sharing a boundary. | [adjective] Having the same scope, range of meaning, or extent in time. COTTONMOUTH (18) [noun] An oral dryness often associated with certain medicines and recreational drugs. | [noun] A snake, Agkistrodon piscivorus, the water moccasin. | [noun] A snake, Agkistrodon contortrix mokasen, the northern copperhead. COULOMETERS (15) COULOMETRIC (17) COUNTERMAND (16) [noun] An order to the contrary of a previous one. | [verb] To revoke (a former command); to cancel or rescind by giving an order contrary to one previously given. | [verb] To recall a person or unit with such an order. COUNTERMEMO (17) COUNTERMINE (15) [noun] A mine used by defenders to intercept an enemy mine or tunnel. | [noun] An underground gallery excavated to intercept and destroy the mining of an enemy. | [noun] A stratagem or plot by which another stratagem or project is defeated. COUNTERMOVE (18) [noun] A move in opposition or response to a preceding move. | [verb] To move in opposition or in retaliation. COUNTERMYTH (21) COUPLEMENTS (17) COXCOMBICAL (28) COXCOMBRIES (26) CRAFTSMANLY (21) CRAFTSWOMAN (21) [noun] A female artisan. CRAFTSWOMEN (21) [noun] A female artisan. CRANIOMETRY (18) [noun] The practice of taking measurements of the skull. CREATIONISM (15) [noun] The Abrahamic doctrine that each individual human soul is created by God, as opposed to traducianism. | [noun] Any creationary belief, especially a belief that the origin of things is due to an event or process of creation brought about by the deliberate act of any divine agency, such as a Creator God (creator god). | [noun] The belief that a deity created the world, especially as described in a particular religious text, such as the Quran or the Book of Genesis. CREMATORIES (15) [noun] The establishment or furnace that cremates bodies. CREMATORIUM (17) [noun] A place where the bodies of dead people are cremated CRIMINALITY (18) [noun] The state of being criminal. | [noun] Criminal activity. | [noun] A criminal act. CRIMINALIZE (24) [verb] To make (something) a crime; to make illegal under criminal law; to ban. | [verb] To treat as a criminal. CRIMINATING (16) CRIMINATION (15) CRIMINOLOGY (19) [noun] The study of crime and criminals, especially their behaviour. CROSSBOWMAN (20) CROSSBOWMEN (20) CRUMBLINESS (17) CRYPTARITHM (23) CRYPTOGAMIC (23) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the cryptogams. CRYPTOGRAMS (21) [noun] Encrypted text. | [noun] (games) A type of word puzzle in which text encoded by a simple cipher is to be decoded. CRYPTOMERIA (20) [noun] A Japanese cedar, Cryptomeria japonica CULMINATING (16) [verb] Of a heavenly body, to be at the highest point, reach its greatest altitude. | [verb] To reach the (physical) summit, highest point, peak etc. | [verb] To reach a climax; to come to the decisive point (especially as an end or conclusion). CULMINATION (15) [noun] The attainment of the highest point of altitude reached by a heavenly body; passage across the meridian; transit. | [noun] Attainment or arrival at the highest pitch of glory, power, etc. CUMBERBUNDS (20) CUMMERBUNDS (20) [noun] A broad sash, especially one that is pleated lengthwise and worn as an article of formal dress, as around a man's waist together with a tuxedo or dinner jacket. CUMULATIONS (15) CUMULONIMBI (19) [noun] A cloud, with a tall structure and a flat base, that is often associated with thunderstorms. CURETTEMENT (15) CURMUDGEONS (17) [noun] A miser. | [noun] An ill-tempered person full of stubborn ideas or opinions. CURRICULUMS (17) [noun] The set of courses, coursework, and their content, offered at a school or university. | [noun] A racecourse; a place for running. CURRYCOMBED (23) CURTAILMENT (15) [noun] The act of curtailing CUSTOMARILY (18) [adverb] (manner) In the customary manner; as is custom | [adverb] (frequency) Under normal circumstances, normally. CUSTOMHOUSE (18) [noun] An official building, in a port, where customs are collected and shipping is cleared for entry and exit CUSTOMISING (16) [verb] To build or alter according to personal preferences or specifications. CUSTOMIZERS (24) CUSTOMIZING (25) [verb] To build or alter according to personal preferences or specifications. CYCLOMETERS (20) [noun] A device that counts the revolutions of a bicycle wheel in order to indicate distance travelled. | [noun] An instrument for measuring circular arcs. | [noun] A machine used to decrypt Enigma machine ciphers. CYCLOSTOMES (20) [noun] Any of various primitive jawless fish of the class Cyclostomata, such as the lamprey or hagfish. CYCLOTHYMIA (26) [noun] A chronic mental disturbance characterized by mood swings and depression. CYCLOTHYMIC (28) CYPRIPEDIUM (23) [noun] Any member of the orchid genus Cypripedium. CYSTEAMINES (18) CYTOCHROMES (23) [noun] Any of various related hemoproteins found in the cells of most organisms, which are an important part of cell respiration. CYTOMEGALIC (21) [adjective] Relating to or exhibiting cytomegaly. CYTOPLASMIC (22) DAMASCENING (17) DAMSELFLIES (17) [noun] Any of various insects of the suborder Zygoptera that have long slender bodies, and are similar to dragonflies but having wings folded when at rest. DAUNOMYCINS (19) DAYDREAMERS (18) DAYDREAMING (19) [verb] To have such a series of thoughts; to woolgather. | [noun] An instance of daydreaming; a daydream or reverie. DEAMINATING (15) DEAMINATION (14) [noun] The removal of an amino group from a compound. DEBASEMENTS (16) [noun] The act of debasing or the state of being debased; a lowering or degradation, especially in character or quality. | [noun] The lowering of the value of a currency by reducing the amount of valuable metal in the coins. DEBATEMENTS (16) DEBOUCHMENT (21) DEBRIDEMENT (17) [noun] The removal of dead, damaged, or infected tissue to improve the healing potential of the remaining healthy tissue. | [noun] The removal of the dental tartar that has accumulated over teeth, typically done using hand tools and ultrasound instruments. DECAMPMENTS (20) DECEMVIRATE (19) DECIMALIZED (26) [verb] : To convert to the decimal system. DECIMALIZES (25) [verb] : To convert to the decimal system. DECIMATIONS (16) [noun] (strictly) The killing or punishment of every tenth person, usually by lot. | [noun] (generally) The killing or destruction of any large portion of a population. | [noun] A tithe or the act of tithing. DECLAMATION (16) [noun] The act or art of declaiming; rhetorical delivery; loud speaking in public. | [noun] A set or harangue; declamatory discourse. | [noun] Pretentious rhetorical display, with more sound than sense. DECLAMATORY (19) [adjective] Having the quality of a declamation. | [adjective] Pretentiously lofty in style; bombastic. DECOMPOSERS (18) [noun] Any organism that feeds off decomposing organic material, especially such a bacterium or fungus DECOMPOSING (19) [verb] To separate or break down something into its components; to disintegrate or fragment | [verb] To rot, decay or putrefy DECREMENTAL (16) DEFACEMENTS (19) [noun] An act of defacing; an instance of visibly marring or disfiguring something. | [noun] An act of voiding or devaluing; nullification of the face value. | [noun] (vexillology) A symbol added to a flag or coat of arms to change it or make it different from another. DEFAMATIONS (17) [noun] The act of injuring another person's reputation by any slanderous communication, written or oral; the wrong of maliciously injuring the good name of another. DEFEMINIZED (27) [verb] To lose, or to remove feminine characteristics or qualities DEFEMINIZES (26) [verb] To lose, or to remove feminine characteristics or qualities DEFILEMENTS (17) [noun] The act of defiling. | [noun] The state of being defiled. | [noun] The protection of the interior walls of a fortification from enfilading fire, as by covering them, or by a high parapet on the exposed side. DEFINEMENTS (17) DEFINIENDUM (18) [noun] The term—word or phrase—defined in a definition. DEFORCEMENT (19) DEFORMALIZE (26) DEFORMATION (17) [noun] The act of deforming, or state of being deformed. | [noun] A transformation; change of shape. DEFORMATIVE (20) DEFORMITIES (17) [noun] The state of being deformed. | [noun] An ugly or misshapen feature or characteristic. DEGLAMORIZE (24) [verb] To make less glamorous DEHUMANIZED (27) [verb] To take away humanity; to remove or deny human qualities, characteristics, or attributes; to impersonalize. DEHUMANIZES (26) [verb] To take away humanity; to remove or deny human qualities, characteristics, or attributes; to impersonalize. DELAMINATED (15) [verb] To cause (something assembled by lamination) to come apart into the layers that make it up. | [verb] To come apart into its component layers. | [adjective] Whose laminations have been removed. DELAMINATES (14) [verb] To cause (something assembled by lamination) to come apart into the layers that make it up. | [verb] To come apart into its component layers. DELIGHTSOME (18) DELIVERYMAN (20) DELIVERYMEN (20) DELPHINIUMS (19) [noun] A cultivated plant, belonging to the genus Delphinium, with tall blue-colored spikes containing flowers. | [noun] A shade of blue, named for the flowers. DEMAGNETIZE (24) [verb] To make something nonmagnetic by removing its magnetic properties. | [verb] To erase the contents of a magnetic storage device. DEMAGOGUERY (19) [noun] The actions of a demagogue. | [noun] Rhetoric that appeals to the prejudices of the people. DEMAGOGUING (17) [verb] To speak or act in the manner of a demagogue; to speak about (an issue) in the manner of a demagogue. DEMANDINGLY (19) DEMARCATING (17) [verb] To mark the limits or boundaries of something; to delimit. | [verb] To mark the difference between two causes of action; to distinguish. DEMARCATION (16) [noun] The act of marking off a boundary or setting a limit, notably by belligerents signing a treaty or ceasefire. | [noun] A limit thus fixed, in full demarcation line. | [noun] Any strictly defined separation. DEMERGERING (16) DEMIGODDESS (17) DEMIURGICAL (17) DEMOBILIZED (26) [verb] To release someone from military duty, especially after a war. | [verb] To disband troops, or remove them from a war footing. DEMOBILIZES (25) [verb] To release someone from military duty, especially after a war. | [verb] To disband troops, or remove them from a war footing. DEMOCRACIES (18) [noun] Rule by the people, especially as a form of government; either directly or through elected representatives (representative democracy). | [noun] A government under the direct or representative rule of the people of its jurisdiction. | [noun] Belief in political freedom and equality; the "spirit of democracy". DEMOCRATIZE (25) [verb] To make democratic. DEMODULATED (16) [verb] To reverse modulate, undo the effects of modulation. DEMODULATES (15) [verb] To reverse modulate, undo the effects of modulation. DEMODULATOR (15) DEMOGRAPHER (20) [noun] A person who studies demography DEMOGRAPHIC (22) [noun] (chiefly in plural) A demographic criterion: a characteristic used to classify people for statistical purposes, such as age, race, or gender. | [noun] A demographic group: a collection of people sharing a value for a certain demographic criterion. | [noun] An individual person's characteristic, encoded for the purposes of statistical analysis. DEMOISELLES (14) [noun] A damselfly of the family Calopterygidae. | [noun] A young lady; a damsel; a lady's maid. | [noun] The Numidian crane (Grus virgo). DEMOLISHERS (17) DEMOLISHING (18) [verb] To destroy. | [verb] To defeat or consume utterly (as a theory, belief or opponent). DEMOLITIONS (14) [noun] The process of demolishing or destroying buildings or other structures. DEMONETIZED (24) [verb] To withdraw the status of legal tender from a coin (etc.) and remove it from circulation. | [verb] To declare ineligible or worthless as a medium of exchange or as legal tender. | [verb] To demote (published content, or its creator) so that it is no longer eligible to earn money for its publisher. DEMONETIZES (23) [verb] To withdraw the status of legal tender from a coin (etc.) and remove it from circulation. | [verb] To declare ineligible or worthless as a medium of exchange or as legal tender. | [verb] To demote (published content, or its creator) so that it is no longer eligible to earn money for its publisher. DEMONICALLY (19) DEMONSTRATE (14) [verb] To show how to use (something). | [verb] To show the steps taken to create a logical argument or equation. | [verb] To participate in or organize a demonstration. DEMORALIZED (24) [verb] To destroy the morale of; to dishearten. DEMORALIZER (23) DEMORALIZES (23) [verb] To destroy the morale of; to dishearten. DEMOUNTABLE (16) [noun] A temporary and portable building, especially a portable classroom in a school. | [adjective] Able to be removed from its mount; designed to be dismantled | [adjective] (of a hard drive) Designed to be removed from the read mechanism. DEMYSTIFIED (21) [verb] To remove the mystery from something; to explain or clarify. DEMYSTIFIES (20) [verb] To remove the mystery from something; to explain or clarify. DENDROGRAMS (16) [noun] A tree-like diagram used to show the ancestors and descendents of species DENOMINATED (15) [verb] To name; to designate. | [verb] To express in a monetary unit. DENOMINATES (14) [verb] To name; to designate. | [verb] To express in a monetary unit. DENOMINATOR (14) [noun] The number or expression written below the line in a fraction (such as 2 in ½). | [noun] One who gives a name to something. DENOTEMENTS (14) DENOUEMENTS (14) [noun] (authorship, often used metaphorically) The conclusion or resolution of a plot. DENUDEMENTS (15) DENUMERABLE (16) [adjective] Capable of being assigned a bijection to the natural numbers. Applied to sets which are not finite, but have a one-to-one mapping to the natural numbers. DENUMERABLY (19) DEPARTMENTS (16) [noun] A part, portion, or subdivision. | [noun] A distinct course of life, action, study, or the like. | [noun] A subdivision of an organization. DEPLOYMENTS (19) [noun] An arrangement or classification of things. | [noun] An implementation, or putting into use, of something. | [noun] The distribution of military forces prior to battle. DEPORTMENTS (16) DEPRAVEMENT (19) DEPROGRAMED (18) [verb] To counteract the effects of previous programming or brainwashing, especially in an attempt to persuade (a person) to abandon allegiance to a cult. DERAILMENTS (14) [noun] The action of a locomotive or train leaving the rails along which it runs. | [noun] A pattern of discourse (in speech or writing) that is a sequence of unrelated or only remotely related ideas. | [noun] An instance of diverting a conversation or debate from its original topic. DERANGEMENT (15) DERMATOGENS (15) DERMATOLOGY (18) [noun] The study of the skin and its diseases DESIDERATUM (15) [noun] Something that is wished for, or considered desirable. DESIGNMENTS (15) DESIPRAMINE (16) DESPISEMENT (16) DESPOILMENT (16) DESQUAMATED (24) [verb] To shed or peel. DESQUAMATES (23) [verb] To shed or peel. DETACHMENTS (19) [noun] The action of detaching; separation. | [noun] The state of being detached or disconnected; insulation. | [noun] Indifference to the concerns of others; disregard; nonchalance; aloofness. DETAINMENTS (14) DETERMINACY (19) DETERMINANT (14) [noun] A determining factor; an element that determines the nature of something. | [noun] A scalar that encodes certain characteristics of a given transformation matrix; the unique scalar function over square matrices which is distributive over matrix multiplication, multilinear in the rows and columns, and takes the value 1 for the unit matrix; abbreviated as: det. | [noun] A substance that causes a cell to adopt a particular fate. DETERMINATE (14) [noun] A single state of a particular determinable attribute. | [adjective] Distinct, clearly defined. | [adjective] Fixed, set, unvarying. | [verb] To bring to an end; to determine. DETERMINERS (14) [noun] (grammar) A member of a class of words functioning in a noun phrase to identify or distinguish a referent without describing or modifying it. | [noun] (grammar) A dependent function in a noun phrase marking the NP as definite or indefinite. This function is usually filled by words in the determinative class but may be filled by other elements such as a genitive pronoun. | [noun] Something that determines, or helps someone to determine, something else. DETERMINING (15) [verb] To set the boundaries or limits of. | [verb] To ascertain definitely; to figure out, find out, or conclude by analyzing, calculating, or investigating. | [verb] To fix the form or character of; to shape; to prescribe imperatively; to regulate; to settle. DETERMINISM (16) [noun] The doctrine that all actions are determined by the current state and immutable laws of the universe, with no possibility of choice. | [noun] The property of having behavior determined only by initial state and input. DETERMINIST (14) DETRAINMENT (14) DETRIMENTAL (14) [adjective] Causing damage or harm. DETUMESCENT (16) DEUTOPLASMS (16) DEVELOPMENT (19) [noun] The process of developing; growth, directed change. | [noun] The process by which a mature multicellular organism or part of an organism is produced by the addition of new cells. | [noun] Something which has developed. DEVOTEMENTS (17) DIAGRAMMING (18) [verb] To represent or indicate something using a diagram. | [verb] To schedule the operations of a locomotive or train according to a diagram. DIAMAGNETIC (17) [noun] Any substance that exhibits diamagnetism. | [adjective] Exhibiting diamagnetism; repelled by a magnet. DIAMETRICAL (16) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a diagonal or diameter | [adjective] Completely opposed DIAMONDBACK (23) [noun] (common name) Either of two species of rattlesnake having a diamond pattern on the back: Crotalus adamanteus, found in the southeastern United States, and Crotalus atrox, found in the southwestern United States and northwestern and central Mexico. | [noun] The saltmarsh terrapin of the Atlantic coast (Malacoclemmys palustris). DIATHERMIES (17) DICHOGAMIES (20) DICHOGAMOUS (20) DICHOTOMIES (19) [noun] A separation or division into two; a distinction that results in such a division. | [noun] Such a division involving apparently incompatible or opposite principles; a duality. | [noun] The division of a class into two disjoint subclasses that are together comprehensive, as the division of man into white and not white. DICHOTOMIST (19) DICHOTOMIZE (28) [verb] To separate into two parts or classifications. | [verb] To be divided into two. | [verb] To exhibit as a half disk. DICHOTOMOUS (19) [adjective] Dividing or branching into two pieces. DICHROMATES (19) [noun] Any salt of dichromic acid; in solution the orange dichromate anion (Cr2O72-) is in equilibrium with the yellow chromate anion (CrO42-), the relative amount of each ion depending on the pH; they are both very powerful oxidizing agents DICHROMATIC (21) DICOUMARINS (16) DICOUMAROLS (16) DICTYOSOMES (19) DIDACTICISM (19) DILATOMETER (14) DILATOMETRY (17) DIMENSIONAL (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to dimensions. | [adjective] Having dimension or dimensions; three-dimensional. DIMENSIONED (15) [verb] To mark, cut or shape something to specified dimensions. | [adjective] Possessing dimension, non-dimensionless, dimensionful. DIMERCAPROL (18) [noun] The mercaptan 2,3-dimercaptopropanol used as an antidote to arsenic poisoning. DIMETHOATES (17) DIMINISHING (18) [verb] To make smaller. | [verb] To become smaller. | [verb] To lessen the authority or dignity of; to put down; to degrade; to abase; to weaken; to nerf (in gaming). DIMINUENDOS (15) [noun] A dynamic mark directing that a passage is to be played gradually more softly | [noun] A passage having this mark | [noun] (metaphoric) The gradual dying away of something. DIMINUTIONS (14) [noun] A lessening, decrease or reduction. | [noun] The act or process of making diminutive. | [noun] A compositional technique where the composer shortens the melody by shortening its note values. DIMINUTIVES (17) [noun] (grammar) A word form expressing smallness, youth, unimportance, or endearment. DIMORPHISMS (21) DINNERTIMES (14) [noun] The time when dinner takes place. | [noun] The time when dinner is ready. | [noun] The midday break in English schools (some areas), lunchtime. DIPLOMACIES (18) DIPLOMATIST (16) [noun] A diplomat DIPSOMANIAC (18) DIPSOMANIAS (16) DISABLEMENT (16) DISACCUSTOM (18) DISAFFIRMED (21) [verb] To deny, contradict or repudiate DISARMAMENT (16) [noun] The reduction or the abolition of the military forces and armaments of a nation, and of its capability to wage war. | [noun] The act of disarming an opponent in a fight. DISARMINGLY (18) [adverb] In a disarming manner. DISASSEMBLE (16) [verb] To take to pieces; to reverse the process of assembly. | [verb] To convert machine code to a human-readable, mnemonic form. DISASSEMBLY (19) DISBANDMENT (17) [noun] The act of disbanding DISBARMENTS (16) DISBOSOMING (17) DISCERNMENT (16) [noun] The ability to distinguish; judgement. | [noun] Discrimination. | [noun] The ability to distinguish between things. DISCLAIMERS (16) [noun] One who disclaims, disowns, or renounces. | [noun] A public disavowal, as of responsibility, pretensions, claims, opinions, etc. | [noun] A denial, disavowal, or renunciation, as of a title, claim, interest, estate, or trust; relinquishment or waiver of an interest or estate. DISCLAIMING (17) [verb] To renounce all claim to; to deny ownership of or responsibility for; to disown; to disavow; to reject. | [verb] To deny, as a claim; to refuse. | [verb] To relinquish or deny having a claim; to disavow another's claim; to decline accepting, as an estate, interest, or office. DISCLIMAXES (23) DISCOMFITED (20) [verb] To defeat completely; to rout. | [verb] To defeat the plans or hopes of; to frustrate; disconcert. | [verb] To embarrass greatly; to confuse; to perplex; to disconcert. DISCOMFORTS (19) [noun] Mental or bodily distress. | [noun] Something that disturbs one’s comfort; an annoyance. | [verb] To cause annoyance or distress to. DISCOMMENDS (19) DISCOMMODED (20) [verb] To cause inconvenience to (someone). DISCOMMODES (19) [verb] To cause inconvenience to (someone). DISCOMPOSED (19) [verb] To destroy the composure of; to disturb or agitate. | [verb] To disarrange, or throw into a state of disorder. | [adjective] Uneasy or disturbed. DISCOMPOSES (18) [verb] To destroy the composure of; to disturb or agitate. | [verb] To disarrange, or throw into a state of disorder. DISCONFIRMS (19) [verb] To establish the falsity of a claim or belief; to show or to tend to show that a theory or hypothesis is not valid. DISEMBARKED (21) [verb] To remove from on board a vessel; to put on shore | [verb] To go ashore out of a ship or boat; to leave a train or airplane DISEMBODIED (18) [adjective] Having no material body, immaterial; incorporeal or insubstantial. | [verb] To cause someone's soul, spirit, consciousness, voice, etc, to become separated from the physical body. | [verb] To separate (a part of the body) from the body. DISEMBODIES (17) [verb] To cause someone's soul, spirit, consciousness, voice, etc, to become separated from the physical body. | [verb] To separate (a part of the body) from the body. | [verb] To discharge from military service or array. DISEMBOGUED (18) [verb] To come out into the open sea from a river etc. | [verb] (of a river or waters) To pour out, to debouch; to flow out through a narrow opening into a larger space. DISEMBOGUES (17) [verb] To come out into the open sea from a river etc. | [verb] (of a river or waters) To pour out, to debouch; to flow out through a narrow opening into a larger space. DISEMBOWELS (19) [verb] To take or let out the bowels or interior parts of; to eviscerate. | [verb] To take or draw from the body, as the web of a spider. DISENCUMBER (18) [verb] To remove an encumbrance or burden from (someone or something). DISESTEEMED (15) [verb] To hold little or no esteem for; to consider worthless. DISLODGMENT (16) DISMANTLING (15) [verb] To divest, strip of dress or covering. | [verb] To remove fittings or furnishings from. | [verb] To take apart; to disassemble; to take to pieces. DISMAYINGLY (21) DISMEMBERED (19) [verb] To remove the limbs of. | [verb] To cut or otherwise divide something into pieces. | [adjective] From which the limbs have been removed DISMISSIONS (14) DISMOUNTING (15) [verb] To (cause to) get off (something). | [verb] To make (a mounted drive) unavailable for use. | [verb] To come down; to descend. DISOWNMENTS (17) DISPORTMENT (16) DISREMEMBER (18) [verb] To fail to remember; to forget. DISSEMBLERS (16) DISSEMBLING (17) [verb] To disguise or conceal something. | [verb] To feign. | [verb] To deliberately ignore something; to pretend not to notice. DISSEMINATE (14) [verb] To sow and scatter principles, ideas, opinions, etc, or concrete things, for growth and propagation, like seeds. | [verb] To become widespread. DISSEMINULE (14) [noun] A seed fruit that has been modified for migration. DISSEPIMENT (16) [noun] Partition (in an organ); septum DISSIMILARS (14) DISSIMILATE (14) [verb] To make dissimilar or unlike. | [verb] To become dissimilar or unlike. DISSIMULATE (14) [verb] To practise deception by concealment or omission, or by feigning a false appearance. | [verb] To disguise or hide by adopting a false appearance. | [verb] To connive at; to wink at; to pretend not to notice. DISSYMMETRY (22) [noun] Asymmetry | [noun] Chirality DISTEMPERED (17) [verb] To temper or mix unduly; to make disproportionate; to change the due proportions of. | [verb] To derange the functions of, whether bodily, mental, or spiritual; to disorder; to disease. | [verb] To deprive of temper or moderation; to disturb; to ruffle; to make disaffected, ill-humoured, or malignant. DISULFIRAMS (17) DITHYRAMBIC (24) DIVEBOMBING (22) [verb] (of an aircraft) To bomb whilst in a steep dive. | [verb] (of a bird) To attack (especially the head of) a person or animal that strays into their territory. | [verb] (of a motorist) To overtake slower traffic by way of a more circuitous route, such as a pair of freeway exit and entrance ramps. DIVESTMENTS (17) [noun] The sale or other disposal of some kind of asset. DIVISIONISM (17) [noun] The use of small areas of color to construct an image. | [noun] Support for division of a territory, etc. DIVORCEMENT (19) DOCKMASTERS (20) DOCUMENTARY (19) [noun] A film, TV program, publication etc. which presents a social, political, scientific or historical subject in a factual or informative manner. | [adjective] Of, related to, or based on documents. | [adjective] Which serves to document (record and:or illustrate) a subject. DOCUMENTERS (16) DOCUMENTING (17) [verb] To record in documents. | [verb] To furnish with documents or papers necessary to establish facts or give information. DOGMATIZERS (24) DOGMATIZING (25) [verb] To treat something as dogma. | [verb] To speak or write dogmatically. DOLOMITIZED (24) DOLOMITIZES (23) DOMESTICATE (16) [noun] An animal or plant that has been domesticated. | [verb] To make domestic. | [verb] To make fit for domestic life. DOMESTICITY (19) [noun] Life at home with one's family. | [noun] (plural) Domestic chores; housework. | [noun] Affection for the home and its material comforts. DOMICILIARY (19) [noun] : A person who legally resides in a particular place. | [adjective] Of or relating to a domicile DOMICILIATE (16) DOMINATIONS (14) [noun] A lid. | [noun] Area or situation which screens a person or thing from view. | [noun] The front and back of a book, magazine, CD package, etc. DOMINEERING (15) [verb] To rule over or control arbitrarily or arrogantly; to tyrannize. | [noun] The act of one who domineers. | [adjective] Overbearing, dictatorial or authoritarian DOMINICKERS (20) DOOMSAYINGS (18) DOOMSDAYERS (18) DORMITORIES (14) [noun] A room containing a number of beds (and often some other furniture and/or utilities) for sleeping, often applied to student and backpacker accommodation of this kind. | [noun] A building or part of a building which houses students, soldiers, monks etc. who sleep there and use communal further facilities. | [noun] A dormitory town. DOSIMETRIES (14) DRAMATISING (15) [verb] To adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television | [verb] To present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner DRAMATIZING (24) [verb] To adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television | [verb] To present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner DRAMATURGES (15) [noun] Someone who writes or adapts theater plays, a playwright, dramatist, especially one connected with a specific theater or company. | [noun] A literary adviser or editor in a theater, opera, or film company that researches, selects, adapts, edits, and interprets scripts, libretti, texts, and printed programs (or helps others with these tasks), consults with authors, and does public relations work. DRAMATURGIC (17) DRAUGHTSMAN (18) [noun] A person skilled at drawing engineering or architectural plans. | [noun] A book illustrator. | [noun] A piece in the game of draughts (checkers). DRAUGHTSMEN (18) [noun] A person skilled at drawing engineering or architectural plans. | [noun] A book illustrator. | [noun] A piece in the game of draughts (checkers). DREAMLESSLY (17) DREAMWORLDS (18) [noun] An imaginary world, such as experienced while dreaming. DRESSMAKERS (18) [noun] A person who makes tailor-made women's clothes. DRESSMAKING (19) DRILLMASTER (14) DROMEDARIES (15) [noun] The single-humped camel (Camelus dromedarius). | [noun] Any swift riding camel. DRUMBEATERS (16) DRUMBEATING (17) DUMBFOUNDED (21) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. | [adjective] Shocked and speechless. DUMBFOUNDER (20) DUMBWAITERS (19) [noun] A small elevator used to move food etc. from one floor of a building to another. | [noun] A table or set of trays on rollers used for serving food. | [noun] A lazy Susan. DUMFOUNDING (19) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. DUMPINESSES (16) DUODECIMALS (17) DUUMVIRATES (17) [noun] Rule by two people. | [noun] A state under the rule of two people. | [noun] Any of several offices of the Roman Republic held by two joint magistrates known as duumvirs. DYNAMICALLY (22) [adverb] Of a dynamic nature; variable or constantly changing nature. DYNAMOMETER (19) [noun] Any of various devices used to measure mechanical power, force, or torque. DYNAMOMETRY (22) DYSPHEMISMS (24) [noun] The use of a derogatory, offensive or vulgar word or phrase to replace a (more) neutral original. | [noun] A word or phrase that is used to replace another in this way. DYSPROSIUMS (19) DYSRHYTHMIA (26) [noun] A disturbance to an otherwise normal biological rhythm (especially that of the heart). DYSRHYTHMIC (28) EARTHMOVERS (19) [noun] A vehicle designed to excavate or transport earth in large quantities. EARTHMOVING (20) EASTERNMOST (13) [adjective] Farthest east ECHINODERMS (19) [noun] An animal of the phylum Echinodermata, comprising radially symmetric, spiny-skinned marine animals including seastars, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, crinoids, and sand dollars. ECLECTICISM (19) [noun] The quality of being eclectic | [noun] An approach to thought that draws upon multiple theories to gain complementary insights into phenomena | [noun] Any form of art that borrows from multiple other styles ECOFEMINISM (20) [noun] A sociopolitical movement combining feminism and environmentalism. ECOFEMINIST (18) ECONOMETRIC (17) ECONOMISING (16) [verb] To practice being economical (by using things sparingly or in moderation, and by avoiding waste or extravagance). | [verb] To use frugally. ECONOMIZERS (24) [noun] A person who avoids waste | [noun] A heat exchange device in a boiler that improves efficiency and saves fuel ECONOMIZING (25) [verb] To practice being economical (by using things sparingly or in moderation, and by avoiding waste or extravagance). | [verb] To use frugally. ECOTOURISMS (15) ECTOMORPHIC (22) ECTOPLASMIC (19) ECTOTHERMIC (20) ECUMENICISM (19) ECUMENICIST (17) ECUMENICITY (20) EDUTAINMENT (14) [noun] A form of programming (cinematic, television, live action, games or any material) that provides both education and entertainment. EFFACEMENTS (21) EFFEMINATES (19) EGOCENTRISM (16) EGOMANIACAL (16) EINSTEINIUM (13) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Es) with atomic number 99: a soft, silvery, paramagnetic metal. ELASTOMERIC (15) ELECAMPANES (17) [noun] A tall Eurasian herb, Inula helenium, whose roots have been used medicinally ELECTROFORM (18) ELECTROGRAM (16) ELEMENTALLY (16) ELIMINATING (14) [verb] To completely remove, get rid of, put an end to. | [verb] To kill (a person or animal). | [verb] To excrete (waste products). ELIMINATION (13) [noun] The act of eliminating, expelling or throwing off. | [noun] The act of excluding a losing contestant from a match, tournament, or other competition. | [noun] The act of voting off or throwing off a contestant in a reality television competition. ELIMINATIVE (16) ELIMINATORS (13) EMACIATIONS (15) [noun] The act of making very lean. | [noun] The state of being emaciated or reduced to excessive leanness; an excessively lean condition. EMANCIPATED (18) [verb] To set free from the power of another; to liberate; as: | [verb] To free from any controlling influence, especially from anything which exerts undue or evil influence | [adjective] Something which has been set free. EMANCIPATES (17) [verb] To set free from the power of another; to liberate; as: | [verb] To free from any controlling influence, especially from anything which exerts undue or evil influence EMANCIPATOR (17) EMASCULATED (16) [verb] To deprive of virile or procreative power; to castrate, to geld. | [verb] To deprive of masculine vigor or spirit; to weaken; to render effeminate; to vitiate by unmanly softness. | [verb] Of a flower: to deprive of the anthers. EMASCULATES (15) [verb] To deprive of virile or procreative power; to castrate, to geld. | [verb] To deprive of masculine vigor or spirit; to weaken; to render effeminate; to vitiate by unmanly softness. | [verb] Of a flower: to deprive of the anthers. EMASCULATOR (15) EMBALMMENTS (19) EMBANKMENTS (21) [noun] A long mound of earth, stone, or similar material, usually built for purposes such as to hold back or store water, for protection from weather or enemies, or to support a road or railway. EMBARCADERO (18) EMBARKATION (19) EMBARKMENTS (21) EMBARRASSED (16) [verb] To humiliate; to disrupt somebody's composure or comfort with acting publicly or freely; to disconcert; to abash | [verb] To hinder from liberty of movement; to impede; to obstruct. | [verb] To involve in difficulties concerning money matters; to encumber with debt; to beset with urgent claims or demands. EMBARRASSES (15) [verb] To humiliate; to disrupt somebody's composure or comfort with acting publicly or freely; to disconcert; to abash | [verb] To hinder from liberty of movement; to impede; to obstruct. | [verb] To involve in difficulties concerning money matters; to encumber with debt; to beset with urgent claims or demands. EMBELLISHED (19) [verb] To make more beautiful and attractive; to decorate. | [verb] To make something sound or look better or more acceptable than it is in reality; to distort, to embroider. | [adjective] Having been made more attractive, compelling or interesting. EMBELLISHER (18) EMBELLISHES (18) [verb] To make more beautiful and attractive; to decorate. | [verb] To make something sound or look better or more acceptable than it is in reality; to distort, to embroider. EMBITTERING (16) [verb] To cause to be bitter. | [noun] Embitterment EMBLAZONERS (24) EMBLAZONING (25) [verb] To adorn with prominent markings. | [verb] To inscribe upon. | [verb] To draw (a coat of arms). EMBLEMATIZE (26) [verb] To stand as an emblem for; to represent. EMBODIMENTS (18) [noun] The process of embodying. | [noun] A physical entity typifying an abstract concept. EMBOLDENING (17) [verb] To render (someone) bolder or more courageous. | [verb] To encourage, inspire, or motivate. | [verb] To format text in boldface. EMBOLECTOMY (22) [noun] Surgical removal of an embolism EMBONPOINTS (17) [noun] Plumpness, stoutness, especially when voluptuous. EMBORDERING (17) EMBOSSMENTS (17) EMBOUCHURES (20) [noun] The use of the lips, facial muscles, tongue, and teeth when playing a wind instrument. | [noun] The mouth of a river or valley. EMBOWELLING (19) [verb] To enclose or bury. | [verb] To remove the bowels; disembowel. | [noun] An act of disembowelment. EMBRACEABLE (19) EMBRACEMENT (19) EMBRACERIES (17) EMBRACINGLY (21) EMBRANGLING (17) EMBRITTLING (16) [verb] To become or make brittle. EMBROCATION (17) [noun] The act of moistening and rubbing a diseased part with spirit, oil, etc. | [noun] The liquid or lotion with which an affected part is rubbed. EMBROIDERED (17) [verb] To stitch a decorative design on fabric with needle and thread of various colours. | [verb] To add imaginary detail to a narrative to make it more interesting or acceptable. EMBROIDERER (16) EMBROILMENT (17) EMBRYOGENIC (21) EMBRYONATED (19) [adjective] Containing an embryo EMBRYOPHYTE (26) EMENDATIONS (14) [noun] The act of altering for the better, or correcting what is erroneous or faulty; correction; improvement. | [noun] Alteration by editorial criticism, as of a text so as to give a better reading; removal of errors or corruptions from a document. | [noun] An intentional change in the spelling of a scientific name, which is usually not allowed. EMERGENCIES (16) [noun] A situation which poses an immediate risk and which requires urgent attention. | [noun] The department of a hospital that treats emergencies. | [noun] An individual brought in at short notice to replace a member of staff, a player in a sporting team, etc. EMIGRATIONS (14) [noun] The act of emigrating; movement of a person or persons out of a country or national region, for the purpose of permanent relocation of residence. | [noun] A body of emigrants; emigrants collectively EMMENAGOGUE (17) [noun] An herb that stimulates blood flow in the pelvic area and uterus, causing menstruation. EMOTIONALLY (16) [adverb] In an emotional manner; displaying emotion. | [adverb] Regarding emotions. EMOTIONLESS (13) [adjective] Lacking emotion. EMOTIVITIES (16) EMPANELLING (16) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. EMPATHISING (19) [verb] To feel empathy for another person EMPATHIZING (28) [verb] To feel empathy for another person EMPERORSHIP (20) EMPHASISING (19) [verb] To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something). EMPHASIZING (28) [verb] To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something). EMPIRICALLY (20) [adverb] Based on experience as opposed to theoretical knowledge. | [adverb] Based on data gathered in the real world. EMPIRICISMS (19) EMPIRICISTS (17) [noun] An advocate or supporter of empiricism EMPLACEMENT (19) [noun] An installation that houses a military weapon. | [noun] A place where a thing is located; the act of placing something somewhere. | [noun] The inclusion of igneous rock in older rocks, or the development or localization of an ore body in older rocks. The latter is referred to as ore deposition. EMPLOYABLES (20) EMPLOYMENTS (20) [noun] The work or occupation for which one is used, and often paid | [noun] The act of employing | [noun] A use, purpose EMPOISONING (16) EMPOWERMENT (20) [noun] The achievement of political, social or economic power by an individual or group. | [noun] The process of supporting another person or persons to discover and claim personal power. | [noun] The state of being empowered (either generally, or specifically). EMPTINESSES (15) EMULATIVELY (19) EMULOUSNESS (13) EMULSIFIERS (16) [noun] A substance that helps an emulsion form, or helps keep an emulsion from separating. EMULSIFYING (20) [verb] To make into an emulsion. ENAMELWARES (16) ENANTIOMERS (13) [noun] One of a pair of stereoisomers that is the mirror image of the other, but may not be superimposed on this other stereoisomer. Almost always, a pair of enantiomers contain at least one chiral center, and a sample of either enantiomer will be optically active. ENCAMPMENTS (19) [noun] A campsite. | [noun] A group of temporary living quarters and/or other temporary structures. ENCASEMENTS (15) ENCASHMENTS (18) ENCHAINMENT (18) ENCHANTMENT (18) [noun] The act of enchanting or the feeling of being enchanted. | [noun] Something that enchants; a magical spell. ENCOMIASTIC (17) ENCOMPASSED (18) [verb] To form a circle around; to encircle. | [verb] To include within its scope; to circumscribe or go round so as to surround; to enclose; to contain. | [verb] To include completely; to describe fully or comprehensively. ENCOMPASSES (17) [verb] To form a circle around; to encircle. | [verb] To include within its scope; to circumscribe or go round so as to surround; to enclose; to contain. | [verb] To include completely; to describe fully or comprehensively. ENCRIMSONED (16) ENCUMBERING (18) [verb] To load down something with a burden | [verb] To restrict or block something with a hindrance or impediment | [verb] To burden with a legal claim or other obligation ENCUMBRANCE (19) [noun] Something that encumbers; a burden that must be carried. | [noun] An interest, right, burden, or liability attached to a title of land, such as a lien or mortgage. | [noun] One who is dependent on another. ENCYSTMENTS (18) ENDEARMENTS (14) [noun] The act or process of endearing, of causing (something or someone) to be loved or to be the object of affection. | [noun] The state or characteristic of being endeared. | [noun] An expression of affection. ENDEMICALLY (19) ENDOCARDIUM (17) [noun] A thin serous membrane that lines the interior of the heart. ENDOENZYMES (26) ENDOMETRIAL (14) ENDOMETRIUM (16) [noun] The mucous membrane that lines the uterus in mammals and in which fertilized eggs are implanted. ENDOMITOSES (14) ENDOMITOSIS (14) ENDOMITOTIC (16) ENDOMIXISES (21) ENDOMORPHIC (21) ENDOPLASMIC (18) ENDORSEMENT (14) [noun] The act or quality of endorsing | [noun] An amendment or annotation to an insurance contract or other official document (such as a driving licence). | [noun] An instructor's signed acknowledgement of time practising specific flying skills. ENDOTHECIUM (19) ENDOTHELIUM (17) [noun] A thin layer of flat epithelial cells that lines the heart, serous cavities, lymph vessels, and blood vessels. ENDOTHERMIC (19) [adjective] Of a chemical reaction that absorbs heat energy from its surroundings. | [adjective] Of an animal whose body temperature is regulated by internal factors. ENFEOFFMENT (22) ENFORCEMENT (18) [noun] The act of enforcing; compulsion. | [noun] A giving force to; a putting in execution. | [noun] That which enforces, constraints, gives force, authority, or effect to; constraint; force applied. ENFRAMEMENT (18) ENGAGEMENTS (15) [noun] An appointment, especially to speak or perform. | [noun] Connection or attachment. | [noun] (by extension, about human emotional state) The feeling of being compelled, drawn in, connected to what is happening, interested in what will happen next. ENGORGEMENT (15) ENGRAFTMENT (17) ENGROSSMENT (14) [noun] The state of being engrossed; concentration or preoccupation. | [noun] The fact or instance of writing in a legal document. ENGULFMENTS (17) ENHANCEMENT (18) [noun] Improvement. | [noun] (radiology) The degree to which the image of a scan stands out as a bright area. ENIGMATICAL (16) ENJAMBEMENT (24) [noun] A technique in poetry whereby a sentence is carried over to the next line without pause. ENJAMBMENTS (24) [noun] A technique in poetry whereby a sentence is carried over to the next line without pause. ENLACEMENTS (15) ENLARGEMENT (14) [noun] The act of making something larger. | [noun] A making more obvious or serious; exacerbation. | [noun] An image, particularly a photograph, that has been enlarged. ENLISTMENTS (13) [noun] The act of enlisting. ENMESHMENTS (18) ENNOBLEMENT (15) ENRICHMENTS (18) [noun] The act of enriching or something enriched. | [noun] The process of making enriched uranium. | [noun] The addition of sugar to grape juice used to make wine; chaptalization. ENROLLMENTS (13) [noun] The act of enrolling or the state of being enrolled. | [noun] The people enrolled, considered as a group. | [noun] The number of people enrolled. ENSERFMENTS (16) ENSLAVEMENT (16) [noun] The act of enslaving or the state of being a slave; bondage ENTAILMENTS (13) ENTEROSTOMY (16) [noun] The construction of a permanent opening into the intestine through the abdominal wall. ENTHUSIASMS (16) [noun] Possession by a god; divine inspiration or frenzy. | [noun] Intensity of feeling; excited interest or eagerness. | [noun] Something in which one is keenly interested. ENTICEMENTS (15) [noun] The act or practice of enticing, of alluring or tempting | [noun] That which entices, or incites to evil; means of allurement; an alluring object ENTITLEMENT (13) [noun] The right to have something, whether actual or perceived. | [noun] Power, authority to do something. | [noun] Something that one is entitled to. ENTOMBMENTS (17) [noun] The act of entombing or the state of being entombed | [noun] The decommissioning of a radioactive site by encasing it in concrete ENTOMOFAUNA (16) ENTOMOPHILY (21) ENTRAINMENT (13) ENTRAPMENTS (15) [noun] The state of being entrapped. | [noun] Action by law enforcement personnel to lead an otherwise innocent person to commit a crime, in order to arrest and prosecute that person for the crime. | [noun] A method of isolating specific cells or molecules from a mixture, especially by immobilization on a gel. ENTREATMENT (13) ENTRUSTMENT (13) ENUMERATING (14) [verb] To specify each member of a sequence individually in incrementing order. | [verb] To determine the amount of. ENUMERATION (13) [noun] The act of enumerating, making separate mention, or recounting. | [noun] A detailed account, in which each thing is specially noticed. | [noun] A recapitulation, in the peroration, of the heads of an argument. ENUMERATIVE (16) ENUMERATORS (13) [noun] A person who, or a thing that enumerates; a counter or iterator. | [noun] A census taker. ENVELOPMENT (18) ENVIRONMENT (16) [noun] The surroundings of, and influences on, a particular item of interest. | [noun] The natural world or ecosystem. | [noun] All the elements that affect a system or its inputs and outputs. ENZYMICALLY (30) EPHEMERALLY (21) EPHEMERIDES (19) [noun] (plural taken as singular) An ephemeris. | [noun] (singular or plural) A journal or diary. | [noun] A table giving the apparent position of celestial bodies throughout the year; normally given as right ascension and declination. EPIDEMICITY (21) EPIDENDRUMS (17) EPIDERMISES (16) [noun] The outer, protective layer of the skin of vertebrates, covering the dermis | [noun] The similar outer layer of cells in invertebrates and plants EPILIMNIONS (15) EPINEURIUMS (15) EPIPHYTISMS (23) EPITHALAMIA (18) [noun] A song or poem celebrating a marriage. EPITHALAMIC (20) EPITHELIOMA (18) EPITOMISING (16) [verb] To make an epitome of; to shorten; to condense. | [verb] To be an epitome of. EPITOMIZING (25) [verb] To make an epitome of; to shorten; to condense. | [verb] To be an epitome of. EQUILIBRIUM (24) [noun] The condition of a system in which competing influences are balanced, resulting in no net change. | [noun] Mental balance. | [noun] The state of a reaction in which the rates of the forward and reverse reactions are the same. ERGONOMISTS (14) ERGOTAMINES (14) ERRATICISMS (15) ERYTHREMIAS (19) ERYTHRISMAL (19) ESCAPEMENTS (17) [noun] The contrivance in a timepiece (winding wristwatch) which connects the train of wheel work with the pendulum or balance, giving to the latter the impulse by which it is kept in vibration. | [noun] A mechanism found in devices such as a typewriter or printer which controls lateral motion of the carriage. | [noun] An escape or means of escape. ESCARPMENTS (17) [noun] A steep descent or declivity; steep face or edge of a ridge; ground about a fortified place, cut away nearly vertically to prevent hostile approach. ESEMPLASTIC (17) [adjective] Unifying; having the power to shape disparate things into a unified whole. ESOTERICISM (15) ESTHETICISM (18) [noun] A doctrine which holds aesthetics or beauty as the highest ideal or most basic standard. ESTIMATIONS (13) [noun] The process of making an estimate. | [noun] The amount, extent, position, size, or value reached in an estimate. | [noun] Esteem or favourable regard. ETHAMBUTOLS (18) ETHIONAMIDE (17) ETYMOLOGIES (17) [noun] The study of the historical development of languages, particularly as manifested in individual words. | [noun] The origin and historical development of a word; the derivation. | [noun] An account of the origin and historical development of a word as presented in a dictionary or the like. ETYMOLOGISE (17) [verb] To find or provide the etymology for a word. ETYMOLOGIST (17) ETYMOLOGIZE (26) [verb] To find or provide the etymology for a word. EUCHROMATIC (20) EUCHROMATIN (18) [noun] Uncoiled dispersed threads of chromosomal material that occurs during interphase; it stains lightly with basic dyes EUDAEMONISM (16) [noun] A philosophical notion, or system of ethics, which measures happiness in relation to morality. (Not to be confused with utilitarianism, which similarly emphasizes happiness but conceives of it differently.) EUDAEMONIST (14) EUDAIMONISM (16) EUDIOMETERS (14) [noun] A graduated glass tube, closed at one end, that is used for measuring the change in the volume of gases during a chemical reaction. EUDIOMETRIC (16) EUHEMERISMS (18) EUHEMERISTS (16) EUPHEMISING (19) [verb] To utter one or more euphemisms; to speak euphemistically. | [verb] To describe in euphemistic terms. EUPHEMISTIC (20) [adjective] Of or pertaining to euphemism. EUPHEMIZERS (27) EUPHEMIZING (28) [verb] To utter one or more euphemisms; to speak euphemistically. | [verb] To describe in euphemistic terms. EURHYTHMICS (24) [noun] A rhythmic interpretation of music with graceful, free-style dance movements EURHYTHMIES (22) EURYTHERMAL (19) [adjective] (of an organism) Able to tolerate a wide range of temperature. EURYTHERMIC (21) [adjective] (of an organism) Able to tolerate a wide range of temperature. EVANGELISMS (17) EVOLVEMENTS (19) EXAMINATION (20) [noun] The act of examining. | [noun] Particularly, an inspection by a medical professional to establish the extent and nature of any sickness or injury. | [noun] A formal test involving answering written or oral questions under a time constraint and usually without access to textbooks. EXANTHEMATA (23) [noun] A widespread rash usually occurring in children. EXCITEMENTS (22) [noun] The state of being excited (emotionally aroused). | [noun] Something that excites. EXCLAMATION (22) [noun] A loud calling or crying out, for example as in surprise, pain, grief, joy, anger, etc. | [noun] A word expressing outcry; an interjection | [noun] A clause type used to make an exclamatory statement: What a mess they made!; How stupid I was! EXCLAMATORY (25) [adjective] Resembling an exclamation. | [adjective] Emphatic. EXCLUSIVISM (25) [noun] The practice of being exclusive; a mentality or policy that excludes others. | [noun] The doctrine that one religion is the only true religion, or that one religious sect is the only true version of a larger religion. EXCREMENTAL (22) EXEMPLARILY (25) EXEMPLARITY (25) EXEMPLIFIED (26) [verb] To show or illustrate by example. | [verb] To be an instance of or serve as an example. | [verb] To make an attested copy or transcript of (a document) under seal. EXEMPLIFIES (25) [verb] To show or illustrate by example. | [verb] To be an instance of or serve as an example. | [verb] To make an attested copy or transcript of (a document) under seal. EXHUMATIONS (23) [noun] The act of digging up that which has been buried. EXODERMISES (21) EXPERIMENTS (22) [noun] A test under controlled conditions made to either demonstrate a known truth, examine the validity of a hypothesis, or determine the efficacy of something previously untried. | [noun] Experience, practical familiarity with something. | [verb] To conduct an experiment. EXTEMPORARY (25) [adjective] Extemporaneous. EXTEMPORISE (22) [verb] To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise. | [verb] To do something in a makeshift way. | [verb] To make or create extempore. EXTEMPORIZE (31) [verb] To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise. | [verb] To do, create, improvise, adapt, or devise in an impromptu or spontaneous manner. EXTERMINATE (20) [verb] To kill all of (a population of pests or undesirables), usually intentionally. | [verb] To bring a definite end to; finish completely. EXTERMINING (21) EXTERNALISM (20) [noun] Excessive regard to outward acts or appearances, especially in religion. | [noun] The act of judging by outward appearance or acts. | [noun] The belief that only things that can be observed by senses are real. EXTREMENESS (20) EXTREMITIES (20) [noun] The most extreme or furthest point of something. | [noun] An extreme measure. | [noun] A hand or foot. FACTUALISMS (18) FAMILIARISE (16) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARITY (19) [noun] The state of being extremely friendly; intimacy. | [noun] Undue intimacy; inappropriate informality, impertinence. | [noun] An instance of familiar behaviour. FAMILIARIZE (25) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMISHMENTS (21) FANATICISMS (18) [noun] The characteristic or practice of being a fanatic. FARMERETTES (16) FARMWORKERS (23) [noun] A person hired to work on the farm or in the agricultural industry. FARTHERMOST (19) [adjective] Distant; remote in space. | [adjective] Remote in time. | [adjective] Long. FAVORITISMS (19) FEDERALISMS (17) FELLMONGERS (17) [noun] Someone who sells or works with animal hides and skins. FELLMONGERY (20) [noun] The trade of a fellmonger. | [noun] A fellmonger's place of work. FEMTOSECOND (19) [noun] A unit of time equal to 0.000 000 000 000 001 seconds (i.e. 1x10-15 seconds) and with symbol fs. FERMENTABLE (18) FERRIMAGNET (17) FERROMAGNET (17) FIBROMATOUS (18) FILAMENTARY (19) FILAMENTOUS (16) FILMINESSES (16) FILMMAKINGS (23) FILMOGRAPHY (25) [noun] A selective list of movie titles that share a similar characteristic such as the same genre, the same director, the same actor etc. FILMSETTERS (16) FILMSETTING (17) [verb] To typeset by exposing type characters onto photographic film, which is then used to generate printing plates. | [noun] Photocomposition of type. FIMBRIATION (18) FIREBOMBING (21) [verb] To attack with a firebomb. | [noun] An attack with a firebomb. FIRMAMENTAL (18) FISHERWOMAN (22) [noun] A woman who fishes. | [noun] A woman whose profession is catching fish. FISHERWOMEN (22) [noun] A woman who fishes. | [noun] A woman whose profession is catching fish. FISHMONGERS (20) [noun] A person who sells fish. | [noun] A fishmonger's, a fishmonger's shop: a shop that sells fish. | [noun] A pimp. FLAMBOYANCE (23) [noun] The condition of being flamboyant. FLAMBOYANCY (26) FLAMBOYANTS (21) [noun] The royal poinciana (Delonix regia), a showy tropical tree. FLAMEPROOFS (21) [verb] To make flameproof. FLIMFLAMMED (24) [verb] To swindle or cheat. FLIMFLAMMER (23) [noun] A swindler; a con artist. FLORILEGIUM (17) [noun] A collection of flowers | [noun] A patristic anthology FLUORIMETER (16) [noun] An instrument used to detect and measure fluorescence. FLUORIMETRY (19) FLUOROMETER (16) [noun] An instrument used to detect and measure fluorescence. FLUOROMETRY (19) FOAMFLOWERS (22) FOAMINESSES (16) FOMENTATION (16) [noun] The act of fomenting; the application of warm, soft, medicinal substances, as for the purpose of easing pain by relaxing the skin, or of discussing (dispersing) tumours. | [noun] A lotion or poultice applied to a diseased or injured part of the body. | [noun] Encouragement; excitation; instigation. FOOTLAMBERT (18) FORAMINIFER (19) [noun] Any of several large aquatic amoeboid protists, of the subphylum Foraminifera, characterized by streaming granular ectoplasm that among other things is used for catching food, often with a calcareous shell with many holes through which pseudopodia protrude. FOREDOOMING (18) [verb] To predestine to a doom. FOREIGNISMS (17) FOREMANSHIP (21) FOREMOTHERS (19) [noun] A female ancestor. FOREVERMORE (19) [adverb] At any or all times in the future; forever FORMABILITY (21) FORMALISING (17) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALISTIC (18) FORMALITIES (16) [noun] The state of being formal. | [noun] Something said or done as a matter of form. | [noun] A customary ritual without new or unique meaning. FORMALIZERS (25) FORMALIZING (26) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMATIVELY (22) FORMFITTING (20) [adjective] (of clothing) That follows the contours of the body FORMICARIES (18) [noun] An ant colony, a pile of earth built by ants in which they nest. FORMULARIES (16) [noun] A list of formulas; a collection of set forms to be followed, especially in religious belief. | [noun] A pharmacopoeia or list of available drugs, particularly prescription drugs | [noun] A list of drugs, created by health insurers, hospitals, or prescription drug plans, that defines how costs for any drug are shared between patient and health care provider, typically broken down by tiers such as preferred generics with lowest copay, or preferred brand with higher copay, or non-preferred brand and not covered tiers with the highest cost to the patient. FORMULARIZE (25) [verb] To express as a formula, to formulate. FORMULATING (17) [verb] To reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression. FORMULATION (16) [noun] The act, process, or result of formulating or reducing to a formula. | [noun] A medicinal preparation. FORMULATORS (16) FORMULIZING (26) FORTHCOMING (22) [noun] An act of coming forth. | [noun] Something that is yet to come. | [adjective] Approaching or about to take place. | [verb] To come forth. FORTISSIMOS (16) [noun] The dynamic sign indicating that the piece should be played fortissimo. Abbreviation: ff. FOULMOUTHED (20) [adjective] Tending to use obscene or offensive language FRAGMENTARY (20) [adjective] Consisting of fragments; disconnected; scattered. | [adjective] Composed of the fragments of other rocks. FRAGMENTATE (17) FRAGMENTING (18) [verb] To break apart. | [verb] To cause to be broken into pieces. | [verb] To break up and disperse (a file) into non-contiguous areas of a disk. FRAGMENTIZE (26) FRAMESHIFTS (22) FREEMARTINS (16) [noun] A female calf, born as twin with a bull calf, but sexually imperfect (often infertile). | [noun] Any female animal born sterile or otherwise infertile. FREEMASONRY (19) [noun] Fellowship and sympathy among a number of people. | [noun] The institutions, precepts, and rites of the Freemasons. | [noun] Strange customs which resemble those of Freemasons. FRENETICISM (18) FULFILLMENT (19) [noun] The act of fulfilling. | [noun] The state or quality of being fulfilled; completion; realization. | [noun] The act of consummating a desire or promise. FULFILMENTS (19) [noun] The act of fulfilling. | [noun] The state or quality of being fulfilled; completion; realization. | [noun] The act of consummating a desire or promise. FULLMOUTHED (20) FULMINATING (17) [verb] To make a verbal attack. | [verb] To issue as a denunciation. | [verb] To thunder or make a loud noise. FULMINATION (16) [noun] The act of fulminating or exploding; detonation. | [noun] The act of thundering forth threats or censures, as with authority. | [noun] That which is fulminated or thundered forth; vehement menace or censure. FULSOMENESS (16) FUMIGATIONS (17) [noun] The act of fumigating, or applying smoke or vapor, as for disinfection. | [noun] Vapor raised in the process of fumigating. FUNAMBULISM (20) FUNAMBULIST (18) [noun] A tightrope walker or a similar performer on a slack rope. FUNDAMENTAL (17) [noun] (usually in the plural) A leading or primary principle, rule, law, or article, which serves as the groundwork of a system; an essential part | [noun] The lowest frequency of a periodic waveform. | [noun] The lowest partial of a complex tone. FUROSEMIDES (17) FURTHERMORE (19) [adverb] In addition; besides; what's more; used to denote additional information. FURTHERMOST (19) [adjective] Distant; remote in space. | [adjective] Remote in time. | [adjective] Long. GADOLINIUMS (15) GALLIMAUFRY (20) [noun] A hash of various kinds of meats, a ragout. | [noun] Any absurd medley. GAMEKEEPERS (20) [noun] A person employed to maintain the game for hunting and all associated materials and effects. Often shortened to keeper. GAMETANGIUM (17) [noun] A gamete-producing organ or cell found in many multicellular protists, algae and fungi, and in the gametophytes of plants. GAMETICALLY (19) GAMETOCYTES (19) [noun] A diploid germ cell that divides by meiosis into a gamete GAMETOGENIC (17) GAMETOPHORE (19) GAMETOPHYTE (22) [noun] A plant (or the haploid phase in its life cycle) which produces gametes by mitosis in order to produce a zygote. GANGSTERDOM (16) GANGSTERISM (15) GARNISHMENT (17) [noun] A judgment that a third party should pay money owing to a defendant directly to a plaintiff. GASTRECTOMY (19) [noun] Removal or partial removal of the stomach GASTRONOMES (14) [noun] A lover of good food; a connoisseur or gourmet GASTRONOMIC (16) [adjective] Of or pertaining to gastronomy. GEMINATIONS (14) GEMMOLOGIES (17) GEMMOLOGIST (17) GEMOLOGICAL (17) GEMOLOGISTS (15) GENDARMERIE (15) [noun] A military body charged with police duties among the civilian population. GENTAMICINS (16) GENTEELISMS (14) [noun] A nicer word used instead of a vulgar or distasteful word GENTLEMANLY (17) [adjective] Of, being, pertaining to, or resembling a gentleman or gentlemen. | [adverb] In the manner or with the behavior of a gentleman; with social grace, politely. GENTLEWOMAN (17) [noun] A woman of the nobility. GENTLEWOMEN (17) [noun] A woman of the nobility. GEOCHEMICAL (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to geochemistry GEOCHEMISTS (19) [noun] A chemist or geologist who specializes in geochemistry GEOMAGNETIC (17) GEOMETRICAL (16) [adjective] Of, or relating to geometry; geometric. | [adjective] (of a design) Consisting of lines and simple shapes. | [adjective] (of a staircase) Having the stairs supported by the wall at one end only. GEOMETRISED (15) GEOMETRISES (14) GEOMETRIZED (24) GEOMETRIZES (23) GEOTROPISMS (16) GERMANIZING (24) GERMINATING (15) [verb] Of a seed, to begin to grow, to sprout roots and leaves. | [verb] To cause to grow; to produce. GERMINATION (14) [noun] The process of germinating; the beginning of vegetation or growth from a seed or spore; the first development of germs, either animal or vegetable. GERMINATIVE (17) GERRYMANDER (18) [noun] The act of gerrymandering. | [noun] A voting district skewed by gerrymandering. | [verb] To divide a geographic area into voting districts in such a way as to give an unfair advantage to one party in an election. GIMCRACKERY (25) GIMMICKRIES (22) GLAMORISING (15) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMORIZERS (23) GLAMORIZING (24) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMOROUSLY (17) GLAMOURIZED (24) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMOURIZES (23) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMOURLESS (14) GLASSMAKERS (18) GLASSMAKING (19) [noun] The craft or industry of producing glass GLIMMERINGS (17) [noun] A glimmer. GLUCOSAMINE (16) [noun] An amino derivative of glucose that is a component of polysaccharides such as chitin; it is marketed as a dietary supplement supposedly to reduce the symptoms of arthritis. GLUTAMINASE (14) GNOSTICISMS (16) GONADECTOMY (20) GONIOMETERS (14) [noun] A device used to measure the angles of joints commonly used in orthopedics and physical therapy. | [noun] A device used to measure the angles of crystals. | [noun] A radio direction finder. GONIOMETRIC (16) GORMANDISED (16) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GORMANDISES (15) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GORMANDIZED (25) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GORMANDIZER (24) GORMANDIZES (24) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GOURMANDISE (15) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. | [noun] Gluttony GOURMANDISM (17) GOURMANDIZE (24) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GOVERNMENTS (17) [noun] The body with the power to make and/or enforce laws to control a country, land area, people or organization. | [noun] (grammar) The relationship between a word and its dependents. | [noun] The state and its administration viewed as the ruling political power. GRADIOMETER (15) [noun] Any of several instruments used to measure the gradient of a physical property (such as magnetic field). GRADUALISMS (15) GRAMICIDINS (17) GRAMMARIANS (16) [noun] A person who studies grammar. GRAMMATICAL (18) [adjective] Not breaching any constraints of the grammar, or morpho-syntax, of the relevant language. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to grammar. GRAMOPHONES (19) [noun] A record player. GRANDMOTHER (18) [noun] A mother of someone's parent. | [noun] A female ancestor or progenitor. GRANGERISMS (15) GRANULOMATA (14) [noun] An inflammatory nodule found in many diseases, consisting of histiocytes (macrophages) attempting to wall off substances they perceive as foreign but are unable to eliminate, such as certain infectious organisms as well as other materials such as suture fragments | [noun] (medicine, less specific) any small nodule GRAVIMETERS (17) [noun] An instrument used to measure local variations in the gravitational field. | [noun] A hydrometer. GRAVIMETRIC (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to measurement by weight. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to measurement of the local gravitational field. GREENMAILED (15) GREENMAILER (14) GRIMINESSES (14) GRUMBLINGLY (20) GUESSTIMATE (14) [noun] An estimate that is hardly any better than a guess, often because it is based on insufficient or unreliable data. | [verb] To make a guesstimate. | [verb] To make a guesstimate of a specific quantity. GUMMINESSES (16) GUNSMITHING (18) GUTTURALISM (14) GYMNOSPERMS (21) [noun] Any plant such as a conifer whose seeds are not enclosed in an ovary. GYMNOSPERMY (24) GYROCOMPASS (21) [noun] A north-seeking form of gyroscope used as a directional reference in navigation. HABILIMENTS (18) [noun] Clothes, especially clothing appropriate for someone's job, status, or to an occasion. | [noun] Equipment or furnishings characteristic of a place or being; trappings. HACKMATACKS (28) [noun] A larch, a tree of the species Larix laricina. | [noun] A balsam poplar, a tree of the species Populus balsamifera. HALLMARKING (21) [verb] To provide or stamp with a hallmark. | [noun] The action of making a hallmark HALOMORPHIC (23) HAMMERHEADS (22) [noun] The portion of a hammer containing the metal striking face (also including the claw or peen if so equipped). | [noun] Any of various sharks of the genus Sphyrna or Zygaena having the eyes set on projections from the sides of the head, which gives it a hammer shape. | [noun] A fresh-water fish; the stone-roller, in the minnow family Cyprinidae. HAMMERLOCKS (24) [noun] A hold, in wrestling, in which an opponent's arm is twisted up behind his back; an armlock HAMMINESSES (18) HANDMAIDENS (18) [noun] A maid that waits at hand; a female servant or attendant. HARASSMENTS (16) [noun] Persistent attacks and criticism causing worry and distress. | [noun] Deliberate pestering or annoying. | [noun] Excessive intimidation. HARDMOUTHED (21) HARMFULNESS (19) HARMONICIST (18) HARMONISING (17) [verb] To be in harmonious agreement. | [verb] To play or sing in harmony. | [verb] To provide parts to. HARMONIZERS (25) HARMONIZING (26) [verb] To be in harmonious agreement. | [verb] To play or sing in harmony. | [verb] To provide parts to. HARRUMPHING (22) [verb] To dislike, protest, or dismiss. HARVESTTIME (19) HEADMASTERS (17) [noun] A male school principal. HEADSTREAMS (17) [noun] A stream that is the source of a river HEARTSOMELY (19) HEATHENDOMS (20) HEATHENISMS (19) HECTOMETERS (18) [noun] An SI unit of length equal to 102 metres. Symbol: hm HELIOMETERS (16) [noun] An astronomical instrument, based on a telescope, for measuring the diameter of the sun; now used to measure the angular distance between stars and other celestial bodies. HELIOMETRIC (18) HEMANGIOMAS (19) [noun] A congenital, benign tumor of endothelial cells. HEMATOCRITS (18) [noun] The percentage (by volume) of packed red blood cells in a centrifuged sample of blood | [noun] A centrifuge used to analyze the relative amount of red blood cells and plasma in blood HEMATOLOGIC (19) HEMATOXYLIN (26) [noun] A phenolic compound having the chemical formula C16H14O6, used (most often in conjunction with eosin) to make dye for staining tissue samples; extracted from the heart of the bloodwood tree, Haematoxylum campechianum. HEMERYTHRIN (22) HEMIACETALS (18) HEMIHYDRATE (23) [noun] A hydrate whose solid contains one molecule of water of crystallization per two molecules, or per two unit cells HEMIMORPHIC (25) HEMIPLEGIAS (19) HEMIPLEGICS (21) HEMIPTERANS (18) [noun] A hemipter. HEMIPTEROUS (18) HEMISPHERES (21) [noun] Half of the celestial sphere, as divided by either the ecliptic or the celestial equator . | [noun] A realm or domain of activity . | [noun] Half of the Earth, such as the Northern Hemisphere, Southern Hemisphere, Western Hemisphere or Eastern Hemisphere, Land Hemisphere, Water Hemisphere etc. . HEMISPHERIC (23) HEMOCYANINS (21) HEMODYNAMIC (24) [adjective] Of or pertaining to hemodynamics, the circulation of blood in the body. HEMOGLOBINS (19) HEMOPHILIAC (23) HEMOPHILIAS (21) HEMOPHILICS (23) HEMOPOIESES (18) HEMOPOIESIS (18) [noun] Formation of new cellular components of the blood in myeloid or lymphatic tissue. HEMOPOIETIC (20) HEMOPROTEIN (18) HEMORRHAGED (21) [verb] To bleed copiously. | [verb] To lose (something) in copious quantities. HEMORRHAGES (20) [verb] To bleed copiously. | [verb] To lose (something) in copious quantities. HEMORRHAGIC (22) [adjective] Of, relating to, or producing hemorrhage. HEMORRHOIDS (20) [noun] (often in the plural) An engorged, dilated and easily broken varicosity in the perianal area, often accompanied by intense itching and throbbing pain: piles. HEMOSIDERIN (17) HEMOSTATICS (18) HEMSTITCHED (22) [verb] To sew or embroider using this stitch HEMSTITCHER (21) HEMSTITCHES (21) [noun] An embroidery stitch in which parallel threads are drawn together in groups | [verb] To sew or embroider using this stitch HENOTHEISMS (19) HEPATECTOMY (23) HEPTAMETERS (18) [noun] A line or verse containing seven metrical feet HERMENEUTIC (18) [adjective] That explains, interprets, illustrates or elucidates. HERMETICISM (20) HESPERIDIUM (19) [noun] Any of several kinds of true berries, including citrus fruit such as the lemon and lime, which have pulpy interiors and leathery skins containing aromatic oils. HETEROATOMS (16) HETEROECISM (18) HEXADECIMAL (26) [noun] A number system with base sixteen, using the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, A, B, C, D, E and F, most used in computing as a hexadecimal digit can represent four bits, half a standard byte. | [noun] A number expressed in the hexadecimal system. | [adjective] Of a number, expressed in hexadecimal. HIGHBROWISM (25) HIPPOCAMPAL (24) [adjective] Pertaining to the hippocampus. HIPPOCAMPUS (24) [noun] A mythological creature with the front head and forelimbs of a horse and the rear of a dolphin. | [noun] A part of the brain located inside the temporal lobe, consisting mainly of grey matter. It is a component of the limbic system and plays a role in memory and emotion. HIPPODROMES (21) [noun] A horse racing course. | [noun] A fraudulent sporting contest with a predetermined winner. | [noun] A circus with equestrian performances. HIPPOPOTAMI (22) [noun] A large, semi-aquatic, herbivorous (plant-eating) African mammal (Hippopotamus amphibius) HIPSTERISMS (18) HISTAMINASE (16) HISTORICISM (18) [noun] A theory that events are influenced by historical conditions, rather than by people. | [noun] The use of historical styles in contemporary art. | [noun] A method of interpretation in Christian eschatology which attempts to associate Biblical prophecies with actual historical events and symbolic beings with historical persons or societies. HOLOENZYMES (28) [noun] A haloenzyme. HOMECOMINGS (21) [noun] The act or event of returning home. | [noun] In colleges and high schools, a tradition centred around a football game, a parade and the "coronation" of a Homecoming Queen. HOMEMAKINGS (23) HOMEOPATHIC (23) [noun] Any of the diluted remedies used in homeopathy. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to homeopathy. | [adjective] Extremely dilute, insipid. HOMEOSTASES (16) [noun] The ability of a system or living organism to adjust its internal environment to maintain a state of dynamic constancy; such as the ability of warm-blooded animals to maintain a stable temperature. | [noun] Such a dynamic equilibrium or balance. HOMEOSTASIS (16) [noun] The ability of a system or living organism to adjust its internal environment to maintain a state of dynamic constancy; such as the ability of warm-blooded animals to maintain a stable temperature. | [noun] Such a dynamic equilibrium or balance. HOMEOSTATIC (18) HOMEOTHERMS (21) [noun] A creature that maintains a stable internal body temperature regardless of external influence. HOMEOTHERMY (24) HOMEPORTING (19) HOMESCHOOLS (21) [verb] To educate children at home, that is, at a private domestic place, in lieu of sending them to a public school or private educational institution. | [verb] To be educated at home. HOMESTEADED (18) HOMESTEADER (17) HOMESTRETCH (21) [noun] The final stretch of a race track | [noun] The last part of some activity (e.g. a speech) HOMEYNESSES (19) HOMICIDALLY (22) HOMILETICAL (18) HOMOGAMETIC (21) [adjective] That produces, or contains, only one type of sex chromosome. HOMOGENATES (17) [noun] Any material obtained by homogenization | [noun] The slurry of tissues and cells which results when cell structure has been mechanically disrupted. HOMOGENEITY (20) [noun] The condition of being homogeneous HOMOGENEOUS (17) [adjective] Of the same kind; alike, similar. | [adjective] Having the same composition throughout; of uniform make-up. | [adjective] In the same state of matter. HOMOGENISED (18) [verb] To make homogeneous, to blend or puree. | [verb] Specifically, to treat milk so that the cream no longer separates. HOMOGENISES (17) [verb] To make homogeneous, to blend or puree. | [verb] Specifically, to treat milk so that the cream no longer separates. HOMOGENIZED (27) [verb] To make homogeneous, to blend or puree. | [verb] Specifically, to treat milk so that the cream no longer separates. | [adjective] Having been made homogenous, said especially of milk (which when homogenized no longer separates into cream and skim milk). HOMOGENIZER (26) HOMOGENIZES (26) [verb] To make homogeneous, to blend or puree. | [verb] Specifically, to treat milk so that the cream no longer separates. HOMOGRAPHIC (24) HOMOIOTHERM (21) [noun] Any warm-blooded animal HOMOIOUSIAN (16) [noun] One of the Semi-Arians of the 4th century who held that the Son was of like, but not the same, essence or substance with the Father. | [adjective] Having a similar but not identical essence, especially with reference to the first and second persons of the Trinity HOMOLOGATED (18) [verb] To confirm, ratify or approve, especially officially or legally. HOMOLOGATES (17) [verb] To confirm, ratify or approve, especially officially or legally. HOMOLOGICAL (19) HOMOLOGIZED (27) [verb] To make something homologous. | [verb] To become homologous. HOMOLOGIZER (26) HOMOLOGIZES (26) [verb] To make something homologous. | [verb] To become homologous. HOMOMORPHIC (25) [adjective] Of or pertaining to homomorphism; having a homomorphism. HOMONUCLEAR (18) HOMOOUSIANS (16) [noun] One of those, in the 4th century, who accepted the Nicene Creed and maintained that the Son had the same essence or substance with the Father. HOMOPHOBIAS (23) HOMOPHONIES (21) HOMOPHONOUS (21) [adjective] Having the same pronunciation. | [adjective] Homophonic; sounding the same. HOMOPLASIES (18) HOMOPLASTIC (20) HOMOPOLYMER (23) HOMOPTERANS (18) [noun] Any insect (a true bug) of the order Homoptera. HOMOPTEROUS (18) HOMOSEXUALS (23) [noun] A person who is attracted solely or primarily to others of the same sex. HOMOSPORIES (18) HOMOSPOROUS (18) HOMOTHALLIC (21) HOMOZYGOSES (29) HOMOZYGOSIS (29) HOMOZYGOTES (29) [noun] A diploid individual that has equal alleles at one or more genetic loci. HONEYCOMBED (24) [verb] To riddle something with holes, especially in such a pattern. | [adjective] Having a perforated structure, resembling a honeycomb. HONEYMOONED (20) [verb] To have a honeymoon (a trip taken by a couple after wedding). HONEYMOONER (19) HONORARIUMS (16) [noun] Compensation for services that do not have a predetermined value. HOODLUMISMS (19) HOOLIGANISM (17) [noun] Unruly, aggressive behavior; behavior associated with hooligans HORMOGONIUM (19) HORMONELIKE (20) HOUSEMASTER (16) [noun] A teacher who is in charge of a house at a boarding school. HOUSEMOTHER (19) [noun] A woman employed in a residence for young people to look after them. HUCKSTERISM (22) HUMANNESSES (16) HUMIDIFIERS (20) [noun] A device that is used to increase the humidity of the air. HUMIDIFYING (24) [verb] To increase the humidity in the air. HUMIDISTATS (17) [noun] A device that measures, or controls, the relative humidity of a gas. HUMILIATING (17) [verb] To injure the dignity and self-respect of. | [verb] To make humble; to lower in condition or status. | [adjective] Liable to humiliate, degrade, shame or embarrass someone. HUMILIATION (16) [noun] The act of humiliating or humbling someone; abasement of pride; mortification. | [noun] The state of being humiliated, humbled or reduced to lowliness or submission. HUMMINGBIRD (22) [noun] Any of various small American birds in the family Trochilidae that have the ability to hover. HUMORESQUES (25) [noun] A composition that is playful in attitude and tone. HUMORLESSLY (19) HYALOPLASMS (21) HYDROMEDUSA (21) [noun] The South American snake-necked turtle. HYDROMETEOR (20) [noun] Rain, snow and other precipitation products of the condensation of atmospheric water vapour HYDROMETERS (20) [noun] An instrument that floats in a liquid and measures its specific gravity on a scale. HYDROMETRIC (22) HYGROMETERS (20) [noun] An instrument that measures the humidity of the air or other gases, especially the relative humidity. HYGROMETRIC (22) HYMENOPTERA (21) [noun] Any insect of the order Hymenoptera HYMNOLOGIES (20) HYOSCYAMINE (24) [noun] An alkaloid, the stereoisomer of atropine, used medicinally to treat abdominal pain and similar conditions HYPERGAMIES (22) HYPERIMMUNE (23) [adjective] That causes, or is associated with, an extreme immune response HYPERMANIAS (21) HYPERMARKET (25) [noun] A combination of department store and supermarket. HYPERMEDIAS (22) HYPERMETERS (21) HYPERMETRIC (23) HYPERMNESIA (21) [noun] An elevated level of memory recall. HYPERMNESIC (23) HYPERMODERN (22) HYPNOPOMPIC (27) [adjective] Referring to the state of consciousness before becoming completely awake. HYPOCORISMS (23) HYPODERMICS (24) [noun] A hypodermic syringe, needle or injection HYPOKALEMIA (25) [noun] The condition of having an abnormally low concentration of potassium ions in the blood. HYPOKALEMIC (27) HYPOLIMNION (21) [noun] The perpetually cold layer of water that lies beneath the thermocline of a thermally stratified lake. HYPOMORPHIC (28) HYPOTHALAMI (24) [noun] A region of the forebrain located below the thalamus, forming the basal portion of the diencephalon, and functioning to regulate body temperature, some metabolic processes and governing the autonomic nervous system. HYPOTHERMAL (24) HYPOTHERMIA (24) [noun] Abnormally low body temperature; specifically, below 35°C. HYPOTHERMIC (26) HYPSOMETERS (21) [noun] An instrument that measures altitude indirectly by measuring the boiling point of water (which varies with atmospheric pressure). HYPSOMETRIC (23) [adjective] Of or pertaining to hypsometry (measuring elevation relative to sea level) HYSTEROTOMY (22) ICONOCLASMS (17) IDEMPOTENTS (16) [noun] An idempotent element. | [noun] An idempotent structure. IDEOGRAMMIC (19) IDIOMORPHIC (21) IGNIMBRITES (16) IGNOMINIOUS (14) [adjective] Marked by shame or disgrace. IGNORAMUSES (14) [noun] A totally ignorant person—unknowledgeable, uneducated, or uninformed; a fool. | [noun] A grand jury's ruling on an indictment when the evidence is determined to be insufficient to send the case to trial. ILLIMITABLE (15) [adjective] Impervious to limitation, without limit. ILLIMITABLY (18) ILLUMINABLE (15) ILLUMINANCE (15) [noun] The luminous flux incident on unit area of a surface; measured in lux or lumens. ILLUMINANTS (13) [noun] Something that illuminates. ILLUMINATED (14) [verb] To shine light on something. | [verb] To decorate something with lights. | [verb] To clarify or make something understandable. ILLUMINATES (13) [noun] Someone thought to have an unusual degree of enlightenment. | [verb] To shine light on something. | [verb] To decorate something with lights. ILLUMINATOR (13) ILLUMINISMS (15) ILLUMINISTS (13) [noun] Someone who subscribes to the doctrine of illuminism, or who claims to have achieved spiritual illumination; one of the Illuminati. ILLUSIONISM (13) [noun] The performance of magic tricks. | [noun] The theory of dealing with illusions. | [noun] The doctrine that the material world is an illusion. IMAGINARIES (14) IMAGINARILY (17) IMAGINATION (14) [noun] The image-making power of the mind; the act of mentally creating or reproducing an object not previously perceived; the ability to create such images. | [noun] Particularly, construction of false images; fantasizing. | [noun] Creativity; resourcefulness. IMAGINATIVE (17) [adjective] Having a lively or creative imagination. | [adjective] Tending to be fanciful or inventive. | [adjective] False or imagined. IMBIBITIONS (17) [noun] The act of imbibing. IMBITTERING (16) IMBOLDENING (17) IMBRICATING (18) [verb] To overlap in a regular pattern. | [verb] To undergo or cause to undergo imbrication. IMBRICATION (17) IMIPRAMINES (17) IMITATIVELY (19) IMMANENCIES (17) IMMANENTISM (17) IMMANENTIST (15) IMMEDIACIES (18) [noun] The quality of being immediate, of happening right away. | [noun] Lack of mediation; directness. | [noun] Immediate awareness or apprehension. IMMEDIATELY (19) [adverb] In an immediate manner; instantly or without delay. | [conjunction] Directly (as soon as). Indicates that the independent clause describes something that occurs immediately after the dependent clause's referent does. IMMEDICABLE (20) [adjective] Incurable; not able to be assisted by medicine. IMMEDICABLY (23) IMMENSENESS (15) IMMENSITIES (15) [noun] The state or characteristic of being immense. | [noun] An immense object. IMMIGRATING (17) [verb] To move into a foreign country to stay permanently. IMMIGRATION (16) [noun] The act of immigrating; the passing or coming into a country of which one is not native born for the purpose of permanent residence. IMMINENCIES (17) IMMITIGABLE (18) [adjective] That cannot be mitigated IMMITIGABLY (21) IMMITTANCES (17) [noun] Either the impedance or the admittance of an electrical network, considered as alternatives. IMMOBILISMS (19) IMMOBILIZED (27) [verb] To render motionless; to stop moving or stop from moving. | [verb] To modify a surface such that things will not stick to it | [adjective] Subject to immobilization. IMMOBILIZER (26) [noun] Something or someone that immobilises. IMMOBILIZES (26) [verb] To render motionless; to stop moving or stop from moving. | [verb] To modify a surface such that things will not stick to it IMMODESTIES (16) [noun] The state of being immodest; a lack of modesty. IMMOLATIONS (15) IMMORALISMS (17) IMMORALISTS (15) IMMORTALISE (15) [verb] To give unending life to, to make immortal. | [verb] To make eternally famous. IMMORTALITY (18) [noun] The condition of being immortal. IMMORTALIZE (24) [verb] To give unending life to, to make immortal. | [verb] To make eternally famous. | [verb] To remove the effects of normal apoptosis. IMMORTELLES (15) [noun] Any of various papery flowers, often dried and used as decoration. | [noun] Any of various trees of the genus Erythrina. IMMUNOASSAY (18) [noun] A test for the presence of a substance using the reaction of an antibody to its antigen, making use of the high selectivity of components of biological immune systems. | [verb] To carry out such a test. IMMUNOBLOTS (17) IMMUNOGENIC (18) [adjective] That produces a reaction from the immune system; antigenic IMMUNOLOGIC (18) IMMUREMENTS (17) IMPAIRMENTS (17) [noun] The result of being impaired | [noun] A deterioration or weakening | [noun] A disability or handicap IMPALEMENTS (17) IMPANELLING (16) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. IMPARADISED (17) IMPARADISES (16) IMPARTATION (15) IMPARTIALLY (18) [adverb] In an impartial manner; fairly. IMPARTMENTS (17) IMPASSIONED (16) [adjective] Filled with intense emotion or passion; fervent. IMPASSIVELY (21) IMPASSIVITY (21) IMPATIENCES (17) IMPATIENTLY (18) [adverb] Without patience IMPEACHABLE (22) IMPEACHMENT (22) [noun] The act of calling into question or challenging the accuracy or propriety of something. | [noun] The state of being impeached. | [noun] Hindrance; impediment; obstruction. IMPECUNIOUS (17) [adjective] Lacking money IMPEDIMENTA (18) IMPEDIMENTS (18) [noun] A hindrance; that which impedes or obstructs progress. | [noun] A disability, especially one affecting the hearing or speech. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Baggage, especially that of an army; impedimenta. IMPENITENCE (17) IMPERATIVES (18) [noun] (grammar) The grammatical mood expressing an order (see jussive). In English, the imperative form of a verb is the same as that of the bare infinitive. | [noun] (grammar) A verb in imperative mood. | [noun] An essential action, a must: something which is imperative. IMPERFECTLY (23) [adverb] In an imperfect manner or degree; not fully or completely. IMPERFORATE (18) [noun] A postage stamp that has not been perforated. | [adjective] Not perforated. IMPERIALISM (17) [noun] The policy of forcefully extending a nation's authority by territorial gain or by the establishment of economic and political dominance over other nations. IMPERIALIST (15) [noun] An advocate of imperialism. | [adjective] Of, or relating to imperialism. IMPERILLING (16) [verb] To put into peril; to place in danger. | [verb] To risk or hazard. IMPERILMENT (17) IMPERIOUSLY (18) IMPERMANENT (17) [adjective] Not permanent; momentary IMPERMEABLE (19) [adjective] Impossible to permeate. | [adjective] Not allowing passage, especially of liquids; waterproof. IMPERSONATE (15) [verb] To pretend to be (a different person); to assume the identity of. | [verb] To operate with the permissions of a different user account. | [verb] To manifest in corporeal form; to personify. IMPERTINENT (15) [noun] An impertinent individual. | [adjective] Insolent, ill-mannered | [adjective] Irrelevant (opposite of pertinent) IMPETRATING (16) [verb] To obtain by asking; to procure upon request. | [verb] To ask for; to demand. IMPETRATION (15) [noun] The act of impetrating, or obtaining by petition or entreaty. | [noun] The obtaining of benefice from Rome by solicitation, which benefice belonged to the disposal of the king or other lay patron of the realm. IMPETUOSITY (18) IMPETUOUSLY (18) IMPINGEMENT (18) [noun] The act of impinging. IMPLANTABLE (17) [noun] A device that can be implanted surgically. | [adjective] Capable of being, or designed to be, implanted (within the body etc.) IMPLAUSIBLE (17) [adjective] Not plausible; unlikely; dubious. IMPLAUSIBLY (20) IMPLEMENTED (18) [verb] To bring about; to put into practice | [verb] To carry out; to do IMPLEMENTER (17) [noun] A person who implements something. IMPLEMENTOR (17) [noun] A person who implements something. IMPLICATING (18) [verb] (with “in”) To show to be connected or involved in an unfavorable or criminal way. | [verb] To imply, to have as a necessary consequence or accompaniment. | [verb] To imply without entailing; to have as an implicature. IMPLICATION (17) [noun] The act of implicating. | [noun] The state of being implicated. | [noun] (usually in the plural) A possible effect or result of a decision or action. IMPLICATIVE (20) [adjective] Tending to implicate or to imply; pertaining to implication. IMPLORINGLY (19) IMPOLITICAL (17) IMPOLITICLY (20) IMPORTANCES (17) [noun] The quality or condition of being important or worthy of note. | [noun] Significance or prominence. | [noun] Personal status or standing. IMPORTANTLY (18) [adverb] (sentence adverb) Used to mark a statement as having importance. | [adverb] In an important manner. IMPORTATION (15) [noun] The act or an instance of importing. | [noun] The act or an instance of carrying or conveying, especially into some system, place, area or country. | [noun] That which is imported; commodities or wares introduced into a country from abroad. IMPORTUNATE (15) [adjective] (of a demand) Persistent or pressing, often annoyingly so. | [adjective] (of a person) Given to importunate demands, greedily or thoughtlessly demanding. | [verb] To importune, or to obtain by importunity. IMPORTUNELY (18) IMPORTUNERS (15) IMPORTUNING (16) [verb] To bother, trouble, irritate. | [verb] To harass with persistent requests. | [verb] To approach to offer one's services as a prostitute, or otherwise make improper proposals. IMPORTUNITY (18) [noun] A constant and insistent demanding. | [noun] An inappropriate or unsuitable time; unseasonableness. IMPOSITIONS (15) [noun] The act of imposing, laying on, affixing, enjoining, inflicting, obtruding, and the like. | [noun] That which is imposed, levied, or enjoined. | [noun] An excessive, arbitrary, or unlawful exaction; hence, a trick or deception put or laid on others. IMPOSTHUMES (20) [noun] An abscess. | [noun] A person suffering from an abscess. | [verb] To form an abscess. IMPOTENCIES (17) IMPOUNDMENT (18) IMPRACTICAL (19) [adjective] Not practical; impracticable IMPRECATING (18) [verb] To call down by prayer, as something hurtful or calamitous. IMPRECATION (17) [noun] The act of imprecating, or invoking evil upon someone; a prayer that a curse or calamity may befall someone. | [noun] A curse. IMPRECATORY (20) IMPRECISELY (20) IMPRECISION (17) [noun] Lack of precision or exactness; poor accuracy IMPREGNABLE (18) [adjective] (of a fortress, wall, etc., also used figuratively) Too strong to be penetrated. | [adjective] Capable of being impregnated. IMPREGNABLY (21) IMPREGNANTS (16) IMPREGNATED (17) [verb] To cause to become pregnant. | [verb] To fertilize. | [verb] To saturate, or infuse. IMPREGNATES (16) [verb] To cause to become pregnant. | [verb] To fertilize. | [verb] To saturate, or infuse. IMPREGNATOR (16) IMPRESARIOS (15) [noun] A manager or producer in the entertainment industry, especially music or theatre. IMPRESSIBLE (17) IMPRESSIONS (15) [noun] The indentation or depression made by the pressure of one object on or into another. | [noun] The overall effect of something, e.g., on a person. | [noun] A vague recalling of an event, a belief. IMPRESSMENT (17) IMPRESSURES (15) IMPRIMATURS (17) [noun] An official license to publish or print something, especially when censorship applies. | [noun] (by extension) Any mark of official approval. IMPRINTINGS (16) IMPRISONING (16) [verb] To put in or as if in prison; confine. IMPROPRIETY (20) [noun] The condition of being improper. | [noun] An improper act. | [noun] Improper language. IMPROVEMENT (20) [noun] The act of improving; advancement or growth; a bettering | [noun] The act of making profitable use or application of anything, or the state of being profitably employed; practical application, for example of a doctrine, principle, or theory, stated in a discourse. | [noun] The state of being improved; betterment; advance IMPROVIDENT (19) [adjective] Failing to provide for the future; reckless | [adjective] Incautious; prone to rashness IMPROVISERS (18) IMPROVISING (19) [verb] To make something up or invent it as one goes on; to proceed guided only by imagination, instinct, and guesswork rather than by a careful plan. | [noun] Improvisation IMPROVISORS (18) IMPRUDENCES (18) IMPRUDENTLY (19) IMPUISSANCE (17) IMPULSIVELY (21) [adverb] In an impulsive manner; with force; by impulse. IMPULSIVITY (21) IMPUTATIONS (15) [noun] The act of imputing or charging; attribution; ascription. | [noun] That which has been imputed or charged. | [noun] Charge or attribution of evil; censure; reproach; insinuation. INANIMATELY (16) INCITEMENTS (15) [noun] A call to act; encouragement to act, often in an illegal fashion. INCLEMENTLY (18) INCOMMODING (19) [verb] To disturb, to discomfort, to hinder. INCOMMODITY (21) INCOMPETENT (17) [noun] A person who is incompetent. | [adjective] Unskilled; lacking the degree of ability that would normally be expected. | [adjective] Unable to make rational decisions, insane or otherwise cognitively impaired. INCOMPLIANT (17) INCREMENTAL (15) [adjective] Pertaining to an increment. | [adjective] Occurring over a series of gradual increments, or small steps. INCRIMINATE (15) [verb] To accuse or bring criminal charges against. | [verb] To indicate the guilt of. INCUMBERING (18) INCUNABULUM (17) [noun] A book, single sheet, or image that was printed before the year 1501 in Europe. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The cradle, birthplace or origin of something. INDEMNIFIED (18) [verb] To secure against loss or damage; to insure. | [verb] To compensate or reimburse someone for some expense or injury | [verb] To hurt, to harm INDEMNIFIER (17) INDEMNIFIES (17) [verb] To secure against loss or damage; to insure. | [verb] To compensate or reimburse someone for some expense or injury | [verb] To hurt, to harm INDEMNITIES (14) [noun] Security from damage, loss, or penalty. | [noun] An obligation or duty upon an individual to incur the losses of another. | [noun] Repayment; compensation for loss or injury. INDICTMENTS (16) [noun] An official formal accusation for a criminal offence, or the process by which it is brought to a jury. | [noun] The official legal document outlining the charges concerned; bill of indictment. | [noun] An accusation of wrongdoing; a criticism or condemnation. INDOMITABLE (16) [adjective] Incapable of being subdued, overcome, or vanquished. INDOMITABLY (19) INDORSEMENT (14) [noun] The act or quality of endorsing | [noun] An amendment or annotation to an insurance contract or other official document (such as a driving licence). | [noun] An instructor's signed acknowledgement of time practising specific flying skills. INDUCEMENTS (16) [noun] An incentive that helps bring about a desired state. In some contexts, this can imply bribery. | [noun] An introductory statement of facts or background information. | [noun] (shipping) The act of placing a port on a vessel's itinerary because the volume of cargo offered at that port justifies the cost of routing the vessel. INESTIMABLE (15) [adjective] Not able to be estimated; not able to be calculated, computed or comprehended, as because of great scale, degree or magnitude. INESTIMABLY (18) INFANTILISM (16) [noun] An emotional dependency on being treated as an infant. | [noun] A sexual dependency on the sight or feeling of diapers, or being diapered. INFANTRYMAN (19) [noun] A soldier employed in an infantry role INFANTRYMEN (19) [noun] A soldier employed in an infantry role INFIRMARIES (16) [noun] A place where sick or injured people are cared for, especially a small hospital; sickhouse. | [noun] A clinic or dispensary within another institution. INFIRMITIES (16) [noun] Feebleness, frailty or ailment, especially due to old age. | [noun] A moral weakness or defect INFLAMMABLE (20) [noun] Any inflammable substance. | [adjective] Capable of burning; easily set on fire. | [adjective] Easily excited; set off by the slightest excuse; easily enraged or inflamed. INFLAMMABLY (23) INFOMERCIAL (18) [noun] A program-length television commercial, typically between thirty minutes and one hour long, that advertises a product or service by presenting supposedly impartial information about it. INFORMALITY (19) [noun] The condition of being informal. INFORMATICS (18) [noun] A branch of information science and of computer science that focuses on the study of information processing, particularly with respect to systems integration and human interactions with machine and data. INFORMATION (16) [noun] That which resolves uncertainty; anything that answers the question of "what a given entity is". | [noun] Things that are or can be known about a given topic; communicable knowledge of something. | [noun] The act of informing or imparting knowledge; notification. INFORMATIVE (19) [adjective] Providing information; especially, providing useful or interesting information. | [adjective] (in standards and specifications) Not specifying requirements, but merely providing information. | [adjective] Formative; having power to form. INFORMATORY (19) [adjective] Providing or communicating information. INFRAHUMANS (19) INHARMONIES (16) INHUMANNESS (16) INHUMATIONS (16) [noun] The act of burial. | [noun] The act of burying vessels in warm earth in order to expose their contents to a steady moderate heat; the state of being thus exposed. | [noun] Arenation INITIALISMS (13) [noun] A term formed from the initial letters of several words or parts of words, but which is itself pronounced letter by letter. | [noun] The process of forming words or terms using initial letters of other words. INNUMERABLE (15) [adjective] Not capable of being counted, enumerated, or numbered, hence, indefinitely numerous; of great number. INNUMERABLY (18) INNUMERATES (13) [noun] One who lacks numeracy skills. INSEMINATED (14) [verb] To sow (to disperse or plant seeds). | [verb] To impregnate (to cause to become pregnant). INSEMINATES (13) [verb] To sow (to disperse or plant seeds). | [verb] To impregnate (to cause to become pregnant). INSEMINATOR (13) [noun] A person who, or device that inseminates. INSTALLMENT (13) [noun] One of a series of parts, whether equal or unequal to the other parts of the series, of a given entity or a given process, which part presents or is presented at a particular scheduled interval. | [noun] One member of a series of portions of a debt or sum of money, which portions may or may not be equated (depending in part on whether the interest rate is fixed or variable), payment of which portions are serially exacted at regularly scheduled intervals toward satisfaction of the total. Payments of installments are generally mensual, quarterly, triannual, biannual, or annual. | [noun] A part of a published or broadcast serial. | [noun] The act of installing; installation. INSTALMENTS (13) [noun] One of a series of parts, whether equal or unequal to the other parts of the series, of a given entity or a given process, which part presents or is presented at a particular scheduled interval. | [noun] One member of a series of portions of a debt or sum of money, which portions may or may not be equated (depending in part on whether the interest rate is fixed or variable), payment of which portions are serially exacted at regularly scheduled intervals toward satisfaction of the total. Payments of installments are generally mensual, quarterly, triannual, biannual, or annual. | [noun] A part of a published or broadcast serial. INSTILLMENT (13) INSTRUMENTS (13) [noun] A device used to produce music. | [noun] A means or agency for achieving an effect. | [noun] A measuring or displaying device. INSULARISMS (13) INTEGUMENTS (14) [noun] An outer protective covering such as the feathers or skin of an animal, a rind or shell. | [noun] The outer layer of an ovule, which develops into the seed coat. INTEMPERATE (15) [verb] To disorder. | [adjective] Lacking moderation, temper or control. | [adjective] Indulging any appetite or passion to excess, especially the drinking of alcohol. INTENDMENTS (14) [noun] The sense in which the legal system interprets something, especially the intention of legislation INTERATOMIC (15) [adjective] Between atoms INTERCAMPUS (17) INTERFAMILY (19) INTERMEDDLE (15) [verb] To mix, mingle together. | [verb] To get mixed up (with). | [verb] To butt in, to interfere in or with. INTERMEDINS (14) INTERMESHED (17) [verb] To mesh between one another. INTERMESHES (16) [verb] To mesh between one another. INTERMEZZOS (31) [noun] A short piece of music or act in the interval of the main spectacle; a theatrical interlude. | [noun] A palate cleanser; a small snack with a bright light neutral taste; a fruit; a fresh sparkling wine; or a fruity or milky cocktail; that is served between courses in a meal. INTERMINGLE (14) [verb] To mix or become mixed together. INTERMITTED (14) [verb] To interrupt, to stop or cease temporarily or periodically; to suspend. INTERMITTER (13) INTERMIXING (21) [verb] To mix together; to intermingle or blend. | [noun] A process of intermixture. INTERNMENTS (13) [noun] Confinement within narrow limits, as of foreign troops, to the interior of a country. INTERREGNUM (14) [noun] The period of time between the end of a sovereign's reign and the accession of another sovereign. | [noun] A period of time during which normal executive leadership is suspended or interrupted. | [noun] An intermission in any order of succession; any breach of continuity in action or influence. INTERSYSTEM (16) INTIMATIONS (13) [noun] The act of intimating. | [noun] The thing intimated. | [noun] Announcement; declaration. INTIMIDATED (15) [verb] To make timid or afraid; to cause to feel fear or nervousness; to deter, especially by threats of violence | [adjective] Subjected to intimidation. INTIMIDATES (14) [verb] To make timid or afraid; to cause to feel fear or nervousness; to deter, especially by threats of violence INTIMIDATOR (14) [noun] One who intimidates. INTRADERMAL (14) [adjective] In medicine, injections or infusions fall into the parenteral category of drug/substance delivery methods. Intradermal means within, about, or below a dermal tissue layer (typically the skin) and describes the location of administration. INTROMITTED (14) INTROMITTER (13) INTUMESCENT (15) [noun] Any substance that swells on exposure to heat, thus increasing in volume and decreasing in density. | [adjective] That becomes swollen, especially upon exposure to heat INVALIDISMS (17) INVESTMENTS (16) [noun] The act of investing, or state of being invested. | [noun] A placement of capital in expectation of deriving income or profit from its use or appreciation. | [noun] A vestment. INVOLVEMENT (19) [noun] The act of involving, or the state of being involved. IRIDOSMINES (14) IRKSOMENESS (17) IRONMASTERS (13) [noun] A manufacturer of iron | [noun] The proprietor of an ironworks IRONMONGERS (14) [noun] A retailer in iron goods and hardware IRONMONGERY (17) IRREDENTISM (14) [noun] A nationalistic doctrine advocating the annexation of foreign lands with historic or ethnic links. IRREMOVABLE (18) [adjective] Not removable; immovable; inflexible. IRREMOVABLY (21) ISOCHRONISM (18) ISOMERIZING (23) [verb] To convert a compound into a different isomeric form | [adjective] That promotes isomerization. ISOMORPHISM (20) ISOMORPHOUS (18) ITEMIZATION (22) IVERMECTINS (18) JACKHAMMERS (31) [noun] A portable percussive power tool that combines a hammer and chisel used to drill or break hard matter, for instance rock or concrete. | [verb] To use a jackhammer. | [verb] To break (something) using a jackhammer. JIMSONWEEDS (24) [noun] A poisonous plant of the Datura stramonium species, part of the nightshade (Solanaceae) family. A hallucinogen occasionally ingested by those looking for a cheap high. | [noun] (by extension) Any poisonous plant of the Datura genus. JOURNALISMS (20) JUDGMATICAL (24) JUMPINESSES (22) KARYOGAMIES (21) KARYOLYMPHS (28) KERSEYMERES (20) KETTLEDRUMS (18) [noun] A large hemispherical brass percussion instrument (one of the timpani) with a drumhead that can be tuned by adjusting its tension. | [noun] An informal social party at which a light collation is offered, held in the afternoon or early evening. KIMBERLITES (19) KINEMATICAL (19) KINETOSOMES (17) KLEPTOMANIA (19) [noun] A psychological disorder that causes an uncontrollable obsession with stealing without economic or material need. KOMONDOROCK (24) KYMOGRAPHIC (28) LACHRYMATOR (21) [noun] Any substance that causes tears, such as tear gas. LACRIMATION (15) [noun] The shedding of tears; crying. LACRIMATORS (15) [noun] Any substance that causes tears, such as tear gas. LACTALBUMIN (17) [noun] The albumin content of milk. LAMBREQUINS (24) [noun] A short decorative drapery for a shelf edge or for the top of a window casing; a valance (North America only). | [noun] An ornamental hanging over upper part of window or along the edge of a shelf. | [noun] A border pattern with draped effect used in ceramics. LAMEBRAINED (16) LAMELLATELY (16) LAMELLICORN (15) [noun] A scarabaeid beetle with such antennae, in the obsolete taxon Lamellicornia. | [adjective] (of antennae) Having a group of flat lamellae on the end. | [adjective] (of beetles) Having such antennae. LAMELLIFORM (18) LAMENTATION (13) [noun] The act of lamenting. | [noun] A sorrowful cry; a lament. | [noun] Specifically, mourning. LAMINARIANS (13) LAMINATIONS (13) LAMINITISES (13) LAMMERGEIER (16) [noun] A long-winged vulture, Gypaetus barbatus, found in southern Europe, Africa and India. LAMMERGEYER (19) [noun] A long-winged vulture, Gypaetus barbatus, found in southern Europe, Africa and India. LAMPLIGHTER (19) [noun] A person employed to light streetlights at dusk and snuff them at dawn. LANDLORDISM (15) [noun] An economic system under which a few private individuals (landlords) own property, and rent it to tenants. | [noun] A specific variation or implementation of such a system. LARGEMOUTHS (17) [noun] A creature of this kind. LATIFUNDIUM (17) [noun] A great landed estate with absentee ownership and labor often in a state of partial servitude. LAWRENCIUMS (18) LEBENSRAUMS (15) LEGERDEMAIN (15) [noun] Sleight of hand; "magic" trickery. | [noun] A show of skill or deceitful ability. LEGITIMATED (15) [verb] To make legitimate, lawful, or valid; especially, to put in the position or state of a legitimate person before the law, by legal means. LEGITIMATES (14) [noun] A person born to a legally married couple. | [verb] To make legitimate, lawful, or valid; especially, to put in the position or state of a legitimate person before the law, by legal means. LEGITIMATOR (14) LEGITIMISED (15) [verb] To make legitimate. LEGITIMISES (14) [verb] To make legitimate. LEGITIMISMS (16) LEGITIMISTS (14) LEGITIMIZED (24) [verb] To make legitimate. LEGITIMIZER (23) LEGITIMIZES (23) [verb] To make legitimate. LEISHMANIAL (16) LEISHMANIAS (16) [noun] A parasite that causes leishmaniasis, a genus trypanosome protozoa, Leishmania. LEMMINGLIKE (20) LEMNISCATES (15) LEPROMATOUS (15) [adjective] Relating to a leproma | [adjective] Relating to or afflicted by leprosy LEPROSARIUM (15) [noun] A place or institution (such as a colony, house or hospital) used for the treatment of leprosy. LESBIANISMS (15) LETTERFORMS (16) [noun] The shape of an individual letter | [noun] The design and development of such shapes LEUKOTOMIES (17) [noun] Lobotomy LIBERALISMS (15) LIBERTINISM (15) LIFEMANSHIP (21) LIGAMENTOUS (14) LIGHTSOMELY (20) LIMELIGHTED (18) LIMITATIONS (13) [noun] The act of limiting or the state of being limited. | [noun] A restriction; a boundary, real or metaphorical, caused by some thing or some circumstance. | [noun] An imperfection or shortcoming that limits something's use or value. LIMITEDNESS (14) LIMITLESSLY (16) LIMNOLOGIES (14) LIMNOLOGIST (14) LIMPIDITIES (16) LINCOMYCINS (20) LINEAMENTAL (13) LIQUIDAMBAR (25) [noun] A resinous gum that exudes from the bark of the tree Liquidambar styraciflua | [noun] The tree itself, also called sweetgum LISSOMENESS (13) LITERALISMS (13) LITHOTOMIES (16) [noun] A surgical method for removal of calculi, such as kidney stones and gallstones. LITTERMATES (13) [noun] An animal born in the same litter LOADMASTERS (14) [noun] The member of an aircrew responsible for the loading and internal stowage of heavy cargo (so as to minimise the disruption of the aircraft's trim). LOATHSOMELY (19) LOBECTOMIES (17) [noun] The surgical removal of a lobe from an organ such as the lung or the brain LOBOTOMISED (16) [adjective] Alternative spelling of lobotomized LOBOTOMISES (15) [verb] To perform a lobotomy upon. | [verb] To remove the vitality or intelligence from. LOBOTOMIZED (25) [verb] To perform a lobotomy upon. | [verb] To remove the vitality or intelligence from. LOBOTOMIZES (24) [verb] To perform a lobotomy upon. | [verb] To remove the vitality or intelligence from. LOCOMOTIONS (15) LOCOMOTIVES (18) [noun] The power unit of a train that pulls the coaches or wagons. | [noun] A traction engine | [noun] A cheer characterized by a slow beginning and a progressive increase in speed LOGARITHMIC (19) [adjective] Of, or relating to logarithms. LOGNORMALLY (17) LOGOMACHIES (19) [noun] Dispute over the meaning of words | [noun] A conflict waged only as a battle of words LONGANIMITY (17) LOUDMOUTHED (18) LOVEMAKINGS (21) LUMBERJACKS (28) [noun] A person whose work is to fell trees. | [noun] A lumberjacket. LUMBERYARDS (19) [noun] A facility dedicated to the preparation and/or sale of lumber. LUMBOSACRAL (17) LUMINESCENT (15) [adjective] Emitting light by luminescence. LUMINESCING (16) [verb] To give off light, including in the invisible electromagnetic radiation frequencies, or become luminescent. LUMPINESSES (15) LUMPISHNESS (18) LYCOPODIUMS (21) [noun] Club moss LYMPHOBLAST (23) [noun] An immature lymphocyte; they proliferate uncontrollably in lymphoblastic leukemia LYMPHOCYTES (26) [noun] A type of white blood cell with a spherical nucleus occurring in the lymphatic system, including B cells, T cells and natural killer cells. LYMPHOCYTIC (28) LYMPHOGRAMS (24) LYMPHOKINES (25) [noun] Any of a group of cytokines produced by lymphocytes MACADAMIZED (28) [verb] To cover, as a road, or street, with small, broken stones, so as to form a smooth, hard, convex surface. MACADAMIZES (27) MACERATIONS (15) MACHINATING (19) [verb] To devise a plot or secret plan; to conspire. MACHINATION (18) [noun] A clever scheme or artful plot, usually crafted for evil purposes. | [noun] The act of machinating or plotting. MACHINATORS (18) MACHINEABLE (20) MACHINELIKE (22) MACHINERIES (18) MACINTOSHES (18) [noun] A raincoat. MACROBIOTIC (19) [adjective] Of a lifestyle incorporating a dietary regimen including locally grown, seasonal, natural foods, or of the diet itself. | [adjective] Long-lived. MACROCOSMIC (21) MACROCYCLIC (24) [adjective] (of an organic compound) having a closed ring of more than about twelve atoms | [adjective] Of, or relating to a macrocycle MACROFOSSIL (18) MACROGAMETE (18) [noun] The larger of a pair of conjugating gametes; often the female. MACRONUCLEI (17) MACROPHAGES (21) [noun] A white blood cell that phagocytizes necrotic cell debris and foreign material, including viruses, bacteria, and tattoo ink. It presents foreign antigens on MHC II to lymphocytes. Part of the innate immune system. MACROPHAGIC (23) MACROPHYTES (23) [noun] Any normal macroscopic plant, especially an aquatic one. MACROPHYTIC (25) MACROSCALES (17) [noun] A relatively large scale MACROSCOPIC (21) [adjective] Visible to the unassisted eye | [adjective] Having an appreciable mass MACULATIONS (15) MADDENINGLY (19) [adverb] In a maddening manner. MADREPORIAN (16) MADREPORITE (16) [noun] A calcareous opening in the body of echinoderms which connects the water vascular system to the environment. | [noun] A fossil stony coral, or a deposit composed of the same. MADRIGALIAN (15) MADRIGALIST (15) MAGAZINISTS (23) MAGISTERIAL (14) [adjective] Befitting the status or skill of a magister or master; authoritative, masterly. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a master, magistrate, the magisterium, or one in authority. | [adjective] Pertaining to, produced by, or of the nature of, magistery. MAGISTERIUM (16) [noun] The teaching office or authority of the Roman Catholic Church. | [noun] An authoritative statement. MAGISTRALLY (17) MAGISTRATES (14) [noun] A judicial officer with limited authority to administer and enforce the law. A magistrate's court may have jurisdiction in civil or criminal cases, or both. | [noun] A high official of the state or a municipality in ancient Greece or Rome. | [noun] (by extension) A comparable official in medieval or modern institutions. MAGNANIMITY (19) [noun] The quality of being magnanimous; greatness of mind; elevation or dignity of soul. | [noun] That quality or combination of qualities, in character, which enables one to encounter danger and trouble with tranquility and firmness, to disdain injustice, meanness and revenge, and to act and sacrifice for noble objectives. MAGNANIMOUS (16) [adjective] Noble and generous in spirit. MAGNETISING (15) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETIZERS (23) MAGNETIZING (24) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNIFICATS (19) MAGNIFICENT (19) [adjective] Grand, elegant or splendid in appearance. | [adjective] Grand or noble in action. | [adjective] Exceptional for its kind. MAGNIFICOES (19) [noun] A grandee or nobleman of Venice. | [noun] A rector of a German university. MAIDENHAIRS (17) [noun] A woman's pubic hair | [noun] Either of two species of genus Adiantum of fern with delicate, hair-like stalks, especially Adiantum capillus-veneris | [noun] Designating various types of moss or flowering plants. MAIDENHEADS (18) [noun] Virginity. | [noun] The hymen. MAIDENHOODS (18) [noun] The condition of being a maiden; the time when one is a maiden or young girl. | [noun] A woman's virginity or maidenhead. | [noun] Freshness; newness. MAIDSERVANT (17) [noun] A female servant; a maid. MAILABILITY (18) MAINLANDERS (14) MAINSPRINGS (16) [noun] The principal spring of a clockwork mechanism, which drives it by uncoiling. | [noun] The most important reason for something (Cf. spring "origin of something" (literary) (often in the plural) the springs of her ambition). MAINSTREAMS (15) [verb] To popularize, to normalize, to render mainstream. | [verb] To become mainstream. | [verb] To educate (a disabled student) together with non-disabled students. MAINTAINERS (13) [noun] Someone who keeps or upholds something; a steward. | [noun] A person who does maintenance work. | [noun] A device used to keep teeth in a given position. MAINTAINING (14) [verb] To support (someone), to back up or assist (someone) in an action. | [verb] To keep up; to preserve; to uphold (a state, condition etc.). | [verb] To declare or affirm (a clause) to be true; to assert. MAINTENANCE (15) [noun] Actions performed to keep some machine or system functioning or in service. | [noun] A tort committed when a third party who does not have a bona fide interest in a lawsuit provides help or acquires an interest to a litigant's lawsuit. | [noun] Alimony, a periodical payment or a lump sum made or ordered to be made to a spouse after a divorce. MAISONETTES (13) [noun] A small house | [noun] An apartment often on two floors MAKEREADIES (18) MAKEWEIGHTS (24) [noun] Something of inferior quality which is included in a shipment to make up the weight. | [noun] Something included to add to the apparent weight or force of an argument. MALADAPTIVE (19) [adjective] (chiefly of behaviour) Showing inadequate or faulty adaptation to a new situation. MALADJUSTED (22) [adjective] Badly adjusted to the demands and stresses of daily living; unable to cope. MALADROITLY (17) MALAPROPIAN (17) MALAPROPISM (19) [noun] The blundering use of an absurdly inappropriate word or expression in place of a similar-sounding one. | [noun] An instance of this; malaprop. MALAPROPIST (17) MALARIOLOGY (17) [noun] The scientific study of malaria. MALCONTENTS (15) [noun] A person who is not satisfied with current conditions; a discontented person, a rebel. | [noun] A state of discontentment or dissatisfaction; something that causes discontent. | [verb] To cause discontent or dissatisfaction. MALEDICTING (17) MALEDICTION (16) [noun] A curse. | [noun] Evil speech. MALEDICTORY (19) MALEFACTION (18) MALEFACTORS (18) [noun] A criminal or felon. | [noun] An evildoer. MALEFICENCE (20) MALEVOLENCE (18) [noun] Hostile attitude or feeling. | [noun] Behavior exhibiting a hostile attitude. MALFEASANCE (18) [noun] Wrongdoing. | [noun] Misconduct or wrongdoing, especially by a public official and causing damage. MALFUNCTION (18) [noun] Faulty functioning | [noun] Failure to function | [verb] To function improperly MALICIOUSLY (18) [adverb] In a malicious manner, or for malicious reasons MALIGNANCES (16) MALIGNANTLY (17) MALIGNITIES (14) MALINGERERS (14) [noun] A person who malingers. MALINGERING (15) [verb] To feign illness, injury, or incapacitation in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. | [verb] To self-inflict real injury or infection (to inflict self-harm) in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. MALPOSITION (15) MALPRACTICE (19) [noun] The improper treatment of a patient by a physician that results in injury or loss. | [noun] Improper or unethical conduct by a professional or official person. MALTREATERS (13) MALTREATING (14) [verb] To treat badly, to abuse. MAMMALOGIES (18) MAMMALOGIST (18) MAMMILLATED (18) [adjective] Having small nipples, or small protuberances like nipples or mammae. | [adjective] Bounded like a nipple; said of the apex of some shells. MAMMOGRAPHY (26) [noun] X-ray examination of the breasts for diagnosing and locating abnormalities, especially tumours. MANAGEMENTS (16) [noun] Administration; the use of limited resources combined with forecasting, planning, leadership and execution skills to achieve predetermined specific goals. | [noun] The executives of an organisation, especially senior executives. | [noun] Judicious use of means to accomplish an end. MANAGERSHIP (19) MANCHINEELS (18) [noun] A tropical American tree, Hippomane mancinella, having apple-like, poisonous fruit, and a sap that causes blisters on contact with the skin MANDAMUSING (17) MANDARINATE (14) MANDARINISM (16) MANDATARIES (14) [noun] One who receives a mandate. MANDATORIES (14) [noun] A sign or line that require the path of the disc to be above, below or to one side of it. | [noun] A person, organisation or state who receives a mandate; a mandatary. MANDATORILY (17) MANDIBULATE (16) MANDOLINIST (14) MANDRAGORAS (15) [noun] Mandrake (genus Mandragora); often specifically mandrake root, traditionally used as a narcotic. | [noun] A kind of tiny dragon immune to fire. MANEUVERERS (16) MANEUVERING (17) [verb] To move (something, or oneself) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position. | [verb] To guide, steer, manage purposefully | [verb] To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme MANGANESIAN (14) MANGINESSES (14) MANGOSTEENS (14) [noun] A tropical fruit of the tree genus Garcinia. | [noun] The tree on which the fruit grows. MANHANDLING (18) [verb] To move something heavy by force of men, without aid of levers, pulleys, machine, or tackles. | [verb] To assault or beat up a person. | [verb] To mishandle; to handle roughly; to mangle. MANICURISTS (15) [noun] A person who performs manicures. MANIFESTANT (16) MANIFESTERS (16) MANIFESTING (17) [verb] To show plainly; to make to appear distinctly, usually to the mind; to put beyond question or doubt; to display; to exhibit. | [verb] To exhibit the manifests or prepared invoices of; to declare at the customhouse. MANIFESTOED (17) MANIFESTOES (16) MANIFOLDING (18) MANIPULABLE (17) MANIPULATED (16) [verb] To move, arrange or operate something using the hands | [verb] To influence, manage, direct, control or tamper with something | [verb] To handle and move a body part, either as an examination or for a therapeutic purpose MANIPULATES (15) [verb] To move, arrange or operate something using the hands | [verb] To influence, manage, direct, control or tamper with something | [verb] To handle and move a body part, either as an examination or for a therapeutic purpose MANIPULATOR (15) [noun] Agent noun of manipulate; one who manipulates. | [noun] A device which can be used to move, arrange or operate something. | [noun] A puppeteer, especially one controlling marionettes. MANLINESSES (13) MANNERISTIC (15) MANNISHNESS (16) MANOEUVRING (17) [verb] To move (something, or oneself) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position. | [verb] To guide, steer, manage purposefully | [verb] To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme MANOMETRIES (15) MANORIALISM (15) MANSUETUDES (14) MANTELPIECE (17) [noun] A shelf that is affixed to the wall above a fireplace. MANTELSHELF (19) [noun] A shelf above a fireplace. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. MANUFACTORY (21) [noun] A manufacturing process; a particular industry or part of an industry. | [noun] A plant where something is manufactured; a factory. | [adjective] Relating to manufacture. MANUFACTURE (18) [noun] The action or process of making goods systematically or on a large scale. | [noun] Anything made, formed or produced; product. | [noun] The process of such production; generation, creation. MANUMISSION (15) [noun] Release from slavery or other legally sanctioned servitude; the giving of freedom; the act of manumitting. MANUMITTING (16) [verb] To release from slavery, to free. MANUSCRIPTS (17) [noun] A book, composition or any other document, written by hand (or manually typewritten), not mechanically reproduced. | [noun] A single, original copy of a book, article, composition etc, written by hand or even printed, submitted as original for (copy-editing and) reproductive publication. MAQUILADORA (23) [noun] An assembly plant in Mexico owned by a company from the United States or another foreign country, using cheap local labour and imported components, and which then exports its products to the company's country of origin; also (by extension) similar factories in other countries. MAQUILLAGES (23) MARASCHINOS (18) [noun] A sweet liqueur made from marasca cherries MARATHONERS (16) MARATHONING (17) MARBLEISING (16) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEIZING (25) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARCHIONESS (18) [noun] The wife of a marquess. | [noun] A woman holding the rank of marquess in her own right. MARGINALITY (17) MARGINALIZE (23) [verb] To relegate (something, especially a topic or a group of people) to the margins or to a lower limit; to exclude socially or otherwise. MARGINATING (15) [verb] To provide with margins. MARGINATION (14) MARGRAVATES (17) [noun] The status or rank of margrave. | [noun] A territory governed by a margrave or margravine. MARGRAVIATE (17) [noun] The status or rank of margrave. | [noun] A territory governed by a margrave or margravine. MARGRAVINES (17) [noun] The wife of a margrave. | [noun] A woman with the rank and responsibilities of a margrave. MARGUERITES (14) [noun] An oxeye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare). | [noun] A shrub with daisy-like flowers, Argyranthemum frutescens | [noun] The China aster. MARICULTURE (15) [noun] Aquaculture using seawater MARINATIONS (13) MARIONETTES (13) [noun] A puppet, usually made of wood, which is animated by the pulling of strings. | [noun] The buffel duck. MARKETPLACE (21) [noun] An open area in a town housing a public market. | [noun] The space, actual or metaphorical, in which a market operates. | [noun] (by extension) The world of commerce and trade. MARLINSPIKE (19) [noun] A tool, consisting of a pointed metal spike, used to manipulate the strands of rope or cable when knotting and splicing. MARMOREALLY (18) MARQUESSATE (22) [noun] The territory of a marquess, margrave or person of comparable rank. MARQUETERIE (22) [noun] A decorative technique in which veneers of wood, ivory, metal etc. are inlaid into a wood surface to form intricate designs. | [noun] An example of this work MARQUETRIES (22) MARQUISATES (22) [noun] The territory held by a marquis, margrave or marchioness. | [noun] The state or rank of a marquis. MARQUISETTE (22) [noun] A sheer cotton fabric used for mosquito nets and curtains MARROWBONES (18) [noun] A bone containing edible marrow. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The shins or knees, chiefly in references to kneeling. MARSHALCIES (18) MARSHALLING (17) [verb] To arrange (troops, etc.) in line for inspection or a parade. | [verb] (by extension) To arrange (facts, etc.) in some methodical order. | [verb] To ceremoniously guide, conduct or usher. MARSHALSHIP (21) MARSHMALLOW (21) [noun] A species of mallow, Althaea officinalis, that grows in marshy terrain. | [noun] A type of confectionery, originally (since Ancient Egyptian times) made from this plant, but now generally made of sugar or corn syrup, gelatin that has been pre-softened in water, gum arabic, flavorings, and sometimes beaten egg whites, all whipped to a spongy consistency. | [noun] Someone who is soft and benign. MARTENSITES (13) MARTENSITIC (15) MARTINGALES (14) [noun] A piece of harness used on a horse to keep it from raising its head above a desired point. | [noun] A spar, or piece of rigging that strengthens the bowsprit. | [noun] A stochastic process for which the conditional expectation of future values given the sequence of all prior values is equal to the current value. MARTYRIZING (26) [verb] To make a martyr of (someone). MARTYROLOGY (20) [noun] A catalogue or list of martyrs (or, more precisely, of saints), arranged in the order of their anniversaries. | [noun] The story of the deaths of several famous Rabbis (including Rabbi Akiva) by Romans, read both on Yom Kippur and Tisha b'Av. MARVELOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a marvellous manner. | [adverb] To a great or impressive degree; very. MASCARPONES (17) MASCULINELY (18) MASCULINISE (15) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINIST (15) [noun] An advocate of masculinism. | [adjective] Relating to or in accordance with masculinism. MASCULINITY (18) [noun] The degree or property of being masculine or manly; manliness. MASCULINIZE (24) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASOCHISTIC (20) [adjective] Deriving (especially sexual) pleasure from abuse, being punished, or dominated. MASQUERADED (24) [verb] To take part in a masquerade; to assemble in masks and costumes; to wear a disguise. | [verb] To pass off as a different person or a person with qualities that one does not possess; also, to make a pretentious show of being what one is not. | [verb] To conceal (someone) with, or as if with, a mask; to disguise. MASQUERADER (23) MASQUERADES (23) [noun] An assembly or party of people wearing (usually elaborate or fanciful) masks and costumes, and amusing themselves with dancing, conversation, or other diversions. | [noun] The act of wearing a mask or dressing up in a costume for, or as if for, a masquerade ball. | [noun] An act of living under false pretenses; a concealment of something by a false or unreal show; a disguise, a pretence; also, a pretentious display. MASSASAUGAS (14) [noun] The rattlesnake Sistrurus catenatus (formerly Crotalinus catenatus) in the family Viperidae, found in three subspecies. MASSIVENESS (16) MASTERFULLY (19) [adverb] In a masterful manner; in an extremely confident and competent manner. MASTERMINDS (16) [noun] A person with an extraordinary intellect or skill that is markedly superior to his or her peers. | [noun] A person responsible for the highest level of planning and execution of a major operation. | [verb] To act in the role of mastermind. MASTERPIECE (17) [noun] A piece of work that has been given much critical praise, especially one that is considered the greatest work of a person's career. | [noun] A work of outstanding creativity, skill or workmanship. | [noun] A work created in order to qualify as a master craftsman and member of a guild. MASTERSHIPS (18) MASTERWORKS (20) [noun] A piece done to prove possession of skill sufficient to be ranked a master. | [noun] A piece of quality, indicative of having been made by a master; a masterpiece. | [noun] An act of primary importance. MASTHEADING (18) [verb] To send to the masthead as a punishment. MASTICATING (16) [verb] To chew (food). | [verb] To grind or knead something into a pulp. MASTICATION (15) MASTICATORS (15) [noun] Someone who masticates. | [noun] A machine for cutting meat into fine pieces for toothless people. | [noun] A machine for cutting leather, India rubber, or similar tough substances, into fine pieces, in some processes of manufacture. MASTICATORY (18) MASTOIDITIS (14) [noun] Inflammation of the mastoid process of the temporal bone. MASTURBATED (16) [verb] To stimulate oneself sexually, especially by use of one’s hand or a sex toy made for this purpose, often to the point of ejaculation. | [verb] To stimulate someone else sexually without penetration of the penis. | [verb] To stimulate or please oneself by means of anything, not necessarily sexual, that does not get them anywhere; something that wastes their time; something that does not help others or achieve any important goal. MASTURBATES (15) [verb] To stimulate oneself sexually, especially by use of one’s hand or a sex toy made for this purpose, often to the point of ejaculation. | [verb] To stimulate someone else sexually without penetration of the penis. | [verb] To stimulate or please oneself by means of anything, not necessarily sexual, that does not get them anywhere; something that wastes their time; something that does not help others or achieve any important goal. MASTURBATOR (15) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) Someone who masturbates. | [noun] A sex toy used to complement and help stimulate its user's erogenous zone(s) during masturbation, and often designed to simulate an erotic body part (of an imaginary partner). MATCHBOARDS (21) MATCHLESSLY (21) MATCHMAKERS (24) [noun] Someone who finds suitable dates or marriage partners for other people. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who arranges professional boxing matches. | [noun] Someone who makes matchsticks. MATCHMAKING (25) [verb] To do matchmaking: to set up a date between two people or to arrange a marriage. | [noun] An attempt to make two people romantically interested in each other, especially an attempt to set up a date between people or to arrange a marriage. | [noun] A service aiming to bring together sellers and buyers or potential partners. MATCHSTICKS (24) [noun] A small, slender piece of wood or cardboard serving as a component of a match. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Any similarly small and thin piece. MATERIALISE (13) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALISM (15) [noun] Constant concern over material possessions and wealth; a great or excessive regard for worldly concerns. | [noun] The philosophical belief that nothing exists beyond what is physical. | [noun] Material substances in the aggregate; matter. MATERIALIST (13) [noun] Someone who is materialistic, concerned only with material possessions. | [noun] A follower or proponent of philosophical materialism. | [adjective] Having features typical of philosophical materialism. MATERIALITY (16) [noun] The quality of being material; having a physical existence. | [noun] The quality of being of consequence to a legal decision. MATERIALIZE (22) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERNITIES (13) MATEYNESSES (16) MATHEMATICS (20) [noun] An abstract representational system used in the study of numbers, shapes, structure, change and the relationships between these concepts. | [noun] A person's ability to count, calculate, and use different systems of mathematics at differing levels. MATHEMATIZE (27) [verb] To describe in terms of a mathematical equation. MATRIARCHAL (18) [adjective] Governed by (or as if by) a matriarch. | [adjective] Governed by females, rather than by males. MATRICULANT (15) [noun] A person who has matriculated or been registered on a list or roll, usually at a school. MATRICULATE (15) [noun] A person admitted to membership in a society. | [verb] To enroll as a member of a body, especially of a college or university | [verb] To be enrolled as a member of a body, especially of a college or university. MATRILINEAL (13) [adjective] Tracing descent only through female ancestors. MATRIMONIAL (15) [noun] A classified advertisement describing an individual who wishes to find a marriage partner. | [adjective] Of, or having to do with matrimony and marriage. MATRIMONIES (15) MATRONYMICS (20) [noun] A surname or byname acquired from the given name of one's mother. | [noun] By extension, a surname or byname acquired from the given name from a female ancestor. MATURATIONS (13) MATUTINALLY (16) MAVOURNEENS (16) MAWKISHNESS (23) MAXILLARIES (20) MAXILLIPEDS (23) [noun] One of the appendages on the heads of centipedes and some crustaceans behind the maxillae, used for feeding. The maxillipeds, known as forcipules, give centipedes their scientific name, Chilopoda (lip-foot). MAXIMALISTS (22) [noun] A person with maximalist beliefs or tendencies; someone who prefers redundancy or excess MAYONNAISES (16) [noun] A dressing made from vegetable oil, raw egg yolks and seasoning, used on salads, with french fries, in sandwiches etc. | [noun] Any cold dish with that dressing as an ingredient. | [noun] Any cream, for example for moisturizing the face or conditioning the hair, for which the base is egg yolks and oil. MAYORALTIES (16) [noun] The office (or term of office) of a mayor. MEADOWLANDS (18) [noun] A tract of land cultivated as a meadow. MEADOWLARKS (21) [noun] The meadow pipit (Anthus pratensis). | [noun] Any of several songbirds of the genera Sturnella and Leistes, native to the Americas. MEADOWSWEET (20) [noun] A Eurasian perennial flowering plant of Rosaceae family, Filipendula ulmaria. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Spiraea of the Rosaceae family, native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere and consisting of about 80-100 species of shrubs. MEANINGLESS (14) [adjective] Lacking meaning. | [adjective] Insignificant; not worthy of importance. MEASURELESS (13) [adjective] Not measured because it is so large that it is difficult or impossible to do so. MEASUREMENT (15) [noun] The act of measuring. | [noun] Magnitude (or extent or amount) determined by an act of measuring. MEATINESSES (13) MEATPACKING (22) [noun] The slaughter and further processing of animals for meat. MECHANICALS (20) [noun] Manually created layout of artwork that is camera ready for photographic reproduction. | [noun] One who does manual labor, especially one who is similar to Shakespeare's rude mechanicals | [noun] A robot or mechanical creature. MECHANICIAN (20) [noun] One skilled in the theory or construction of machines. | [noun] One skilled in building, using, or repairing machines, or who makes machines or tools. | [noun] One skilled in mechanics. MECHANISTIC (20) [adjective] Having the impersonal and automatic characteristics of a machine. | [adjective] Predetermined by, or as if by, a mechanism. | [adjective] Having a physical or biological cause. MECHANIZERS (27) MECHANIZING (28) [verb] To equip something with machinery. | [verb] To equip a military unit with tanks and other armed vehicles. | [verb] To make something routine, automatic or monotonous. MEDEVACKING (24) [verb] To transport (patients) by medevac. MEDIASTINAL (14) MEDIASTINUM (16) [noun] The region in mammals between the pleural sacs, containing the heart and all of the thoracic viscera except the lungs. MEDIATIONAL (14) MEDIATRICES (16) MEDIATRIXES (21) MEDICAMENTS (18) [noun] A medicine, medication or drug. MEDICATIONS (16) [noun] A medicine, or all the medicines regularly taken by a patient. | [noun] The administration of medicine. MEDICINABLE (18) MEDICINALLY (19) MEDICOLEGAL (17) MEDIEVALISM (19) MEDIEVALIST (17) MEDITATIONS (14) [noun] A devotional exercise of, or leading to contemplation. | [noun] A contemplative discourse, often on a religious or philosophical subject. | [noun] A musical theme treated in a meditative manner. MEDIUMISTIC (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to mediums (people claiming to contact the dead); relating to or having the ability to communicate with spirits. MEDIUMSHIPS (21) MEERSCHAUMS (20) [noun] A soft white mineral, chiefly used for smoking-pipes and cigar holders. | [noun] A smoking-pipe made from meerschaum. MEGAGAMETES (17) [noun] A macrogamete. MEGALOBLAST (16) [noun] An abnormally large red blood cell associated with pernicious anemia and with folic acid deficiency. MEGALOMANIA (16) [noun] A psychopathological condition characterized by delusional fantasies of wealth, power, or omnipotence. | [noun] Narcissistic personality disorder. | [noun] An obsession with grandiose or extravagant things or actions. MEGALOMANIC (18) MEGALOPOLIS (16) [noun] A large conurbation, where two or more large cities have sprawled outward to meet, forming something larger than a metropolis; a megacity. MEGAPARSECS (18) MEGAPHONING (20) [verb] To use a megaphone; to speak through a megaphone. MEGAPROJECT (25) MEGATONNAGE (15) MEGAVITAMIN (19) MEIOTICALLY (18) MEITNERIUMS (15) MELANCHOLIA (18) [noun] Deep sadness or gloom; melancholy. | [noun] Clinical depression, characterised by irrational fears, guilt and apathy. MELANCHOLIC (20) [noun] A person who is habitually melancholy. | [adjective] Filled with or affected by melancholy—great sadness or depression, especially of a thoughtful or introspective nature. MELANOBLAST (15) MELANOCYTES (18) [noun] A cell in the skin that produces the pigment melanin. MELANOPHORE (18) MELANOSOMES (15) MELIORATING (14) [verb] To make better; to improve; to solve a problem. | [verb] To become better. MELIORATION (13) MELIORATIVE (16) MELIORATORS (13) MELIORISTIC (15) MELLIFLUENT (16) [adjective] Mellifluous. MELLIFLUOUS (16) [adjective] Flowing like honey. | [adjective] Sweet, smooth and musical; pleasant to hear (generally used of a person's voice, tone or writing style). MELLOPHONES (18) [noun] A brass instrument frequently used in place of the French horn in marching bands and similar performance groups MELODICALLY (19) MELODIOUSLY (17) MELTABILITY (18) MEMBERSHIPS (22) [noun] The state of being a member of a group or organization. | [noun] The body of members of an organization. | [noun] The fact of being a member of a set. MEMORABILIA (17) [noun] Objects that are connected to or remind their owner of past events. | [noun] Things worth remembering: noteworthy points. MEMORANDUMS (18) [noun] A short note serving as a reminder. | [noun] A written business communication. | [noun] A brief diplomatic communication. MEMORIALISE (15) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALIST (15) [noun] A writer of memorials. | [noun] One who signs a petition. MEMORIALIZE (24) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIZABLE (26) MENDACITIES (16) MENDELEVIUM (19) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Md, formerly Mv) with atomic number 101. MENDICITIES (16) MENINGIOMAS (16) [noun] A common tumour of the central nervous system, occurring in the meninges, usually benign. MENORRHAGIA (17) [noun] Excessive menstruation. | [noun] The normal flow of the menses. MENSERVANTS (16) [noun] A male servant. MENSTRUALLY (16) MENSTRUATED (14) [verb] To stain with or as if with menses. | [verb] To undergo menstruation, to have a period. MENSTRUATES (13) [verb] To stain with or as if with menses. | [verb] To undergo menstruation, to have a period. MENSURATION (13) [noun] The act or process of measuring; measurement. | [noun] The study of measurement, especially the derivation and use of algebraic formulae to measure the areas, volumes and different parameters of geometric figures. | [noun] A 13th century system for governing rhythmic relationships in music that was a precursor to the modern use of time signatures; The use of mensural notation. MENTALISTIC (15) MENTALITIES (13) [noun] A mindset; a way of thinking; a set of beliefs. | [noun] The characteristics of a mind described as a system of distinctive structures and processes based in biology, language, or culture, etc.; a mental system. MENTHOLATED (17) [adjective] Impregnated with menthol. MENTIONABLE (15) MENTORSHIPS (18) [noun] State of being a mentor MEPERIDINES (16) MEPROBAMATE (19) [noun] A carbamate derivative used as an anxiolytic drug. MERCENARIES (15) [noun] One motivated by gain, especially monetary. | [noun] A person employed to fight in an armed conflict who is not a member of the state or military group for which they are fighting and whose primary motivation is private gain. | [noun] One hired to engage in a figurative battle, as a corporate takeover, a lawsuit, or a political campaign. MERCENARILY (18) MERCERISING (16) MERCERIZING (25) MERCHANDISE (19) [noun] Commodities offered for sale. | [noun] A commodity offered for sale; an article of commerce; a kind of merchandise. | [noun] The act or business of trading; trade; traffic. MERCHANDIZE (28) [noun] Commodities offered for sale. | [noun] A commodity offered for sale; an article of commerce; a kind of merchandise. | [noun] The act or business of trading; trade; traffic. MERCHANTING (19) MERCHANTMAN (20) [noun] A merchant. | [noun] A cargo ship, engaged in commercial activities, as opposed to a warship. MERCHANTMEN (20) [noun] A merchant. | [noun] A cargo ship, engaged in commercial activities, as opposed to a warship. MERCILESSLY (18) [adverb] In a merciless manner. MERCURATING (16) MERCURATION (15) MERCURIALLY (18) MERIDIONALS (14) [noun] An inhabitant of a southern region, especially the south of France MERITOCRACY (20) [noun] Rule by merit, and talent. | [noun] A type of society where wealth, income, and social status are assigned through competition. MERITOCRATS (15) [noun] An advocate of meritocracy. | [noun] A person who has authority allegedly based on ability. MERITORIOUS (13) [adjective] Deserving of merit or commendation; deserving reward. MEROBLASTIC (17) MEROMORPHIC (22) MEROMYOSINS (18) MERRINESSES (13) MERRYMAKERS (22) MERRYMAKING (23) [noun] Joyful festivities, especially as a celebration. MESALLIANCE (15) MESENCHYMAL (23) MESENCHYMES (23) MESENTERIES (13) [noun] The membrane that attaches the intestines to the wall of the abdomen, maintaining their position in the abdominal cavity, and supplying them with blood vessels, nerves, and lymphatics. MESHUGGENER (18) [noun] A madman; a crazy person, a nutter. | [adjective] Crazy, insane MESMERISING (16) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESMERIZERS (24) MESMERIZING (25) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. | [adjective] Exercising mesmerism on; spellbinding; enthralling. MESOCYCLONE (20) MESOMORPHIC (22) MESONEPHRIC (20) MESONEPHROI (18) MESONEPHROS (18) MESOPELAGIC (18) [noun] A mesopelagic fish | [adjective] Describing a pelagic zone of the oceans between the photic epipelagic and the aphotic bathypelagic zones MESOPHYLLIC (23) MESOSPHERES (18) MESOSPHERIC (20) MESOTHELIAL (16) MESOTHELIUM (18) [noun] A membrane of flat epithelial cells that lines the body cavity of embryos and forms the squamous cells of the peritoneum, pericardium, and pleura MESOTROPHIC (20) MESSIAHSHIP (21) MESSIANISMS (15) MESSINESSES (13) METABOLISMS (17) METABOLITES (15) [noun] Any substance produced by, or taking part in, a metabolic reaction. METABOLIZED (25) [verb] To undergo metabolism. | [verb] To cause a substance to undergo metabolism. | [verb] To produce a substance using metabolism. METABOLIZES (24) [verb] To undergo metabolism. | [verb] To cause a substance to undergo metabolism. | [verb] To produce a substance using metabolism. METACARPALS (17) [noun] Any of the bones of the metacarpus. METACENTERS (15) [noun] A midway point between a ship's centre of buoyancy when upright and its centre of buoyancy when tilted; it must be above the centre of gravity to enable a tilting ship to return to an upright position. METACENTRIC (17) METAETHICAL (18) METAFICTION (18) [noun] A form of self-referential literature concerned with the art and devices of fiction itself. METAGENESES (14) METAGENESIS (14) [noun] The production of sexual and asexual organisms in alternate generations METAGENETIC (16) METALLIZING (23) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLOIDAL (14) METALSMITHS (18) METALWORKER (20) METAMERISMS (17) METAMORPHIC (22) [noun] A rock that has been changed from its original form by subjection to heat and/or pressure. | [adjective] Characterised by or exhibiting a change in form or character. | [adjective] Pertaining to metamorphism; having been structurally altered as a result of, or resulting from, exposure to intense heat and/or pressure (at the contact zone between colliding plates, for example). METANALYSES (16) [noun] Analysis of analyses. | [noun] The act of breaking down a word or phrase into segments or meanings not original to it; breaking down the boundaries between words or other units. METANALYSIS (16) [noun] Analysis of analyses. | [noun] The act of breaking down a word or phrase into segments or meanings not original to it; breaking down the boundaries between words or other units. METANEPHRIC (20) METANEPHROI (18) METANEPHROS (18) METAPHRASES (18) [noun] A literal, word-for-word translation. | [noun] An answering phrase; repartee. | [verb] To make such a literal translation. METAPHYSICS (23) [noun] The field of study of metaphysics. | [noun] The metaphysical system of a particular philosopher or of a particular school of thought. | [noun] A fundamental principle or key concept. METAPLASIAS (15) METAPLASTIC (17) [adjective] Relating to, or produced by metaplasia | [adjective] Relating to metaplasticity METASEQUOIA (22) METASOMATIC (17) METASTASIZE (22) [verb] (of a disease or tumour) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis. METATARSALS (13) [noun] Any of the bones of the metatarsus. METEORITICS (15) METEOROIDAL (14) METEOROLOGY (17) [noun] The science that deals with the study of the atmosphere and its phenomena, especially with weather and weather forecasting. | [noun] The atmospheric phenomena in a specific region or period. METERSTICKS (19) METESTRUSES (13) METHANATION (16) METHEDRINES (17) METHENAMINE (18) METHICILLIN (18) [noun] An antibiotic drug, chemically related to penicillin, often used against strains of bacteria which have become resistant to penicillin. METHIONINES (16) METHODISING (18) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODISTIC (19) METHODIZING (27) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODOLOGY (21) [noun] (originally science) The study of methods used in a field. | [noun] A collection of methods, practices, procedures and rules used by those who work in some field. | [noun] The implementation of such methods etc. METHYLAMINE (21) METHYLATING (20) [verb] To add, or treat with methyl alcohol (see methylated spirits) | [verb] To add a methyl group to a compound | [verb] To add a methyl group to a nucleic acid as part of the process of gene expression METHYLATION (19) METHYLATORS (19) METHYLDOPAS (22) METONYMICAL (20) METRICATION (15) METRICIZING (25) METROLOGIES (14) METROLOGIST (14) MIASMICALLY (20) MICROAMPERE (19) MICROBREWER (20) MICROBURSTS (17) [noun] A strong downdraft, of less than 2.5 miles in diameter, that can cause damaging winds. MICROBUSSES (17) MICROCLINES (17) MICROCOCCAL (21) MICROCOCCUS (21) [noun] Any of a group of spherical, aerobic, gram-positive bacteria, of the genus Micrococcus, that are wide-ranging and harmless. MICROCOPIES (19) [noun] A photocopy that is greatly reduced in size. | [noun] Very short copy. MICROCOSMIC (21) MICROCOSMOS (19) [noun] A small or microscopic cosmos; a microcosm. MICROCURIES (17) MICROFARADS (19) [noun] One millionth ( 10-6 ) of a farad, abbreviated as µF. MICROFAUNAE (18) MICROFAUNAL (18) MICROFAUNAS (18) MICROFIBRIL (20) [noun] A bundle of cellulose polymer chains held together by weak bonds. MICROFICHES (23) [noun] A sheet of microfilm, six by four inches, holding several hundred reduced images of document pages; read using a microfiche reader or microfilm reader. | [noun] A device used to magnify and read these sheets. MICROFILMED (21) [verb] To reproduce documents on such film MICROFILMER (20) MICROFLORAE (18) MICROFLORAL (18) MICROFLORAS (18) MICROFOSSIL (18) [noun] A microscopic fossil MICROFUNGUS (19) [noun] A fungus of microscopic size. MICROGAMETE (18) [noun] The smaller of a pair of conjugating gametes; often the male MICROGRAPHS (21) [noun] An image such as a photograph that presents the microscopic at a macroscopic scale; an image produced with a microscope | [noun] A pantograph instrument for executing minute writing or engraving. MICROGROOVE (19) [noun] The long, spiral groove of a vinyl LP record | [noun] Any microscopic groove MICROIMAGES (18) MICROINCHES (20) MICROINJECT (24) [verb] To inject with a micropipette. MICROLITERS (15) [noun] A unit of fluid measure being one millionth (10−6) of a litre. Symbol: μl MICROLITHIC (20) MICROMANAGE (18) [verb] To manage, direct, or control a person, group, or system to an unnecessary level of detail or precision. MICROMETERS (17) [noun] An SI/MKS unit of measure, the length of one millionth of a meter. Symbols: µm, um, rm. | [noun] A device used to measure distance very precisely but within a limited range, especially depth, thickness, and diameter. MICROMETHOD (21) MICRONIZING (25) [verb] To reduce in size, often to micrometer scale. MICRONUCLEI (17) MICROPHAGES (21) [noun] A small phagocyte, especially a polymorphonuclear leucocyte MICROPHONES (20) [noun] A device (transducer) used to convert sound waves into a varying electric current; normally fed into an amplifier and either recorded or broadcast. | [verb] To put one or more microphones on or in. MICROPHONIC (22) MICROPHYLLS (23) [noun] A leaf having a single unbranched vein, or a structure that is derived from such a leaf. | [noun] A very small leaf MICROPIPETS (19) [noun] A very small pipette. MICROPOROUS (17) MICROPRISMS (19) [noun] Any of many very small prisms used, either to form a reflective surface, or to form an area in a camera's viewfinder that blurs if the image is not precisely in focus MICROPROBES (19) [noun] An instrument used to determine the chemical composition at a point on a solid surface, such as that of a mineral. It analyzes the X-rays emitted when a beam of electrons are focused on the sample. MICROQUAKES (28) MICROREADER (16) [noun] Any device used to read microfilm or microfiche MICROSCALES (17) [noun] A very small or microscopic scale | [noun] The scale of microanalysis | [noun] A scale of physical consideration or of bounds having a characteristic dimension typically ranging from 1 to 999 µm (under 1 mm) MICROSCOPES (19) [noun] An optical instrument used for observing small objects. | [noun] Any instrument for imaging very small objects (such as an electron microscope). MICROSCOPIC (21) [adjective] Of, or relating to microscopes or microscopy; microscopal | [adjective] So small that it can only be seen using a microscope. | [adjective] Very small; minute MICROSECOND (18) [noun] An SI unit of time equal to 10-6 seconds. Symbol: μs It is commonly represented with symbol µs. MICROSEISMS (17) [noun] A faint earth tremor caused by natural phenomena, such as wind. MICROSPHERE (20) [noun] Any sphere whose size is measured in micrometres MICROSPORES (17) [noun] The smaller of the two spores produced by plants; compare megaspore. | [noun] One of the numerous tiny spore-like elements produced through the encystment and subdivision of many monads MICROSTATES (15) [noun] A country that has a very small population and land area | [noun] The specific detailed microscopic configuration of a system. MICROSWITCH (23) [noun] An electrical switch that operates with very little travel of (or pressure on) the actuator. MICROTUBULE (17) [noun] A small tube made of protein and found in cells; part of the cytoskeleton. MICROVILLAR (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a microvillus MICROVILLUS (18) [noun] Any of many fingerlike extensions on the surfaces of many cells, consisting of the proteins actin, fimbrin, and villin. MICROWAVING (22) [verb] To cook (something) in a microwave oven. MICROWORLDS (19) MICTURATING (16) [verb] To urinate. MICTURITION (15) [noun] Urination MIDDLEBROWS (20) [noun] A person or thing that is neither highbrow nor lowbrow, but in between. MIDFIELDERS (18) [noun] A player who operates behind the attackers and in front of the defence. MIDLATITUDE (15) MIDSAGITTAL (15) MIDSECTIONS (16) [noun] The middle section of something. | [noun] The midriff; the section of the human torso, from below the chest to above the waist. MIDWIFERIES (20) MIGNONETTES (14) [noun] A plant, Reseda odorata, having greyish-green flowers with orange-coloured stamens, and exhaling a delicious fragrance. In Africa it is a low shrub, but further north it is usually an annual herb. | [noun] A mignonette tree (Lawsonia inermis), source of the dye henna. | [noun] A mignonette vine MIGRATIONAL (14) MILITANCIES (15) MILITARISED (14) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARISES (13) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARISMS (15) MILITARISTS (13) [noun] One who believes in the use of military force. MILITARIZED (23) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARIZES (22) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILKINESSES (17) MILLEFIORIS (16) MILLEFLEURS (16) [noun] A background of many small flowers and plants, popular in tapestry of the Middle Ages in Europe. MILLENARIAN (13) [noun] A person who believes in an apocalyptic millennium. | [adjective] Pertaining to the belief in an impending period of one thousand years of peace and righteousness associated with the Second Coming of Christ. | [adjective] Pertaining to any of various religious or social movements which believe in a coming radical change to existing world order. MILLENARIES (13) [noun] A period of one thousand years; a millennium. MILLENNIUMS (15) [noun] A period of time consisting of one thousand years. | [noun] The period of one thousand years during which Christ will reign on earth (according to Millenarianist interpretations). | [noun] A period of universal happiness, peace or prosperity; a utopia. MILLESIMALS (15) MILLIAMPERE (17) [noun] One thousandth (10-3) of an ampere. MILLICURIES (15) MILLIDEGREE (15) MILLIHENRYS (19) MILLILITERS (13) [noun] A unit of measure of capacity, being one thousandth of a litre. Symbol: ml MILLIMETERS (15) [noun] An SI/MKS unit of measure, the length of 1/1000 of a meter. Symbol: mm MILLIMICRON (17) MILLINERIES (13) [noun] Women's hats. | [noun] A shop selling women's hats. | [noun] The business and work that a milliner engages in. MILLIONAIRE (13) [noun] (strictly) A person whose net worth is at or greater than one million units of the local currency, but less than two million. | [noun] A person whose net worth is at or greater than one million units of the local currency; a multimillionaire. MILLIONFOLD (17) MILLIOSMOLS (15) MILLIRADIAN (14) MILLISECOND (16) [noun] One one-thousandth of a second. Symbol: ms. MILLSTREAMS (15) [noun] The water that runs through a millrace to power a mill. MILLWRIGHTS (20) [noun] A person who designed, erected and built mills and milling machinery. | [noun] A person engaged in the erection of machinery. MIMEOGRAPHS (21) [noun] A machine for making printed copies using typed stencil, eventually superseded by photocopying. | [verb] To make mimeograph copies. MIMETICALLY (20) MINAUDIERES (14) MINDBLOWERS (19) MINDFULNESS (17) [noun] Awareness. | [noun] Inclination to be mindful or aware. | [noun] (as understood in Buddhism and psychology) Paying attention on purpose, in the present moment, and non-judgementally. MINERALISED (14) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALISES (13) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALIZED (23) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALIZER (22) MINERALIZES (22) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALOGIC (16) MINESTRONES (13) MINESWEEPER (18) [noun] A vehicle, device or person with the purpose of removing explosive mines (landmines or water mines). | [noun] A logic-based computer game in which the player has to discover the position of mines in a rectangular grid, based on numerical hints. MINIATURIST (13) [noun] An artist who paints miniature figures or scenes. | [noun] A person who creates or collects miniature figurines (such as dolls). MINIATURIZE (22) [verb] To design or construct something on a miniature scale. MINICOURSES (15) MINIMALISMS (17) MINIMALISTS (15) [noun] One who believes in or seeks a minimal state; one who seeks to minimize or reduce to a minimum. MINISCHOOLS (18) MINISKIRTED (18) MINISTERIAL (13) [noun] A member of the mediaeval estate or caste of unfree nobles. | [adjective] Related to a religious minister or ministry. | [adjective] Related to a governmental minister or ministry. MINISTERING (14) [verb] To attend to (the needs of); to tend; to take care (of); to give aid; to give service. | [verb] To function as a clergyman or as the officiant in church worship | [verb] To afford, to give, to supply. MINISTRANTS (13) MINNESINGER (14) [noun] In 12th- to 14th-century Germany, a peripatetic musician, often performing songs of courtly love. MIRTHLESSLY (19) MISADAPTING (17) MISADJUSTED (22) MISADVISING (18) MISALIGNING (15) MISALLIANCE (15) [noun] An unsuitable alliance, especially an unsuitable marriage. MISALLOCATE (15) [verb] To allocate incorrectly or inappropriately. MISALTERING (14) MISANALYSES (16) MISANALYSIS (16) MISANTHROPE (18) [noun] One who hates all mankind; one who hates the human race. MISANTHROPY (21) [noun] Hatred or dislike of people or mankind. MISAPPLYING (21) [verb] To apply incorrectly; to misuse. MISASSAYING (17) MISASSEMBLE (17) MISAVERRING (17) MISAWARDING (18) MISBALANCED (18) MISBALANCES (17) MISBECOMING (20) MISBEGOTTEN (16) [verb] To beget wrongly or badly. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) One born illegitimately (i.e., out of wedlock); a bastard. | [noun] (in the plural) A person born into infelicitous circumstances. MISBEHAVERS (21) MISBEHAVING (22) [noun] Bad conduct or actions | [verb] To act or behave in an inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected manner. MISBEHAVIOR (21) [noun] Action or conduct that is inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected. MISBELIEVED (19) MISBELIEVER (18) MISBELIEVES (18) MISBIASSING (16) MISBRANDING (17) MISBUILDING (17) MISBUTTONED (16) MISCAPTIONS (17) MISCARRIAGE (16) [noun] A failure; a mistake or error. | [noun] The spontaneous natural termination of a pregnancy, especially before it is viable; the fatal expulsion of a foetus from the womb before term. MISCARRYING (19) [verb] To have an unfortunate accident of some kind; to be killed, or come to harm. | [verb] To go astray; to do something wrong. | [verb] To have a miscarriage; to abort a foetus, usually without intent to do so. MISCATALOGS (16) MISCELLANEA (15) [noun] A miscellaneous collection of different things; a miscellany. | [noun] A miscellany. MISCHANNELS (18) MISCHARGING (20) MISCHIEVOUS (21) [adjective] Causing mischief; injurious. | [adjective] Troublesome, cheeky, badly behaved. MISCIBILITY (20) MISCITATION (15) MISCLAIMING (18) MISCLASSIFY (21) [verb] To classify incorrectly. MISCLASSING (16) MISCOLORING (16) MISCOMPUTED (20) MISCOMPUTES (19) MISCONCEIVE (20) [verb] To misunderstand MISCONDUCTS (18) [noun] Behavior that is considered to be unacceptable. | [verb] To mismanage. | [verb] To behave inappropriately, to misbehave. MISCONNECTS (17) MISCONSTRUE (15) [verb] To interpret erroneously, to understand incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISCOUNTING (16) [verb] To incorrectly count or add up. MISCREATING (16) MISCREATION (15) [noun] A faulty or unnatural making or creation. MISDEFINING (18) MISDEMEANOR (16) [noun] A crime usually punishable upon conviction by a small fine or by a short term of imprisonment. In the USA, misdemeanants usually are incarcerated in county jail for less than one year, but felons usually are incarcerated in state or federal prison for more than one year. Crimes which are punishable by large fines or by longer imprisonment are sometimes called felonies. MISDESCRIBE (18) [verb] To incorrectly explain or detail something or someone. MISDEVELOPS (19) MISDIAGNOSE (15) [verb] To incorrectly diagnose. MISDIALLING (15) [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDIRECTED (17) [verb] To direct something wrongly | [verb] To direct attention away from covert actions or intended targets. | [verb] To put the incorrect address on a mail item MISDIVISION (17) MISDOUBTING (17) [verb] To doubt the existence or reality of. | [verb] To have suspicions about. | [noun] Doubt MISEDUCATED (17) [verb] To educate wrongly. MISEDUCATES (16) [verb] To educate wrongly. MISEMPHASES (20) MISEMPHASIS (20) MISEMPLOYED (21) [verb] To employ incorrectly; to misuse. MISENROLLED (14) MISENTERING (14) MISERICORDE (16) MISERICORDS (16) [noun] Relaxation of monastic rules. | [noun] The room in a monastery for monks granted such relaxation. | [noun] A ledge, sometimes ornately carved, attached to a folding church seat to provide support for a person standing for long periods; a subsellium. MISERLINESS (13) [noun] The property of being miserly. MISESTEEMED (16) MISESTIMATE (15) [verb] To estimate erroneously. MISEVALUATE (16) MISFEASANCE (18) [noun] An actual or alleged wrong that arises from an action; often, the wrongful use of legal authority. MISFIELDING (18) [verb] To field the ball clumsily or ineptly; in cricket this can result in the batsman scoring another run. MISFOCUSING (19) MISFOCUSSED (19) MISFOCUSSES (18) MISFORTUNES (16) [noun] Bad luck | [noun] An undesirable event such as an accident MISFUNCTION (18) MISGOVERNED (18) [verb] To govern badly or wrongly. MISGRAFTING (18) MISGUESSING (15) MISGUIDANCE (17) MISGUIDEDLY (19) MISHANDLING (18) [verb] To manipulate something roughly, causing physical damage. | [verb] To deal with a situation incorrectly or ineffectively; to make a mistake in handling a situation. | [noun] Incorrect handling; mismanagement. MISIDENTIFY (20) [verb] To mistake the identity. MISINFERRED (17) MISINFORMED (19) [verb] To give or deliver false, fake, or misleading information. MISINTERRED (14) MISJOINDERS (21) MISJUDGMENT (24) MISLABELING (16) [verb] To label incorrectly. | [noun] An incorrect labeling. MISLABELLED (16) [verb] To label incorrectly. MISLABORING (16) MISLEARNING (14) MISLIGHTING (18) MISLOCATING (16) MISLOCATION (15) MISMANAGING (17) [verb] To manage an area of responsibility in a way which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. | [verb] To behave, in a management capacity, in a manner which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. MISMARRIAGE (16) [noun] Bad or unsuitable marriage. MISMATCHING (21) [verb] To match unsuitably; to fail to match | [noun] An incorrect match or pairing; a mismatch. MISOGAMISTS (16) MISOGYNISTS (17) [noun] One who professes misogyny; a hater of women. | [noun] One who displays prejudice against or looks down upon women. MISORDERING (15) MISORIENTED (14) MISPACKAGED (23) MISPACKAGES (22) MISPAINTING (16) MISPATCHING (21) MISPERCEIVE (20) [verb] To perceive erroneously. MISPLANNING (16) MISPLANTING (16) MISPLEADING (17) MISPOINTING (16) MISPOSITION (15) MISPRINTING (16) [verb] To make a misprint. MISPRISIONS (15) [noun] Criminal neglect of duty or wrongful execution of official duties. | [noun] The failure to give information about a crime that one knows to be taking place. | [noun] Misinterpretation or misunderstanding. MISPROGRAMS (18) MISRECKONED (20) MISRECORDED (17) MISREFERRED (17) MISREGISTER (14) MISRELATING (14) MISREMEMBER (19) [verb] To remember incorrectly. MISRENDERED (15) [verb] To render incorrectly. MISREPORTED (16) [verb] To report erroneously; to give an incorrect account of. MISSHAPENLY (21) MISSILERIES (13) MISSIONIZED (23) MISSIONIZER (22) MISSIONIZES (22) MISSOUNDING (15) MISSPEAKING (20) [noun] Speaking ill; defamation, slander. | [noun] The fact or instance of speaking falsely or unclearly. MISSPELLING (16) [verb] To spell incorrectly. | [noun] A misspelt word. MISSPENDING (17) [noun] Improper, wasteful, or incorrect spending; squandering | [verb] To spend poorly, incorrectly or unwisely. MISSTARTING (14) MISSTEERING (14) MISSTOPPING (18) MISSTRICKEN (19) MISSTRIKING (18) MISTEACHING (19) [verb] To teach incorrectly. | [noun] Wrong, false, or incorrect teaching. MISTHINKING (21) MISTHROWING (20) MISTINESSES (13) MISTOUCHING (19) MISTRAINING (14) MISTREATING (14) [verb] To treat someone, or something roughly or badly. MISTRUSTFUL (16) [adjective] Having mistrust, lacking trust (in someone or something). | [adjective] Expressing or showing a lack of trust. | [adjective] Having a suspicion, imagining or supposing (that something undesirable is the case). MISTRUSTING (14) [verb] To have no confidence in (something or someone). | [verb] To be wary, suspicious or doubtful of (something or someone). | [verb] To suspect, to imagine or suppose (something) to be the case. MISTRYSTING (17) MISTUTORING (14) MITHRIDATES (17) [noun] A supposed universal antidote against poison. MITIGATIONS (14) MITOTICALLY (18) MIXOLOGISTS (21) [noun] A person who creates cocktails; a bartender. | [noun] A disc jockey. MIZZENMASTS (33) [noun] The aftmost mast on a ship having three or more masts. | [noun] The second mast of a ship having two masts where the second one is shorter, such as a ketch or yawl. MOBOCRACIES (19) [noun] Rule or control by the mob (or by the mass of ordinary people); a mob as a politically powerful force. MOCKINGBIRD (23) [noun] A long-tailed American songbird of the Mimidae family, noted for its ability to mimic calls of other birds. MODERATIONS (14) [noun] The state or quality of being moderate; avoidance of extremes | [noun] An instance of moderating: bringing something away from extremes, especially in a beneficial way | [noun] The process of moderating a discussion MODERNISING (15) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNISTIC (16) MODERNITIES (14) [noun] The quality of being modern or contemporary. | [noun] Modern times. | [noun] (history) Quality of being of the modern period of contemporary historiography. MODERNIZERS (23) MODERNIZING (24) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODULARIZED (24) MODULATIONS (14) [noun] The process of applying a signal to a carrier, modulating. | [noun] The variation and regulation of a population, physiological response, etc. | [noun] A change in key. MOISTNESSES (13) MOISTURISED (14) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURISES (13) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURIZED (23) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURIZER (22) [noun] Something that causes moisture or a a condition of wetness; something that makes things moist. | [noun] Moisturising cream, emollient. MOISTURIZES (22) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOLDINESSES (14) MOLECULARLY (18) MOLESTATION (13) [noun] The act of molesting. MOLLYCODDLE (20) [noun] A person, especially a man or a boy, who is pampered and overprotected. | [verb] To be overprotective and indulgent toward; to pamper. MOLYBDENITE (19) [noun] A mineral, molybdenum disulfide MoS2, that is the principal ore of molybdenum; it is structurally similar to graphite and has a similar look and feel. MOLYBDENUMS (21) MOMENTARILY (18) [adverb] (manner) In a momentary manner; for a moment or instant. | [adverb] (duration) In a moment or very soon; any minute now, any time now. | [adverb] Progressively; moment by moment. MOMENTOUSLY (18) MONARCHICAL (20) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a monarch or monarchy. | [adjective] Having sole or undivided authority. MONARCHISMS (20) MONARCHISTS (18) [noun] An advocate of, or believer in, monarchy. MONASTERIES (13) [noun] Building for housing monks or others who have taken religious vows MONASTICISM (17) MONETARISMS (15) MONETARISTS (13) MONEYLENDER (17) [noun] A person who lends money and charges interest, especially one who is not part of the official financial industry MONEYMAKERS (22) [noun] Someone or something that earns or makes money; anything lucrative or profitable. | [noun] (usually a woman's) butt, ass, rear end | [noun] A lady’s breast. MONEYMAKING (23) [noun] The acquisition of money | [adjective] Profitable. | [adjective] For profit. MONGRELIZED (24) [verb] To breed a mongrel | [verb] To cross-breed MONGRELIZES (23) [verb] To breed a mongrel | [verb] To cross-breed MONITORSHIP (18) MONKEYSHINE (23) MONOCHASIAL (18) MONOCHASIUM (20) [noun] A type of cyme on which each single axis bears one flower. MONOCHROMAT (20) MONOCHROMES (20) [noun] A black and white image, especially such a photograph. | [noun] A painting executed in shades of a single colour. | [noun] A ceramic glaze of a single colour; an object so glazed. MONOCHROMIC (22) MONOCLONALS (15) MONOCRACIES (17) [noun] A form of government in which unlimited power is held by a single individual. | [noun] An instance of this government. MONOCRYSTAL (18) MONOCULARLY (18) MONOCULTURE (15) [noun] The cultivation of a single crop at a time. | [noun] A culture or society that lacks diversity; a society marked by monoculturalism. MONODICALLY (19) MONOGAMISTS (16) MONOGASTRIC (16) MONOGENEANS (14) [noun] Any of the many trematode flatworms of the class Monogenea, mostly ectoparasites on fish MONOGENESES (14) MONOGENESIS (14) [noun] The theory that mankind originated with a single ancestor or ancestral couple. | [noun] The theory that all languages, or a particular set of languages, originated from a single source. | [noun] Development of the ovum from a parent like itself. MONOGENETIC (16) MONOGRAMING (17) MONOGRAMMED (19) [verb] To mark something with a monogram. MONOGRAMMER (18) MONOGRAPHED (20) [verb] To write a monograph on (a subject). | [verb] Of the FDA: to publish a standard that authorizes the use of (a substance). MONOGRAPHIC (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a monograph or treatise. | [adjective] Drawn in lines without colours. MONOHYBRIDS (22) [noun] A hybrid between two species that only have a difference of one gene. MONOHYDROXY (30) MONOLINGUAL (14) [noun] A person who knows or uses only a single language; a monoglot | [adjective] Knowing or using a single language; written or spoken in a single language. MONOLOGISTS (14) [noun] A person who performs a monologue or monologues. MONOLOGUIST (14) [noun] A person who performs a monologue or monologues. MONOMANIACS (17) [noun] A person who is obsessed with a single thing, to the exclusion of other concerns. MONOMORPHIC (22) [adjective] Having or existing in a single shape or form | [adjective] (of a gene) invariant across a species | [adjective] (of a function) taking only a single data type MONONUCLEAR (15) [adjective] Having a single nucleus | [adjective] Monocyclic MONOPHAGIES (19) MONOPHAGOUS (19) [adjective] That eats only one kind of food. MONOPHONIES (18) MONOPHTHONG (22) [noun] A vowel (in the sense of a sound rather than a letter of the alphabet) that has the same sound throughout its pronunciation, such as the short vowels in "pap", "pep", "pip", "pop" and "pup", as opposed to a diphthong (eg, /aɪ/, the vowel in "pipe") or a triphthong (eg, /aɪə/, the sound in the non-rhotic pronunciation of "pyre"). MONOPHYLIES (21) MONOPOLISED (16) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLISES (15) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLISTS (15) [noun] One who has, or attempts to acquire, a monopoly on something. MONOPOLIZED (25) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLIZER (24) MONOPOLIZES (24) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPSONIES (15) [noun] A market situation in which there is only one buyer for a product. | [noun] A buyer with disproportionate power. MONOSTELIES (13) MONOTERPENE (15) MONOTHEISMS (18) MONOTHEISTS (16) MONOZYGOTIC (28) [adjective] (of an identical twin) That has developed from a single fertilized ovum. MONSEIGNEUR (14) [noun] An honorific form of address for an eminent person in France, especially under the Ancien Régime. | [noun] (in particular) A title of the Dauphin of France. MONSTRANCES (15) [noun] An ornamental, often precious receptacle, either open or with a transparent cover, in which the sacramental bread is placed for veneration. MONSTROSITY (16) [noun] An organism showing abnormal development or deformity. | [noun] A monstrous thing, person or act. | [noun] The state of being monstrous. MONSTROUSLY (16) MONTAGNARDS (15) MOODINESSES (14) MOONFLOWERS (19) [noun] Any of several plants that flower at night: MOONLIGHTED (18) [verb] To work on the side (at a secondary job), often in the evening or during the night. | [verb] (by extension) To engage in an activity other than what one is known for. | [verb] (by extension, of an inanimate object) To perform a secondary function substantially different from its supposed primary function, as in protein moonlighting. MOONLIGHTER (17) MOONSHINERS (16) [noun] Someone who makes or distributes moonshine MORATORIUMS (15) [noun] An authorization to a debtor, permitting temporary suspension of payments. | [noun] A suspension of an ongoing activity. MORBIDITIES (16) MORIBUNDITY (19) MORONICALLY (18) MORPHACTINS (20) MORPHINISMS (20) MORPHOGENIC (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a morphogen, a morphogene or morphogenesis. MORPHOLOGIC (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to morphology; morphological MORPHOMETRY (23) [noun] The measurement of the form of organisms MORTADELLAS (14) MORTALITIES (13) [noun] The state or quality of being mortal. | [noun] The number of deaths. | [noun] Death. MORTARBOARD (16) [noun] A square board, with a handle, on which mortar or plaster is carried: a hawk. | [noun] An academic cap that has a flat square top with a tassel. MORULATIONS (13) MOTHBALLING (19) [verb] To store or shelve something no longer used. | [verb] To stop using (something), but keep it in good condition. MOTHERBOARD (19) [noun] The primary circuit board of a personal computer, containing the circuitry for the central processing unit, keyboard, mouse and monitor, together with slots for other devices. MOTHERHOODS (20) MOTHERHOUSE (19) [noun] The monastery from which the other 'houses' of a religious order or congregation were (directly or indirectly) founded, often eponymous. | [noun] The convent which is the seat (and often the above original foundation) of the superior of an order or congregation, and/or on which lower ranking houses (such as priories under an abbot) depend. MOTHERLANDS (17) [noun] The country of one's ancestors. | [noun] The country of one's birth. | [noun] Country of origin. MOTHPROOFED (22) [verb] To apply odoriferous materials intended to repel moths from clothing. MOTHPROOFER (21) MOTIVATIONS (16) [noun] Willingness of action especially in behavior. | [noun] The action of motivating. | [noun] Something which motivates. MOTOCROSSES (15) MOTONEURONS (13) [noun] A motor neuron. MOTORBIKING (20) MOTORBOATER (15) MOTORBUSSES (15) [noun] A motorised bus, or coach. MOTORCADING (17) MOTORCYCLED (21) MOTORCYCLES (20) [noun] An open-seated motor vehicle with handlebars instead of a steering wheel, and having two (or sometimes three) wheels. | [verb] To ride a motorcycle. MOTORICALLY (18) MOTORMOUTHS (18) [noun] One who talks very fast or incessantly; a chatty or loquacious person. MOTORTRUCKS (19) MOUNTAINEER (13) [noun] A person who climbs mountains for sport or pleasure. | [noun] A person who lives in a mountainous area (often with the connotation that such people are outlaws or uncivilized). | [noun] An animal or plant that is native to a mountainous area. MOUNTAINOUS (13) [adjective] Having many mountains; characterized by mountains; of the nature of a mountain; rough (terrain); rocky. | [adjective] Resembling a mountain, especially in size; huge; towering. | [adjective] (of a problem or task) Very difficult. MOUNTAINTOP (15) [noun] The summit of a mountain. | [adjective] Situated or occurring on the summit of a mountain. MOUNTEBANKS (19) [noun] One who sells dubious medicines. | [noun] One who sells by deception; a con artist; a charlatan. | [noun] An acrobat. MOURNFULLER (16) MOUSINESSES (13) MOUSSELINES (13) [noun] A very fine, semi-opaque fabric similar to muslin, typically made of silk, wool or cotton. | [noun] A soft, light sweet or savoury mousse. | [noun] A hollandaise sauce that has been made frothy with whipped cream or egg white, served mainly with fish or asparagus. MOUSTACHIOS (18) MOUTHPIECES (20) [noun] A part of any device that functions in or near the mouth, especially: | [noun] A spokesman; one who speaks on behalf of someone else. | [noun] A lawyer for the defense. MOUTHWASHES (22) [noun] A liquid used to clean one's mouth. MOVABLENESS (18) MOVIEGOINGS (18) MOVIEMAKERS (22) [noun] A person who makes movies as a profession; a cinematographer MOVIEMAKING (23) [noun] The production of movies MOZZARELLAS (31) MUCOPEPTIDE (20) MUCOPROTEIN (17) MUDDINESSES (15) MUDSKIPPERS (22) [noun] Any of various gobies of the subfamily Oxudercinae that are able to survive out of water by breathing through their skins and having strong pectoral fins that act as simple legs. MUDSLINGERS (15) MUDSLINGING (16) [noun] Casting aspersions with intent to discredit. | [noun] An act of making damaging or spiteful remarks with the intent to discredit. MUGGINESSES (15) MULTIAGENCY (19) [adjective] Involving multiple agencies MULTIAUTHOR (16) MULTIBARREL (15) MULTIBLADED (17) MULTICAMPUS (19) MULTICARBON (17) MULTICAUSAL (15) MULTICELLED (16) MULTICENTER (15) [adjective] (of a study) Taking place at multiple locations MULTICLIENT (15) MULTICOATED (16) MULTICOLORS (15) MULTICOLUMN (17) MULTICOUNTY (18) MULTICOURSE (15) MULTIDOMAIN (16) MULTIENGINE (14) MULTIENZYME (27) MULTIETHNIC (18) [noun] A member of more than one ethnic group. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or consisting of several ethnic groups. MULTIFACTOR (18) MULTIFAMILY (21) [noun] A residence intended for more than one family. | [adjective] Intended for more than one family. Particularly applied to residences. MULTIHEADED (18) MULTIMANNED (16) MULTIMEDIAS (16) MULTIMEMBER (19) MULTINATION (13) MULTINOMIAL (15) [noun] Polynomial | [adjective] Polynomial MULTIPAROUS (15) [adjective] Having two or more pregnancies resulting in viable offspring. | [adjective] Producing several offspring at one time. MULTIPHASIC (20) MULTIPHOTON (18) MULTIPISTON (15) MULTIPLAYER (18) [noun] (games) The feature of a video game where multiple human players play simultaneously. | [adjective] (games) Requiring or allowing multiple human players to play simultaneously. MULTIPLEXED (23) [verb] To interleave several activities. | [verb] To combine several signals into one. | [verb] To convert (a cinema business) into a large complex, or multiplex. MULTIPLEXER (22) MULTIPLEXES (22) [noun] A building or a place where several activities occur in multiple units concurrently or different times. | [noun] (by extension) A large cinema complex comprising many (typically more than five, and often over ten) movie theatres or houses. | [noun] Throwing motion where more than one ball is thrown with one hand at the same time. MULTIPLEXOR (22) MULTIPLIERS (15) [noun] A number by which another (the multiplicand) is to be multiplied. | [noun] (grammar) An adjective indicating the number of times something is to be multiplied. | [noun] A ratio used to estimate total economic effect for a variety of economic activities. MULTIPLYING (19) [verb] To increase the amount, degree or number of (something). | [verb] (with by) To perform multiplication on (a number). | [verb] To grow in number. MULTIRACIAL (15) [noun] An individual of more than one race. | [adjective] Composed of, or having a mixture of, multiple races. MULTISCREEN (15) [adjective] Having multiple screens MULTISOURCE (15) MULTISYSTEM (18) MULTITIERED (14) MULTIVALENT (16) [noun] Any multivalent chromosome. | [adjective] Having more than one valency or having a valency greater than 3; polyvalent. | [adjective] Having three or more homologous chromosomes during the first division of meiosis. MULTIVOLUME (18) MUNDANENESS (14) MUNDANITIES (14) MUNDUNGUSES (15) MUNICIPALLY (20) MUNIFICENCE (20) [noun] The quality of being munificent; generosity. | [noun] Means of defence; fortification. MUNITIONING (14) [verb] To supply with munitions. MURDERESSES (14) MURDEROUSLY (17) MURKINESSES (17) MURMUROUSLY (18) MUSCULARITY (18) MUSCULATURE (15) [noun] The collection of all muscles in a single body or in a single organ. | [noun] The structural configuration of muscle in a body or organ. MUSEOLOGIES (14) MUSEOLOGIST (14) MUSHINESSES (16) MUSHROOMING (19) [verb] To grow quickly to a large size. | [verb] To gather mushrooms. | [verb] To form the shape of a mushroom. MUSICALISED (16) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work | [adjective] That has been set to music MUSICALISES (15) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICALIZED (25) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICALIZES (24) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSKELLUNGE (18) [noun] A large freshwater gamefish of the pike family, native to the lakes and rivers of eastern and middle western North America; Esox masquinongy. MUSKINESSES (17) MUSSINESSES (13) MUSTACHIOED (19) [verb] To adorn with a mustachio, or something that resembles a mustachio. MUSTINESSES (13) MUTAGENESES (14) MUTAGENESIS (14) [noun] The creation or formation of a genetic mutation. MUTILATIONS (13) [noun] The act of mutilating or the state of being mutilated. MUTINEERING (14) MUTTONCHOPS (20) [noun] A cut of sheep's meat, often containing a section of a rib. | [noun] (by extension) A facial hairstyle consisting of sideburns and a moustache without a beard. MUTUALISTIC (15) MUTUALITIES (13) MUTUALIZING (23) [verb] To make, or to become mutual | [verb] To organize a business (especially a financial business) so that it is owned by its customers (or its employees) MUZZINESSES (31) MYASTHENIAS (19) MYASTHENICS (21) MYCETOZOANS (27) MYCOLOGICAL (21) MYCOLOGISTS (19) MYCOPHAGIES (24) MYCOPHAGIST (24) MYCOPHAGOUS (24) MYCOPLASMAL (22) MYCOPLASMAS (22) [noun] Any infectious bacterium of the genus Mycoplasma, often specifically Mycoplasma pneumoniae MYCORRHIZAE (30) [noun] A symbiosis between the mycelium of a fungus and the roots of a plant. MYCORRHIZAL (30) MYCORRHIZAS (30) MYELOBLASTS (18) MYELOGENOUS (17) MYELOMATOUS (18) MYELOPATHIC (23) MYOCARDITIS (19) [noun] Inflammation of the myocardium. MYOCLONUSES (18) MYOELECTRIC (20) MYOFILAMENT (21) MYOINOSITOL (16) MYRMECOLOGY (24) [noun] The study of ants. MYSTAGOGIES (18) MYSTAGOGUES (18) [noun] A person who prepares an initiate for entry into a mystery cult, or who teaches mystical doctrines | [noun] One who keeps and shows church relics. MYTHICIZERS (30) MYTHICIZING (31) [verb] To make into a myth. | [verb] To interpret in terms of mythology. MYTHMAKINGS (26) MYTHOGRAPHY (28) [noun] A depiction of a myth in literature or the arts. MYTHOLOGERS (20) MYTHOLOGIES (20) [noun] The collection of myths of a people, concerning the origin of the people, history, deities, ancestors and heroes. | [noun] A similar body of myths concerning an event, person or institution. | [noun] Pervasive elements of a fictional universe that resemble a mythological universe. MYTHOLOGIST (20) MYTHOLOGIZE (29) [verb] To interpret (a story etc.) as mythological; to explain the symbolic meaning of. | [verb] To construct a myth or mythology. | [verb] To make (something or someone) into a myth; to create a legend about. MYTHOMANIAC (23) MYTHOMANIAS (21) MYTHOPOEIAS (21) MYTHOPOETIC (23) [adjective] Giving rise to myths; pertaining to the creation of myth. | [adjective] Being a creative interpretation. | [adjective] Given the quality of a myth or a poem, used typically in opposition to a purely factual account. MYXOMATOSES (25) MYXOMATOSIS (25) [noun] A usually fatal viral disease of rabbits, causing skin tumors. MYXOMYCETES (30) [noun] Any protozoan of the phylum Myxomycota; the slime molds MYXOVIRUSES (26) [noun] Any of a group of RNA viruses of the Orthomyxoviridae and Paramyxoviridae families. NARCISSISMS (15) NASTURTIUMS (13) [noun] The popular name of any of the plants in the Tropaeolum genus of flowering plants native to south and central America. | [noun] A plant in this genus, Tropaeolum majus. | [noun] Any of the plants in the genus, Nasturtium, that includes watercress. NATATORIUMS (13) [noun] A swimming pool, especially an indoor one; a building housing one or more swimming pools. NATIONALISM (13) [noun] Patriotism; the idea of supporting one's country, people or culture. | [noun] Support for the creation of a sovereign nation (which does not currently exist). | [noun] Support for the union of Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. NATURALISMS (13) NECROMANCER (17) [noun] A person who practices or performs necromancy. NECROMANTIC (17) [noun] Conjuration | [adjective] Of or relating to necromancy: the resurrection of or communication with the dead, especially through the use of black magic. NEEDLEWOMAN (17) [noun] A woman who works with a needle; a female embroiderer, sewer, etc. NEEDLEWOMEN (17) [noun] A woman who works with a needle; a female embroiderer, sewer, etc. NEGATIVISMS (17) NEMATICIDAL (16) NEMATICIDES (16) [noun] Any pesticide designed to kill nematodes (roundworms). NEMATOCIDAL (16) NEMATOCIDES (16) [noun] Any pesticide designed to kill nematodes (roundworms). NEMATOCYSTS (18) [noun] A capsule, in certain cnidarians, containing a barbed, threadlike tube that delivers a paralyzing sting NEOREALISMS (13) NEOSTIGMINE (14) [noun] An anticholinesterase drug used in the form of its bromide C12H19BrN2O2 or a methyl sulfate derivative C13H22N2O6S especially in the diagnosis and treatment of myasthenia gravis and in the treatment of urinary bladder or bowel atony. NEPHRECTOMY (23) [noun] The surgical removal of a kidney. NEPHROSTOME (18) NEURILEMMAL (15) NEURILEMMAS (15) [noun] The outer membranous covering of a nerve fiber. NEUROHUMORS (16) NEUROTICISM (15) NEUTRALISMS (13) NEWSMONGERS (17) [noun] Gossiper | [noun] Journalist NIACINAMIDE (16) NIGHTMARISH (20) [adjective] Resembling a nightmare. NIMBOSTRATI (15) NINCOMPOOPS (19) [noun] A foolish or silly person. NINNYHAMMER (21) NITROSAMINE (13) [noun] A divalent functional group, >N.N=O. | [noun] Any of a class of carcinogenic organic compounds containing this group, prepared by the reaction of amines with nitrites. NOISEMAKERS (17) [noun] A person or device that produces a great deal of noise, especially one used in a celebration or sporting event. | [noun] A device comprising a handle with a ratchet at one end, with the ratchet end contained within a box that serves as an echo chamber, so that swinging or moving the device causes the ratchet to rotate within the box, creating a series of loud clicking sounds NOISEMAKING (18) NOISOMENESS (13) NOMENCLATOR (15) NOMINALISMS (15) NOMINALISTS (13) NOMINATIONS (13) [noun] An act or instance of nominating. | [noun] A device or means by which a person or thing is nominated. NOMINATIVES (16) [noun] The nominative case. | [noun] A noun in the nominative case. NOMOGRAPHIC (21) NOMOLOGICAL (16) [adjective] Pertaining to or expressing general laws that lack logical necessity. NONACADEMIC (18) NONADMIRERS (14) NONALUMINUM (15) NONANATOMIC (15) NONARGUMENT (14) NONAROMATIC (15) NONCHEMICAL (20) [noun] A substance that is not a chemical. | [adjective] Not chemical. NONCOMPOSER (17) NONCOMPOUND (18) NONCOMPUTER (17) NONCONFORMS (18) NONCONSUMER (15) NONCRIMINAL (15) NONCUSTOMER (15) NONDOGMATIC (17) NONDOMESTIC (16) NONDOMINANT (14) NONDRAMATIC (16) NONECONOMIC (17) NONEMPHATIC (20) NONEMPLOYEE (18) NONFAMILIAL (16) NONFAMILIES (16) NONFEMINIST (16) NONHARMONIC (18) NONHORMONAL (16) [adjective] Not hormonal. NONLUMINOUS (13) NONMAGNETIC (16) [adjective] Not magnetic; not affected by a magnet. NONMATERIAL (13) [adjective] Not material; apart from matter NONMEETINGS (14) NONMETALLIC (15) NONMETRICAL (15) NONMILITANT (13) [noun] One who is not a militant. | [adjective] Not militant. NONMILITARY (16) [adjective] Not military; civilian. NONMINORITY (16) NONMONETARY (16) NONMOTILITY (16) NONMUSICALS (15) NONMUSICIAN (15) NONMYSTICAL (18) NONORGASMIC (16) NONPAYMENTS (18) NONPHONEMIC (20) NONPROBLEMS (17) NONRUMINANT (13) NONSWIMMERS (18) [noun] One who is not a swimmer, who does not or cannot swim. NONSYMBOLIC (20) NONSYSTEMIC (18) NONTEMPORAL (15) [adjective] Not temporal. NONTERMINAL (13) NONVENOMOUS (16) NORMALISING (14) [verb] To make normal, to make standard. | [verb] To format in a standardized manner, to make consistent. | [verb] To reduce to variations by excluding irrelevant aspects. NORMALITIES (13) NORMALIZERS (22) NORMALIZING (23) [verb] To make normal, to make standard. | [verb] To format in a standardized manner, to make consistent. | [verb] To reduce to variations by excluding irrelevant aspects. NORMATIVELY (19) NOURISHMENT (16) [noun] The act of nourishing or the state of being nourished | [noun] Something that nourishes; food NUCLEOPLASM (17) [noun] The protoplasm of a cell nucleus. NUCLEOSOMAL (15) NUCLEOSOMES (15) [noun] Any of the subunits that repeat in chromatin; a coil of DNA surrounding a core of eight histones NUMERATIONS (13) [noun] The act of counting or numbering things; enumeration. | [noun] Any system of giving names to numbers. NUMERICALLY (18) [adverb] In a numerical manner. | [adverb] In terms of numbers. NUMISMATICS (17) [noun] The study of coins, tokens, medals and paper money | [noun] The study of coins | [noun] The collecting of coins, tokens, medals and paper money NUMISMATIST (15) NYMPHOLEPSY (26) [noun] A frenzied state of (usually erotic) emotion, especially concerning something or someone unattainable. NYMPHOLEPTS (23) [noun] A person in a state of nympholepsy. NYMPHOMANIA (23) [noun] Excess of sexual behaviour or desire in women. NYSTAGMUSES (17) OARSMANSHIP (18) OBJECTIVISM (27) [noun] The state of being objective. | [noun] Moral objectivism. | [noun] Any of several doctrines that holds that all of reality is objective and exists outside of the mind. OBTAINMENTS (15) OCEANARIUMS (15) [noun] A park where visitors can see marine mammals and/or fish. OECUMENICAL (17) [adjective] Pertaining to the universal Church, representing the entire Christian world; interdenominational; sometimes by extension, interreligious. | [adjective] General, universal, worldwide. OFFICIALDOM (22) [noun] The people elected to government or employed in the civil service. OFFICIALISM (21) OMINOUSNESS (13) OMNIFARIOUS (16) [adjective] Of many or all forms, varieties, or kinds. | [adjective] Exceedingly varied. OMNIPOTENCE (17) [noun] Unlimited power; commonly attributed to a deity or deities. OMNIPOTENTS (15) OMNIPRESENT (15) [adjective] Being everywhere simultaneously OMNISCIENCE (17) [noun] The capacity to know everything. ONEIROMANCY (18) [noun] (divination) Divination by the interpretation of dreams. | [noun] (in a weak sense) The interpretation of dreams. | [noun] (divination) An act of such divination or dream-interpretation. ONOMATOLOGY (17) OPENMOUTHED (19) [adjective] Talkative, speaking freely. | [adjective] With the mouth open. | [adjective] Gaping in surprise, wonder or astonishment. OPHTHALMIAS (21) OPPORTUNISM (17) [noun] The practice of taking advantage of any situations or people to achieve an end, often with no regard for principles or consequences. OPPROBRIUMS (19) [noun] Disgrace arising from exceedingly shameful conduct; ignominy. | [noun] Scornful reproach or contempt. | [noun] A cause of shame or disgrace. OPTOMETRIES (15) OPTOMETRIST (15) [noun] A person trained and skilled in examining and testing the eyes for defects, in order to prescribe corrective lenses or treatment. ORDAINMENTS (14) ORGANICISMS (16) ORIENTALISM (13) [noun] In the figurative arts, the tendency to represent eastern subjects, to assume stylistical characteristics original of the East. | [noun] An Eastern word, expression, or custom. ORNAMENTALS (13) [noun] An ornamental plant. ORNAMENTING (14) [verb] To decorate. | [verb] To add to. ORTHONORMAL (16) [adjective] Of a set of vectors, both orthogonal and normalized. | [adjective] Of a linear transformation that preserves both angles and lengths. OSCILLOGRAM (16) [noun] A record produced by an oscillograph or oscilloscope. OSMIRIDIUMS (16) OSMOMETRIES (15) OSMOTICALLY (18) OSTENSORIUM (13) OSTRACODERM (16) [noun] Any of the armored jawless fishes of the Paleozoic. OUTBLOOMING (16) OUTCHARMING (19) OUTCLIMBING (18) OUTCOMPETED (18) [verb] To be more successful than a competitor; especially to thrive in the presence of an organism that is competing for resources OUTCOMPETES (17) [verb] To be more successful than a competitor; especially to thrive in the presence of an organism that is competing for resources OUTDOORSMAN (14) [noun] A man who spends time in outdoor pursuits or sports. OUTDOORSMEN (14) [noun] A man who spends time in outdoor pursuits or sports. OUTDREAMING (15) OUTFUMBLING (19) OUTHOMERING (17) [verb] To score more home runs than another player. OUTHUMORING (17) OUTMANEUVER (16) [verb] To perform movements more adroitly or successfully than. OUTMARCHING (19) OUTMATCHING (19) [verb] To surpass or be better than something or someone else OUTMUSCLING (16) [verb] To surpass in a contest involving strength. OUTNUMBERED (16) [verb] (stative) to be more in number than somebody or something. OUTPERFORMS (18) [verb] To perform better than something or someone. OUTPROMISED (16) OUTPROMISES (15) OUTSCHEMING (19) OUTSMARTING (14) [verb] To beat in a competition of wits. OUTSWIMMING (19) OUTTRUMPING (16) OVARIECTOMY (21) [noun] Surgical removal of one or both ovaries. OVERCLAIMED (19) OVERCOMMITS (20) [verb] To make excessive commitments, either beyond one's ability or beyond what is reasonable OVERCOMPLEX (27) OVERCONSUME (18) OVERCRAMMED (21) OVEREMOTING (17) OVERGARMENT (17) [noun] A garment normally worn over other garments. OVERIMPRESS (18) OVERINFORMS (19) OVERMANAGED (18) OVERMANAGES (17) OVERMANNING (17) [verb] To provide with too many personnel; overstaff. OVERMANTELS (16) [noun] A decorative structure, usually plasterwork or carved wood, and sometimes containing a mirror, over a mantelpiece OVERMASTERS (16) [verb] To overpower or overwhelm. OVERMATCHED (22) [verb] To match more than intended. | [verb] To be more than equal to or a match for, to surpass; hence, to conquer, vanquish. | [verb] To marry to a superior. OVERMATCHES (21) [noun] A match in which one opponent is greatly superior to the other. | [noun] An opponent who is more than a match for another; one who cannot be defeated. | [verb] To match more than intended. OVERMELTING (17) OVERMILKING (21) OVERMUSCLED (19) OVERPAYMENT (21) [noun] Payment exceeding the amount actually due. OVERPROGRAM (19) OVERPROMISE (18) [verb] To promise more than is delivered OVERPROMOTE (18) OVERPUMPING (21) OVERSMOKING (21) OVERTRIMMED (19) OVERTRUMPED (19) [verb] To play a higher trump card than the previous one in a trick OVERWARMING (20) OVERWHELMED (23) [verb] To engulf, surge over and submerge. | [verb] To overpower, crush. | [verb] To overpower emotionally. PACEMAKINGS (22) PACIFICISMS (22) PALIMPSESTS (17) [noun] A manuscript or document that has been erased or scraped clean, for reuse of the paper, parchment, vellum, or other medium on which it was written. | [noun] Monumental brasses that have been reused by engraving of the blank back side. | [noun] Circular features believed to be lunar craters that have been obliterated by later volcanic activity. PALINDROMES (16) [noun] A word, phrase, number or any other sequence of units which has the property of reading the same forwards as it does backwards, character for character, sometimes disregarding punctuation, capitalization and diacritics. | [noun] (by extension) A poetic form in which the sequence of words reads the same in either direction. | [noun] A stretch of DNA in which the sequence of nucleotides on one strand are in the reverse order to that of the complementary strand PALINDROMIC (18) PALMERWORMS (20) PALMISTRIES (15) PAMPHLETEER (20) [noun] A writer or publisher of pamphlets, a second-rate journalist | [verb] To publish and distribute pamphlets as a form of propaganda. PANCRATIUMS (17) PANDEMONIUM (18) [noun] A place where all demons live; Hell. | [noun] Chaos; tumultuous or lawless violence. | [noun] An outburst; loud, riotous uproar, especially of a crowd. PANJANDRUMS (23) [noun] An important, powerful or influential person. | [noun] A self-important or pretentious person. | [noun] A massive, rocket-propelled, explosive-laden cart designed by the British military during World War II. PANTOMIMING (18) [verb] To make (a gesture) without speaking. | [verb] To entertain others by silent gestures or actions. | [noun] The performance of pantomime. PANTOMIMIST (17) PAPERMAKERS (21) PAPERMAKING (22) [noun] The craft of making paper. PAPILLOMATA (17) [noun] An epithelial tumour, usually benign, with the appearance of a papilla PARALLELISM (15) [noun] The state or condition of being parallel; agreement in direction, tendency, or character. | [noun] The state of being in agreement or similarity; resemblance, correspondence, analogy. | [noun] A parallel position; the relation of parallels. PARALOGISMS (16) [noun] A fallacious argument or illogical conclusion, especially one committed by mistake, or believed by the speaker to be logical. PARAMAGNETS (16) PARAMECIUMS (19) [noun] An oval-shaped protozoan organism of the genus Paramecium. PARAMEDICAL (18) [noun] An individual trained to medically stabilize people through various interventions, victims of trauma or medical events outside of a hospital setting and preparing them for transport to a medical facility. | [noun] An individual who is licensed at the state or national level to practice medical interventions in an emergency pre-hospital setting. | [adjective] Of or relating to the provision of emergency medical treatment PARAMETRIZE (24) [verb] To describe in terms of parameters. | [verb] To rewrite (a database query, etc.) as a template into which parameters can be inserted. PARAMNESIAS (15) PARAMOUNTCY (20) [noun] The fact or condition of being paramount; supremacy, precedence. PARAMOUNTLY (18) PARANORMALS (15) PARASITISMS (15) PARENCHYMAL (23) [adjective] Of or pertaining to parenchyma PARENCHYMAS (23) PARLIAMENTS (15) [noun] A formal council summoned (especially by a monarch) to discuss important issues. | [noun] In many countries, the legislative branch of government, a deliberative assembly or set of assemblies whose elected or appointed members meet to debate the major political issues of the day, make, amend, and repeal laws, authorize the executive branch of government to spend money, and in some cases exercise judicial powers; a legislature. | [noun] A particular assembly of the members of such a legislature, as convened for a specific purpose or period of time (commonly designated with an ordinal number – for example, first parliament or 12th parliament – or a descriptive adjective – for example, Long Parliament, Short Parliament and Rump Parliament). PARONOMASIA (15) [noun] A pun or play on words. PARSIMONIES (15) PASTORALISM (15) PATELLIFORM (18) PATERNALISM (15) [noun] The treatment of people in a fatherly manner, especially by caring for them and sometimes being stern with them. PATRIMONIAL (15) PATRIMONIES (15) [noun] A right or estate inherited from one's father; or, in a larger sense, from any ancestor. | [noun] Formerly, a church estate or endowment. PATRIOTISMS (15) PATRONYMICS (20) [noun] A name acquired from one's father. | [noun] (by extension) A name acquired from one's father's, grandfather's or earlier (male) ancestor's first name. Some cultures use a patronymic where other cultures use a surname or family name; other cultures (like Russia) use both a patronymic and a surname. PEACEMAKERS (21) [noun] One who sets the pace in a race, to guide the others. | [noun] A set of nerves which stimulate the heart to beat. | [noun] (hence) A medical implement that is used to stimulate a heart to beat by simulating the action of the natural pacemaker. PEACEMAKING (22) [noun] The act of reconciling two people or groups who disagree. PELARGONIUM (16) [noun] Any of various flowering plants of the genus Pelargonium, commonly called geraniums. PEMPHIGUSES (21) PENICILLIUM (17) [noun] Any of the blue-green fungi, of the genus Penicillium, that are used in the manufacture of cheeses, and are an important source of antibiotics. PENMANSHIPS (20) PENTAMEROUS (15) [adjective] In five parts; made up of five parts. PENTAMETERS (15) [noun] A line in a poem having five metrical feet. | [noun] Poetic metre in which each line has five feet. PENTAMIDINE (16) [noun] An antimicrobial medication used to prevent or treat pneumocystosis. PENTSTEMONS (15) PENULTIMATE (15) [noun] A penult, a next-to-last thing, particularly: | [adjective] (in United States usually formal) Next to last, second to last; immediately preceding the end of a sequence, list, etc. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a penult. PEPPERMINTS (19) [noun] A hybrid herb of the mint family (Mentha × piperita), formed by crossing watermint and spearmint, which has a high menthol content and a sharp flavor and is used in cooking, especially in herb teas and in confections. | [noun] A confection containing extract of peppermint. PEPPERMINTY (22) PERAMBULATE (17) [verb] To walk about, roam or stroll. | [verb] To inspect (an area) on foot. PERFORMABLE (20) PERFORMANCE (20) [noun] The act of performing; carrying into execution or action; execution; achievement; accomplishment; representation by action. | [noun] That which is performed or accomplished; a thing done or carried through; an achievement; a deed; an act; a feat; especially, an action of an elaborate or public character. | [noun] A live show or concert. PERFUMERIES (18) [noun] A shop selling perfumes. | [noun] A factory where perfume is made. | [noun] The manufacture of perfume. PERICARDIUM (18) [noun] A serous membrane that surrounds the heart allowing it to contract. PERICRANIUM (17) [noun] The membrane (or periosteum) which covers the outer surface of the skull. | [noun] The head, skull; one's mind. PERINEURIUM (15) [noun] The sheath of connective tissue that surrounds a fascicle of nerve fibres PERISTOMIAL (15) PERITHECIUM (20) [noun] An ascocarp shaped like a skittle or ball, distinguished by a small pore, the ostiole, through which the spores are released one by one when ripe. PERITONEUMS (15) [noun] In mammals, the serous membrane lining the cavity of the abdomen and that is folded over the viscera. | [noun] In animals, the membrane lining the coelom cavity. PERMAFROSTS (18) PERMANENCES (17) [noun] The state of being permanent. | [noun] The reciprocal of magnetic inductance. PERMANENTLY (18) [adverb] In a permanent manner; lastingly. | [adverb] Forever. PERMEATIONS (15) PERMETHRINS (18) PERMILLAGES (16) PERMISSIBLE (17) [adjective] Permitted. PERMISSIBLY (20) PERMISSIONS (15) [noun] Authorisation; consent (especially formal consent from someone in authority) | [noun] The act of permitting. | [noun] Flags or access control lists pertaining to a file that dictate who can access it, and how. PERMUTATION (15) [noun] One of the ways something exists, or the ways a set of objects can be ordered. | [noun] A one-to-one mapping from a finite set to itself. | [noun] An ordering of a finite set of distinct elements. PEROXISOMAL (22) PEROXISOMES (22) [noun] An intracellular organelle found in all eukaryotes (except Archezoa) which is the source of the enzymes that catalyze the production and breakdown hydrogen peroxide, and are responsible for the oxidation of long-chain fatty acids. PERSONALISM (15) [noun] The character of being personal. | [noun] A doctrine of subjective idealism that regards personality as the means of interpreting reality. PESSIMISTIC (17) [adjective] Marked by pessimism and little hopefulness; expecting the worst. | [adjective] Pertaining to the worst-case scenario. | [adjective] Taking out exclusive locks on data to prevent conflicts with other processes that might modify it. PETROLATUMS (15) PHALLICISMS (20) PHANEROGAMS (19) [noun] Any plant that produces seeds (rather than spores). PHANTASMATA (18) PHANTOMLIKE (22) PHARISAISMS (18) PHARMACISTS (20) [noun] A professional who dispenses prescription drugs in a hospital or retail pharmacy. | [noun] (academic) One who studies pharmacy. PHELLODERMS (19) PHENOMENONS (18) PHLEBOGRAMS (21) PHONEMICIST (20) PHONOGRAMIC (21) PHOSPHONIUM (23) [noun] The tetravalent positively-charged phosphorus cation R4P+ PHOTOMAPPED (23) PHOTOMETERS (18) [noun] Any of several instruments used to measure various aspects of the intensity of light. PHOTOMETRIC (20) PHOTOMOSAIC (20) [noun] A composite image made of individual photographs, normally of the same shape and size, placed together - to show a panoramic view etc. PHOTOMURALS (18) [noun] A large photograph (or series of photographs) used as a wall decoration. PHOTOSYSTEM (21) [noun] Either of two biochemical systems, active in chloroplasts, that are part of photosynthesis PHRASEMAKER (22) PHYCOMYCETE (28) [noun] A member of the Phycomycetes, a group of fungi. PHYSICALISM (23) [noun] A philosophical position holding that everything which exists is no more extensive than its physical properties; that is, that there are no kinds of things other than physical things. PHYSIOGNOMY (25) [noun] The art or pseudoscience of deducing the predominant temper and other characteristic qualities of the mind from the outward appearance, especially from the features of the face. | [noun] The face or countenance, with respect to the temper of the mind; particular configuration, cast, or expression of countenance, as denoting character. | [noun] The art of telling fortunes by inspection of the features. PHYTOCHROME (26) [noun] Any of a class of pigments that control most photomorphogenic responses in higher plants PIANISSIMOS (15) [noun] A dynamic sign indicating that a portion of music should be played pianissimo. | [noun] A portion of music that is played very softly. PIEZOMETERS (24) [noun] An instrument used to measure pressure. PIEZOMETRIC (26) PILGRIMAGED (18) [verb] To go on a pilgrimage. PILGRIMAGES (17) [noun] A journey made to a sacred place, or a religious journey. | [noun] (by extension) A visit to any site revered or associated with a meaningful event. PIMPMOBILES (21) [noun] An extravagantly large or ornate automobile, presumably suitable for a pimp. PITTOSPORUM (17) [noun] Any plant of the genus Pittosporum, various Old World shrubs and trees. PLAGIARISMS (16) [noun] Copying of another person's ideas, text or other creative work, and presenting it as one's own, especially without permission; plagiarizing. | [noun] Text or other work resulting from this act. | [noun] The instance of plagiarism. PLANETARIUM (15) [noun] A display museum in which images of stars and other astronomical phenomena are projected onto a domed ceiling. | [noun] An orrery. PLANIMETERS (15) [noun] An integrating device used to measure the area of an irregular figure via tracing its outline. PLANIMETRIC (17) PLASMAGENES (16) PLASMALEMMA (19) [noun] The cell membrane. PLASMINOGEN (16) [noun] The inactive precursor to plasmin; profibrinolysin PLASMODESMA (18) [noun] A microscopic channel traversing the cell walls of plant cells and some algal cells, enabling transport and communication between them. PLASMOLYSES (18) [verb] To cause or undergo plasmolysis. | [noun] The shrinking of protoplasm away from the cell wall of a plant or bacterium due to water loss PLASMOLYSIS (18) [noun] The shrinking of protoplasm away from the cell wall of a plant or bacterium due to water loss PLASMOLYTIC (20) PLASMOLYZED (28) [verb] To cause, or to undergo plasmolysis | [adjective] Modified by plasmolysis PLASMOLYZES (27) [verb] To cause, or to undergo plasmolysis PLATEMAKERS (19) [noun] One who produces plates (printing surfaces). PLATEMAKING (20) PLAYMAKINGS (23) PLEBEIANISM (17) PLEINAIRISM (15) PLEOCHROISM (20) PLEOMORPHIC (22) PLUMPNESSES (17) PLYOMETRICS (20) [noun] A form of exercise that involves the rapid stretching and contracting of muscles to develop muscular power. PNEUMOCOCCI (21) [noun] A gram-positive bacterium, Streptococcus pneumoniae, that causes pneumonia and other infectious diseases PNEUMOGRAPH (21) PNEUMONITIS (15) [noun] Inflammation of the tissue of the lungs. POCKMARKING (26) PODOPHYLLUM (24) POINTILLISM (15) [noun] In art, the use of small areas of color to construct an image. POLARIMETER (15) [noun] An instrument used to measure the rotation of the plane of polarized light as it passes through a sample of an optically active compound. POLARIMETRY (18) POLEMICALLY (20) POLEMICISTS (17) [noun] A person who writes polemics | [noun] A person who puts forward controversial views POLEMICIZED (27) [verb] To engage in argument. POLEMICIZES (26) [verb] To engage in argument. POLEMONIUMS (17) POLICEWOMAN (20) [noun] A female police officer. POLICEWOMEN (20) [noun] A female police officer. POLYCHOTOMY (26) POLYCHROMED (24) [adjective] Strikingly multicolored, as if by polychromy. POLYCHROMES (23) POLYGAMISTS (19) [noun] One who practices polygamy, or maintains that it is lawful. POLYGAMIZED (29) POLYGAMIZES (28) POLYGLOTISM (19) POLYMATHIES (21) POLYMERASES (18) [noun] Any of various enzymes that catalyze the formation of polymers of DNA or RNA using an existing strand of RNA or DNA respectively as a template. POLYMERISED (19) [verb] To convert a monomer to a polymer by polymerization. | [verb] To undergo polymerization. POLYMERISES (18) [verb] To convert a monomer to a polymer by polymerization. | [verb] To undergo polymerization. POLYMERISMS (20) POLYMERIZED (28) [verb] To convert a monomer to a polymer by polymerization. | [verb] To undergo polymerization. POLYMERIZES (27) [verb] To convert a monomer to a polymer by polymerization. | [verb] To undergo polymerization. POLYMORPHIC (25) [adjective] Relating to polymorphism (any sense), able to have several shapes or forms. | [adjective] (of a function) Having or relating to the ability to take multiple data types for a single parameter. POLYNOMIALS (18) [noun] (strict sense) An expression consisting of a sum of a finite number of terms, each term being the product of a constant coefficient and one or more variables raised to a non-negative integer power, such as a_n x^n + a_{n-1}x^{n-1} + ... + a_0 x^0. | [noun] A taxonomic designation (such as of a subspecies) consisting of more than two terms. POLYONYMOUS (21) POLYRHYTHMS (27) [noun] Music with multiple rhythmic elements played simultaneously. | [noun] A rhythm performed as part of a piece of music with multiple rhythmic elements played simultaneously. | [noun] Music containing two or more conflicting pulses. POLYTHEISMS (21) POMEGRANATE (16) [noun] A fruit-bearing shrub or small tree, Punica granatum. | [noun] The fruit of Punica granatum, about the size of an orange and having a red pulp containing many seeds and enclosed in a thick, hard, reddish skin. | [noun] A dark red colour, like that of a pomegranate. POMOLOGICAL (18) POMOLOGISTS (16) POMPADOURED (19) [verb] To style hair into a pompadour | [adjective] (of a head of hair) Styled in a pompadour. POMPOSITIES (17) POMPOUSNESS (17) PORTMANTEAU (15) [noun] A large travelling case usually made of leather, and opening into two equal sections. | [noun] A schoolbag. | [noun] A hook on which to hang clothing. | [noun] A portmanteau word. POSITIVISMS (18) POSITRONIUM (15) POSTFORMING (19) POSTMARITAL (15) POSTMARKING (20) [verb] To apply a postmark on. POSTMASTERS (15) [noun] The head of a post office. | [noun] The administrator of an electronic mail system. | [noun] A kind of scholar at Merton College, Oxford; portionist. POSTMORTEMS (17) [noun] An investigation of a corpse to determine the cause of death. | [noun] Any investigation after the conclusion of an activity, particularly when said activity produces an unwanted outcome. POSTPRIMARY (20) PRAEMUNIRES (15) [verb] To charge with the offence of praemunire; to subject to the penalties of praemunire. PRAESIDIUMS (16) PRAGMATICAL (18) PRAGMATISMS (18) PRAGMATISTS (16) [noun] One who acts in a practical or straightforward manner; one who is pragmatic; one who values practicality or pragmatism. | [noun] One who acts in response to particular situations rather than upon abstract ideals; one who is willing to ignore their ideals to accomplish goals. | [noun] One who belongs to the philosophic school of pragmatism; one who holds that the meaning of beliefs are the actions they entail, and that the truth of those beliefs consist in the actions they entail successfully leading a believer to their goals. PREACHMENTS (20) [noun] (now chiefly depreciative) Preaching; sermonizing. | [noun] An instance of preaching; a sermon or homily. PREADMITTED (17) PRECOMPUTED (20) PRECOMPUTER (19) PRECOMPUTES (19) PREDICAMENT (18) [noun] A definite class, state or condition. | [noun] An unfortunate or trying position or condition; a tight spot. | [noun] That which is predicated; a category PREDOMINANT (16) [noun] A subdominant. | [adjective] Common or widespread; prevalent. | [adjective] Significant or important; dominant. PREDOMINATE (16) [verb] To dominate, have control, or succeed by superior numbers or size. | [verb] To be prominent; to loom large; to be the chief component of a whole. | [verb] To dominate or hold power over, especially through numerical advantage; to outweigh. PREEMERGENT (16) PREEMINENCE (17) [noun] The status of being preeminent, dominant or ascendant. | [noun] High importance; superiority. PREEMPTIONS (17) PREFERMENTS (18) [noun] Prior claim (on payment, or on purchasing something); the first rights to obtain a particular payment or product. | [noun] The fact of being pushed or advanced to a more favourable situation; furtherance, promotion (of a candidate, action, undertaking etc.). | [noun] Advancement to a higher position or office; promotion. PREFRESHMAN (21) PREHOMINIDS (19) PREJUDGMENT (24) PRELIMINARY (18) [noun] A preparation for a main matter; an introduction. | [noun] Any of a series of sports events that determine the finalists | [noun] A relatively minor contest that precedes a major one, especially in boxing PRELIMITING (16) PREMARRIAGE (16) PREMATURELY (18) [adverb] In a premature manner; too soon or too early. PREMATURITY (18) PREMAXILLAE (22) PREMAXILLAS (22) PREMEASURED (16) PREMEASURES (15) PREMEDIEVAL (19) PREMEDITATE (16) [verb] To meditate, consider, or plan beforehand; to think about and revolve in the mind beforehand. PREMIERSHIP (20) [noun] The office of a premier or prime minister. | [noun] (sporting) The position held by the champion team at the end of a particular season (especially as used in Australian rules football). PREMODIFIED (20) [verb] To modify in advance PREMODIFIES (19) [verb] To modify in advance PREMOISTENS (15) PREMONISHED (19) [verb] To warn of something in advance PREMONISHES (18) [verb] To warn of something in advance PREMONITION (15) [noun] A clairvoyant or clairaudient experience, such as a dream, which resonates with some event in the future. | [noun] A strong intuition that something is about to happen (usually something negative, but not exclusively). PREMONITORY (18) PREMUNITION (15) PRENOMINATE (15) PRENUMBERED (18) PREPAYMENTS (20) PREPROGRAMS (18) [verb] To program something in advance. | [verb] To predispose to certain thoughts or behaviours. PREROMANTIC (17) PRESENTISMS (15) PRESENTMENT (15) [noun] A statement made on oath by a jury. | [noun] The notice taken by a grand jury of any offence from their own knowledge or observation, without any bill of indictment laid before them. | [noun] (ecclesiastical law) A formal complaint submitted to a bishop or archdeacon. PRESTAMPING (18) PRESTISSIMO (15) [adjective] Extremely fast, the fastest possible tempo. | [adverb] Very quickly. PRESUMINGLY (19) PRESUMPTION (17) [noun] The act of presuming, or something presumed | [noun] The belief of something based upon reasonable evidence, or upon something known to be true | [noun] The condition upon which something is presumed PRESUMPTIVE (20) [adjective] Based on presumption, probability, conjecture, hypothesis or belief. | [adjective] Making presumptions; behaving as one who presumes, who assumes that which they perhaps should not. PRETERMINAL (15) PRETRIMMING (18) PRIMALITIES (15) PRIMATESHIP (20) PRIMATOLOGY (19) [noun] The branch of zoology relating to the study of primates PRIMENESSES (15) PRIMIPAROUS (17) PRIMITIVELY (21) PRIMITIVISM (20) [noun] The state or quality of being primitive. | [noun] The opinion that life was better or more moral among primitive peoples, or among children, and has deteriorated with civilization. | [noun] Any of a group of related styles in the arts, influenced by a belief in the superiority of primitive forms. PRIMITIVIST (18) PRIMITIVITY (21) PRINTMAKERS (19) [noun] One who makes prints: copies of works of art. PRINTMAKING (20) [noun] The field of art concerned, roughly, with the transfer of ink or paint from a plate or block or through a screen mesh to paper. PRISMATOIDS (16) PROBABILISM (19) PROBLEMATIC (19) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A problem or difficulty in a particular field of study. | [adjective] Posing a problem; having or suffering from problem(s): | [adjective] Only affirming the possibility that a predicate be actualised. PROCAMBIUMS (21) PROCLAIMERS (17) PROCLAIMING (18) [verb] To announce or declare. | [noun] Proclamation PROCTODAEUM (18) PROCUREMENT (17) [noun] The purchasing department of a company. | [noun] The act of procuring or obtaining; obtainment; attainment. | [noun] Efficient contrivance; management; agency. PROGNATHISM (19) PROGRAMINGS (17) PROGRAMMERS (18) [noun] One who writes computer programs; a software developer. | [noun] One who decides which programs will be shown on a television station, or which songs will be played on a radio station. | [noun] A device that installs or controls a software program in some other machine. PROGRAMMING (19) [verb] To enter a program or other instructions into (a computer or other electronic device) to instruct it to do a particular task. | [verb] To develop (software) by writing program code. | [verb] To put together the schedule of an event. PROLEGOMENA (16) [noun] (usually in the plural) A prefatory discussion; a formal essay or critical discussion serving to introduce and interpret an extended work. PROMENADERS (16) [noun] Agent noun of promenade; one who promenades. | [noun] An attender at, or devotee of, promenade concerts. PROMENADING (17) [verb] To walk for amusement, show, or exercise. | [verb] To perform the stylized walk of a square dance. PROMETHIUMS (20) PROMINENCES (17) [noun] The state of being prominent: widely known or eminent. | [noun] Relative importance. | [noun] A bulge: something that bulges out or is protuberant or projects from a form. PROMINENTLY (18) [adverb] In a prominent manner. PROMISCUITY (20) [noun] The state or quality of being promiscuous. | [noun] Indiscriminateness in the choice of sexual partners. | [noun] State of being mixed, composed of diverse elements, unsystematic; heterogeneity. PROMISCUOUS (17) [adjective] Made up of various disparate elements mixed together; of disorderly composition. | [adjective] Made without careful choice; indiscriminate. | [adjective] Indiscriminate in choice of sexual partners, or having many sexual partners. PROMISINGLY (19) PROMOTIONAL (15) [noun] An advertising promotion | [adjective] Of or relating to an advertising promotion; serving to promote a service, institution, business, etc. | [adjective] Of or relating to promotion to a post of higher status. PROMPTBOOKS (23) [noun] An annotated copy of a script used by a prompter PROMPTITUDE (18) [noun] The quality of being prompt; alacrity. PROMULGATED (17) [verb] To make known or public. | [verb] To put into effect as a regulation. PROMULGATES (16) [verb] To make known or public. | [verb] To put into effect as a regulation. PROMULGATOR (16) PROSCENIUMS (17) [noun] The stage area between the curtain and the orchestra. | [noun] The stage area immediately in front of the scene building. | [noun] The row of columns at the front the scene building, at first directly behind the circular orchestra but later upon a stage. PROSELYTISM (18) PROSEMINARS (15) PROSTATISMS (15) PROTHALAMIA (18) [noun] A song or poem in honour of a bride and bridegroom about to be married. PROTHALLIUM (18) PROTHROMBIN (20) [noun] A glycoprotein, produced in the liver, that is converted into thrombin during bleeding and subsequent clotting. PROTOHUMANS (18) [noun] One of the earliest humans. PROTOMARTYR (18) [noun] Any of the first Christian martyrs. PROTONEMATA (15) PROTOPHLOEM (20) PROTOPLASMS (17) PROTOSTOMES (15) [noun] Any animal, of the taxon Protostomia, in which the mouth is derived from the embryonic blastopore PROTOXYLEMS (25) PROVITAMINS (18) [noun] Any biologically inactive compound that may be converted into a vitamin within an animal organism PROXIMATELY (25) PROXIMITIES (22) PSEUDOMONAD (17) PSEUDOMONAS (16) [noun] A pseudomonad. PSEUDOMORPH (21) [noun] A deceptive, irregular, or false form; specifically: PSYCHODRAMA (24) [noun] A form of psychotherapy in which a patient acts a role in a context devised by a psychotherapist. | [noun] A drama in this form | [noun] A dramatic work focusing on the psychology of its characters PSYCHOMETRY (26) [noun] The paranormal ability to discover information about an object's past, and especially about its past owners, merely by handling it. | [noun] The use of psychological tests to measure intelligence, abilities, attitudes, and personality traits. PSYCHOMOTOR (23) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the function of muscles under the control of the mind PUMPKINSEED (22) [noun] The seed of a pumpkin. | [noun] A North American sunfish; Lepomis gibbosus. PUNISHMENTS (18) [noun] The act or process of punishing, imposing and/or applying a sanction. | [noun] A penalty to punish wrongdoing, especially for crime. | [noun] A suffering by pain or loss imposed as retribution PURITANISMS (15) PUZZLEMENTS (33) [noun] The confusing state of being puzzled; bewilderment | [noun] A puzzle. PYCNOMETERS (20) PYRAMIDALLY (22) PYRAMIDICAL (21) PYRIMIDINES (19) [noun] A diazine in which the two nitrogen atoms are in the meta- positions; it is the basis of three of the bases found in DNA and RNA: thymine, uracil and cytosine PYROMANCIES (20) PYROMANIACS (20) [noun] A person suffering from pyromania PYROMETRIES (18) QUADRENNIUM (23) [noun] A period of 4 years, the sets of four years in the Egyptian and Greek calendars. QUADRUMVIRS (26) QUAGMIRIEST (23) QUARRELSOME (22) [adjective] Argumentative; fond of or prone to quarreling. QUISLINGISM (23) QUITCLAIMED (25) QUIZMASTERS (31) [noun] A person who poses questions to contestants on a quiz show. RABBLEMENTS (17) RADICALISMS (16) [noun] Any of various radical social or political movements that aim at fundamental change in the structure of society RADIOMETERS (14) [noun] A device that measures radiant energy. RADIOMETRIC (16) [adjective] Referring to the science of radiometry. RAGAMUFFINS (20) [noun] A dirty, shabbily-clothed child; an urchin. | [noun] A breed of domestic cat which is an offshoot from the Ragdoll. RAINMAKINGS (18) RAMBOUILLET (15) RANDOMIZERS (23) RANDOMIZING (24) [verb] To arrange randomly; to make random RATIONALISM (13) [noun] The theory that the reason is a source of knowledge independent of and superior to sense perception. | [noun] The theory that knowledge may be derived by deductions from a priori concepts (such as axioms, postulates or earlier deductions). | [noun] A view that the fundamental method for problem solving is through reason and experience rather than faith, inspiration, revelation, intuition or authority. RAVAGEMENTS (17) RAVISHMENTS (19) RAZZAMATAZZ (49) [noun] Ambiguous or meaningless language. | [noun] Empty and tiresome speculation. | [noun] Something presenting itself in a fanciful and showy, often unrealistic manner, especially when intended to impress and confuse. READMISSION (14) [noun] A second or subsequent admission READMITTING (15) [verb] To admit, or allow to enter, again. REAFFIRMING (20) [verb] To affirm again. | [verb] To bolster or support. REALIGNMENT (14) [noun] The act of realigning or something realigned. REANIMATING (14) [verb] To animate again. REANIMATION (13) REARGUMENTS (14) REARMAMENTS (15) [noun] The process of rearming. REASSEMBLED (16) [verb] To assemble again | [verb] To put back together; to reverse the process of disassembly REASSEMBLES (15) [verb] To assemble again | [verb] To put back together; to reverse the process of disassembly REATTEMPTED (16) [verb] To attempt again. RECIDIVISMS (19) RECLAIMABLE (17) RECLAMATION (15) [noun] The act of reclaiming or the state of being reclaimed. | [noun] The recovery of a wasteland, or of flooded land so it can be cultivated. RECOMBINANT (17) [noun] An organism, cell or haplotype formed by genetic recombination. | [adjective] Formed by a new combination of existing elements. RECOMBINING (18) [verb] To combine again, especially to reassemble the parts of something previously taken apart in a different manner. | [verb] To undergo recombination. | [noun] The exchanging of genetic material RECOMMENCED (20) [verb] To begin again. RECOMMENCES (19) [verb] To begin again. RECOMMENDED (19) [verb] To bestow commendation on; to represent favourably; to suggest, endorse or encourage as an appropriate choice. | [verb] To make acceptable; to attract favor to. | [verb] To advise, propose, counsel favorably RECOMMENDER (18) RECOMMITTAL (17) RECOMMITTED (18) [verb] Commit again RECOMPENSED (18) [verb] To reward or repay (someone) for something done, given etc. | [verb] To give compensation for an injury, or other type of harm or damage. | [verb] To give (something) in return; to pay back; to pay, as something earned or deserved. RECOMPENSES (17) [verb] To reward or repay (someone) for something done, given etc. | [verb] To give compensation for an injury, or other type of harm or damage. | [verb] To give (something) in return; to pay back; to pay, as something earned or deserved. RECOMPILING (18) [verb] To compile again. RECOMPOSING (18) [verb] To compose or construct again. | [verb] To bring (oneself) back to a state of calm. RECOMPUTING (18) RECONFIRMED (19) [verb] To confirm again; to establish more firmly | [verb] (travel) To advise an airline of your intention to use a reservation, or risk cancellation. RECOUPMENTS (17) RECRIMINATE (15) [verb] To accuse in return, state an accusation in return. RECRUITMENT (15) [noun] The process or art of finding candidates for a post in an organization, or recruits for the armed forces. | [noun] A style or process of recruiting. | [noun] The addition of new recruits to a population. REDEMANDING (16) REDEMPTIONS (16) [noun] The act of redeeming or something redeemed. | [noun] The recovery, for a fee, of a pawned article. | [noun] Salvation from sin. REDETERMINE (14) [verb] To determine again REEMBARKING (20) REEMBODYING (20) REEMBROIDER (16) REEMERGENCE (16) [noun] A second or subsequent emergence after being hidden etc. REEMISSIONS (13) REEMPHASIZE (27) [verb] To emphasize again; to reiterate. REEMPLOYING (19) [verb] To employ again. REENACTMENT (15) [noun] The repetition of an earlier (usually historic) event, as a performance or social event. REEQUIPMENT (24) REESTIMATED (14) REESTIMATES (13) REEXAMINING (21) [verb] To examine again. REFERENDUMS (17) [noun] A direct popular vote on a proposed law or constitutional amendment. The adposition on is usually used before the related subject of the vote. | [noun] An action, choice, etc., which is perceived as passing judgment on another matter. REFINEMENTS (16) [noun] The act, or the result of refining; the removal of impurities, or a purified material | [noun] High-class style; cultivation. | [noun] A fine or subtle distinction. REFORMATION (16) [noun] An improvement (or an intended improvement) in the existing form or condition of institutions or practices, etc.; intended to make a striking change for the better in social, political or religious affairs or in the conduct of persons or operation of organizations. | [noun] Change or correction, by a court in equity, to a written instrument to conform to the original intention of the parties. REFORMATIVE (19) REFORMATORY (19) [noun] A prison, especially one for juveniles; a reform school. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or conducive to reform; reformative. REFORMATTED (17) [verb] To format anew or again, generally erasing a previous format. | [adjective] Having been formatted again. REFORMULATE (16) [verb] To formulate again or differently. REFRAINMENT (16) REFRESHMENT (19) [noun] The action of refreshing; a means of restoring strength, energy or vigour. | [noun] A light snack or drink. REFUGEEISMS (17) REGIMENTALS (14) [noun] The uniform worn by a soldier in a regiment. REGIMENTING (15) [verb] To form soldiers into a regiment. | [verb] To systematize, or put in rigid order. REGIONALISM (14) [noun] Affection, often excessive, for one's own region and to everything related to it. | [noun] Political tendency to concede forms of politico-administrative autonomy to regions. | [noun] A word or phrase originating in, characteristic of, or limited to a region. REHAMMERING (19) REHUMANIZED (26) REHUMANIZES (25) REICHSMARKS (22) [noun] The monetary unit in Germany between 1924 and 1948. REIMAGINING (15) [verb] To imagine or conceive something in a new way | [noun] A remake (of a dramatic work) REIMBURSING (16) [verb] To compensate with payment; especially, to repay money spent on one's behalf. REIMMERSING (16) REIMPLANTED (16) REIMPORTING (16) [verb] To import again. | [verb] To import goods which have previously been exported, particularly pharmaceutical products, back into the country of origin. REINFORMING (17) RELATIVISMS (16) REMAINDERED (15) [verb] To mark or declare items left unsold as subject to reduction in price. REMARKETING (18) REMARRIAGES (14) [noun] A second or subsequent marriage REMASTERING (14) [verb] To produce a new version of a recording by remixing the original master recordings. | [verb] To create a new master copy by enhancing sound or picture quality of an older recording. | [verb] To produce a new version of a video game with updated graphics, often re-recorded music, and added features and content. REMEASURING (14) [verb] To measure again. REMEDIATING (15) [verb] To correct or improve (a deficiency or problem). REMEDIATION (14) [noun] The process of remedying a situation. REMEMBERERS (17) REMEMBERING (18) [verb] To reconstitute or reassemble that which has been dismembered. | [verb] To recall from one's memory; to have an image in one's memory. | [verb] To memorize; to put something into memory. REMEMBRANCE (19) [noun] The act of remembering; a holding in mind, or bringing to mind; recollection. | [noun] The state of being remembered, or held in mind; memory, recollection. | [noun] Something remembered; a person or thing kept in memory. REMIGRATION (14) REMINISCENT (15) [noun] One who is addicted to indulging, narrating, or recording reminiscences. | [adjective] Of, or relating to reminiscence | [adjective] Suggestive of an earlier event or times REMINISCERS (15) REMINISCING (16) [verb] To recall the past in a private moment, often fondly or nostalgically. | [verb] To talk or write about memories of the past, especially pleasant memories. | [verb] To remember fondly; to reminisce about. REMITTANCES (15) [noun] The act of transmitting money, bills, etc. to a distant place, in return or payment for goods purchased. | [noun] That which is remitted; a payment to a remote recipient. REMOBILIZED (25) REMOBILIZES (24) REMODELLING (15) [verb] To change the appearance, layout, or furnishings of. | [noun] An instance of modification or redecorating. REMODIFYING (21) [verb] To modify again REMOISTENED (14) REMONETIZED (23) [verb] To monetize again. REMONETIZES (22) [verb] To monetize again. REMONSTRANT (13) [noun] One who remonstrates, or issues (usually formal and written) protestations. | [adjective] Inclined or tending to remonstrate; expostulatory; urging reasons in opposition to something. REMONSTRATE (13) [verb] To object; to express disapproval (with, against). | [verb] Specifically, to lodge an official objection (especially by means of a remonstrance) with a monarch or other ruling body. | [verb] (often with an object consisting of direct speech or a clause beginning with that) To state or plead as an objection, formal protest, or expression of disapproval. REMORSELESS (13) [adjective] Without remorse, mercy or pity. | [adjective] Unyielding or relentless. REMOTIVATED (17) REMOTIVATES (16) REMUNERATED (14) [verb] To compensate; to pay. REMUNERATES (13) [verb] To compensate; to pay. REMUNERATOR (13) RENOMINATED (14) [verb] To nominate again. RENOMINATES (13) [verb] To nominate again. RENUMBERING (16) [verb] To number again, to assign new numbers to. | [noun] The act or process of assigning new numbers. REPLACEMENT (17) [noun] A person or thing that takes the place of another; a substitute. | [noun] The act of replacing something. | [noun] The removal of an edge of crystal, by one plane or more. REPRIMANDED (17) [verb] To reprove in a formal or official way. REPROGRAMED (17) [verb] To program anew or differently. | [verb] (by extension) To make a fundamental change to the behaviour or habits of. | [verb] To shift funds appropriated for one government program to a different government program. REQUIREMENT (22) [noun] A necessity or prerequisite; something required or obligatory. Its adpositions are generally of in relation to who or what has given it, on in relation to whom or what it is given to, and for in relation to what is required. | [noun] Something asked. | [noun] A statement (in domain specific terms) which specifies a verifiable constraint on an implementation that it shall undeniably meet or (a) be deemed unacceptable, or (b) result in implementation failure, or (c) result in system failure. REREMINDING (15) RESCINDMENT (16) RESEMBLANCE (17) [noun] The quality or state of resembling | [noun] That which resembles, or is similar; a representation; a likeness. | [noun] A comparison; a simile. RESENTMENTS (13) [noun] A feeling of anger or displeasure stemming from belief that one has been wronged by others or betrayed; indignation. | [noun] The state of holding something in the mind as a subject of contemplation, or of being inclined to reflect upon it; feeling; impression. | [noun] Satisfaction; gratitude RESMOOTHING (17) RESTATEMENT (13) [noun] The act of restating. | [noun] A second or subsequent statement. RESTIMULATE (13) RESUBMITTED (16) [verb] To submit again. RESUMMONING (16) RESUMPTIONS (15) [noun] The act of resuming or starting something again. | [noun] Eminent domain RETEMPERING (16) RETINACULUM (15) RETIREMENTS (13) [noun] An act of retiring; withdrawal. | [noun] The state of being retired; seclusion. | [noun] A place of seclusion or privacy; a retreat. RETRANSFORM (16) RETRANSMITS (13) [verb] To transmit again. REVANCHISMS (21) REVEALMENTS (16) REVILEMENTS (16) REVISIONISM (16) [noun] The advocacy of a revision of some accepted theory, doctrine or a view of historical events. | [noun] An evolutionary form of Marxism, abandoning some of its original principles. REVIVALISMS (19) RHABDOMANCY (24) [noun] Divination with wands or rods, especially to use a divining rod to find things below the ground. RHABDOMERES (19) RHEUMATISMS (18) RHEUMATIZES (25) RHIZOMATOUS (25) RHIZOTOMIES (25) RHOMBOHEDRA (22) [noun] A prism with six faces, each a rhombus. RHOMBOIDEUS (19) [noun] Any of the rhomboid muscles. RHYTHMICITY (27) [noun] The quality or state of having a rhythm RHYTHMIZING (32) RIFAMPICINS (20) RIGAMAROLES (14) RINGMASTERS (14) [noun] The person who manages the performers in a circus ring. RODOMONTADE (15) [noun] Vain boasting; a rant; pretentious behaviour. | [verb] To boast, brag or bluster pretentiously. | [adjective] Pretentiously boastful. ROMANTICISE (15) [verb] To interpret or view something in a romantic (unrealistic, idealized) manner. | [verb] To think or act in a romantic manner. ROMANTICISM (17) [noun] A romantic quality, spirit or action. ROMANTICIST (15) [noun] An advocate or follower of romanticism. ROMANTICIZE (24) [verb] To interpret or view something in a romantic (unrealistic, idealized) manner. | [verb] To think or act in a romantic manner. ROOMINESSES (13) ROSEMALINGS (14) RUDIMENTARY (17) [noun] (usually in the plural) One of the rudimentary mammae of boars. | [adjective] Of or relating to one or more rudiments. | [adjective] Basic; minimal; with less than, or only the minimum, necessary. RUFFIANISMS (19) RUMBUSTIOUS (15) [adjective] Boisterous and unruly. RUMINATIONS (13) [noun] The act of ruminating; i.e. chewing cud. | [noun] Deep thought or consideration. | [noun] Negative cyclic thinking; persistent and recurrent worrying or brooding. RUMORMONGER (16) [noun] A person who spreads rumors and gossip. | [verb] To spread rumors and gossip. SACRAMENTAL (15) [noun] An object (such as holy water or a crucifix) or an action (such as making the sign of the cross) which is regarded as encouraging devotion and thus spiritually aiding the person who uses it. | [adjective] Used in, or relating to, a sacrament. SALAMANDERS (14) [noun] A long, slender, chiefly terrestrial amphibian of the order Caudata, superficially resembling a lizard. | [noun] A creature much like a lizard that is resistant to and lives in fire (in which it is often depicted in heraldry), hence the elemental being of fire. | [noun] A metal utensil with a flat head which is heated and put over a dish to brown the top. SALINOMETER (13) [noun] A salimeter. SALMAGUNDIS (15) [noun] A food consisting of chopped meat and pickled herring, with oil, vinegar, pepper, and onions. | [noun] Hence, any mixture of various ingredients; an olio or medley; a potpourri; a miscellany. SALMONBERRY (18) [noun] A bush, Rubus spectabilis, found on the Pacific coast of North America. | [noun] The fruit from this bush, similar in appearance and texture to the blackberry and raspberry. SALMONELLAE (13) [noun] Any of several rod-shaped bacteria, of the genus Salmonella, that cause food poisoning and other diseases SALMONELLAS (13) [noun] Any of several rod-shaped bacteria, of the genus Salmonella, that cause food poisoning and other diseases SALTIMBOCCA (19) [noun] An Italian dish of veal, thinly sliced and rolled in prosciutto ham and sage leaves. SAMARSKITES (17) SANATORIUMS (13) [noun] An institution that treats chronic diseases, and provides supervised recuperation and convalescence. SANITARIUMS (13) [noun] An institution that treats chronic diseases, and provides supervised recuperation and convalescence. SANITORIUMS (13) SARCOLEMMAL (17) SARCOLEMMAS (17) [noun] A thin cell membrane that surrounds a striated muscle fibre SARCOMATOUS (15) SARCOPLASMS (17) SARDONICISM (16) SCALARIFORM (18) [adjective] Having the form of a ladder SCARAMOUCHE (20) SCAREMONGER (16) [noun] Someone who spreads worrying rumours or needlessly alarms people. | [verb] To spread worrying rumours. SCATTERGRAM (16) [noun] Scatter plot SCEPTICISMS (19) SCHEMATISMS (20) SCHEMATIZED (28) [verb] To organize according to a scheme. | [verb] To distort and simplify for the purpose of highlighting certain characteristics. | [verb] To make a plan in outline. SCHEMATIZES (27) [verb] To organize according to a scheme. | [verb] To distort and simplify for the purpose of highlighting certain characteristics. | [verb] To make a plan in outline. SCHISMATICS (20) [noun] A person involved in a schism SCHISMATIZE (27) SCHISTOSOME (18) [noun] A parasitic flatworm which needs two hosts to complete its life cycle. The immature form infests freshwater snails and the adult lives in the blood vessels of birds and mammals, causing bilharzia in humans. SCHMALTZIER (27) [adjective] Overly sentimental, emotional, maudlin or bathetic. SCHMALZIEST (27) SCHOOLMARMS (20) [noun] A woman who is a teacher, especially a teacher in a schoolhouse; may carry the connotation she is severe and/or a spinster. | [noun] A person, male or female, who exhibits characteristics attributed to schoolteachers of the old times, such as strict enforcement of arbitrary rules. | [noun] A tree with two or more trunks; a forked tree. SCHOOLMATES (18) [noun] A person who was a fellow attendee at one's school. SCHOOLROOMS (18) [noun] A classroom, a room in a school used for instruction. SCHOOLTIMES (18) [noun] Time spent in school; classtime | [noun] Time spent at school; schooldays SCHWARMEREI (21) SCLERODERMA (16) [noun] A chronic systemic autoimmune disease characterized by hardening the skin or other organs through excessive deposits of collagen. SCLEROMETER (15) SCOPOLAMINE (17) [noun] A poisonous alkaloid C17H21NO4 similar to atropine that is found in various solanaceous plants and is used for its anticholinergic effects (such as preventing nausea in motion sickness and inducing mydriasis). SCOUTMASTER (15) [noun] An adult leader of a group of Scouts. SCREAMINGLY (19) [adverb] While screaming, or as if screaming SCRIMMAGERS (18) SCRIMMAGING (19) [verb] To have, or be involved in, a scrimmage. | [noun] A scrimmage. SCRIMSHAWED (22) [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. | [verb] To engrave fanciful designs on (shells, whales' teeth, etc.). SCRIPTORIUM (17) [noun] A room set aside for the copying, writing, or illuminating of manuscripts and records, especially such a room in a monastery. SCRUMMAGING (19) [verb] To engage in an ordered formation of forwards in which each side aims to gain control of the ball, as described above. SCRUMPTIOUS (17) [adjective] Delicious; delectable. | [adjective] Picky; fastidious. SCYPHISTOMA (23) [noun] The young attached larva of Discophora in the stage when it resembles a hydroid, or actinian. SEABORGIUMS (16) SEAMANSHIPS (18) SEAMINESSES (13) SECULARISMS (15) SECUREMENTS (15) SEDIMENTARY (17) [noun] A rock of this kind. | [adjective] (of a rock) Made by the deposition and compression of small particles. SEDIMENTING (15) [verb] To deposit material as a sediment. | [verb] To be deposited as a sediment. SEDUCEMENTS (16) SEGMENTALLY (17) SEISMICALLY (18) SEISMOGRAMS (16) [noun] The graphical output from an accelerograph or seismograph. SEISMOGRAPH (19) [noun] An instrument that automatically detects and records the intensity, direction and duration of earthquakes and similar events. SEISMOMETER (15) [noun] A device used by seismologists to detect and measure seismic waves and therefore locate earthquakes etc; a seismograph. SEISMOMETRY (18) SEMANTICIST (15) SEMAPHORING (19) [verb] To signal using, or as if using, a semaphore, with the implication that it is done nonverbally. SEMASIOLOGY (17) [noun] Semantics; a discipline within linguistics concerned with the meaning of a word independent of its phonetic expression. SEMIAQUATIC (24) [adjective] (of animals) Spending part of the life cycle underwater. Also, spending a significant proportion of its time in both terrestrial and aquatic environments. | [adjective] (of plants) Having the roots partially or entirely underwater. SEMIARIDITY (17) SEMICIRCLES (17) [noun] Half of a circle. | [noun] An instrument for measuring angles. SEMICLASSIC (17) SEMIDEIFIED (18) SEMIDEIFIES (17) SEMIDESERTS (14) SEMIDIURNAL (14) SEMIDWARVES (20) SEMILETHALS (16) SEMILIQUIDS (23) [noun] Any substance with properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. SEMIMONTHLY (21) [noun] Something done or made every half month, especially a periodical. | [adjective] Occurring twice a month or at half month intervals. | [adverb] In a manner occurring twice a month or at half month intervals. SEMINARIANS (13) SEMINARISTS (13) SEMINATURAL (13) SEMINOMADIC (18) SEMIOLOGIES (14) SEMIOLOGIST (14) SEMIOTICIAN (15) [noun] One who studies semiotics or semantics SEMIOTICIST (15) SEMIPOPULAR (17) SEMIPOSTALS (15) SEMIPRIVATE (18) SEMIQUAVERS (25) [noun] A sixteenth note, drawn as a crotchet with two tails. SEMIRETIRED (14) [adjective] Partially retired; working part time, and/or not yet receiving pension benefits nor drawing down retirement savings. SEMISHRUBBY (23) SEMISKILLED (18) [adjective] Requiring only minimal levels of training. SEMITONALLY (16) SEMITRAILER (13) [noun] A trailer without a front axle and with wheels only at the trailing end, designed to be pulled via a pivoting arrangement which also partially supports its weight. | [noun] A tractor-trailer or big rig: a semi-trailer plus the truck or tractor pulling it. SEMITROPICS (17) SEMPERVIVUM (23) [noun] Any of the genus Sempervivum of succulent plants, the houseleeks or liveforevers. SEMPITERNAL (15) [adjective] Everlasting, eternal. | [adjective] Everlasting, that is, having infinite temporal duration (as opposed to eternal: outside time and thus lacking temporal duration altogether). SENSUALISMS (13) SENTIMENTAL (13) [adjective] Characterized by sentiment, sentimentality or excess emotion. | [adjective] Derived from emotion rather than reason; of or caused by sentiment. | [adjective] Romantic. SEPARATISMS (15) SEPTICEMIAS (17) SEQUESTRUMS (22) SERMONETTES (13) [noun] A short sermon. SERMONIZERS (22) SERMONIZING (23) [verb] To speak in the manner of a sermon; to preach; to propagate one's morality or opinions with speech. | [verb] To preach a sermon to (somebody); to give (somebody) instruction or admonishment on the basis of one's morality or opinions. | [verb] To say in the manner of a sermon or lecture. SERVOMOTORS (16) [noun] An electric motor in a servomechanism, especially one which incorporates feedback so it accurately positions the device. SETTLEMENTS (13) [noun] The act of settling. | [noun] The state of being settled. | [noun] A colony that is newly established; a place or region newly settled. SEXAGESIMAL (21) [noun] A sexagesimal fraction. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, proceeding by, or based on the number sixty. SEXTODECIMO (23) [noun] A size of a sheet of paper resulting from folding and cutting a sheet of paper into sixteenths (3.25"-5" x 5"-6.25"). | [noun] A book consisting of pages of that size. SHAGGYMANES (21) SHAMANISTIC (18) SHAMELESSLY (19) [adverb] In a shameless manner; without shame; impudently. SHERIFFDOMS (23) SHIPMASTERS (18) [noun] The master of a ship; a captain; a commander. SHIRTMAKERS (20) SHITTIMWOOD (20) SHMALTZIEST (25) SHORTCOMING (19) [noun] Deficiency SHOWMANSHIP (24) [noun] The quality or skill of giving an engaging or compelling performance; a stage presence. SIGMOIDALLY (18) SIGNALMENTS (14) SILLIMANITE (13) [noun] A fibrous neosilicate mineral, polymorphic with andalusite and kyanite, with the chemical formula Al2SiO5. SILVERSMITH (19) [noun] A person who makes articles out of silver usually larger than jewellery. SIMILITUDES (14) [noun] Similarity or resemblance to something else. | [noun] A way in which two people or things share similitude. | [noun] Someone or something that closely resembles another; a duplicate or twin. SIMPLIFIERS (18) SIMPLIFYING (22) [verb] To make simpler, either by reducing in complexity, reducing to component parts, or making easier to understand. | [verb] To become simpler. SIMULACRUMS (17) [noun] An image or representation. | [noun] A faint trace or semblance. SIMULATIONS (13) [noun] Something that simulates a system or environment in order to predict actual behaviour. | [noun] The process of simulating. | [noun] A video game designed to convey a more or less realistic experience, as of a sport or warfare. SIMULCASTED (16) [verb] To broadcast a program or event across more than one medium or service at the same time. SINSEMILLAS (13) SKEPTICISMS (21) SKIRMISHERS (20) SKIRMISHING (21) [verb] To engage in a minor battle or dispute | [noun] A brief battle; a skirmish. SLIMINESSES (13) SLIMNASTICS (15) SLIPFORMING (19) SLIPSTREAMS (15) [noun] The low-pressure zone immediately following a rapidly moving object, caused by turbulence. | [noun] A genre of fantastic or non-realistic fiction that crosses conventional genre boundaries. | [verb] To take advantage of the suction produced by a slipstream by travelling immediately behind the slipstream generator. SLUMGULLION (14) [noun] A stew of meat and vegetables. | [noun] A beverage made watery, such as weak coffee or tea. | [noun] A reddish muddy deposit in mining sluices. SMALLHOLDER (17) [noun] A person who owns or runs a smallholding. | [noun] A small slaveholder, a person who owns a smallholding. SMALLMOUTHS (18) [noun] A variety of bass (fish) having a small mouth SMALLNESSES (13) SMALLSWORDS (17) [noun] A light one-handed sword, designed for thrusting, which evolved out of the longer and heavier rapier of the late Renaissance. SMARAGDITES (15) SMARTNESSES (13) SMATTERINGS (14) [noun] A superficial or shallow knowledge of a subject. | [noun] A small number or amount of something. SMITHEREENS (16) [noun] (originally Ireland) Fragments or splintered pieces; numerous tiny disconnected items. SMITHSONITE (16) [noun] A mineral form of zinc carbonate, ZnCO3, mined as an ore of zinc or as an ornamental stone. SMOKEHOUSES (20) [noun] A structure used to smoke food to preserve it and to add flavor. | [noun] A structure in which freshly harvested tobacco is cured or preserved by smoking. SMOKESTACKS (23) [noun] A conduit or group of conduits atop a structure allowing smoke to flow out. SMOKINESSES (17) SMOOTHBORES (18) [noun] A cannon, gun or other firearm that has an unrifled barrel. SMOOTHENING (17) [verb] To make smooth. | [verb] To become smooth. SMORGASBORD (17) [noun] A Swedish-style buffet comprising a variety of cold sandwiches and other dishes; (by extension) any buffet with a wide selection of dishes. | [noun] An abundant and diverse collection of things. SMOULDERING (15) [verb] To burn with no flame and little smoke. | [verb] To show signs of repressed anger or suppressed mental turmoil or other strong emotion, such as passion. | [verb] To exist in a suppressed or hidden state. SNOWMOBILER (18) SNOWMOBILES (18) [noun] A vehicle with skis at the front and a caterpillar track at the rear, used for travelling over snow, sometimes as sport SOCIOMETRIC (17) SODOMITICAL (16) SOLACEMENTS (15) SOLEMNIFIED (17) SOLEMNIFIES (16) SOLEMNITIES (13) [noun] The quality of being deeply serious and sober or solemn. | [noun] An instance or example of solemn behavior; a rite or ceremony performed with reverence. | [noun] A feast day of the highest rank celebrating a mystery of faith such as the Trinity, an event in the life of Jesus, the Virgin Mary, or another important saint. SOLEMNIZING (23) [verb] To make solemn, or official, through ceremony or legal act. | [verb] To make grave, serious, and reverential. SOLIDARISMS (14) SOLMIZATION (22) [noun] The sol-fa system of singing. SOMATICALLY (18) SOMATOMEDIN (16) [noun] Any of a group of peptides which mediate the action of somatotropin on cartilage SOMATOTYPES (18) [noun] A body build. | [noun] A type of physique, especially one of the types defined by Sheldon: ectomorphic, endomorphic, mesomorphic. SOMERSAULTS (13) [noun] Starting on one's feet, an instance of rotating one's body 360 degree while airborne or on the ground, with one's feet going over one's head. | [verb] To perform a somersault. SOMERSETING (14) SOMERSETTED (14) SOMEWHITHER (22) SOMNIFEROUS (16) [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) causing or inducing sleep, normally with harmful overtones. SOMNOLENCES (15) SOMNOLENTLY (16) SPASMOLYTIC (20) [noun] Any antispastic drug. | [adjective] Antispastic, antispasmodic SPECIALISMS (17) [noun] Speciality. | [noun] The concentration of one's efforts upon a particular field of study. SPECIESISMS (17) SPECTROGRAM (18) [noun] A visual representation of the spectrum of a sound changing through time. | [noun] A visual representation of the spectrum of a celestial body's radiation. SPEEDOMETER (16) [noun] A device that measures, and indicates the current speed of a vehicle. | [noun] Such a device incorporating an odometer. SPERMACETIS (17) SPERMAGONIA (16) SPERMATHECA (20) [noun] A small sac within the reproductive tract of some female invertebrates, such as insects, which stores sperm until it is used to fertilize the ova. SPERMATOZOA (24) [noun] A reproductive cell or gamete of a male, carried in semen, that fertilizes an ovum to produce a zygote. SPERMICIDAL (18) [adjective] Having the ability to kill sperm. SPERMICIDES (18) [noun] A substance used for killing sperm. SPERMOPHILE (20) SPHEROMETER (18) SPIROMETERS (15) [noun] An instrument for measuring the air capacity of the lungs. SPIROMETRIC (17) SPLENECTOMY (20) [noun] The surgical removal of the spleen. SPOKESWOMAN (22) [noun] A woman who speaks as the voice of a group of people. SPOKESWOMEN (22) [noun] A woman who speaks as the voice of a group of people. SPOONERISMS (15) [noun] A play on words on a phrase in which the initial (usually consonantal) sounds of two or more of the main words are transposed. SPOROGONIUM (16) SPORTSMANLY (18) SPORTSWOMAN (18) [noun] A woman who engages in sports; a female athlete. SPORTSWOMEN (18) [noun] A woman who engages in sports; a female athlete. SPRINGTIMES (16) [noun] The season of spring, between winter and summer. SQUAMATIONS (22) SQUEAMISHLY (28) STABLEMATES (15) [noun] One (such as a racehorse) from the same stable. | [noun] One from the same organization or background. STALAGMITES (14) [noun] A secondary mineral deposit of calcium carbonate or other mineral, in shapes similar to icicles, that lie on the ground of a cave. STALAGMITIC (16) STALEMATING (14) [verb] To bring about a state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves. | [verb] To bring about a stalemate, in which no advance in an argument is achieved. STAMINODIUM (16) STARTLEMENT (13) STATESMANLY (16) STEAMFITTER (16) STEAMROLLED (14) [verb] To flatten, as if with a steamroller. | [verb] To ruthlessly crush or overwhelm. STEAMROLLER (13) [noun] A steam-powered heavy road roller | [noun] Any heavy road roller | [noun] (by extension) any seemingly irresistible force STEELMAKERS (17) STEELMAKING (18) STENOTHERMS (16) STEPMOTHERS (18) [noun] The wife of one's biological father, other than one's biological mother. | [noun] A viola, especially Viola tricolor, heartsease. STEREOGRAMS (14) [noun] An early stereophonic music centre containing a gramophone and radio, and often storage space for records | [noun] A stereoscopic image; a stereograph STICHOMYTHY (27) STIGMATISTS (14) [noun] A person whose body is marked by stigmata; a stigmatic STIGMATIZED (24) [verb] To characterize as disgraceful or ignominious; to mark with a stigma or stigmata. | [adjective] Subject to a stigma; marked as an outcast. STIGMATIZES (23) [verb] To characterize as disgraceful or ignominious; to mark with a stigma or stigmata. STIMULATING (14) [verb] To encourage into action. | [verb] To arouse an organism to functional activity. | [adjective] Having a manner that stimulates. STIMULATION (13) [noun] A pushing or goading toward action. | [noun] An activity causing excitement or pleasure; the act of stimulating. | [noun] Any action or condition that creates a response; sensory input. STIMULATIVE (16) STIMULATORS (13) [noun] A person, device or substance that stimulates. STIMULATORY (16) STOMACHACHE (23) [noun] A pain in the abdomen, often caused by indigestion. (The pain is usually lower than the stomach and related to the intestines.) STOMATOPODS (16) STOMODAEUMS (16) STONEMASONS (13) [noun] One who works in stone STRAMONIUMS (15) STREAMLINED (14) [verb] To design and construct the contours of a vehicle etc. so as to offer the least resistance to its flow through a fluid. | [verb] (by extension) To simplify or organize a process in order to increase its efficiency. | [verb] To modernise. STREAMLINER (13) STREAMLINES (13) [noun] A line that is tangent to the velocity of flow of a fluid; equivalent to the path of a specific particle in that flow. | [noun] On a weather chart, a line that is tangent to the flow of the wind. STREAMSIDES (14) STREETLAMPS (15) [noun] A lamp that illuminates a street or sidewalk. STUMBLEBUMS (19) [noun] A blundering or awkward person. | [noun] An inept prizefighter. | [noun] A homeless person. STUMBLINGLY (19) STYLOPODIUM (19) SUBASSEMBLY (20) [noun] An assembly that is assembled with others to form a larger assembly SUBBASEMENT (17) [noun] A basement located beneath another basement SUBCLIMAXES (24) SUBCOMPACTS (21) [noun] Something that is smaller than the compact version, especially a very small car. SUBDERMALLY (19) SUBDOMINANT (16) [noun] The fourth tone of a scale. | [noun] The triad built on the subdominant tone. SUBEMPLOYED (21) SUBFAMILIES (18) [noun] A taxonomic category ranking between a family and a genus; formerly called a tribe SUBKINGDOMS (21) [noun] A taxonomic category below kingdom and above superphylum. | [noun] A kingdom that is part of another kingdom, ruled by a subking. SUBLIMATING (16) [verb] To change state from a solid to a gas without passing through the liquid state. | [verb] To purify or refine a substance through such a change of state. | [verb] To modify the natural expression of a sexual or primitive instinct in a socially acceptable manner; to divert the energy of such an instinct into some acceptable activity. SUBLIMATION (15) SUBLIMENESS (15) SUBLIMITIES (15) SUBMANAGERS (16) SUBMARGINAL (16) [adjective] Less than, or worse than, marginal. Not meeting even the minimum standard of quality. | [adjective] Below a margin. SUBMARINERS (15) SUBMARINING (16) SUBMEDIANTS (16) [noun] The sixth note of a scale, shown as VI. SUBMERGENCE (18) SUBMERGIBLE (18) SUBMERSIBLE (17) [noun] A small nonmilitary, non-nuclear submarine for exploration. | [noun] A retroactive term used for non-nuclear submarines; nuclear submarines are termed "true submarines". | [noun] A term used primarily by some navies for nuclear submarines, termed "true submersibles", because they cannot retroactively declare that their non-nuclear submarines should be called by a different name. SUBMERSIONS (15) [noun] The act of submerging, or the state of being submerged; immersion | [noun] A differentiable map whose differential is everywhere surjective. SUBMINISTER (15) SUBMISSIONS (15) [noun] The act of submitting or yielding; surrender. | [noun] The act of submitting or giving e.g. a completed piece of work. | [noun] The thing which has been submitted. SUBMULTIPLE (17) [noun] A quantity that gives another quantity when multiplied by an integer SUBMUNITION (15) [noun] Any part of a weapon (typically a bomb or missile) that separates from a parent munition before or during employment SUBNORMALLY (18) SUBOPTIMIZE (26) SUBPRIMATES (17) SUBPROBLEMS (19) SUBPROGRAMS (18) [noun] A program contained within a larger program SUBSAMPLING (18) [noun] The creation of subsamples | [noun] A subordinate sampling SUBSEGMENTS (16) SUBSUMPTION (17) SUBTERMINAL (15) [adjective] Positioned near an end | [adjective] Less than terminal SUBUMBRELLA (17) [noun] The integument of the undersurface of the bell, or disk-shaped body, of a jellyfish. SUCCEDANEUM (18) [noun] A substitute, replacement for something else, particularly of a medicine used in place of another. SUDATORIUMS (14) SULFONAMIDE (17) [noun] Any amide of a sulfonic acid RS(=O)2NR'2 | [noun] Any of a group of antibiotics; a sulfa drug SUMMABILITY (20) SUMMARISING (16) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMARIZERS (24) SUMMARIZING (25) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMATIONAL (15) SUMMERHOUSE (18) [noun] A house owned not as a primary residence and used as vacation home during warm weather months of the year. | [noun] An outbuilding in a garden where the owners can relax in warm weather. SUMMERSAULT (15) [noun] Starting on one's feet, an instance of rotating one's body 360 degree while airborne or on the ground, with one's feet going over one's head. | [verb] To perform a somersault. SUMMERTIMES (17) SUMMERWOODS (19) SUMPTUOUSLY (18) SUPERBOMBER (19) SUPERFAMILY (21) [noun] A taxonomic category above family and below order (and its subdivisions). | [noun] A large group of related proteins or other molecules. SUPERIMPOSE (17) [verb] To place an object over another object, usually in such a way that both will be visible. | [verb] To establish a structural system over, independently of underlying structures. SUPERJUMBOS (24) SUPERMARKET (19) [noun] A large self-service store that sells groceries and, usually, medications, household goods and/or clothing. | [noun] A chain of such stores. | [noun] A one-stop shop; a place offering a range of products or services. SUPERMICROS (17) SUPERMODELS (16) [noun] A highly paid, famous fashion model. SUPERMODERN (16) SUPERNORMAL (15) [adjective] Beyond what is normal; exceeding the average or the point of reference. | [adjective] Paranormal, supernatural. | [adjective] (default logic, of a default) Both categorical and normal. SUPERORGASM (16) SUPERSMOOTH (18) SUPERSYSTEM (18) SUPPLEMENTS (17) [noun] Something added, especially to make up for a deficiency. | [noun] An extension to a document or publication that adds information, corrects errors or brings up to date. | [noun] An additional section of a newspaper devoted to a specific subject. SUPREMACIES (17) SUPREMACIST (17) [noun] A person who advocates the supremacy of one particular group over all others. SUPREMATISM (17) [noun] A genre of abstract art based on simple geometric forms. SUPREMATIST (15) SUPREMENESS (15) SURMOUNTING (14) [verb] To get over; to overcome. | [verb] To cap; to sit on top off. | [noun] The act by which something is surmounted, or overcome. SURREALISMS (13) SYBARITISMS (18) SYMBOLISING (19) [verb] To be symbolic of; to represent. | [verb] To use symbols; to represent ideas symbolically. | [verb] To resemble each other in qualities or properties; to correspond; to harmonize. SYMBOLISTIC (20) SYMBOLIZERS (27) SYMBOLIZING (28) [verb] To be symbolic of; to represent. | [verb] To use symbols; to represent ideas symbolically. | [verb] To resemble each other in qualities or properties; to correspond; to harmonize. SYMBOLOGIES (19) SYMMETRICAL (20) [adjective] Exhibiting symmetry; having harmonious or proportionate arrangement of parts; having corresponding parts or relations. SYMMETRIZED (28) SYMMETRIZES (27) SYMPATHETIC (23) [adjective] Of, related to, showing, or characterized by sympathy | [adjective] Relating to similarity | [adjective] Relating to the sympathetic nervous system SYMPATHISED (22) [verb] To have, show or express sympathy; to be affected by feelings similar to those of another, in consequence of knowing the person to be thus affected. | [verb] To support, favour, have sympathy (with a political cause or movement, a side in a conflict / in an action). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. SYMPATHISES (21) [verb] To have, show or express sympathy; to be affected by feelings similar to those of another, in consequence of knowing the person to be thus affected. | [verb] To support, favour, have sympathy (with a political cause or movement, a side in a conflict / in an action). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. SYMPATHIZED (31) [verb] To have, show or express sympathy; to be affected by feelings similar to those of another, in consequence of knowing the person to be thus affected. | [verb] To support, favour, have sympathy (with a political cause or movement, a side in a conflict / in an action). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. SYMPATHIZER (30) [noun] A person who sympathizes (with a political cause, a side in a conflict, etc.); a supporter. | [noun] A person who has, shows or expresses sympathy (with another person or people); a person who enters into the feelings of another. SYMPATHIZES (30) [verb] To have, show or express sympathy; to be affected by feelings similar to those of another, in consequence of knowing the person to be thus affected. | [verb] To support, favour, have sympathy (with a political cause or movement, a side in a conflict / in an action). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. SYMPETALIES (18) SYMPETALOUS (18) [adjective] Gamopetalous SYMPHONIOUS (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to simultaneous sounds that are harmonious together. SYMPHONISTS (21) [noun] A composer of symphonies SYMPOSIARCH (23) SYMPOSIASTS (18) [noun] One engaged with others at a banquet or merrymaking. | [noun] A participant in a symposium. SYMPTOMATIC (22) [adjective] Showing symptoms. | [adjective] Relating to, based on, or constituting a symptom. | [adjective] Relating to symptomatics SYMPTOMLESS (20) SYNAPTOSOME (18) SYNCHROMESH (24) [noun] A system of synchronized transmission found in modern gearboxes to make gear changing easier and smoother. | [noun] (by extension) A device which functions like a synchronized transmission. | [adjective] Having the quality or smoothly exchanging interlocking forces. SYNCHRONISM (21) [noun] The state of being synchronous. | [noun] A temporal relationship between events. | [noun] The tabular arrangement of contemporary events etc. in history. SYNCRETISMS (18) SYNDESMOSES (17) [noun] A slightly movable articulation or joint where the contiguous bony surfaces are united by an interosseous ligament. SYNDESMOSIS (17) [noun] A slightly movable articulation or joint where the contiguous bony surfaces are united by an interosseous ligament. SYNDICALISM (19) [noun] Control of government and industry by labor unions, usually achieved through revolutionary direct action. SYNONYMICAL (21) SYNONYMISTS (19) SYNONYMIZED (29) SYNONYMIZES (28) SYNTAGMATIC (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a syntagma. SYSTEMATICS (18) [noun] The study of classification systems and nomenclature. | [noun] The systematic classification of a branch of science, especially the classification of organisms. | [noun] A branch of Christian theology that formulates an orderly, rational, and coherent account of Christian beliefs. It comprises dogmatics, ethics and philosophy of religion. SYSTEMATISE (16) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATISM (18) SYSTEMATIST (16) SYSTEMATIZE (25) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMIZING (26) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. | [verb] To engage in a cognitive process described as the drive to analyze and construct systems. TACHOMETERS (18) [noun] A device for measuring the revolutions per minute (RPMs) of a revolving shaft, as with the driveshaft of an automobile. | [noun] A device for measuring or indicating velocity or speed, as of blood, a river, a machine, etc. TAMBOURINES (15) [noun] A percussion instrument consisting of a small, usually wooden, hoop closed on one side with a drum frame and featuring jingling metal disks on the tread; it is most often held in the hand and shaken rhythmically; by extension, any frame drum. | [noun] A tambourine dove. | [noun] A kind of Provençal dance. TAMPERPROOF (20) [adjective] Resistant to tampering TANGLEMENTS (14) TAPHONOMIES (18) TAPHONOMIST (18) TARMACADAMS (18) TASKMASTERS (17) [noun] Someone who supervises workers, especially one who imposes hard or burdensome work. | [noun] A source of hard work or responsibility. TASTEMAKERS (17) [noun] A trendsetter with respect to taste. TAUTOMERISM (15) TAUTONYMIES (16) TAXIDERMIES (21) TAXIDERMIST (21) [noun] One who practices taxidermy, the stuffing of animals. TAXONOMISTS (20) TECHNETIUMS (18) TEEMINGNESS (14) TEETOTALISM (13) TELECOMMUTE (17) [verb] To work from home, sometimes for part of a working day or week, using a computer connected to one's employer's network or via the Internet. TELEGRAMMED (17) TELEMETERED (14) [adjective] Measured by means of telemetry TELEMETRIES (13) TELEONOMIES (13) TEMERARIOUS (13) [adjective] Recklessly daring or bold. TEMPERAMENT (17) [noun] A moderate and proportionable mixture of elements or ingredients in a compound; the condition in which elements are mixed in their proper proportions. | [noun] Any state or condition as determined by the proportion of its ingredients or the manner in which they are mixed; consistence, composition; mixture. | [noun] A person's usual manner of thinking, behaving or reacting. TEMPERANCES (17) TEMPERATELY (18) TEMPERATURE (15) [noun] A measure of cold or heat, often measurable with a thermometer. | [noun] An elevated body temperature, as present in fever and many illnesses. | [noun] A property of macroscopic amounts of matter that serves to gauge the average intensity of the random actual motions of the individually mobile particulate constituents. http//arxiv.org/pdf/physics/0004055 TEMPESTUOUS (15) [adjective] Of, or resembling a tempest; stormy, tumultuous. TEMPORALITY (18) [noun] The condition of being bounded in time (of being temporal.) TEMPORALIZE (24) TEMPORARIES (15) [noun] One serving for a limited time; short-term employee. TEMPORARILY (18) [adverb] For a limited period of time; not permanently. TEMPORISING (16) [verb] To deliberately act evasively or prolong a discussion in order to gain time or postpone a decision, sometimes in order to reach a compromise or simply to make a conversation more temperate; to stall for time. | [verb] To apply a temporary piece of dental work that will later be removed. | [verb] To comply with the time or occasion; to humor, or yield to, the current of opinion or circumstances; also, to trim, as between two parties. TEMPORIZERS (24) TEMPORIZING (25) [verb] To deliberately act evasively or prolong a discussion in order to gain time or postpone a decision, sometimes in order to reach a compromise or simply to make a conversation more temperate; to stall for time. | [verb] To apply a temporary piece of dental work that will later be removed. | [verb] To comply with the time or occasion; to humor, or yield to, the current of opinion or circumstances; also, to trim, as between two parties. TEMPTATIONS (15) [noun] The act of tempting | [noun] The condition of being tempted. | [noun] Something attractive, tempting or seductive; an inducement or enticement. TEMPTRESSES (15) [noun] An alluring woman who seduces or exploits men. | [noun] A woman considered sexually attractive by men. TENSIOMETER (13) TENSIOMETRY (16) TERMINATING (14) [verb] To end, especially in an incomplete state. | [verb] To set or be a limit or boundary to. | [verb] To kill. TERMINATION (13) [noun] The process of terminating or the state of being terminated. | [noun] The process of firing an employee; ending one's employment at a business for any reason. | [noun] An end in time; a conclusion. TERMINATIVE (16) TERMINATORS (13) [noun] Someone who terminates or ends something, especially (in later use) an assassin or exterminator. | [noun] The line between the day side and the night side of a moon, planet or other celestial body. | [noun] A DNA sequence which causes RNA transcription to cease and an mRNA transcript to break off. TERMINOLOGY (17) [noun] The doctrine of terms; a theory of terms or appellations; a treatise on terms, a system of specialized terms. | [noun] The set of terms actually used in any business, art, science, or the like; nomenclature; technical terms. TERMITARIES (13) [noun] An anthill built and occupied by termites. TERMITARIUM (15) [noun] A termite colony. TERPOLYMERS (18) [noun] A copolymer derived from three species of monomer. TESTIMONIAL (13) [noun] A statement, especially one given under oath; testimony | [noun] A written recommendation of someone's worth or character | [noun] A tribute given in appreciation of someone's service etc. TESTIMONIES (13) [noun] Statements made by a witness in court. | [noun] An account of first-hand experience. | [noun] In a church service, a personal account, such as of one's conversion. TETRADRACHM (19) TETRAHYMENA (19) TETRAMEROUS (13) [adjective] In four parts: such that each whorl (of flower parts) has four flower parts. TETRAMETERS (13) [noun] A line in a poem having four metrical feet. | [noun] A poetic metre in which each line has four feet. TETRAZOLIUM (22) [noun] A univalent cation derived from a tetrazole THALASSEMIA (16) [noun] Any of a group of inherited disorders in which the amount of hemoglobin in the blood is reduced. THALASSEMIC (18) THALIDOMIDE (18) [noun] A drug sold during the late 1950s and early 1960s as a sleeping aid, and to pregnant women as an antiemetic to combat morning sickness and other symptoms, but withdrawn as causing severe birth defects, such as phocomelia; currently used to treat leprosy. THAUMATURGE (17) [noun] A performer of thaumaturgy; a performer of miracles; a magician. THAUMATURGY (20) THEOBROMINE (18) [noun] An alkaloid, of similar structure to caffeine, found in chocolate and cocoa. THEOREMATIC (18) THERMALIZED (26) [verb] To lower the velocity and kinetic energy of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor by use of a moderator, and thus increase the efficiency of fission | [adjective] (of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor) Brought to a lower velocity and kinetic energy by use of a moderator. THERMALIZES (25) [verb] To lower the velocity and kinetic energy of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor by use of a moderator, and thus increase the efficiency of fission THERMICALLY (21) THERMIONICS (18) [noun] The science dealing with thermionic emission. THERMISTORS (16) [noun] A resistor whose resistance varies rapidly and predictably with temperature and as a result can be used to measure temperature. THERMOCLINE (18) [noun] A layer within a body of water or air where the temperature changes rapidly with depth. THERMODURIC (19) THERMOFORMS (21) THERMOGRAMS (19) [noun] The graphical record produced during thermography; a temperature map of the surface of a body THERMOGRAPH (22) [noun] A thermometer which records the temperature. | [verb] To record temperature using such an instrument THERMOMETER (18) [noun] An apparatus used to measure temperature. THERMOMETRY (21) THERMOPHILE (21) [noun] An organism that lives and thrives at relatively high temperatures; a form of extremophile; many are members of the Archaea. THERMOPILES (18) [noun] An electronic device that converts thermal energy into electrical energy. Usually constructed using a series-combination of thermocouples THERMOSCOPE (20) THERMOSTATS (16) [noun] A device that automatically responds to changes in temperature by activating a heating or cooling system to maintain the temperature at a desired setting. THERMOTAXES (23) THERMOTAXIS (23) [noun] Movement in response to temperature THIAMINASES (16) THIGMOTAXES (24) THIGMOTAXIS (24) [noun] The movement of an organism either towards or away from the stimulus of physical contact. THIMBLEFULS (21) [noun] As much as a thimble will hold. | [noun] (by extension) A small amount of liquid, especially alcoholic spirits. THIMBLERIGS (19) THIMBLESFUL (21) THIMBLEWEED (22) THIMEROSALS (16) THINGAMABOB (21) [noun] A thing or person whose actual name is unknown or forgotten. THINGAMAJIG (25) [noun] Something that one does not know the name of. THINGUMAJIG (25) [noun] Something that one does not know the name of. THINGUMMIES (19) [noun] A thing (used in a vague way to refer to something whose name one cannot recall). | [noun] Penis. | [noun] A person whose name is either unknown or forgotten THORACOTOMY (21) [noun] The surgical procedure of making an incision into the chest, normally as a first step to gain access to the thoracic organs, such as the heart, the lungs, and the esophagus. THREADWORMS (20) [noun] A parasitic roundworm, Strongyloides stercoralis, which causes strongyloidiasis. | [noun] The pinworm. THROMBOCYTE (23) [noun] Platelet THROMBOXANE (25) [noun] Any of a number of eicosanoids, related to prostaglandin, that have a role in the clotting of blood THUMBPRINTS (20) [noun] A print, mark or impression made by a thumb. THUMBSCREWS (23) [noun] A screw that can be turned with the thumb and fingers. | [noun] An instrument of torture used to crush the fingers. | [noun] A weakness that can be taken advantage of. THUMBTACKED (25) THUMBWHEELS (24) [noun] A small thumb or finger-operated wheel on a mechanical or electronic device. TIEMANNITES (13) TIMBERHEADS (19) TIMBERLANDS (16) [noun] Forested land thought of in terms of its potential and value as timber. TIMBERLINES (15) [noun] The height or limit beyond which trees do not grow in mountainous or Arctic regions. TIMBERWORKS (22) TIMEKEEPERS (19) [noun] A device that shows the time; a timepiece. | [noun] A person who keeps records of the hours of attendance of employees. | [noun] A person who records the time elapsed in a sporting event. TIMEKEEPING (20) [verb] To keep track of and/or enforce any restrictions on the time; keep time. | [noun] The measurement of time, or determining what the local time is. TIMEPLEASER (15) TIMESERVERS (16) [noun] Someone who honours their commitments only when it is personally easy to do so. | [noun] A person who conforms to current opinions, especially for reasons of personal advantage; an opportunist. | [noun] Someone who performs a job for the required time only, making a minimum of effort. TIMESERVING (17) TIMEWORKERS (20) TIMIDNESSES (14) TIMOCRACIES (17) [noun] (Platonism) A form of government in which ambition for honor, power and military glory motivates the rulers. | [noun] (Aristotelianism) A form of government in which civic honor or political power increases with the amount of property one owns. TINSMITHING (17) TITRIMETRIC (15) TOASTMASTER (13) [noun] A person who introduces speakers, and proposes toasts at a formal dinner; a master of ceremonies. TOLBUTAMIDE (16) [noun] A drug that blocks potassium channels, used in the treatment of diabetes. TOMAHAWKING (24) [verb] To strike with a tomahawk. TOMOGRAPHIC (21) TONOMETRIES (13) TOOLMAKINGS (18) TOOTHSOMELY (19) TOPONYMICAL (20) TOPONYMISTS (18) TOURMALINES (13) [noun] A complex black or dark-coloured borosilicate mineral, compounded with various chemical elements and considered a semi-precious stone. | [noun] A transparent gemstone cut from it. TOURNAMENTS (13) [noun] During the Middle Ages, a series of battles and other contests designed to prepare knights for war. | [noun] A series of games; either the same game played many times, or a succession of games related by a single theme; played competitively to determine a single winning team or individual. | [noun] A digraph obtained by assigning a direction to each edge in an undirected complete graph. TOXOPLASMAS (22) [noun] Any member of the genus Toxoplasma of parasitic sporozoans. TOXOPLASMIC (24) TRACHEOTOMY (21) [noun] A surgical procedure in which an incision is made into the trachea, through the neck, and a tube inserted so as to make an artificial opening in order to assist breathing. TRADEMARKED (19) [verb] To register something as a trademark. | [verb] To so label a product. | [adjective] Registered as a trademark. TRADUCEMENT (16) TRAGICOMEDY (20) [noun] The genre of drama that combines elements of tragedy and comedy. | [noun] A drama that combines elements of tragedy and comedy. TRAMMELLING (16) [verb] To entangle, as in a net. | [verb] To confine; to hamper; to shackle. | [noun] A hindrance or impediment. TRAMONTANES (13) [noun] A dry, cold north wind in Italy and adjacent Mediterranean areas. | [noun] One living beyond the mountains; a foreigner; a stranger. TRAMPOLINER (15) TRAMPOLINES (15) [noun] A gymnastic and recreational device consisting of a piece of taut, strong fabric stretched over a steel frame using many coiled springs as anchors. | [noun] Any of a variety of looping or jumping instructions in specific programming languages TRANSDERMAL (14) [noun] A transdermal patch or implant. | [adjective] Through the unbroken skin. TRANSFORMED (17) [verb] To change greatly the appearance or form of. | [verb] To change the nature, condition or function of; to change in nature, disposition, heart, character, etc.; to convert. | [verb] To subject to a transformation; to change into another form without altering the value. TRANSFORMER (16) [noun] (toys) A toy in the Transformers toyline which has mechanical parts that allow it to be altered in appearance from its original form as a humanoid robot action figure to another form, usually a vehicle, depending on the toy. | [noun] One of the characters in the Transformers franchise who is an alien humanoid robot that can mechanically alter its appearance, or "transform", into a vehicle, creature, or (rarely) a tool. | [noun] Something that transforms, changing its own or another thing's shape. TRANSHUMANT (16) TRANSMARINE (13) [adjective] Beyond or on the other side of a sea. | [adjective] Crossing a sea. TRANSMITTAL (13) [noun] The act of transmitting a message; a transmission | [noun] Item of correspondence. TRANSMITTED (14) [verb] To send or convey something from one person, place or thing to another. | [verb] To spread or pass on something such as a disease or a signal. | [verb] To impart, convey or hand down something by inheritance or heredity. TRANSMITTER (13) [noun] One who or that which transmits something (in all senses). | [noun] An electronic device that generates and amplifies a carrier wave, modulates it with a meaningful signal derived from speech, music, TV or other sources, and broadcasts the resulting signal from an antenna. TRANSMUTING (14) [verb] To change, transform or convert one thing to another, or from one state or form to another. TRAUMATISED (14) [verb] To injure, e.g. tissues, by force or by thermal, chemical or other agents. | [verb] To cause a trauma in. TRAUMATISES (13) [verb] To injure, e.g. tissues, by force or by thermal, chemical or other agents. | [verb] To cause a trauma in. TRAUMATISMS (15) [noun] A physical or mental injury that is the result of trauma TRAUMATIZED (23) [verb] To injure, e.g. tissues, by force or by thermal, chemical or other agents. | [verb] To cause a trauma in. TRAUMATIZES (22) [verb] To injure, e.g. tissues, by force or by thermal, chemical or other agents. | [verb] To cause a trauma in. TREMULOUSLY (16) TRENCHERMAN (18) [noun] A feeder; a great eater; a gormandizer. | [noun] A cook. | [noun] A table companion; a tablemate. TRENCHERMEN (18) [noun] A feeder; a great eater; a gormandizer. | [noun] A cook. | [noun] A table companion; a tablemate. TREPONEMATA (15) TRICHOMONAD (19) [noun] Any of many flagellate protozoans of the genus Trichomonas, most of which are parasitic TRICHOMONAL (18) TRICHROMATS (18) TRIGEMINALS (14) TRIMETROGON (14) TRISTIMULUS (13) TRIUMVIRATE (16) [noun] An official group of three people, especially a ruling council of three men and particularly two such councils in Roman history. TROMBONISTS (15) [noun] A person who plays the trombone. TROPOMYOSIN (18) [noun] A protein involved in muscle contraction. It is related to myosin and occurs together with troponin in the thin filaments of muscle tissue. TROUBLESOME (15) [adjective] Causing trouble or anxiety TRUCKMASTER (19) TRUMPETLIKE (19) TRYPANOSOME (18) [noun] Any of a group of protozoan parasites which are transmitted by biting insects and infect the blood of humans and other vertebrates. TRYPTAMINES (18) TUMBLERFULS (18) TUMBLERSFUL (18) TUMBLEWEEDS (19) TUMEFACTION (18) TUMESCENCES (17) TUMORIGENIC (16) [adjective] That can cause tumors TWELVEMONTH (22) [noun] A year. ULTRAMARINE (13) [noun] A brilliant blue pigment that is either extracted from mineral deposits or made synthetically; traditionally made from ground-up lapis lazuli. | [noun] A brilliant pure dark blue or slightly purplish colour. | [adjective] Of a brilliant blue colour. ULTRAMODERN (14) [adjective] Extremely modern. ULTRASIMPLE (15) ULTRASMOOTH (16) ULTRAVACUUM (18) UMBELLIFERS (18) [noun] Any plant of the family Apiaceae, also called Umbelliferae, whose inflorescence is an umbel, such as a carrot or celery. UMBILICATED (18) UMBILICUSES (17) [noun] Navel | [noun] Hilum | [noun] A depression or opening in the center of the base of many spiral shells. UMBRELLAING (16) UNAMBIGUOUS (16) [adjective] Clear, and having no uncertainty or ambiguity UNAMBITIOUS (15) [adjective] Having little ambition for success or achievement UNAMORTIZED (23) UNAMPLIFIED (19) [adjective] Not amplified UNANIMITIES (13) UNANIMOUSLY (16) [adverb] In a unanimous manner; without objection. UNASHAMEDLY (20) [adverb] In an unashamed manner. UNASSEMBLED (16) UNAUTOMATED (14) UNBESEEMING (16) UNBLEMISHED (19) [adjective] Faultless or lacking blemishes. | [adjective] Free from evil or corruption. UNCINEMATIC (17) UNCLIMBABLE (19) UNCOMBATIVE (20) UNCOMMITTED (18) [adjective] Not inclined toward either side in a matter under dispute. | [adjective] Not bound or pledged to a cause, party etc. | [adjective] (of an update to a database etc.) Not yet written to disk and logged. UNCOMMONEST (17) UNCOMPLETED (18) [adjective] Not completed. UNCONFIRMED (19) [adjective] Not finally established, settled or confirmed. | [adjective] Not having undergone the ritual of confirmation. UNCRUMPLING (18) [verb] To return something that has been crumpled closer to its original state. | [verb] Having been crumpled, to return closer to its original state. UNCUSTOMARY (18) [adjective] Not customary UNDEMANDING (16) [adjective] Not demanding UNDERMANNED (15) [verb] To fail to provide with enough workers or crew. | [adjective] Insufficiently manned; understaffed UNDERMINING (15) [verb] To dig underneath (something), to make a passage for destructive or military purposes; to sap. | [verb] To weaken or work against; to hinder, sabotage. | [verb] To erode the base or foundation of something, e.g. by the action of water. UNDERWHELMS (20) [verb] To fail to impress; to perform disappointingly. UNEARMARKED (18) UNEMOTIONAL (13) [adjective] Showing little or no feeling. | [adjective] Reasoned and objective, involving reason or intellect rather than feelings. UNEMPIRICAL (17) UNEMPLOYEDS (19) UNFERMENTED (17) [adjective] That has not been fermented | [adjective] That has been produced without fermentation UNFOLDMENTS (17) [noun] Unfolding UNGLAMOROUS (14) [adjective] Not glamorous; humdrum or prosaic. UNIDIOMATIC (16) [adjective] Not idiomatic. UNIFORMNESS (16) UNIMMUNIZED (25) UNIMPORTANT (15) [adjective] Petty; not important or noteworthy UNIMPRESSED (16) [verb] Too fail to impress positively; to leave very little impression or a bad impression; | [adjective] Not impressed UNLIMBERING (16) [verb] To deploy an artillery piece for firing (ie, to detach it from its limber). | [verb] (by extension) To clumsily put into employ a large weapon or object. | [verb] To unsling something, as a backpack, carried on the body with a strap; to bring something carried into the hands for use. UNLIMITEDLY (17) UNMAGNIFIED (18) UNMALICIOUS (15) UNMANLINESS (13) UNMASCULINE (15) [adjective] Not masculine; not characteristic of, typical of, or appropriate for a man UNMATCHABLE (20) [adjective] Unable to be matched. | [adjective] Uniquely good; not approached by anything else in quality or excellence. UNMEDICATED (17) UNMELODIOUS (14) [adjective] Not melodious. UNMEMORABLE (17) [adjective] Not memorable UNMEMORABLY (20) UNMITIGATED (15) [adjective] Not mitigated. | [adjective] (intensifier) Total, complete, utter. UNMONITORED (14) [adjective] Not monitored; unwatched UNMOTIVATED (17) [adjective] Lacking motivation, without impetus to strive or excel. | [adjective] For which there is no motive. UNNILHEXIUM (23) UNPERFORMED (19) [adjective] Not performed UNPROMISING (16) [verb] To revoke or annul (something promised before). | [adjective] Not promising UNRECLAIMED (16) [adjective] Not reclaimed. UNREMITTING (14) [adjective] Incessant; never slackening UNREMOVABLE (18) [adjective] Unable to be removed. UNSCRAMBLED (18) [verb] To reverse the process of scrambling, decrypt. | [verb] To put into order or restore to order. UNSCRAMBLER (17) UNSCRAMBLES (17) [verb] To reverse the process of scrambling, decrypt. | [verb] To put into order or restore to order. UNSEEMLIEST (13) [adjective] Inconsistent with established standards of good form or taste. UNSEGMENTED (15) [adjective] Not segmented. UNTIMELIEST (13) UNTRAMMELED (16) [adjective] Not limited or restricted; unrestrained; limitless. UNWHOLESOME (19) [adjective] Not wholesome; unfavorable to health; unhealthful. | [adjective] Not sound; tainted; defective. | [adjective] Indicating unsound health; characteristic of or suggesting an unsound condition, physical or mental; repulsive; offensive. UREOTELISMS (13) URICOTELISM (15) URINOMETERS (13) UTOPIANISMS (15) VAGABONDISM (20) VANGUARDISM (18) VARIOMETERS (16) [noun] An instrument used to measure variations in a magnetic field. | [noun] A rate-of-climb indicator. VASECTOMIES (18) [noun] The surgical incision of all or part of the vas deferens as a means of male sterilization. VASECTOMIZE (27) [verb] To perform a vasectomy VELOCIMETER (18) [noun] A device used to measure the speed of sound in a liquid. VENTURESOME (16) [adjective] Bold; willing to take risks; adventurous. | [adjective] Potentially hazardous; risky. VERISIMILAR (16) VERMICELLIS (18) VERMICULATE (18) [verb] To decorate with lines resembling the tracks of worms. | [adjective] Like a worm; resembling a worm. | [adjective] Vermiculated. VERMICULITE (18) [noun] A hydrated silicate mineral which expands on heating; it is used in insulation and as a medium for planting. VERMILLIONS (16) VICTIMHOODS (22) VICTIMISING (19) [verb] To make someone a victim or sacrifice. | [verb] To punish someone unjustly. | [verb] To swindle or defraud someone. VICTIMIZERS (27) VICTIMIZING (28) [verb] To make someone a victim or sacrifice. | [verb] To punish someone unjustly. | [verb] To swindle or defraud someone. VICTIMOLOGY (22) [noun] The study of the victims of crime, and especially of the reasons why some people are more prone to be victims. VIGILANTISM (17) [noun] The activities of a vigilante VISCOMETERS (18) [noun] An instrument used to measure the viscosity of a liquid. VISCOMETRIC (20) VOLUNTARISM (16) [noun] A reliance on volunteers to support an institution or achieve an end; volunteerism. | [noun] A doctrine that assigns the most dominant position to the will rather than the intellect. | [noun] The political theory that a community is best organized by the voluntary cooperation of individuals, rather than by a government, which is regarded as being coercive by nature. WAMPUMPEAGS (23) WARLORDISMS (17) WARMHEARTED (20) [adjective] Amicable and friendly | [adjective] Kind, sympathetic and generous WASHERWOMAN (22) [noun] A woman who washes other people's laundry for payment. WASHERWOMEN (22) [noun] A woman who washes other people's laundry for payment. WATCHMAKERS (25) [noun] A person who repairs (and originally made) watches. WATCHMAKING (26) WATERMARKED (21) [verb] To mark paper with a watermark. | [verb] To mark a datafile with a digital watermark. WATERMELONS (16) [noun] A plant of the species Citrullus lanatus, bearing a melon-like fruit. | [noun] The fruit of the watermelon plant, having a green rind and watery flesh that is typically bright red when ripe and contains black pips. | [noun] An environmentalist with socialist leanings (from the similarity to the fruit, being green on the outside, and red (Communist) on the inside). WEARISOMELY (19) WEIMARANERS (16) WELCOMENESS (18) WELTSCHMERZ (30) [noun] (sometimes capitalized) World-weariness; an apathetic or pessimistic view of life; depression concerning or discomfort with the human condition or state of the world. WESTERNMOST (16) [adjective] Farthest west. WHARFMASTER (22) WHIMSICALLY (24) WHITESMITHS (22) [noun] A person who forges things out of tin or pewter; a tinsmith. | [noun] A worker in iron who finishes or polishes the work, in distinction from one who forges it. WHOLESOMELY (22) WHOREMASTER (19) [noun] A man who uses the services of prostitutes. | [noun] A pimp. | [noun] An exploiter of people. WHOREMONGER (20) [noun] A frequent customer of whores. | [noun] A procurer of whores; a pimp. WIDEMOUTHED (21) WILDERMENTS (17) WIMPINESSES (18) WIMPISHNESS (21) WINDJAMMERS (26) [noun] One who plays a wind instrument, especially a bugler in the army. | [noun] A sailing ship; especially a large, iron-hulled, square-rigged ship with three or more masts. | [noun] A member of the crew of a ship of this kind. WINDJAMMING (27) WINDMILLING (18) [verb] To rotate with a sweeping motion. | [verb] Of a rotating part of a machine, to (become disengaged and) rotate freely. | [noun] The process of milling with a windmill. WINSOMENESS (16) WINTERTIMES (16) WISENHEIMER (19) [noun] (mildly humorous) A self-assertive and arrogant person; a know-it-all or smart aleck. WITENAGEMOT (17) [noun] (history, usually uncountable, sometimes countable) Any of several assemblies which existed in Anglo-Saxon England from the 7th to the 11th century, initially with regional jurisdiction (there being different ones in Essex, Kent, Mercia, Northumbria, Sussex and Wessex), later with national jurisdiction, made up of important noblemen. | [noun] (history) A specific session of such an assembly. WOLFRAMITES (19) WOMANLINESS (16) WOMANPOWERS (21) WONDERMENTS (17) WORDMONGERS (18) WORKAHOLISM (23) [noun] The urge of a person to work excessively. WORKMANLIKE (24) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a workman. | [adjective] Done competently but without flair. | [adjective] Performed with the skill of an artisan or craftsman. WORKMANSHIP (25) [noun] The skill of an artisan or craftsman. | [noun] The quality of something made by an artisan or craftsman. WORRISOMELY (19) XEROPHYTISM (28) XEROTHERMIC (25) YARDMASTERS (17) ZEMINDARIES (23) ZYGOMORPHIC (33) [adjective] Having bilateral symmetry

12-Letter Words (3328)

ABANDONMENTS (17) [noun] The act of abandoning, or the state of being abandoned; total desertion; relinquishment. | [noun] The voluntary leaving of a person to whom one is bound by a special relation, as a wife, husband or child; desertion. | [noun] An abandoned building or structure. ABOLISHMENTS (19) ABOLITIONISM (16) ABOMINATIONS (16) [noun] An abominable act; a disgusting vice; a despicable habit. | [noun] The feeling of extreme disgust and hatred | [noun] A state that excites detestation or abhorrence; pollution. ABRIDGEMENTS (18) [noun] The act of abridging; reduction or deprivation | [noun] The state of being abridged or lessened. | [noun] An epitome or compend, as of a book; a shortened or abridged form; an abbreviation. ABSENTEEISMS (16) ABSENTMINDED (18) [adjective] Absent in mind; often preoccupied; forgetful or careless due to distraction; easily distracted. ABSTEMIOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a manner that is abstaining from excessive eating, drinking, or indulgence; with moderation and restraint. ACADEMICALLY (22) [adverb] In an academic style or way; from an academic perspective. ACADEMICIANS (19) [noun] A member (especially a senior one) of the faculty at a college or university; an academic. | [noun] A member or follower of an academy, or society for promoting science, art, or literature, such as the French Academy, or the Royal Academy of Arts. ACADEMICISMS (21) [noun] Plural of academicism; excessive adherence to academic rules or traditions, or artistic styles that rigidly follow classical academic conventions rather than pursuing innovation or originality. ACCLAMATIONS (18) [noun] A shout of approbation, favor, or assent; eager expression of approval; loud applause. | [noun] The act of winning an election to a post because there were no other candidates. | [noun] A representation, in sculpture or on medals, of people expressing joy. ACCLIMATIONS (18) [noun] The process of becoming, or the state of being, acclimated, or habituated to a new climate; acclimatization. | [noun] The adaptation of an organism to its natural climatic environment. ACCLIMATISED (19) [verb] To get used to a new climate. | [verb] To make used to a new climate or one that is different from that which is natural; to inure or habituate to other circumstances; to adapt to the peculiarities of a foreign or strange climate. ACCLIMATISES (18) [verb] To get used to a new climate. | [verb] To make used to a new climate or one that is different from that which is natural; to inure or habituate to other circumstances; to adapt to the peculiarities of a foreign or strange climate. ACCLIMATIZED (28) [verb] To get used to a new climate. | [verb] To make used to a new climate or one that is different from that which is natural; to inure or habituate to other circumstances; to adapt to the peculiarities of a foreign or strange climate. | [adjective] Subjected to acclimatization ACCLIMATIZER (27) [noun] One who or that which acclimatizes; a device or substance used to help organisms adjust to a new climate or environment. ACCLIMATIZES (27) [verb] To get used to a new climate. | [verb] To make used to a new climate or one that is different from that which is natural; to inure or habituate to other circumstances; to adapt to the peculiarities of a foreign or strange climate. ACCOMMODATED (22) [verb] To render fit, suitable, or correspondent; to adapt. | [verb] To cause to come to agreement; to bring about harmony; to reconcile. | [verb] To provide housing for. ACCOMMODATES (21) [verb] To render fit, suitable, or correspondent; to adapt. | [verb] To cause to come to agreement; to bring about harmony; to reconcile. | [verb] To provide housing for. ACCOMMODATOR (21) [noun] A person who accommodates or makes adjustments to suit others' needs or preferences. ACCOMPANISTS (20) [noun] The performer in music who takes the accompanying part. ACCOMPANYING (24) [verb] To go with or attend as a companion or associate; to keep company with; to go along with. | [verb] To supplement with; add to. | [verb] To perform an accompanying part or parts in a composition. ACCOMPLISHED (24) [verb] To finish successfully. | [verb] To complete, as time or distance. | [verb] To execute fully; to fulfill; to complete successfully. ACCOMPLISHER (23) [noun] One who accomplishes; a person who completes or achieves something successfully. ACCOMPLISHES (23) [verb] To finish successfully. | [verb] To complete, as time or distance. | [verb] To execute fully; to fulfill; to complete successfully. ACCOUCHEMENT (23) [noun] Delivery in childbed; parturition ACCOUTERMENT (18) [noun] The act of accoutering. | [noun] An article of clothing or equipment, in particular when used as an accessory. | [noun] Apparatus needed for a task or journey. ACCOUTREMENT (18) [noun] The act of accoutering. | [noun] An article of clothing or equipment, in particular when used as an accessory. | [noun] Apparatus needed for a task or journey. ACCUMULATING (19) [verb] To heap up in a mass; to pile up; to collect or bring together (either literally or figuratively) | [verb] To grow or increase in quantity or number; to increase greatly. | [verb] To take a higher degree at the same time with a lower degree, or at a shorter interval than usual. ACCUMULATION (18) [noun] The act of amassing or gathering, as into a pile. | [noun] The process of growing into a heap or a large amount. | [noun] A mass of something piled up or collected. ACCUMULATIVE (21) [adjective] Characterized by accumulation; serving to collect or amass | [adjective] Having a propensity to amass; acquisitive. ACCUMULATORS (18) [noun] One who, or that which, accumulates. | [noun] A wet-cell storage battery. | [noun] (betting) A collective bet on successive events, with both stake and winnings being carried forward to accumulate progressively. ACHIEVEMENTS (22) [noun] The act of achieving or performing; a successful performance; accomplishment | [noun] A great or heroic deed or feat; something accomplished by valor or boldness | [noun] An escutcheon or ensign armorial; now generally applied to the funeral shield commonly called hatchment. ACHROMATISMS (21) [noun] The condition of being achromatism, referring to the absence of color or the state of being colorless. | [noun] In optics, the correction of chromatic aberration in lenses to produce images without color fringing. ACHROMATIZED (29) [verb] Made achromatic; deprived of color or rendered colorless. ACHROMATIZES (28) [verb] To make colorless or remove color from something; to deprive of chromatic qualities. ACIDIMETRIES (17) [noun] The plural of acidimetry, which is the process of determining the quantity of acid in a substance through chemical analysis or titration. ACQUIREMENTS (25) [noun] (chiefly in plural) Something that has been acquired; an attainment or accomplishment. | [noun] The act or fact of acquiring something; acquisition. ACROMEGALICS (19) [noun] Plural of acromegalic; people who have acromegaly, a disorder causing abnormal growth of hands, feet, and facial features due to excess growth hormone. ACROMEGALIES (17) [noun] Plural of acromegaly, a hormonal disorder characterized by excessive growth of the hands, feet, and facial features in adults, typically caused by a pituitary gland tumor. ACTINOMETERS (16) [noun] A device used to measure the heating power of electromagnetic radiation, especially that of solar radiation. ACTINOMETRIC (18) [adjective] Relating to the measurement of the intensity of radiation, particularly solar radiation. ACTINOMORPHY (24) [noun] The property of a flower or organism having radial symmetry, with parts arranged symmetrically around a central axis. ACTINOMYCETE (21) [noun] Any of various filamentous or rod-shaped bacteria, of the order Actinomycetales, that resemble fungi. Some actinomycetes are pathogens and some are sources of antibiotics. ACTINOMYCINS (21) [noun] Antibiotic compounds produced by actinomycete bacteria, used in cancer treatment and as research tools. ADJOURNMENTS (22) [noun] The state of being adjourned, or action of adjourning. | [noun] Ampliatio. ADJUSTMENTAL (22) ADMINISTERED (16) [verb] To cause to ingest (a drug), either by openly offering or through deceit. | [verb] To apportion out, distribute. | [verb] To manage or supervise the conduct, performance or execution of; to govern or regulate the parameters for the conduct, performance or execution of; to work in an administrative capacity. ADMINISTRANT (15) ADMINISTRATE (15) [verb] To administer | [verb] The act or function of providing maintenance and general housekeeping for computer systems, networks, peripheral equipment, etc. ADMIRABILITY (20) [noun] The quality or state of being admirable; the characteristic of being worthy of admiration. ADMONISHMENT (20) [noun] The act of admonishing; a reprimand or rebuke. ADMONITORILY (18) [adverb] In a manner that expresses warning or reproof; in an admonishing way. ADOPTIANISMS (17) [noun] The plural of adoptionism, a Christian theological doctrine holding that Jesus was adopted as the Son of God rather than being born divine. | [noun] Instances or practices of adopting this theological position. ADOPTIONISMS (17) ADRENOCHROME (20) [noun] An oxidation product of adrenaline that has been the subject of various scientific and speculative discussions regarding its properties and effects. ADUMBRATIONS (17) [noun] Faint shadows or vague suggestions of something. | [verb] Third-person singular present of adumbrate, meaning to faintly shadow forth or suggest obscurely. ADVANCEMENTS (20) [noun] The act of advancing, ; promotion to a higher place or dignity | [noun] The state of being advanced | [noun] An advance of money or value; payment in advance. ADVENTURISMS (18) [noun] Plural of adventurism; reckless or aggressive political or military action undertaken without proper consideration of consequences. AERODYNAMICS (20) [noun] The science of the dynamics of bodies moving relative to gases, especially the interaction of moving objects with the atmosphere | [noun] The aerodynamic properties of a particular object (typically a car) AEROEMBOLISM (18) [noun] The formation of gas bubbles in the blood vessels, typically caused by a rapid decrease in atmospheric pressure, as experienced by divers or aviators. | [noun] A condition resulting from the formation of nitrogen bubbles in the body tissues due to rapid decompression. AEROMAGNETIC (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to aeromagnetics AEROMEDICINE (17) [noun] The branch of medicine concerned with the physiological effects of flight and aerospace environments on the human body. AESTHETICISM (19) [noun] A doctrine which holds aesthetics or beauty as the highest ideal or most basic standard. AFFIRMATIONS (20) [noun] That which is affirmed; a declaration that something is true. | [noun] The solemn declaration made by Quakers and others incapable of taking an oath. | [noun] A form of self-forced meditation or repetition; autosuggestion. AFFIRMATIVES (23) [noun] Yes; an answer that shows agreement or acceptance. | [noun] (grammar) An answer that shows agreement or acceptance. | [noun] An assertion. AFTERMARKETS (21) [noun] The market for further goods and services, such as replacement parts and accessories, subsequent to the sale of a product such as an automobile or computer. | [noun] The industry that serves that market. | [noun] Trading activity in a security immediately following its initial offering to the public. AGGLOMERATED (17) [verb] To wind or collect into a ball; hence, to gather into a mass or anything like a mass. AGGLOMERATES (16) [verb] To wind or collect into a ball; hence, to gather into a mass or anything like a mass. AGGRIEVEMENT (19) [noun] The state of being aggrieved or wronged; a grievance or complaint. AGNOSTICISMS (17) [noun] The plural form of agnosticism, referring to multiple instances or types of the philosophical position that the existence of God or ultimate reality is unknowable or unknown. AGRARIANISMS (15) [noun] Plural of agrarianism; political or social movements advocating for the interests of farmers or the redistribution of land to agricultural workers. AGRICHEMICAL (22) [noun] A chemical compound, such as a hormone, fungicide, or insecticide, that improves the production of crops. | [noun] A compound or product derived from farmed plants. | [adjective] Relating to agrochemistry. AGROCHEMICAL (22) [noun] A chemical compound, such as a hormone, fungicide, or insecticide, that improves the production of crops. | [noun] A compound or product derived from farmed plants. | [adjective] Relating to agrochemistry. ALBUMINURIAS (16) ALCHEMICALLY (24) ALIMENTATION (14) [noun] Feeding, being fed; the provision of food and other necessities. ALKALIMETERS (18) [noun] A device used to measure alkalinity. ALLELOMORPHS (19) [noun] One of a number of alternative forms of the same gene occupying a given position, or locus, on a chromosome. ALLOMORPHISM (21) ALMIGHTINESS (18) ALPHANUMERIC (21) [noun] An alphanumeric character. | [adjective] Consisting of, or limited to, letters and/or numbers, especially the characters A to Z (lowercase and uppercase) and 0 to 9. | [adjective] Consisting of these characters plus punctuation and other special characters. AMALGAMATING (18) [verb] To merge, to combine, to blend, to join. | [verb] To make an alloy of a metal and mercury. | [verb] To combine (free groups) by identifying respective isomorphic subgroups. AMALGAMATION (17) [noun] The process of amalgamating; a mixture, merger or consolidation. | [noun] The result of amalgamating; a mixture or alloy. | [noun] The intermarriage and interbreeding of different ethnicities or races. AMALGAMATORS (17) AMATEURISHLY (20) AMAZONSTONES (23) AMBASSADRESS (17) [noun] A female ambassador. | [noun] The wife of an ambassador. AMBIDEXTROUS (24) [adjective] Having equal ability in both hands; in particular, able to write equally well with both hands. | [adjective] Equally usable by left-handed and right-handed people (as a tool or instrument). | [adjective] Practising or siding with both parties. AMBITIONLESS (16) AMBIVALENCES (21) [noun] The coexistence of opposing attitudes or feelings (such as love and hate) towards a person, object or idea. | [noun] A state of uncertainty or indecisiveness. AMBIVALENTLY (22) AMBIVERSIONS (19) AMBLYGONITES (20) AMBULATORIES (16) [noun] The round walkway encircling the altar in many cathedrals. | [noun] Any part of a building intended for walking in; a corridor. AMBULATORILY (19) AMELIORATING (15) [verb] To make better, or improve, something perceived to be in a negative condition. | [verb] To become better; improve. AMELIORATION (14) [noun] The act of making better. | [noun] An improvement. | [noun] The process by which a term gains a more positive connotation over time. AMELIORATIVE (17) AMELIORATORS (14) AMELIORATORY (17) AMENTIFEROUS (17) AMIABILITIES (16) AMICABLENESS (18) AMINOPTERINS (16) [noun] Plural of aminopterin, a synthetic compound used in biochemistry and medicine as an antimetabolite drug that inhibits dihydrofolate reductase. AMINOPYRINES (19) [noun] Plural of aminopyrine, an analgesic and antipyretic drug formerly used to reduce fever and pain. AMITOTICALLY (19) AMMONIATIONS (16) [noun] The plural of ammoniations, which are processes or instances of treating something with ammonia or ammonia compounds. AMOBARBITALS (18) [noun] Plural of amobarbital, a barbiturate drug used as a sedative and hypnotic medication. AMONTILLADOS (15) [noun] A pale, dry sherry from Montilla. AMORTIZATION (23) [noun] The reduction of loan principal over a series of payments. | [noun] The distribution of the cost of an intangible asset, such as an intellectual property right, over the projected useful life of the asset. AMOXICILLINS (23) [noun] Plural of amoxicillin, a broad-spectrum antibiotic of the penicillin type used to treat bacterial infections. AMOXYCILLINS (26) [noun] Plural of amoxycillin, a semisynthetic penicillin antibiotic used to treat bacterial infections. AMPEROMETRIC (20) [adjective] Relating to or denoting a method of electrochemical analysis that measures electric current produced by a chemical reaction. AMPHETAMINES (21) [noun] (proper) The racemic freebase of 1-phenylpropan-2-amine; an equal parts mixture of levoamphetamine and dextroamphetamine in their pure amine forms. | [noun] Any mixture of the two amphetamine enantiomers, dextroamphetamine and levoamphetamine. | [noun] Referring to a substituted amphetamine; a member of the amphetamine class of chemicals. AMPHIBIOUSLY (24) [adverb] In a manner involving or relating to amphibians, or in a way that operates both on land and in water. AMPHIBOLITES (21) [noun] Plural of amphibolite, a type of metamorphic rock composed primarily of amphibole minerals and plagioclase feldspar. AMPHIBRACHIC (28) [adjective] Relating to or consisting of amphibrachs, a metrical foot in poetry consisting of three syllables with the stress on the middle syllable. AMPHICTYONIC (26) [adjective] Relating to an amphictyony, an ancient Greek religious association or league of neighboring states united for the protection of a common sanctuary. AMPHIDIPLOID (23) [noun] An organism, especially a plant, that contains two complete diploid sets of chromosomes from two different species. AMPHISBAENAS (21) [noun] A mythical serpent having a head at each end of its body, able to move in either direction. | [noun] A member of a genus of lizards, native to the Americas, having extremities which are very similar. AMPHISBAENIC (23) AMPHITHEATER (22) [noun] An open, outdoor theatre (which may be a theatre in the round, or have a stage with seating on only one side), especially one from the classical period of ancient Greece or Rome, or a modern venue of similar design. | [noun] A natural formation of a similar shape, where a steep mountain or slope a particular rock formation forms a partial or compete bowl, especially one used as a performance space (and possibly modified by carving out seats, etc) because the slopes naturally amplify or echo sound. AMYGDALOIDAL (20) [adjective] Shaped like an almond | [adjective] Of, like or pertaining to, the amygdaloid mineral. AMYLOPECTINS (21) [noun] Polysaccharides that are the branched components of starch, consisting of glucose units linked in a helical structure and found in plants. ANACHRONISMS (19) [noun] A chronological mistake; the erroneous dating of an event, circumstance, or object. | [noun] A person or thing which seems to belong to a different time or period of time. ANAGRAMMATIC (19) [adjective] Being or relating to an anagram. ANAPLASMOSES (16) [noun] Plural of anaplasmosis, a disease in animals caused by infection with Anaplasma bacteria, transmitted by ticks and characterized by fever and anemia. ANAPLASMOSIS (16) [noun] A disease of animals caused by infection with Anaplasma bacteria, transmitted by ticks and characterized by fever and anemia. ANASTIGMATIC (17) [adjective] (of the eye, or a lens system) Free from astigmatism ANASTOMOSING (15) [verb] (of streams and rivers, blood vessels, etc) To join (two or more things) by anastomosis, to interconnect forming a network. | [verb] (of rivers, blood vessels, etc) To join by anastomosis. | [adjective] Fused together in a vein-like network; used to describe mushroom gills that are interconnected with veins. ANATHEMATIZE (26) [verb] To cause to be, or to declare as, an anathema or evil. ANATOMICALLY (19) [adverb] Pertaining to the anatomy. ANECDOTALISM (17) ANEMOMETRIES (16) [noun] Plural of anemometry; the practice or technique of measuring wind speed and direction using an anemometer. ANEMOPHILOUS (19) [adjective] Pollinated by the wind ANIMADVERTED (19) [verb] To criticise, to censure. | [verb] To consider. | [verb] To turn judicial attention (to); to criticise or punish. ANISOTROPISM (16) ANNOUNCEMENT (16) [noun] An act of announcing, or giving notice. | [noun] That which conveys what is announced. | [noun] The content which is announced. ANTECHAMBERS (21) [noun] A small room used as an entryway or reception area to a larger room. ANTEPENDIUMS (17) [noun] Plural of antependium, a decorative cloth or panel hung in front of an altar in a church. ANTHELMINTIC (19) [noun] A drug for the treatment of intestinal worm infestation, either by killing the worms or by causing them to be expelled from the body. | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) Destructive to parasitic intestinal worms. ANTIACADEMIC (19) ANTIBLACKISM (22) ANTICLIMAXES (23) [noun] A failed or reverse climax, particularly: ANTICONSUMER (16) ANTIDOGMATIC (18) ANTIECONOMIC (18) ANTIELITISMS (14) [noun] Plural of antielitism; opposition to or rejection of the principles, practices, or existence of elites or elitism. ANTIFASCISMS (19) [noun] Plural of antifascism; political ideologies and movements opposed to fascism. ANTIFEMININE (17) ANTIFEMINISM (19) [noun] Opposition to feminism or the principles and goals of the feminist movement. ANTIFEMINIST (17) [noun] A person who is antagonistic to feminism. | [noun] An advocate of antifeminism. | [adjective] Antagonistic to feminism ANTIGAMBLING (18) ANTIHUMANISM (19) ANTILEUKEMIC (20) [adjective] Acting against or used to treat leukemia. ANTIMACASSAR (16) [noun] A cover for the back or arms of a chair or sofa, originally to prevent them from being soiled by macassar oil. ANTIMAGNETIC (17) [adjective] Unable to be magnetized; unaffected by a magnetic field. ANTIMALARIAL (14) [noun] An agent that prevents or counteracts malaria. | [adjective] Preventing or counteracting malaria. ANTIMILITARY (17) ANTIMITOTICS (16) [noun] Substances or drugs that inhibit or prevent mitosis (cell division), commonly used in cancer treatment and chemotherapy. ANTIMONOPOLY (19) ANTIMOSQUITO (23) ANTINEPOTISM (16) ANTIREALISMS (14) [noun] Plural of antirealism; philosophical positions that deny the existence of or our access to certain types of entities, such as abstract objects, moral facts, or mind-independent reality. ANTIROMANTIC (16) ANTIRRHINUMS (17) [noun] Any plant of the genus Antirrhinum of snapdragons. ANTITHROMBIN (19) [noun] A protein in blood that inhibits thrombin and prevents excessive blood clotting. ANTIVITAMINS (17) ANTONOMASIAS (14) [noun] The plural of antonomasia, a literary device in which a proper name is substituted for a common noun or vice versa, or a characteristic epithet or phrase is used in place of a name. | [noun] Instances of using a title or epithet instead of a person's name, or using a person's name to represent a general characteristic or type. APOCALYPTISM (23) [noun] A belief in or expectation of an imminent catastrophic end of the world or current age. | [noun] Religious or ideological movements based on the belief in an impending apocalypse. APOCHROMATIC (23) [adjective] Relating to or denoting a lens or optical system that is corrected for chromatic aberration, producing images free from color fringing. APOMORPHINES (21) [noun] Plural of apomorphine, a dopamine agonist drug used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease and erectile dysfunction. APOTHEGMATIC (22) [adjective] Of, relating to, or resembling an apothegm; tersely and memorably expressed. APPEASEMENTS (18) [noun] The state of being appeased; the policy of giving in to demands in order to preserve the peace. APPENDECTOMY (24) [noun] The surgical procedure for the removal of the vermiform appendix. APPOINTMENTS (18) [noun] The act of appointing a person to hold an office or to have a position of trust | [noun] The state of being appointed to a service or office; an office to which one is appointed | [noun] Stipulation; agreement; the act of fixing by mutual agreement. APPRAISEMENT (18) [noun] The act or process of appraising; an appraisal or valuation. APPRESSORIUM (18) [noun] A specialized fungal structure that allows parasitic fungi to attach to and penetrate the surface of a host plant cell. APPROXIMATED (26) [verb] To estimate. | [verb] To come near to; to approach. | [verb] To carry or advance near; to cause to approach. APPROXIMATES (25) [verb] To estimate. | [verb] To come near to; to approach. | [verb] To carry or advance near; to cause to approach. ARBITRAMENTS (16) [noun] The judgement of an arbiter or arbitrator; an arbitration. ARCHDUKEDOMS (25) [noun] The plural of archdukedom; the territories or domains ruled by an archduke or archduchess. ARCHESPORIUM (21) [noun] The tissue in a plant ovule or anther from which the spore-producing cells are derived. ARITHMETICAL (19) [adjective] Relating to or based on arithmetic; involving or using numbers and basic mathematical operations. ARMAMENTARIA (16) [noun] All of the equipment available for carrying out a task, especially all the equipment used by a physician in the practice of medicine. AROMATHERAPY (22) [noun] The use of selected fragrances in lotions and inhalants in an effort to affect mood and promote health. AROMATICALLY (19) [adverb] In a manner relating to or having the qualities of aroma; with regard to aromatic properties or scent. ARRAIGNMENTS (15) [noun] The formal charging of a defendant with an offense. ARRANGEMENTS (15) [noun] The act of arranging. | [noun] The manner of being arranged. | [noun] A collection of things that have been arranged. ARSPHENAMINE (19) [noun] A phenolic amine derivative of arsenic that was used to treat syphilis (under the trade name of Salvarsan). ARTERIOGRAMS (15) [noun] Plural of arteriogram, which is an X-ray image of an artery obtained after injection of a contrast medium to visualize blood flow and detect abnormalities. ARTILLERYMAN (17) [noun] A soldier enlisted in an artillery unit or who uses artillery. ARTILLERYMEN (17) [noun] A soldier enlisted in an artillery unit or who uses artillery. ASCOMYCETOUS (21) [adjective] Of, relating to, or belonging to the Ascomycetes, a large division of fungi that produce spores in a sac-like structure called an ascus. ASPERGILLUMS (17) [noun] An implement, in the form of a brush, or of a rod with a perforated container, for sprinkling holy water; a holy water sprinkler. ASSEMBLAGIST (17) [noun] An artist who creates assemblages, which are artworks made by combining found objects or various materials into a unified composition. ASSIMILATING (15) [verb] To incorporate nutrients into the body, especially after digestion. | [verb] To incorporate or absorb (knowledge) into the mind. | [verb] To absorb (a person or people) into a community or culture. ASSIMILATION (14) [noun] The act of assimilating or the state of being assimilated. | [noun] The metabolic conversion of nutrients into tissue. | [noun] (by extension) The absorption of new ideas into an existing cognitive structure. ASSIMILATIVE (17) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by the process of assimilation, particularly the absorption and integration of new ideas, cultures, or information into an existing system or group. ASSIMILATORS (14) [noun] A person or thing which assimilates. | [noun] In algae, a filament of cells involved with photosynthesis, usually full of chloroplasts. ASSIMILATORY (17) [adjective] Relating to or promoting the process of assimilation, particularly the absorption and integration of different elements into a unified whole. ASSUAGEMENTS (15) [noun] Plural of assuagement; the act of calming, soothing, or satisfying something such as pain, anger, or a desire. ASSUMABILITY (19) [noun] The quality or state of being assumable; the capacity to be assumed or taken on, particularly in reference to a mortgage or other obligation that can be transferred to another party. ASTIGMATISMS (17) [noun] Plural of astigmatism; a refractive error of the eye in which the cornea or lens has an irregular shape, causing blurred vision at all distances. ASTONISHMENT (17) [noun] The feeling or experience of being astonished; great surprise. | [noun] Something very surprising. | [noun] Loss of physical sensation; inability to move a part of the body. ASTROCYTOMAS (19) [noun] Tumors that arise from astrocytes, a type of glial cell in the brain and spinal cord. ASTROMETRIES (14) [noun] The plural of astrometry, the branch of astronomy that deals with the measurement and study of the positions and movements of celestial bodies. ASTRONOMICAL (16) [adjective] Of or relating to astronomy. | [adjective] Very large; of vast measure. ASYMMETRICAL (21) [adjective] Not symmetrical. | [adjective] (of a question) Presenting a false dilemma, or a choice between two things which are not opposites. ASYMPTOMATIC (23) [noun] A patient who exhibits no symptoms of disease. | [adjective] Not exhibiting any symptoms of disease. ASYNCHRONISM (22) ATHEROMATOUS (17) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by atheroma, a deposit of fatty substances in artery walls. ATHLETICISMS (19) ATMOSPHERICS (21) [noun] Radio interference caused by pulses of electromagnetic radiation in the atmosphere as the result of lightning and other events (both natural and man-made) ATOMIZATIONS (23) [noun] The plural of atomization; instances or processes of reducing something into fine particles or a spray. AUDIOMETRIES (15) [noun] Plural of audiometry; the measurement of hearing ability and sensitivity to sound at different frequencies. AUGMENTATION (15) [noun] The act or process of augmenting. | [noun] A particular mark of honour, granted by the sovereign in consideration of some noble action, or by favour; and either quartered with the family arms, or on an escutcheon or canton. | [noun] A surgical procedure to enlarge a body part, as breast augmentation. AUGMENTATIVE (18) [noun] (grammar) A form of word that expresses large size, intensity, or seniority | [adjective] Growing, enlarging, increasing. AUTOEROTISMS (14) [noun] Plural of autoerotism; sexual self-stimulation or sexual gratification of oneself. AUTOIMMUNITY (19) [noun] A condition in which the immune system attacks the body's own cells and tissues, causing inflammation and disease. AUTOMATICITY (19) [noun] The quality or condition of being automatic; the ability to perform actions without conscious thought or effort. | [noun] In psychology and neuroscience, the execution of skilled behaviors that require minimal cognitive resources after sufficient practice or learning. AUTOMATIZING (24) [verb] To make or become automatic. | [verb] To cause to be automated; to automate. AUTOMOBILING (17) [verb] The act of traveling by automobile or engaging in activities related to automobiles. AUTOMOBILIST (16) [noun] A person who drives an automobile; a motorist. AUTOMOBILITY (19) AUTOMORPHISM (21) [noun] A mathematical function that maps a structure to itself while preserving its operations or relations. AUTONOMOUSLY (17) [adverb] In an autonomous or self-governing manner. AUTOTOMIZING (24) [verb] The act of an animal voluntarily shedding or detaching a body part (such as a tail or limb) as a defense mechanism or escape response. AVITAMINOSES (17) [noun] Plural of avitaminosis; diseases or conditions resulting from a deficiency of one or more vitamins in the diet. AVITAMINOSIS (17) [noun] Any disease which is caused by vitamin deficiency. AVITAMINOTIC (19) [adjective] Relating to or caused by avitaminosis; suffering from a deficiency of vitamins. AXIOMATIZING (31) [verb] To establish a set of axioms that describe or govern certain phenomena AXISYMMETRIC (28) [adjective] Exhibiting symmetry around an axis; exhibiting cylindrical symmetry. AZOOSPERMIAS (25) [noun] The plural form of azoospermia, a medical condition characterized by the absence of sperm in semen. BACHELORDOMS (22) [noun] The plural of bachelordom; the state, condition, or domain of being a bachelor or unmarried man. BACKCOURTMAN (24) BACKCOURTMEN (24) [noun] Players who operate in the backcourt area of a basketball court, typically guards responsible for ball handling and playmaking. BACKWOODSMAN (26) [noun] A person who is acclimated to living in a forest area that is far removed from civilization or modern conveniences. | [noun] An uncivilized person. | [noun] (UK politics) A Peer who is seldom present in the House of Lords of the United Kingdom Parliament, who may be encouraged to attend when a very important vote is expected. BACKWOODSMEN (26) [noun] A person who is acclimated to living in a forest area that is far removed from civilization or modern conveniences. | [noun] An uncivilized person. | [noun] (UK politics) A Peer who is seldom present in the House of Lords of the United Kingdom Parliament, who may be encouraged to attend when a very important vote is expected. BALLETOMANES (16) [noun] A ballet enthusiast. BALLETOMANIA (16) [noun] An excessive enthusiasm for or obsession with ballet. BANTAMWEIGHT (23) [noun] A weight class in boxing and other sports, intermediate between flyweight and featherweight. In boxing it ranges from 112 to 118 pounds (51 to 54 kg). | [noun] A boxer or other competitor of this weight. BARBARIANISM (18) BARNSTORMERS (16) [noun] Performers who travel from town to town staging theatrical productions or aerial stunts. | [noun] Early aviators who traveled around the country giving flying exhibitions and offering airplane rides. BARNSTORMING (17) [verb] To travel around the countryside making political speeches etc. | [verb] To appear at fairs and carnivals in exhibitions of stunt flying, sporting events, or theater. | [verb] (of a sports team) To travel from town to town performing in front of small crowds. https//web.archive.org/web/20051201203635/http://www.sportingnews.com/archives/sports2000/numbers/173540.htmlhttps//web.archive.org/web/20070505133024/http://www.hoophall.com/halloffamers/bhof-original-celtics.htmlhttps//web.archive.org/web/20070929004147/http://www.jimthorpe.org/jim_thorpe_athlete.php http//www.nytimes.com/2013/06/17/sports/soccer/to-us-soccer-team-home-field-is-a-many-changing-thing.html?_r=2 BASEMENTLESS (16) BATHYMETRIES (22) [noun] The plural of bathymetry; measurements and study of the depths and underwater topography of oceans, seas, and lakes. BATTLEMENTED (17) [adjective] Having battlements; furnished with or decorated by battlements (notched parapets on castle walls). BEACHCOMBERS (25) [noun] A seaman who is not prepared to work but hangs around port areas living off the charity of others. | [noun] Any loafer around a waterfront. | [noun] A person who collects marine salvage at the coast. BEACHCOMBING (26) [noun] The activity of searching along a beach for shells, sea glass, or other items of interest washed ashore. BEDAZZLEMENT (35) [noun] The state of being dazzled or bewildered; a condition of confusion or astonishment caused by something brilliant or overwhelming. BEDEVILMENTS (20) [noun] Plural of bedevilment; instances of being troubled, harassed, or caused great distress by something or someone. | [noun] Acts of tormenting or causing mischief. BEDIZENMENTS (26) [noun] Plural of bedizement; showy or gaudy ornaments and decorations used to embellish something. BEFUDDLEMENT (21) [noun] The state of being confused or bewildered. | [noun] Something that confuses or perplexes. BEGLAMOURING (18) BEGUILEMENTS (17) [noun] Plural of beguilement; the act of charming or enchanting someone, or the state of being delighted and entertained. | [noun] Deceptive tricks or stratagems used to mislead or deceive. BEHAVIORISMS (22) [noun] Plural of behaviorism; philosophical or psychological approaches that emphasize observable behavior rather than internal mental states or consciousness. BELITTLEMENT (16) [noun] The act of making someone or something seem less important or impressive; disparagement. | [noun] The act of treating someone in a way that shows a lack of respect. BENCHMARKING (26) [verb] To measure the performance or quality of (an item) relative to another similar item in an impartial scientific manner. | [noun] A performance measurement according to a benchmark. BENCHWARMERS (24) [noun] A player who rarely or never gets to play in the games or matches, and is most often a substitute. BEREAVEMENTS (19) [noun] The state of being bereaved; deprivation; especially the loss of a relative by death BETWEENTIMES (19) [noun] The space or time between two things; intervals or pauses. | [adverb] During the intervening time; occasionally or at intervals. BEWILDERMENT (20) [noun] The state of being bewildered. | [noun] A confusing or perplexing situation. BEWITCHMENTS (24) [noun] Plural of bewitchment; the state of being under a spell or magical influence. | [noun] Acts or instances of bewitching or enchanting someone. BIBLIOMANIAC (20) [noun] A person who has an excessive or compulsive desire to collect and possess books. BIBLIOMANIAS (18) [noun] Plural of bibliomania; an excessive enthusiasm for collecting books or a compulsive desire to accumulate books. BICAMERALISM (20) [noun] A system of government with two separate legislative chambers or houses. BILATERALISM (16) [noun] A policy or system based on mutual dealings between two parties or nations. | [noun] In linguistics, the principle or practice of having two sides or bilateral symmetry. BILINGUALISM (17) [noun] The condition of being bilingual; the ability to speak two languages. BIMETALLISMS (18) [noun] Plural of bimetallism; the use of two metals, typically gold and silver, as the standard of value for a monetary system. BIMETALLISTS (16) [noun] Advocates or supporters of bimetallism, an economic system using both gold and silver as monetary standards. BIMILLENNIAL (16) BIMODALITIES (17) [noun] The quality or state of having two modes or peaks, particularly in statistical distributions or data sets. BIOCHEMICALS (23) [noun] A chemical substance derived from a biological source BIOCHEMISTRY (24) [noun] The chemistry of those compounds that occur in living organisms, and the processes that occur in their metabolism and catabolism | [noun] The chemical characteristics of a particular living organism | [noun] The biochemical activity associated with a particular chemical or condition BIOMATERIALS (16) [noun] A nonviable, biocompatible material used in a medical device, intended to interact with biological systems or to evaluate, treat, augment, or replace any tissue, organ, or function of the body. BIOMECHANICS (23) [noun] The branch of biophysics that deals with the mechanics of the human or animal body; especially concerned with muscles and the skeleton. | [noun] The functioning of a particular part of a body. BIOMEDICINES (19) [noun] The application of biology and physiology to clinical medicine. | [noun] The branch of medicine that studies the effects of environmental stress on organisms (most often in space travel). | [noun] A medicine created with the use of living organisms. BIOMETRICIAN (18) [noun] One who practices biometrics. BIOMOLECULAR (18) [adjective] Relating to or involving molecules that are produced by living organisms or are essential to life processes. BIOMOLECULES (18) [noun] Molecules, such as amino acids, sugars, nucleic acids, proteins, polysaccharides, DNA, and RNA, that occur naturally in living organisms BIOTELEMETRY (19) [noun] The science of measuring and transmitting biological data from living organisms, typically from a distance using electronic instruments. BIRACIALISMS (18) BITUMINIZING (26) [verb] To treat with bitumen BLABBERMOUTH (23) [noun] A gossip. | [noun] A person who talks excessively. | [noun] A kind of foam-dispensing nozzle used in firefighting at airports. BLACKMAILERS (22) [noun] Someone who blackmails. BLACKMAILING (23) [verb] To extort money or favors from (a person) by exciting fears of injury other than bodily harm, such as injury to reputation, distress of mind, false accusation, etc. | [verb] (Kenya) To speak ill of someone; to defame someone. | [noun] The act of one who blackmails. BLANDISHMENT (20) [noun] Flattering speech or actions designed to persuade or influence. BLIMPISHNESS (21) [noun] The quality or state of being blimpish; characterized by conservative, reactionary, or pompous attitudes and behavior. BLITHESOMELY (22) BLOODMOBILES (19) [noun] Mobile units equipped to collect blood donations from donors at various locations. BLOODSTREAMS (17) [noun] The flow of blood through the circulatory system of a living organism. | [noun] Plural of bloodstream, referring to multiple instances or metaphorical references to blood circulation. BOHEMIANISMS (21) BOILERMAKERS (20) [noun] A person qualified to make or repair boilers. | [noun] A whiskey with a beer chaser. BOMBARDMENTS (21) [noun] The act of bombing, especially towns or cities | [noun] Heavy artillery fire | [noun] The incidence of an intense stream of high-energy particles directed at a substance BOMBINATIONS (18) [noun] A continuous deep sound or humming noise, typically made by bees or other insects. | [noun] The act of making a buzzing or droning sound. BOOMERANGING (18) [verb] To return or rebound unexpectedly, especially when the result is undesired; to backfire. | [verb] To travel in a curved path. BOTTOMLESSLY (19) [adverb] In a manner that is without bottom or limit; endlessly or infinitely. | [adverb] To an immeasurable or unfathomable degree. BRAINSTORMED (17) [verb] To investigate something, or solve a problem using brainstorming. | [verb] To participate in a brainstorming session. BRAINSTORMER (16) [noun] A person who participates in brainstorming, a creative problem-solving technique where ideas are generated freely without immediate criticism. BRINKMANSHIP (25) [noun] Pursuit of an advantage by appearing to be willing to risk a dangerous policy rather than concede a point. BROMEGRASSES (17) [noun] Plural of bromegrass, a type of perennial grass commonly used for pasture and hay in temperate regions. BROMINATIONS (16) [noun] The plural of bromination, which is the chemical process of introducing bromine atoms into an organic compound. BROMOURACILS (18) [noun] Halogenated derivatives of uracil used in molecular biology research and mutagenesis studies, known for their ability to cause mutations in DNA. BRONCHOSPASM (23) [noun] Difficulty in breathing due to a contraction of smooth muscle in the walls of the bronchi and bronchioles BROOMBALLERS (18) BRYOPHYLLUMS (27) [noun] Plural of bryophyllum, a genus of tropical succulent plants known for their ability to produce plantlets on their leaf margins. BULLMASTIFFS (22) [noun] A breed of very large mastiff originally bred to immobilize poachers. BUMBERSHOOTS (21) [noun] An umbrella, especially when erroneously seen as a stereotypically English accessory. BURGOMASTERS (17) [noun] The mayor, or head magistrate, of a town in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany and certain other countries. CABBAGEWORMS (24) [noun] Any of various lepidopterans whose larvae feed on cabbages and other cole crops. CABINETMAKER (22) [noun] A skilled woodworker who makes high-quality wooden furniture CALAMITOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a manner involving disaster or great misfortune; disastrously. CALIFORNIUMS (19) [noun] Plural of californium, a synthetic radioactive chemical element with atomic number 98. CALORIMETERS (16) [noun] An apparatus for measuring the heat generated or absorbed by either a chemical reaction, change of phase or some other physical change. CALORIMETRIC (18) [adjective] Relating to the measurement of heat or the science of calorimetry, which determines the amount of heat produced by a substance or chemical reaction. CALUMNIATING (17) [verb] To make hurtful untrue comments about. | [verb] To levy a false charge against, especially of a vague offense, with the intent to damage someone's reputation or standing. CALUMNIATION (16) CALUMNIATORS (16) [noun] Plural of calumniator; people who make false and damaging statements about others. | [noun] Those who engage in calumny or slander. CALUMNIOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a manner that involves making false and damaging statements about someone; slanderously. CAMARADERIES (17) [noun] The plural of camaraderie; a feeling of friendly trust and goodwill among people in a group or team. CAMERAPERSON (18) [noun] A person who operates a camera, especially in film or television production. CAMOUFLAGING (21) [verb] To hide or disguise something by covering it up or changing the way it looks. CAMPHORATING (22) [verb] Present participle of camphorate; to treat or impregnate with camphor. CANDELABRUMS (19) [noun] Plural of candelabrum; large branched candlesticks or light fixtures designed to hold multiple candles. CANNIBALISMS (18) [noun] The practice of eating human flesh, especially as part of cultural or ritualistic practices. | [noun] The act of a company or entity consuming or absorbing similar entities or competitors. CAPROLACTAMS (20) [noun] A cyclic amide compound formed by the polymerization of caprolactam, used in the production of nylon and other synthetic polymers. CARAMELISING (17) [verb] To convert (sugar) into caramel. | [verb] To brown (sugar) by means of heat. | [verb] To undergo this kind of conversion or browning. CARAMELIZING (26) [verb] To convert (sugar) into caramel. | [verb] To brown (sugar) by means of heat. | [verb] To undergo this kind of conversion or browning. CARMINATIVES (19) [noun] A drug or substance that induces the releasing of gas from the digestive tract CAUDILLISMOS (17) CAVALIERISMS (19) CEMENTATIONS (16) [noun] Plural of cementation, the process of cementing or bonding materials together, or in metallurgy, the process of case-hardening steel by heating it with a carbonaceous material. CEMENTITIOUS (16) [adjective] Resembling or having some properties of cement. CENTIMORGANS (17) [noun] A length of chromosome in which an average of 0.01 crossover occurs per generation. CEPHALOMETRY (24) [noun] The measurement of the skull, especially in order to study its growth and development CEREMONIALLY (19) [adverb] In a formal, ritualistic, or ceremonial manner; with ceremonial observance or formality. CHAIRMANNING (20) CHAIRMANSHIP (24) [noun] The office, or the term, of a chairman. CHAMAEPHYTES (27) [noun] Any low perennial plant whose buds overwinter just above soil level CHAMBERLAINS (21) [noun] An officer in charge of managing the household of a sovereign, especially in the United Kingdom and in Denmark. | [noun] A high officer of state, as currently with the papal camerlengo, but normally now a mainly honorary title. | [noun] An upper servant of an inn. CHAMBERMAIDS (24) [noun] A maid who handles the chores in a bedroom. CHAMPIONSHIP (26) [noun] A competition to determine a champion, especially the final of a series of competitions. | [noun] The position of champion, or winner. | [noun] Defense or support of some cause. CHARISMATICS (21) [noun] A member of the Charismatic Movement. CHARLATANISM (19) [noun] The practice of a charlatan; fraudulent or quack behavior, especially the deceptive pretense of having special knowledge or skills. CHASTISEMENT (19) [noun] Punishment or severe criticism inflicted on someone. CHAULMOOGRAS (20) [noun] A tree found in Southeast Asia, Hydnocarpus wightiana, which yields an oil that was formerly used as a treatment for leprosy. CHECKMARKING (30) CHEMIOSMOTIC (23) [adjective] Relating to the coupling of chemical reactions with the transport of ions across a membrane to produce adenosine triphosphate (ATP) in cells. CHEMISORBING (22) [verb] Present participle of chemisorb; the process of bonding a substance to a surface through chemical attraction, forming a chemical bond between the adsorbate and the surface. CHEMOSURGERY (23) [noun] A surgical technique using chemical agents to destroy tissue, especially used in the treatment of skin lesions or tumors. CHEMOTHERAPY (27) [noun] Any chemical treatment intended to be therapeutic with respect to a disease state. | [noun] (most common usage) chemical treatment to kill or halt the replication and/or spread of cancerous cells in a patient. CHEMOTROPISM (23) [noun] The directional growth or movement of an organism in response to chemical stimuli. CHIMERICALLY (24) [adverb] In a manner that is wildly fanciful, imaginary, or impossible; in the way of a chimera. CHIMICHANGAS (25) [noun] A deep-fried wet burrito CHIMNEYPIECE (26) [noun] A mantelpiece. CHIROMANCERS (21) [noun] One who practices chiromancy; a palm reader. CHIROMANCIES (21) [noun] The practice of divining the future by reading the lines and features of the human hand; palmistry. CHLORENCHYMA (27) [noun] Plant tissue composed of chlorophyll-containing cells that is specialized for photosynthesis. CHLOROFORMED (23) [verb] To treat with chloroform, or to render unconscious with chloroform. CHOIRMASTERS (19) [noun] The musical director of a choir, who conducts performances and supervises rehearsal CHONDRIOSOME (20) [noun] A mitochondrion, especially one of the granular bodies in the cytoplasm of a cell that serves as a site of energy production. CHRESTOMATHY (25) [noun] A collection of written passages, used to learn an unfamiliar language. | [noun] A collection of choice passages from an author or authors. CHRISMATIONS (19) [noun] The plural of chrismation, the Christian sacramental anointing with consecrated oil (chrism), particularly used in Eastern Orthodox and some other Christian traditions during baptism or confirmation. CHROMATICISM (23) [noun] The use of notes outside the major or minor scale of a piece of music, creating chromatic effects. | [noun] In visual art, the use of color as a primary element of composition. CHROMATICITY (24) [noun] An objective specification of the quality of a colour, regardless of its luminance. CHROMATOGRAM (22) [noun] The visual output from a chromatograph. Usually a graphical display or histogram. CHROMINANCES (21) [noun] The plural of chrominance, referring to the component of a color signal that carries color information (hue and saturation) as distinct from brightness or luminance, commonly used in color television and video technology. CHROMOCENTER (21) [noun] A densely stained region of the nucleus in cells, typically representing condensed heterochromatin or aggregated chromosomes. CHROMONEMATA (21) [noun] The plural of chromonema, referring to the individual strands or filaments of a chromosome that become visible during certain stages of cell division. CHROMOPHORES (24) [noun] That part of the molecule of a dye responsible for its colour | [noun] (more generally) the group of atoms in a molecule in which the electronic transition responsible for a given spectral band is located CHROMOPHORIC (26) [adjective] Relating to or capable of absorbing light and producing color; containing or involving a chromophore (a chemical group responsible for the color of a compound). CHROMOPLASTS (21) [noun] Any plastid in which a pigment is synthesized or stored CHROMOSPHERE (24) [noun] The faint pink extension of a star's atmospheric envelope between the corona and the photosphere CHRONOMETERS (19) [noun] A device for measuring time, such as a watch or clock. CHRONOMETRIC (21) [adjective] Relating to the measurement of time or the accuracy of timekeeping devices. CHRYSOMELIDS (23) [noun] Any leaf beetle of the family Chrysomelidae CHUMMINESSES (21) [noun] The plural of chumminess; the quality or state of being chummy (friendly and familiar in manner). CHYLOMICRONS (24) [noun] A microscopic globule of lipoprotein, found in blood and lymph, that is associated with the digestion of fats CHYMOTRYPSIN (27) [noun] An endopeptidase enzyme that cleaves peptides at the carboxyl side of tyrosine, tryptophan, and phenylalanine amino acids. CHYMOTRYPTIC (29) [adjective] Relating to or produced by chymotrypsin, a digestive enzyme that breaks down proteins in the small intestine. CINEMATHEQUE (28) [noun] A film archive with small cinemas, screening classic and art-house films. CINEMATIZING (26) [verb] To adapt or produce in the form of a motion picture; to film or make into a movie. CIRCUMCENTER (20) [noun] The point that is equidistant from all three vertices of a triangle, and is the center of the circle that passes through all three vertices. CIRCUMCIRCLE (22) [noun] A circle that passes through every vertex of a given triangle (or other polygon where possible) CIRCUMCISERS (20) [noun] Plural of circumciser; persons who perform circumcision. CIRCUMCISING (21) [verb] To surgically remove the foreskin (prepuce) from a penis (male). | [verb] (sometimes proscribed) To surgically remove the clitoris (clitoridectomy), clitoral hood, or labia (female). CIRCUMCISION (20) [noun] The surgical removal of the foreskin of the penis. | [noun] The surgical removal of the clitoral hood of the clitoris; female circumcision. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) The surgical removal of the clitoris; clitoridectomy, usually referred to as female genital mutilation CIRCUMFLEXES (28) [noun] A diacritical mark (ˆ) placed over a vowel in the orthography or transliteration of many languages to change its pronunciation; while in some other languages over a consonant. CIRCUMFLUENT (21) [adjective] Flowing round; surrounding in the manner of a fluid. CIRCUMFLUOUS (21) CIRCUMFUSING (22) [verb] To pour round; to spread round, as a fluid. | [verb] To spread round; to surround. CIRCUMFUSION (21) CIRCUMJACENT (27) [adjective] Lying or located in the area around something. CIRCUMSCRIBE (22) [verb] To draw a line around; to encircle. | [verb] To limit narrowly; to restrict. | [verb] To draw the smallest circle or higher-dimensional sphere that has (a polyhedron, polygon, etc.) in its interior. CIRCUMSTANCE (20) [noun] That which attends, or relates to, or in some way affects, a fact or event; an attendant thing or state of things. | [noun] An event; a fact; a particular incident. | [noun] Circumlocution; detail. CIRCUMVENTED (22) [verb] To avoid or get around something; to bypass | [verb] To surround or besiege | [verb] To outwit or outsmart CIRROCUMULUS (18) [noun] A principal high-level cloud type appearing as a thin, white patch of cloud without shadows, composed of very small droplets in the form of grains or ripples. The elements may be merged or separate, and more or less regularly arranged; they subtend an angle of less than 1° when observed at an angle of more than 30° above the horizon. Holes or rifts often occur in a sheet of cirrocumulus. Abbreviated Cc. CLAMMINESSES (18) [noun] The plural of clamminess; the quality or state of being clammy (cold and damp). CLEISTOGAMIC (19) [adjective] Relating to or denoting flowers that are self-pollinating and remain closed, never opening to expose their reproductive organs. CLERICALISMS (18) [noun] The plural of clericalism, referring to multiple instances or aspects of the principle of clerical influence in secular affairs, or the power and influence of the clergy in political or social matters. CLIMACTERICS (20) [noun] A critical stage or decisive point; a turning point. | [noun] A period in human life in which some great change is supposed to take place, calculated in different ways by different authorities (often identified as every seventh or ninth year). | [noun] The period of life that leads up to and follows the end of menstruation in women; the menopause. CLIMATICALLY (21) [adverb] In a manner relating to or determined by climate. CLITORECTOMY (21) [noun] Surgical removal of the clitoris, sometimes performed as a form of female genital mutilation. CLOSEMOUTHED (20) [adjective] Reticent, secretive or uncommunicative CLUMSINESSES (16) [noun] The plural form of clumsiness; instances or qualities of being clumsy or lacking grace and coordination. COCHAIRWOMAN (24) [noun] A woman who shares the position of chairperson with another person or persons. COCHAIRWOMEN (24) [noun] Plural of cochairwoman; women who share the position of chair or chairperson of a committee, organization, or event. COFFEEMAKERS (26) [noun] Any of several different types of kitchen apparatus used to brew and filter coffee. COHOMOLOGIES (20) [noun] Plural of cohomology, a mathematical concept in algebraic topology that assigns sequences of abelian groups or rings to a topological space to study its structural properties. COLLECTIVISM (21) [noun] An economic system in which the means of production and distribution are owned and controlled by the people collectively | [noun] The practice or principle of giving a group priority over each individual in it. COLLEMBOLANS (18) [noun] Small wingless arthropods of the class Collembola, commonly known as springtails, characterized by a forked tail-like appendage used for jumping. COLLEMBOLOUS (18) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of Collembola, an order of small arthropods commonly known as springtails. COLLENCHYMAS (24) [noun] Plural of collenchyma, a type of plant tissue composed of elongated cells with unevenly thickened walls that provide mechanical support in growing plant organs. COLLIMATIONS (16) [noun] The act of aligning optical or mechanical components along a common axis or line. | [noun] In astronomy, the alignment of celestial bodies in a straight line as seen from Earth. COLOGARITHMS (20) [noun] The logarithm of the reciprocal of a number, equal to the negative of the logarithm of the number itself. COLONIALISMS (16) [noun] The plural form of colonialism, referring to multiple instances or systems of colonial rule and exploitation of territories and peoples by foreign powers. COLORIMETERS (16) [noun] Any of various instruments designed to determine the color of something, by comparison with standard colors or by spectroscopy. | [noun] An analytic instrument that estimates the concentration of a substance in a sample by measuring its color against the solution's complimentary color. COLORIMETRIC (18) [adjective] Relating to the measurement of color or the determination of the concentration of a substance by comparing its color to a standard. COLUMNIATION (16) COMANAGEMENT (19) [noun] Joint management of a resource or organization by two or more parties, particularly the collaborative management of wildlife or natural resources by government agencies and indigenous peoples or other stakeholders. COMBINATIONS (18) [noun] The act of combining, the state of being combined or the result of combining. | [noun] An object formed by combining. | [noun] A sequence of numbers or letters used to open a combination lock. COMBUSTIBLES (20) [noun] A material that is capable of burning. COMELINESSES (16) [noun] The plural of comeliness, meaning the quality of being attractive or pleasing in appearance. COMEUPPANCES (22) [noun] Retribution which is justly deserved. COMFORTINGLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that gives comfort, solace, or reassurance to someone. COMICALITIES (18) [noun] The plural of comicality; humorous or amusing qualities; instances of being comic or funny. COMMANDEERED (20) [verb] To seize for military use. | [verb] To force into military service. | [verb] To take arbitrarily or by force. COMMANDERIES (19) [noun] Plural of commandery; estates or properties controlled by the military orders of knights, particularly the Knights Templar or Knights Hospitaller. | [noun] The buildings or headquarters of such military orders. COMMANDINGLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that expresses or exercises authority, control, or dominance over others. COMMANDMENTS (21) [noun] A divinely ordained command, especially one of the Ten Commandments. | [noun] Something that must be obeyed; a command or edict. | [noun] The act of commanding; exercise of authority. COMMEMORATED (21) [verb] To honour the memory of someone or something with a ceremony or object. | [verb] To serve as a memorial to someone or something. COMMEMORATES (20) [verb] To honour the memory of someone or something with a ceremony or object. | [verb] To serve as a memorial to someone or something. COMMEMORATOR (20) [noun] One who commemorates or honors the memory of a person or event. COMMENCEMENT (22) [noun] The first existence of anything; act or fact of commencing | [noun] The day when degrees are conferred by colleges and universities upon students and others. | [noun] A graduation ceremony, from a school, college or university. COMMENDATION (19) [noun] The act of commending; praise; favorable representation in words; recommendation. | [noun] That which is the ground of approbation or praise. | [noun] A message of affection or respect; compliments; greeting. COMMENDATORY (22) [noun] That which commends; a commendation; eulogy. | [adjective] Serving to commend or compliment; complimentary. | [adjective] Holding a benefice in commendam. COMMENSALISM (20) [noun] A sharing of the same environment by two organisms where one species benefits and the other is unaffected. An example is barnacles on whales. | [noun] The act of eating together; table fellowship. COMMENSURATE (18) [verb] To reduce to a common measure. | [verb] To proportionate; to adjust. | [adjective] Of a proportionate or similar measurable standard. COMMENTARIES (18) [noun] A series of comments or annotations; especially, a book of explanations or expositions on the whole or a part of some other work | [noun] (usually in the plural) a brief account of transactions or events written hastily, as if for a memorandum | [noun] An oral relation of an event, especially broadcast by television or radio, as it occurs COMMENTATING (19) [verb] To provide a commentary; to act as a commentator; to maintain a stream of comments about some event. COMMENTATORS (18) [noun] A person who comments; especially someone who is paid to give his/her opinions in the media about current affairs, sports, etc. COMMERCIALLY (23) [adverb] In a commercial manner: a manner pertaining to commerce. COMMINATIONS (18) [noun] A formal denunciation; especially one threatening divine punishment, read out in church on Ash Wednesday COMMINUTIONS (18) [noun] (waste management) The breaking or grinding up of a material to form smaller particles. | [noun] The fracture of a bone site in multiple pieces (technically, at least three); crumbling. COMMISERATED (19) [verb] To feel or express compassion or sympathy for (someone or something). | [verb] (as the phrasal verb commiserate with) To sympathize; condole. | [verb] To offer condolences jointly with; express sympathy with. COMMISERATES (18) [verb] To feel or express compassion or sympathy for (someone or something). | [verb] (as the phrasal verb commiserate with) To sympathize; condole. | [verb] To offer condolences jointly with; express sympathy with. COMMISSARIAL (18) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of a commissary or commissariat. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a commissioner or commission. COMMISSARIAT (18) [noun] A supply of food. | [noun] The department of an army that supplies provisions for the troops. | [noun] A department of the government of the Soviet Union in the early period of its existence. COMMISSARIES (18) [noun] A store primarily serving persons in an institution, most often soldiers or prisoners. | [noun] A cafeteria at a movie studio. | [noun] One to whom is committed some charge, duty, or office, by a superior power; a commissioner. COMMISSIONED (19) [verb] To send or officially charge someone or some group to do something. | [verb] To place an order for (often piece of art) | [verb] To put into active service COMMISSIONER (18) [noun] A member of a commission. | [noun] Someone commissioned to perform certain duties. | [noun] An official in charge of a government department, especially a police force. COMMITTEEMAN (20) [noun] A man who is a member of a committee | [noun] A man who is a local leader of a political party COMMITTEEMEN (20) [noun] A man who is a member of a committee | [noun] A man who is a local leader of a political party COMMODIFYING (26) [verb] To make something into a commodity, sometimes at the expense of its intrinsic value. COMMODIOUSLY (22) [adverb] In a spacious and comfortable manner; with plenty of room or space. COMMONALTIES (18) [noun] The common people; the commonality. | [noun] A group of things having similar characteristics. | [noun] A class composed of persons lacking clerical or noble rank; commoners. COMMONNESSES (18) [noun] The quality or state of being common; the plural of commonness, referring to multiple instances or aspects of being ordinary, frequent, or shared by many. COMMONPLACES (22) [noun] A platitude or cliché. | [noun] Something that is ordinary; something commonly done or occurring. | [noun] A memorandum; something to be frequently consulted or referred to. COMMONWEALTH (24) [noun] The well-being of a community. | [noun] The entirety of a (secular) society, a polity, a state. | [noun] Republic. Often capitalized, as Commonwealth. COMMUNALISMS (20) [noun] Plural of communalism; the principle of organizing society around communes or communities with shared ownership and decision-making. | [noun] Plural of communalism; emphasis on community interests over individual interests. COMMUNALISTS (18) [noun] People who advocate for or practice communalism, a system emphasizing community ownership or collective action. | [noun] Members of a community or commune. COMMUNALIZED (28) [verb] To take property into communal ownership COMMUNALIZES (27) [verb] To take property into communal ownership COMMUNICABLE (22) [adjective] (of a disease) Able to be transmitted between people or animals; contagious or catching. | [adjective] Readily communicated. | [adjective] Talkative or expansive. COMMUNICABLY (25) [adverb] In a manner that can be communicated or expressed to others. COMMUNICANTS (20) [noun] A person who receives (or is allowed to receive the elements (i.e., bread and wine) of) the sacrament of Holy Communion (compare also the terms: communion, Communion, Lord’s Supper, Mass, Eucharist, Divine Liturgy). | [noun] One who communicates. COMMUNICATED (21) [verb] To impart | [verb] To share COMMUNICATEE (20) COMMUNICATES (20) [verb] To impart | [verb] To share COMMUNICATOR (20) [noun] Someone who, or something that communicates. | [noun] Any of several electronic devices that allow people with various disabilities to communicate via displays or artificial speech. | [noun] A usually portable communications device. COMMUTATIONS (18) [noun] The exchange of one form of payment or obligation for another, typically a reduced sentence for a prisoner. | [noun] In mathematics, the property that the order of operands does not affect the result of an operation. COMPANIONATE (18) [adjective] Designating a proposed type of marriage (or other partnership) in which the partners plan to have no children and take on no legal obligations to one another. | [adjective] Friendly, companionable. | [adjective] Pertaining to a (chiefly romantic) relationship that emphasises companionship and mutual respect. COMPANIONING (19) [verb] To be a companion to; to attend on; to accompany. | [verb] To qualify as a companion; to make equal. COMPANIONWAY (24) [noun] A staircase or ladder from one deck to another on a ship COMPARATISTS (18) [noun] A person who carries out a comparative study, especially of language and literary works COMPARATIVES (21) [noun] (grammar) A construction showing a relative quality, in English usually formed by adding more or appending -er. For example, the comparative of green is greener; of evil, more evil. | [noun] (grammar) A word in the comparative form. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Data used to make a comparison. COMPARTMENTS (20) [noun] A room, or section, or chamber | [noun] One of the parts into which an area is subdivided. | [noun] Part of a protein that serves a specific function. COMPATRIOTIC (20) COMPELLATION (18) [noun] The act of compelling or forcing someone to do something. | [noun] Something that compels or drives someone to act. COMPELLINGLY (22) [adverb] In a compelling manner. COMPENSATING (19) [verb] To do (something good) after (something bad) happens | [verb] To pay or reward someone in exchange for work done or some other consideration. | [verb] To make up for; to do something in place of something else; to correct, satisfy; to reach an agreement such that the scales are literally or (metaphorically) balanced; to equalize or make even. COMPENSATION (18) [noun] The act or principle of compensating. | [noun] Something which is regarded as an equivalent; something which compensates for loss. | [noun] The extinction of debts of which two persons are reciprocally debtors by the credits of which they are reciprocally creditors; the payment of a debt by a credit of equal amount. COMPENSATIVE (21) COMPENSATORS (18) [noun] Devices or mechanisms that counterbalance or offset something to maintain equilibrium or correct for variations. | [noun] People or things that make amends or provide reparation for a loss or injury. COMPENSATORY (21) [adjective] (of a payment) Intended to recompense someone who has experienced loss, suffering, or injury. COMPETENCIES (20) [noun] A sufficient supply (of). | [noun] A sustainable income. | [noun] The ability to perform some task; competence. COMPETITIONS (18) [noun] The action of competing. | [noun] A contest for a prize or award. | [noun] The competitors in such a contest. COMPILATIONS (18) [noun] The act or process of compiling or gathering together from various sources. | [noun] That which is compiled; especially, a book or document composed of materials gathering from other books or documents. | [noun] Translation of source code into object code by a compiler. COMPLACENCES (22) [noun] Plural of complacence; a state of self-satisfied contentment or lack of concern. COMPLACENTLY (23) [adverb] In a self-satisfied manner, showing complacency or lack of concern about potential problems. COMPLAINANTS (18) [noun] The party that brings a civil lawsuit against another; the plaintiff. | [noun] An alleged victim in a criminal investigation or trial. | [noun] One who makes complaint. COMPLAISANCE (20) [noun] A disposition to please others; willingness to comply with the wishes of others. | [noun] Affability and courtesy in manner. COMPLEMENTAL (20) [adjective] Serving to complete or enhance something by providing what is lacking or missing. COMPLEMENTED (21) [verb] To complete, to bring to perfection, to make whole. | [verb] To provide what the partner lacks and lack what the partner provides, thus forming part of a whole. | [verb] To change a voltage, number, color, etc. to its complement. COMPLETENESS (18) [noun] The state or condition of being complete | [noun] The property of a logical theory that whenever a wff is valid then it must also be a theorem. Symbolically, letting T represent a theory within logic L, this can be represented as the property that whenever T \vDash \phi is true, then T \vdash \phi must also be true, for any wff φ of logic L. COMPLEXATION (25) [noun] The formation of a complex COMPLEXIFIED (29) [verb] Made complex or more complex; converted into a complex form or structure. COMPLEXIFIES (28) [verb] Makes something complex or more complicated. COMPLEXIONAL (25) [adjective] Relating to or affecting the complexion of the skin. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the overall appearance or character of something. COMPLEXIONED (26) [adjective] Having a particular complexion or skin color, often used in combination with descriptive terms (such as "dark-complexioned" or "light-complexioned"). COMPLEXITIES (25) [noun] The state of being complex; intricacy; entanglement. | [noun] That which is and renders complex; intricacy; complication. COMPLIANCIES (20) [noun] The plural of compliancy; the quality or state of being compliant or willing to comply with rules, requests, or standards. COMPLICACIES (22) [noun] Plural of complicacy; the state or quality of being complicated or intricate. | [noun] Complex or tangled circumstances or situations. COMPLICATING (21) [verb] To make complex; to modify so as to make something intricate or difficult. | [verb] To involve in a convoluted matter. COMPLICATION (20) [noun] The act or process of complicating. | [noun] The state of being complicated; intricate or confused relation of parts; complexity. | [noun] A person who doesn't fit in with the main scheme of things; an interloper. COMPLICITIES (20) [noun] Plural of complicity; the state of being involved with others in wrongdoing or illegal activity. | [noun] Instances or cases of partnership in or involvement with something reprehensible. COMPLICITOUS (20) [adjective] Complicit. COMPLIMENTED (21) [verb] To pay a compliment (to); to express a favorable opinion (of). COMPONENTIAL (18) [adjective] Relating to or composed of components; of or pertaining to individual parts or elements that make up a whole. COMPORTMENTS (20) [noun] Plural of comportment; a person's manner of bearing or conduct; deportment or behavior. COMPOSEDNESS (19) [noun] The state or quality of being calm, controlled, and self-possessed. | [noun] The act or process of composing or creating something. COMPOSITIONS (18) [noun] The act of putting together; assembly. | [noun] A mixture or compound; the result of composing. | [noun] The proportion of different parts to make a whole. COMPOUNDABLE (21) COMPREHENDED (23) [verb] To include, comprise; to contain. | [verb] To understand or grasp fully and thoroughly. | [adjective] Understood. COMPRESSEDLY (22) [adverb] In a compressed manner; in a way that is squeezed, condensed, or reduced in size or volume. COMPRESSIBLE (20) [adjective] Able to be compressed or squeezed into a smaller space or volume. COMPRESSIONS (18) [noun] An increase in density; the act of compressing, or the state of being compressed; compaction. | [noun] The cycle of an internal combustion engine during which the fuel and air mixture is compressed. | [noun] The process by which data is compressed. COMPROMISERS (20) [noun] People who settle differences by making mutual concessions. | [noun] People who compromise their principles or standards. COMPROMISING (21) [verb] To bind by mutual agreement. | [verb] To adjust and settle by mutual concessions; to compound. | [verb] To find a way between extremes. COMPTROLLERS (18) [noun] The chief accountant of a company or government. COMPULSIVELY (24) [adverb] In a compulsive manner; obsessively. COMPULSIVITY (24) [noun] The quality or state of being compulsive; an irresistible urge to perform an action repeatedly. COMPULSORILY (21) [adverb] In a compulsory manner. COMPUNCTIONS (20) [noun] Feelings of guilt or moral scruple that make one reluctant to do something. | [noun] Slight feelings of doubt or hesitation. COMPUNCTIOUS (20) [adjective] Exhibiting compunctions, scruples, feelings of guilt. COMPURGATION (19) [noun] Acquitting someone from a formal charge or accusation following the sworn oaths of a number of other people; vindication. COMPURGATORS (19) [noun] Someone who vouches for another person's innocence, trustworthiness etc. COMPUTATIONS (18) [noun] The act or process of computing; calculation; reckoning. | [noun] The result of computation; the amount computed. COMPUTERDOMS (21) [noun] The plural of computerdom, referring to the world, realm, or domain of computers and computing technology. COMPUTERESES (18) COMPUTERISED (19) [adjective] Having undergone computerisation. | [adjective] Functioning upon or through the medium of computers; digital. | [verb] To convert a manual function or system into a computer system. COMPUTERISES (18) [verb] To convert a manual function or system into a computer system. | [verb] To equip with a computer or a computer system. | [verb] To enter data into such a system. COMPUTERISTS (18) COMPUTERIZED (28) [adjective] Having undergone computerisation. | [adjective] Functioning upon or through the medium of computers; digital. | [verb] To convert a manual function or system into a computer system. COMPUTERIZES (27) [verb] To convert a manual function or system into a computer system. | [verb] To equip with a computer or a computer system. | [verb] To enter data into such a system. COMPUTERLESS (18) COMPUTERLIKE (22) COMPUTERNIKS (22) COMRADESHIPS (22) [noun] The company or friendship of others, or sharing a goal. CONCEALMENTS (18) [noun] The practice of keeping secrets. | [noun] The condition of being hidden or concealed. | [noun] Protection from observation or surveillance. CONCERNMENTS (18) [noun] The state or quality of being a concern | [noun] That in which one is concerned or interested; concern; affair; interest. | [noun] Importance; moment; consequence CONCOMITANCE (20) [noun] Occurrence or existence together or in connection with one another, coexistence | [noun] A concomitant. | [noun] The Roman Catholic doctrine of the existence of the entire body of Christ in the Eucharist, under each element, so that the body and blood are both received by communication in one kind only. CONCOMITANTS (18) [noun] Something happening or existing at the same time. | [noun] An invariant homogeneous polynomial in the coefficients of a form, a covariant variable, and a contravariant variable. CONDEMNATION (17) [noun] The act of condemning or pronouncing to be wrong | [noun] The act of judicially condemning, or adjudging guilty, unfit for use, or forfeited; the act of dooming to punishment or forfeiture. | [noun] The state of being condemned. CONDEMNATORY (20) [adjective] Serving to condemn or censure CONDOMINIUMS (19) [noun] Joint sovereignty over a territory by two or more countries. | [noun] A region or territory under such rule. | [noun] A building in which each unit is owned by an individual but the grounds, structure etc are owned jointly. CONFINEMENTS (19) [noun] The act of confining or the state of being confined. | [noun] Lying-in, time of giving birth. CONFIRMATION (19) [noun] An official indicator that things will happen as planned. | [noun] A verification that something is true or has happened. | [noun] A ceremony of sealing and conscious acknowledgement of the faith in many Christian churches, typically around the ages of 14 to 18; considered a sacrament in some churches, including Catholicism, but not in most Protestant churches. CONFIRMATORY (22) [adjective] Serving to confirm something. CONFORMANCES (21) [noun] Plural of conformance; instances of complying with or agreeing to a standard, requirement, or expectation. | [noun] In quality assurance and manufacturing, the degree to which a product or service meets specified standards or requirements. CONFORMATION (19) [noun] The act of conforming; the act of producing conformity. | [noun] The state of being conformed; agreement; hence; structure, as depending on the arrangement of parts; form; arrangement. | [noun] The spatial arrangement of a group of atoms in a molecule as a result of rotation about a covalent bond which remains unbroken. CONFORMITIES (19) [noun] Plural of conformity; instances of compliance with standards, rules, or established practices. | [noun] Instances of correspondence in form or character; similarities or agreements in nature or qualities. CONGEALMENTS (17) [noun] The act of congealing. | [noun] Something that has congealed; a clot. CONGLOMERATE (17) [noun] A cluster of heterogeneous things. | [noun] A corporation formed by the combination of several smaller corporations whose activities are unrelated to the corporation's primary activity. | [noun] A rock consisting of gravel or pebbles embedded in a matrix. CONNUBIALISM (18) CONSERVATISM (19) [noun] A political philosophy that advocates traditional values. | [noun] A risk-averse attitude or approach. CONSIGNMENTS (17) [noun] A collection of goods to be sent, in transit or having been sent | [noun] The act of consigning CONSUMERISMS (18) [noun] The plural of consumerism, referring to multiple instances or aspects of the economic and social order that encourages the acquisition of consumer goods. CONSUMERISTS (16) [noun] A proponent of consumerism. CONSUMERSHIP (21) CONSUMMATELY (21) [adverb] In a perfect or complete manner; with supreme skill or accomplishment. CONSUMMATING (19) [verb] To bring (a task, project, goal etc.) to completion; to accomplish. | [verb] To make perfect, achieve, give the finishing touch. | [verb] To make (a marriage) complete by engaging in first sexual intercourse. CONSUMMATION (18) [noun] The act of consummating, or the state of being consummated; the state of being completed; completion. | [noun] The first act of sexual intercourse in a relationship, particularly the first such act following marriage. | [noun] The achievement of perfection. CONSUMMATIVE (21) CONSUMMATORS (18) [noun] Plural of consummator; those who consummate or complete something, particularly those who complete a marriage through consummation. | [noun] Those who consume or use up resources. CONSUMMATORY (21) [adjective] Relating to or denoting an action or behavior that is an end in itself rather than a means to an end. | [adjective] Of or relating to the consummation or completion of something. CONSUMPTIONS (18) [noun] The act of eating, drinking, or using something. | [noun] A wasting disease, especially tuberculosis. | [noun] The amount of a resource used or eaten. CONSUMPTIVES (21) [noun] A person suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis. CONTAINMENTS (16) [noun] The act or process of keeping something harmful, dangerous, or unwanted under control or within limits. | [noun] Plural of containment; multiple instances or areas of restraint or restriction. CONTAMINANTS (16) [noun] That which contaminates; an impurity; foreign matter. CONTAMINATED (17) [verb] To make something dangerous or toxic by introducing impurities or foreign matter. | [verb] To soil, stain, corrupt, or infect by contact or association. | [verb] To make unfit for use by the introduction of unwholesome or undesirable elements. CONTAMINATES (16) [verb] To make something dangerous or toxic by introducing impurities or foreign matter. | [verb] To soil, stain, corrupt, or infect by contact or association. | [verb] To make unfit for use by the introduction of unwholesome or undesirable elements. CONTAMINATOR (16) [noun] One that contaminates or pollutes. | [noun] In biology, an unwanted organism or substance that makes a sample impure. CONTEMPLATED (19) [verb] To look at on all sides or in all its aspects; to view or consider with continued attention; to regard with deliberate care; to meditate on; to study, ponder, or consider. | [verb] To consider as a possibility. CONTEMPLATES (18) [verb] To look at on all sides or in all its aspects; to view or consider with continued attention; to regard with deliberate care; to meditate on; to study, ponder, or consider. | [verb] To consider as a possibility. CONTEMPLATOR (18) [noun] One who contemplates; a person engaged in deep thought or meditation. CONTEMPORARY (21) [noun] Someone or something living at the same time, or of roughly the same age as another. | [noun] Something existing at the same time. | [adjective] From the same time period, coexistent in time. CONTEMPORIZE (27) CONTEMPTIBLE (20) [adjective] Deserving contempt CONTEMPTIBLY (23) [adverb] In a manner deserving contempt; despicably or shamefully. CONTEMPTUOUS (18) [adjective] Showing contempt; expressing disdain; showing a lack of respect. CONTENTMENTS (16) [noun] Plural of contentment; states of satisfaction or peaceful happiness. CONTERMINOUS (16) [adjective] Meeting end to end or at the ends. | [adjective] Having matching boundaries; or, adjoining and sharing a boundary. | [adjective] Having the same scope, range of meaning, or extent in time. CONTROLMENTS (16) CONTUMACIOUS (18) [adjective] Contemptuous of authority; willfully disobedient; rebellious. | [adjective] Willfully disobedient to the summons or orders of a court. CONTUMELIOUS (16) [adjective] Rudely contemptuous; showing contumely; exhibiting an insolent or disdainful attitude. COPOLYMERIZE (30) [verb] To polymerize so as to form a copolymer COPPERSMITHS (23) [noun] A person who forges things out of copper. | [noun] A South Asian barbet, Psilopogon haemacephala, with crimson forehead and throat, best known for its metronomic call that has been likened to a coppersmith striking metal with a hammer. CORPORATISMS (18) [noun] Plural of corporatism, a system of organization where power is held by large interest groups or corporations, or an economic system based on corporate organization of society into groups with specific interests and responsibilities. COSMETICALLY (21) COSMETICIANS (18) [noun] A person skilled at applying cosmetics. | [noun] A person who manufactures or sells cosmetics. COSMETICIZED (28) COSMETICIZES (27) COSMOCHEMIST (23) COSMOGONICAL (19) COSMOGONISTS (17) COSMOGRAPHER (22) COSMOGRAPHIC (24) COSMOLOGICAL (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to cosmology, or to the overall structure of the universe COSMOLOGISTS (17) COSMOPOLISES (18) [noun] An important city, such as a capital city, inhabited by people from a diverse range of cultural backgrounds. COSMOPOLITAN (18) [noun] A cosmopolitan person; a cosmopolite. | [noun] A cocktail containing vodka, triple sec, lime juice and cranberry juice. | [noun] A butterfly, Vanessa cardui COSMOPOLITES (18) [noun] One who is at home in every place; a citizen of the world; a cosmopolitan person. | [noun] The butterfly painted lady (Vanessa cardui). COSTERMONGER (17) [noun] A trader who sells fruit and vegetables from a cart or barrow in the street. COTTONMOUTHS (19) [noun] An oral dryness often associated with certain medicines and recreational drugs. | [noun] A snake, Agkistrodon piscivorus, the water moccasin. | [noun] A snake, Agkistrodon contortrix mokasen, the northern copperhead. COULOMETRIES (16) COUNCILMANIC (20) COUNCILWOMAN (21) [noun] A female member of a council, especially a city council; now often replaced by gender-neutral councilor (British, councillor). COUNCILWOMEN (21) [noun] A female member of a council, especially a city council; now often replaced by gender-neutral councilor (British, councillor). COUNTERCLAIM (18) [noun] A suit filed by a defendant against a plaintiff secondary to the original complaint. | [verb] To file a counterclaim. COUNTERIMAGE (17) COUNTERMANDS (17) [verb] To revoke (a former command); to cancel or rescind by giving an order contrary to one previously given. | [verb] To recall a person or unit with such an order. | [verb] To prohibit. COUNTERMARCH (21) [noun] A march back along the same route | [verb] To march back along the same route COUNTERMEMOS (18) COUNTERMINES (16) [noun] A mine used by defenders to intercept an enemy mine or tunnel. | [noun] An underground gallery excavated to intercept and destroy the mining of an enemy. | [noun] A stratagem or plot by which another stratagem or project is defeated. COUNTERMOVED (20) COUNTERMOVES (19) [noun] A move in opposition or response to a preceding move. COUNTERMYTHS (22) COUNTRYWOMAN (22) [noun] A female compatriot | [noun] A woman who lives in the country or has retained country ways COUNTRYWOMEN (22) [noun] A female compatriot | [noun] A woman who lives in the country or has retained country ways CRANIOTOMIES (16) [noun] The surgical procedure for removing a part of the skull, called a bone flap, prior to a treatment. The bone flap is replaced at the end of the operation. CREAMINESSES (16) CREATIONISMS (16) CREMATORIUMS (18) [noun] A place where the bodies of dead people are cremated CRIMINALIZED (26) [verb] To make (something) a crime; to make illegal under criminal law; to ban. | [verb] To treat as a criminal. CRIMINALIZES (25) [verb] To make (something) a crime; to make illegal under criminal law; to ban. | [verb] To treat as a criminal. CRIMINATIONS (16) CRUMMINESSES (18) CRYPTARITHMS (24) CRYPTOGAMOUS (22) CRYPTOMERIAS (21) [noun] A Japanese cedar, Cryptomeria japonica CRYPTORCHISM (26) CULMINATIONS (16) [noun] The attainment of the highest point of altitude reached by a heavenly body; passage across the meridian; transit. | [noun] Attainment or arrival at the highest pitch of glory, power, etc. CUMBERSOMELY (23) CUMBROUSNESS (18) CUMULATIVELY (22) [adverb] In a cumulative manner. CUMULONIMBUS (20) [noun] A cloud, with a tall structure and a flat base, that is often associated with thunderstorms. CURETTEMENTS (16) CURMUDGEONLY (21) [adjective] Characteristic of a curmudgeon; churlish CURRYCOMBING (24) CURTAILMENTS (16) [noun] The act of curtailing CUSTOMHOUSES (19) [noun] An official building, in a port, where customs are collected and shipping is cleared for entry and exit CUSTOMSHOUSE (19) [noun] An official building, in a port, where customs are collected and shipping is cleared for entry and exit CYCLOTHYMIAS (27) CYPRIPEDIUMS (24) [noun] Any member of the orchid genus Cypripedium. CYTOCHEMICAL (26) CYTOMEMBRANE (23) CYTOTAXONOMY (29) DAMNABLENESS (17) DAMSELFISHES (21) [noun] Any of a number of fish in the Pomacentridae family. DAYDREAMLIKE (23) DEAMINATIONS (15) DEBOUCHMENTS (22) DEBRIDEMENTS (18) [noun] The removal of dead, damaged, or infected tissue to improve the healing potential of the remaining healthy tissue. | [noun] The removal of the dental tartar that has accumulated over teeth, typically done using hand tools and ultrasound instruments. DECALCOMANIA (19) [noun] The process of transferring decorative designs onto surfaces using decals. | [noun] A decal. DECEMVIRATES (20) DECIMALIZING (27) [verb] : To convert to the decimal system. DECIPHERMENT (22) DECLAMATIONS (17) [noun] The act or art of declaiming; rhetorical delivery; loud speaking in public. | [noun] A set or harangue; declamatory discourse. | [noun] Pretentious rhetorical display, with more sound than sense. DECOMMISSION (19) [verb] To take out of service or to render unusable. | [verb] To remove or revoke a commission. | [verb] To remove or revoke a formal designation. DECOMPENSATE (19) DECOMPOSABLE (21) DECOMPRESSED (20) [verb] To relieve the pressure or compression on something. | [verb] To bring someone (such as a diver) back to normal atmospheric pressure after being exposed to high pressure. | [verb] To restore (compressed data) to its original form. DECOMPRESSES (19) [verb] To relieve the pressure or compression on something. | [verb] To bring someone (such as a diver) back to normal atmospheric pressure after being exposed to high pressure. | [verb] To restore (compressed data) to its original form. DEFEMINIZING (28) [verb] To lose, or to remove feminine characteristics or qualities DEFORCEMENTS (20) DEFORMALIZED (28) DEFORMALIZES (27) DEFORMATIONS (18) [noun] The act of deforming, or state of being deformed. | [noun] A transformation; change of shape. DEGLAMORIZED (26) [verb] To make less glamorous DEGLAMORIZES (25) [verb] To make less glamorous DEHUMANIZING (28) [verb] To take away humanity; to remove or deny human qualities, characteristics, or attributes; to impersonalize. DEHUMIDIFIED (23) [verb] To reduce the moisture in a body of air; to lower the humidity. DEHUMIDIFIER (22) [noun] A device for removing the moisture content from air DEHUMIDIFIES (22) [verb] To reduce the moisture in a body of air; to lower the humidity. DELAMINATING (16) [verb] To cause (something assembled by lamination) to come apart into the layers that make it up. | [verb] To come apart into its component layers. DELAMINATION (15) DELIMITATION (15) [noun] The act of delimiting something. | [noun] A limit or boundary. DEMAGNETIZED (26) [verb] To make something nonmagnetic by removing its magnetic properties. | [verb] To erase the contents of a magnetic storage device. | [adjective] From which all magnetism has been removed. DEMAGNETIZER (25) DEMAGNETIZES (25) [verb] To make something nonmagnetic by removing its magnetic properties. | [verb] To erase the contents of a magnetic storage device. DEMARCATIONS (17) [noun] The act of marking off a boundary or setting a limit, notably by belligerents signing a treaty or ceasefire. | [noun] A limit thus fixed, in full demarcation line. | [noun] Any strictly defined separation. DEMENTEDNESS (16) DEMILITARIZE (24) [verb] To remove troops from an area. | [verb] To prevent troops from entering an area. | [verb] To return an area to civilian control. DEMIMONDAINE (18) [noun] A sexually promiscuous woman (of the demimonde) DEMINERALIZE (24) [verb] To remove minerals or mineral salts from (a liquid). DEMOBILIZING (27) [verb] To release someone from military duty, especially after a war. | [verb] To disband troops, or remove them from a war footing. DEMOCRATIZED (27) [verb] To make democratic. DEMOCRATIZER (26) DEMOCRATIZES (26) [verb] To make democratic. DEMODULATING (17) [verb] To reverse modulate, undo the effects of modulation. DEMODULATION (16) DEMODULATORS (16) DEMOGRAPHERS (21) [noun] A person who studies demography DEMOGRAPHICS (23) [noun] The characteristics of human populations for purposes of social studies. DEMOGRAPHIES (21) DEMOLISHMENT (20) DEMONETIZING (25) [verb] To withdraw the status of legal tender from a coin (etc.) and remove it from circulation. | [verb] To declare ineligible or worthless as a medium of exchange or as legal tender. | [verb] To demote (published content, or its creator) so that it is no longer eligible to earn money for its publisher. DEMONIACALLY (20) DEMONIZATION (24) [noun] The act of demonizing. | [noun] Something demonized. DEMONOLOGIES (16) [noun] The study of demons, especially the incantations required to summon and control them. DEMONOLOGIST (16) DEMONSTRABLE (17) [noun] Something that can be demonstrated. | [adjective] Able to be demonstrated. DEMONSTRABLY (20) [adverb] In such a manner as to be capable of being demonstrated, shown or proved. DEMONSTRATED (16) [verb] To show how to use (something). | [verb] To show the steps taken to create a logical argument or equation. | [verb] To participate in or organize a demonstration. DEMONSTRATES (15) [verb] To show how to use (something). | [verb] To show the steps taken to create a logical argument or equation. | [verb] To participate in or organize a demonstration. DEMONSTRATOR (15) [noun] One who demonstrates anything, or proves beyond doubt. | [noun] The forefinger. | [noun] One who takes part in a demonstration; a protester. DEMORALIZERS (24) DEMORALIZING (25) [verb] To destroy the morale of; to dishearten. | [adjective] Disheartening. DEMURENESSES (15) DEMYSTIFYING (25) [verb] To remove the mystery from something; to explain or clarify. DENOMINATING (16) [verb] To name; to designate. | [verb] To express in a monetary unit. DENOMINATION (15) [noun] The act of naming or designating. | [noun] That by which anything is denominated or styled; an epithet; a name, designation, or title; especially, a general name indicating a class of like individuals | [noun] A class, or society of individuals, called by the same name; a sect or religious subgroup. DENOMINATIVE (18) [noun] A word, often a verb, that is derived from a noun or adjective. | [adjective] Being a name. | [adjective] Possessing, or capable of possessing, a distinct denomination or designation; denominable. DENOMINATORS (15) [noun] The number or expression written below the line in a fraction (such as 2 in ½). | [noun] One who gives a name to something. DENOUNCEMENT (17) DENSITOMETER (15) [noun] A device that measures the optical density of a material. | [noun] A device that measures the specific gravity of a substance; a densimeter. DENSITOMETRY (18) DEPARTMENTAL (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a department. DEPOLYMERIZE (29) [verb] To decompose a polymer into smaller fragments. DEPRAVEMENTS (20) DEPROGRAMING (19) [verb] To counteract the effects of previous programming or brainwashing, especially in an attempt to persuade (a person) to abandon allegiance to a cult. DEPROGRAMMED (21) [verb] To counteract the effects of previous programming or brainwashing, especially in an attempt to persuade (a person) to abandon allegiance to a cult. DEPROGRAMMER (20) DERANGEMENTS (16) DERMABRASION (17) [noun] A cosmetic medical procedure in which the surface of the epidermis of the skin is removed by abrasion, typically to remove scarring or sun-damaged skin. DERMATITISES (15) DERMATOLOGIC (18) DERMATOPHYTE (23) [noun] Any parasitic fungus (mycosis) that infects the skin (tinea, ringworm, jock itch, athlete's foot). DESIPRAMINES (17) DESPISEMENTS (17) DESPOILMENTS (17) DESQUAMATING (25) [verb] To shed or peel. DESQUAMATION (24) DETERMINABLE (17) [noun] An attribute of something that is susceptible of determination into various states | [adjective] Able to be determined or limited | [adjective] Able to be decided or settled by law DETERMINABLY (20) DETERMINANTS (15) [noun] A determining factor; an element that determines the nature of something. | [noun] A scalar that encodes certain characteristics of a given transformation matrix; the unique scalar function over square matrices which is distributive over matrix multiplication, multilinear in the rows and columns, and takes the value 1 for the unit matrix; abbreviated as: det. | [noun] A substance that causes a cell to adopt a particular fate. DETERMINATOR (15) DETERMINEDLY (19) [adverb] In a determined manner. DETERMINISMS (17) DETERMINISTS (15) DETHRONEMENT (18) DETRAINMENTS (15) DETRIMENTALS (15) DETUMESCENCE (19) [noun] The act of subsiding from a swollen state, especially the relaxation of an erect penis. DEUTEROSTOME (15) DEVELOPMENTS (20) [noun] The process of developing; growth, directed change. | [noun] The process by which a mature multicellular organism or part of an organism is produced by the addition of new cells. | [noun] Something which has developed. DEVIATIONISM (18) DIAGRAMMABLE (20) DIAGRAMMATIC (20) [adjective] In the form of a diagram. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a diagram or to diagrammatics. DIAMAGNETISM (18) DIAMONDBACKS (24) [noun] (common name) Either of two species of rattlesnake having a diamond pattern on the back: Crotalus adamanteus, found in the southeastern United States, and Crotalus atrox, found in the southwestern United States and northwestern and central Mexico. | [noun] The saltmarsh terrapin of the Atlantic coast (Malacoclemmys palustris). DIASTEREOMER (15) DIASTROPHISM (20) DIATOMACEOUS (17) DICHOTOMISTS (20) DICHOTOMIZED (30) [verb] To separate into two parts or classifications. | [verb] To be divided into two. | [verb] To exhibit as a half disk. DICHOTOMIZES (29) [verb] To separate into two parts or classifications. | [verb] To be divided into two. | [verb] To exhibit as a half disk. DICHROMATISM (22) [noun] The condition of being dichromatic | [noun] A form of colourblindness in which only two of the three primary colours can be distinguished | [noun] The condition when male and female birds have different plumage colors. DIDACTICISMS (20) DIFFUSIONISM (21) DILATOMETERS (15) DILATOMETRIC (17) DILETTANTISM (15) DIMENSIONING (16) [verb] To mark, cut or shape something to specified dimensions. DIMERCAPROLS (19) DIMERIZATION (24) DIMINISHABLE (20) DIMINISHMENT (20) DIMINUTIVELY (21) DIPLOMATISTS (17) [noun] A diplomat DIPSOMANIACS (19) DISABLEMENTS (17) DISACCUSTOMS (19) DISAFFIRMING (22) [verb] To deny, contradict or repudiate DISAGREEMENT (16) [noun] An argument or debate. | [noun] A condition of not agreeing or concurring. DISAMBIGUATE (18) [verb] To remove ambiguities from; to make less ambiguous; to clarify or specify which of multiple possibilities, e.g. possible meanings of an ambiguous statement, applies, or to invite or require this. | [verb] To distinguish one word or lexical unit (from a different one which has a similar form). DISARMAMENTS (17) DISASSEMBLED (18) [verb] To take to pieces; to reverse the process of assembly. | [verb] To convert machine code to a human-readable, mnemonic form. DISASSEMBLES (17) [verb] To take to pieces; to reverse the process of assembly. | [verb] To convert machine code to a human-readable, mnemonic form. DISBANDMENTS (18) [noun] The act of disbanding DISBURSEMENT (17) [noun] The act, instance, or process of disbursing. | [noun] Money paid out or spent. DISCERNMENTS (17) DISCLAMATION (17) DISCOMFITING (21) [verb] To defeat completely; to rout. | [verb] To defeat the plans or hopes of; to frustrate; disconcert. | [verb] To embarrass greatly; to confuse; to perplex; to disconcert. DISCOMFITURE (20) [noun] A feeling of frustration, disappointment, perplexity or embarrassment. DISCOMFORTED (21) [verb] To cause annoyance or distress to. | [verb] To discourage; to deject. DISCOMMENDED (21) DISCOMMODING (21) [verb] To cause inconvenience to (someone). DISCOMPOSING (20) [verb] To destroy the composure of; to disturb or agitate. | [verb] To disarrange, or throw into a state of disorder. | [adjective] Unsettling; tending to discompose DISCOMPOSURE (19) [noun] The state of being discomposed. | [noun] Discordance; disagreement of parts. DISCONFIRMED (21) [verb] To establish the falsity of a claim or belief; to show or to tend to show that a theory or hypothesis is not valid. DISCRIMINANT (17) [noun] An expression that gives information about the roots of a polynomial; for example, the expression D = b2 - 4ac determines whether the roots of the quadratic equation ax2 + bx + c = 0 are real and distinct (D > 0), real and equal (D = 0) or complex (D < 0). | [noun] The invariant (on the vector space of forms of degree d in n variables) that vanishes exactly when the corresponding hypersurface in Pn-1 is singular. | [adjective] Serving to discriminate. DISCRIMINATE (17) [verb] To make distinctions. | [verb] (construed with against) To make decisions based on prejudice. | [verb] To set apart as being different; to mark as different; to separate from another by discerning differences; to distinguish. DISECONOMIES (17) [noun] A financial drawback or cost arising from a process DISEMBARKING (22) [verb] To remove from on board a vessel; to put on shore | [verb] To go ashore out of a ship or boat; to leave a train or airplane | [noun] A disembarkation. DISEMBARRASS (17) [verb] To get (someone) out of a difficult or embarrassing situation; to free (someone) from the embarrassment (of a situation); to relieve (someone of a burden, item of clothing, etc.) (often used reflexively). | [verb] To free (something) from complication. | [verb] To disentangle (two things); to distinguish. DISEMBODYING (22) [verb] To cause someone's soul, spirit, consciousness, voice, etc, to become separated from the physical body. | [verb] To separate (a part of the body) from the body. | [verb] To discharge from military service or array. DISEMBOGUING (19) [verb] To come out into the open sea from a river etc. | [verb] (of a river or waters) To pour out, to debouch; to flow out through a narrow opening into a larger space. DISEMBOWELED (21) [verb] To take or let out the bowels or interior parts of; to eviscerate. | [verb] To take or draw from the body, as the web of a spider. DISENCUMBERS (19) [verb] To remove an encumbrance or burden from (someone or something). DISENDOWMENT (19) DISESTEEMING (16) [verb] To hold little or no esteem for; to consider worthless. DISGUISEMENT (16) [noun] Disguise (deceptive appearance) DISHARMONIES (18) DISHARMONIZE (27) DISINTERMENT (15) DISLODGEMENT (17) DISLODGMENTS (17) DISMALNESSES (15) DISMEMBERING (20) [verb] To remove the limbs of. | [verb] To cut or otherwise divide something into pieces. | [noun] The act or process whereby something is dismembered. DISMISSIVELY (21) [adverb] In a dismissive manner DISPLACEMENT (19) [noun] The act of displacing, or the state of being displaced; a putting out of place. | [noun] The quantity of a liquid displaced by a floating body, as water by a ship, the weight of the displaced liquid being equal to that of the displacing body. | [noun] The process of extracting soluble substances from organic material and the like, whereby a quantity of saturated solvent is displaced, or removed, for another quantity of the solvent. DISPORTMENTS (17) DISREMEMBERS (19) [verb] To fail to remember; to forget. DISSEMINATED (16) [verb] To sow and scatter principles, ideas, opinions, etc, or concrete things, for growth and propagation, like seeds. | [verb] To become widespread. | [adjective] Spread around; widespread DISSEMINATES (15) [verb] To sow and scatter principles, ideas, opinions, etc, or concrete things, for growth and propagation, like seeds. | [verb] To become widespread. DISSEMINATOR (15) DISSEMINULES (15) [noun] A seed fruit that has been modified for migration. DISSEPIMENTS (17) [noun] Partition (in an organ); septum DISSEVERMENT (18) DISSIMILARLY (18) DISSIMILATED (16) [verb] To make dissimilar or unlike. | [verb] To become dissimilar or unlike. DISSIMILATES (15) [verb] To make dissimilar or unlike. | [verb] To become dissimilar or unlike. DISSIMULATED (16) [verb] To practise deception by concealment or omission, or by feigning a false appearance. | [verb] To disguise or hide by adopting a false appearance. | [verb] To connive at; to wink at; to pretend not to notice. DISSIMULATES (15) [verb] To practise deception by concealment or omission, or by feigning a false appearance. | [verb] To disguise or hide by adopting a false appearance. | [verb] To connive at; to wink at; to pretend not to notice. DISSIMULATOR (15) DISSYMMETRIC (22) DISTEMPERATE (17) DISTEMPERING (18) [verb] To temper or mix unduly; to make disproportionate; to change the due proportions of. | [verb] To derange the functions of, whether bodily, mental, or spiritual; to disorder; to disease. | [verb] To deprive of temper or moderation; to disturb; to ruffle; to make disaffected, ill-humoured, or malignant. DIVERTICULUM (20) [noun] A small out-pouching of an organ wall such as the large intestine or urinary bladder. DIVERTIMENTI (18) [noun] Composition that has several short movements, a style that composers started to use in the 18th century. DIVERTIMENTO (18) [noun] Composition that has several short movements, a style that composers started to use in the 18th century. DIVISIONISMS (18) DIVORCEMENTS (20) DOCUMENTABLE (19) DOGMATICALLY (21) DOLOMITIZING (25) DOMESTICALLY (20) [adverb] In a domestic manner | [adverb] At home, playing in one's home ground DOMESTICATED (18) [verb] To make domestic. | [verb] To make fit for domestic life. | [verb] To adapt to live with humans. DOMESTICATES (17) [noun] An animal or plant that has been domesticated. DOMICILIATED (18) DOMICILIATES (17) DOMINATRICES (17) [noun] A dominating woman; a female dominator. | [noun] A dominant female in sadomasochistic practices. DOPAMINERGIC (20) [noun] Any substance that affects the production of dopamine | [adjective] Containing, involving, or transmitting dopamine. | [adjective] Of or relating to dopamine. DRAMATICALLY (20) [adverb] In a dramatic manner. DRAMATIZABLE (26) DRAMATURGIES (16) DREAMFULNESS (18) DREAMINESSES (15) DRESSMAKINGS (20) DRILLMASTERS (15) DRUMBEATINGS (18) DUMBFOUNDERS (21) DUMBFOUNDING (22) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. DUMORTIERITE (15) [noun] A fibrous aluminium boro-silicate mineral that occurs in various colours. DYNAMOMETERS (20) [noun] Any of various devices used to measure mechanical power, force, or torque. DYNAMOMETRIC (22) DYSMENORRHEA (21) [noun] Painful menstruation. DYSPHEMISTIC (25) DYSRHYTHMIAS (27) [noun] A disturbance to an otherwise normal biological rhythm (especially that of the heart). EARTHMOVINGS (21) ECLECTICISMS (20) ECOFEMINISMS (21) ECOFEMINISTS (19) ECONOMETRICS (18) [noun] The branch of economics that applies statistical methods to the empirical study of economic theories and relationships. ECONOMETRIST (16) ECONOMICALLY (21) [adverb] (manner) In an economical manner; not wastefully; not extravagantly | [adverb] (domain) From the perspective of economics or an economy. | [adverb] According to divine economy. ECOTERRORISM (16) [noun] Terrorism with an ecological motive, such as attacks against corporations perceived to be harming the natural environment. ECUMENICALLY (21) ECUMENICISMS (20) ECUMENICISTS (18) EDUTAINMENTS (15) EFFEMINACIES (22) EGOCENTRISMS (17) EINSTEINIUMS (14) ELASMOBRANCH (21) [noun] Any of many cartilaginous fish of the subclass Elasmobranchii. ELECTROFORMS (19) ELECTROGRAMS (17) ELECTROMETER (16) [noun] A device used to detect and measure static electricity; an electroscope. | [noun] A precision voltmeter that draws almost no current from the circuit. ELEEMOSYNARY (20) [noun] A beggar | [adjective] Relating to charity, alms, or almsgiving. | [adjective] Given in charity or alms; having the nature of alms ELEMENTARILY (17) ELIMINATIONS (14) [noun] The act of eliminating, expelling or throwing off. | [noun] The act of excluding a losing contestant from a match, tournament, or other competition. | [noun] The act of voting off or throwing off a contestant in a reality television competition. EMANCIPATING (19) [verb] To set free from the power of another; to liberate; as: | [verb] To free from any controlling influence, especially from anything which exerts undue or evil influence EMANCIPATION (18) [noun] The act of setting free from the power of another, as from slavery, subjection, dependence, or controlling influence. | [noun] The state of being thus set free; liberation (used, for example, of slaves from bondage, of a person from prejudices, of the mind from superstition, of a nation from tyranny or subjugation). EMANCIPATORS (18) EMARGINATION (15) EMASCULATING (17) [verb] To deprive of virile or procreative power; to castrate, to geld. | [verb] To deprive of masculine vigor or spirit; to weaken; to render effeminate; to vitiate by unmanly softness. | [verb] Of a flower: to deprive of the anthers. EMASCULATION (16) EMASCULATORS (16) EMBARCADEROS (19) EMBARKATIONS (20) EMBARRASSING (17) [verb] To humiliate; to disrupt somebody's composure or comfort with acting publicly or freely; to disconcert; to abash | [verb] To hinder from liberty of movement; to impede; to obstruct. | [verb] To involve in difficulties concerning money matters; to encumber with debt; to beset with urgent claims or demands. EMBATTLEMENT (18) EMBELLISHERS (19) EMBELLISHING (20) [verb] To make more beautiful and attractive; to decorate. | [verb] To make something sound or look better or more acceptable than it is in reality; to distort, to embroider. | [noun] An embellishment. EMBEZZLEMENT (36) [noun] The fraudulent conversion of property from a property owner. EMBITTERMENT (18) EMBLAZONMENT (27) EMBLAZONRIES (25) EMBLEMATICAL (20) EMBLEMATIZED (28) [verb] To stand as an emblem for; to represent. EMBLEMATIZES (27) [verb] To stand as an emblem for; to represent. EMBOLIZATION (25) [noun] A nonsurgical, minimally invasive procedure that effects the selective occlusion of blood vessels by purposely introducing emboli. EMBRACEMENTS (20) EMBROCATIONS (18) [noun] The act of moistening and rubbing a diseased part with spirit, oil, etc. | [noun] The liquid or lotion with which an affected part is rubbed. EMBROIDERERS (17) EMBROIDERIES (17) [noun] The ornamentation of fabric using needlework. | [noun] A piece of embroidered fabric. | [noun] The elaboration of an account etc. with details, especially when fictitious. EMBROIDERING (18) [verb] To stitch a decorative design on fabric with needle and thread of various colours. | [verb] To add imaginary detail to a narrative to make it more interesting or acceptable. | [noun] An embroidered decoration. EMBROILMENTS (18) EMBRYOGENIES (20) EMBRYOLOGIES (20) EMBRYOLOGIST (20) EMBRYOPHYTES (27) EMISSIVITIES (17) EMMENAGOGUES (18) [noun] An herb that stimulates blood flow in the pelvic area and uterus, causing menstruation. EMOTIONALISM (16) EMOTIONALIST (14) EMOTIONALITY (17) EMOTIONALIZE (23) [verb] To give something an emotional quality. | [verb] To make an emotional display. EMPATHICALLY (24) EMPERORSHIPS (21) EMPHATICALLY (24) [adverb] In an emphatic manner; with emphasis. | [adverb] Not really, but apparently. EMPLACEMENTS (20) [noun] An installation that houses a military weapon. | [noun] A place where a thing is located; the act of placing something somewhere. | [noun] The inclusion of igneous rock in older rocks, or the development or localization of an ore body in older rocks. The latter is referred to as ore deposition. EMPOISONMENT (18) EMPOWERMENTS (21) [noun] The achievement of political, social or economic power by an individual or group. | [noun] The process of supporting another person or persons to discover and claim personal power. | [noun] The state of being empowered (either generally, or specifically). EMPRESSEMENT (18) [noun] Animated cordiality; friendliness, enthusiasm. EMULSIFIABLE (19) ENANTIOMERIC (16) ENANTIOMORPH (19) [noun] A mirror image, a form related to another as an object is to its image in a mirror. | [noun] Either of a pair of crystals that are mirror images of each other, and are optically active. | [noun] A similar molecule or compound; an enantiomer. ENCHAINMENTS (19) ENCHANTMENTS (19) [noun] The act of enchanting or the feeling of being enchanted. | [noun] Something that enchants; a magical spell. ENCIPHERMENT (21) ENCIRCLEMENT (18) ENCOMPASSING (19) [verb] To form a circle around; to encircle. | [verb] To include within its scope; to circumscribe or go round so as to surround; to enclose; to contain. | [verb] To include completely; to describe fully or comprehensively. ENCRIMSONING (17) ENCROACHMENT (21) [noun] An entry into a place or area that was previously uncommon; an advance beyond former borders; intrusion; incursion. | [noun] An intrusion upon another's possessions or rights; infringement. | [noun] That which is gained by such unlawful intrusion. ENCUMBRANCER (20) ENCUMBRANCES (20) [noun] Something that encumbers; a burden that must be carried. | [noun] An interest, right, burden, or liability attached to a title of land, such as a lien or mortgage. | [noun] One who is dependent on another. ENDANGERMENT (16) [noun] The act of putting someone into danger, or the condition of being in danger. | [noun] The exposure of someone, especially a child, to danger or harm. ENDEMICITIES (17) ENDODERMISES (16) ENDOMETRITIS (15) [noun] Inflammation of the endometrium ENDOMORPHIES (20) ENDOMORPHISM (22) ENDORSEMENTS (15) [noun] The act or quality of endorsing | [noun] An amendment or annotation to an insurance contract or other official document (such as a driving licence). | [noun] An instructor's signed acknowledgement of time practising specific flying skills. ENDOSYMBIONT (20) ENDOTHELIOMA (18) ENDOTHERMIES (18) ENFEEBLEMENT (19) ENFEOFFMENTS (23) ENFORCEMENTS (19) [noun] The act of enforcing; compulsion. | [noun] A giving force to; a putting in execution. | [noun] That which enforces, constraints, gives force, authority, or effect to; constraint; force applied. ENFRAMEMENTS (19) ENGORGEMENTS (16) ENGRAFTMENTS (18) ENGROSSMENTS (15) [noun] The state of being engrossed; concentration or preoccupation. | [noun] The fact or instance of writing in a legal document. ENHANCEMENTS (19) [noun] Improvement. | [noun] (radiology) The degree to which the image of a scan stands out as a bright area. ENJAMBEMENTS (25) [noun] A technique in poetry whereby a sentence is carried over to the next line without pause. ENLARGEMENTS (15) [noun] The act of making something larger. | [noun] A making more obvious or serious; exacerbation. | [noun] An image, particularly a photograph, that has been enlarged. ENNOBLEMENTS (16) ENORMOUSNESS (14) ENSHRINEMENT (17) ENSLAVEMENTS (17) [noun] The act of enslaving or the state of being a slave; bondage ENTANGLEMENT (15) [noun] The state of being entangled; intricate and confused involution. | [noun] That which entangles; intricacy; perplexity. | [noun] An obstruction placed in front or on the flank of a fortification, to impede an enemy's approach. ENTEROSTOMAL (14) ENTHRALLMENT (17) [noun] The act of enthralling or the state of being enthralled ENTHRONEMENT (17) ENTITLEMENTS (14) [noun] The right to have something, whether actual or perceived. | [noun] Power, authority to do something. | [noun] Something that one is entitled to. ENTOMOFAUNAE (17) ENTOMOFAUNAS (17) ENTOMOLOGIES (15) ENTOMOLOGIST (15) [noun] A scientist who studies insects. ENTRAINMENTS (14) ENTRANCEMENT (16) ENTREATMENTS (14) ENTRENCHMENT (19) [noun] The process of entrenching or something which entrenches | [noun] A fortification constructed of trenches ENTRUSTMENTS (14) ENUMERATIONS (14) [noun] The act of enumerating, making separate mention, or recounting. | [noun] A detailed account, in which each thing is specially noticed. | [noun] A recapitulation, in the peroration, of the heads of an argument. ENVELOPMENTS (19) ENVIRONMENTS (17) [noun] The surroundings of, and influences on, a particular item of interest. | [noun] The natural world or ecosystem. | [noun] All the elements that affect a system or its inputs and outputs. ENZYMOLOGIES (27) ENZYMOLOGIST (27) EPHEMERALITY (22) EPICUREANISM (18) EPIDEMICALLY (22) EPIDEMIOLOGY (21) [noun] The branch of science dealing with the spread and control of diseases, viruses, concepts etc. throughout populations or systems. | [noun] The epidemiological body of knowledge about a particular thing. EPIDIDYMIDES (22) [noun] A narrow, tightly-coiled tube connecting the efferent ducts from the rear of each testicle to its vas deferens, where sperm are stored during maturation. EPIDIDYMITIS (21) EPIGRAMMATIC (21) [adjective] Having the characteristics of an epigram | [adjective] Containing or using epigrams EPILEPTIFORM (21) EPIPHENOMENA (21) [noun] A symptom that develops during the course of a disease that is not connected to the disease. | [noun] A mental state or process that is an incidental byproduct of physiological events in the brain or nervous system. | [noun] Any state, process, or other activity that is the result of another, a consequence. EPISIOTOMIES (16) [noun] A surgical incision through the perineum made to enlarge the vagina and assist childbirth. EPISTEMOLOGY (20) [noun] The branch of philosophy dealing with the study of knowledge; theory of knowledge, asking such questions as "What is knowledge?", "How is knowledge acquired?", "What do people know?", "How do we know what we know?". | [noun] A particular theory of knowledge. EPITHALAMION (19) [noun] A song or poem celebrating a marriage. EPITHALAMIUM (21) [noun] A song or poem celebrating a marriage. EPITHELIOMAS (19) EQUANIMITIES (23) EQUILIBRIUMS (25) ERGASTOPLASM (17) ERYTHEMATOUS (20) ERYTHROMYCIN (25) [noun] Any of a class of macrolide antibiotics produced by an actinomycete of the genus Streptomyces. ESOTERICISMS (16) ESSENTIALISM (14) [noun] The view that objects have properties that are essential to them. | [noun] The view that all members of certain groups of people (such as those with the same race, gender, age, or sexual orientation) have common, essential traits inherent to the defining feature of the group; behavior or statement(s) that reflect such a view. | [noun] The doctrine that there are certain traditional concepts, values, and skills that are essential to society and should be taught to all students. ESTHETICISMS (19) ESTRANGEMENT (15) [noun] The act of estranging; the act of alienating; alienation. | [noun] The state of being alien; foreign, non-native. ETHANOLAMINE (17) ETHIONAMIDES (18) ETYMOLOGICAL (20) [adjective] Of or relating to etymology. | [adjective] (of a word) Consistent with its etymological characteristics (in historical usage and/or the source language). ETYMOLOGISED (19) [verb] To find or provide the etymology for a word. ETYMOLOGISES (18) [verb] To find or provide the etymology for a word. ETYMOLOGISTS (18) ETYMOLOGIZED (28) [verb] To find or provide the etymology for a word. ETYMOLOGIZES (27) [verb] To find or provide the etymology for a word. EUCHROMATINS (19) EUDAEMONISMS (17) EUDAEMONISTS (15) EUDAIMONISMS (17) EUHEMERISTIC (19) EURYTHERMOUS (20) EVERBLOOMING (20) EVOLUTIONISM (17) EXAMINATIONS (21) [noun] The act of examining. | [noun] Particularly, an inspection by a medical professional to establish the extent and nature of any sickness or injury. | [noun] A formal test involving answering written or oral questions under a time constraint and usually without access to textbooks. EXANTHEMATIC (26) EXCLAMATIONS (23) [noun] A loud calling or crying out, for example as in surprise, pain, grief, joy, anger, etc. | [noun] A word expressing outcry; an interjection | [noun] A clause type used to make an exclamatory statement: What a mess they made!; How stupid I was! EXCLUSIVISMS (26) EXEMPLIFYING (30) [verb] To show or illustrate by example. | [verb] To be an instance of or serve as an example. | [verb] To make an attested copy or transcript of (a document) under seal. EXOPHTHALMIC (31) [adjective] Of, or relating to exophthalmos. | [adjective] Having prominent eyeballs. EXOPHTHALMOS (29) [noun] An abnormal protrusion of the eyeball from its socket. EXOPHTHALMUS (29) [noun] An abnormal protrusion of the eyeball from its socket. EXOTHERMALLY (27) EXPANSIONISM (23) [noun] The policy, of a nation, of expanding its territory or its economic influence. EXPATRIATISM (23) EXPERIMENTAL (23) [noun] The subject of an experiment. | [adjective] Pertaining to or founded on experiment. | [adjective] Serving to be experimented upon; used in an experiment. EXPERIMENTED (24) [verb] To conduct an experiment. | [verb] To experience; to feel; to perceive; to detect. | [verb] To test or ascertain by experiment; to try out; to make an experiment on. EXPERIMENTER (23) [noun] A person who experiments. EXTEMPORALLY (26) EXTEMPORISED (24) [verb] To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise. | [verb] To do something in a makeshift way. | [verb] To make or create extempore. EXTEMPORISES (23) [verb] To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise. | [verb] To do something in a makeshift way. | [verb] To make or create extempore. EXTEMPORIZED (33) [verb] To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise. | [verb] To do, create, improvise, adapt, or devise in an impromptu or spontaneous manner. EXTEMPORIZER (32) EXTEMPORIZES (32) [verb] To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise. | [verb] To do, create, improvise, adapt, or devise in an impromptu or spontaneous manner. EXTENSOMETER (21) [noun] An electromechanical device for measuring changes in length of an object undergoing stress. EXTERMINATED (22) [verb] To kill all of (a population of pests or undesirables), usually intentionally. | [verb] To bring a definite end to; finish completely. EXTERMINATES (21) [verb] To kill all of (a population of pests or undesirables), usually intentionally. | [verb] To bring a definite end to; finish completely. EXTERMINATOR (21) EXTERNALISMS (21) EXTRALIMITAL (21) [adjective] From beyond a boundary or limit EXTRAMARITAL (21) [adjective] Taking place outside marriage. | [adjective] Adulterous. EXTRAMUNDANE (22) [adjective] Beyond mundane, beyond ordinary. | [adjective] Extraterrestrial; occurring or originating outside of the Earth. EXTRAMURALLY (24) EXTRAMUSICAL (23) [adjective] Apart from and in addition to music FACTIONALISM (19) FAMILIARISED (18) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARISES (17) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARIZED (27) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARIZES (26) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARNESS (17) FAMOUSNESSES (17) FATHOMLESSLY (23) FEARSOMENESS (17) FEEBLEMINDED (21) [adjective] Weak in intellectual power; lacking firmness or constancy; lacking intelligence FELLMONGERED (19) [verb] To prepare animal skin for tanning. FEMALENESSES (17) FEMININENESS (17) FEMININITIES (17) [noun] The sum of all attributes that are feminine or convey womanhood. FEMINIZATION (26) FEMTOSECONDS (20) [noun] A unit of time equal to 0.000 000 000 000 001 seconds (i.e. 1x10-15 seconds) and with symbol fs. FERMENTATION (17) [noun] Any of many anaerobic biochemical reactions in which an enzyme (or several enzymes produced by a microorganism) catalyses the conversion of one substance into another; especially the conversion (using yeast) of sugars to alcohol or acetic acid with the evolution of carbon dioxide | [noun] A state of agitation or excitement; a ferment. FERMENTATIVE (20) FERRIMAGNETS (18) FERROMAGNETS (18) FIBROMYALGIA (23) [noun] A condition characterised by chronic pain, stiffness, and tenderness of the muscles, tendons, and joints. FIBROSARCOMA (21) [noun] A fibroblastic sarcoma: a malignant tumor derived from fibrous connective tissue FILMSETTINGS (18) FIMBRIATIONS (19) FLABELLIFORM (22) FLAMBOYANCES (24) [noun] The condition of being flamboyant. FLAMBOYANTLY (25) FLAMEPROOFED (23) [verb] To make flameproof. FLAMEPROOFER (22) FLAMETHROWER (23) [noun] A device that projects a flame for starting fires, and sometimes also additional fuel to help ignition. Used either as a weapon or a tool. FLAMMABILITY (24) FLIMFLAMMERS (24) [noun] A swindler; a con artist. FLIMFLAMMERY (27) [noun] Nonsense | [noun] A deception or swindle FLIMFLAMMING (25) [verb] To swindle or cheat. FLIMSINESSES (17) FLUORIMETERS (17) [noun] An instrument used to detect and measure fluorescence. FLUORIMETRIC (19) FLUOROCHROME (22) [noun] Any of various fluorescent dyes used to stain biological material before microscopic examination FLUOROMETERS (17) [noun] An instrument used to detect and measure fluorescence. FLUOROMETRIC (19) FOMENTATIONS (17) [noun] The act of fomenting; the application of warm, soft, medicinal substances, as for the purpose of easing pain by relaxing the skin, or of discussing (dispersing) tumours. | [noun] A lotion or poultice applied to a diseased or injured part of the body. | [noun] Encouragement; excitation; instigation. FOOTLAMBERTS (19) FORAMINIFERA (20) [noun] Any of a large group of amoeboid protists, of the order Foraminifera, that are mostly marine. FORAMINIFERS (20) [noun] Any of several large aquatic amoeboid protists, of the subphylum Foraminifera, characterized by streaming granular ectoplasm that among other things is used for catching food, often with a calcareous shell with many holes through which pseudopodia protrude. FOREMANSHIPS (22) FORMALDEHYDE (25) [noun] The simplest aldehyde, HCHO, a colourless gas that has many industrial applications; it dissolves in water to give formol (10%) and formalin. FORMALIZABLE (28) FORMALNESSES (17) FORMLESSNESS (17) FORMULARIZED (27) [verb] To express as a formula, to formulate. FORMULARIZER (26) FORMULARIZES (26) [verb] To express as a formula, to formulate. FORMULATIONS (17) [noun] The act, process, or result of formulating or reducing to a formula. | [noun] A medicinal preparation. FRAGMENTALLY (21) FRAGMENTATED (19) FRAGMENTATES (18) FRAGMENTIZED (28) FRAGMENTIZES (27) FRATERNALISM (17) FRENETICISMS (19) FRONTIERSMAN (17) [noun] A person who lives on the borders of a country, or in a wild and undeveloped area on the fringes of civilization. FRONTIERSMEN (17) [noun] A person who lives on the borders of a country, or in a wild and undeveloped area on the fringes of civilization. FULFILLMENTS (20) [noun] The act of fulfilling. | [noun] The state or quality of being fulfilled; completion; realization. | [noun] The act of consummating a desire or promise. FULMINATIONS (17) [noun] The act of fulminating or exploding; detonation. | [noun] The act of thundering forth threats or censures, as with authority. | [noun] That which is fulminated or thundered forth; vehement menace or censure. FUNAMBULISMS (21) FUNAMBULISTS (19) [noun] A tightrope walker or a similar performer on a slack rope. FUNDAMENTALS (18) [noun] (usually in the plural) A leading or primary principle, rule, law, or article, which serves as the groundwork of a system; an essential part | [noun] The lowest frequency of a periodic waveform. | [noun] The lowest partial of a complex tone. GALACTOSEMIA (17) GALACTOSEMIC (19) GALVANOMETER (18) [noun] A device used to indicate the presence and direction of a small electric current, especially used to detect a null or balanced condition in a bridge circuit. GAMESMANSHIP (22) [noun] The use of legal but unsporting tactics to gain an advantage over one’s opponent GAMESOMENESS (17) GAMETOGENOUS (16) GAMETOPHORES (20) GAMETOPHYTES (23) [noun] A plant (or the haploid phase in its life cycle) which produces gametes by mitosis in order to produce a zygote. GAMETOPHYTIC (25) GAMOPETALOUS (17) GANGSTERDOMS (17) GANGSTERISMS (16) GARNISHMENTS (18) [noun] A judgment that a third party should pay money owing to a defendant directly to a plaintiff. GASTROCNEMII (17) [noun] The muscle at the back of the calf, whose insertion is the Achilles tendon at the heel. GASTRONOMIES (15) GASTRONOMIST (15) [noun] A gastronome GEMEINSCHAFT (23) [noun] An association or group of individuals sharing common beliefs, attitudes, and tastes; a fellowship. | [noun] A society or group characterized by a strong sense of common identity, personal relationships, and attachments to various concerns. GEMMOLOGISTS (18) GENDARMERIES (16) [noun] A military body charged with police duties among the civilian population. GEOCHEMISTRY (23) [noun] The branch of chemistry that deals with the chemical composition of the Earth and other planets, and with the chemical processes that occur in the formation of rocks and minerals etc. GEOMAGNETISM (18) [noun] The magnetism of the Earth. | [noun] The science that studies the magnetism of the Earth. GEOMETRICIAN (17) [noun] A geometer; a mathematician specializing in the study of geometry. GEOMETRISING (16) GEOMETRIZING (25) GEOTHERMALLY (21) GERMINATIONS (15) [noun] The process of germinating; the beginning of vegetation or growth from a seed or spore; the first development of germs, either animal or vegetable. GERRYMANDERS (19) [noun] The act of gerrymandering. | [noun] A voting district skewed by gerrymandering. | [verb] To divide a geographic area into voting districts in such a way as to give an unfair advantage to one party in an election. GINGIVECTOMY (24) GLADSOMENESS (16) GLAMOURIZING (25) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLASSMAKINGS (20) GLIOBLASTOMA (17) [noun] A fast-growing, malignant tumor of the brain GLOOMINESSES (15) GLUCOSAMINES (17) [noun] An amino derivative of glucose that is a component of polysaccharides such as chitin; it is marketed as a dietary supplement supposedly to reduce the symptoms of arthritis. GLUTAMINASES (15) GLUTETHIMIDE (19) GONIOMETRIES (15) GORMANDISING (17) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GORMANDIZERS (25) GORMANDIZING (26) [noun] The act of one who gormandizes. | [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GOSSIPMONGER (18) GOURMANDISES (16) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GOURMANDISMS (18) GOURMANDIZED (26) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GOURMANDIZES (25) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GOVERNMENTAL (18) [adjective] Relating to a government | [adjective] Relating to governing. GRADIOMETERS (16) [noun] Any of several instruments used to measure the gradient of a physical property (such as magnetic field). GRANDMOTHERS (19) [noun] A mother of someone's parent. | [noun] A female ancestor or progenitor. GRAVIMETRIES (18) GREENBACKISM (23) GREENMAILERS (15) GREENMAILING (16) GROUNDMASSES (16) GRUESOMENESS (15) GRUMPINESSES (17) GUESSTIMATED (16) [verb] To make a guesstimate. | [verb] To make a guesstimate of a specific quantity. GUESSTIMATES (15) [noun] An estimate that is hardly any better than a guess, often because it is based on insufficient or unreliable data. GUNSMITHINGS (19) GUTTURALISMS (15) GYMNOSOPHIST (23) [noun] One of a school of ancient Indian ascetic philosophers, reported in antiquity, who wore little clothing; a mystic. GYNECOMASTIA (20) [noun] Excessive development of breasts in males, resembling the breast development in women. GYROMAGNETIC (21) [adjective] Of, relating to, or resulting from the properties of a spinning magnet, or a spinning electric charge; magnetogyric HAMANTASCHEN (22) HAMSTRINGING (19) [verb] To lame or disable by cutting the tendons of the ham or knee; to hough. | [verb] To cripple; to incapacitate; to disable. | [noun] An instance of somebody being hamstringed. HANDSOMENESS (18) HARBORMASTER (19) [noun] An official responsible for the enforcement of regulations in a port. HARMLESSNESS (17) HARMONICALLY (22) HARMONICISTS (19) HARMONIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a harmonious manner; coordinately. HARVESTTIMES (20) HEADFOREMOST (21) HEADMISTRESS (18) [noun] A female school principal. HEARTWARMING (21) [adjective] Eliciting cosy feelings of tenderness and sympathy. HEBDOMADALLY (24) HELIOTROPISM (19) [noun] The property of some plants of turning under the influence of light; either positively (towards the light) or negatively (away from the light) HELLGRAMMITE (20) [noun] The aquatic larval form of the dobsonfly, having a segmented body with legs on each segment, and a head with prominent pincers, prized as fish bait. | [noun] A lure designed to mimic a hellgramite. HELMSMANSHIP (24) [noun] The role of helmsman. HEMANGIOMATA (20) [noun] A congenital, benign tumor of endothelial cells. HEMATOGENOUS (18) [adjective] Producing blood | [adjective] Spread by blood HEMATOLOGIES (18) HEMATOLOGIST (18) HEMATOXYLINS (27) HEMEROCALLIS (19) [noun] Any member of the genus Hemerocallis of daylilies. HEMERYTHRINS (23) HEMICHORDATE (23) [noun] Any of many marine worms, of the phylum Hemichordata, that have a primitive notochord | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of these animals HEMIHYDRATED (25) HEMIHYDRATES (24) [noun] A hydrate whose solid contains one molecule of water of crystallization per two molecules, or per two unit cells HEMIMORPHISM (26) HEMODIALYSES (21) [noun] A dialysis utilizing extracorporeal removal of waste products from the blood in the case of kidney failure. HEMODIALYSIS (21) [noun] A dialysis utilizing extracorporeal removal of waste products from the blood in the case of kidney failure. HEMODILUTION (18) HEMODYNAMICS (25) HEMOPHILIACS (24) HEMOPROTEINS (19) HEMORRHAGING (22) [verb] To bleed copiously. | [verb] To lose (something) in copious quantities. HEMORRHOIDAL (21) HEMOSIDERINS (18) HEMSTITCHERS (22) HEMSTITCHING (23) [verb] To sew or embroider using this stitch HEPATOMEGALY (23) [noun] An abnormal enlargement of the liver HEREDITAMENT (18) [noun] Property which can be inherited. | [noun] Inheritance. HERMENEUTICS (19) [noun] The study or theory of the methodical interpretation of text, especially holy texts. HERMETICALLY (22) [adverb] With a hermetic seal; so as to be airtight. | [adverb] In a hermetic manner; isolatedly. HERMETICISMS (21) HEROICOMICAL (21) HETEROECISMS (19) HETEROGAMETE (18) HETEROGAMETY (21) HETEROGAMIES (18) HETEROGAMOUS (18) HETERONOMIES (17) HETERONOMOUS (17) [adjective] Arising from an external influence, force, or agency; not autonomous | [adjective] (of parts of an organism) differing in development or in specialization | [adjective] (of a language) being a dialect of an autonomous language HEXADECIMALS (27) HIBERNACULUM (21) HIGHBROWISMS (26) HIPPOPOTAMUS (23) [noun] A large, semi-aquatic, herbivorous (plant-eating) African mammal (Hippopotamus amphibius) HISTAMINASES (17) HISTORICISMS (19) HOLIDAYMAKER (25) [noun] Someone who is on holiday HOMELESSNESS (17) [noun] The state of being homeless. HOMELINESSES (17) HOMEOMORPHIC (26) HOMEOPATHIES (22) [noun] A system of treating diseases with small amounts of substances which, in larger amounts, would produce the observed symptoms. HOMEOTHERMIC (24) HOMESCHOOLED (23) [verb] To educate children at home, that is, at a private domestic place, in lieu of sending them to a public school or private educational institution. | [verb] To be educated at home. HOMESCHOOLER (22) HOMESICKNESS (23) [noun] The characteristic of being homesick; a strong, sad feeling of missing one's home (and often left-behind loved ones, such as family and friends) when physically away. HOMESTEADERS (18) HOMESTEADING (19) [verb] To acquire or settle on land as a homestead. HOMINIZATION (26) HOMOGENISING (19) [verb] To make homogeneous, to blend or puree. | [verb] Specifically, to treat milk so that the cream no longer separates. HOMOGENIZERS (27) HOMOGENIZING (28) [verb] To make homogeneous, to blend or puree. | [verb] Specifically, to treat milk so that the cream no longer separates. HOMOIOTHERMS (22) [noun] Any warm-blooded animal HOMOIOUSIANS (17) [noun] One of the Semi-Arians of the 4th century who held that the Son was of like, but not the same, essence or substance with the Father. HOMOLOGATING (19) [verb] To confirm, ratify or approve, especially officially or legally. HOMOLOGATION (18) HOMOLOGIZERS (27) HOMOLOGIZING (28) [verb] To make something homologous. | [verb] To become homologous. HOMOMORPHISM (26) [noun] A structure-preserving map between two algebraic structures of the same type, such as groups, rings, or vector spaces. | [noun] A similar appearance of two unrelated organisms or structures. HOMONYMOUSLY (25) HOMOPOLYMERS (24) HOMOSEXUALLY (27) HOMOTHALLISM (22) HOMOZYGOSITY (33) [noun] The condition of being homozygous. HOMOZYGOUSLY (33) HONEYCOMBING (25) [verb] To riddle something with holes, especially in such a pattern. | [noun] A honeycomb pattern or structure. HONEYMOONERS (20) HONEYMOONING (21) [verb] To have a honeymoon (a trip taken by a couple after wedding). | [adjective] (of a married couple) On a honeymoon HOOLIGANISMS (18) HORSEMANSHIP (22) [noun] The skill of riding a horse, and sometimes of training and managing horses. HOUSEMASTERS (17) [noun] A teacher who is in charge of a house at a boarding school. HOUSEMOTHERS (20) [noun] A woman employed in a residence for young people to look after them. HOUSEWARMING (21) [noun] A party to celebrate moving into a new home. | [noun] The act of welcoming a person/family to their newly purchased or newly rented home. HUCKSTERISMS (23) HUMANENESSES (17) HUMANITARIAN (17) [noun] A scholar of one of the subjects in the humanities. | [noun] A person who believes in the philosophy of humanism. | [noun] In the Renaissance, a scholar of Greek and Roman classics. HUMANIZATION (26) HUMBLENESSES (19) HUMBUGGERIES (21) HUMIFICATION (22) HUMILIATIONS (17) [noun] The act of humiliating or humbling someone; abasement of pride; mortification. | [noun] The state of being humiliated, humbled or reduced to lowliness or submission. HUMMINGBIRDS (23) [noun] Any of various small American birds in the family Trochilidae that have the ability to hover. HUMOROUSNESS (17) HYDRODYNAMIC (27) HYDROMANCIES (23) HYDROMEDUSAE (22) [noun] The South American snake-necked turtle. HYDROMETEORS (21) [noun] Rain, snow and other precipitation products of the condensation of atmospheric water vapour HYDROMORPHIC (28) HYDROTHERMAL (24) [adjective] Of, or relating to hot water. | [adjective] Of or relating to emanations of hot water that are rich in minerals, or to the rocks formed from them. HYDROTROPISM (23) [noun] The movement of a plant (or other organism) either towards or away from water HYMENOPTERAN (22) [noun] Any insect of the order Hymenoptera: the bees, wasps and ants etc. | [adjective] Relating to or denoting hymenopterans. HYMENOPTERON (22) HYOSCYAMINES (25) HYPERCOMPLEX (33) HYPERENDEMIC (25) HYPERLIPEMIA (24) [noun] An excess quantity of lipid in the blood; a symptom of several medical conditions. HYPERLIPEMIC (26) HYPERMARKETS (26) [noun] A combination of department store and supermarket. HYPERMNESIAS (22) HYPERMUTABLE (24) [adjective] That mutates rapidly HYPERREALISM (22) HYPERTHERMIA (25) [noun] The condition of having an abnormally high body temperature caused by a failure of the heat-regulating mechanisms of the body to deal with the heat coming from the environment. | [noun] The therapeutic application of heat to a patient. HYPERTHERMIC (27) HYPOCALCEMIA (26) [noun] The condition of having an abnormally low concentration of calcium ions in the blood. HYPOCALCEMIC (28) HYPODERMISES (23) HYPOGLYCEMIA (28) [noun] A too low level of blood glucose. HYPOGLYCEMIC (30) HYPOKALEMIAS (26) HYPOTHALAMIC (27) HYPOTHALAMUS (25) [noun] A region of the forebrain located below the thalamus, forming the basal portion of the diencephalon, and functioning to regulate body temperature, some metabolic processes and governing the autonomic nervous system. HYPOTHERMIAS (25) HYSTERECTOMY (25) [noun] The surgical procedure to remove all of or part of the uterus. ILLEGITIMACY (20) [noun] The state or condition of being illegitimate ILLEGITIMATE (15) [noun] A person born to unmarried parents. | [verb] To make illegitimate. | [adjective] Not conforming to known principles, or established or accepted rules or standards. ILLIBERALISM (16) ILLUMINANCES (16) [noun] The luminous flux incident on unit area of a surface; measured in lux or lumens. ILLUMINATING (15) [verb] To shine light on something. | [verb] To decorate something with lights. | [verb] To clarify or make something understandable. ILLUMINATION (14) [noun] The act of illuminating, or supplying with light; the state of being illuminated. | [noun] Festive decoration of houses or buildings with lights. | [noun] Adornment of books and manuscripts with colored illustrations. See illuminate (transitive verb). ILLUMINATIVE (17) ILLUMINATORS (14) ILLUSIONISMS (14) IMAGINATIONS (15) [noun] The image-making power of the mind; the act of mentally creating or reproducing an object not previously perceived; the ability to create such images. | [noun] Particularly, construction of false images; fantasizing. | [noun] Creativity; resourcefulness. IMBECILITIES (18) IMBIBITIONAL (18) IMBRICATIONS (18) IMMACULACIES (20) IMMACULATELY (21) [adverb] In an immaculate manner; in a manner free of stain or blemish; without being defiled. | [adverb] In a manner free of error; in a perfect or flawless manner. IMMANENTISMS (18) IMMANENTISTS (16) IMMATURITIES (16) IMMEASURABLE (18) [noun] Anything that cannot be measured | [adjective] Impossible to measure | [adjective] Vast IMMEASURABLY (21) [adverb] In a manner that is not measurable, in a way that can not be measured IMMEMORIALLY (21) IMMENSURABLE (18) IMMETHODICAL (22) IMMIGRATIONS (17) IMMOBILITIES (18) IMMOBILIZERS (27) [noun] Something or someone that immobilises. IMMOBILIZING (28) [verb] To render motionless; to stop moving or stop from moving. | [verb] To modify a surface such that things will not stick to it IMMODERACIES (19) IMMODERATELY (20) IMMODERATION (17) [noun] Lack of moderation. IMMORALITIES (16) [noun] The state or quality of being immoral; vice. | [noun] An immoral act or practice. IMMORTALISED (17) [verb] To give unending life to, to make immortal. | [verb] To make eternally famous. IMMORTALISES (16) [verb] To give unending life to, to make immortal. | [verb] To make eternally famous. IMMORTALIZED (26) [verb] To give unending life to, to make immortal. | [verb] To make eternally famous. | [verb] To remove the effects of normal apoptosis. IMMORTALIZER (25) IMMORTALIZES (25) [verb] To give unending life to, to make immortal. | [verb] To make eternally famous. | [verb] To remove the effects of normal apoptosis. IMMOVABILITY (24) IMMUNIZATION (25) [noun] The process by which an individual is safely exposed in a controlled manner to a material that is designed to prime their immune system against that material. | [noun] One such exposure. IMMUNOASSAYS (19) [noun] A test for the presence of a substance using the reaction of an antibody to its antigen, making use of the high selectivity of components of biological immune systems. IMMUNOLOGIES (17) IMMUNOLOGIST (17) IMMUTABILITY (21) IMPARADISING (18) IMPARTATIONS (16) IMPARTIALITY (19) [noun] The quality of being impartial; fairness. IMPASSIONING (17) [verb] Make passionate, instill passion in IMPEACHMENTS (23) [noun] The act of calling into question or challenging the accuracy or propriety of something. | [noun] The state of being impeached. | [noun] Hindrance; impediment; obstruction. IMPENETRABLE (18) [adjective] Not penetrable. | [adjective] Incomprehensible; fathomless; inscrutable. | [adjective] Opaque; obscure; not translucent or transparent. IMPENETRABLY (21) IMPENITENCES (18) IMPENITENTLY (19) IMPERATIVELY (22) IMPERATORIAL (16) IMPERCEPTIVE (23) [adjective] Unable to perceive. IMPERCIPIENT (20) [adjective] Lacking perception; unable to perceive. IMPERFECTION (21) [noun] Those qualities or features that are imperfect; the characteristic, state, or quality of being imperfect. | [noun] Something that makes something else less than perfect; a blemish, impurity, error, etc. IMPERFECTIVE (24) [noun] The imperfective aspect; a verb having this aspect. | [adjective] Of, relating to or having the properties of the imperfective aspect. IMPERIALISMS (18) IMPERIALISTS (16) [noun] An advocate of imperialism. IMPERILMENTS (18) IMPERISHABLE (21) [noun] (in the plural) something that does not perish, or keeps for a long time | [adjective] Not perishable; not subject to decay; enduring permanently IMPERISHABLY (24) IMPERMANENCE (20) [noun] Lack of permanence or continued duration. | [noun] The quality or state of being impermanent. | [noun] Anicca, the doctrine which asserts that all of conditioned existence is transient. IMPERMANENCY (23) [noun] Lack of permanence or continued duration. | [noun] The quality or state of being impermanent. | [noun] Anicca, the doctrine which asserts that all of conditioned existence is transient. IMPERSONALLY (19) IMPERSONATED (17) [verb] To pretend to be (a different person); to assume the identity of. | [verb] To operate with the permissions of a different user account. | [verb] To manifest in corporeal form; to personify. IMPERSONATES (16) [verb] To pretend to be (a different person); to assume the identity of. | [verb] To operate with the permissions of a different user account. | [verb] To manifest in corporeal form; to personify. IMPERSONATOR (16) [noun] One who fraudulently impersonates another person. | [noun] An entertainer whose act is based upon performing impressions of others. IMPERTINENCE (18) [noun] Lack of pertinence; irrelevance. | [noun] An instance of this; a moment of being impertinent. | [noun] The fact or character of being out of place; inappropriateness. IMPERTINENCY (21) IMPERVIOUSLY (22) IMPETIGINOUS (17) IMPETRATIONS (16) IMPINGEMENTS (19) [noun] The act of impinging. IMPISHNESSES (19) IMPLANTATION (16) [noun] The way in which an organ, bone, muscle etc. becomes inserted into its set place. | [noun] Planting; securing a plant etc. into the ground. | [noun] The introduction of a notion, idea or thought into someone's mind. IMPLEMENTERS (18) [noun] A person who implements something. IMPLEMENTING (19) [verb] To bring about; to put into practice | [verb] To carry out; to do IMPLEMENTORS (18) [noun] A person who implements something. IMPLICATIONS (18) [noun] The act of implicating. | [noun] The state of being implicated. | [noun] (usually in the plural) A possible effect or result of a decision or action. IMPLICITNESS (18) IMPOLITENESS (16) IMPONDERABLE (19) [noun] An imponderable substance or body; specifically, in the plural, a name formerly applied to heat, light, electricity, and magnetism. | [noun] An imponderable question. | [adjective] Not ponderable; without sensible or appreciable weight; incapable of being weighed. IMPONDERABLY (22) IMPORTANCIES (18) IMPORTATIONS (16) [noun] The act or an instance of importing. | [noun] The act or an instance of carrying or conveying, especially into some system, place, area or country. | [noun] That which is imported; commodities or wares introduced into a country from abroad. IMPOUNDMENTS (19) IMPOVERISHED (23) [verb] To make poor. | [verb] To weaken in quality; to deprive of some strength or richness. | [verb] To become poor. IMPOVERISHER (22) IMPOVERISHES (22) [verb] To make poor. | [verb] To weaken in quality; to deprive of some strength or richness. | [verb] To become poor. IMPRECATIONS (18) [noun] The act of imprecating, or invoking evil upon someone; a prayer that a curse or calamity may befall someone. | [noun] A curse. IMPRECISIONS (18) [noun] Lack of precision or exactness; poor accuracy IMPREGNATING (18) [verb] To cause to become pregnant. | [verb] To fertilize. | [verb] To saturate, or infuse. IMPREGNATION (17) IMPREGNATORS (17) IMPRESSIVELY (22) [adverb] In an impressive manner; forcibly. IMPRESSMENTS (18) IMPRISONMENT (18) [noun] A confinement in a place, especially a prison or a jail, as punishment for a crime. IMPROPERNESS (18) IMPROVEMENTS (21) [noun] The act of improving; advancement or growth; a bettering | [noun] The act of making profitable use or application of anything, or the state of being profitably employed; practical application, for example of a doctrine, principle, or theory, stated in a discourse. | [noun] The state of being improved; betterment; advance IMPROVIDENCE (22) IMPROVISATOR (19) IMPUDICITIES (19) IMPUISSANCES (18) IMPURENESSES (16) IMPUTABILITY (21) IMPUTATIVELY (22) INADMISSIBLE (17) [noun] A person who is not to be admitted (to a country, a group, etc). | [adjective] Not admissible, especially that cannot be admitted as evidence at a trial INADMISSIBLY (20) INCENDIARISM (17) INCLEMENCIES (18) INCLINOMETER (16) [noun] An instrument that displays the angle of an aircraft relative to the horizon. | [noun] An instrument that measures magnetic dip; a dip circle. | [noun] A surveying instrument that measures angles of inclination or elevation; a clinometer. INCOMMODIOUS (19) [adjective] (of a place occupied by people) Uncomfortable or inhospitable, especially due to being cramped. | [adjective] Discomforting, inconvenient, or unsuitable. INCOMMUTABLE (20) [adjective] Not commutable INCOMMUTABLY (23) INCOMPARABLE (20) [noun] Something beyond compare; a thing with which there is no comparison. | [adjective] So much better than another as to be beyond comparison; matchless or unsurpassed. | [adjective] Not able to be compared. INCOMPARABLY (23) [adverb] In an incomparable manner. INCOMPATIBLE (20) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) An incompatible substance; one of a group of things that cannot be placed or used together because of a change of chemical composition or opposing medicinal qualities. | [noun] A consequent of a contrary. | [adjective] Of two things: that cannot coexist; not congruous because of differences INCOMPATIBLY (23) INCOMPETENCE (20) [noun] Inability to perform; lack of competence; ineptitude. INCOMPETENCY (23) INCOMPETENTS (18) [noun] A person who is incompetent. INCOMPLETELY (21) [adverb] In an incomplete manner. | [adverb] To an incomplete degree. INCOMPUTABLE (20) [adjective] Not computable; that cannot be computed. INCOMPUTABLY (23) INCONFORMITY (22) INCONSUMABLE (18) INCONSUMABLY (21) INCRIMINATED (17) [verb] To accuse or bring criminal charges against. | [verb] To indicate the guilt of. INCRIMINATES (16) [verb] To accuse or bring criminal charges against. | [verb] To indicate the guilt of. INCUMBENCIES (20) [noun] The state of being incumbent. | [noun] An obligation or duty | [noun] A tenure INDEMNIFIERS (18) INDEMNIFYING (22) [verb] To secure against loss or damage; to insure. | [verb] To compensate or reimburse someone for some expense or injury | [verb] To hurt, to harm INDOMETHACIN (20) [noun] A non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug commonly used to reduce fever, pain, stiffness, and swelling, having chemical formula C19H16ClNO4. INDORSEMENTS (15) [noun] The act or quality of endorsing | [noun] An amendment or annotation to an insurance contract or other official document (such as a driving licence). | [noun] An instructor's signed acknowledgement of time practising specific flying skills. INFANTILISMS (17) INFLAMMABLES (21) [noun] Any inflammable substance. INFLAMMATION (19) [noun] The act of inflaming, kindling, or setting on fire. | [noun] The state of being inflamed | [noun] A condition of any part of the body, consisting of congestion of the blood vessels, with obstruction of the blood current, and growth of morbid tissue. It is manifested outwardly by redness and swelling, attended with heat and pain. INFLAMMATORY (22) [noun] Any material that causes inflammation | [adjective] Tending to inflame or provoke somebody. | [adjective] Relating to, causing or caused by inflammation. INFLATIONISM (17) INFOMERCIALS (19) [noun] A program-length television commercial, typically between thirty minutes and one hour long, that advertises a product or service by presenting supposedly impartial information about it. INFORMATIONS (17) [noun] That which resolves uncertainty; anything that answers the question of "what a given entity is". | [noun] Things that are or can be known about a given topic; communicable knowledge of something. | [noun] The act of informing or imparting knowledge; notification. INFOTAINMENT (17) [noun] A form of programming (cinematic, television, live action, etc.) that provides both information and entertainment; also known as soft news, the information in infotainment programming consists of mostly celebrity news and human drama. INFRINGEMENT (18) [noun] A violation or breach, as of a law. | [noun] An encroachment on a right, a person, a territory, or a property. INFUNDIBULUM (20) [noun] A funnel-shaped cavity or organ. INHARMONIOUS (17) [adjective] Not in harmony; discordant | [adjective] Lacking accord or agreement INHUMANITIES (17) [noun] The lack of compassion. | [noun] An inhuman act. INNUMERACIES (16) INSEMINATING (15) [verb] To sow (to disperse or plant seeds). | [verb] To impregnate (to cause to become pregnant). INSEMINATION (14) [noun] A sowing of seed; the act of inseminating. | [noun] The act of impregnating (making pregnant). INSEMINATORS (14) [noun] A person who, or device that inseminates. INSTALLMENTS (14) [noun] One of a series of parts, whether equal or unequal to the other parts of the series, of a given entity or a given process, which part presents or is presented at a particular scheduled interval. | [noun] One member of a series of portions of a debt or sum of money, which portions may or may not be equated (depending in part on whether the interest rate is fixed or variable), payment of which portions are serially exacted at regularly scheduled intervals toward satisfaction of the total. Payments of installments are generally mensual, quarterly, triannual, biannual, or annual. | [noun] A part of a published or broadcast serial. INSTILLMENTS (14) INSTRUMENTAL (14) [noun] (grammar) The instrumental case. | [noun] A composition written or performed without lyrics, sometimes using a lead instrument to replace vocals. | [adjective] Essential or central; of great importance or relevance. INSTRUMENTED (15) [verb] To apply measuring devices. | [verb] To devise, conceive, cook up, plan. | [verb] To perform upon an instrument; to prepare for an instrument. INTEMPERANCE (18) [noun] Lack of moderation or temperance; excess. | [noun] Drunkenness or gluttony. INTERCOMPANY (21) INTERCOMPARE (18) INTERLAMINAR (14) INTERMARRIED (15) [verb] To marry a member of another group, social stratum, or religion. | [verb] To marry within the same ethnic, social, or family group. INTERMARRIES (14) [verb] To marry a member of another group, social stratum, or religion. | [verb] To marry within the same ethnic, social, or family group. INTERMEDDLED (17) [verb] To mix, mingle together. | [verb] To get mixed up (with). | [verb] To butt in, to interfere in or with. INTERMEDDLER (16) INTERMEDDLES (16) [verb] To mix, mingle together. | [verb] To get mixed up (with). | [verb] To butt in, to interfere in or with. INTERMEDIACY (20) INTERMEDIARY (18) [noun] An agent acting as a mediator between sides that may disagree. | [noun] An arranger of a contract or other agreement who is separate from the parties to the agreement | [noun] One or several stages of an event which occurs after the start and before the end. INTERMEDIATE (15) [noun] Anything in an intermediate position. | [noun] An intermediary. | [noun] Any substance formed as part of a series of chemical reactions that is not the end-product. INTERMESHING (18) [noun] The act or process of meshing between one another. | [adjective] That mesh between one another. INTERMINABLE (16) [noun] A repeating decimal. | [adjective] Existing or occurring without interruption or end; ceaseless, unending. INTERMINABLY (19) INTERMINGLED (16) [verb] To mix or become mixed together. INTERMINGLES (15) [verb] To mix or become mixed together. INTERMISSION (14) [noun] A break between two performances or sessions, such as at a concert, play, seminar, or religious assembly. INTERMITOTIC (16) INTERMITTENT (14) [noun] An intermittent fever or disease. | [adjective] Stopping and starting, occuring, or presenting at intervals; coming after a particular time span. | [adjective] (specifically, of a body of water) Existing only for certain seasons; that is, being dry for part of the year. INTERMITTERS (14) INTERMITTING (15) [verb] To interrupt, to stop or cease temporarily or periodically; to suspend. INTERMIXTURE (21) [noun] A mass formed by mixture; a mass of ingredients mixed. | [noun] Admixture; an additional ingredient. INTERMONTANE (14) INTERREGNUMS (15) [noun] The period of time between the end of a sovereign's reign and the accession of another sovereign. | [noun] A period of time during which normal executive leadership is suspended or interrupted. | [noun] An intermission in any order of succession; any breach of continuity in action or influence. INTERSEGMENT (15) INTIMATENESS (14) INTIMIDATING (16) [verb] To make timid or afraid; to cause to feel fear or nervousness; to deter, especially by threats of violence | [adjective] Threatening INTIMIDATION (15) [noun] The act of making timid or fearful or of deterring by threats; the state of being intimidated INTIMIDATORS (15) [noun] One who intimidates. INTIMIDATORY (18) INTRACOMPANY (21) INTRAMURALLY (17) INTROMISSION (14) [noun] The state of being allowed to enter; admittance | [noun] The act of allowing to enter; admission | [noun] Putting one thing into another; insertion INTROMITTENT (14) INTROMITTERS (14) INTROMITTING (15) INTUITIONISM (14) [noun] An approach to mathematics/logic which avoids proof by contradiction, and which requires that, in order to prove that something exists, one must construct it. INTUMESCENCE (18) INVEIGLEMENT (18) INVOLVEMENTS (20) [noun] The act of involving, or the state of being involved. IRREDEEMABLE (17) [noun] A financial instrument that cannot be freely redeemed. | [adjective] Not redeemable; not able to be restored, recovered, revoked, or escaped. | [adjective] (of debts, currency, etc.) Not able to be cancelled by a payment or converted to another form of currency or financial instrument, especially one considered more secure or reliable. IRREDEEMABLY (20) IRREDENTISMS (15) IRREFORMABLE (19) [adjective] That cannot be reformed IRREMEDIABLE (17) [adjective] Unable to be remedied, cured, corrected or repaired; irreparable, incurable. IRREMEDIABLY (20) ISOCHRONISMS (19) ISODIAMETRIC (17) [adjective] Having an equal or nearly equal diameter in all directions ISOENZYMATIC (28) ISOLATIONISM (14) [noun] A national (or group) policy of non-interaction with other nations (or groups). ISOMORPHISMS (21) ISOTHERMALLY (20) ITEMIZATIONS (23) JACKHAMMERED (33) [verb] To use a jackhammer. | [verb] To break (something) using a jackhammer. | [verb] To form (something) using a jackhammer. JUDGMENTALLY (26) KATZENJAMMER (36) [noun] A hangover. | [noun] Jitters; discord; confusion. | [noun] Depression. KLEPTOMANIAC (22) KLEPTOMANIAS (20) KREMLINOLOGY (22) KYMOGRAPHIES (27) LACHRYMATORS (22) [noun] Any substance that causes tears, such as tear gas. LACHRYMOSELY (25) LACHRYMOSITY (25) LACRIMATIONS (16) LACTALBUMINS (18) LAMELLICORNS (16) [noun] A scarabaeid beetle with such antennae, in the obsolete taxon Lamellicornia. LAMENTATIONS (14) [noun] The act of lamenting. | [noun] A sorrowful cry; a lament. | [noun] Specifically, mourning. LAMMERGEIERS (17) [noun] A long-winged vulture, Gypaetus barbatus, found in southern Europe, Africa and India. LAMMERGEYERS (20) [noun] A long-winged vulture, Gypaetus barbatus, found in southern Europe, Africa and India. LAMPLIGHTERS (20) [noun] A person employed to light streetlights at dusk and snuff them at dawn. LAMPOONERIES (16) LANDLORDISMS (16) LANGUISHMENT (18) [noun] The state of languishing. | [noun] Tenderness of look or mien; amorous pensiveness. LAPAROTOMIES (16) [noun] The surgical procedure for making an incision in the abdominal wall to gain access into the abdominal cavity. Performed either as exploratory surgery, or as the first step in an abdominal operation. LARYNGECTOMY (23) LEGERDEMAINS (16) LEGITIMACIES (17) LEGITIMATELY (18) [adverb] In a legitimate manner, properly. LEGITIMATING (16) [verb] To make legitimate, lawful, or valid; especially, to put in the position or state of a legitimate person before the law, by legal means. LEGITIMATION (15) LEGITIMATIZE (24) [verb] To make legitimate. | [verb] To legalize. LEGITIMATORS (15) LEGITIMISING (16) [verb] To make legitimate. LEGITIMIZERS (24) LEGITIMIZING (25) [verb] To make legitimate. LEMONGRASSES (15) LEPROSARIUMS (16) [noun] A place or institution (such as a colony, house or hospital) used for the treatment of leprosy. LEUKEMOGENIC (21) [adjective] That tends to cause leukemia LIBERTINISMS (16) LIFEMANSHIPS (22) LIMBERNESSES (16) LIMELIGHTING (19) LIMITATIONAL (14) LIMNOLOGICAL (17) LIMNOLOGISTS (15) LIMPIDNESSES (17) LIQUIDAMBARS (26) [noun] A resinous gum that exudes from the bark of the tree Liquidambar styraciflua | [noun] The tree itself, also called sweetgum LOBOTOMISING (17) [verb] To perform a lobotomy upon. | [verb] To remove the vitality or intelligence from. LOBOTOMIZING (26) [verb] To perform a lobotomy upon. | [verb] To remove the vitality or intelligence from. LOCKSMITHING (24) LOGNORMALITY (18) LONESOMENESS (14) LONGSHOREMAN (18) [noun] A man employed to load and unload ships. | [noun] One who makes a living along the shore by oyster-fishing, etc. LONGSHOREMEN (18) [noun] A man employed to load and unload ships. | [noun] One who makes a living along the shore by oyster-fishing, etc. LONGSOMENESS (15) LUFTMENSCHEN (22) LUKEWARMNESS (21) LUMINESCENCE (18) [noun] Any emission of light that cannot be attributed merely to the temperature of the emitting body. LUMINIFEROUS (17) [adjective] Producing or transmitting light; luminous. LUMINOSITIES (14) [noun] The state of being luminous, or a luminous object; brilliance or radiance | [noun] The ratio of luminous flux to radiant flux at the same wavelength; the luminosity factor | [noun] The rate at which a star radiates energy in all directions LUMINOUSNESS (14) LUMPECTOMIES (20) [noun] The surgical removal of a tumour or cyst from a breast. LYMPHOBLASTS (24) [noun] An immature lymphocyte; they proliferate uncontrollably in lymphoblastic leukemia LYMPHOGRAPHY (31) LYMPHOMATOUS (24) MACADAMIZING (29) MACHICOLATED (22) [verb] To furnish with machicolations. | [adjective] Having machicolations. MACHINATIONS (19) [noun] A clever scheme or artful plot, usually crafted for evil purposes. | [noun] The act of machinating or plotting. MACKINTOSHES (23) [noun] A waterproof long coat made of rubberized cloth. | [noun] By extension, any waterproof coat or raincoat. | [noun] Waterproof rubberized cloth. MACROCYTOSES (21) MACROCYTOSIS (21) MACROFOSSILS (19) MACROGAMETES (19) [noun] The larger of a pair of conjugating gametes; often the female. MACRONUCLEAR (18) MACRONUCLEUS (18) MACROPTEROUS (18) MADEMOISELLE (17) [noun] Courtesy title for an unmarried woman in France or a French-speaking country. | [noun] (jocular or affected) A young woman or girl, especially one who is French or French-speaking. MADREPORIANS (17) MADREPORITES (17) [noun] A calcareous opening in the body of echinoderms which connects the water vascular system to the environment. | [noun] A fossil stony coral, or a deposit composed of the same. MADRIGALISTS (16) MAGISTERIUMS (17) MAGISTRACIES (17) [noun] The office or dignity of a magistrate. | [noun] The collective body of magistrates. MAGISTRATURE (15) MAGNETICALLY (20) MAGNETIZABLE (26) MAGNETOGRAPH (21) [noun] An instrument for measuring changes in the direction and intensity of magnetic fields. MAGNETOMETER (17) [noun] An instrument used to measure the intensity and direction of a magnetic field, especially at points on the Earth's surface. MAGNETOMETRY (20) MAGNETOPAUSE (17) [noun] The boundary between the Earth's magnetosphere and the sun's plasma. MAGNIFICALLY (23) MAGNIFICENCE (22) [noun] Grandeur, brilliance, lavishness or splendor | [noun] The act of doing what is magnificent; the state or quality of being magnificent. | [noun] Impressiveness MAGNILOQUENT (24) [adjective] Speaking pompously; using deliberately long or esoteric words. MAIDENLINESS (15) MAIDSERVANTS (18) [noun] A female servant; a maid. MAINSTREAMED (17) [verb] To popularize, to normalize, to render mainstream. | [verb] To become mainstream. | [verb] To educate (a disabled student) together with non-disabled students. MAINTAINABLE (16) MAINTENANCES (16) MAJESTICALLY (26) [adverb] In a majestic manner. MAJORITARIAN (21) [noun] One who supports the dominance of the majority over the minority. | [adjective] Supporting the dominance of the majority over the minority. MALACOLOGIES (17) MALACOLOGIST (17) MALADJUSTIVE (25) MALAPERTNESS (16) MALAPROPISMS (20) [noun] The blundering use of an absurdly inappropriate word or expression in place of a similar-sounding one. | [noun] An instance of this; malaprop. MALAPROPISTS (18) MALCONTENTED (17) MALEDICTIONS (17) [noun] A curse. | [noun] Evil speech. MALEFACTIONS (19) MALEFICENCES (21) MALEVOLENCES (19) MALEVOLENTLY (20) MALFEASANCES (19) MALFORMATION (19) [noun] An abnormal formation. | [noun] An abnormal developmental feature of offspring. MALFUNCTIONS (19) [noun] Faulty functioning | [noun] Failure to function | [verb] To function improperly MALIGNANCIES (17) [noun] The state of being malignant or diseased. | [noun] A malignant cancer; specifically, any neoplasm that is invasive or otherwise not benign. | [noun] That which is malign; evil, depravity, malevolence. MALLEABILITY (19) MALNOURISHED (18) [verb] To feed insufficiently, to cause malnutrition. | [adjective] Suffering from malnutrition MALNUTRITION (14) [noun] A lack of adequate nourishment. MALOCCLUSION (18) [noun] A misalignment of the upper and lower sets of teeth. MALODOROUSLY (18) MALPOSITIONS (16) MALPRACTICES (20) [noun] The improper treatment of a patient by a physician that results in injury or loss. | [noun] Improper or unethical conduct by a professional or official person. MALTREATMENT (16) [noun] Cruel or harmful treatment or abuse; mistreatment. MALVERSATION (17) [noun] Corrupt behaviour, illegitimate activity, especially by someone in authority MAMMALOGISTS (19) MAMMOGRAPHIC (26) MANAGEMENTAL (17) MANAGERESSES (15) [noun] A female manager. MANAGERIALLY (18) MANAGERSHIPS (20) MANDARINATES (15) MANDARINISMS (17) MANDOLINISTS (15) MANEUVERABLE (19) [adjective] (often in combination) Able to be maneuvered MANFULNESSES (17) MANIFESTANTS (17) MANIFESTOING (18) MANIFOLDNESS (18) MANIPULATING (17) [verb] To move, arrange or operate something using the hands | [verb] To influence, manage, direct, control or tamper with something | [verb] To handle and move a body part, either as an examination or for a therapeutic purpose MANIPULATION (16) [noun] The practice of manipulating or the state of being manipulated. | [noun] The skillful use of the hands in, for example, chiropractic. | [noun] The usage of underhanded influence over a person, event, or situation to gain a desired outcome. MANIPULATIVE (19) [noun] A manipulable object designed to demonstrate a mathematical concept. | [adjective] Using manipulation purposefully. | [adjective] Tending to manipulate. MANIPULATORS (16) [noun] Agent noun of manipulate; one who manipulates. | [noun] A device which can be used to move, arrange or operate something. | [noun] A puppeteer, especially one controlling marionettes. MANIPULATORY (19) MANNERLINESS (14) MANORIALISMS (16) MANSLAUGHTER (18) [noun] The slaying of a human being. | [noun] The unlawful killing of a human, either in negligence or incidentally to the commission of some unlawful act, but without specific malice, or upon a sudden excitement of anger. MANTELPIECES (18) [noun] A shelf that is affixed to the wall above a fireplace. MANUFACTURED (20) [verb] To make things, usually on a large scale, with tools and either physical labor or machinery. | [verb] To work (raw or partly wrought materials) into suitable forms for use. | [verb] To fabricate; to create false evidence to support a point. MANUFACTURER (19) [noun] One that manufactures MANUFACTURES (19) [noun] The action or process of making goods systematically or on a large scale. | [noun] Anything made, formed or produced; product. | [noun] The process of such production; generation, creation. MANUMISSIONS (16) [noun] Release from slavery or other legally sanctioned servitude; the giving of freedom; the act of manumitting. MAQUILADORAS (24) [noun] An assembly plant in Mexico owned by a company from the United States or another foreign country, using cheap local labour and imported components, and which then exports its products to the company's country of origin; also (by extension) similar factories in other countries. MARATHONINGS (18) MARGINALIZED (25) [verb] To relegate (something, especially a topic or a group of people) to the margins or to a lower limit; to exclude socially or otherwise. | [adjective] Subject to marginalization. MARGINALIZES (24) [verb] To relegate (something, especially a topic or a group of people) to the margins or to a lower limit; to exclude socially or otherwise. MARGINATIONS (15) MARGRAVIATES (18) [noun] The status or rank of margrave. | [noun] A territory governed by a margrave or margravine. MARICULTURES (16) MARKEDNESSES (19) MARKETPLACES (22) [noun] An open area in a town housing a public market. | [noun] The space, actual or metaphorical, in which a market operates. | [noun] (by extension) The world of commerce and trade. MARKSMANSHIP (25) [noun] The ability to shoot accurately at a target. MARLINESPIKE (20) [noun] A tool, consisting of a pointed metal spike, used to manipulate the strands of rope or cable when knotting and splicing. MARLINSPIKES (20) [noun] A tool, consisting of a pointed metal spike, used to manipulate the strands of rope or cable when knotting and splicing. MARQUESSATES (23) [noun] The territory of a marquess, margrave or person of comparable rank. MARQUETERIES (23) MARQUISETTES (23) MARRIAGEABLE (17) [noun] One who is suitable for marriage. | [adjective] Suitable for marriage; nubile. MARSHALSHIPS (22) MARSHINESSES (17) MARSHMALLOWS (22) [noun] A species of mallow, Althaea officinalis, that grows in marshy terrain. | [noun] A type of confectionery, originally (since Ancient Egyptian times) made from this plant, but now generally made of sugar or corn syrup, gelatin that has been pre-softened in water, gum arabic, flavorings, and sometimes beaten egg whites, all whipped to a spongy consistency. | [noun] Someone who is soft and benign. MARSHMALLOWY (25) MASCULINISED (17) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINISES (16) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINISTS (16) [noun] An advocate of masculinism. MASCULINIZED (26) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINIZES (25) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASQUERADERS (24) MASQUERADING (25) [verb] To take part in a masquerade; to assemble in masks and costumes; to wear a disguise. | [verb] To pass off as a different person or a person with qualities that one does not possess; also, to make a pretentious show of being what one is not. | [verb] To conceal (someone) with, or as if with, a mask; to disguise. MASTECTOMIES (18) [noun] The surgical procedure to remove of all or part of a breast; mammectomy. MASTERLINESS (14) MASTERMINDED (18) [verb] To act in the role of mastermind. MASTERPIECES (18) [noun] A piece of work that has been given much critical praise, especially one that is considered the greatest work of a person's career. | [noun] A work of outstanding creativity, skill or workmanship. | [noun] A work created in order to qualify as a master craftsman and member of a guild. MASTERSINGER (15) [noun] A German lyric poet of the late Middle Ages. MASTERSTROKE (18) [noun] An action which demonstrates great skill or artistry. MASTICATIONS (16) MASTURBATING (17) [verb] To stimulate oneself sexually, especially by use of one’s hand or a sex toy made for this purpose, often to the point of ejaculation. | [verb] To stimulate someone else sexually without penetration of the penis. | [verb] To stimulate or please oneself by means of anything, not necessarily sexual, that does not get them anywhere; something that wastes their time; something that does not help others or achieve any important goal. MASTURBATION (16) [noun] Manual erotic stimulation of the genitals or other erotic regions, often to orgasm, either by oneself or a partner. | [noun] A vain activity. MASTURBATORS (16) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) Someone who masturbates. | [noun] A sex toy used to complement and help stimulate its user's erogenous zone(s) during masturbation, and often designed to simulate an erotic body part (of an imaginary partner). MASTURBATORY (19) MATCHMAKINGS (26) MATERIALISED (15) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALISES (14) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALISMS (16) MATERIALISTS (14) [noun] Someone who is materialistic, concerned only with material possessions. | [noun] A follower or proponent of philosophical materialism. MATERIALIZED (24) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALIZER (23) MATERIALIZES (23) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALNESS (14) MATHEMATICAL (21) [adjective] Of, or relating to mathematics | [adjective] Possible but highly improbable MATHEMATIZED (29) [verb] To describe in terms of a mathematical equation. MATHEMATIZES (28) [verb] To describe in terms of a mathematical equation. MATRIARCHATE (19) [noun] A matriarchal system or community. | [noun] The position of a matriarch. MATRIARCHIES (19) [noun] A social system in which the mother is head of household, having authority over men and children. | [noun] A system of government by females (particularly as a kind of polity). | [noun] The dominance of women in social or cultural systems. MATRICULANTS (16) [noun] A person who has matriculated or been registered on a list or roll, usually at a school. MATRICULATED (17) [verb] To enroll as a member of a body, especially of a college or university | [verb] To be enrolled as a member of a body, especially of a college or university. MATRICULATES (16) [verb] To enroll as a member of a body, especially of a college or university | [verb] To be enrolled as a member of a body, especially of a college or university. MATURATIONAL (14) MAXIMIZATION (32) MEADOWSWEETS (21) [noun] A Eurasian perennial flowering plant of Rosaceae family, Filipendula ulmaria. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Spiraea of the Rosaceae family, native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere and consisting of about 80-100 species of shrubs. MEAGERNESSES (15) MEALYMOUTHED (23) [adjective] Prone to speaking evasively, indirectly, or duplicitously; not forthright MEANINGFULLY (21) [adverb] In a meaningful or significant manner. MEASUREMENTS (16) [noun] The act of measuring. | [noun] Magnitude (or extent or amount) determined by an act of measuring. MEATPACKINGS (23) MECAMYLAMINE (23) MECHANICALLY (24) [adverb] In a mechanical manner. MECHANICIANS (21) [noun] One skilled in the theory or construction of machines. | [noun] One skilled in building, using, or repairing machines, or who makes machines or tools. | [noun] One skilled in mechanics. MECHANIZABLE (30) MEDIEVALISMS (20) MEDIEVALISTS (18) MEDIOCRITIES (17) [noun] The quality of being intermediate between two extremes; a mean. | [noun] A middle course of action; moderation, balance. | [noun] The condition of being mediocre; having only an average degree of quality, skills etc.; no better than standard. MEDITATIVELY (21) MEETINGHOUSE (18) [noun] A building where people meet for a purpose. | [noun] A building where a Quaker congregation assembles for worship. MEGALOBLASTS (17) [noun] An abnormally large red blood cell associated with pernicious anemia and with folic acid deficiency. MEGALOMANIAC (19) [noun] One affected with or exhibiting megalomania. MEGALOMANIAS (17) MEGAPROJECTS (26) MEGATONNAGES (16) MEGAVITAMINS (20) MELANCHOLIAC (21) [noun] A person who is habitually melancholy. MELANCHOLIAS (19) MELANCHOLICS (21) MELANCHOLIES (19) MELANIZATION (23) MELANOBLASTS (16) MELANOPHORES (19) MELIORATIONS (14) MELLOWNESSES (17) MELODRAMATIC (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to melodrama; like or suitable to a melodrama; unnatural in situation or action. | [adjective] Exaggeratedly emotional or sentimental. MEMBRANOUSLY (21) MEMORABILITY (21) MEMORIALISED (17) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALISES (16) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALISTS (16) [noun] A writer of memorials. | [noun] One who signs a petition. MEMORIALIZED (26) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALIZES (25) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIZATION (25) [noun] The act of committing something to memory or memorizing. MENDACIOUSLY (20) MENDELEVIUMS (20) MENDICANCIES (19) MENINGIOMATA (17) [noun] A common tumour of the central nervous system, occurring in the meninges, usually benign. MENINGITIDES (16) MENINGOCOCCI (21) [noun] A pathogenic bacterium, Neisseria meningitidis, common cause of cerebrospinal meningitis MENORRHAGIAS (18) MENSTRUATING (15) [verb] To stain with or as if with menses. | [verb] To undergo menstruation, to have a period. MENSTRUATION (14) [noun] The periodic discharging of the menses, the flow of blood and cells from the lining of the uterus in unfertilized females of humans and other primates. MENSURATIONS (14) [noun] The act or process of measuring; measurement. | [noun] The study of measurement, especially the derivation and use of algebraic formulae to measure the areas, volumes and different parameters of geometric figures. | [noun] A 13th century system for governing rhythmic relationships in music that was a precursor to the modern use of time signatures; The use of mensural notation. MEPROBAMATES (20) MERCANTILISM (18) [noun] The theory that a nation must always have a positive balance of trade, in the manner that a merchant would operate a shop. Typically this model presupposes protectionism. | [noun] The theory that holds that the prosperity of a nation depends upon its supply of capital, and that the global volume of trade is unchangeable. MERCANTILIST (16) MERCHANDISED (21) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCHANDISER (20) MERCHANDISES (20) [noun] Commodities offered for sale. | [noun] A commodity offered for sale; an article of commerce; a kind of merchandise. | [noun] The act or business of trading; trade; traffic. MERCHANDIZED (30) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCHANDIZES (29) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCHANTABLE (21) [adjective] Fit for the market, i.e. suitable for selling for an ordinary price. Sometimes, this is a technical designation for a particular kind or class. MERCIFULNESS (19) MERCURATIONS (16) MERETRICIOUS (16) [adjective] Tastelessly gaudy; superficially attractive but having in reality no value or substance; falsely alluring. | [adjective] Involving unlawful sexual connection or lack of consent by at least one party (said of a romantic relationship) | [adjective] Of, or relating to prostitutes or prostitution. MERIDIONALLY (18) MERISTEMATIC (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the meristem MERISTICALLY (19) MERITOCRATIC (18) [adjective] Pertaining to a meritocracy. MERRYMAKINGS (24) MERRYTHOUGHT (24) [noun] The furcula or wishbone. MESALLIANCES (16) MESENCEPHALA (21) MESHUGGENERS (19) [noun] A madman; a crazy person, a nutter. MESMERICALLY (21) MESOCYCLONES (21) MESOMORPHIES (21) MESOPHYLLOUS (22) MESOTHELIOMA (19) [noun] An uncommon malignant tumour of the mesothelium, usually of the lungs after exposure to asbestos. MESOTHORACES (19) MESOTHORACIC (21) MESOTHORAXES (24) [noun] The middle of the three segments of the thorax of an insect, carrying the second pair of legs, and the forewings when present. MESSEIGNEURS (15) [noun] An honorific form of address for an eminent person in France, especially under the Ancien Régime. | [noun] (in particular) A title of the Dauphin of France. MESSIAHSHIPS (22) METABOLIZING (26) [verb] To undergo metabolism. | [verb] To cause a substance to undergo metabolism. | [verb] To produce a substance using metabolism. METACENTRICS (18) METACERCARIA (18) METAFICTIONS (19) [noun] A form of self-referential literature concerned with the art and devices of fiction itself. METAGALACTIC (19) METAGALAXIES (22) METALANGUAGE (16) [noun] (critical theory) Any language or vocabulary of specialized terms used to describe or analyze a language or linguistic process. | [noun] Any similar language used to define a programming language. METALLICALLY (19) METALLOPHONE (19) [noun] Any musical instrument consisting of tuned metal bars which are struck to make sound. METALLURGIES (15) METALLURGIST (15) METALWORKERS (21) METALWORKING (22) METAMORPHISM (23) [noun] The process by which rocks are changed into other forms by the application of heat and/or pressure. | [noun] The process by which insects develop through life stages, for example, those of embryo, larva, pupa and imago. The life cycle of the butterfly is one of complete metamorphosis, in which the embryo grows within the egg, hatches into the larval stage caterpillar, enters the pupal stage within its chrysalis, and finally emerges as an adult butterfly imago. | [noun] (by extension) Any dramatic change from one thing to another METAMORPHOSE (21) [verb] (of a moth or insect) To undergo metamorphosis. | [verb] (by extension) To undergo some transformation. | [verb] To transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance. METAPHORICAL (21) [adjective] Pertaining to or characterized by a metaphor; figurative; symbolic. METAPHYSICAL (24) [adjective] Of or pertaining to metaphysics. | [adjective] Being an adherent of the philosophy of metaphysics. | [adjective] Immaterial, supersensual, not physical (more properly, "beyond" that which is physical). METASEQUOIAS (23) METASOMATISM (18) [noun] The process by which the bulk chemical composition of a rock is changed by the introduction of components from an external source, especially by a hydrothermal fluid. METASTASIZED (24) [verb] (of a disease or tumour) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis. METASTASIZES (23) [verb] (of a disease or tumour) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis. METATHETICAL (19) METATHORACES (19) METATHORACIC (21) METATHORAXES (24) [noun] The hindmost of the three sections of the thorax of an insect, carrying the posterior pair of legs and the hindwings when present. METENCEPHALA (21) METEORICALLY (19) METEORITICAL (16) METEOROLOGIC (17) METHACRYLATE (22) [noun] Any salt or ester of methacrylic acid, especially an ester used in the manufacture of resins and plastics. | [noun] A resin manufactured from methacrylic acid or a methacrylate. METHANATIONS (17) METHAQUALONE (26) [noun] A sedative drug that has effects similar to barbiturates. Also used recreationally. METHENAMINES (19) METHICILLINS (19) METHODICALLY (23) [adverb] In a methodical manner; with order. METHOTREXATE (24) [noun] An antimetabolite and antifolate drug used in treatment of cancer and autoimmune diseases. METHOXYCHLOR (32) METHYLAMINES (22) METHYLATIONS (20) METHYSERGIDE (22) METICULOSITY (19) METICULOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a meticulous manner. METRICATIONS (16) METROLOGICAL (17) METROLOGISTS (15) METRONOMICAL (18) METROPOLISES (16) [noun] (history) The mother (founding) polis (city state) of a colony. | [noun] A large, busy city, especially as the main city in an area or country or as distinguished from surrounding rural areas. | [noun] (canon law) The see of a metropolitan archbishop, ranking above its suffragan diocesan bishops. METROPOLITAN (16) [noun] A bishop empowered to oversee other bishops; an archbishop. | [noun] The inhabitant of a metropolis. | [adjective] Pertaining to the see or province of a metropolitan. METRORRHAGIA (18) [noun] Abnormal uterine bleeding MICROAMPERES (20) MICROANALYST (19) MICROANATOMY (21) MICROBALANCE (20) [noun] Any balance capable of weighing objects having a mass less than a milligram MICROBIOLOGY (22) [noun] The branch of biology that deals with microorganisms, especially their effects on man and other living organisms. MICROBREWERS (21) MICROBREWERY (24) [noun] A small commercial brewery, often one serving a single pub at which it is physically located; in the United States, often used to indicate a brewery that produces fewer than 15,000 barrels of beer annually. MICROBREWING (22) MICROCAPSULE (20) [noun] A very small capsule designed to release its contents when broken (typically, after being swallowed). MICROCEPHALY (26) [noun] A neurological disorder in which the person affected has an abnormally small head due to a failure of brain growth. MICROCIRCUIT (20) [noun] An electronic device, usually fabricated by photolithography, that is very small and implements several components or their equivalent; an integrated circuit. MICROCLIMATE (20) [noun] A small, local region having a unique pattern of weather or weather effects that differ from the local climate. MICROCRYSTAL (21) MICROCULTURE (18) MICROELEMENT (18) MICROFIBRILS (21) [noun] A bundle of cellulose polymer chains held together by weak bonds. MICROFILARIA (19) [noun] The very small larva of a filarial worm. MICROFILMERS (21) MICROFILMING (22) [verb] To reproduce documents on such film MICROFOSSILS (19) [noun] A microscopic fossil MICROGAMETES (19) [noun] The smaller of a pair of conjugating gametes; often the male MICROGRAPHED (23) MICROGRAPHIC (24) MICROGRAVITY (23) [noun] A state of very low acceleration between two free floating objects, as found in sustained freefall, in orbit, or in interstellar space. MICROGROOVES (20) [noun] The long, spiral groove of a vinyl LP record | [noun] Any microscopic groove MICROHABITAT (21) [noun] A specific habitat, typically extremely small, such as a cave corner or a cardboard box. MICROINJECTS (25) [verb] To inject with a micropipette. MICROMANAGED (20) [verb] To manage, direct, or control a person, group, or system to an unnecessary level of detail or precision. MICROMANAGER (19) MICROMANAGES (19) [verb] To manage, direct, or control a person, group, or system to an unnecessary level of detail or precision. MICROMETHODS (22) MICRONUCLEUS (18) MICROPHONICS (23) MICROPHYSICS (26) [noun] That branch of physics that deals with objects smaller than a molecule MICROPIPETTE (20) [noun] A very small pipette. | [verb] To transfer or measure the volume of a liquid using a micropipette. MICROPROGRAM (21) [noun] A set of microinstructions in a CPU, used to implement machine instructions | [verb] To manually write a microprogram MICROREADERS (17) [noun] Any device used to read microfilm or microfiche MICROSCOPIES (20) MICROSCOPIST (20) MICROSECONDS (19) [noun] An SI unit of time equal to 10-6 seconds. Symbol: μs It is commonly represented with symbol µs. MICROSEISMIC (20) MICROSPHERES (21) [noun] Any sphere whose size is measured in micrometres MICROSPOROUS (18) MICROSURGERY (20) [noun] Surgical procedures that are very small. | [adjective] Relating to techniques of surgery on very small or delicate parts of the body. MICROTECHNIC (23) MICROTONALLY (19) MICROTUBULAR (18) MICROTUBULES (18) [noun] A small tube made of protein and found in cells; part of the cytoskeleton. MICROVILLOUS (19) MICROWAVABLE (24) MICTURITIONS (16) [noun] Urination MIDDLEWEIGHT (23) [noun] A weight class in professional boxing between light middleweight or welterweight and super middleweight or cruiserweight; a similar division in wrestling and other sports | [noun] A boxer who fights in this division; a similar wrestler etc | [noun] (by extension) An employee ranking anywhere between junior and senior. MIDLATITUDES (16) MIFEPRISTONE (19) [noun] (steroid drug) A steroid pharmaceutical used to induce abortion, or as an emergency contraceptive. MIGHTINESSES (18) MILITANTNESS (14) MILITARISING (15) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARISTIC (16) [adjective] Using the power of the military. | [adjective] Related to the use of the military. MILITARIZING (24) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILLENARIANS (14) [noun] A person who believes in an apocalyptic millennium. MILLESIMALLY (19) MILLIAMPERES (18) [noun] One thousandth (10-3) of an ampere. MILLIDEGREES (16) MILLIHENRIES (17) MILLILAMBERT (18) MILLIMICRONS (18) MILLIONAIRES (14) [noun] (strictly) A person whose net worth is at or greater than one million units of the local currency, but less than two million. | [noun] A person whose net worth is at or greater than one million units of the local currency; a multimillionaire. MILLIRADIANS (15) MILLISECONDS (17) [noun] One one-thousandth of a second. Symbol: ms. MIMEOGRAPHED (23) [verb] To make mimeograph copies. MINDEDNESSES (16) MINDLESSNESS (15) MINERALISING (15) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALIZERS (23) MINERALIZING (24) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALOGIES (15) MINERALOGIST (15) MINESWEEPERS (19) [noun] A vehicle, device or person with the purpose of removing explosive mines (landmines or water mines). | [noun] A logic-based computer game in which the player has to discover the position of mines in a rectangular grid, based on numerical hints. MINESWEEPING (20) MINIATURISTS (14) [noun] An artist who paints miniature figures or scenes. | [noun] A person who creates or collects miniature figurines (such as dolls). MINIATURIZED (24) [verb] To design or construct something on a miniature scale. | [adjective] That is a miniature version of something MINIATURIZES (23) [verb] To design or construct something on a miniature scale. MINICOMPUTER (20) [noun] A computer smaller than a mainframe, but larger than a microcomputer. MINIMIZATION (25) [noun] The act of lowering something to its smallest value or extent. | [noun] The process of finding the minimum value of a function. MINISTRATION (14) [noun] The act of ministering. MINNESINGERS (15) [noun] In 12th- to 14th-century Germany, a peripatetic musician, often performing songs of courtly love. MINSTRELSIES (14) MINUTENESSES (14) MIRACULOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a miraculous manner. MIRTHFULNESS (20) MISADDRESSED (17) [verb] To address (a letter, etc.) incorrectly. MISADDRESSES (16) [verb] To address (a letter, etc.) incorrectly. MISADJUSTING (23) MISADVENTURE (18) [noun] An accidental mishap or misfortune. MISALIGNMENT (17) [noun] The state, or an instance, of being misaligned MISALLIANCES (16) [noun] An unsuitable alliance, especially an unsuitable marriage. MISALLOCATED (17) [verb] To allocate incorrectly or inappropriately. MISALLOCATES (16) [verb] To allocate incorrectly or inappropriately. MISANTHROPES (19) [noun] One who hates all mankind; one who hates the human race. MISANTHROPIC (21) [adjective] Hating or disliking mankind. MISAPPRAISAL (18) MISAPPREHEND (22) [verb] To interpret incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISASSEMBLED (19) MISASSEMBLES (18) MISATTRIBUTE (16) [verb] To erroneously attribute; to falsely ascribe; used especially of authorship. MISBALANCING (19) MISBEGINNING (18) MISBEHAVIORS (22) [noun] Action or conduct that is inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected. MISBELIEVERS (19) MISBELIEVING (20) MISBUTTONING (17) MISCALCULATE (18) [verb] To calculate incorrectly. | [verb] To make a gross error in judgement. MISCAPTIONED (19) MISCARRIAGES (17) [noun] A failure; a mistake or error. | [noun] The spontaneous natural termination of a pregnancy, especially before it is viable; the fatal expulsion of a foetus from the womb before term. MISCATALOGED (18) MISCELLANIES (16) [noun] Miscellaneous items. | [noun] A collection of writings on various subjects or topics; an anthology. MISCELLANIST (16) MISCHANNELED (20) MISCITATIONS (16) MISCOMPUTING (21) MISCONCEIVED (22) [verb] To misunderstand MISCONCEIVER (21) MISCONCEIVES (21) [verb] To misunderstand MISCONDUCTED (20) [verb] To mismanage. | [verb] To behave inappropriately, to misbehave. | [verb] To act improperly. MISCONNECTED (19) MISCONSTRUED (17) [verb] To interpret erroneously, to understand incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISCONSTRUES (16) [verb] To interpret erroneously, to understand incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISCREATIONS (16) [noun] A faulty or unnatural making or creation. MISDEMEANANT (17) [noun] One who commits misdemeanors MISDEMEANORS (17) [noun] A crime usually punishable upon conviction by a small fine or by a short term of imprisonment. In the USA, misdemeanants usually are incarcerated in county jail for less than one year, but felons usually are incarcerated in state or federal prison for more than one year. Crimes which are punishable by large fines or by longer imprisonment are sometimes called felonies. MISDESCRIBED (20) [verb] To incorrectly explain or detail something or someone. MISDESCRIBES (19) [verb] To incorrectly explain or detail something or someone. MISDEVELOPED (21) MISDIAGNOSED (17) [verb] To incorrectly diagnose. MISDIAGNOSES (16) [verb] To incorrectly diagnose. | [noun] An incorrect diagnosis. MISDIAGNOSIS (16) [noun] An incorrect diagnosis. MISDIRECTING (18) [verb] To direct something wrongly | [verb] To direct attention away from covert actions or intended targets. | [verb] To put the incorrect address on a mail item MISDIRECTION (17) [noun] An act of misleading, of convincing someone to concentrate in an incorrect direction. | [noun] An error of law within a judgement committed by a judge or judges of a lower court, particularly as found by an appeals court MISDIVISIONS (18) MISEDUCATING (18) [verb] To educate wrongly. MISEDUCATION (17) MISEMPHASIZE (30) MISEMPLOYING (22) [verb] To employ incorrectly; to misuse. MISENROLLING (15) MISERICORDES (17) MISESTEEMING (17) MISESTIMATED (17) [verb] To estimate erroneously. MISESTIMATES (16) [verb] To estimate erroneously. MISEVALUATED (18) MISEVALUATES (17) MISFEASANCES (19) [noun] An actual or alleged wrong that arises from an action; often, the wrongful use of legal authority. MISFOCUSSING (20) MISFUNCTIONS (19) MISGOVERNING (19) [verb] To govern badly or wrongly. MISGUIDANCES (18) MISINFERRING (18) MISINFORMING (20) [verb] To give or deliver false, fake, or misleading information. MISINTERPRET (16) [verb] To make an incorrect interpretation; to misunderstand. MISINTERRING (15) MISJUDGMENTS (25) MISKNOWLEDGE (23) MISLABELLING (17) [verb] To label incorrectly. | [noun] An incorrect labelling. MISLEADINGLY (19) [adverb] In a misleading manner. MISLOCATIONS (16) MISMARRIAGES (17) [noun] Bad or unsuitable marriage. MISOGYNISTIC (20) [adjective] Of, relating to or exhibiting misogyny. MISORIENTING (15) MISPACKAGING (24) MISPERCEIVED (22) [verb] To perceive erroneously. MISPERCEIVES (21) [verb] To perceive erroneously. MISPLACEMENT (20) MISPOSITIONS (16) MISPROGRAMED (20) MISPRONOUNCE (18) [verb] To pronounce (a word, phrase, etc.) incorrectly. MISQUOTATION (23) MISRECKONING (21) MISRECORDING (18) MISREFERENCE (19) MISREFERRING (18) MISREGISTERS (15) MISREMEMBERS (20) [verb] To remember incorrectly. MISRENDERING (16) [verb] To render incorrectly. | [noun] An incorrect rendering. MISREPORTING (17) [verb] To report erroneously; to give an incorrect account of. | [noun] Incorrect reporting MISREPRESENT (16) [verb] To represent falsely; to inaccurately portray something. MISSIOLOGIES (15) MISSIONARIES (14) [noun] One who is sent on a mission. | [noun] A person who travels attempting to spread a religion or a creed. | [noun] A religious messenger. MISSIONIZERS (23) MISSIONIZING (24) MISSPELLINGS (17) [noun] A misspelt word. MISSTATEMENT (16) MISTRANSLATE (14) [verb] To translate incorrectly. MISTREATMENT (16) [noun] Cruel, abusive , bad, unfair, or thoughtless treatment of a person or animal (only rarely of an object or a machine; usually: mishandle). MITOCHONDRIA (20) [noun] A spherical or ovoid organelle found in the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells and containing genetic material separate from that of the host; it is responsible for the conversion of food to usable energy in the form of ATP. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) mitochondrion MITOGENICITY (20) MNEMONICALLY (21) MOBILIZATION (25) [noun] The act of mobilizing | [noun] The marshalling of troops and national resources in preparation for war. | [noun] The process by which the armed forces of a nation are brought to a state of readiness for a conflict. MOCKINGBIRDS (24) [noun] A long-tailed American songbird of the Mimidae family, noted for its ability to mimic calls of other birds. MODERATENESS (15) MODERNNESSES (15) MODIFICATION (20) [noun] The form of existence belonging to a particular object, entity etc.; a mode of being. | [noun] The change undergone by a word when used in a construction (for instance am => 'm in I'm) | [noun] The result of modifying something; a new or changed form. MODISHNESSES (18) MODULABILITY (20) MODULARITIES (15) MOISTURISING (15) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURIZERS (23) [noun] Something that causes moisture or a a condition of wetness; something that makes things moist. | [noun] Moisturising cream, emollient. MOISTURIZING (24) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. | [noun] (cosmo) The act of making something moist; but especially, of a cosmetic, of making the skin or hair less dry MOLESTATIONS (14) [noun] The act of molesting. MOLLUSCICIDE (19) MOLLYCODDLED (22) [verb] To be overprotective and indulgent toward; to pamper. MOLLYCODDLER (21) MOLLYCODDLES (21) [noun] A person, especially a man or a boy, who is pampered and overprotected. MOLYBDENITES (20) MONADELPHOUS (20) [adjective] Having all its stamens within a flower fused together at least partly by the filaments. MONASTICALLY (19) MONASTICISMS (18) MONETIZATION (23) [noun] The conversion of something (especially metal) into money. | [noun] The process of making a business activity profit-generating, particularly in computer and Internet-related activities. MONEYLENDERS (18) [noun] A person who lends money and charges interest, especially one who is not part of the official financial industry MONEYMAKINGS (24) MONGRELIZING (25) [verb] To breed a mongrel | [verb] To cross-breed MONITORSHIPS (19) MONKEYSHINES (24) [noun] A puerile trick or prank MONOCHROMATS (21) MONOCHROMIST (21) MONOCRYSTALS (19) MONOCULTURAL (16) MONOCULTURES (16) MONODISPERSE (17) [verb] To cause to become monodisperse. | [adjective] (of a colloid) Having particles of (approximately) the same size. | [adjective] Unvarying; all the same. MONODRAMATIC (19) MONOFILAMENT (19) [noun] A single strand of man-made fiber MONOGAMOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a monogamous manner. MONOGRAMMERS (19) MONOGRAMMING (20) [verb] To mark something with a monogram. MONOGRAPHING (21) [verb] To write a monograph on (a subject). | [verb] Of the FDA: to publish a standard that authorizes the use of (a substance). MONOLINGUALS (15) [noun] A person who knows or uses only a single language; a monoglot MONOLOGUISTS (15) [noun] A person who performs a monologue or monologues. MONOMANIACAL (18) MONOMETALLIC (18) [adjective] Consisting of a single metal. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to monometallism. MONOMORPHISM (23) MONONUCLEARS (16) MONONUCLEATE (16) MONOPHTHONGS (23) [noun] A vowel (in the sense of a sound rather than a letter of the alphabet) that has the same sound throughout its pronunciation, such as the short vowels in "pap", "pep", "pip", "pop" and "pup", as opposed to a diphthong (eg, /aɪ/, the vowel in "pipe") or a triphthong (eg, /aɪə/, the sound in the non-rhotic pronunciation of "pyre"). MONOPHYLETIC (24) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or affecting a single phylum (or other taxon) of organisms. | [adjective] Deriving from a single clade (monophylum). | [adjective] Descending from a single ancestral species. MONOPODIALLY (20) MONOPOLISING (17) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLISTIC (18) [adjective] Acting in the manner of a monopoly. MONOPOLIZERS (25) MONOPOLIZING (26) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONORCHIDISM (22) MONOSPECIFIC (23) [adjective] (Of a genus) containing only one known species. | [adjective] (Of a group of antibodies) with affinity for the same antigen. MONOSYLLABIC (21) [noun] A word consisting of one syllable | [adjective] Consisting of one syllable. | [adjective] Using monosyllables, speaking in monosyllables; curt. MONOSYLLABLE (19) [noun] A word of one syllable. | [noun] A euphemism for the word cunt MONOSYNAPTIC (21) [adjective] Having, or involving a single synapse | [adjective] Stupid, lacking in brainpower MONOTERPENES (16) MONOTHEISTIC (19) [adjective] Believing in a single god, deity, spirit, etc., especially for an organized religion, faith, or creed. MONOTONICITY (19) MONOTONOUSLY (17) MONSIGNORIAL (15) MONUMENTALLY (19) [adverb] To a monumental extent; very greatly. MOONLIGHTERS (18) MOONLIGHTING (19) [verb] To work on the side (at a secondary job), often in the evening or during the night. | [verb] (by extension) To engage in an activity other than what one is known for. | [verb] (by extension, of an inanimate object) To perform a secondary function substantially different from its supposed primary function, as in protein moonlighting. MORALIZATION (23) MORBIDNESSES (17) MOROSENESSES (14) MORPHALLAXES (26) MORPHALLAXIS (26) [noun] The regeneration of specific tissue due to loss or death of the existing tissue. MORPHOLOGIES (20) [noun] A scientific study of form and structure, usually without regard to function. Especially: | [noun] The form and structure of something. | [noun] A description of the form and structure of something. MORPHOLOGIST (20) MORPHOMETRIC (23) MORTARBOARDS (17) [noun] A square board, with a handle, on which mortar or plaster is carried: a hawk. | [noun] An academic cap that has a flat square top with a tassel. MOTHERBOARDS (20) [noun] The primary circuit board of a personal computer, containing the circuitry for the central processing unit, keyboard, mouse and monitor, together with slots for other devices. MOTHERFUCKER (26) [noun] (strongly vulgar) An extremely contemptible or mean person. | [noun] (strongly vulgar) Any person, often but not always with the connotation that the person is disliked or is threatening. | [noun] (markedly vulgar) An extremely intense experience, often but not always negative. MOTHERHOUSES (20) [noun] The monastery from which the other 'houses' of a religious order or congregation were (directly or indirectly) founded, often eponymous. | [noun] The convent which is the seat (and often the above original foundation) of the superior of an order or congregation, and/or on which lower ranking houses (such as priories under an abbot) depend. MOTHERLINESS (17) MOTHPROOFERS (22) MOTHPROOFING (23) [verb] To apply odoriferous materials intended to repel moths from clothing. MOTIONLESSLY (17) MOTIVATIONAL (17) [adjective] Tending or intended to motivate. MOTIVELESSLY (20) MOTONEURONAL (14) MOTORBOATERS (16) MOTORBOATING (17) MOTORCYCLING (22) [verb] To ride a motorcycle. | [noun] The activity or hobby of travelling on a motorcycle MOTORCYCLIST (21) [noun] Someone who rides a motorcycle MOTORIZATION (23) MOUNTAINEERS (14) [noun] A person who climbs mountains for sport or pleasure. | [noun] A person who lives in a mountainous area (often with the connotation that such people are outlaws or uncivilized). | [noun] An animal or plant that is native to a mountainous area. MOUNTAINSIDE (15) [noun] The sloping side of a mountain. MOUNTAINTOPS (16) [noun] The summit of a mountain. MOUNTEBANKED (21) MOURNFULLEST (17) MOURNFULNESS (17) MOUSETRAPPED (19) [verb] To trap; to trick or fool (someone) into a bad situation. | [verb] To prevent (the user) from leaving a website by opening another copy when it is closed. MOUTHBREEDER (20) MOVABILITIES (19) MOVELESSNESS (17) MOVIEMAKINGS (24) MUCILAGINOUS (17) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or resembling mucus; slimy and viscous. MUCOPEPTIDES (21) MUCOPROTEINS (18) MUDDLEHEADED (21) [adjective] Confused, groggy, semi-conscious. | [adjective] Foolish, stupid MUDSLINGINGS (17) MULIEBRITIES (16) MULISHNESSES (17) MULLIGATAWNY (21) [noun] An Indian soup having a meat base and curry seasoning. MULTIBILLION (16) [adjective] Having a value of several billion (in general, at least two billion) MULTICHANNEL (19) [adjective] A connection, usually electronic, that uses multiple channels to process or transmit signals MULTICOLORED (17) [adjective] Having multiple colors. MULTIELEMENT (16) MULTIETHNICS (19) MULTIFACETED (20) [adjective] Having multiple facets. | [adjective] Having many aspects; nuanced or diverse. MULTIFARIOUS (17) [adjective] Having great diversity or variety; of various kinds; made up of many differing parts; manifold. | [adjective] (of lawsuits) In which a party or a cause of action has been improperly or wrongfully joined together in the same suit, as in a misjoinder, perhaps as a result of a joinder of unrelated, distinct, independent parties or matters. MULTIFORMITY (22) MULTILATERAL (14) [noun] A group with representatives from three or more parties or nations. | [adjective] Having many sides or points of view. | [adjective] Involving three or more parties or nations. MULTILAYERED (18) [adjective] Having more than one layer. MULTILEVELED (18) MULTILINGUAL (15) [noun] A polyglot | [adjective] Of, relating to, or involving multiple languages. | [adjective] (Of a person) able to communicate in a number of languages. MULTIMEGATON (17) MULTIMILLION (16) [adjective] Having several millions; costing or worth many millions of dollars, pounds, euros or some other currency. MULTINOMIALS (16) [noun] Polynomial MULTINUCLEAR (16) MULTIPARTITE (16) [adjective] Divided into multiple parts | [adjective] Involving multiple nations; multilateral | [adjective] Describing a system of three or more entangled quantum states MULTIPICTURE (18) MULTIPLEXERS (23) MULTIPLEXING (24) [verb] To interleave several activities. | [verb] To combine several signals into one. | [verb] To convert (a cinema business) into a large complex, or multiplex. MULTIPLEXORS (23) MULTIPLICAND (19) [noun] A number that is to be multiplied by another (the multiplier). MULTIPLICITY (21) [noun] The state of being made of multiple diverse elements. | [noun] The number of values for which a given condition holds. | [noun] A large indeterminate number. MULTIPROBLEM (20) MULTIPRODUCT (19) MULTIPRONGED (18) MULTIPURPOSE (18) [adjective] Designed or intended to fit more than one type of function or application; having multiple uses. MULTISENSORY (17) [adjective] Pertaining to the integration of information from different sensory modalities MULTISERVICE (19) MULTISKILLED (19) [adjective] Having multiple skills MULTISPECIES (18) MULTISTEMMED (19) MULTISTORIED (15) [adjective] Multi-storey. MULTITASKING (19) [verb] To schedule and execute multiple tasks (program) simultaneously; control being passed from one to the other using interrupts. | [verb] (of a person) To handle multiple tasks at once. | [noun] The simultaneous execution of multiple tasks (programs) under the control of an interrupt-driven operating system. MULTITOWERED (18) MULTIVALENCE (19) MULTIVALENTS (17) MULTIVARIATE (17) [noun] A vector, each of whose elements is a variate. | [adjective] Having or involving multiple variables. MULTIVERSITY (20) [noun] A kind of modern, large-scale university, open to all, proposed by Clark Kerr in the 1960s. MULTIVITAMIN (19) [noun] A mixture of vitamins | [noun] A preparation containing such a mixture | [adjective] Containing or relating to multiple vitamins. MULTIVOLTINE (17) MULTIWARHEAD (21) MUNICIPALITY (21) [noun] A district with a government that typically encloses no other governed districts; a borough, city, or incorporated town or village. | [noun] The governing body of such a district. MUNICIPALIZE (27) [verb] To convert into a municipality MUNIFICENCES (21) [noun] The quality of being munificent; generosity. MUNIFICENTLY (22) MUSCULATURES (16) MUSEOLOGICAL (17) MUSEOLOGISTS (15) MUSICALISING (17) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICALITIES (16) MUSICALIZING (26) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICIANSHIP (21) [noun] The skill of a musician or of a composer. MUSICOLOGIES (17) MUSICOLOGIST (17) [noun] One who studies musicology. MUTABILITIES (16) MUTAGENICITY (20) MUTATIONALLY (17) MUTINOUSNESS (14) MUTTONFISHES (20) MYCETOMATOUS (21) MYCOBACTERIA (23) [noun] Any of many rod-shaped, aerobic bacteria, of the genus Mycobacterium, that cause diseases such as tuberculosis and leprosy. MYCOPHAGISTS (25) MYCOPLASMATA (23) [noun] Any infectious bacterium of the genus Mycoplasma, often specifically Mycoplasma pneumoniae MYELOBLASTIC (21) MYELOPATHIES (22) MYOFIBRILLAR (22) MYOFILAMENTS (22) MYOINOSITOLS (17) MYRMECOPHILE (26) [noun] An organism, especially an insect, that lives in close association with or shares a nest with a species of ant. MYSTERIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a mysterious manner MYSTIFYINGLY (27) MYTHOGRAPHER (26) [noun] One who studies or writes down myths and legends MYTHOLOGICAL (23) [adjective] Of, or relating to myths or mythology. | [adjective] Legendary. | [adjective] Imaginary. MYTHOLOGISTS (21) MYTHOLOGIZED (31) [verb] To interpret (a story etc.) as mythological; to explain the symbolic meaning of. | [verb] To construct a myth or mythology. | [verb] To make (something or someone) into a myth; to create a legend about. MYTHOLOGIZER (30) MYTHOLOGIZES (30) [verb] To interpret (a story etc.) as mythological; to explain the symbolic meaning of. | [verb] To construct a myth or mythology. | [verb] To make (something or someone) into a myth; to create a legend about. MYTHOMANIACS (24) MYXEDEMATOUS (27) NAMELESSNESS (14) NATIONALISMS (14) [noun] Patriotism; the idea of supporting one's country, people or culture. | [noun] Support for the creation of a sovereign nation (which does not currently exist). | [noun] Support for the union of Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. NECROMANCERS (18) [noun] A person who practices or performs necromancy. NECROMANCIES (18) NECROPHILISM (21) NEMATOLOGIES (15) NEMATOLOGIST (15) NEOSTIGMINES (15) NEPHELOMETER (19) [noun] An instrument for measuring various aspects of the suspended particles in a fluid; especially in a colloid. NEPHELOMETRY (22) NEPHROSTOMES (19) NEUROANATOMY (17) [noun] The anatomy of the nervous system. | [noun] The structure of the nerves of a specific organ or organism. NEUROCHEMIST (19) NEUROFIBROMA (19) [noun] A benign tumor composed of Schwann cells NEUROHORMONE (17) [noun] Any hormone that stimulates the nervous system NEUROHUMORAL (17) NEUROTICISMS (16) NEWSMAGAZINE (27) NEWSPAPERMAN (21) [noun] A man who works in the production of the text of a newspaper; a reporter, editor, etc. NEWSPAPERMEN (21) [noun] A man who works in the production of the text of a newspaper; a reporter, editor, etc. NIACINAMIDES (17) NICOTINAMIDE (17) [noun] The amide of nicotinic acid (or niacin). NIMBLENESSES (16) NIMBOSTRATUS (16) [noun] According to the World Meteorological Organization, a mid-level, principal cloud type, generally formless and dark grey in colour, which forms from altostratus occurring in layers at the middle altitude of the troposphere (usually above 2400 metres). Nimbostratus usually brings precipitation as the mid-level clouds thicken and subside into the low level of the troposphere. Frontal or cyclonic lift can also carry the top of a deep nimbostratus layer into the high levels of the troposphere. Also classified or characterized as multi-level; abbreviated Ns. NINNYHAMMERS (22) NITROMETHANE (17) [noun] A colourless oily liquid used in organic synthesis, and as a fuel for rockets, racing cars and model aircraft | [noun] The simplest nitroparaffin, CH3NO2 NITROSAMINES (14) [noun] A divalent functional group, >N.N=O. | [noun] Any of a class of carcinogenic organic compounds containing this group, prepared by the reaction of amines with nitrites. NOCTAMBULIST (18) [noun] One who sleepwalks at night; a somnambulist. NOISEMAKINGS (19) NOMENCLATORS (16) NOMENCLATURE (16) [noun] A set of rules used for forming the names or terms in a particular field of arts or sciences. | [noun] A set of names or terms. | [noun] A name. NOMINALISTIC (16) NOMOGRAPHIES (20) NONACADEMICS (19) NONADMISSION (15) NONALIGNMENT (15) [noun] The condition of being nonaligned NONAMBIGUOUS (17) NONARGUMENTS (15) NONAROMATICS (16) NONAUTOMATED (15) NONAUTOMATIC (16) [adjective] Not automatic. NONCHEMICALS (21) NONCLASSROOM (16) NONCOMBATANT (18) [noun] A non-fighting member of the armed forces. | [noun] A civilian in time of conflict. NONCOMBATIVE (21) [adjective] Not combative. NONCOMMITTAL (18) [adjective] Tending to avoid commitment; lacking certainty or decisiveness; reluctant to give out information or show one's feelings or opinion. NONCOMMITTED (19) NONCOMMUNIST (18) [noun] One who is not a communist. NONCOMMUNITY (21) NONCOMPLYING (22) NONCOMPOSERS (18) NONCONFORMED (20) NONCONFORMER (19) NONCONSUMERS (16) NONCONSUMING (17) NONCRIMINALS (16) NONCUSTOMERS (16) NONDEFORMING (19) NONDEMANDING (17) NONECONOMIST (16) NONEMERGENCY (20) [noun] Something that is not an emergency | [adjective] Not an emergency. | [adjective] Not involved in emergency services, such as fire or rescue. NONEMOTIONAL (14) [adjective] Not emotional; unrelated to emotion. NONEMPIRICAL (18) NONEMPLOYEES (19) NONENZYMATIC (28) NONFEMINISTS (17) NONFLAMMABLE (21) [noun] Any nonflammable substance. | [adjective] Not combustible. | [adjective] Not easily set on fire. NONGLAMOROUS (15) NONHEMOLYTIC (22) NONIMITATIVE (17) NONIMMIGRANT (17) NONINCUMBENT (18) NONMALIGNANT (15) [adjective] Not malignant, without malice. | [adjective] Of a growth in the body, not cancerous. NONMALLEABLE (16) NONMERCURIAL (16) NONMETAMERIC (18) NONMICROBIAL (18) NONMIGRATORY (18) NONMILITANTS (14) NONMOLECULAR (16) NONMOTORIZED (24) NONMUNICIPAL (18) NONMUSICIANS (16) NONNORMATIVE (17) NONNUMERICAL (16) NONPERFORMER (19) NONPETROLEUM (16) NONRUMINANTS (14) NONSYMMETRIC (21) NONTERMINALS (14) NONTREATMENT (14) NONUNANIMOUS (14) NORMALIZABLE (25) NORMOTENSIVE (17) [noun] A person who has normal blood pressure. | [adjective] Having normal tension. | [adjective] Having normal blood pressure. NORMOTHERMIA (19) NORMOTHERMIC (21) NORTHERNMOST (17) [adjective] Farthest north. NOURISHMENTS (17) NUCLEOPLASMS (18) NUMEROLOGIES (15) NUMEROLOGIST (15) NUMEROUSNESS (14) NUMINOUSNESS (14) NUMISMATISTS (16) NYMPHOLEPTIC (26) NYMPHOMANIAC (26) [noun] A woman with an excessive libido. | [adjective] (of a woman) Having an excessive libido. NYMPHOMANIAS (24) OARSMANSHIPS (19) OBJECTIVISMS (28) OBSCURANTISM (18) [noun] A state of opposition to human progress or enlightenment. | [noun] Deliberate obscurity or vagueness. OFFICIALDOMS (23) [noun] The people elected to government or employed in the civil service. OFFICIALISMS (22) OLEANDOMYCIN (20) OLFACTOMETER (19) [noun] A device used to measure the acuity of a person's sense of smell. | [noun] A device used to measure odour intensity, and concentrations of volatile organic compounds, by means of their smell. OMNIPOTENCES (18) [noun] Unlimited power; commonly attributed to a deity or deities. OMNIPOTENTLY (19) OMNIPRESENCE (18) [noun] The ability to be at all places at the same time; usually only attributed to God. OMNISCIENCES (18) OMNISCIENTLY (19) OMNIVOROUSLY (20) ONOMASTICIAN (16) ONOMATOPOEIA (16) [noun] The property of a word of sounding like what it represents. | [noun] A word that sounds like what it represents, such as "gurgle" or "hiss". | [noun] The use of language whose sound imitates that which it names. ONOMATOPOEIC (18) [adjective] Of or relating to onomatopoeia. | [adjective] Having the property of onomatopoeia. OOPHORECTOMY (24) [noun] Surgical removal of one or both ovaries. OPERATIONISM (16) [noun] The doctrine that the meaning of a term consists of the operation(s) performed in defining it OPPORTUNISMS (18) OPTIMALITIES (16) OPTIMISATION (16) [noun] The design and operation of a system or process to make it as good as possible in some defined sense. OPTIMIZATION (25) [noun] The design and operation of a system or process to make it as good as possible in some defined sense. OPTOMETRISTS (16) [noun] A person trained and skilled in examining and testing the eyes for defects, in order to prescribe corrective lenses or treatment. ORIENTALISMS (14) ORISMOLOGIES (15) ORNAMENTALLY (17) ORTHORHOMBIC (24) [adjective] Having three unequal axes at right angles. OSCILLOGRAMS (17) [noun] A record produced by an oscillograph or oscilloscope. OSMOLALITIES (14) OSMOLARITIES (14) OSTEOMALACIA (16) [noun] A softening of adult bones due to inadequate mineralization; the adult equivalent of rickets OSTEOSARCOMA (16) [noun] A type of cancer of the bone OSTRACODERMS (17) [noun] Any of the armored jawless fishes of the Paleozoic. OUTCOMPETING (19) [verb] To be more successful than a competitor; especially to thrive in the presence of an organism that is competing for resources OUTMANEUVERS (17) [verb] To perform movements more adroitly or successfully than. OUTNUMBERING (17) [verb] (stative) to be more in number than somebody or something. OUTPERFORMED (20) [verb] To perform better than something or someone. OUTPLACEMENT (18) [noun] The process of helping to find new employment for redundant workers, especially executives OUTPROMISING (17) OVARIOTOMIES (17) [noun] A surgical removal of an ovary. OVERCLAIMING (20) OVERCOMPRESS (21) OVERCONSUMED (20) OVERCONSUMES (19) OVERCRAMMING (22) OVERDOCUMENT (20) OVERDOMINANT (18) OVERDRAMATIC (20) [adjective] Dramatic to excess. OVEREMPHASES (22) OVEREMPHASIS (22) [noun] Excessive emphasis. OVEREMPHATIC (24) OVERENAMORED (18) OVERESTIMATE (17) [noun] An estimate that is too high. | [verb] To judge or calculate too highly. OVERFAMILIAR (20) [adjective] Common or repeated to the point of being unnoticed or annoying. | [adjective] (Used with “with”) So acquainted with something, that one doesn't notice it, or is annoyed by it. | [adjective] Overly friendly or intimate. OVERGARMENTS (18) [noun] A garment normally worn over other garments. OVERINFORMED (21) OVERMANAGING (19) OVERMANNERED (18) OVERMASTERED (18) [verb] To overpower or overwhelm. OVERMATCHING (23) [verb] To match more than intended. | [verb] To be more than equal to or a match for, to surpass; hence, to conquer, vanquish. | [verb] To marry to a superior. OVERMATURITY (20) OVERMEDICATE (20) OVERMODESTLY (21) OVEROPTIMISM (21) [noun] Excessive optimism. OVEROPTIMIST (19) OVERORNAMENT (17) OVERPAYMENTS (22) [noun] Payment exceeding the amount actually due. OVERPROGRAMS (20) OVERPROMISED (20) [verb] To promise more than is delivered OVERPROMISES (19) [verb] To promise more than is delivered OVERPROMOTED (20) OVERPROMOTES (19) OVERSIMPLIFY (25) [verb] To explain or present something in a way that excludes important information for the sake of brevity, or of making the explanation or presentation easy to understand. OVERTRIMMING (20) OVERTRUMPING (20) [verb] To play a higher trump card than the previous one in a trick OVERWHELMING (24) [verb] To engulf, surge over and submerge. | [verb] To overpower, crush. | [verb] To overpower emotionally. PAEDOMORPHIC (24) [adjective] Of, relating to, or resulting from the retention of juvenile characteristics by an adult. PALINDROMIST (17) PAMPHLETEERS (21) [noun] A writer or publisher of pamphlets, a second-rate journalist PANCHROMATIC (23) [adjective] (of black and white film) sensitive to all visible colours | [adjective] (digital imaging) sensitive to a wide range of wavelengths of light, typically most of the visible spectrum PANCREOZYMIN (30) [noun] Cholecystokinin PANDEMONIUMS (19) PANTOMIMISTS (18) PAPERMAKINGS (23) PARADIGMATIC (20) [noun] A writer of memoirs of religious persons, as examples of Christian excellence. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a paradigm. | [adjective] Related as members of a substitution class. PARALLELISMS (16) [noun] The state or condition of being parallel; agreement in direction, tendency, or character. | [noun] The state of being in agreement or similarity; resemblance, correspondence, analogy. | [noun] A parallel position; the relation of parallels. PARAMAGNETIC (19) [adjective] Exhibiting paramagnetism PARAMEDICALS (19) PARAMETERIZE (25) [verb] To describe in terms of parameters. | [verb] To rewrite (a database query, etc.) as a template into which parameters can be inserted. PARAMETRIZED (26) [verb] To describe in terms of parameters. | [verb] To rewrite (a database query, etc.) as a template into which parameters can be inserted. | [adjective] Furnished with, or described in terms of parameters PARAMETRIZES (25) [verb] To describe in terms of parameters. | [verb] To rewrite (a database query, etc.) as a template into which parameters can be inserted. PARAMILITARY (19) [noun] A group of civilians trained and organized in a military fashion, but which do not represent the formal forces of a sovereign power. | [noun] A member of a paramilitary group. | [adjective] Relating to a paramilitary PARANORMALLY (19) PARATHORMONE (19) [noun] Parathyroid hormone PARKINSONISM (20) [noun] A neurological syndrome characterized by tremor, bradykinesia, rigidity, and postural instability; a condition with the symptoms of Parkinson's disease, regardless of its cause. PAROCHIALISM (21) [noun] The quality or state of being parochial; especially: selfish pettiness or narrowness (as of interests, opinions, or views). PARONOMASIAS (16) [noun] A pun or play on words. PARONOMASTIC (18) PARSIMONIOUS (16) [adjective] Exhibiting parsimony; sparing in the expenditure of money; frugal to excess. | [adjective] Using a minimal number of assumptions, steps, or conjectures. | [adjective] Not conceding many goals. PASTORALISMS (16) PATERNALISMS (16) PEACEMAKINGS (23) PELARGONIUMS (17) [noun] Any of various flowering plants of the genus Pelargonium, commonly called geraniums. PENETROMETER (16) [noun] A mechanical device that measures the ease of penetration of an object into a semisolid | [noun] A device that measures the penetrating power of electromagnetic radiation (especially X-rays) PENTAMIDINES (17) PERAMBULATED (19) [verb] To walk about, roam or stroll. | [verb] To inspect (an area) on foot. PERAMBULATES (18) [verb] To walk about, roam or stroll. | [verb] To inspect (an area) on foot. PERAMBULATOR (18) [noun] A baby carriage; a pram. | [noun] One who perambulates. | [noun] A surveyor's instrument for measuring distances, consisting of a wheel that rolls over the ground, along with a clockwork apparatus and a dial plate upon which the distance travelled is shown by an index. PEREMPTORILY (21) PERFORMANCES (21) [noun] The act of performing; carrying into execution or action; execution; achievement; accomplishment; representation by action. | [noun] That which is performed or accomplished; a thing done or carried through; an achievement; a deed; an act; a feat; especially, an action of an elaborate or public character. | [noun] A live show or concert. PERFORMATIVE (22) [noun] A performative utterance. | [adjective] Being enacted as it is said. | [adjective] Being done as a performance in order to create an impression. PERFORMATORY (22) PERIONYCHIUM (24) PERMANENCIES (18) PERMANGANATE (17) [noun] Any salt of permanganic acid: they are purple crystalline solids, mostly soluble in water, and are strong oxidizing agents | [noun] Potassium permanganate PERMEABILITY (21) [noun] The property of being permeable | [noun] The rate of flow of a fluid through a porous material | [noun] A measure of the ability of a rock to transmit fluids (such as oil or water) PERMISSIVELY (22) PERMITTIVITY (22) [noun] A property of a dielectric medium that determines the forces that electric charges placed in the medium exert on each other. PERMUTATIONS (16) [noun] One of the ways something exists, or the ways a set of objects can be ordered. | [noun] A one-to-one mapping from a finite set to itself. | [noun] An ordering of a finite set of distinct elements. PERSONALISMS (16) PHARMACOLOGY (25) [noun] The science of drugs including their origin, composition, pharmacokinetics, therapeutic use, and toxicology. | [noun] The properties and reactions of drugs especially with relation to their therapeutic value. PHARMACOPEIA (23) [noun] An official book describing medicines or other pharmacological substances, especially their use, preparation, and regulation. | [noun] A collection of drugs. PHENOMENALLY (22) [adverb] In a manner that is extraordinary or amazing. | [adverb] In terms of phenomena. PHENTOLAMINE (19) [noun] A synthetic compound used as a vasodilator, especially in certain cases of hypertension. PHILHARMONIC (24) [noun] A full-size symphony orchestra. | [adjective] Appreciative of music, but especially to its performance PHILISTINISM (19) PHILLUMENIST (19) [noun] A person who collects match-related items, like matchbox labels, matchboxes, matchbooks, or matchbook covers. PHLEBOTOMIES (21) [noun] The opening of a vein, either to withdraw blood or for letting blood; venesection. PHLEBOTOMIST (21) PHONEMICALLY (24) PHONEMICISTS (21) PHONOGRAMMIC (24) PHOSPHONIUMS (24) [noun] The tetravalent positively-charged phosphorus cation R4P+ PHOTOCHEMIST (24) PHOTOCHROMIC (26) [adjective] Of, related to, or produced by photochromism | [adjective] Relating to the part of a molecule responsible for its photochromism PHOTOCOMPOSE (23) PHOTODYNAMIC (25) [adjective] Of, relating to, or caused by the energy or momentum of light or other electromagnetic radiations | [adjective] Of, or relating to photodynamics PHOTOMAPPING (24) PHOTOMETRIES (19) PHOTOMONTAGE (20) [noun] A composite image combining two or more photographs. | [noun] The art of constructing such images. PHOTOMOSAICS (21) [noun] A composite image made of individual photographs, normally of the same shape and size, placed together - to show a panoramic view etc. PHOTOPOLYMER (24) [noun] Any polymer that reacts to light with a physical or chemical change, used especially for teeth fillings PHOTOSYSTEMS (22) [noun] Either of two biochemical systems, active in chloroplasts, that are part of photosynthesis PHOTOTROPISM (21) [noun] The movement of a plant towards or away from light PHRAGMOPLAST (22) PHRASEMAKERS (23) PHRASEMAKING (24) PHRASEMONGER (20) PHYCOMYCETES (29) [noun] A member of the Phycomycetes, a group of fungi. PHYSICALISMS (24) PHYSIOGNOMIC (25) PHYTOCHEMIST (27) PHYTOCHROMES (27) PHYTOHORMONE (25) PICTORIALISM (18) PIGMENTATION (17) [noun] Coloration of human, plant or animal tissue, especially by pigment. PILGRIMAGING (19) [verb] To go on a pilgrimage. PINEALECTOMY (21) PIROPLASMATA (18) PITTOSPORUMS (18) [noun] Any plant of the genus Pittosporum, various Old World shrubs and trees. PLANETARIUMS (16) [noun] A display museum in which images of stars and other astronomical phenomena are projected onto a domed ceiling. | [noun] An orrery. PLANETESIMAL (16) [noun] Any of many small, solid astronomical objects that orbit a star and form protoplanets through mutual gravitational attraction. | [adjective] Being or relating to one of these astronomical objects. PLASMALEMMAS (20) [noun] The cell membrane. PLASMINOGENS (17) PLASMODESMAS (19) PLASMOGAMIES (19) PLASMOLYZING (29) [verb] To cause, or to undergo plasmolysis PLATEMAKINGS (21) PLEBEIANISMS (18) PLEINAIRISMS (16) PLEOCHROISMS (21) PLEOMORPHISM (23) [noun] The occurrence of multiple structural forms during the life cycle of an organism | [noun] The ability to assume different forms or shapes. | [noun] The coexistence, in the same locality, of two or more distinct forms independent of sex, not connected by intermediate gradations, but produced from common parents. PNEUMATICITY (21) PNEUMATOLOGY (20) [noun] The study of spiritual beings and phenomena, especially the interactions between humans and God. | [noun] The study of the Holy Spirit as revealed in Scripture. | [noun] The science dealing with air or gases, their physical and chemical properties, therapeutic applications, etc. PNEUMOCOCCAL (22) PNEUMOCOCCUS (22) [noun] A gram-positive bacterium, Streptococcus pneumoniae, that causes pneumonia and other infectious diseases PNEUMOGRAPHS (22) PNEUMOTHORAX (26) [noun] Presence of air inside the pleural cavity, usually caused by injury either to the lung or the chest wall. PODOPHYLLUMS (25) POIKILOTHERM (23) [noun] A cold-blooded animal | [adjective] Cold-blooded POINTILLISMS (16) POLARIMETERS (16) [noun] An instrument used to measure the rotation of the plane of polarized light as it passes through a sample of an optically active compound. POLARIMETRIC (18) POLEMICIZING (28) [verb] To engage in argument. POLYCENTRISM (21) POLYCHROMIES (24) POLYCHROMING (25) POLYCYTHEMIA (27) [noun] A rare disorder in which the bone marrow produces an abnormally large amount of blood cells, often red blood cells. POLYCYTHEMIC (29) POLYEMBRYONY (27) [noun] The production of two or more embryos in one seed, due either to the existence and fertilization of more than one embryonic sac or to the origination of embryos outside of the embryonic sac. | [noun] The production of two or more embryos from a single fertilized egg. POLYGAMIZING (30) POLYGLOTISMS (20) POLYGLOTTISM (20) POLYMERISING (20) [verb] To convert a monomer to a polymer by polymerization. | [verb] To undergo polymerization. POLYMERIZING (29) [verb] To convert a monomer to a polymer by polymerization. | [verb] To undergo polymerization. | [adjective] That polymerizes POLYMORPHISM (26) [noun] The ability to assume different forms or shapes. | [noun] The coexistence, in the same locality, of two or more distinct forms independent of sex, not connected by intermediate gradations, but produced from common parents. | [noun] The feature pertaining to the dynamic treatment of data elements based on their type, allowing for an instance of a method to have several definitions. POLYMORPHOUS (24) [adjective] Having, or assuming, a variety of forms, characters, or styles | [adjective] Having, or occurring in, several distinct forms | [adjective] Crystallizing in two or more different forms; polymorphic POLYRHYTHMIC (30) POLYRIBOSOME (21) [noun] A cluster of ribosomes, connected by mRNA, that collectively synthesizes protein POMEGRANATES (17) [noun] A fruit-bearing shrub or small tree, Punica granatum. | [noun] The fruit of Punica granatum, about the size of an orange and having a red pulp containing many seeds and enclosed in a thick, hard, reddish skin. | [noun] A dark red colour, like that of a pomegranate. PORTMANTEAUS (16) [noun] A large travelling case usually made of leather, and opening into two equal sections. | [noun] A schoolbag. | [noun] A hook on which to hang clothing. PORTMANTEAUX (23) [noun] A large travelling case usually made of leather, and opening into two equal sections. | [noun] A schoolbag. | [noun] A hook on which to hang clothing. POSITRONIUMS (16) POSTFEMINIST (19) [noun] One who belongs to the postfeminism movement. | [adjective] Pertaining to postfeminism. POSTHUMOUSLY (22) [adverb] After death POSTIMPERIAL (18) POSTISCHEMIC (23) POSTMEDIEVAL (20) POSTMIDNIGHT (21) POSTMISTRESS (16) [noun] A female postmaster POSTORGASMIC (19) POSTPONEMENT (18) [noun] A delay, as a formal delay in a proceeding. POSTROMANTIC (18) POSTSTIMULUS (16) POSTVAGOTOMY (23) PRAGMATICISM (21) PRAGMATICIST (19) PRAGMATISTIC (19) PRASEODYMIUM (22) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Pr) with an atomic number of 59, a soft, silvery, malleable and ductile metal, valued for its magnetic, electrical, chemical, and optical properties. PREADMISSION (17) PREADMITTING (18) PREAMPLIFIER (21) [noun] A voltage amplifier for amplifying a low-level input signal; its output is the input to a higher-level amplifier. PREASSEMBLED (19) PRECOMPUTING (21) PREDETERMINE (17) [verb] To determine or decide in advance. | [verb] To doom by previous decree; to foredoom. PREDICAMENTS (19) [noun] A definite class, state or condition. | [noun] An unfortunate or trying position or condition; a tight spot. | [noun] That which is predicated; a category PREDOMINANCE (19) [noun] The condition or state of being predominant; ascendancy, domination, preeminence, preponderance. PREDOMINANCY (22) PREDOMINATED (18) [verb] To dominate, have control, or succeed by superior numbers or size. | [verb] To be prominent; to loom large; to be the chief component of a whole. | [verb] To dominate or hold power over, especially through numerical advantage; to outweigh. PREDOMINATES (17) [verb] To dominate, have control, or succeed by superior numbers or size. | [verb] To be prominent; to loom large; to be the chief component of a whole. | [verb] To dominate or hold power over, especially through numerical advantage; to outweigh. PREECLAMPSIA (20) [noun] A complication of pregnancy, affecting about 2-20% of women, depending on location, characterized by hypertension and damage to the linings of the blood vessels of the brain, liver, lungs and kidneys, which can lead to multiple organ failure, convulsions, coma and death. The only cure is delivery of the child. PREECLAMPTIC (22) [noun] An individual who has preeclampsia. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to preeclampsia. | [adjective] Before eclampsia. PREEMERGENCE (19) PREEMINENCES (18) [noun] The status of being preeminent, dominant or ascendant. | [noun] High importance; superiority. PREEMINENTLY (19) [adverb] In a preeminent manner. PREEMPTIVELY (24) PREFORMATION (19) [noun] Prior formation. | [noun] The theory that organisms are fully developed in the form of an egg or seed, and just increase in size (as opposed to epigenesis). PREFORMATTED (20) PREFORMULATE (19) PREJUDGMENTS (25) PREMALIGNANT (17) PREMARITALLY (19) PREMARKETING (21) PREMAXILLARY (26) [noun] A premaxilla. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the premaxillae PREMEASURING (17) PREMEDITATED (18) [verb] To meditate, consider, or plan beforehand; to think about and revolve in the mind beforehand. | [adjective] Planned, considered or estimated in advance; deliberate. PREMEDITATES (17) [verb] To meditate, consider, or plan beforehand; to think about and revolve in the mind beforehand. PREMEDITATOR (17) PREMENSTRUAL (16) [adjective] Occurring in the time period during the menstrual cycle leading up to the beginning of menstruation. | [adjective] Relating to the time period in a girl's life prior to her first experience of menstruation; prepubescent. PREMIERSHIPS (21) [noun] The office of a premier or prime minister. | [noun] (sporting) The position held by the champion team at the end of a particular season (especially as used in Australian rules football). PREMIGRATION (17) PREMODIFYING (24) [verb] To modify in advance PREMOISTENED (17) PREMONISHING (20) [verb] To warn of something in advance PREMONITIONS (16) [noun] A clairvoyant or clairaudient experience, such as a dream, which resonates with some event in the future. | [noun] A strong intuition that something is about to happen (usually something negative, but not exclusively). PREMUNITIONS (16) PRENOMINATED (17) PRENOMINATES (16) PRENUMBERING (19) PREPRIMARIES (18) PREPROGRAMED (20) [verb] To program something in advance. | [verb] To predispose to certain thoughts or behaviours. PRESENTIMENT (16) [noun] A premonition; a feeling that something, often of undesirable nature, is going to happen. PRESENTMENTS (16) [noun] A statement made on oath by a jury. | [noun] The notice taken by a grand jury of any offence from their own knowledge or observation, without any bill of indictment laid before them. | [noun] (ecclesiastical law) A formal complaint submitted to a bishop or archdeacon. PRESUMPTIONS (18) [noun] The act of presuming, or something presumed | [noun] The belief of something based upon reasonable evidence, or upon something known to be true | [noun] The condition upon which something is presumed PRESUMPTUOUS (18) [adjective] Going beyond what is right, proper, or appropriate because of an excess of self-confidence or arrogance. PRETERMITTED (17) [verb] To intentionally disregard something, allow it to go unnoticed, or change the subject in response to someone's comment; to omit or fail to carry out something; to prematurely terminate or interrupt something. PRETREATMENT (16) [noun] Any treatment received before some other process. | [adjective] Prior to treatment. PRIMATESHIPS (21) PRIMITIVISMS (21) PRIMITIVISTS (19) PRIMOGENITOR (17) [noun] An initial ancestor. PRIMORDIALLY (20) PRINTMAKINGS (21) PROBABILISMS (20) PROBLEMATICS (20) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A problem or difficulty in a particular field of study. PROCLAMATION (18) [noun] A statement which is proclaimed; formal public announcement. PROCTODAEUMS (19) PROCUREMENTS (18) [noun] The purchasing department of a company. | [noun] The act of procuring or obtaining; obtainment; attainment. | [noun] Efficient contrivance; management; agency. PROGNATHISMS (20) PROGRAMMABLE (21) [noun] A calculator that allows the user to write programs. | [adjective] Capable of being programmed. PROGRAMMATIC (21) [adjective] Of, or relating to a step-by-step program, especially a computer program | [adjective] Of, or relating to program music PROGRAMMINGS (20) PROLEGOMENON (17) [noun] (usually in the plural) A prefatory discussion; a formal essay or critical discussion serving to introduce and interpret an extended work. PROMONTORIES (16) [noun] A high point of land extending into a body of water, headland; cliff. | [noun] A projecting part of the body. PROMPTITUDES (19) PROMPTNESSES (18) PROMULGATING (18) [verb] To make known or public. | [verb] To put into effect as a regulation. PROMULGATION (17) PROMULGATORS (17) PRONOMINALLY (19) PROSELYTISMS (19) PROTACTINIUM (18) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Pa) with atomic number 91: a dense, silvery-gray actinide metal. PROTHALAMION (19) [noun] A song or poem in honour of a bride and bridegroom about to be married. PROTHALAMIUM (21) [noun] A song or poem in honour of a bride and bridegroom about to be married. PROTHROMBINS (21) PROTOMARTYRS (19) [noun] Any of the first Christian martyrs. PROTONEMATAL (16) PROTOPHLOEMS (21) PROTOPLASMIC (20) PSEUDOMONADS (18) PSEUDOMORPHS (22) [noun] A deceptive, irregular, or false form; specifically: PSEUDONYMITY (23) PSEUDONYMOUS (20) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a pseudonym. | [adjective] (of a name) Fictitious. | [adjective] That uses a pseudonym. PSEUDOPODIUM (20) [noun] Pseudopod PSEUDORANDOM (18) [adjective] Of a sequence of numbers, such that it has all the properties of a random sequence following some probability distribution (except true randomness), but is actually generated using a deterministic algorithm. PSYCHODRAMAS (25) [noun] A form of psychotherapy in which a patient acts a role in a context devised by a psychotherapist. | [noun] A drama in this form | [noun] A dramatic work focusing on the psychology of its characters PSYCHOLOGISM (25) [noun] The tendency to describe things in psychological or subjective terms PSYCHOMETRIC (26) [adjective] Of or pertaining to psychometrics PSYCHROMETER (24) [noun] Any of several instruments used to measure the relative humidity of the atmosphere; especially a wet-and-dry-bulb hygrometer. PSYCHROMETRY (27) PTERIDOSPERM (19) [noun] Any of various extinct gymnosperms, of the division Pteridospermatophyta, resembling ferns, but producing seeds instead of spores PUMPERNICKEL (24) [noun] A German sourdough bread made from rye. PUMPKINSEEDS (23) [noun] The seed of a pumpkin. | [noun] A North American sunfish; Lepomis gibbosus. PYRIDOXAMINE (27) PYROMANIACAL (21) PYROMORPHITE (24) [noun] A yellowish-green mineral, a mixed phosphate and chloride of lead with the chemical formula Pb5(PO4)3Cl, that is sometimes mined as an ore. QUADRENNIUMS (24) [noun] A period of 4 years, the sets of four years in the Egyptian and Greek calendars. QUADRUMANOUS (24) [adjective] Having four feet whose first digits are opposable; applies to all non-human primates. QUALMISHNESS (26) QUINQUENNIUM (32) [noun] A period of five years. QUISLINGISMS (24) QUITCLAIMING (26) RACEMIZATION (25) RADIOCHEMIST (20) RADIOELEMENT (15) [noun] Any element whose currently known isotopes are all radioactive. RADIOMETRIES (15) RADIOMIMETIC (19) RADIOTHORIUM (18) RAMBOUILLETS (16) RAMBUNCTIOUS (18) [adjective] Boisterous, energetic, noisy, and difficult to control. RAMIFICATION (19) [noun] A branching-out, the act or result of developing branches; specifically the divergence of the stem and limbs of a plant into smaller ones, or of similar developments in blood vessels, anatomical structures etc. | [noun] An offshoot of a decision, fact etc.; a consequence or implication, especially one which complicates a situation. | [noun] An arrangement of branches. RAMPAGEOUSLY (20) RANDOMNESSES (15) [noun] The property of all possible outcomes being equally likely. | [noun] A type of circumstance or event that is described by a probability distribution. | [noun] A measure of the lack of purpose, logic or objectivity of an event. RATIONALISMS (14) RAZZMATAZZES (50) READJUSTMENT (22) [noun] A second, or subsequent adjustment READMISSIONS (15) [noun] A second or subsequent admission REALIGNMENTS (15) [noun] The act of realigning or something realigned. REANIMATIONS (14) REASSEMBLAGE (17) REASSEMBLIES (16) [noun] The process of assembling something again. REASSEMBLING (17) [verb] To assemble again | [verb] To put back together; to reverse the process of disassembly REASSESSMENT (14) [noun] The act of reassessing; a second or subsequent assessment. REASSIGNMENT (15) [noun] The act of reassigning; a second or subsequent assignment. REATTACHMENT (19) REATTEMPTING (17) [verb] To attempt again. RECLAMATIONS (16) [noun] The act of reclaiming or the state of being reclaimed. | [noun] The recovery of a wasteland, or of flooded land so it can be cultivated. RECOMBINANTS (18) [noun] An organism, cell or haplotype formed by genetic recombination. RECOMMENCING (21) [verb] To begin again. RECOMMENDERS (19) RECOMMENDING (20) [verb] To bestow commendation on; to represent favourably; to suggest, endorse or encourage as an appropriate choice. | [verb] To make acceptable; to attract favor to. | [verb] To advise, propose, counsel favorably RECOMMISSION (18) [verb] To give a new commission or to validate an existing commission. | [verb] To put back in service (undoing decommissioning). RECOMMITMENT (20) RECOMMITTALS (18) RECOMMITTING (19) [verb] Commit again RECOMPENSING (19) [verb] To reward or repay (someone) for something done, given etc. | [verb] To give compensation for an injury, or other type of harm or damage. | [verb] To give (something) in return; to pay back; to pay, as something earned or deserved. RECONFIRMING (20) [verb] To confirm again; to establish more firmly | [verb] (travel) To advise an airline of your intention to use a reservation, or risk cancellation. RECRIMINATED (17) [verb] To accuse in return, state an accusation in return. RECRIMINATES (16) [verb] To accuse in return, state an accusation in return. RECRUITMENTS (16) RECUMBENCIES (20) REDEMPTIONER (17) REDEPLOYMENT (20) [noun] The act of redeploying. | [noun] A new deployment. REDETERMINED (16) [verb] To determine again REDETERMINES (15) [verb] To determine again REDUCTIONISM (17) [noun] An approach to studying complex systems or ideas by reducing them to a set of simpler components. | [noun] A philosophical position which holds that a complex system is nothing but the sum of its parts, and that an account of it can be reduced to accounts of individual constituents. In a reductionist framework, the phenomena that can be explained completely in terms of relations between other more fundamental phenomena, are called "epiphenomena". REEMBROIDERS (17) REEMERGENCES (17) [noun] A second or subsequent emergence after being hidden etc. REEMPHASIZED (29) [verb] To emphasize again; to reiterate. REEMPHASIZES (28) [verb] To emphasize again; to reiterate. REEMPLOYMENT (21) REENACTMENTS (16) [noun] The repetition of an earlier (usually historic) event, as a performance or social event. REENGAGEMENT (16) REENLISTMENT (14) REEQUIPMENTS (25) REESTIMATING (15) REFORMATIONS (17) [noun] An improvement (or an intended improvement) in the existing form or condition of institutions or practices, etc.; intended to make a striking change for the better in social, political or religious affairs or in the conduct of persons or operation of organizations. | [noun] Change or correction, by a court in equity, to a written instrument to conform to the original intention of the parties. REFORMATTING (18) [verb] To format anew or again, generally erasing a previous format. | [noun] The act by which something is reformatted. REFORMULATED (18) [verb] To formulate again or differently. REFORMULATES (17) [verb] To formulate again or differently. REFRAINMENTS (17) REFRESHMENTS (20) [noun] The action of refreshing; a means of restoring strength, energy or vigour. | [noun] A light snack or drink. REGIONALISMS (15) [noun] Affection, often excessive, for one's own region and to everything related to it. | [noun] Political tendency to concede forms of politico-administrative autonomy to regions. | [noun] A word or phrase originating in, characteristic of, or limited to a region. REHUMANIZING (27) REIMBURSABLE (18) REIMPLANTING (17) REIMPOSITION (16) [noun] The act of reimposing; the act of imposing something again. REIMPRESSION (16) REINDICTMENT (17) REINVESTMENT (17) [noun] The condition of being reinvested | [noun] A second or subsequent investment in the same thing REMAINDERING (16) [verb] To mark or declare items left unsold as subject to reduction in price. REMEDIATIONS (15) [noun] The process of remedying a situation. REMEMBERABLE (20) REMEMBRANCER (20) [noun] A person who reminds someone. | [noun] A memento or souvenir. | [noun] A recorder, or municipal judge. REMEMBRANCES (20) [noun] The act of remembering; a holding in mind, or bringing to mind; recollection. | [noun] The state of being remembered, or held in mind; memory, recollection. | [noun] Something remembered; a person or thing kept in memory. REMIGRATIONS (15) REMILITARIZE (23) [verb] To militarize (a demilitarized area) again. REMINISCENCE (18) [noun] An act of remembering long-past experiences, often fondly. | [noun] A mental image thus remembered. REMISSNESSES (14) REMOBILIZING (26) REMOISTENING (15) REMONETIZING (24) [verb] To monetize again. REMONSTRANCE (16) [noun] A remonstration; disapproval; a formal, usually written, objection or protest. REMONSTRANTS (14) [noun] One who remonstrates, or issues (usually formal and written) protestations. REMONSTRATED (15) [verb] To object; to express disapproval (with, against). | [verb] Specifically, to lodge an official objection (especially by means of a remonstrance) with a monarch or other ruling body. | [verb] (often with an object consisting of direct speech or a clause beginning with that) To state or plead as an objection, formal protest, or expression of disapproval. REMONSTRATES (14) [verb] To object; to express disapproval (with, against). | [verb] Specifically, to lodge an official objection (especially by means of a remonstrance) with a monarch or other ruling body. | [verb] (often with an object consisting of direct speech or a clause beginning with that) To state or plead as an objection, formal protest, or expression of disapproval. REMONSTRATOR (14) REMORSEFULLY (20) REMOTENESSES (14) REMOTIVATING (18) REMOTIVATION (17) REMOVABILITY (22) REMUNERATING (15) [verb] To compensate; to pay. REMUNERATION (14) [noun] Something given in exchange for goods or services rendered. | [noun] A payment for work done; wages, salary, emolument. | [noun] A recompense for a loss; compensation. REMUNERATIVE (17) [adjective] Offering compensation, usually financial; rewarding; lucrative. REMUNERATORS (14) REMUNERATORY (17) RENOMINATING (15) [verb] To nominate again. RENOMINATION (14) RENOUNCEMENT (16) REPLACEMENTS (18) [noun] A person or thing that takes the place of another; a substitute. | [noun] The act of replacing something. | [noun] The removal of an edge of crystal, by one plane or more. REPRIMANDING (18) [verb] To reprove in a formal or official way. REPROGRAMING (18) [verb] To program anew or differently. | [verb] (by extension) To make a fundamental change to the behaviour or habits of. | [verb] To shift funds appropriated for one government program to a different government program. REPROGRAMMED (20) [verb] To program anew or differently. | [verb] (by extension) To make a fundamental change to the behaviour or habits of. | [verb] To shift funds appropriated for one government program to a different government program. REQUIREMENTS (23) [noun] A necessity or prerequisite; something required or obligatory. Its adpositions are generally of in relation to who or what has given it, on in relation to whom or what it is given to, and for in relation to what is required. | [noun] Something asked. | [noun] A statement (in domain specific terms) which specifies a verifiable constraint on an implementation that it shall undeniably meet or (a) be deemed unacceptable, or (b) result in implementation failure, or (c) result in system failure. RESCINDMENTS (17) RESEMBLANCES (18) [noun] The quality or state of resembling | [noun] That which resembles, or is similar; a representation; a likeness. | [noun] A comparison; a simile. RESETTLEMENT (14) [noun] The transportation of a group of people to a new settlement RESPIROMETER (16) [noun] A device used to measure the rate of respiration of living organisms, such as plants or fish. | [noun] An apparatus for supplying air to a diver under water. RESPIROMETRY (19) RESSENTIMENT (14) [noun] Resentment. | [noun] A sense of resentment arising from suppressed feelings of envy and hatred, often leading to a frustrated sense of inferiority, with various social repercussions. RESTATEMENTS (14) [noun] The act of restating. | [noun] A second or subsequent statement. RESTIMULATED (15) RESTIMULATES (14) RESUBMISSION (16) [noun] The act or process of resubmitting; a second or subsequent submission RESUBMITTING (17) [verb] To submit again. RETRANSFORMS (17) RETRENCHMENT (19) [noun] A curtailment or reduction. | [noun] A defensive work constructed within a fortification to make it more defensible by allowing defenders to retreat into and fight from it even after the enemy has taken the outer work. REVISIONISMS (17) RHABDOMANCER (22) RHEUMATOLOGY (21) [noun] The branch of medicine specializing in arthritis and other ailments of the joints. RHODOMONTADE (19) RHOMBOHEDRAL (23) [adjective] Having three equal axes and oblique angles. RHOMBOHEDRON (23) [noun] A prism with six faces, each a rhombus. RHYTHMICALLY (28) [adverb] In a rhythmical manner | [adverb] With reference to rhythm RISORGIMENTO (15) RODOMONTADES (16) [noun] Vain boasting; a rant; pretentious behaviour. ROMANIZATION (23) ROMANTICALLY (19) [adverb] In a romantic way. ROMANTICISED (17) [verb] To interpret or view something in a romantic (unrealistic, idealized) manner. | [verb] To think or act in a romantic manner. | [adjective] Interpreted in an unrealistic, idealized fashion. ROMANTICISES (16) [verb] To interpret or view something in a romantic (unrealistic, idealized) manner. | [verb] To think or act in a romantic manner. ROMANTICISMS (18) [noun] A romantic quality, spirit or action. ROMANTICISTS (16) [noun] An advocate or follower of romanticism. ROMANTICIZED (26) [verb] To interpret or view something in a romantic (unrealistic, idealized) manner. | [verb] To think or act in a romantic manner. | [adjective] Interpreted in an unrealistic, idealized fashion. ROMANTICIZES (25) [verb] To interpret or view something in a romantic (unrealistic, idealized) manner. | [verb] To think or act in a romantic manner. RUMINATIVELY (20) RUMORMONGERS (17) [noun] A person who spreads rumors and gossip. | [verb] To spread rumors and gossip. SABERMETRICS (18) [noun] The analysis of baseball, especially via its statistics. SACRAMENTALS (16) [noun] An object (such as holy water or a crucifix) or an action (such as making the sign of the cross) which is regarded as encouraging devotion and thus spiritually aiding the person who uses it. SALAMANDRINE (15) SALESMANSHIP (19) [noun] The skills and knowledge of how to sell. | [noun] A position as salesman. SALINOMETERS (14) [noun] A salimeter. SALTIMBOCCAS (20) SALVATIONISM (17) SANCTIMONIES (16) [noun] A hypocritical form of excessive piety, considered to be an affectation merely for public show. SARCOMATOSES (16) SARCOMATOSIS (16) SARCOPLASMIC (20) SARDONICISMS (17) SCAPEGOATISM (19) SCARAMOUCHES (21) SCAREMONGERS (17) [noun] Someone who spreads worrying rumours or needlessly alarms people. SCATTERGRAMS (17) [noun] Scatter plot SCHEMATIZING (29) [verb] To organize according to a scheme. | [verb] To distort and simplify for the purpose of highlighting certain characteristics. | [verb] To make a plan in outline. SCHISMATICAL (21) [noun] A person involved in a schism | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a schism | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a schisma SCHISMATIZED (29) SCHISMATIZES (28) SCHISTOSOMAL (19) SCHISTOSOMES (19) [noun] A parasitic flatworm which needs two hosts to complete its life cycle. The immature form infests freshwater snails and the adult lives in the blood vessels of birds and mammals, causing bilharzia in humans. SCHMALTZIEST (28) [adjective] Overly sentimental, emotional, maudlin or bathetic. SCHOOLMASTER (19) [noun] A male teacher. | [noun] Male teacher in charge of a school, usually a small one. | [noun] Anything that teaches. SCHUSSBOOMER (21) SCHWARMEREIS (22) SCLERENCHYMA (24) [noun] A mechanical ground tissue, impermeable to water, which consists of cells having narrow lumen and thick, mineralized walls of lignin; present in stems, vascular bundles (of monocots), seed coverings, and vein and tips of leaves. | [noun] The hard calcareous deposit in the tissues of the stony corals (Anthozoa). SCLERODERMAS (17) SCLEROMETERS (16) SCOPOLAMINES (18) SCOUTMASTERS (16) [noun] An adult leader of a group of Scouts. SCRIMSHANDER (20) [noun] Someone who scrimshaws. | [noun] The manufacture of handicrafts by sailors on long voyages, especially as whittled from wood or bone. | [noun] An item produced by scrimshaw. SCRIMSHAWING (23) [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. | [verb] To engrave fanciful designs on (shells, whales' teeth, etc.). SCYPHISTOMAE (24) [noun] The young attached larva of Discophora in the stage when it resembles a hydroid, or actinian. SCYPHISTOMAS (24) [noun] The young attached larva of Discophora in the stage when it resembles a hydroid, or actinian. SEAMLESSNESS (14) SEAMSTRESSES (14) [noun] A woman who sews clothes professionally. SECESSIONISM (16) SECTARIANISM (16) [noun] Rigid adherence to a particular sect, denomination, ideology, or party. | [noun] A political system in which power is shared among religious sects based on a constitutional formula distributing public offices among these sects SECTIONALISM (16) [noun] Promoting the good of one division, department or subgroup over that of the whole. | [noun] Promoting the good of one region over that of the nation. SEDIMENTABLE (17) SEEMLINESSES (14) SEGMENTATION (15) [noun] The act or an instance of dividing into segments | [noun] The state of being divided into segments | [noun] The partitioning of an image into groups of pixels SEISMICITIES (16) SEISMOGRAPHS (20) [noun] An instrument that automatically detects and records the intensity, direction and duration of earthquakes and similar events. SEISMOGRAPHY (23) SEISMOLOGIES (15) SEISMOLOGIST (15) SEISMOMETERS (16) [noun] A device used by seismologists to detect and measure seismic waves and therefore locate earthquakes etc; a seismograph. SEISMOMETRIC (18) SELFSAMENESS (17) SEMANTICALLY (19) SEMANTICISTS (16) SEMEIOLOGIES (15) SEMIABSTRACT (18) SEMIANNUALLY (17) SEMIARBOREAL (16) SEMICIRCULAR (18) [adjective] In the shape of half of a circle or a semicircle. SEMICLASSICS (18) SEMICOLONIAL (16) SEMICOLONIES (16) SEMIDARKNESS (19) [noun] Partial or near darkness, dimness, twilight. SEMIDEIFYING (22) SEMIDETACHED (21) [noun] Such a house. | [adjective] Of a house: joined to another one on one side, having one shared wall. SEMIDIAMETER (17) [noun] The apparent radius of a star etc, when viewed from Earth. | [noun] A radius: half of a diameter. SEMIDOMINANT (17) SEMIFINALIST (17) SEMIFINISHED (21) [adjective] Partially finished SEMIFLEXIBLE (26) SEMILITERATE (14) [noun] A person who is semiliterate. | [adjective] Not entirely literate; having a limited grasp of the written language SEMILUSTROUS (14) SEMIMETALLIC (18) SEMIMONASTIC (18) SEMIMYSTICAL (21) SEMINIFEROUS (17) [adjective] Producing seed | [adjective] Conveying, containing, bearing, or producing semen or seminal fluid SEMINUDITIES (15) SEMIOFFICIAL (22) [adjective] Having some degree of official authority. SEMIOLOGICAL (17) SEMIOLOGISTS (15) SEMIOTICIANS (16) [noun] One who studies semiotics or semantics SEMIOTICISTS (16) SEMIPALMATED (19) [adjective] Having webs between some, but not all, of the toes SEMIPARASITE (16) SEMIPRECIOUS (18) [adjective] Sort of or somewhat precious or valuable. Usually used as part of the phrase semi-precious stones or semi-precious gems. SEMITRAILERS (14) [noun] A trailer without a front axle and with wheels only at the trailing end, designed to be pulled via a pivoting arrangement which also partially supports its weight. | [noun] A tractor-trailer or big rig: a semi-trailer plus the truck or tractor pulling it. SEMITROPICAL (18) SEMIWEEKLIES (21) SEMPERVIVUMS (24) [noun] Any of the genus Sempervivum of succulent plants, the houseleeks or liveforevers. SEMPITERNITY (19) SEMPSTRESSES (16) [noun] A seamstress, a woman employed to sew. SENSITOMETER (14) [noun] An instrument used to measure the sensitivity of photographic film to light. SENSITOMETRY (17) SENSORIMOTOR (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to both sensory and motor activity SERVICEWOMAN (22) [noun] A woman who serves in the armed forces. SERVICEWOMEN (22) [noun] A woman who serves in the armed forces. SEXAGESIMALS (22) [noun] A sexagesimal fraction. SEXTODECIMOS (24) [noun] A size of a sheet of paper resulting from folding and cutting a sheet of paper into sixteenths (3.25"-5" x 5"-6.25"). | [noun] A book consisting of pages of that size. SHAMEFACEDLY (26) SHAMEFULNESS (20) SHITTIMWOODS (21) SHORTCOMINGS (20) [noun] Deficiency SHOWMANSHIPS (25) SILLIMANITES (14) SILVERSMITHS (20) [noun] A person who makes articles out of silver usually larger than jewellery. SIMILARITIES (14) [noun] Closeness of appearance to something else. | [noun] The relation of sharing properties. | [noun] A transformation that preserves angles and the ratios of distances SIMONIACALLY (19) SIMPLEMINDED (20) [adjective] Stupid. | [adjective] Unsophisticated; lacking subtlety. SIMPLENESSES (16) SIMPLICIALLY (21) SIMPLICITIES (18) [noun] The state or quality of being simple | [noun] An act or instance of foolishness. SIMULCASTING (17) [verb] To broadcast a program or event across more than one medium or service at the same time. SIMULTANEITY (17) SIMULTANEOUS (14) [adjective] Happening at the same moment. | [adjective] (of a set of equations) To be solved for the same values of variables. SKIMPINESSES (20) SLEDGEHAMMER (21) [noun] A hammer that consists of a large, heavy, broad and flat block of metal (the head) attached to a handle typically 0.5 meter to 1 meter long. The sledgehammer's design is meant to allow it to be swung powerfully, and to distribute force over a wide area upon impact. | [verb] To strike with a sledgehammer. SLIPSTREAMED (17) [verb] To take advantage of the suction produced by a slipstream by travelling immediately behind the slipstream generator. | [verb] To incorporate additional software (such as patches) into an existing installer. SLUMGULLIONS (15) SLUMPFLATION (19) SMALLCLOTHES (19) SMALLHOLDERS (18) [noun] A person who owns or runs a smallholding. | [noun] A small slaveholder, a person who owns a smallholding. SMALLHOLDING (19) [noun] A piece of land, smaller than a farm, used for the cultivation of vegetables or the breeding of animals. | [noun] A small plantation or land with a small number of slaves (generally 19 or less). Contrasted with middling plantation (20-49 slaves) and large plantation (50+ and owned by planters). SMARMINESSES (16) SMITHSONITES (17) SMOOTHNESSES (17) SMORGASBORDS (18) [noun] A Swedish-style buffet comprising a variety of cold sandwiches and other dishes; (by extension) any buffet with a wide selection of dishes. | [noun] An abundant and diverse collection of things. SMUDGINESSES (16) SMUTTINESSES (14) SNOWMOBILERS (19) SNOWMOBILING (20) [noun] The use of a snowmobile for amusement. SNOWMOBILIST (19) SOCIOMETRIES (16) SOLEMNIFYING (21) SOLEMNNESSES (14) SOLMIZATIONS (23) SOMATOLOGIES (15) SOMATOMEDINS (17) SOMATOPLEURE (16) [noun] A fold of tissue, in the embryo of a vertebrate, from which the walls of the body and the amnion develop. SOMATOSTATIN (14) [noun] A cyclopeptide hormone, secreted by the pancreas, that inhibits the production of certain other hormones SOMATOTROPIN (16) [noun] A polypeptide growth hormone produced by the human pituitary gland SOMBERNESSES (16) SOMERSAULTED (15) [verb] To perform a somersault. SOMERSETTING (15) SOMNAMBULANT (18) [noun] A sleepwalker. | [adjective] Walking as if, or while, asleep; sleepwalking. SOMNAMBULATE (18) SOMNAMBULISM (20) [noun] Sleepwalking SOMNAMBULIST (18) SOMNIFACIENT (19) SOUTHERNMOST (17) [adjective] Farthest south. SPASMOLYTICS (21) [noun] Any antispastic drug. SPECTROGRAMS (19) [noun] A visual representation of the spectrum of a sound changing through time. | [noun] A visual representation of the spectrum of a celestial body's radiation. SPECTROMETER (18) [noun] An optical instrument for measuring the absorption of light by chemical substances; typically it will plot a graph of absorption versus wavelength or frequency, and the patterns produced are used to identify the substances present, and their internal structure. SPECTROMETRY (21) SPEEDOMETERS (17) [noun] A device that measures, and indicates the current speed of a vehicle. | [noun] Such a device incorporating an odometer. SPERMAGONIUM (19) SPERMATHECAE (21) [noun] A small sac within the reproductive tract of some female invertebrates, such as insects, which stores sperm until it is used to fertilize the ova. SPERMATOCYTE (21) [noun] A male gametocyte, from which a spermatozoon develops. SPERMATOZOAL (25) SPERMATOZOAN (25) SPERMATOZOID (26) [noun] A motile, ciliated male gamete produced in the antheridium of an alga, fern or gymnosperm. SPERMATOZOON (25) [noun] A reproductive cell or gamete of a male, carried in semen, that fertilizes an ovum to produce a zygote. SPERMOPHILES (21) SPHEROMETERS (19) SPHYGMOGRAPH (29) [noun] A mechanical device used to measure blood pressure and pulse. SPIRITUALISM (16) [noun] A doctrine, opposing materialism, that claims transcendency of the divine being, the altogether spiritual character of reality and the value of inwardness of consciousness. | [noun] A belief that the dead communicate with the living, especially through a medium. Used in a broader sense than spiritism/Kardecism. | [noun] The quality or state of being spiritual. SPIROMETRIES (16) SPLENOMEGALY (20) [noun] An enlargement of the spleen. STABLISHMENT (19) STANDPATTISM (17) STAPEDECTOMY (22) STARTLEMENTS (14) STEAMFITTERS (17) STEAMINESSES (14) STEAMROLLERS (14) [noun] A steam-powered heavy road roller | [noun] Any heavy road roller | [noun] (by extension) any seemingly irresistible force STEAMROLLING (15) [verb] To flatten, as if with a steamroller. | [verb] To ruthlessly crush or overwhelm. STEELMAKINGS (19) STENOTHERMAL (17) [adjective] Able to tolerate only a narrow range of temperatures STEPFAMILIES (19) [noun] Any family having one or more stepchildren or stepparents. | [noun] The family of one's stepfather or stepmother; those immediate family members not related by blood. STEREOISOMER (14) [noun] One of a set of the isomers of a compound that exhibits stereoisomerism STICHOMYTHIA (25) [noun] A technique in drama or poetry, in which alternating lines, or half-lines, are given to alternating characters, voices, or entities. STICHOMYTHIC (27) STIGMASTEROL (15) STIGMATIZING (25) [verb] To characterize as disgraceful or ignominious; to mark with a stigma or stigmata. STIMULATIONS (14) [noun] A pushing or goading toward action. | [noun] An activity causing excitement or pleasure; the act of stimulating. | [noun] Any action or condition that creates a response; sensory input. STOMACHACHES (24) STOMATITIDES (15) STOMATITISES (14) STONEMASONRY (17) STORMINESSES (14) STRABISMUSES (16) STRATOCUMULI (16) [noun] A principal low-level cloud type, predominantly stratiform, in the form of a gray and/or whitish layer or patch, which nearly always has dark parts and is nonfibrous. STREAMLINERS (14) STREAMLINING (15) [verb] To design and construct the contours of a vehicle etc. so as to offer the least resistance to its flow through a fluid. | [verb] (by extension) To simplify or organize a process in order to increase its efficiency. | [verb] To modernise. STREPTOMYCES (21) STREPTOMYCIN (21) [noun] An aminoglycoside and bactericidal antibiotic administered via intramuscular injection. STROMATOLITE (14) [noun] A laminated, columnar, rock-like structure constituting a large share of all fossils from 3.5 to 0.5 billion years ago, with some still being formed at present, some or all of which result from the deposit of minerals by microorganisms such as cyanobacteria. SUBBASEMENTS (18) [noun] A basement located beneath another basement SUBCOMMITTEE (20) [noun] A committee formed by an existing committee, comprising a subset of its members. SUBCOMMUNITY (23) SUBCOMPONENT (20) SUBDOMINANTS (17) [noun] The fourth tone of a scale. | [noun] The triad built on the subdominant tone. SUBECONOMIES (18) SUBEPIDERMAL (19) SUBJECTIVISM (28) [noun] The doctrine that reality is created or shaped by the mind. | [noun] The doctrine that knowledge is based in feelings or intuition | [noun] The doctrine that values and moral principles come from attitudes, convention, whim, or preference. SUBLIMATIONS (16) SUBLIMINALLY (19) SUBMAXILLARY (26) SUBMERGENCES (19) SUBMERSIBLES (18) [noun] A small nonmilitary, non-nuclear submarine for exploration. | [noun] A retroactive term used for non-nuclear submarines; nuclear submarines are termed "true submarines". | [noun] A term used primarily by some navies for nuclear submarines, termed "true submersibles", because they cannot retroactively declare that their non-nuclear submarines should be called by a different name. SUBMICROGRAM (21) SUBMINIATURE (16) [adjective] Compact or smaller than miniature. SUBMINISTERS (16) SUBMISSIVELY (22) SUBMULTIPLES (18) [noun] A quantity that gives another quantity when multiplied by an integer SUBMUNITIONS (16) [noun] Any part of a weapon (typically a bomb or missile) that separates from a parent munition before or during employment SUBNORMALITY (19) SUBOPTIMIZED (28) SUBOPTIMIZES (27) SUBSUMPTIONS (18) SUBTEMPERATE (18) SUBUMBRELLAS (18) [noun] The integument of the undersurface of the bell, or disk-shaped body, of a jellyfish. SUCCEDANEUMS (19) SULFONAMIDES (18) [noun] Any amide of a sulfonic acid RS(=O)2NR'2 | [noun] Any of a group of antibiotics; a sulfa drug SUMMARIZABLE (27) SUMMERHOUSES (19) [noun] A house owned not as a primary residence and used as vacation home during warm weather months of the year. | [noun] An outbuilding in a garden where the owners can relax in warm weather. SUMMERSAULTS (16) [noun] Starting on one's feet, an instance of rotating one's body 360 degree while airborne or on the ground, with one's feet going over one's head. SUPERBOMBERS (20) SUPEREMINENT (16) [adjective] Superior to or notable above all others; outstanding; supremely remarkable. SUPERHUMANLY (22) SUPERIMPOSED (19) [verb] To place an object over another object, usually in such a way that both will be visible. | [verb] To establish a structural system over, independently of underlying structures. | [adjective] Positioned on or above something else, especially in layers SUPERIMPOSES (18) [verb] To place an object over another object, usually in such a way that both will be visible. | [verb] To establish a structural system over, independently of underlying structures. SUPERMARKETS (20) [noun] A large self-service store that sells groceries and, usually, medications, household goods and/or clothing. | [noun] A chain of such stores. | [noun] A one-stop shop; a place offering a range of products or services. SUPERMASSIVE (19) [adjective] Very or extremely massive. | [adjective] Much larger than usual. SUPERORGASMS (17) SUPERPREMIUM (20) SUPERREALISM (16) SUPERSTARDOM (17) [noun] The status or position of a superstar. SUPERSTRATUM (16) [noun] A stratum that is on top of another | [noun] A language imposed upon a population that previously spoke another language SUPERSYSTEMS (19) SUPPLEMENTAL (18) [noun] Something that supplements or adds to. | [noun] A requisition or article of legislation that provides additional funding for a program. | [adjective] Acting to supplement. SUPPLEMENTED (19) [verb] To provide or make a supplement to something. SUPPLEMENTER (18) SUPRALIMINAL (16) SUPREMACISTS (18) [noun] A person who advocates the supremacy of one particular group over all others. SUPREMATISMS (18) SUPREMATISTS (16) SURMOUNTABLE (16) SWAMPINESSES (19) SYCOPHANTISM (24) SYMBOLICALLY (24) [adverb] In a symbolic manner. | [adverb] By means of symbols or a symbol. | [adverb] As symbols or a symbol. SYMMETALLISM (21) SYMMETRIZING (29) SYMPATHETICS (24) SYMPATHISING (23) [verb] To have, show or express sympathy; to be affected by feelings similar to those of another, in consequence of knowing the person to be thus affected. | [verb] To support, favour, have sympathy (with a political cause or movement, a side in a conflict / in an action). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. SYMPATHIZERS (31) [noun] A person who sympathizes (with a political cause, a side in a conflict, etc.); a supporter. | [noun] A person who has, shows or expresses sympathy (with another person or people); a person who enters into the feelings of another. SYMPATHIZING (32) [verb] To have, show or express sympathy; to be affected by feelings similar to those of another, in consequence of knowing the person to be thus affected. | [verb] To support, favour, have sympathy (with a political cause or movement, a side in a conflict / in an action). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. SYMPOSIARCHS (24) SYNAPTOSOMAL (19) SYNAPTOSOMES (19) SYNCHRONISMS (22) SYNDACTYLISM (23) SYNDICALISMS (20) SYNONYMITIES (20) SYNONYMIZING (30) SYNONYMOUSLY (23) SYSTEMATISED (18) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATISES (17) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATISMS (19) SYSTEMATISTS (17) SYSTEMATIZED (27) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATIZER (26) SYSTEMATIZES (26) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMICALLY (22) [adverb] In a systemic manner. | [adverb] In a manner that affects an entire system. TAPHONOMISTS (19) TASKMISTRESS (18) [noun] A woman who assigns tasks; a female overseer. TAUTOMERISMS (16) TAXIDERMISTS (22) [noun] One who practices taxidermy, the stuffing of animals. TEETOTALISMS (14) TELECOMMUTED (19) [verb] To work from home, sometimes for part of a working day or week, using a computer connected to one's employer's network or via the Internet. TELECOMMUTER (18) TELECOMMUTES (18) [verb] To work from home, sometimes for part of a working day or week, using a computer connected to one's employer's network or via the Internet. TELEGRAMMING (18) TELEMARKETER (18) TELEMETERING (15) [verb] To transmit by telemetry. TELLUROMETER (14) TEMPERAMENTS (18) [noun] A moderate and proportionable mixture of elements or ingredients in a compound; the condition in which elements are mixed in their proper proportions. | [noun] Any state or condition as determined by the proportion of its ingredients or the manner in which they are mixed; consistence, composition; mixture. | [noun] A person's usual manner of thinking, behaving or reacting. TEMPERATURES (16) [noun] A measure of cold or heat, often measurable with a thermometer. | [noun] An elevated body temperature, as present in fever and many illnesses. | [noun] A property of macroscopic amounts of matter that serves to gauge the average intensity of the random actual motions of the individually mobile particulate constituents. http//arxiv.org/pdf/physics/0004055 TEMPORALIZED (26) TEMPORALIZES (25) TENDEROMETER (15) TENSIOMETERS (14) TENSIOMETRIC (16) TERMINATIONS (14) [noun] The process of terminating or the state of being terminated. | [noun] The process of firing an employee; ending one's employment at a business for any reason. | [noun] An end in time; a conclusion. TESTAMENTARY (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a will or testament TESTIMONIALS (14) [noun] A statement, especially one given under oath; testimony | [noun] A written recommendation of someone's worth or character | [noun] A tribute given in appreciation of someone's service etc. TETRADRACHMS (20) TETRAHYMENAS (20) TETRAZOLIUMS (23) THALASSAEMIA (17) [noun] Any of a group of inherited disorders in which the amount of hemoglobin in the blood is reduced. THALASSEMIAS (17) THALASSEMICS (19) THALIDOMIDES (19) THAUMATURGES (18) [noun] A performer of thaumaturgy; a performer of miracles; a magician. THAUMATURGIC (20) THEMATICALLY (22) [adverb] In a thematic manner THEOBROMINES (19) THEOCENTRISM (19) THERMALIZING (27) [verb] To lower the velocity and kinetic energy of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor by use of a moderator, and thus increase the efficiency of fission THERMOCLINES (19) [noun] A layer within a body of water or air where the temperature changes rapidly with depth. THERMOCOUPLE (21) [noun] A transducer consisting of two different metals welded together at each end; a voltage is produced that is proportional to the difference in temperature between the two junctions (one of which is normally held at a known temperature) THERMOFORMED (23) THERMOGRAPHS (23) [noun] A thermometer which records the temperature. THERMOGRAPHY (26) [noun] Any of several techniques for the remote measurement of the temperature variations of a body, especially by creating images produced by infrared radiation. | [noun] Any process of writing involving the use of heat. THERMOHALINE (20) THERMOLABILE (19) [adjective] Subject to destruction/decomposition or change in response to heat. THERMOMETERS (19) [noun] An apparatus used to measure temperature. THERMOMETRIC (21) THERMOPHILES (22) [noun] An organism that lives and thrives at relatively high temperatures; a form of extremophile; many are members of the Archaea. THERMOPHILIC (24) THERMOSCOPES (21) THERMOSPHERE (22) [noun] The layer of the Earth's atmosphere directly above the mesosphere and directly below the exosphere. THERMOSTABLE (19) [adjective] Physically or chemically unaffected by high temperatures THERMOSTATED (18) THERMOSTATIC (19) THERMOTACTIC (21) THERMOTROPIC (21) THIMBLEBERRY (24) [noun] Rubus parviflorus, a species of Rubus, native to western and northern North America, from Alaska east to Ontario and Minnesota, and south to northern Mexico. | [noun] The fruit of the above plant. | [noun] The black raspberry, Rubus occidentalis. THIMBLEWEEDS (23) THINGAMABOBS (22) [noun] A thing or person whose actual name is unknown or forgotten. THINGAMAJIGS (26) [noun] Something that one does not know the name of. THINGUMAJIGS (26) [noun] Something that one does not know the name of. THROMBOCYTES (24) [noun] Platelet THROMBOCYTIC (26) THROMBOLYTIC (24) THROMBOXANES (26) THUMBTACKING (26) THUNDERSTORM (18) [noun] A storm consisting of thunder and lightning produced by a cumulonimbus, usually accompanied with heavy rain, wind, and sometimes hail; and in rarer cases sleet, freezing rain, or snow. THYMECTOMIES (24) [noun] The surgical removal of the thymus THYMECTOMIZE (33) TIMBERDOODLE (18) TIMEKEEPINGS (21) [noun] The measurement of time, or determining what the local time is. TIMELESSNESS (14) TIMELINESSES (14) TIMEPLEASERS (16) TIMESERVINGS (18) TIMOCRATICAL (18) TIMOROUSNESS (14) TINSMITHINGS (18) TIRESOMENESS (14) TOASTMASTERS (14) [noun] A person who introduces speakers, and proposes toasts at a formal dinner; a master of ceremonies. TOILSOMENESS (14) TOLBUTAMIDES (17) TOMFOOLERIES (17) TOMOGRAPHIES (20) TRACHEOSTOMY (22) [noun] A surgical procedure in which an incision is made into the trachea, through the neck, and a tube inserted so as to make an artificial opening in order to assist breathing TRADEMARKING (20) [verb] To register something as a trademark. | [verb] To so label a product. TRADUCEMENTS (17) TRAGICOMICAL (19) TRAMPOLINERS (16) TRAMPOLINING (17) [verb] To jump as if on a trampoline. | [verb] To rewrite (computer code) to use the looping or jumping instructions called trampolines. TRAMPOLINIST (16) TRANSAMINASE (14) [noun] Any of a group of enzymes that catalyze transamination. TRANSFORMERS (17) [noun] (toys) A toy in the Transformers toyline which has mechanical parts that allow it to be altered in appearance from its original form as a humanoid robot action figure to another form, usually a vehicle, depending on the toy. | [noun] One of the characters in the Transformers franchise who is an alien humanoid robot that can mechanically alter its appearance, or "transform", into a vehicle, creature, or (rarely) a tool. | [noun] Something that transforms, changing its own or another thing's shape. TRANSFORMING (18) [verb] To change greatly the appearance or form of. | [verb] To change the nature, condition or function of; to change in nature, disposition, heart, character, etc.; to convert. | [verb] To subject to a transformation; to change into another form without altering the value. TRANSHUMANCE (19) [noun] The seasonal movement of people, with their cattle or other grazing animals, to new pastures which may be quite distant. TRANSHUMANTS (17) TRANSMIGRATE (15) [verb] To migrate to another country. | [verb] (of the soul) To pass into another body after death. TRANSMISSION (14) [noun] The act of transmitting, e.g. data or electric power. | [noun] The fact of being transmitted. | [noun] Something that is transmitted, such as a message, picture or a disease; the sending of such a thing. TRANSMISSIVE (17) TRANSMITTALS (14) [noun] The act of transmitting a message; a transmission | [noun] Item of correspondence. TRANSMITTERS (14) [noun] One who or that which transmits something (in all senses). | [noun] An electronic device that generates and amplifies a carrier wave, modulates it with a meaningful signal derived from speech, music, TV or other sources, and broadcasts the resulting signal from an antenna. TRANSMITTING (15) [verb] To send or convey something from one person, place or thing to another. | [verb] To spread or pass on something such as a disease or a signal. | [verb] To impart, convey or hand down something by inheritance or heredity. TRANSMOGRIFY (21) [verb] To completely alter the form of. | [verb] To completely alter one's form. TRANSMONTANE (14) [adjective] Of or relating to the other side of the mountains. TRANSMUTABLE (16) TRANSURANIUM (14) TRANSVESTISM (17) TRAUMATISING (15) [verb] To injure, e.g. tissues, by force or by thermal, chemical or other agents. | [verb] To cause a trauma in. TRAUMATIZING (24) [verb] To injure, e.g. tissues, by force or by thermal, chemical or other agents. | [verb] To cause a trauma in. TREMENDOUSLY (18) [adverb] Greatly; enormously TRICHOMONADS (20) [noun] Any of many flagellate protozoans of the genus Trichomonas, most of which are parasitic TRICHOTOMIES (19) [noun] Division or separation into three groups or pieces. | [noun] The property of an order relation whereby, given an ordered pair of elements (of a given algebraic structure), exactly one of these is true: the first element is 'less than' the second one, the second is 'less than' the first, or the two elements are equal. TRICHOTOMOUS (19) TRICHROMATIC (21) [adjective] Involving three colours. | [adjective] Able to perceive three primary colours. TRIGONOMETRY (18) [noun] The branch of mathematics that deals with the relationships between the sides and the angles of triangles and the calculations based on them, particularly the trigonometric functions. TRIMETHOPRIM (21) [noun] An antibiotic, 5-(3,4,5-trimethoxybenzyl)pyrimidine-2,4-diamine, used against, among other infections, those of the urinary tract. TRIMETROGONS (15) TRIUMPHALISM (21) [noun] The attitude or belief that a particular doctrine, culture, or social system, particularly a religious or political one, is superior and that it will or should triumph over all others. TRIUMPHALIST (19) TRIUMPHANTLY (22) [adverb] In a triumphant manner. TRIUMVIRATES (17) [noun] An official group of three people, especially a ruling council of three men and particularly two such councils in Roman history. TROPOMYOSINS (19) TROUBLEMAKER (20) [noun] One who causes trouble, especially one who does so deliberately. | [noun] A complainer. TRUCKMASTERS (20) TRYPANOSOMES (19) [noun] Any of a group of protozoan parasites which are transmitted by biting insects and infect the blood of humans and other vertebrates. TUMEFACTIONS (19) TUMULTUOUSLY (17) TURBIDIMETER (17) [noun] An optical instrument that measures the turbidity of a fluid containing suspended particles. TURBIDIMETRY (20) TWELVEMONTHS (23) [noun] A year. TYMPANITESES (19) ULTIMATENESS (14) ULTRACOMPACT (20) ULTRALEFTISM (17) ULTRAMARINES (14) ULTRAMONTANE (14) [noun] Someone who acknowledges the supremacy of the Pope | [adjective] Respecting the supremacy of the Pope. | [adjective] From the other side of a mountain range, particularly the Alps. ULTRAREALISM (14) ULTRAVACUUMS (19) UMBILICATION (18) UMBRAGEOUSLY (20) UNACCLIMATED (19) UNACCUSTOMED (19) [verb] To make or become used to a change from something one was accustomed to. | [adjective] Not used to an event or thing, not accustomed. UNAMBIVALENT (19) [adjective] Not ambivalent. UNBECOMINGLY (22) UNCOMMERCIAL (20) [noun] A spoof advertisement created for countercultural purposes. | [adjective] Not commercial; often specifically not commercially viable UNCOMMONNESS (18) [noun] The state or quality of being uncommon. UNCOMPELLING (19) UNCOMPLACENT (20) UNCOMPOUNDED (20) [adjective] Not compounded. UNCONFORMITY (22) [noun] A lack of conformity | [noun] A gap in time in rock strata, where erosion occurs while deposition slows or stops UNDECOMPOSED (20) UNDEMOCRATIC (19) [adjective] Not democratic UNDERGARMENT (16) [noun] Any garment worn underneath others, especially one worn next to the skin; an item of underwear. | [noun] (in the plural) Temple garments worn by the followers of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. UNDERLAYMENT (18) UNDERPAYMENT (20) UNDERWHELMED (22) [verb] To fail to impress; to perform disappointingly. UNDETERMINED (16) [adjective] Not determined; not settled; not decided. | [adjective] Not limited; not defined; indeterminate. UNDIMINISHED (19) [adjective] Not diminished. UNDIPLOMATIC (19) [adjective] Not diplomatic or tactful | [adjective] Lacking sensitivity or the skill of dealing with others UNDOCUMENTED (18) [adjective] Lacking instructions or reference material. | [adjective] Not having official documents that provide identification, authorization, etc. | [noun] An immigrant who has entered a country (often as a migrant worker) and has no documentation authorizing them to (still) be present there. UNDRAMATIZED (25) UNECONOMICAL (18) [adjective] Not economical UNEMBITTERED (17) UNEMPLOYABLE (21) [noun] An individual who is not suited to employment. | [adjective] Not employable. UNEMPLOYMENT (21) [noun] The state of having no job; joblessness. | [noun] The phenomenon of joblessness in an economy. | [noun] The level of joblessness in an economy, often measured as a percentage of the workforce. UNENCUMBERED (19) [adjective] Not burdened with worries, cares or responsibilities. | [adjective] Free of encumbrance. | [adjective] (of property) Not subject to any claims. UNFAMILIARLY (20) UNFATHOMABLE (22) [adjective] Impossible to fathom or understand. | [adjective] Difficult to penetrate. UNFLAMBOYANT (22) UNFORMULATED (18) [adjective] Not formulated. UNGERMINATED (16) UNGLAMORIZED (25) UNHANDSOMELY (21) UNICAMERALLY (19) UNIFORMITIES (17) [noun] The state of being uniform, alike and lacking variety. | [noun] The absence of alternatives or diversity; sameness. UNIMAGINABLE (17) [adjective] Unable to be imagined; inconceivable or mind-boggling; beyond belief UNIMAGINABLY (20) [adverb] To an extent or in a way that cannot be, or could not have been, imagined UNIMPRESSIVE (19) [adjective] Lacking the ability to impress, inability to produce an impression. UNITARIANISM (14) UNIVERSALISM (17) [noun] The state of being universal; universality. | [noun] The belief that all souls can attain salvation. | [noun] Alternative form of Unitarian Universalism UNMANAGEABLE (17) [adjective] Not manageable; not readily submitting to handling or management; not easily restrained, governed, or directed UNMANAGEABLY (20) UNMANNEREDLY (18) UNMARKETABLE (20) [adjective] Not marketable UNMEASURABLE (16) [adjective] Not able to be measured; immeasurable. UNMECHANIZED (29) UNMERCIFULLY (22) UNMISTAKABLE (20) [adjective] Unique, such that it cannot be mistaken for something else. UNMISTAKABLY (23) [adverb] In an unmistakable manner; unquestionably. UNMODERNIZED (25) [adjective] Not modernized. UNMORALITIES (14) UNMYELINATED (18) UNNILHEXIUMS (24) UNNILPENTIUM (16) UNNILQUADIUM (24) UNORNAMENTED (15) [adjective] Not ornamented; without ornament. UNPROGRAMMED (20) UNREDEEMABLE (17) [adjective] Not redeemable; irredeemable. UNREMARKABLE (20) [adjective] Not remarkable. UNREMARKABLY (23) UNREMEMBERED (19) [adjective] Not remembered UNSCRAMBLERS (18) UNSCRAMBLING (19) [verb] To reverse the process of scrambling, decrypt. | [verb] To put into order or restore to order. UNSEEMLINESS (14) UNSETTLEMENT (14) UNSYSTEMATIC (19) [adjective] Not systematic UNTIMELINESS (14) URICOTELISMS (16) VAGABONDISMS (21) VAGINISMUSES (18) VANGUARDISMS (19) VASECTOMIZED (29) [verb] To perform a vasectomy | [adjective] That has been subjected to vasectomy VASECTOMIZES (28) [verb] To perform a vasectomy VELOCIMETERS (19) [noun] A device used to measure the speed of sound in a liquid. VENOMOUSNESS (17) VENTROMEDIAL (18) [adjective] Both ventral and medial VERMICULATED (20) [verb] To decorate with lines resembling the tracks of worms. | [adjective] Decorated with lines like worm tracks. VERMICULITES (19) VIGILANTISMS (18) VISCOMETRIES (19) VISCOSIMETER (19) [noun] A viscometer. VITRECTOMIES (19) [noun] The surgical removal of some or all of the vitreous humour from the eye. VOLUMINOSITY (20) VOLUMINOUSLY (20) VOLUNTARISMS (17) VOLUNTARYISM (20) [noun] A reliance on volunteers to support an institution or achieve an end; volunteerism. | [noun] A doctrine that assigns the most dominant position to the will rather than the intellect. | [noun] The political theory that a community is best organized by the voluntary cooperation of individuals, rather than by a government, which is regarded as being coercive by nature. VOLUNTEERISM (17) [noun] Reliance on volunteers to perform a social or educational function. | [noun] The tendency to volunteer; the activity of volunteering. WAREHOUSEMAN (20) [noun] A person who manages, or works in, a warehouse. | [noun] One who keeps a wholesale shop for woollen goods. WAREHOUSEMEN (20) [noun] A person who manages, or works in, a warehouse. | [noun] One who keeps a wholesale shop for woollen goods. WARMONGERING (19) [verb] To advocate war. | [noun] Bellicism; militarism WATCHMAKINGS (27) WATERMANSHIP (22) WATERMARKING (22) [verb] To mark paper with a watermark. | [verb] To mark a datafile with a digital watermark. WEISENHEIMER (20) [noun] (mildly humorous) A self-assertive and arrogant person; a know-it-all or smart aleck. WHARFMASTERS (23) WHIGMALEERIE (21) WHIMSICALITY (25) WHOREMASTERS (20) [noun] A man who uses the services of prostitutes. | [noun] A pimp. | [noun] An exploiter of people. WHOREMONGERS (21) [noun] A frequent customer of whores. | [noun] A procurer of whores; a pimp. WINDJAMMINGS (28) WISENHEIMERS (20) [noun] (mildly humorous) A self-assertive and arrogant person; a know-it-all or smart aleck. WITENAGEMOTE (18) WITENAGEMOTS (18) [noun] (history, usually uncountable, sometimes countable) Any of several assemblies which existed in Anglo-Saxon England from the 7th to the 11th century, initially with regional jurisdiction (there being different ones in Essex, Kent, Mercia, Northumbria, Sussex and Wessex), later with national jurisdiction, made up of important noblemen. | [noun] (history) A specific session of such an assembly. WOMANISHNESS (20) WORDSMITHERY (24) WORKAHOLISMS (24) WORKINGWOMAN (25) WORKINGWOMEN (25) WORKMANSHIPS (26) XEROPHYTISMS (29) XIPHISTERNUM (26) [noun] The xiphoid process, a small cartilaginous extension to the lower part of the sternum, usually ossified in the adult human. YELLOWHAMMER (25) [noun] A passerine bird, Emberiza citrinella, of western Eurasia, which is mainly yellow in colour. | [noun] The northern flicker, Colaptes auratus. | [noun] A native or resident of the American state of Alabama. ZYGOMORPHIES (32)

13-Letter Words (2493)

ABNORMALITIES (17) [noun] The state or quality of being abnormal; variation; irregularity. | [noun] Something abnormal; an aberration; an abnormal occurrence or feature. ABOLITIONISMS (17) ACCELEROMETER (19) [noun] An instrument for measuring acceleration. | [noun] An instrument made for detecting and measuring vibrations. ACCLIMATISING (20) [verb] To get used to a new climate. | [verb] To make used to a new climate or one that is different from that which is natural; to inure or habituate to other circumstances; to adapt to the peculiarities of a foreign or strange climate. ACCLIMATIZERS (28) [noun] Plural of acclimatizer; devices or substances used to help organisms adapt to new environmental conditions. | [noun] People or agents that help acclimate others to new surroundings or conditions. ACCLIMATIZING (29) [verb] To get used to a new climate. | [verb] To make used to a new climate or one that is different from that which is natural; to inure or habituate to other circumstances; to adapt to the peculiarities of a foreign or strange climate. ACCOMMODATING (23) [verb] To render fit, suitable, or correspondent; to adapt. | [verb] To cause to come to agreement; to bring about harmony; to reconcile. | [verb] To provide housing for. ACCOMMODATION (22) [noun] (usually a mass noun) Lodging in a dwelling or similar living quarters afforded to travellers in hotels or on cruise ships, or prisoners, etc. | [noun] (physical) Adaptation or adjustment. | [noun] (personal) Adaptation or adjustment. ACCOMMODATIVE (25) [adjective] Supplying with or obliging; accommodating. ACCOMMODATORS (22) [noun] People who adapt or adjust to the needs, preferences, or circumstances of others. | [noun] In the Kolb Learning Styles theory, individuals who prefer hands-on experience and practical application of knowledge. ACCOMPANIMENT (23) [noun] A part, usually performed by instruments, that gives support or adds to the background in music, or adds for ornamentation; also, the harmony of a figured bass. | [noun] That which accompanies; something that attends as a circumstance, or which is added to give greater completeness to the principal thing, or by way of ornament, or for the sake of symmetry. ACCOMPLISHERS (24) [noun] People who successfully complete or achieve something; those who accomplish tasks or goals. ACCOMPLISHING (25) [verb] To finish successfully. | [verb] To complete, as time or distance. | [verb] To execute fully; to fulfill; to complete successfully. ACCOUCHEMENTS (24) [noun] Delivery in childbed; parturition ACCOUTERMENTS (19) [noun] The act of accoutering. | [noun] An article of clothing or equipment, in particular when used as an accessory. | [noun] Apparatus needed for a task or journey. ACCOUTREMENTS (19) [noun] The act of accoutering. | [noun] An article of clothing or equipment, in particular when used as an accessory. | [noun] Apparatus needed for a task or journey. ACCUMULATIONS (19) [noun] The act of amassing or gathering, as into a pile. | [noun] The process of growing into a heap or a large amount. | [noun] A mass of something piled up or collected. ACCUSTOMATION (19) ACETAMINOPHEN (22) [noun] A white crystalline compound used in medicine as an anodyne to relieve pain and reduce fever. ACETAZOLAMIDE (27) [noun] A medication used to treat glaucoma, altitude sickness, and certain types of epilepsy by inhibiting carbonic anhydrase to reduce fluid production. ACHROMATIZING (30) [verb] Converting to a colorless or monochromatic state by removing color or reducing chromatic aberration in optical systems. ACRIMONIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a bitter, harsh, or spiteful manner; with acrimony or ill will. ACRONYMICALLY (25) ACTINOMETRIES (17) [noun] The plural of actinometry, which is the measurement of the intensity of radiation, especially solar radiation. ACTINOMORPHIC (24) [adjective] (of a flower) Having its petals arranged in a radially symmetric fashion. ACTINOMYCETES (22) [noun] Any of various filamentous or rod-shaped bacteria, of the order Actinomycetales, that resemble fungi. Some actinomycetes are pathogens and some are sources of antibiotics. ACTINOMYCOSES (22) [noun] A chronic bacterial infection caused by Actinomyces species, characterized by the formation of abscesses and draining sinuses, typically affecting the jaw, lungs, or abdomen. | [noun] The plural form of actinomycosis. ACTINOMYCOSIS (22) [noun] A chronic bacterial infection caused by Actinomyces bacteria, typically affecting the jaw, lungs, or abdomen and characterized by draining sinuses and granule formation. ACTINOMYCOTIC (24) [adjective] Relating to or caused by actinomycosis, a chronic bacterial infection typically affecting the jaw, lungs, or abdomen. ADMEASUREMENT (18) [noun] Apportionment. ADMINISTERING (17) [verb] To cause to ingest (a drug), either by openly offering or through deceit. | [verb] To apportion out, distribute. | [verb] To manage or supervise the conduct, performance or execution of; to govern or regulate the parameters for the conduct, performance or execution of; to work in an administrative capacity. ADMINISTRABLE (18) [adjective] Capable of being administered or managed. ADMINISTRANTS (16) [noun] Plural of administrant; persons who administer or manage affairs, particularly in a religious or institutional context. ADMINISTRATED (17) [verb] To administer | [verb] The act or function of providing maintenance and general housekeeping for computer systems, networks, peripheral equipment, etc. ADMINISTRATES (16) [verb] To administer | [verb] The act or function of providing maintenance and general housekeeping for computer systems, networks, peripheral equipment, etc. ADMINISTRATOR (16) [noun] One who administers affairs; one who directs, manages, executes, or dispenses, whether in civil, judicial, political, or ecclesiastical affairs; a manager | [noun] A person who manages or settles the estate of an intestate, or of a testator when there is no competent executor; one to whom the right of administration has been committed by competent authority | [noun] One who is responsible for software installation, management, information and maintenance of a computer or network ADMIRABLENESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being admirable; worthiness of admiration. ADMISSIBILITY (21) [noun] The state or quality of being admissible or allowable. ADMONISHINGLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that expresses disapproval or warning; in a way that scolds or cautions someone about their behavior. ADMONISHMENTS (21) [noun] The act of admonishing; a reprimand or rebuke. ADRENALECTOMY (21) [noun] The surgical removal of one or both adrenal glands. ADRENOCHROMES (21) [noun] Oxidation products of adrenaline (epinephrine) that form when the hormone is exposed to oxygen, or synthetic compounds with similar chemical structure. ADUMBRATIVELY (24) ADVENTURESOME (19) [adjective] Prone to, or willing to undertake, adventures; daring or bold. ADVERTISEMENT (19) [noun] A commercial solicitation designed to sell some commodity, service or similar. | [noun] A public notice. | [noun] A recommendation of a particular product, service or person. ADVERTIZEMENT (28) [noun] An archaic or alternative spelling of "advertisement," a public notice or announcement promoting a product, service, or event. | [noun] A paid announcement in a newspaper, magazine, broadcast, or online platform designed to attract public attention or patronage. AERODYNAMICAL (21) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by the motion of air and the forces produced by objects moving through air, or designed to reduce air resistance. AEROEMBOLISMS (19) [noun] Plural of aeroembolism, a condition caused by air bubbles entering the bloodstream, typically occurring in divers or aviators. | [noun] Air bubbles in blood vessels that can cause pain, paralysis, or death. AEROMECHANICS (22) [noun] The branch of mechanics that deals with the motion of air and the forces acting on bodies moving through air, or the study of aerodynamics and flight mechanics. AEROMEDICINES (18) AESTHETICISMS (20) [noun] Plural of aestheticism; movements or doctrines emphasizing the pursuit of beauty and art for their own sake, independent of moral or social themes. AFFIRMATIVELY (27) [adverb] In an affirming manner. AGAMOSPERMIES (20) [noun] The production of seeds or fruit without sexual fertilization; asexual reproduction in plants. AGGIORNAMENTO (17) [noun] The process of bringing something up to date or modernizing it, especially the modernization of the Roman Catholic Church initiated by Pope John XXIII. AGGLOMERATING (18) [verb] To wind or collect into a ball; hence, to gather into a mass or anything like a mass. AGGLOMERATION (17) [noun] The act or process of collecting in a mass; a heaping together. | [noun] State of being collected in a mass; a mass; cluster. | [noun] An extended city area comprising the built-up area of a central city and any suburbs linked by continuous urban area. AGGLOMERATIVE (20) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by the process of gathering together into a mass or cluster. | [adjective] Of or relating to agglomeration, especially in geology or business contexts where entities combine or cluster together. AGGRIEVEMENTS (20) AGRICHEMICALS (23) [noun] A chemical compound, such as a hormone, fungicide, or insecticide, that improves the production of crops. | [noun] A compound or product derived from farmed plants. AGROCHEMICALS (23) [noun] A chemical compound, such as a hormone, fungicide, or insecticide, that improves the production of crops. | [noun] A compound or product derived from farmed plants. AGRONOMICALLY (21) [adverb] In a manner relating to agronomy, the science of crop production and soil management. AIMLESSNESSES (15) [noun] The plural of aimlessness; the quality or state of lacking purpose, direction, or goal. ALCHEMISTICAL (22) [adjective] Of or relating to alchemy; involving magical or mysterious transformations. ALDOSTERONISM (16) [noun] A condition, marked by excessive secretion of aldosterone, that gives rise to cardiac difficulties ALIMENTATIONS (15) ALKALIMETRIES (19) ALLELOMORPHIC (22) ALLOMORPHISMS (22) ALPHANUMERICS (22) [noun] An alphanumeric character. AMALGAMATIONS (18) [noun] The process of amalgamating; a mixture, merger or consolidation. | [noun] The result of amalgamating; a mixture or alloy. | [noun] The intermarriage and interbreeding of different ethnicities or races. AMATIVENESSES (18) AMBASSADORIAL (18) AMBIDEXTERITY (28) [noun] The property of being equally skillful with each hand. | [noun] Superior cleverness or adaptability. AMBIGUOUSNESS (18) AMBISEXUALITY (27) AMBITIOUSNESS (17) AMELIORATIONS (15) [noun] The act of making better. | [noun] An improvement. | [noun] The process by which a term gains a more positive connotation over time. AMENABILITIES (17) AMIABLENESSES (17) AMICABILITIES (19) AMINOACIDURIA (18) [noun] The presence of amino acids in the urine, typically indicating a metabolic disorder or kidney dysfunction. AMINOPHYLLINE (23) [noun] A bronchodilator drug used to treat asthma and other respiratory conditions, consisting of theophylline combined with ethylenediamine. AMITRIPTYLINE (20) [noun] An antidepressant drug; a tablet containing this drug. AMNIOCENTESES (17) [noun] A procedure for obtaining amniotic fluid from a pregnant animal, by inserting a hollow needle through the abdominal wall and into the amniotic sac. Used in diagnosing possible genetic defects and/or obstetric complications. AMNIOCENTESIS (17) [noun] A procedure for obtaining amniotic fluid from a pregnant animal, by inserting a hollow needle through the abdominal wall and into the amniotic sac. Used in diagnosing possible genetic defects and/or obstetric complications. AMOROUSNESSES (15) [noun] The plural form of amorousness; instances or qualities of being amorous or showing sexual desire. AMORPHOUSNESS (20) [noun] The quality or state of being amorphous; lacking a definite form or shape. | [noun] The property of lacking organization, structure, or clear definition. AMORTIZATIONS (24) [noun] The reduction of loan principal over a series of payments. | [noun] The distribution of the cost of an intangible asset, such as an intellectual property right, over the projected useful life of the asset. AMPHIBOLOGIES (23) [noun] Amphiboly. AMPHICTYONIES (25) [noun] Plural of amphictyony; ancient Greek religious associations or leagues of neighboring states that shared a common sanctuary or temple. AMPHIDIPLOIDS (24) [noun] Organisms or plants that contain two complete sets of chromosomes from each of two different species, resulting from hybridization and chromosome doubling. AMPHIDIPLOIDY (27) [noun] The condition of having two complete sets of chromosomes from each of two different species, resulting from the doubling of chromosomes in a hybrid organism. AMPHIPLOIDIES (23) [noun] The plural of amphiploidy, a condition in organisms where chromosome sets from two or more different species are combined, resulting in a polyploid organism with chromosomes from multiple ancestral sources. AMPHIPROSTYLE (25) [noun] An amphiprostyle temple or edifice. | [adjective] (of a temple or edifice) Having columns at either end but not along the sides. AMPHITHEATERS (23) [noun] An open, outdoor theatre (which may be a theatre in the round, or have a stage with seating on only one side), especially one from the classical period of ancient Greece or Rome, or a modern venue of similar design. | [noun] A natural formation of a similar shape, where a steep mountain or slope a particular rock formation forms a partial or compete bowl, especially one used as a performance space (and possibly modified by carving out seats, etc) because the slopes naturally amplify or echo sound. AMPHITHEATRIC (25) AMPLIFICATION (22) [noun] The act, or result of amplifying, enlarging, extending or adding. | [noun] The act, or result of independently increasing some quantity, especially voltage, power or current. | [noun] Gain. AMUSINGNESSES (16) [noun] The plural of amusingness; the quality or state of being amusing or entertaining in multiple instances or contexts. ANAGRAMMATIZE (27) [verb] To produce an anagram of; to transpose the letters of. ANALPHABETISM (22) [noun] The state or condition of being unable to read or write; illiteracy. ANATHEMATIZED (28) [verb] To cause to be, or to declare as, an anathema or evil. ANATHEMATIZES (27) [verb] To cause to be, or to declare as, an anathema or evil. ANECDOTALISMS (18) ANGIOSPERMOUS (18) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of angiosperms, plants that produce flowers and seeds enclosed in a fruit. ANIMADVERSION (19) [noun] A criticism, a critical remark. | [noun] The state or characteristic of being animadversive. ANIMADVERTING (20) [verb] To criticise, to censure. | [verb] To consider. | [verb] To turn judicial attention (to); to criticise or punish. ANIMALIZATION (24) [noun] The process of making or becoming animal in nature or character. | [noun] Reversion to a more primitive or bestial state. ANIMATENESSES (15) [noun] The plural of animateness; the quality or state of being animate or having life. ANISOMETROPIA (17) [noun] A condition of the eye in which the two eyes have different refractive powers, resulting in unequal focus. ANISOMETROPIC (19) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by anisometropia, a condition in which the two eyes have different refractive powers, resulting in unequal image sizes on the retinas. ANISOTROPISMS (17) [noun] The plural of anisotropism, referring to the quality or condition of being anisotropic (having properties that vary depending on direction). ANNOUNCEMENTS (17) [noun] An act of announcing, or giving notice. | [noun] That which conveys what is announced. | [noun] The content which is announced. ANOMALOUSNESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being anomalous; deviation from what is standard, normal, or expected. ANONYMOUSNESS (18) ANTEPENULTIMA (17) ANTHELMINTICS (20) [noun] A drug for the treatment of intestinal worm infestation, either by killing the worms or by causing them to be expelled from the body. ANTHROPOMETRY (23) [noun] The science of measuring the human body in order to ascertain the average dimensions of the human form at different ages, and in different divisions of race, class, etc. ANTHROPOMORPH (25) ANTIBLACKISMS (23) ANTICLIMACTIC (21) [adjective] Lacking climax, disappointing or ironically insignificant following of impressive foreshadowing. ANTICOMMUNISM (21) [noun] Opposition to communism as a political ideology or system of government. ANTICOMMUNIST (19) [noun] One who is opposed to the tenets of communism. | [adjective] Opposed to the tenets of communism. ANTIFEMINISMS (20) [noun] Plural of antifeminism; opposition to feminism or feminist principles and movements. ANTIFEMINISTS (18) [noun] A person who is antagonistic to feminism. | [noun] An advocate of antifeminism. ANTIFORMALIST (18) ANTIHISTAMINE (18) [noun] A drug or substance that counteracts the effects of a histamine. Commonly used to alleviate the symptoms of hay fever and other allergies. ANTIHUMANISMS (20) [noun] Plural of antihumanism; philosophical or ideological positions that reject or oppose humanism and its emphasis on human values and dignity. ANTILOGARITHM (19) [noun] The number of which a given number is the logarithm (to a given base). ANTIMACASSARS (17) [noun] A cover for the back or arms of a chair or sofa, originally to prevent them from being soiled by macassar oil. ANTIMALARIALS (15) [noun] An agent that prevents or counteracts malaria. ANTIMARIJUANA (22) ANTIMECHANIST (20) ANTIMETABOLIC (19) ANTIMICROBIAL (19) [noun] An agent that destroys microbes, inhibits their growth, or prevents or counteracts their pathogenic action | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) tending to destroy or capable of destroying microbes | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) inhibiting the growth of microbes ANTIMODERNIST (16) ANTINOMIANISM (17) [noun] The theological doctrine that Christians are freed from moral law by grace and faith alone. | [noun] The belief that moral laws are not binding on those who have faith or special grace. ANTIRHEUMATIC (20) [adjective] Acting against or relieving rheumatism or rheumatic conditions. ANTIRITUALISM (15) ANTIROMANTICS (17) ANTISMUGGLING (18) ANTISPASMODIC (20) [noun] A drug that suppresses spasms. | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) Referring to something that suppresses spasms, generally a drug. ANTISUBMARINE (17) [adjective] Designed or used to detect, prevent, or destroy submarines. ANTISYMMETRIC (22) [adjective] (of a binary relation R on a set S) Having the property that, for any two distinct elements of S, at least one is not related to the other via R; equivalently, having the property that, for any x, y ∈ S, if both xRy and yRx then x=y. | [adjective] (of certain mathematical objects) Whose sign changes on the application of a matrix transpose or some generalisation thereof: ANTITERRORISM (15) [noun] (law enforcement) Activity aiming at opposing or preventing terrorism. ANTITHROMBINS (20) [noun] Proteins that inhibit or prevent the formation of blood clots by neutralizing thrombin, a key enzyme in the coagulation cascade. APOCALYPTISMS (24) [noun] Plural of apocalyptism; beliefs or doctrines concerning the end of the world or final judgment. | [noun] Theories or movements that predict or emphasize catastrophic or cataclysmic events. APOMICTICALLY (24) [adverb] In a manner relating to apomixis, a form of asexual reproduction in plants where seeds develop without fertilization. APPORTIONMENT (19) [noun] The act of apportioning or the state of being apportioned. | [noun] The distribution of members of the House of Representatives according to the population of the various states. | [noun] The allocation of direct taxation according to the population of the various states. APPRAISEMENTS (19) [noun] Plural of appraisement; the act or process of evaluating or assessing the value, quality, or nature of something. APPROXIMATELY (29) [adverb] Imprecise but close to in quantity or amount. APPROXIMATING (27) [verb] To estimate. | [verb] To come near to; to approach. | [verb] To carry or advance near; to cause to approach. APPROXIMATION (26) [noun] The act, process or result of approximating. | [noun] An imprecise solution or result that is adequate for a defined purpose. | [noun] The act of bringing together the edges of tissue to be sutured. APPROXIMATIVE (29) [noun] (grammar) A grammatical construct that expresses approximation. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or being an estimate or approximation. ARCHIMANDRITE (21) [noun] The superior of a large monastery, or group of monasteries, in the Orthodox Church. | [noun] An honorary title sometimes given to a monastic priest. ARGUMENTATION (16) [noun] Inference based on reasoning from given propositions. | [noun] An exchange of arguments | [noun] The addition of arguments to a model; parameterization. ARGUMENTATIVE (19) [adjective] Of or relating to argumentation; specifically, presenting a logical argument or line of reasoning; argumentive, discursive. | [adjective] Prone to argue or dispute. ARITHMETICIAN (20) [noun] One with expertise in arithmetic; a mathematician. ARMAMENTARIUM (19) [noun] All of the equipment available for carrying out a task, especially all the equipment used by a physician in the practice of medicine. AROMATICITIES (17) [noun] The quality or state of being aromatic; the characteristic of having a pleasant smell or of being an aromatic compound in chemistry. AROMATIZATION (24) [noun] The process of converting a chemical compound into an aromatic compound. | [verb] To convert into an aromatic compound through a chemical reaction. ARSPHENAMINES (20) [noun] Plural of arsphenamine, an arsenic-containing compound formerly used in the treatment of syphilis and other infections. ASCERTAINMENT (17) [noun] The act of ascertaining. ASSEMBLAGISTS (18) [noun] Artists who create assemblage art, a form of art made by combining found or discarded objects into new configurations. ASSEMBLYWOMAN (25) [noun] A female member of an assembly. | [noun] A member of the lower house of certain US state legislatures. ASSEMBLYWOMEN (25) [noun] A female member of an assembly. | [noun] A member of the lower house of certain US state legislatures. ASSIMILATIONS (15) [noun] The act of assimilating or the state of being assimilated. | [noun] The metabolic conversion of nutrients into tissue. | [noun] (by extension) The absorption of new ideas into an existing cognitive structure. ASTHMATICALLY (23) [adverb] In a manner relating to or affected by asthma; in a wheezing or labored way. ASTONISHMENTS (18) [noun] The feeling or experience of being astonished; great surprise. | [noun] Something very surprising. | [noun] Loss of physical sensation; inability to move a part of the body. ASTROCYTOMATA (20) [noun] Plural of astrocytoma, a type of brain tumor that arises from astrocytes (star-shaped glial cells in the nervous system). ASYNCHRONISMS (23) [noun] Plural of asynchronism; the quality or state of being asynchronous or occurring at different times. | [noun] Things that are out of their proper historical period or chronologically inconsistent. ATOMISTICALLY (20) [adverb] In a manner relating to or composed of atoms; from an atomistic perspective or viewpoint. AUGMENTATIONS (16) [noun] The act or process of augmenting. | [noun] A particular mark of honour, granted by the sovereign in consideration of some noble action, or by favour; and either quartered with the family arms, or on an escutcheon or canton. | [noun] A surgical procedure to enlarge a body part, as breast augmentation. AUGMENTATIVES (19) [noun] Words or affixes that increase the size, intensity, or importance of the base word. | [noun] In linguistics, morphemes or words used to express augmentation or enlargement of meaning. AUTOEROTICISM (17) [noun] Sexual stimulation or gratification of oneself. AUTOMATICALLY (20) [adverb] In an automatic manner. AUTOMOBILISTS (17) [noun] People who drive automobiles or are enthusiasts of automobiles. AUTOMORPHISMS (22) [noun] Plural of automorphism, a mathematical transformation of a structure that maps it onto itself while preserving its operations and relations. AUTONOMICALLY (20) [adverb] In a manner relating to or controlled by the autonomic nervous system, or in a self-governing or independent way. AUTORADIOGRAM (17) [noun] A photograph image produced by placing a film in contact with a specimen containing (or treated with) radioactive material; an autoradiogram AWESOMENESSES (18) [noun] The plural of awesomeness; the quality or state of being awesome or inspiring awe. AXIOMATICALLY (27) [adverb] In a manner based on or derived from axioms; in a way that is self-evident or accepted as a fundamental truth without proof. AXISYMMETRIES (27) [noun] Plural of axisymmetry; the quality or state of being symmetric about an axis, particularly used in mathematics, physics, and engineering to describe objects or systems that have rotational symmetry around a central axis. BALLETOMANIAS (17) [noun] Plural of balletomania; an excessive enthusiasm or passion for ballet. BAMBOOZLEMENT (30) [noun] The act or process of bamboozling or being bamboozled. BANTAMWEIGHTS (24) [noun] A weight class in boxing and other sports, intermediate between flyweight and featherweight. In boxing it ranges from 112 to 118 pounds (51 to 54 kg). | [noun] A boxer or other competitor of this weight. BARBARIANISMS (19) [noun] Plural of barbarism; words, expressions, or practices that are considered rude, crude, or uncivilized, or deviations from standard language usage. BASIDIOMYCETE (23) [noun] Any fungus of the phylum Basidiomycota, that produces sexual spores on a basidium. BATHYMETRICAL (25) [adjective] Relating to the measurement of ocean depths or the study of underwater topography. BEDAZZLEMENTS (36) [noun] Plural of bedazzlement; instances of dazzling or amazing someone with brilliance or splendor. | [noun] Decorative elements or embellishments that sparkle or shine. BEFUDDLEMENTS (22) [noun] Plural of befuddlement; states of confusion or bewilderment. BELEAGUERMENT (18) [noun] The fact or state of beleaguering; a state of blockade or siege. BELITTLEMENTS (17) [noun] Plural of belittlement; acts or instances of making someone or something seem less important or valuable. BENCHMARKINGS (27) [noun] Plural of benchmarking; the process of comparing performance, quality, or practices against a standard or competitor. | [verb] Third-person singular present tense of benchmark; comparing something against established standards or competitors. BENZIMIDAZOLE (36) [noun] A heterocyclic organic compound containing a benzene ring fused to an imidazole ring, used in pharmaceuticals and as a fungicide. BESTSELLERDOM (18) BEWILDERMENTS (21) [noun] The state of being bewildered. | [noun] A confusing or perplexing situation. BIBLIOMANIACS (21) [noun] People who have an excessive or compulsive enthusiasm for collecting and accumulating books. BIBLIOPHILISM (24) BICAMERALISMS (21) [noun] The plural form of bicameralism, referring to systems of government with two legislative chambers or houses. BICULTURALISM (19) [noun] The state or condition of being bicultural; the coexistence of two distinct cultures within a society or individual. | [noun] A policy or approach that recognizes and maintains two cultural traditions, particularly in education or social contexts. BILATERALISMS (17) [noun] The plural of bilateralism, referring to multiple instances or systems of bilateral relations or agreements between two parties. BILDUNGSROMAN (19) [noun] A novel tracing the spiritual, moral, psychological, or social development and growth of the main character, usually from childhood to maturity. BILINGUALISMS (18) [noun] The practice or condition of being bilingual, or the ability to speak two languages fluently. | [noun] Plural of bilingualism, referring to multiple instances or aspects of bilingual practices. BIMETALLISTIC (19) BIMILLENARIES (17) [noun] A two-thousandth anniversary BIMILLENNIALS (17) BIMOLECULARLY (22) [adverb] In a manner involving two molecules, especially in chemistry when describing a reaction or process that occurs between two molecular entities. BIOCHEMICALLY (27) [adverb] In a manner relating to chemical processes occurring within living organisms or cells. BIOCOMPATIBLE (23) [adjective] Compatible with biological tissue BIOMECHANICAL (24) [adjective] Of or pertaining to biomechanics BIOMETRICIANS (19) [noun] One who practices biometrics. BIOSYSTEMATIC (22) BIOTELEMETRIC (19) BIPARTISANISM (19) BLABBERMOUTHS (24) [noun] A gossip. | [noun] A person who talks excessively. | [noun] A kind of foam-dispensing nozzle used in firefighting at airports. BLACKGUARDISM (25) [noun] The behavior or practices characteristic of a blackguard; dishonest, unscrupulous, or disreputable conduct. BLACKSMITHING (27) [noun] The craft or work of a blacksmith, involving the forging and shaping of metal by hand using heat and tools. BLAMELESSNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being free from blame or guilt; innocence. BLANDISHMENTS (21) [noun] Flattering speech or actions designed to persuade or influence. BLASPHEMOUSLY (25) [adverb] In a manner that shows contempt or irreverence toward something sacred or holy. BLASTOMYCOSES (22) [noun] Plural of blastomycosis, a fungal infection caused by Blastomyces dermatitidis, typically affecting the lungs and skin. BLASTOMYCOSIS (22) [noun] A fungal infection caused by the organism Blastomyces dermatitidis, endemic to parts of North America, whose clinical symptoms resemble those of histoplasmosis BLEPHAROSPASM (24) [noun] A physiological condition characterized by recurring involuntary twitches or closing of the eyelids. BOMBASTICALLY (24) [adverb] In a bombastic manner; with high-sounding but often meaningless language or extravagant style. BRAINSTORMERS (17) [noun] People who engage in brainstorming, a technique of generating ideas through group discussion or individual reflection. | [noun] Plural of brainstormer, referring to multiple individuals or sessions focused on creative problem-solving. BRAINSTORMING (18) [verb] To investigate something, or solve a problem using brainstorming. | [verb] To participate in a brainstorming session. | [noun] A method of problem solving in which members of a group contribute ideas spontaneously. BRINKMANSHIPS (26) [noun] The practice of pursuing a dangerous policy to the brink of disaster before backing down, or multiple instances of such practices. BRINKSMANSHIP (26) [noun] Pursuit of an advantage by appearing to be willing to risk a dangerous policy rather than concede a point. BROMOCRIPTINE (21) [noun] A drug used in the treatment of parkinsonism, galactorrhea, and other conditions. It is a synthetic analog of the ergot alkaloids and stimulates the dopaminergic receptors of the brain, inhibiting the release of prolactin. BRONCHOSPASMS (24) [noun] Sudden contractions of the muscles in the bronchi of the lungs, causing difficulty in breathing. | [noun] Plural of bronchospasm, a medical condition characterized by constriction of the airways. BUMPTIOUSNESS (19) [noun] The quality of being bumptious; aggressive self-assertiveness or obnoxious self-importance. BUREAUCRATISM (19) [noun] Excessive adherence to bureaucratic rules and procedures, or the system and practices of bureaucracy viewed negatively as being rigid and inefficient. BUSINESSWOMAN (20) [noun] A woman involved in business. BUSINESSWOMEN (20) [noun] A woman involved in business. CABINETMAKERS (23) [noun] A skilled woodworker who makes high-quality wooden furniture CABINETMAKING (24) [noun] The craft or trade of making fine wooden furniture and cabinetry. CALLITHUMPIAN (22) [noun] A person who makes loud, discordant noise; a participant in a noisy mock serenade or parade, typically to mock or ridicule someone. CALORIMETRIES (17) [noun] Plural of calorimetry; the scientific measurement of heat produced or absorbed in chemical reactions or physical changes. CALUMNIATIONS (17) [noun] Plural of calumniation; false and malicious statements or accusations intended to damage someone's reputation. CAMERAPERSONS (19) [noun] Plural of cameraperson; individuals who operate cameras, especially in film, television, or photography production. CAMPANOLOGIES (20) [noun] The study of bells and bell-ringing, or the art and practice of ringing bells. CAMPANOLOGIST (20) [noun] A person who studies or is expert in bells and bell-ringing. CAMPHORACEOUS (24) [adjective] Resembling, containing, or having the characteristics of camphor, particularly in smell or taste. CAMPYLOBACTER (26) [noun] Any bacteria of the genus Campylobacter; a principal cause of food poisoning CARCINOMATOUS (19) [adjective] Relating to or affected by carcinoma; of the nature of or characterized by cancer. CATASTROPHISM (22) [noun] The doctrine that sudden catastrophes, rather than continuous change, cause the main features of the Earth's crust. | [noun] The practice or tendency of catastrophizing, regarding bad things as catastrophic. CATECHOLAMINE (22) [noun] Any of a class of aromatic amines derived from pyrocatechol that are hormones produced by the adrenal gland. CEPHALOMETRIC (24) [adjective] Relating to the measurement of the head and its dimensions, particularly used in anthropology and orthodontics to analyze skeletal and dental characteristics. CEREMONIALISM (19) [noun] Excessive adherence to or emphasis on ceremony and ritual, particularly in religious or formal contexts. | [noun] The practice or system of performing ceremonies. CEREMONIALIST (17) [noun] A person who practices or is concerned with ceremony and ritual observance. CEREMONIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a formal, dignified, and elaborate manner; with careful attention to ritual or protocol. CERULOPLASMIN (19) [noun] A blue copper-containing protein in blood plasma that transports copper and is involved in iron metabolism. CHAIRMANSHIPS (25) [noun] The office, or the term, of a chairman. CHAMELEONLIKE (24) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a chameleon. CHAMPIONSHIPS (27) [noun] A competition to determine a champion, especially the final of a series of competitions. | [noun] The position of champion, or winner. | [noun] Defense or support of some cause. CHARLATANISMS (20) [noun] Plural of charlatanism; the practices, methods, or behavior characteristic of charlatans (fraudsters who make false claims of expertise). CHASTISEMENTS (20) [noun] Plural of chastisement; severe punishments or scoldings. | [noun] Acts of disciplining or correcting someone, typically through punishment. CHEMISORPTION (22) [noun] The process in which a substance is adsorbed on the surface of another by means of chemical rather than physical bonding CHEMORECEPTOR (24) [noun] A sense organ, or one of its cells (such as those for the sense of taste or smell), that can respond to a chemical stimulus; a chemosensor CHEMOSURGICAL (23) [adjective] Relating to or denoting surgery performed using chemical agents or techniques. CHEMOTAXONOMY (32) [noun] The classification of organisms based on their chemical composition and biochemical properties. CHEMOTROPISMS (24) [noun] The directional growth or movement of an organism in response to chemical stimuli. CHIMNEYPIECES (27) [noun] A mantelpiece. CHLAMYDOSPORE (26) [noun] A thick-walled spore that is the resting stage of some bacteria. CHLORENCHYMAS (28) [noun] Plural of chlorenchyma, the photosynthetic parenchyma tissue in plants containing chloroplasts. | [noun] Green tissue in plants composed of cells specialized for photosynthesis. CHLOROFORMING (24) [verb] To treat with chloroform, or to render unconscious with chloroform. CHOLANGIOGRAM (22) [noun] A radiographic image of the bile ducts obtained by injecting contrast medium. CHONDRIOSOMES (21) [noun] Plural of chondriosome; mitochondria or structures within cells that function in cellular respiration and energy production. CHROMATICALLY (25) [adverb] In a manner relating to colors or the chromatic scale in music. | [adverb] With respect to the arrangement or gradation of colors or tones. CHROMATICISMS (24) [noun] The plural of chromaticism, referring to the use of notes outside the diatonic scale in music, or the quality of being chromatic in color or appearance. CHROMATOGRAMS (23) [noun] The visual output from a chromatograph. Usually a graphical display or histogram. CHROMATOGRAPH (26) [noun] A machine that performs chromatography by gas or liquid separation. | [verb] To analyze or separate mixtures using chromatography CHROMATOLYSES (23) [noun] The plural of chromatolysis, which is the dissolution or disintegration of the chromatin or Nissl bodies in a nerve cell, typically occurring after injury to the axon. CHROMATOLYSIS (23) [noun] The dissolution or breaking down of chromatin in the cell nucleus, typically occurring during cell death or degeneration. CHROMATOLYTIC (25) CHROMATOPHORE (25) [noun] A pigment-containing cell or organ in animals that can change color by expanding or contracting, used for camouflage or communication. | [noun] A structure in plants containing pigments that produce color. CHROMOCENTERS (22) [noun] Densely stained regions of chromatin in the cell nucleus, typically found at the periphery, consisting of heterochromatin that is transcriptionally inactive. CHROMONEMATIC (24) CHROMOPROTEIN (22) [noun] A protein that contains a pigment or colored prosthetic group, such as hemoglobin or chlorophyll-binding proteins. CHROMOSOMALLY (25) [adverb] In a manner relating to or affecting chromosomes, or with respect to chromosomal characteristics. CHROMOSPHERES (25) [noun] The faint pink extension of a star's atmospheric envelope between the corona and the photosphere CHROMOSPHERIC (27) [adjective] Relating to or denoting the chromosphere, the layer of the sun's atmosphere located between the photosphere and the corona. CHRONOMETRIES (20) [noun] Plural of chronometry; the science of measuring time or the techniques and instruments used for precise time measurement. CHRYSANTHEMUM (28) [noun] Any of many flowering perennial plants, of the genus Chrysanthemum, native to China, that have showy radiate heads. CHURCHMANSHIP (30) [noun] The principles, practices, or conduct of a churchman; devotion to or support of the church or ecclesiastical interests. CHYMOTRYPSINS (28) [noun] Plural of chymotrypsin, a digestive enzyme produced by the pancreas that breaks down proteins in the small intestine. CINEMATHEQUES (29) [noun] A film archive with small cinemas, screening classic and art-house films. CINEMATICALLY (22) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of cinema or cinematography; in a way suitable for or reminiscent of film. CINEMATOGRAPH (23) [noun] A camera that could develop its own film and served as its own projector. | [verb] To employ the techniques of cinematography. CIRCUMAMBIENT (23) [adjective] Including all aspects of; encompassing. | [adjective] Surrounding. | [adverb] In a circumambient manner CIRCUMCENTERS (21) [noun] The centers of circles that pass through all three vertices of a triangle, or more generally, the centers of circles that pass through all vertices of a polygon. CIRCUMCIRCLES (23) [noun] A circle that passes through every vertex of a given triangle (or other polygon where possible) CIRCUMCISIONS (21) [noun] The surgical removal of the foreskin of the penis. | [noun] The surgical removal of the clitoral hood of the clitoris; female circumcision. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) The surgical removal of the clitoris; clitoridectomy, usually referred to as female genital mutilation CIRCUMFERENCE (24) [noun] The line that bounds a circle or other two-dimensional figure | [noun] The length of such a line | [noun] The surface of a round or spherical object CIRCUMFUSIONS (22) [noun] The act of pouring around or spreading over a surface. | [noun] In medicine, the application of liquid medication around a body part. CIRCUMSCRIBED (24) [verb] To draw a line around; to encircle. | [verb] To limit narrowly; to restrict. | [verb] To draw the smallest circle or higher-dimensional sphere that has (a polyhedron, polygon, etc.) in its interior. CIRCUMSCRIBES (23) [verb] To draw a line around; to encircle. | [verb] To limit narrowly; to restrict. | [verb] To draw the smallest circle or higher-dimensional sphere that has (a polyhedron, polygon, etc.) in its interior. CIRCUMSPECTLY (26) [adverb] In a manner that is wary, cautious, and careful to consider all circumstances and potential consequences. CIRCUMSTANCED (22) [adjective] Placed in particular circumstances or conditions; situated. CIRCUMSTANCES (21) [noun] That which attends, or relates to, or in some way affects, a fact or event; an attendant thing or state of things. | [noun] An event; a fact; a particular incident. | [noun] Circumlocution; detail. CIRCUMSTELLAR (19) [adjective] Relating to or surrounding a star or stars. CIRCUMVALLATE (22) [verb] To surround with, or as if with, a rampart. | [adjective] Surrounded with a wall; enclosed with a rampart. | [adjective] Surrounded by a ridge or elevation. CIRCUMVENTING (23) [verb] To avoid or get around something; to bypass | [verb] To surround or besiege | [verb] To outwit or outsmart CIRCUMVENTION (22) [noun] The act of evading by going around (bypassing). | [noun] The act of prevailing over another by fraud or deception CLAMOROUSNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being clamorous; noisiness or loudness characterized by insistent and vociferous demands or complaints. CLEISTOGAMIES (18) [noun] The plural of cleistogamy, the production of flowers that do not open and are self-pollinated, or the flowers themselves produced by this process. CLEISTOGAMOUS (18) [adjective] Relating to or denoting plants that produce seeds from flowers that remain closed and do not open, ensuring self-pollination. CLIMACTICALLY (24) [adverb] In a manner relating to or constituting a climax; at the point of greatest intensity or importance. CLIMATOLOGIES (18) [noun] The plural of climatology; studies of the climate and atmospheric conditions of regions or periods. CLIMATOLOGIST (18) [noun] A scientist who studies climate and atmospheric conditions over long periods of time. CLIOMETRICIAN (19) [noun] A historian who uses quantitative methods and statistical analysis to study history; a practitioner of cliometrics. COASTGUARDMAN (19) [noun] A member of a coast guard, an armed service responsible for maritime law enforcement and rescue operations along a coast. COASTGUARDMEN (19) COHOMOLOGICAL (23) COLLECTIVISMS (22) [noun] Plural of collectivism; systems or ideologies that emphasize the importance of the group over the individual. | [noun] Instances or examples of collective action, ownership, or organization based on group rather than individual principles. COLLOQUIALISM (26) [noun] A colloquial word or phrase; a common spoken expression. | [noun] Colloquial style of speaking. COLORIMETRIES (17) [noun] The plural of colorimetry, the science of measuring color and determining color composition of substances. COLUMNIATIONS (17) COMANAGEMENTS (20) [noun] Plural of comanagement; the joint management or administration of something by two or more parties or entities. COMBATIVENESS (22) [noun] The quality or state of being combative; a tendency or inclination to fight or engage in conflict. COMBINATIONAL (19) [adjective] Relating to or involving the selection and arrangement of elements from a set, especially in mathematics and logic. | [adjective] Designed to combine different elements or components together. COMBINATORIAL (19) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or involving combinations | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the combination and arrangement of elements in sets COMBINATORICS (21) [noun] A branch of mathematics that studies (usually finite) collections of objects that satisfy specified criteria COMMANDEERING (21) [verb] To seize for military use. | [verb] To force into military service. | [verb] To take arbitrarily or by force. COMMANDERSHIP (25) COMMEMORATING (22) [verb] To honour the memory of someone or something with a ceremony or object. | [verb] To serve as a memorial to someone or something. COMMEMORATION (21) [noun] The act of commemorating; an observance or celebration to honor the memory of some person or event. | [noun] That which serves the purpose of commemorating; a memorial. | [noun] The specification of individual saints in the prayers for the dead; the great festival of the Oxford academic year, usually taking place on the third Wednesday after Trinity Sunday. COMMEMORATIVE (24) [noun] An object made to commemorate a person, mark an event, etc. | [noun] A postage stamp issued to commemorate, usually a person or event; also commonly applied to thematic (topical) stamp issues. | [adjective] Serving to commemorate something. COMMEMORATORS (21) [noun] People who commemorate or honor the memory of someone or something. COMMENCEMENTS (23) [noun] The first existence of anything; act or fact of commencing | [noun] The day when degrees are conferred by colleges and universities upon students and others. | [noun] A graduation ceremony, from a school, college or university. COMMENDATIONS (20) [noun] The act of commending; praise; favorable representation in words; recommendation. | [noun] That which is the ground of approbation or praise. | [noun] A message of affection or respect; compliments; greeting. COMMENSALISMS (21) [noun] Plural of commensalism; relationships between organisms where one benefits and the other is neither harmed nor benefited. COMMENSURABLE (21) [adjective] Able to be measured using a common standard. | [adjective] Related in size or scale; commensurate or proportionate. | [adjective] (of two or more numbers) Divisible by the same number WP COMMENSURABLY (24) [adverb] In a manner that is proportionate, comparable, or measurable in relation to something else. | [adverb] To a degree or extent that can be assessed or evaluated. COMMERCIALISE (21) [verb] To apply business methodology to something in order to profit | [verb] To exploit something for maximum financial gain, sometimes by sacrificing quality COMMERCIALISM (23) [noun] The practices, methods, aims, and spirit of commerce or business. | [noun] A tendency to value profit over everything else. COMMERCIALIST (21) [noun] A person who practices or advocates commercialism. | [noun] A person engaged in commerce or business. COMMERCIALITY (24) [noun] The quality or state of being commercial; the emphasis on profit and financial gain in business or media. | [noun] A commercial advertisement or broadcast message. COMMERCIALIZE (30) [verb] To apply business methodology to something in order to profit | [verb] To exploit something for maximum financial gain, sometimes by sacrificing quality COMMISERATING (20) [verb] To feel or express compassion or sympathy for (someone or something). | [verb] (as the phrasal verb commiserate with) To sympathize; condole. | [verb] To offer condolences jointly with; express sympathy with. COMMISERATION (19) [noun] The act of commiserating; sorrow for the hardships or afflictions of another; pity; compassion. COMMISERATIVE (22) [adjective] Expressing or feeling sympathy and sorrow for someone else's misfortune. COMMISSARIATS (19) [noun] A supply of food. | [noun] The department of an army that supplies provisions for the troops. | [noun] A department of the government of the Soviet Union in the early period of its existence. COMMISSIONERS (19) [noun] A member of a commission. | [noun] Someone commissioned to perform certain duties. | [noun] An official in charge of a government department, especially a police force. COMMISSIONING (20) [verb] To send or officially charge someone or some group to do something. | [verb] To place an order for (often piece of art) | [verb] To put into active service COMMONALITIES (19) [noun] The common people; the commonalty | [noun] The joint possession of a set of attributes or characteristics. | [noun] Such a shared attribute or characteristic COMMONWEALTHS (25) [noun] The well-being of a community. | [noun] The entirety of a (secular) society, a polity, a state. | [noun] Republic. Often capitalized, as Commonwealth. COMMUNALITIES (19) [noun] Shared features or characteristics that are common to a group of people or things. | [noun] In factor analysis, the proportion of variance in a variable that is shared with other variables. COMMUNALIZING (29) [verb] To take property into communal ownership COMMUNICATEES (21) COMMUNICATING (22) [verb] To impart | [verb] To share | [adjective] Allowing people to pass directly between two rooms. COMMUNICATION (21) [noun] The act or fact of communicating anything; transmission. | [noun] The concept or state of exchanging data or information between entities. | [noun] A message; the essential data transferred in an act of communication. COMMUNICATIVE (24) [adjective] Eager to communicate; talkative. COMMUNICATORS (21) [noun] Someone who, or something that communicates. | [noun] Any of several electronic devices that allow people with various disabilities to communicate via displays or artificial speech. | [noun] A usually portable communications device. COMMUNICATORY (24) [adjective] Of or relating to communication; serving to communicate or convey information. COMMUNITARIAN (19) [noun] A person who believes in or advocates for communitarianism, a social philosophy emphasizing community welfare and collective responsibility. | [adjective] Of or relating to communitarianism or a community-based approach. COMMUNIZATION (28) COMMUTATIVITY (25) [noun] The property of an operation where the order of the operands does not affect the result, such as in addition or multiplication. COMPACTNESSES (21) [noun] The plural of compactness; the quality or state of being compact or closely and firmly united. COMPANIONABLE (21) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a worthy companion; friendly and sociable. COMPANIONABLY (24) [adverb] In a friendly and sociable manner; together with another or others in a pleasant, comfortable way. COMPANIONSHIP (24) [noun] The state of having or being a companion. | [noun] An association, a fellowship. | [noun] The state of being a journeyman. COMPANIONWAYS (25) [noun] A staircase or ladder from one deck to another on a ship COMPARABILITY (24) [noun] The quality of being comparable. COMPARATIVELY (25) [adverb] In a comparative manner. | [adverb] When compared to other entities COMPARATIVIST (22) COMPARTMENTAL (21) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or constructed from compartments COMPARTMENTED (22) [adjective] Divided into compartments. | [adjective] Having (a specified type of) compartments. COMPASSIONATE (19) [verb] To feel compassion (for someone or with regard to something); to regard (someone or something) with compassion. | [adjective] Having, feeling or showing compassion (to or toward someone). | [adjective] Given to someone as an exception because of a family emergency or a death in their family. COMPATIBILITY (24) [noun] The state of being compatible; in which two or more things are able to exist or work together in combination without problems or conflict. | [noun] The capability of two or more items or components of equipment or material to exist or function in the same system or environment without mutual interference. | [noun] The ability to execute a given program on different types of computers without modification of the program or the computers. See backward compatibility and forward compatibility. COMPELLATIONS (19) [noun] Plural of compellation; the act of addressing someone by name or title, or formal modes of address. | [noun] Urgent appeals or demands. COMPENDIOUSLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that is concise and comprehensive; briefly and completely. COMPENSATIONS (19) [noun] The act or principle of compensating. | [noun] Something which is regarded as an equivalent; something which compensates for loss. | [noun] The extinction of debts of which two persons are reciprocally debtors by the credits of which they are reciprocally creditors; the payment of a debt by a credit of equal amount. COMPETITIVELY (25) [adverb] In a competitive manner. COMPLACENCIES (23) [noun] Plural of complacency; a state of self-satisfaction or uncritical satisfaction with oneself or one's achievements. COMPLAININGLY (23) [adverb] In a manner expressing dissatisfaction, annoyance, or protest; while complaining. COMPLAISANCES (21) [noun] Plural of complaisance; the quality of being complaisant, showing a willingness to please or agree. | [noun] Instances of obliging or courteous behavior. COMPLAISANTLY (22) [adverb] In a manner showing willingness to please or obliging behavior; agreeably or compliantly. COMPLEMENTARY (24) [noun] A complementary colour. | [noun] One skilled in compliments. | [noun] An angle which adds with another to equal 90 degrees. COMPLEMENTING (22) [verb] To complete, to bring to perfection, to make whole. | [verb] To provide what the partner lacks and lack what the partner provides, thus forming part of a whole. | [verb] To change a voltage, number, color, etc. to its complement. COMPLEXATIONS (26) [noun] The formation of a complex COMPLEXIFYING (33) [verb] Making something complex or more difficult to understand; the present participle of complexify. COMPLEXNESSES (26) [noun] The plural of complexness; the quality or state of being complex or complicated. COMPLICATEDLY (25) [adverb] In a manner that is difficult to understand or analyze; in a way that involves many interconnected parts or factors. COMPLICATIONS (21) [noun] The act or process of complicating. | [noun] The state of being complicated; intricate or confused relation of parts; complexity. | [noun] A person who doesn't fit in with the main scheme of things; an interloper. COMPLIMENTARY (24) [adjective] In the nature of a compliment. | [adjective] Free; provided at no charge. | [adjective] With respect to the closing of a letter, formal and professional. COMPLIMENTING (22) [verb] To pay a compliment (to); to express a favorable opinion (of). COMPOSITIONAL (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to composition. | [adjective] Being the sum of its parts. COMPREHENDING (24) [verb] To include, comprise; to contain. | [verb] To understand or grasp fully and thoroughly. COMPREHENSION (22) [noun] Thorough understanding | [noun] The totality of intensions, that is, attributes, characters, marks, properties, or qualities, that the object possesses, or else the totality of intensions that are pertinent to the context of a given discussion. | [noun] A compact syntax for generating a list in some functional programming languages. COMPREHENSIVE (25) [noun] A comprehensive school. | [adjective] Broadly or completely covering; including a large proportion of something. COMPRESSIONAL (19) [adjective] Relating to or involving compression, particularly the reduction in volume or density of a substance or material. | [adjective] (Geology) Relating to stress or forces that push rocks or materials together, as opposed to tensional stress. COMPRESSIVELY (25) [adverb] In a manner that compresses or reduces in size; by applying compressive force or pressure. COMPURGATIONS (20) [noun] Acquitting someone from a formal charge or accusation following the sworn oaths of a number of other people; vindication. COMPUTABILITY (24) [noun] The quality or state of being computable; the ability to be calculated or determined by a computer or algorithm. COMPUTATIONAL (19) [adjective] Of or relating to computation. COMPUTERISING (20) [verb] To convert a manual function or system into a computer system. | [verb] To equip with a computer or a computer system. | [verb] To enter data into such a system. COMPUTERIZING (29) [verb] To convert a manual function or system into a computer system. | [verb] To equip with a computer or a computer system. | [verb] To enter data into such a system. COMPUTERPHOBE (26) COMRADELINESS (18) CONCEPTUALISM (21) [noun] The art movement towards conceptual art. | [noun] A theory, intermediate between realism and nominalism, that the mind has the power of forming for itself general conceptions of individual or single objects; the doctrine that universals have an existence in the mind apart from any concrete embodiment. CONCERTMASTER (19) [noun] The first violin in a symphony orchestra; normally plays violin solos CONCOMITANCES (21) [noun] Occurrences or events that happen together at the same time; accompanying or concurrent circumstances or phenomena. CONCOMITANTLY (22) [adverb] At the same time as something else. | [adverb] Incidentally to something else. CONDEMNATIONS (18) [noun] The act of condemning or pronouncing to be wrong | [noun] The act of judicially condemning, or adjudging guilty, unfit for use, or forfeited; the act of dooming to punishment or forfeiture. | [noun] The state of being condemned. CONDYLOMATOUS (21) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by condyloma, a type of wart-like growth, typically sexually transmitted. CONFIRMATIONS (20) [noun] An official indicator that things will happen as planned. | [noun] A verification that something is true or has happened. | [noun] A ceremony of sealing and conscious acknowledgement of the faith in many Christian churches, typically around the ages of 14 to 18; considered a sacrament in some churches, including Catholicism, but not in most Protestant churches. CONFIRMEDNESS (21) CONFORMATIONS (20) [noun] The act of conforming; the act of producing conformity. | [noun] The state of being conformed; agreement; hence; structure, as depending on the arrangement of parts; form; arrangement. | [noun] The spatial arrangement of a group of atoms in a molecule as a result of rotation about a covalent bond which remains unbroken. CONGLOMERATED (19) [verb] To combine together into a larger mass. | [verb] To combine together into a larger corporation. CONGLOMERATES (18) [noun] A cluster of heterogeneous things. | [noun] A corporation formed by the combination of several smaller corporations whose activities are unrelated to the corporation's primary activity. | [noun] A rock consisting of gravel or pebbles embedded in a matrix. CONGLOMERATIC (20) [adjective] Relating to or composed of a conglomerate; formed from diverse elements or materials gathered together. CONGLOMERATOR (18) CONGRESSWOMAN (21) [noun] A female member of congress | [noun] A female member of the House of Representatives CONGRESSWOMEN (21) [noun] A female member of congress | [noun] A female member of the House of Representatives CONNUBIALISMS (19) CONSERVATISMS (20) [noun] Plural of conservatism; political or social philosophies emphasizing traditional institutions and gradual change. | [noun] Practices or tendencies toward preserving existing conditions or conventions. CONSUMERISTIC (19) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of consumerism; emphasizing the consumption of goods and services as a central aspect of society or culture. CONSUMERSHIPS (22) CONSUMMATIONS (19) [noun] The act of consummating, or the state of being consummated; the state of being completed; completion. | [noun] The first act of sexual intercourse in a relationship, particularly the first such act following marriage. | [noun] The achievement of perfection. CONSUMPTIVELY (25) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characterized by consumption, especially excessive consumption or tuberculosis. CONTAMINATING (18) [verb] To make something dangerous or toxic by introducing impurities or foreign matter. | [verb] To soil, stain, corrupt, or infect by contact or association. | [verb] To make unfit for use by the introduction of unwholesome or undesirable elements. CONTAMINATION (17) [noun] The act or process of contaminating | [noun] Something which contaminates. | [noun] A process whereby words with related meanings come to have similar sounds. CONTAMINATIVE (20) [adjective] Tending to contaminate or capable of contaminating; having the quality of making something impure or unclean. CONTAMINATORS (17) [noun] Plural of contaminator; things or people that contaminate or make something impure or unclean. CONTEMPLATING (20) [verb] To look at on all sides or in all its aspects; to view or consider with continued attention; to regard with deliberate care; to meditate on; to study, ponder, or consider. | [verb] To consider as a possibility. CONTEMPLATION (19) [noun] The act of contemplating; musing; being highly concentrated in thought | [noun] Holy meditation. | [noun] The act of looking forward to a future event CONTEMPLATIVE (22) [noun] Someone who has dedicated themselves to religious contemplation. | [adjective] Inclined to contemplate; introspective and thoughtful; meditative. | [adjective] Pertaining to a religious contemplative, or a contemplative religious orders, especially the Roman Catholic varieties. CONTEMPLATORS (19) [noun] People who contemplate; those who engage in deep or prolonged thought or meditation. CONTEMPORIZED (29) [verb] Past tense of contemporize; to make contemporary or to adapt to present times. CONTEMPORIZES (28) [verb] To make something suitable or acceptable for the present time; to adapt or adjust to current circumstances or standards. COPOLYMERIZED (32) [adjective] Polymerized, along with another compound, to form a copolymer COPOLYMERIZES (31) [verb] To polymerize so as to form a copolymer CORPORATIVISM (22) [noun] A system of organization where groups such as businesses, labor unions, and professions are coordinated by the state to achieve national goals. | [noun] An economic or political system in which power is vested in corporate groups. COSMETICIZING (29) COSMETOLOGIES (18) COSMETOLOGIST (18) COSMOCHEMICAL (26) COSMOCHEMISTS (24) COSMOGRAPHERS (23) COSMOGRAPHIES (23) [noun] The creation of maps of the universe. | [noun] The study of the size and geometry of the universe and changes in those with cosmic time. COSMOPOLITANS (19) [noun] A cosmopolitan person; a cosmopolite. | [noun] A cocktail containing vodka, triple sec, lime juice and cranberry juice. | [noun] A butterfly, Vanessa cardui COSMOPOLITISM (21) COSTERMONGERS (18) [noun] A trader who sells fruit and vegetables from a cart or barrow in the street. COTERMINOUSLY (20) COUNTERCLAIMS (19) [noun] A suit filed by a defendant against a plaintiff secondary to the original complaint. COUNTERDEMAND (19) COUNTERIMAGES (18) COUNTERMANDED (19) [verb] To revoke (a former command); to cancel or rescind by giving an order contrary to one previously given. | [verb] To recall a person or unit with such an order. | [verb] To prohibit. COUNTERMELODY (21) [noun] A secondary or supplemental melody played simultaneously with the primary melody. COUNTERMOVING (21) COUNTERREFORM (20) COUNTERSTREAM (17) CRAFTSMANLIKE (24) CRAFTSMANSHIP (25) [noun] The quality of being a craftsman. | [noun] An example of a craftsman's work. CRANIOMETRIES (17) CREDENTIALISM (18) [noun] Excessive emphasis on the importance of educational, academic, legal, or regulatory qualifications. CRIMINALITIES (17) [noun] The state of being criminal. | [noun] Criminal activity. | [noun] A criminal act. CRIMINALIZING (27) [verb] To make (something) a crime; to make illegal under criminal law; to ban. | [verb] To treat as a criminal. CRIMINOLOGIES (18) CRIMINOLOGIST (18) [noun] A person who is skilled in, or practices criminology CRUMBLINESSES (19) CRYPTORCHISMS (27) CUSTOMARINESS (17) CUSTOMSHOUSES (20) [noun] An official building, in a port, where customs are collected and shipping is cleared for entry and exit CYCLOHEXIMIDE (33) CYTOCHEMISTRY (28) CYTOMEMBRANES (24) CYTOTAXONOMIC (29) DAMAGEABILITY (22) DECALCOMANIAS (20) DECAMETHONIUM (23) DECIPHERMENTS (23) DECOMMISSIONS (20) [verb] To take out of service or to render unusable. | [verb] To remove or revoke a commission. | [verb] To remove or revoke a formal designation. DECOMPENSATED (21) DECOMPENSATES (20) DECOMPOSITION (20) [noun] A biological process through which organic material is reduced to e.g. compost. | [noun] The act of taking something apart, e.g. for analysis. | [noun] The splitting (of e.g. a matrix, an atom or a compound) into constituent parts. DECOMPRESSING (21) [verb] To relieve the pressure or compression on something. | [verb] To bring someone (such as a diver) back to normal atmospheric pressure after being exposed to high pressure. | [verb] To restore (compressed data) to its original form. DECOMPRESSION (20) [noun] The process of decompressing. | [noun] The restoration to atmospheric pressure of a person who has spent time under higher pressure (such as a diver) | [noun] Mode of operation of some internal combustion engines that makes them easier to start, but significantly increases fuel consumption. DECONTAMINATE (18) [verb] To remove contamination from (something), rendering it safe. DECRIMINALIZE (27) [verb] To change the laws so something is no longer a crime. DEFORMALIZING (29) DEFORMATIONAL (19) DEGLAMORIZING (27) [verb] To make less glamorous DEHUMIDIFIERS (23) [noun] A device for removing the moisture content from air DEHUMIDIFYING (27) [verb] To reduce the moisture in a body of air; to lower the humidity. DELAMINATIONS (16) DELIMITATIONS (16) [noun] The act of delimiting something. | [noun] A limit or boundary. DEMAGNETIZERS (26) DEMAGNETIZING (27) [verb] To make something nonmagnetic by removing its magnetic properties. | [verb] To erase the contents of a magnetic storage device. DEMAGOGICALLY (23) DEMAGOGUERIES (18) [noun] The actions of a demagogue. | [noun] Rhetoric that appeals to the prejudices of the people. DEMANDINGNESS (18) DEMATERIALIZE (25) [verb] To disappear by becoming immaterial. | [verb] To cause something to disappear by becoming immaterial. | [verb] To remove the physical materials from (a process, etc.) DEMIGODDESSES (19) DEMILITARIZED (26) [verb] To remove troops from an area. | [verb] To prevent troops from entering an area. | [verb] To return an area to civilian control. DEMILITARIZES (25) [verb] To remove troops from an area. | [verb] To prevent troops from entering an area. | [verb] To return an area to civilian control. DEMIMONDAINES (19) [noun] A sexually promiscuous woman (of the demimonde) DEMINERALIZED (26) [adjective] From which all minerals have been removed. DEMINERALIZER (25) DEMINERALIZES (25) [verb] To remove minerals or mineral salts from (a liquid). DEMOCRATIZERS (27) DEMOCRATIZING (28) [verb] To make democratic. DEMODULATIONS (17) DEMOGRAPHICAL (24) DEMOLISHMENTS (21) DEMOLITIONIST (16) DEMONIZATIONS (25) DEMONOLOGICAL (19) DEMONOLOGISTS (17) DEMONSTRATING (17) [verb] To show how to use (something). | [verb] To show the steps taken to create a logical argument or equation. | [verb] To participate in or organize a demonstration. DEMONSTRATION (16) [noun] The act of demonstrating; showing or explaining something. | [noun] An event at which something will be demonstrated. | [noun] Expression of one's feelings by outward signs. DEMONSTRATIVE (19) [noun] (grammar) A demonstrative word | [adjective] That serves to demonstrate, show or prove | [adjective] Given to open displays of emotion DEMONSTRATORS (16) [noun] One who demonstrates anything, or proves beyond doubt. | [noun] The forefinger. | [noun] One who takes part in a demonstration; a protester. DEMULTIPLEXER (25) DEMYELINATING (20) [verb] To remove the myelin sheath from a nerve | [adjective] That promotes, or undergoes demyelination DEMYELINATION (19) DEMYTHOLOGIZE (32) [verb] To remove the mythological elements of. DENOMINATIONS (16) [noun] The act of naming or designating. | [noun] That by which anything is denominated or styled; an epithet; a name, designation, or title; especially, a general name indicating a class of like individuals | [noun] A class, or society of individuals, called by the same name; a sect or religious subgroup. DENOMINATIVES (19) DENOUNCEMENTS (18) DENSITOMETERS (16) [noun] A device that measures the optical density of a material. | [noun] A device that measures the specific gravity of a substance; a densimeter. DENSITOMETRIC (18) DEPOLYMERIZED (31) [verb] To decompose a polymer into smaller fragments. DEPOLYMERIZES (30) [verb] To decompose a polymer into smaller fragments. DEPROGRAMMERS (21) DEPROGRAMMING (22) [verb] To counteract the effects of previous programming or brainwashing, especially in an attempt to persuade (a person) to abandon allegiance to a cult. | [noun] The removal of the programming instilled into a person by a religious, political, economic, or social group associated with the belief system. DERMABRASIONS (18) DERMATOLOGIES (17) DERMATOLOGIST (17) [noun] A person who is skilled in, professes or practices dermatology. DERMATOPHYTES (24) [noun] Any parasitic fungus (mycosis) that infects the skin (tinea, ringworm, jock itch, athlete's foot). DESQUAMATIONS (25) DETERMINACIES (18) DETERMINANTAL (16) DETERMINATELY (19) DETERMINATION (16) [noun] The act of determining, or the state of being determined. | [noun] Bringing to an end; termination; limit. | [noun] Direction or tendency to a certain end; impulsion. DETERMINATIVE (19) [noun] An ideogram used to mark semantic categories of words in logographic scripts. | [noun] (grammar) A member of a class of words functioning in a noun phrase to identify or distinguish a referent without describing or modifying it. Examples of determinatives include articles (a, the), demonstratives (this, those), cardinal numbers (three, fifty), and indefinite numerals (most, any, each). | [adjective] Determining (deciding) something. DETERMINATORS (16) DETERMINISTIC (18) [adjective] Of, or relating to determinism. | [adjective] (of a Turing machine) Having at most one instruction associated with any given internal state. | [adjective] (of a system) Having exactly predictable time evolution. DETHRONEMENTS (19) DETRIMENTALLY (19) DETUMESCENCES (20) DEUTERANOMALY (19) DEUTEROSTOMES (16) DEVELOPMENTAL (21) [noun] A trainee flight controller. | [adjective] Related to development. DEVIATIONISMS (19) DEXAMETHASONE (26) [noun] A synthetic member of the glucocorticoid-class of steroid hormones, having the chemical formula C22H29FO5, or a derivative thereof DIAMAGNETISMS (19) DIAMETRICALLY (21) [adverb] Separated by a diameter, on exactly the opposite side. | [adverb] (especially in the phrase diametrically opposed) Absolutely (in opposition). DIAPHRAGMATIC (24) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or using a diaphragm. DIASTEREOMERS (16) DIASTROPHISMS (21) DIATHERMANOUS (19) DICHOTOMIZING (31) [verb] To separate into two parts or classifications. | [verb] To be divided into two. | [verb] To exhibit as a half disk. DICHOTOMOUSLY (24) DICHROMATISMS (23) DIFFUSIONISMS (22) DILATOMETRIES (16) DILETTANTISMS (16) DIMENSIONALLY (19) DIMENSIONLESS (16) DIMERIZATIONS (25) DIMINISHMENTS (21) DIPHENYLAMINE (24) [noun] An aromatic amine, (C6H5)2NH, used in the manufacture of plastics, dyes, explosives, pesticides, fungicides and pharmaceuticals DIPSOMANIACAL (20) DISACCUSTOMED (21) DISAFFIRMANCE (24) DISAGREEMENTS (17) [noun] An argument or debate. | [noun] A condition of not agreeing or concurring. DISAMBIGUATED (20) [verb] To remove ambiguities from; to make less ambiguous; to clarify or specify which of multiple possibilities, e.g. possible meanings of an ambiguous statement, applies, or to invite or require this. | [verb] To distinguish one word or lexical unit (from a different one which has a similar form). DISAMBIGUATES (19) [verb] To remove ambiguities from; to make less ambiguous; to clarify or specify which of multiple possibilities, e.g. possible meanings of an ambiguous statement, applies, or to invite or require this. | [verb] To distinguish one word or lexical unit (from a different one which has a similar form). DISASSEMBLIES (18) DISASSEMBLING (19) [verb] To take to pieces; to reverse the process of assembly. | [verb] To convert machine code to a human-readable, mnemonic form. DISBURDENMENT (19) DISBURSEMENTS (18) [noun] The act, instance, or process of disbursing. | [noun] Money paid out or spent. DISCLAMATIONS (18) DISCOMFITURES (21) [noun] A feeling of frustration, disappointment, perplexity or embarrassment. DISCOMFORTING (22) [verb] To cause annoyance or distress to. | [verb] To discourage; to deject. DISCOMMENDING (22) DISCOMPOSURES (20) [noun] The state of being discomposed. | [noun] Discordance; disagreement of parts. DISCONFIRMING (22) [verb] To establish the falsity of a claim or belief; to show or to tend to show that a theory or hypothesis is not valid. DISCONFORMITY (24) [noun] A type of unconformity in which erosion or lack of deposition has occurred between two parallel sedimentary strata. | [noun] Nonconformity DISCRIMINABLE (20) [adjective] That can be discriminated or distinguished from others DISCRIMINABLY (23) DISCRIMINANTS (18) [noun] An expression that gives information about the roots of a polynomial; for example, the expression D = b2 - 4ac determines whether the roots of the quadratic equation ax2 + bx + c = 0 are real and distinct (D > 0), real and equal (D = 0) or complex (D < 0). | [noun] The invariant (on the vector space of forms of degree d in n variables) that vanishes exactly when the corresponding hypersurface in Pn-1 is singular. DISCRIMINATED (19) [verb] To make distinctions. | [verb] (construed with against) To make decisions based on prejudice. | [verb] To set apart as being different; to mark as different; to separate from another by discerning differences; to distinguish. DISCRIMINATES (18) [verb] To make distinctions. | [verb] (construed with against) To make decisions based on prejudice. | [verb] To set apart as being different; to mark as different; to separate from another by discerning differences; to distinguish. DISCRIMINATOR (18) [noun] A person who discriminates or differentiates. | [noun] A test or variable, etc. that serves to distinguish between different things. | [noun] Any of several electronic devices that convert some property of a signal into an amplitude whose value is proportional to the difference between the value of the input signal and that of a standard. DISEMBOWELING (22) [verb] To take or let out the bowels or interior parts of; to eviscerate. | [verb] To take or draw from the body, as the web of a spider. | [noun] The act by which somebody is disemboweled. DISEMBOWELLED (22) [verb] To take or let out the bowels or interior parts of; to eviscerate. | [verb] To take or draw from the body, as the web of a spider. DISENCUMBERED (21) [verb] To remove an encumbrance or burden from (someone or something). DISENDOWMENTS (20) DISENGAGEMENT (18) [noun] Release or detachment from a physical situation or other involvement. | [noun] The separation or release of a chemical. | [noun] Leisure; relief from responsibilities or onerous activities. DISFIGUREMENT (20) [noun] The result of disfiguring; the state of being disfigured DISGUISEMENTS (17) [noun] Disguise (deceptive appearance) DISHARMONIOUS (19) DISHARMONIZED (29) DISHARMONIZES (28) DISINTERMENTS (16) DISINVESTMENT (19) [noun] The process of disinvesting; negative investment. DISLODGEMENTS (18) DISMANTLEMENT (18) DISMEMBERMENT (22) [noun] The act of dismembering. | [noun] The state or condition of being dismembered. | [noun] Removal from membership; detachment from an organization, group, etc. DISPARAGEMENT (19) DISPLACEMENTS (20) [noun] The act of displacing, or the state of being displaced; a putting out of place. | [noun] The quantity of a liquid displaced by a floating body, as water by a ship, the weight of the displaced liquid being equal to that of the displacing body. | [noun] The process of extracting soluble substances from organic material and the like, whereby a quantity of saturated solvent is displaced, or removed, for another quantity of the solvent. DISREMEMBERED (21) [verb] To fail to remember; to forget. DISSEMINATING (17) [verb] To sow and scatter principles, ideas, opinions, etc, or concrete things, for growth and propagation, like seeds. | [verb] To become widespread. DISSEMINATION (16) [noun] The act of disseminating, or the state of being disseminated; diffusion for propagation and permanence; a scattering or spreading abroad, as of ideas, beliefs, etc. DISSEMINATORS (16) DISSEVERMENTS (19) DISSIMILARITY (19) [noun] Lack of similarity or lack of likeness in appearance to something else. DISSIMILATING (17) [verb] To make dissimilar or unlike. | [verb] To become dissimilar or unlike. DISSIMILATION (16) DISSIMILATORY (19) DISSIMILITUDE (17) [noun] The quality of being diverse or different; lack of resemblance. DISSIMULATING (17) [verb] To practise deception by concealment or omission, or by feigning a false appearance. | [verb] To disguise or hide by adopting a false appearance. | [verb] To connive at; to wink at; to pretend not to notice. DISSIMULATION (16) [noun] The act of concealing the truth; hypocrisy or deception. | [noun] Hiding one's feelings or intentions. DISSIMULATORS (16) DISSYMMETRIES (21) [noun] Asymmetry | [noun] Chirality DIVERTIMENTOS (19) [noun] Composition that has several short movements, a style that composers started to use in the 18th century. DOCTRINAIRISM (18) DOCUMENTALIST (18) [noun] A person, especially a librarian, who is an expert in documents and documentation. DOCUMENTARIAN (18) [noun] A person whose profession is to create documentary films. | [noun] A person who writes software documentation. | [noun] A person who cares about communication and documentation. DOCUMENTARIES (18) [noun] A film, TV program, publication etc. which presents a social, political, scientific or historical subject in a factual or informative manner. DOCUMENTARILY (21) DOCUMENTARIST (18) [noun] A maker of documentaries. DOCUMENTATION (18) [noun] Something transposed from a thought to a document; the written account of an idea. | [noun] Documentary evidence and sources. | [noun] Documents that explain the operation of a particular machine or software program. DOGMATIZATION (26) DOMESTICATING (19) [verb] To make domestic. | [verb] To make fit for domestic life. | [verb] To adapt to live with humans. DOMESTICATION (18) [noun] The act of domesticating, or accustoming to home; the action of taming wild animals or breeding plants. | [noun] The act of domesticating, or making a legal instrument recognized and enforceable in a jurisdiction foreign to the one in which the instrument was originally issued or created. | [noun] The act of domesticating a text. DOMESTICITIES (18) DOMICILIATING (19) DOMICILIATION (18) [noun] The act of domiciliating. | [noun] Permanent residence DOMINEERINGLY (20) DRAFTSMANSHIP (24) DRAMATISATION (16) [noun] The act of dramatizing. | [noun] A version that has been dramatized. DRAMATIZATION (25) [noun] The act of dramatizing. | [noun] A version that has been dramatized. DRAMATURGICAL (19) DREAMLESSNESS (16) DUMBFOUNDERED (23) DUMORTIERITES (16) DYNAMOMETRIES (21) DYSMENORRHEAS (22) DYSMENORRHEIC (24) ECONOMETRISTS (17) ECOTERRORISMS (17) ECUMENICALISM (21) ECUMENICITIES (19) EGOMANIACALLY (21) ELASMOBRANCHS (22) [noun] Any of many cartilaginous fish of the subclass Elasmobranchii. ELECTRODERMAL (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the electrical properties of skin ELECTROFORMED (21) ELECTROMAGNET (18) [noun] A magnet which attracts metals only when electrically activated ELECTROMETERS (17) [noun] A device used to detect and measure static electricity; an electroscope. | [noun] A precision voltmeter that draws almost no current from the circuit. EMANCIPATIONS (19) [noun] The act of setting free from the power of another, as from slavery, subjection, dependence, or controlling influence. | [noun] The state of being thus set free; liberation (used, for example, of slaves from bondage, of a person from prejudices, of the mind from superstition, of a nation from tyranny or subjugation). EMARGINATIONS (16) EMASCULATIONS (17) EMBARRASSABLE (19) EMBARRASSEDLY (21) EMBARRASSMENT (19) [noun] A state of discomfort arising from bashfulness or consciousness of having violated a social rule; humiliation. | [noun] A state of confusion arising from hesitation or difficulty in choosing. | [noun] A person or thing which is the cause of humiliation to another. EMBATTLEMENTS (19) EMBELLISHMENT (22) [noun] An added touch; an ornamental addition; a flourish. EMBEZZLEMENTS (37) [noun] The fraudulent conversion of property from a property owner. EMBITTERMENTS (19) EMBLAZONMENTS (28) EMBLEMATIZING (29) [verb] To stand as an emblem for; to represent. EMBOLECTOMIES (21) [noun] Surgical removal of an embolism EMBOLIZATIONS (26) EMBRANGLEMENT (20) EMBRITTLEMENT (19) EMBRYOGENESES (21) EMBRYOGENESIS (21) [noun] The process by which an embryo is formed and develops. EMBRYOGENETIC (23) EMBRYOLOGICAL (23) EMBRYOLOGISTS (21) EMBRYONICALLY (25) EMOTIONALISMS (17) EMOTIONALISTS (15) EMOTIONALIZED (25) [verb] To give something an emotional quality. | [verb] To make an emotional display. EMOTIONALIZES (24) [verb] To give something an emotional quality. | [verb] To make an emotional display. EMOTIONLESSLY (18) EMPHYSEMATOUS (25) EMPLOYABILITY (25) [noun] The state or quality of being employable. | [noun] The product or result of being employable. EMPOISONMENTS (19) EMPRESSEMENTS (19) EMULOUSNESSES (15) ENANTIOMORPHS (20) [noun] A mirror image, a form related to another as an object is to its image in a mirror. | [noun] Either of a pair of crystals that are mirror images of each other, and are optically active. | [noun] A similar molecule or compound; an enantiomer. ENCEPHALOGRAM (23) [noun] An image of the brain obtained by encephalography. ENCIPHERMENTS (22) ENCIRCLEMENTS (19) ENCOMPASSMENT (21) ENCOURAGEMENT (18) [noun] The act of encouraging | [noun] Something that incites, supports, promotes, protects or advances; incentive | [noun] Words or actions that increase someone's confidence ENCROACHMENTS (22) [noun] An entry into a place or area that was previously uncommon; an advance beyond former borders; intrusion; incursion. | [noun] An intrusion upon another's possessions or rights; infringement. | [noun] That which is gained by such unlawful intrusion. ENCUMBRANCERS (21) ENCYCLOPEDISM (25) [noun] Encyclopedic knowledge or learning. ENDANGERMENTS (17) [noun] The act of putting someone into danger, or the condition of being in danger. | [noun] The exposure of someone, especially a child, to danger or harm. ENDOLYMPHATIC (26) ENDOMETRIOSES (16) ENDOMETRIOSIS (16) [noun] A condition characterised by the presence of endometrial tissue elsewhere than in the lining of the uterus; an instance of such presence. ENDOMORPHISMS (23) ENDOSYMBIONTS (21) ENDOSYMBIOSES (21) ENDOSYMBIOSIS (21) [noun] The condition of living within the body or cells of another organism; an instance of an organism so living. ENDOSYMBIOTIC (23) ENDOTHELIOMAS (19) ENFEEBLEMENTS (20) ENIGMATICALLY (21) ENLIGHTENMENT (19) [noun] An act of enlightening, or the state of being enlightened or instructed. | [noun] A concept in spirituality, philosophy and psychology related to achieving clarity of perception, reason and knowledge. ENSHRINEMENTS (18) ENSORCELLMENT (17) [noun] Enchantment, bewitchment ENTANGLEMENTS (16) [noun] The state of being entangled; intricate and confused involution. | [noun] That which entangles; intricacy; perplexity. | [noun] An obstruction placed in front or on the flank of a fortification, to impede an enemy's approach. ENTEROSTOMIES (15) [noun] The construction of a permanent opening into the intestine through the abdominal wall. ENTERTAINMENT (15) [noun] An activity designed to give pleasure, enjoyment, diversion, amusement, or relaxation to an audience, no matter whether the audience participates passively as in watching opera or a movie, or actively as in games. | [noun] A show put on for the enjoyment or amusement of others. | [noun] Maintenance or support. ENTHRALLMENTS (18) [noun] The act of enthralling or the state of being enthralled ENTHRONEMENTS (18) ENTOMOLOGICAL (18) ENTOMOLOGISTS (16) [noun] A scientist who studies insects. ENTOMOPHAGOUS (21) ENTOMOPHILIES (20) ENTOMOPHILOUS (20) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or pollinated by means of entomophily. ENTRANCEMENTS (17) ENTRENCHMENTS (20) [noun] The process of entrenching or something which entrenches | [noun] A fortification constructed of trenches ENUMERABILITY (20) ENVIRONMENTAL (18) [adjective] Pertaining to the environment. ENZYMATICALLY (32) ENZYMOLOGISTS (28) EPICUREANISMS (19) EPIDEMICITIES (20) EPIDEMIOLOGIC (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to epidemiology. EPIGRAMMATISM (22) EPIGRAMMATIST (20) EPIGRAMMATIZE (29) EPIPHENOMENAL (22) EPIPHENOMENON (22) [noun] A symptom that develops during the course of a disease that is not connected to the disease. | [noun] A mental state or process that is an incidental byproduct of physiological events in the brain or nervous system. | [noun] Any state, process, or other activity that is the result of another, a consequence. EPISTEMICALLY (22) EPITHALAMIUMS (22) [noun] A song or poem celebrating a marriage. EPITHELIOMATA (20) ERGASTOPLASMS (18) ERGONOMICALLY (21) ERYTHROMYCINS (26) ESSENTIALISMS (15) ESTABLISHMENT (20) [noun] The act of establishing; a ratifying or ordaining; settlement; confirmation. | [noun] The state of being established, founded, etc.; fixed state. | [noun] That which is established; as a form of government, a permanent organization, business or force, or the place where one is permanently fixed for residence. ESTIMABLENESS (17) ESTRANGEMENTS (16) [noun] The act of estranging; the act of alienating; alienation. | [noun] The state of being alien; foreign, non-native. ETHANOLAMINES (18) ETHNOCENTRISM (20) [noun] The tendency to look at the world primarily from the perspective of one's own traditional, deferred, or adoptive ethnic culture. ETYMOLOGISING (20) [verb] To find or provide the etymology for a word. ETYMOLOGIZING (29) [verb] To find or provide the etymology for a word. EUDAEMONISTIC (18) EVOLUTIONISMS (18) EXAMINATIONAL (22) EXANTHEMATOUS (25) EXCOMMUNICATE (28) [noun] A person so excluded. | [verb] To officially exclude someone from membership of a church or religious community. | [verb] To exclude from any other group; to banish. EXEMPLARINESS (24) EXEMPLARITIES (24) EXHIBITIONISM (27) [noun] The practice or character trait of deliberately drawing attention to oneself. | [noun] The practice or character trait of deliberately displaying one's genitals, nipples, or buttocks in public. EXOTHERMICITY (30) EXPANSIONISMS (24) EXPATRIATISMS (24) EXPERIMENTERS (24) [noun] A person who experiments. EXPERIMENTING (25) [verb] To conduct an experiment. | [verb] To experience; to feel; to perceive; to detect. | [verb] To test or ascertain by experiment; to try out; to make an experiment on. EXPRESSIONISM (24) [noun] A movement in the arts in which the artist did not depict objective reality, but rather a subjective expression of their inner experiences | [noun] A somewhat analogous genre in early 20th century music EXTEMPORARILY (27) EXTEMPORISING (25) [verb] To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise. | [verb] To do something in a makeshift way. | [verb] To make or create extempore. EXTEMPORIZERS (33) EXTEMPORIZING (34) [verb] To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise. | [verb] To do, create, improvise, adapt, or devise in an impromptu or spontaneous manner. EXTENSOMETERS (22) [noun] An electromechanical device for measuring changes in length of an object undergoing stress. EXTERMINATING (23) [verb] To kill all of (a population of pests or undesirables), usually intentionally. | [verb] To bring a definite end to; finish completely. EXTERMINATION (22) [noun] The act of exterminating; total destruction or eradication | [noun] Elimination. EXTERMINATORS (22) EXTERMINATORY (25) EXTREMENESSES (22) FACTIONALISMS (20) FAMILIARISING (19) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARITIES (18) [noun] The state of being extremely friendly; intimacy. | [noun] Undue intimacy; inappropriate informality, impertinence. | [noun] An instance of familiar behaviour. FAMILIARIZING (28) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FASHIONMONGER (22) FELLMONGERIES (19) FELLMONGERING (20) [verb] To prepare animal skin for tanning. FEMINIZATIONS (27) FERMENTATIONS (18) FERRIMAGNETIC (21) [adjective] Exhibiting ferrimagnetism FERROMAGNETIC (21) [adjective] Of a material, such as iron or nickel, that is easily magnetized FEUILLETONISM (18) FIBROMYALGIAS (24) FIBROSARCOMAS (22) [noun] A fibroblastic sarcoma: a malignant tumor derived from fibrous connective tissue FILMOGRAPHIES (24) [noun] A selective list of movie titles that share a similar characteristic such as the same genre, the same director, the same actor etc. FLAGELLANTISM (19) FLAMBOYANCIES (25) FLAMEPROOFERS (23) FLAMEPROOFING (24) [verb] To make flameproof. FLAMETHROWERS (24) [noun] A device that projects a flame for starting fires, and sometimes also additional fuel to help ignition. Used either as a weapon or a tool. FLUORIMETRIES (18) FLUOROCHROMES (23) [noun] Any of various fluorescent dyes used to stain biological material before microscopic examination FLUOROMETRIES (18) FORAMINIFERAL (21) FORAMINIFERAN (21) FORESTALLMENT (18) FORMABILITIES (20) FORMALDEHYDES (26) FORMALIZATION (27) FORMIDABILITY (24) FORMULAICALLY (23) FORMULARIZERS (27) FORMULARIZING (28) [verb] To express as a formula, to formulate. FRAGMENTARILY (22) FRAGMENTATING (20) FRAGMENTATION (19) [noun] The act of fragmenting or something fragmented; disintegration. | [noun] The process by which fragments of an exploding bomb scatter. | [noun] The breaking up and dispersal of a file into non-contiguous areas of a disk. FRAGMENTIZING (29) FRATERNALISMS (18) FREEMASONRIES (18) FULSOMENESSES (18) FUNCTIONALISM (20) [noun] A doctrine, in several fields, that the function of something should be reflected in its design and the materials used in its construction | [noun] The definition of mental states in terms of their causes and effects | [noun] The idea that social and cultural cohesion are a function of the interdependence and interactions of the institutions of a society FUNDAMENTALLY (22) [adverb] In a fundamental or basic sense; reaching the very core of the matter. GALACTOSAMINE (18) [noun] An amino derivative of the sugar galactose; found in glycolipids and in mucopolysaccharides GALACTOSEMIAS (18) GALLIMAUFRIES (19) [noun] A hash of various kinds of meats, a ragout. | [noun] Any absurd medley. GALVANOMETERS (19) [noun] A device used to indicate the presence and direction of a small electric current, especially used to detect a null or balanced condition in a bridge circuit. GALVANOMETRIC (21) GAMESMANSHIPS (23) GAMETOGENESES (17) GAMETOGENESIS (17) [noun] The process by which gametes are produced. GASTRECTOMIES (18) [noun] Removal or partial removal of the stomach GASTROCNEMIUS (18) [noun] The muscle at the back of the calf, whose insertion is the Achilles tendon at the heel. GASTRONOMICAL (18) [adjective] Gastronomic GASTRONOMISTS (16) [noun] A gastronome GEMEINSCHAFTS (24) GEMUTLICHKEIT (25) [noun] The state or fact of being gemütlich; middle-class niceness or cosiness, hospitality. GENERALISSIMO (16) [noun] A supreme commander of the armed forces of a country, especially one who is also a political leader. GENTLEMANLIKE (20) GEOCHEMICALLY (26) GEOMAGNETISMS (19) GEOMETRICALLY (21) GEOMETRICIANS (18) [noun] A geometer; a mathematician specializing in the study of geometry. GEOMORPHOLOGY (25) [noun] The study of landforms, their classification, origin, development, and history. GERMANIZATION (25) GERMINABILITY (21) GERRYMANDERED (21) [verb] To divide a geographic area into voting districts in such a way as to give an unfair advantage to one party in an election. | [verb] (by extension) To draw dividing lines for other types of districts in an unintuitive way to favor a particular group or for other perceived gain. GIMCRACKERIES (24) GLAMORIZATION (25) GLAMOROUSNESS (16) GLIOBLASTOMAS (18) [noun] A fast-growing, malignant tumor of the brain GLUTETHIMIDES (20) GONADECTOMIES (19) GOSSIPMONGERS (19) GOURMANDIZING (27) [noun] The act of one who gormandizes. | [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GOVERNMENTESE (19) GRAMINIVOROUS (19) [adjective] That eats grasses and seeds. GRAMMATICALLY (23) [adverb] In a grammatical manner | [adverb] Concerning grammar GRANDMOTHERLY (23) GRANTSMANSHIP (21) GRANULOMATOUS (16) GRAPHEMICALLY (26) GREENBACKISMS (24) GUESSTIMATING (17) [verb] To make a guesstimate. | [verb] To make a guesstimate of a specific quantity. GYMNASTICALLY (24) GYMNOSOPHISTS (24) [noun] One of a school of ancient Indian ascetic philosophers, reported in antiquity, who wore little clothing; a mystic. GYMNOSPERMIES (23) GYMNOSPERMOUS (23) GYNANDROMORPH (25) [noun] An insect, crustacean or bird literally having physical characteristics of both sexes, usually displaying a bilateral difference. | [noun] A person having certain physical characteristics of both sexes. GYNECOMASTIAS (21) GYROCOMPASSES (23) [noun] A north-seeking form of gyroscope used as a directional reference in navigation. HANDCRAFTSMAN (24) HANDCRAFTSMEN (24) HARBORMASTERS (20) [noun] An official responsible for the enforcement of regulations in a port. HARMFULNESSES (21) HARMONIZATION (27) [noun] An act of harmonizing. HELIOTROPISMS (20) HELLGRAMMITES (21) [noun] The aquatic larval form of the dobsonfly, having a segmented body with legs on each segment, and a head with prominent pincers, prized as fish bait. | [noun] A lure designed to mimic a hellgramite. HELMINTHIASES (21) HELMINTHIASIS (21) [noun] Infestation with parasitic worms HELMINTHOLOGY (25) [noun] The branch of zoology related to the study of helminths (parasitic worms). HELMSMANSHIPS (25) HEMACYTOMETER (25) [noun] A device used to count the number of blood cells in a volume of blood. HEMAGGLUTININ (20) [noun] An antigenic glycoprotein that causes agglutination of red blood cells HEMATOLOGICAL (21) HEMATOLOGISTS (19) HEMATOPHAGOUS (24) [adjective] Feeding on blood. HEMATOPOIESES (20) HEMATOPOIESIS (20) [noun] The process by which blood cells are produced. HEMATOPOIETIC (22) HEMICELLULOSE (20) [noun] A mixture of several plant polysaccharides, of smaller molecular weight than cellulose, that are soluble in dilute alkali; they are involved in the manufacture of paper, and are used in the production of furfural and ethanol. HEMICHORDATES (24) [noun] Any of many marine worms, of the phylum Hemichordata, that have a primitive notochord HEMIMORPHISMS (27) HEMISPHERICAL (25) HEMOCYTOMETER (25) [noun] A device used to count the number of blood cells in a volume of blood. HEMODILUTIONS (19) HEMORRHOIDALS (22) HEPATECTOMIES (22) HEREDITAMENTS (19) [noun] Property which can be inherited. | [noun] Inheritance. HERMAPHRODITE (24) [noun] An individual or organism possessing ambiguous sexual organs, typically including both types of gonads. | [noun] A person or thing possessing two opposing qualities. | [noun] A hermaphrodite brig. HERMENEUTICAL (20) HETEROGAMETES (19) HETEROGAMETIC (21) [adjective] That produces heterogametes | [adjective] That produces different forms of the same gamete e.g. spermatozoa containing either an X- or a Y-chromosome HETEROMORPHIC (25) [adjective] Having different forms in different stages of the life cycle | [adjective] Differing in size or structure from the normal HEXAMETHONIUM (30) HISTAMINERGIC (21) HISTOCHEMICAL (25) [noun] Any chemical compound or reagent used in histochemistry or histology | [adjective] Of or pertaining to histochemistry HOLIDAYMAKERS (26) [noun] Someone who is on holiday HOMEOMORPHISM (27) [noun] A continuous bijection from one topological space to another, with continuous inverse. | [noun] A similarity in the crystal structure of unrelated compounds HOMEOTHERMIES (23) HOMESCHOOLERS (23) HOMESCHOOLING (24) [noun] Teaching children at home instead of sending them to school. HOMESTRETCHES (23) [noun] The final stretch of a race track | [noun] The last part of some activity (e.g. a speech) HOMINIZATIONS (27) HOMOEROTICISM (22) HOMOGENEITIES (19) HOMOGENEOUSLY (22) HOMOIOTHERMIC (25) HOMOLOGATIONS (19) HOMOLOGICALLY (24) HOMOMORPHISMS (27) [noun] A structure-preserving map between two algebraic structures of the same type, such as groups, rings, or vector spaces. | [noun] A similar appearance of two unrelated organisms or structures. HOMOPOLYMERIC (27) HOMOSCEDASTIC (23) HOMOSEXUALITY (28) [noun] The state of being sexually attracted primarily or exclusively to persons of the same sex. | [noun] Sexual activity with a person of the same sex. HOMOSOCIALITY (23) HOMOTHALLISMS (23) HORSEMANSHIPS (23) HOUSEWARMINGS (22) [noun] A party to celebrate moving into a new home. | [noun] The act of welcoming a person/family to their newly purchased or newly rented home. HUMANITARIANS (18) [noun] A scholar of one of the subjects in the humanities. | [noun] A person who believes in the philosophy of humanism. | [noun] In the Renaissance, a scholar of Greek and Roman classics. HUMANIZATIONS (27) HUMIFICATIONS (23) HUMILIATINGLY (22) HUMORLESSNESS (18) HYDRODYNAMICS (28) [noun] The scientific study of fluids in motion. HYDROMAGNETIC (25) HYDROTROPISMS (24) HYDROXYLAMINE (32) HYMENOPTERANS (23) [noun] Any insect of the order Hymenoptera: the bees, wasps and ants etc. HYMENOPTERONS (23) HYMENOPTEROUS (23) HYPERCALCEMIA (27) HYPERCALCEMIC (29) HYPERGLYCEMIA (29) [noun] An unusually high concentration of sugar in the blood HYPERGLYCEMIC (31) HYPERIMMUNIZE (34) HYPERLIPEMIAS (25) HYPERMETRICAL (25) HYPERMETROPIA (25) [noun] Hyperopia HYPERMETROPIC (27) HYPERMOBILITY (28) [noun] An excess amount of elasticity in a bodily joint HYPERREALISMS (23) HYPERROMANTIC (25) HYPERTHERMIAS (26) HYPERURBANISM (25) HYPERURICEMIA (25) [noun] An abnormally high level of uric acid in one's blood. HYPOCALCEMIAS (27) HYPOGLYCEMIAS (29) HYPOGLYCEMICS (31) HYSTEROTOMIES (21) IDEOGRAMMATIC (21) IDIOMATICALLY (21) IDIOMATICNESS (18) IGNOMINIOUSLY (19) ILLIBERALISMS (17) ILLUMINATIONS (15) [noun] The act of illuminating, or supplying with light; the state of being illuminated. | [noun] Festive decoration of houses or buildings with lights. | [noun] Adornment of books and manuscripts with colored illustrations. See illuminate (transitive verb). IMAGINARINESS (16) IMAGINATIVELY (22) [adverb] In an imaginative manner; showing creativity. IMAGISTICALLY (21) IMITATIVENESS (18) IMMANENTISTIC (19) IMMATERIALISM (19) [noun] The metaphysical denial of the existence of the material world IMMATERIALIST (17) IMMATERIALITY (20) IMMATERIALIZE (26) IMMEDIATENESS (18) IMMENSENESSES (17) IMMIGRATIONAL (18) IMMISCIBILITY (24) IMMODERATIONS (18) [noun] Lack of moderation. IMMORTALISING (18) [verb] To give unending life to, to make immortal. | [verb] To make eternally famous. IMMORTALITIES (17) IMMORTALIZERS (26) IMMORTALIZING (27) [verb] To give unending life to, to make immortal. | [verb] To make eternally famous. | [verb] To remove the effects of normal apoptosis. IMMOVABLENESS (22) IMMUNIZATIONS (26) [noun] The process by which an individual is safely exposed in a controlled manner to a material that is designed to prime their immune system against that material. | [noun] One such exposure. IMMUNOCHEMIST (24) IMMUNOGENESES (18) IMMUNOGENESIS (18) IMMUNOGENETIC (20) IMMUNOLOGICAL (20) IMMUNOLOGISTS (18) IMMUNOSORBENT (19) [noun] An antibody that is used to remove a specific antigen from a mixture. | [noun] An antigen that is used to remove a specific antibody from a mixture. | [adjective] Relating to the absorption of antibodies by insoluble antigens. IMMUNOTHERAPY (25) [noun] The treatment of disease by adjusting the body's immune response. | [noun] The treatment of cancer by improving the ability of the host to reject a tumour immunologically. IMMUTABLENESS (19) IMPALPABILITY (24) IMPASSABILITY (22) IMPASSIBILITY (22) IMPASSIVENESS (20) IMPASSIVITIES (20) IMPECCABILITY (26) IMPECUNIOSITY (22) IMPECUNIOUSLY (22) IMPERCEIVABLE (24) IMPERCEPTIBLE (23) [adjective] Not perceptible, not detectable, too small in magnitude to be observed IMPERCEPTIBLY (26) [adverb] Not noticeably; too small to be detected; too little to be perceived. IMPERCIPIENCE (23) IMPERFECTIONS (22) [noun] Those qualities or features that are imperfect; the characteristic, state, or quality of being imperfect. | [noun] Something that makes something else less than perfect; a blemish, impurity, error, etc. IMPERFECTIVES (25) IMPERFECTNESS (22) IMPERIALISTIC (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to imperialism or imperialists; favoring imperialism. IMPERIOUSNESS (17) IMPERISHABLES (22) IMPERMANENCES (21) IMPERMANENTLY (22) IMPERMISSIBLE (21) [adjective] Not permissible; not to be permitted or allowed IMPERMISSIBLY (24) IMPERSONALITY (20) IMPERSONALIZE (26) IMPERSONATING (18) [verb] To pretend to be (a different person); to assume the identity of. | [verb] To operate with the permissions of a different user account. | [verb] To manifest in corporeal form; to personify. IMPERSONATION (17) [noun] The act of impersonating IMPERSONATORS (17) [noun] One who fraudulently impersonates another person. | [noun] An entertainer whose act is based upon performing impressions of others. IMPERTINENCES (19) [noun] Lack of pertinence; irrelevance. | [noun] An instance of this; a moment of being impertinent. | [noun] The fact or character of being out of place; inappropriateness. IMPERTINENTLY (20) IMPERTURBABLE (21) [adjective] Not easily perturbed, upset or excited. | [adjective] Calm and collected, even under pressure. IMPERTURBABLY (24) IMPETUOSITIES (17) IMPETUOUSNESS (17) IMPLACABILITY (24) IMPLANTATIONS (17) [noun] The way in which an organ, bone, muscle etc. becomes inserted into its set place. | [noun] Planting; securing a plant etc. into the ground. | [noun] The introduction of a notion, idea or thought into someone's mind. IMPLICATIVELY (25) IMPOLITICALLY (22) IMPONDERABLES (20) [noun] An imponderable substance or body; specifically, in the plural, a name formerly applied to heat, light, electricity, and magnetism. | [noun] An imponderable question. IMPORTUNATELY (20) IMPORTUNITIES (17) [noun] A constant and insistent demanding. | [noun] An inappropriate or unsuitable time; unseasonableness. IMPOSSIBILITY (22) [noun] Something that is impossible. | [noun] The quality of being impossible. | [noun] The state of being unable to do something. IMPOVERISHERS (23) IMPOVERISHING (24) [verb] To make poor. | [verb] To weaken in quality; to deprive of some strength or richness. | [verb] To become poor. IMPRACTICABLE (23) [noun] An unmanageable person | [adjective] Not practicable; impossible or difficult in practice | [adjective] (of a passage or road) impassable IMPRACTICABLY (26) IMPRACTICALLY (24) IMPRECISENESS (19) IMPREGNATIONS (18) IMPRESSIONISM (19) [noun] A movement in art characterized by visible brush strokes, ordinary subject matters, and an emphasis on light and its changing qualities | [noun] A style that avoided traditional harmony, and sought to invoke the impressions of the composer | [noun] A style that used imagery and symbolism to portray the poet's impressions IMPRESSIONIST (17) [noun] One who adheres to the theory or method of impressionism. IMPRISONMENTS (19) [noun] A confinement in a place, especially a prison or a jail, as punishment for a crime. IMPROBABILITY (24) [noun] The quality or state of being improbable; unlikelihood. | [noun] That which is improbable; an improbable event or result. IMPROPRIETIES (19) [noun] The condition of being improper. | [noun] An improper act. | [noun] Improper language. IMPROVABILITY (25) IMPROVIDENCES (23) IMPROVIDENTLY (24) IMPROVISATION (20) [noun] The act or art of composing and making music, poetry, and the like, extemporaneously | [noun] That which is improvised; an impromptu. | [noun] Musical technique, characteristic of blues music. IMPROVISATORE (20) IMPROVISATORI (20) IMPROVISATORS (20) IMPROVISATORY (23) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or in the nature of improvisation IMPULSIVENESS (20) IMPULSIVITIES (20) INANIMATENESS (15) INCENDIARISMS (18) INCLINOMETERS (17) [noun] An instrument that displays the angle of an aircraft relative to the horizon. | [noun] An instrument that measures magnetic dip; a dip circle. | [noun] A surveying instrument that measures angles of inclination or elevation; a clinometer. INCOMBUSTIBLE (21) [noun] Any substance that is not flammable. | [adjective] Not capable of catching fire and burning; not flammable. INCOMMODITIES (20) INCOMMUNICADO (22) [adjective] In a state or condition of inability or unwillingness to communicate. | [adverb] In a manner in which communication with outsiders is not possible, for either voluntary or involuntary reasons, especially due to confinement or reclusiveness. INCOMPATIBLES (21) INCOMPETENCES (21) [noun] Inability to perform; lack of competence; ineptitude. INCOMPETENTLY (22) INCREMENTALLY (20) [adverb] In an incremental fashion; by small additions. INCRIMINATING (18) [verb] To accuse or bring criminal charges against. | [verb] To indicate the guilt of. | [adjective] Causing, showing, or proving that one is guilty of wrongdoing. INCRIMINATION (17) INCRIMINATORY (20) INDETERMINACY (21) INDETERMINATE (16) [adjective] Not accurately determined or determinable. | [adjective] Imprecise or vague. | [adjective] (of certain forms of limit) Not definitively or precisely determined, because of the presence of infinity or zero symbols used in any of several improper combinations. INDETERMINISM (18) [noun] The doctrine that all human actions are not so much determined by the preceding events, conditions, causes or karma as by deliberate choice or free will. | [noun] A case in which the uncertainty principle applies; a case in which certain pairs of physical properties such as the position and momentum of a particle cannot be known simultaneously. | [noun] Any situation in which the outcome cannot be completely predicted in advance. INDETERMINIST (16) INDIVIDUALISM (20) [noun] The tendency for a person to act without reference to others, particularly in matters of style, fashion or mode of thought. | [noun] The moral stance, political philosophy, or social outlook that promotes independence and self-reliance of individual people, while opposing the interference with each person's choices by society, the state, or any other group or institution. | [noun] The doctrine that only individual things are real. INDOMETHACINS (21) INDUSTRIALISM (16) [noun] The socio-economic system based upon the industrial production of manufactured goods, rather than on agriculture. INFINITESIMAL (18) [noun] A non-zero quantity whose magnitude is smaller than any positive number (by definition it is not a real number). | [adjective] Incalculably, exceedingly, or immeasurably minute; vanishingly small. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to values that approach zero as a limit. INFLAMMATIONS (20) [noun] The act of inflaming, kindling, or setting on fire. | [noun] The state of being inflamed | [noun] A condition of any part of the body, consisting of congestion of the blood vessels, with obstruction of the blood current, and growth of morbid tissue. It is manifested outwardly by redness and swelling, attended with heat and pain. INFLATIONISMS (18) INFORMALITIES (18) [noun] The condition of being informal. INFORMATIONAL (18) [adjective] Designed to or able to impart information; possessing information. INFORMATIVELY (24) INFORMATORILY (21) INFOTAINMENTS (18) INFRINGEMENTS (19) [noun] A violation or breach, as of a law. | [noun] An encroachment on a right, a person, a territory, or a property. INHOMOGENEITY (22) INHOMOGENEOUS (19) [adjective] Not homogeneous INHUMANNESSES (18) INSEMINATIONS (15) [noun] A sowing of seed; the act of inseminating. | [noun] The act of impregnating (making pregnant). INSTRUMENTALS (15) [noun] (grammar) The instrumental case. | [noun] A composition written or performed without lyrics, sometimes using a lead instrument to replace vocals. | [noun] The backing track of a song. The audio of a song without the vocal track. INSTRUMENTING (16) [verb] To apply measuring devices. | [verb] To devise, conceive, cook up, plan. | [verb] To perform upon an instrument; to prepare for an instrument. INTEGUMENTARY (19) INTEMPERANCES (19) [noun] Lack of moderation or temperance; excess. | [noun] Drunkenness or gluttony. INTEMPERATELY (20) INTERCOMMUNAL (19) INTERCOMPARED (20) INTERCOMPARES (19) INTERDOMINION (16) [adjective] Between dominions of the British Empire. INTEREPIDEMIC (20) INTERFAMILIAL (18) INTERFEROGRAM (19) [noun] An image produced by using an interferometer. INTERLACEMENT (17) INTERMARGINAL (16) INTERMARRIAGE (16) [noun] Marriage between people belonging to different groups, such as different racial, ethnic, or religious groups; mixed marriage. INTERMARRYING (19) [verb] To marry a member of another group, social stratum, or religion. | [verb] To marry within the same ethnic, social, or family group. | [noun] An intermarriage. INTERMEDDLERS (17) INTERMEDDLING (18) [verb] To mix, mingle together. | [verb] To get mixed up (with). | [verb] To butt in, to interfere in or with. INTERMEDIATED (17) [verb] To mediate, to be an intermediate. | [verb] To arrange, in the manner of a broker. INTERMEDIATES (16) [noun] Anything in an intermediate position. | [noun] An intermediary. | [noun] Any substance formed as part of a series of chemical reactions that is not the end-product. INTERMEMBRANE (19) INTERMETALLIC (17) INTERMINGLING (17) [verb] To mix or become mixed together. | [noun] The act by which things intermingle. INTERMISSIONS (15) [noun] A break between two performances or sessions, such as at a concert, play, seminar, or religious assembly. INTERMITTENCE (17) INTERMITTENCY (20) INTERMIXTURES (22) [noun] A mass formed by mixture; a mass of ingredients mixed. | [noun] Admixture; an additional ingredient. INTERMOUNTAIN (15) INTERPANDEMIC (20) INTERPERMEATE (17) INTERPROXIMAL (24) INTERSTIMULUS (15) INTERTERMINAL (15) INTIMIDATIONS (16) [noun] The act of making timid or fearful or of deterring by threats; the state of being intimidated INTRADERMALLY (19) INTRAMUSCULAR (17) [adjective] Inside a muscle or the muscles. INTROMISSIONS (15) [noun] The state of being allowed to enter; admittance | [noun] The act of allowing to enter; admission | [noun] Putting one thing into another; insertion INTUITIONISMS (15) INTUMESCENCES (19) INVEIGLEMENTS (19) IRKSOMENESSES (19) IRONMONGERIES (16) IRRATIONALISM (15) [noun] A philosophical movement formed as a cultural reaction against positivism in the early 20th century. IRRECLAIMABLE (19) [adjective] Incapable of being reclaimed; not reclaimable. | [adjective] Unredeemable. IRRECLAIMABLY (22) ISOCHROMOSOME (22) ISOLATIONISMS (15) ISOMERIZATION (24) ISOMETRICALLY (20) ISOSMOTICALLY (20) JACKHAMMERING (34) [verb] To use a jackhammer. | [verb] To break (something) using a jackhammer. | [verb] To form (something) using a jackhammer. JUDGMATICALLY (29) KAPELLMEISTER (21) [noun] A leader or conductor of a musical group such as an orchestra. | [noun] A term used during the baroque and classical period for the person in charge of music at a noble court. KATZENJAMMERS (37) [noun] A hangover. | [noun] Jitters; discord; confusion. | [noun] Depression. KINEMATICALLY (24) KLEPTOMANIACS (23) LAMELLIBRANCH (22) [noun] Any marine or freshwater bivalve mollusk, of the class Lamellibranchia or Bivalvia; includes the clams, scallops and oysters LANGUISHMENTS (19) [noun] The state of languishing. | [noun] Tenderness of look or mien; amorous pensiveness. LARYNGECTOMEE (21) LEGITIMATIONS (16) LEGITIMATIZED (26) [verb] To make legitimate. | [verb] To legalize. LEGITIMATIZES (25) [verb] To make legitimate. | [verb] To legalize. LEISHMANIASES (18) LEISHMANIASIS (18) [noun] Any of various ulcerative skin diseases caused by any of the protozoans of the genus Leishmania, transmitted to humans and animals by bloodsucking sandflies. LIEBFRAUMILCH (25) LIGHTSOMENESS (19) LIMITEDNESSES (16) LIMITLESSNESS (15) LISSOMENESSES (15) LOATHSOMENESS (18) LOCKSMITHINGS (25) LOGOGRAMMATIC (21) LONGANIMITIES (16) LUMINESCENCES (19) LUMPISHNESSES (20) LYMPHADENITIS (24) [noun] Lymphadenopathy. LYMPHATICALLY (28) LYMPHOBLASTIC (27) LYMPHOCYTOSES (28) LYMPHOCYTOSIS (28) LYMPHOGRAPHIC (31) LYMPHOMATOSES (25) LYMPHOMATOSIS (25) LYMPHOSARCOMA (27) MACHICOLATION (22) [noun] An opening between corbels that support a projecting parapet, or in the floor of a gallery or the roof of a portal, of a fortified building from which missiles can be shot or heated items dropped upon assailants attacking the base of the walls. | [noun] A projecting parapet with a series of such openings. MACHINABILITY (25) MACROECONOMIC (23) [adjective] Relating to macroeconomics. | [adjective] Relating to the entire economy, including the growth rate, money and credit, exchange rates, the total amount of goods and services produced, total income earned, the level of employment of productive resources, and the general behavior of prices. MACROGLOBULIN (20) MACROMOLECULE (21) [noun] A very large molecule, especially used in reference to large biological polymers (e.g. nucleic acids and proteins). MACRONUTRIENT (17) [noun] Any of the elements required in large amounts by all living things. MADEMOISELLES (18) MAGISTERIALLY (19) MAGISTRATICAL (18) MAGISTRATURES (16) MAGNANIMITIES (18) MAGNANIMOUSLY (21) MAGNETIZATION (25) MAGNETOGRAPHS (22) [noun] An instrument for measuring changes in the direction and intensity of magnetic fields. MAGNETOMETERS (18) [noun] An instrument used to measure the intensity and direction of a magnetic field, especially at points on the Earth's surface. MAGNETOMETRIC (20) MAGNETOPAUSES (18) [noun] The boundary between the Earth's magnetosphere and the sun's plasma. MAGNETOSPHERE (21) [noun] The comet-shaped region around Earth or another planet in which charged particles are trapped or deflected. Shaped by the solar wind and the planet's magnetic field. MAGNETOSTATIC (18) MAGNIFICATION (21) [noun] The act of magnifying; enlargement; exaggeration. | [noun] The apparent enlargement of an object in an image. MAGNIFICENCES (23) MAGNIFICENTLY (24) [adverb] In a magnificent manner. MAGNILOQUENCE (27) [noun] The quality of being magniloquent; pompous discourse. MAILABILITIES (17) MAINSTREAMING (18) [verb] To popularize, to normalize, to render mainstream. | [verb] To become mainstream. | [verb] To educate (a disabled student) together with non-disabled students. MAJORITARIANS (22) [noun] One who supports the dominance of the majority over the minority. MALABSORPTION (19) [noun] The state arising from abnormality in digestion or absorption of food nutrients across the gastrointestinal tract. MALACOLOGICAL (20) MALACOLOGISTS (18) MALACOSTRACAN (19) [noun] Any of very many crustaceans of the class Malacostraca MALADAPTATION (18) [noun] The state of being poorly adapted to an environment MALADJUSTMENT (25) [noun] A poor or faulty adjustment, especially of a mechanism. | [noun] The inability to adapt oneself to the needs of others, or to the stresses of normal life. MALADMINISTER (18) [verb] To administer wrongly or badly. MALADROITNESS (16) MALARIOLOGIES (16) MALARIOLOGIST (16) MALFORMATIONS (20) [noun] An abnormal formation. | [noun] An abnormal developmental feature of offspring. MALFUNCTIONED (21) [verb] To function improperly | [verb] To fail to function MALICIOUSNESS (17) MALNUTRITIONS (15) MALOCCLUSIONS (19) [noun] A misalignment of the upper and lower sets of teeth. MALTREATMENTS (17) [noun] Cruel or harmful treatment or abuse; mistreatment. MALVERSATIONS (18) MAMMOGRAPHIES (25) MANAGEABILITY (21) MANIFESTATION (18) [noun] The act or process of becoming manifest. | [noun] The embodiment of an intangible, or variable thing. | [noun] The symptoms or observable conditions which are seen as a result of some disease. MANIPULATABLE (19) MANIPULATIONS (17) [noun] The practice of manipulating or the state of being manipulated. | [noun] The skillful use of the hands in, for example, chiropractic. | [noun] The usage of underhanded influence over a person, event, or situation to gain a desired outcome. MANNISHNESSES (18) MANSLAUGHTERS (19) [noun] The slaying of a human being. | [noun] The unlawful killing of a human, either in negligence or incidentally to the commission of some unlawful act, but without specific malice, or upon a sudden excitement of anger. MANTELSHELVES (21) [noun] A shelf above a fireplace. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. MANUFACTORIES (20) [noun] A manufacturing process; a particular industry or part of an industry. | [noun] A plant where something is manufactured; a factory. MANUFACTURERS (20) [noun] One that manufactures MANUFACTURING (21) [verb] To make things, usually on a large scale, with tools and either physical labor or machinery. | [verb] To work (raw or partly wrought materials) into suitable forms for use. | [verb] To fabricate; to create false evidence to support a point. MARCHIONESSES (20) [noun] The wife of a marquess. | [noun] A woman holding the rank of marquess in her own right. MARGINALITIES (16) MARGINALIZING (26) [verb] To relegate (something, especially a topic or a group of people) to the margins or to a lower limit; to exclude socially or otherwise. MARICULTURIST (17) MARKETABILITY (24) [noun] The likelihood that something will sell; market appeal. MARKSMANSHIPS (26) MARLINESPIKES (21) [noun] A tool, consisting of a pointed metal spike, used to manipulate the strands of rope or cable when knotting and splicing. MARTYRIZATION (27) MARTYROLOGIES (19) [noun] A catalogue or list of martyrs (or, more precisely, of saints), arranged in the order of their anniversaries. | [noun] The story of the deaths of several famous Rabbis (including Rabbi Akiva) by Romans, read both on Yom Kippur and Tisha b'Av. MARTYROLOGIST (19) MARVELOUSNESS (18) MASCULINISING (18) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINITIES (17) [noun] The degree or property of being masculine or manly; manliness. MASCULINIZING (27) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASSIVENESSES (18) MASTERFULNESS (18) MASTERMINDING (19) [verb] To act in the role of mastermind. | [noun] A creativity technique by which a group tries to find solutions for a specific problem from ideas spontaneously contributed by its members. MASTERSINGERS (16) [noun] A German lyric poet of the late Middle Ages. MASTERSTROKES (19) [noun] An action which demonstrates great skill or artistry. MASTICATORIES (17) MASTIGOPHORAN (21) MASTOIDECTOMY (23) MASTOIDITISES (16) MASTURBATIONS (17) [noun] Manual erotic stimulation of the genitals or other erotic regions, often to orgasm, either by oneself or a partner. | [noun] A vain activity. MATERFAMILIAS (20) [noun] The female head of a household MATERIALISING (16) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALISTIC (17) [adjective] Being overly concerned with material possessions and wealth. | [adjective] Of or concerning philosophical materialism. MATERIALITIES (15) MATERIALIZERS (24) MATERIALIZING (25) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATHEMATICIAN (22) [noun] An expert on mathematics. MATHEMATIZING (30) [verb] To describe in terms of a mathematical equation. MATRIARCHATES (20) [noun] A matriarchal system or community. | [noun] The position of a matriarch. MATRICULATING (18) [verb] To enroll as a member of a body, especially of a college or university | [verb] To be enrolled as a member of a body, especially of a college or university. MATRICULATION (17) [noun] Enrollment in a college or university | [noun] A pass in some university examinations | [noun] A registration of armorial bearings MATRILINEALLY (18) MATRIMONIALLY (20) MAWKISHNESSES (25) MAXILLOFACIAL (27) [adjective] Of or relating to the jaw and face. MAXIMIZATIONS (33) MEANINGLESSLY (19) MEASURABILITY (20) MECAMYLAMINES (24) MECHANIZATION (29) [noun] The use of machinery to replace human or animal labour, especially in agriculture and industry. MEDICAMENTOUS (20) MEDITERRANEAN (16) MEETINGHOUSES (19) [noun] A building where people meet for a purpose. | [noun] A building where a Quaker congregation assembles for worship. MEGAKARYOCYTE (28) MEGALOBLASTIC (20) MEGALOMANIACS (20) [noun] One affected with or exhibiting megalomania. MEGALOPOLISES (18) [noun] A large conurbation, where two or more large cities have sprawled outward to meet, forming something larger than a metropolis; a megacity. MEGALOPOLITAN (18) [noun] An inhabitant or a resident of a megalopolis. | [adjective] Of, or relating to a megalopolis MEGASPORANGIA (19) MELANCHOLIACS (22) [noun] A person who is habitually melancholy. MELANIZATIONS (24) MELANOGENESES (16) MELANOGENESIS (16) MELLIFLUENTLY (21) MELLIFLUOUSLY (21) MELODIOUSNESS (16) MELODRAMATICS (20) [noun] Overemotional, exaggerated behavior calculated for effect. MELODRAMATISE (18) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATIST (18) MELODRAMATIZE (27) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELTABILITIES (17) MEMORABLENESS (19) MEMORIALISING (18) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALIZING (27) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIZATIONS (26) [noun] The act of committing something to memory or memorizing. MENINGOCOCCAL (22) MENINGOCOCCIC (24) MENINGOCOCCUS (22) [noun] A pathogenic bacterium, Neisseria meningitidis, common cause of cerebrospinal meningitis MENSTRUATIONS (15) MENSURABILITY (20) MERCANTILISMS (19) MERCANTILISTS (17) MERCENARINESS (17) MERCERIZATION (26) MERCHANDISERS (21) MERCHANDISING (22) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCHANDIZING (31) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCILESSNESS (17) MERCURIALNESS (17) MERITOCRACIES (19) [noun] Rule by merit, and talent. | [noun] A type of society where wealth, income, and social status are assigned through competition. MERITORIOUSLY (18) MERRYTHOUGHTS (25) [noun] The furcula or wishbone. MESENCEPHALIC (24) MESENCEPHALON (22) [noun] A part of the brain located rostral to the pons and caudal to the thalamus and the basal ganglia, composed of the tectum (dorsal portion) and the tegmentum (ventral portion). MESOTHELIOMAS (20) [noun] An uncommon malignant tumour of the mesothelium, usually of the lungs after exposure to asbestos. METABOLICALLY (22) METABOLIZABLE (28) METACERCARIAE (19) METACERCARIAL (19) METACHROMATIC (24) METAFICTIONAL (20) METALANGUAGES (17) [noun] (critical theory) Any language or vocabulary of specialized terms used to describe or analyze a language or linguistic process. | [noun] Any similar language used to define a programming language. METALLIFEROUS (18) [adjective] Containing a metallic element. Often used to describe ores that are mined commercially. METALLIZATION (24) METALLOGRAPHY (24) [noun] The study of the structure of metals and their alloys, by any of a variety of techniques | [noun] A process for utilising metal plates in a manner similar to lithographic stones. | [noun] A process of imitating the grain of wood on metals. METALLOPHONES (20) [noun] Any musical instrument consisting of tuned metal bars which are struck to make sound. METALLURGICAL (18) METALLURGISTS (16) METALWORKINGS (23) METAMERICALLY (22) METAMORPHISMS (24) METAMORPHOSED (23) [verb] (of a moth or insect) To undergo metamorphosis. | [verb] (by extension) To undergo some transformation. | [verb] To transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance. METAMORPHOSES (22) [verb] (of a moth or insect) To undergo metamorphosis. | [verb] (by extension) To undergo some transformation. | [verb] To transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance. METAMORPHOSIS (22) [noun] A transformation, such as one performed by magic. | [noun] A noticeable change in character, appearance, function or condition. | [noun] A change in the form and often habits of an animal after the embryonic stage during normal development. (e.g. the transformation of a caterpillar into a butterfly or a tadpole into a frog.) METAPHOSPHATE (25) [noun] Any salt or ester of metaphosphoric acid. METAPHYSICIAN (25) [noun] A philosopher who specializes in the scholarly study of metaphysics. METASOMATISMS (19) METASTABILITY (20) METASTASIZING (25) [verb] (of a disease or tumour) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis. METENCEPHALIC (24) METENCEPHALON (22) METEORITICIST (17) METEOROLOGIES (16) METEOROLOGIST (16) [noun] A person who studies meteorology | [noun] A weather forecaster METHACRYLATES (23) [noun] Any salt or ester of methacrylic acid, especially an ester used in the manufacture of resins and plastics. | [noun] A resin manufactured from methacrylic acid or a methacrylate. METHAQUALONES (27) METHEMOGLOBIN (23) [noun] An oxidized form of hemoglobin, containing ferric rather than ferrous iron, that cannot transport oxygen. METHODOLOGIES (20) [noun] (originally science) The study of methods used in a field. | [noun] A collection of methods, practices, procedures and rules used by those who work in some field. | [noun] The implementation of such methods etc. METHODOLOGIST (20) METHOTREXATES (25) METHOXYCHLORS (33) METHYLMERCURY (28) METHYSERGIDES (23) METRONIDAZOLE (25) [noun] An antibiotic of the nitroimidazole group, used to treat a range of bacterial, fungal and protozoan infections METROPOLITANS (17) [noun] A bishop empowered to oversee other bishops; an archbishop. | [noun] The inhabitant of a metropolis. METRORRHAGIAS (19) MICROANALYSES (20) MICROANALYSIS (20) [noun] The analysis (and subsequent identification) of very small quantities of material. MICROANALYSTS (20) MICROANALYTIC (22) MICROBALANCES (21) [noun] Any balance capable of weighing objects having a mass less than a milligram MICROBIOLOGIC (22) MICROBREWINGS (23) MICROCAPSULES (21) [noun] A very small capsule designed to release its contents when broken (typically, after being swallowed). MICROCASSETTE (19) MICROCEPHALIC (26) MICROCIRCUITS (21) [noun] An electronic device, usually fabricated by photolithography, that is very small and implements several components or their equivalent; an integrated circuit. MICROCLIMATES (21) [noun] A small, local region having a unique pattern of weather or weather effects that differ from the local climate. MICROCLIMATIC (23) MICROCOMPUTER (23) [noun] A computer designed around a microprocessor, smaller than a minicomputer or a mainframe. MICROCOSMOSES (21) [noun] A small or microscopic cosmos; a microcosm. MICROCRYSTALS (22) MICROCULTURAL (19) MICROCULTURES (19) MICROECONOMIC (23) [adjective] Of, or relating to, a microeconomy or microeconomics. MICROELEMENTS (19) MICROFILAMENT (22) [noun] A very fine (thin) filament. MICROFILARIAE (20) [noun] The very small larva of a filarial worm. MICROFILARIAL (20) MICROFILMABLE (24) MICROGRAPHICS (25) MICROGRAPHING (24) MICROHABITATS (22) [noun] A specific habitat, typically extremely small, such as a cave corner or a cardboard box. MICROINJECTED (27) [verb] To inject with a micropipette. MICROMANAGERS (20) MICROMANAGING (21) [verb] To manage, direct, or control a person, group, or system to an unnecessary level of detail or precision. MICRONUTRIENT (17) [noun] A mineral, vitamin or other substance that is essential, even in very small quantities, for growth or metabolism. MICROORGANISM (20) [noun] An organism that is too small to be seen by the unaided eye, especially a single-celled organism, such as a bacterium. MICROPARTICLE (21) [noun] An extremely small particle. MICROPHYLLOUS (25) MICROPHYSICAL (27) MICROPIPETTES (21) [noun] A very small pipette. MICROPLANKTON (23) MICROPOROSITY (22) MICROPROGRAMS (22) [noun] A set of microinstructions in a CPU, used to implement machine instructions MICROPUNCTURE (21) MICROSCOPICAL (23) MICROSCOPISTS (21) MICROSURGICAL (20) [adjective] Of or pertaining to microsurgery. MICROSWITCHES (25) [noun] An electrical switch that operates with very little travel of (or pressure on) the actuator. MICROTECHNICS (24) MICROTONALITY (20) MICROVASCULAR (22) [adjective] Of or pertaining to extremely small blood vessels MICROWAVEABLE (25) MIDDLEWEIGHTS (24) [noun] A weight class in professional boxing between light middleweight or welterweight and super middleweight or cruiserweight; a similar division in wrestling and other sports | [noun] A boxer who fights in this division; a similar wrestler etc | [noun] (by extension) An employee ranking anywhere between junior and senior. MIFEPRISTONES (20) MILLENNIALISM (17) [noun] Millenarianism MILLENNIALIST (15) MILLILAMBERTS (19) MILLIONAIRESS (15) [noun] A woman whose wealth is greater than one million dollars, or the local currency. MILLIROENTGEN (16) MIMEOGRAPHING (24) [verb] To make mimeograph copies. MINDFULNESSES (19) MINERALIZABLE (26) MINERALOGICAL (18) MINERALOGISTS (16) MINESWEEPINGS (21) MINIATURISTIC (17) MINIATURIZING (25) [verb] To design or construct something on a miniature scale. MINICOMPUTERS (21) [noun] A computer smaller than a mainframe, but larger than a microcomputer. MINIMIZATIONS (26) [noun] The act of lowering something to its smallest value or extent. | [noun] The process of finding the minimum value of a function. MINISTERIALLY (18) MINISTRATIONS (15) [noun] The act of ministering. MISADDRESSING (18) [verb] To address (a letter, etc.) incorrectly. MISADVENTURES (19) [noun] An accidental mishap or misfortune. MISALIGNMENTS (18) [noun] The state, or an instance, of being misaligned MISALLOCATING (18) [verb] To allocate incorrectly or inappropriately. MISALLOCATION (17) MISANTHROPIES (20) MISAPPRAISALS (19) MISAPPREHENDS (23) [verb] To interpret incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISARTICULATE (17) MISASSEMBLING (20) MISASSUMPTION (19) MISATTRIBUTED (18) [verb] To erroneously attribute; to falsely ascribe; used especially of authorship. MISATTRIBUTES (17) [verb] To erroneously attribute; to falsely ascribe; used especially of authorship. MISCALCULATED (20) [verb] To calculate incorrectly. | [verb] To make a gross error in judgement. MISCALCULATES (19) [verb] To calculate incorrectly. | [verb] To make a gross error in judgement. MISCAPTIONING (20) MISCATALOGING (19) MISCEGENATION (18) [noun] (see usage notes) The mixing or blending of race in marriage or breeding, interracial marriage. | [noun] A mixing or blending, especially one which is considered to be inappropriate. MISCELLANEOUS (17) [adjective] Consisting of a variety of ingredients or parts. | [adjective] Having diverse characteristics, abilities or appearances. MISCELLANISTS (17) MISCHANNELING (21) MISCHANNELLED (21) MISCHIEVOUSLY (26) [adverb] In a mischievous manner. MISCIBILITIES (19) MISCLASSIFIED (21) [verb] To classify incorrectly. MISCLASSIFIES (20) [verb] To classify incorrectly. MISCONCEIVERS (22) MISCONCEIVING (23) [verb] To misunderstand | [adjective] Having false ideas; misleading. MISCONCEPTION (21) [noun] A mistaken belief, a wrong idea MISCONDUCTING (21) [verb] To mismanage. | [verb] To behave inappropriately, to misbehave. | [verb] To act improperly. MISCONNECTING (20) MISCONNECTION (19) MISCONSTRUING (18) [verb] To interpret erroneously, to understand incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISDEMEANANTS (18) [noun] One who commits misdemeanors MISDESCRIBING (21) [verb] To incorrectly explain or detail something or someone. MISDEVELOPING (22) MISDIAGNOSING (18) [verb] To incorrectly diagnose. MISDIRECTIONS (18) [noun] An act of misleading, of convincing someone to concentrate in an incorrect direction. | [noun] An error of law within a judgement committed by a judge or judges of a lower court, particularly as found by an appeals court MISEDUCATIONS (18) MISEMPHASIZED (32) MISEMPHASIZES (31) MISEMPLOYMENT (24) MISERABLENESS (17) MISERLINESSES (15) MISESTIMATING (18) [verb] To estimate erroneously. MISESTIMATION (17) MISEVALUATING (19) MISEVALUATION (18) MISFUNCTIONED (21) MISGOVERNMENT (21) MISGUIDEDNESS (18) MISIDENTIFIED (20) [adjective] Identified incorrectly | [verb] To mistake the identity. MISIDENTIFIES (19) [verb] To mistake the identity. MISIMPRESSION (19) MISINTERPRETS (17) [verb] To make an incorrect interpretation; to misunderstand. MISKNOWLEDGES (24) MISMANAGEMENT (20) [noun] The process or practice of managing ineptly, incompetently, or dishonestly. MISPERCEIVING (23) [verb] To perceive erroneously. MISPERCEPTION (21) [noun] An incorrect perception. MISPLACEMENTS (21) MISPOSITIONED (18) MISPROGRAMING (21) MISPROGRAMMED (23) MISPRONOUNCED (20) [verb] To pronounce (a word, phrase, etc.) incorrectly. | [adjective] Pronounced incorrectly. MISPRONOUNCES (19) [verb] To pronounce (a word, phrase, etc.) incorrectly. MISQUOTATIONS (24) MISREFERENCES (20) MISREGISTERED (17) MISREMEMBERED (22) [verb] To remember incorrectly. MISREPRESENTS (17) [verb] To represent falsely; to inaccurately portray something. MISSTATEMENTS (17) MISTRANSCRIBE (19) MISTRANSLATED (16) [verb] To translate incorrectly. MISTRANSLATES (15) [verb] To translate incorrectly. MISTREATMENTS (17) [noun] Cruel, abusive , bad, unfair, or thoughtless treatment of a person or animal (only rarely of an object or a machine; usually: mishandle). MISTRUSTFULLY (21) MISUNDERSTAND (17) [verb] To understand incorrectly, while believing one has understood correctly. MISUNDERSTOOD (17) [verb] To understand incorrectly, while believing one has understood correctly. MITOCHONDRIAL (21) [adjective] Of, or relating to mitochondria. MITOCHONDRION (21) [noun] A spherical or ovoid organelle found in the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells and containing genetic material separate from that of the host; it is responsible for the conversion of food to usable energy in the form of ATP. MOBILIZATIONS (26) [noun] The act of mobilizing | [noun] The marshalling of troops and national resources in preparation for war. | [noun] The process by which the armed forces of a nation are brought to a state of readiness for a conflict. MODERATORSHIP (21) MODERNISATION (16) [noun] The process of modernizing. MODERNIZATION (25) [noun] The process of modernizing. MODIFIABILITY (24) MODIFICATIONS (21) [noun] The form of existence belonging to a particular object, entity etc.; a mode of being. | [noun] The change undergone by a word when used in a construction (for instance am => 'm in I'm) | [noun] The result of modifying something; a new or changed form. MOLLIFICATION (20) MOLLUSCICIDAL (20) MOLLUSCICIDES (20) MOLLYCODDLERS (22) MOLLYCODDLING (23) [verb] To be overprotective and indulgent toward; to pamper. MOMENTARINESS (17) MOMENTOUSNESS (17) MONARCHICALLY (25) MONETIZATIONS (24) MONEYGRUBBING (24) [adjective] Greedy or avaricious MONOAMINERGIC (20) MONOCHROMATIC (24) [adjective] Having only one color, represented by differing hues and tints. For example shades in a black and white television. | [adjective] Perceptive of only one color; unable to distinguish colors; total color blindness. | [adjective] Plain, dull, lifeless. MONOCHROMATOR (22) [noun] An optical device, consisting of one or more slits, that selects a narrow band of wavelengths from a broader spectrum. MONOCHROMISTS (22) MONOCOTYLEDON (21) [noun] Any plant whose seedlings typically have one cotyledon (seed leaf) (in contrast to the two cotyledons typical of dicots), thereby belonging to the taxonomic monocots, formerly variously known as Monocotyledones, Monocotyledonae, or Liliopsida, a class in the angiosperms (Angiospermae), the flowering plants. MONOFILAMENTS (20) [noun] A single strand of man-made fiber MONOGENICALLY (21) MONOGLYCERIDE (22) MONOGRAMMATIC (22) MONOMETALLISM (19) MONOMETALLIST (17) MONOMOLECULAR (19) [adjective] (of a reaction) involving a single molecule | [adjective] Consisting of a single layer of molecules MONOMORPHEMIC (26) [adjective] Consisting of only one morpheme; not divisible into smaller parts MONOMORPHISMS (24) MONONUCLEATED (18) MONONUCLEOSES (17) MONONUCLEOSIS (17) [noun] A viral infection marked by extreme fatigue, high fever, and swollen lymph nodes. MONOPHTHONGAL (24) MONOPSONISTIC (19) MONORCHIDISMS (23) MONOSYLLABLES (20) [noun] A word of one syllable. | [noun] A euphemism for the word cunt MONOTONICALLY (20) MONSTROSITIES (15) [noun] An organism showing abnormal development or deformity. | [noun] A monstrous thing, person or act. | [noun] The state of being monstrous. MONSTROUSNESS (15) MONUMENTALITY (20) MONUMENTALIZE (26) [verb] To make something become or appear monumental MORALIZATIONS (24) MORIBUNDITIES (18) MORPHEMICALLY (27) MORPHOGENESES (21) MORPHOGENESIS (21) [noun] The differentiation of tissues and subsequent growth of structures in an organism MORPHOGENETIC (23) MORPHOLOGICAL (23) [adjective] Of, or pertaining to, morphology. MORPHOLOGISTS (21) MORPHOMETRIES (22) MORTIFICATION (20) [noun] The act of mortifying. | [noun] A sensation of extreme shame or embarrassment. | [noun] The death of part of the body. MOTHERFUCKERS (27) [noun] (strongly vulgar) An extremely contemptible or mean person. | [noun] (strongly vulgar) Any person, often but not always with the connotation that the person is disliked or is threatening. | [noun] (markedly vulgar) An extremely intense experience, often but not always negative. MOTHERFUCKING (28) [adjective] An intensifier, used in the same contexts as fucking, but more intense. | [adverb] (very vulgar) To an extreme degree. MOTORBOATINGS (18) MOTORCYCLISTS (22) [noun] Someone who rides a motorcycle MOTORIZATIONS (24) MOUNTAINOUSLY (18) MOUNTAINSIDES (16) [noun] The sloping side of a mountain. MOUNTEBANKERY (24) MOUNTEBANKING (22) MOUSETRAPPING (20) [verb] To trap; to trick or fool (someone) into a bad situation. | [verb] To prevent (the user) from leaving a website by opening another copy when it is closed. MOUTHBREEDERS (21) MOUTHWATERING (22) [adjective] That is pleasing to the sense of taste; appetizing. | [adjective] (by extension) Enticing or tantalizing. MOVABLENESSES (20) MUCOCUTANEOUS (19) MULTIBARRELED (18) MULTIBRANCHED (23) MULTIBUILDING (19) MULTICELLULAR (17) [noun] Such an organism | [adjective] (of an organism) That has many cells, often differentiated in function. MULTICULTURAL (17) [adjective] Relating or pertaining to several different cultures. MULTICURRENCY (22) MULTIEMPLOYER (22) [noun] One of a group of multiple employers who work cooperatively on one or more personnel issues. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to more than one employer. MULTIFILAMENT (20) [noun] A yarn with multiple filaments. | [adjective] Having multiple filaments MULTIFUNCTION (20) [noun] A multivalued function. | [adjective] Having multiple functions. MULTIHOSPITAL (20) MULTIMEGAWATT (21) MULTIMETALLIC (19) MULTINATIONAL (15) [noun] A multinational company. | [adjective] Of, or involving more than two countries. | [adjective] (of a business organization) Operating, or having subsidiary companies in multiple countries (especially more than two). MULTINUCLEATE (17) MULTIORGASMIC (20) MULTIPARTICLE (19) MULTIPLICANDS (20) [noun] A number that is to be multiplied by another (the multiplier). MULTIPOLARITY (20) MULTIREGIONAL (16) MULTISPECTRAL (19) [adjective] Using light with two or more frequencies or frequency ranges MULTISTRANDED (17) MULTISYLLABIC (22) MULTITALENTED (16) [adjective] Having skill or talent in more than one field. MULTITASKINGS (20) MULTITERMINAL (17) MULTITRILLION (15) MULTITUDINOUS (16) [adjective] Existing in great numbers; innumerable. | [adjective] Comprising a large number of parts. | [adjective] Crowded with many people. MULTIVALENCES (20) MULTIVARIABLE (20) [adjective] Concerning more than one variable. MULTIVITAMINS (20) [noun] A mixture of vitamins | [noun] A preparation containing such a mixture MUMMIFICATION (24) MUNDANENESSES (16) MUNICIPALIZED (29) [verb] To convert into a municipality MUNICIPALIZES (28) [verb] To convert into a municipality MURDEROUSNESS (16) MUSCULARITIES (17) MUSICIANSHIPS (22) MUSICOLOGICAL (20) MUSICOLOGISTS (18) [noun] One who studies musicology. MUTAGENICALLY (21) MUTUALIZATION (24) MYCETOPHAGOUS (26) MYCOBACTERIAL (24) MYCOBACTERIUM (26) [noun] Any of many rod-shaped, aerobic bacteria, of the genus Mycobacterium, that cause diseases such as tuberculosis and leprosy. MYCOLOGICALLY (26) MYELENCEPHALA (25) MYELOFIBROSES (23) MYELOFIBROSIS (23) MYELOFIBROTIC (25) MYOCARDITISES (21) MYOELECTRICAL (22) MYRMECOLOGIES (23) MYRMECOLOGIST (23) MYRMECOPHILES (27) [noun] An organism, especially an insect, that lives in close association with or shares a nest with a species of ant. MYSTIFICATION (23) MYTHOGRAPHERS (27) [noun] One who studies or writes down myths and legends MYTHOGRAPHIES (27) MYTHOLOGIZERS (31) MYTHOLOGIZING (32) [verb] To interpret (a story etc.) as mythological; to explain the symbolic meaning of. | [verb] To construct a myth or mythology. | [verb] To make (something or someone) into a myth; to create a legend about. MYTHOPOETICAL (25) NAPHTHYLAMINE (26) NECROPHILISMS (22) NEMATOLOGICAL (18) NEMATOLOGISTS (16) NEOCLASSICISM (19) [noun] Any of several movements in the arts, architecture, literature and music that revived forms from earlier centuries. NEOLIBERALISM (17) [noun] A political ideology or ideological trend based on neoclassical economics that espouses economic liberalism, favouring trade liberalisation, financial deregulation, a small government, privatisation and liberalisation of government businesses, passive antitrust enforcement, accepting greater economic inequality and disfavouring unionisation. | [noun] The ideology associated with the New Democrats and the Democratic Leadership Council. NEOPLASTICISM (19) [noun] A style of abstract painting, developed by Piet Mondrian, that used only vertical and horizontal lines with the spaces filled in black, white, grey, and primary colours NEPHELOMETERS (20) [noun] An instrument for measuring various aspects of the suspended particles in a fluid; especially in a colloid. NEPHELOMETRIC (22) NEPHRECTOMIES (22) [noun] The surgical removal of a kidney. NEPHRECTOMIZE (31) NEURAMINIDASE (16) [noun] An antigenic enzyme, found on the surfaces of viruses, that catalyzes the hydrolysis of terminal acylneuraminic residues from oligosaccharides, glycoproteins, and glycolipids. NEUROANATOMIC (17) NEUROBLASTOMA (17) [noun] A form of cancer that affects the ganglia in various parts of the body NEUROCHEMICAL (22) [noun] A chemical substance that is involved in neural activity, such as a neurotransmitter | [adjective] Of or pertaining to neurochemistry, the study of the chemical basis of nerve and brain activity NEUROCHEMISTS (20) NEUROFIBROMAS (20) [noun] A benign tumor composed of Schwann cells NEUROHORMONAL (18) NEUROHORMONES (18) [noun] Any hormone that stimulates the nervous system NEUROMUSCULAR (17) [adjective] Pertaining to the voluntary or reflexive control of muscles by nerves. NEWSMAGAZINES (28) NICOTINAMIDES (18) NIGHTMARISHLY (25) NINCOMPOOPERY (24) NITROMETHANES (18) NOCTAMBULISTS (19) [noun] One who sleepwalks at night; a somnambulist. NOISOMENESSES (15) NOMENCLATURAL (17) NOMENCLATURES (17) [noun] A set of rules used for forming the names or terms in a particular field of arts or sciences. | [noun] A set of names or terms. | [noun] A name. NONADMISSIONS (16) NONALIGNMENTS (16) [noun] The condition of being nonaligned NONATTACHMENT (20) NONAUTOMOTIVE (18) NONAUTONOMOUS (15) NONCOMBATANTS (19) [noun] A non-fighting member of the armed forces. | [noun] A civilian in time of conflict. NONCOMMERCIAL (21) [noun] A noncommercial trader. | [adjective] Not engaged in commerce. NONCOMMITMENT (21) NONCOMMUNISTS (19) [noun] One who is not a communist. NONCOMPARABLE (21) NONCOMPATIBLE (21) NONCOMPETITOR (19) NONCOMPLIANCE (21) [noun] A failure to comply. NONCONFORMERS (20) NONCONFORMING (21) NONCONFORMISM (22) NONCONFORMIST (20) [noun] A member of a church separated from the Church of England; a Protestant dissenter. | [noun] Loosely, a Christian who does not conform to the doctrines of an established church. | [noun] Someone who does not conform to accepted beliefs, customs or practices. NONCONFORMITY (23) [noun] Rejection of or the failure to conform, especially to standards, rules, or laws. | [noun] The refusal to adhere to a state religion. | [noun] A type of unconformity in which a non-sedimentary rock intrudes in sedimentary layers. NONCUMULATIVE (20) NONDEMOCRATIC (20) NONDIPLOMATIC (20) NONECONOMISTS (17) NONELEMENTARY (18) NONEMPLOYMENT (22) [noun] Unemployment | [adjective] Not of or pertaining to employment. NONENGAGEMENT (17) NONGOVERNMENT (19) NONHOMOLOGOUS (19) NONHOMOSEXUAL (25) NONIMMIGRANTS (18) NONINCUMBENTS (19) NONJUDGMENTAL (24) [adjective] Without making judgements, especially those based upon personal ethics or opinions NONLEGUMINOUS (16) NONMAINSTREAM (17) NONMANAGEMENT (18) NONMANAGERIAL (16) NONMEANINGFUL (19) NONMEASURABLE (17) NONMECHANICAL (22) NONMEMBERSHIP (24) NONMINORITIES (15) NONMONETARIST (15) NONMONOGAMOUS (18) NONMOTILITIES (15) NONMYELINATED (19) NONPARAMETRIC (19) [adjective] Having a flexible number or nature of parameters which are not fixed in advance. | [adjective] Free of assumptions about the frequency distributions of the variables being assessed. NONPERFORMERS (20) NONPERFORMING (21) NONPERMISSIVE (20) NONPROGRAMMER (20) NONRANDOMNESS (16) NONSYSTEMATIC (20) NONTREATMENTS (15) NONUNIFORMITY (21) NORMALIZATION (24) [noun] Any process that makes something more normal or regular, which typically means conforming to some regularity or rule, or returning from some state of abnormality. | [noun] Standardization, act of imposing standards or norms or rules or regulations. | [noun] In relational database design, a process that breaks down data into record groups for efficient processing, by eliminating redundancy. NORMATIVENESS (18) NORMOTENSIVES (18) NORMOTHERMIAS (20) NUCLEOPLASMIC (21) NUMEROLOGICAL (18) NUMEROLOGISTS (16) NYMPHOLEPSIES (25) NYMPHOMANIACS (27) [noun] A woman with an excessive libido. OBSCURANTISMS (19) ODONTOGLOSSUM (17) [noun] Any of very many orchids of the genus Odontoglossum. OLEANDOMYCINS (21) OLEOMARGARINE (16) [noun] Margarine OLFACTOMETERS (20) [noun] A device used to measure the acuity of a person's sense of smell. | [noun] A device used to measure odour intensity, and concentrations of volatile organic compounds, by means of their smell. OMBUDSMANSHIP (25) OMINOUSNESSES (15) OMNICOMPETENT (21) [adjective] Competent in every area; capable of doing everything. OMNIPRESENCES (19) ONEIROMANCIES (17) ONOMASTICALLY (20) ONOMASTICIANS (17) ONOMATOLOGIES (16) ONOMATOLOGIST (16) ONOMATOPOEIAS (17) ONOMATOPOETIC (19) OPENMOUTHEDLY (24) OPERATIONISMS (17) OPHTHALMOLOGY (27) [noun] The anatomy, functions, pathology, and treatment of the eye. OPTIMISATIONS (17) [noun] The design and operation of a system or process to make it as good as possible in some defined sense. OPTIMIZATIONS (26) [noun] The design and operation of a system or process to make it as good as possible in some defined sense. ORISMOLOGICAL (18) ORNAMENTATION (15) [noun] Decoration, adornment or embellishment. | [noun] The act or process of decorating etc. | [noun] Short notes added to a composition to emphasize certain notes and to add style. OSTEOMALACIAS (17) OSTEOMYELITIS (18) [noun] An infection of the bone OSTEOSARCOMAS (17) [noun] A type of cancer of the bone OUTMANEUVERED (19) [verb] To perform movements more adroitly or successfully than. | [adjective] Overcome by the maneuvering of others. OUTMANIPULATE (17) OUTPERFORMING (21) [verb] To perform better than something or someone. OUTPLACEMENTS (19) [noun] The process of helping to find new employment for redundant workers, especially executives OVARIECTOMIES (20) [noun] Surgical removal of one or both ovaries. OVERAMBITIOUS (20) [adjective] Excessively ambitious OVERAMPLIFIED (24) OVERCOMMITTED (23) [verb] To make excessive commitments, either beyond one's ability or beyond what is reasonable | [adjective] Having committed too much of one's time or resources. OVERCONSUMING (21) OVERDEMANDING (21) OVERDOCUMENTS (21) OVERDOMINANCE (21) OVERDRAMATIZE (28) [verb] To dramatize to excess; to make overdramatic. OVEREMBELLISH (23) [verb] To embellish excessively. OVEREMOTIONAL (18) [adjective] Showing too much emotion. OVEREMPHASIZE (32) [verb] To place too much emphasis on; to overstate the importance of. OVERESTIMATED (19) [verb] To judge or calculate too highly. OVERESTIMATES (18) [verb] To judge or calculate too highly. OVERGLAMORIZE (28) OVERIMPRESSED (21) OVERIMPRESSES (20) OVERINFORMING (22) OVERMASTERING (19) [verb] To overpower or overwhelm. | [adjective] Which overmasters; dominating, oppressive, conquering. OVERMEDICATED (22) OVERMEDICATES (21) OVEROPTIMISMS (22) OVEROPTIMISTS (20) OVERORNAMENTS (18) OVERPROGRAMED (22) OVERPROMISING (21) [verb] To promise more than is delivered OVERPROMOTING (21) OVERSTATEMENT (18) [noun] An exaggeration; a statement in excess of what is reasonable. | [noun] The tendency to overstate. OVERSTIMULATE (18) [verb] To stimulate to an excessive degree; to expose to excessive stimulation. OVERTREATMENT (18) OXYHEMOGLOBIN (31) [noun] The form of haemoglobin, loosely combined with oxygen, present in arterial and capillary blood. PAEDOMORPHISM (25) PALEOMAGNETIC (20) PALINDROMISTS (18) PAMPHLETEERED (23) [verb] To publish and distribute pamphlets as a form of propaganda. PANCREOZYMINS (31) PANORAMICALLY (22) PAPILLOMATOUS (19) PARALLELOGRAM (18) [noun] A convex quadrilateral in which each pair of opposite edges are parallel and of equal length. | [noun] (Gaelic games) either of two rectangular areas (respectively the large parallelogram and the small parallelogram) abutting the goal line in front of the goal. (Since 1986 officially named the large rectangle and small rectangle, though the older names are still occasionally used.) PARAMAGNETISM (20) PARAMETERIZED (27) [verb] To describe in terms of parameters. | [verb] To rewrite (a database query, etc.) as a template into which parameters can be inserted. PARAMETERIZES (26) [verb] To describe in terms of parameters. | [verb] To rewrite (a database query, etc.) as a template into which parameters can be inserted. PARAMETRIZING (27) [verb] To describe in terms of parameters. | [verb] To rewrite (a database query, etc.) as a template into which parameters can be inserted. PARAMOUNTCIES (19) [noun] The fact or condition of being paramount; supremacy, precedence. PARAMYXOVIRUS (30) [noun] Any member of the Paramyxoviridae family of negative-sense single-stranded RNA viruses responsible for a number of human and animal diseases. PARANORMALITY (20) PARATHORMONES (20) PARKINSONISMS (21) PARLIAMENTARY (20) [noun] A parliamentary train. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or enacted by a parliament | [adjective] Having the supreme executive and legislative power resting with a cabinet of ministers chosen from, and responsible to a parliament. PAROCHIALISMS (22) PARTICULARISM (19) [noun] The principle that only certain people are chosen by God for salvation. | [noun] An exclusive focus on a particular group, area, sect etc. | [noun] The principle that individual states, races of a federation etc. may act independently of a central authority. PASSEMENTERIE (17) [noun] A decorative piece of lace or other cloth on clothes. | [noun] Trimmings consisting of braids, cords, beads, tinsel, etc. PATERFAMILIAS (20) [noun] A man who is the head of a household, family or tribe. PATHOGNOMONIC (23) [adjective] (of a sign or symptom) specifically characteristic or indicative of a particular disease or condition. PEDESTRIANISM (18) PENETROMETERS (17) [noun] A mechanical device that measures the ease of penetration of an object into a semisolid | [noun] A device that measures the penetrating power of electromagnetic radiation (especially X-rays) PENICILLAMINE (19) PENULTIMATELY (20) PERAMBULATING (20) [verb] To walk about, roam or stroll. | [verb] To inspect (an area) on foot. PERAMBULATION (19) PERAMBULATORS (19) [noun] A baby carriage; a pram. | [noun] One who perambulates. | [noun] A surveyor's instrument for measuring distances, consisting of a wheel that rolls over the ground, along with a clockwork apparatus and a dial plate upon which the distance travelled is shown by an index. PERAMBULATORY (22) PERFECTIONISM (22) [noun] An unwillingness to settle for anything less than perfection. | [noun] A belief that spiritual perfection may be achieved during life, or that it should be striven for. PERFORMATIVES (23) [noun] A performative utterance. PERICHONDRIUM (23) [noun] A dense layer of fibrous connective tissue surrounding the cartilage of developing bone PERMANENTNESS (17) PERMANGANATES (18) [noun] Any salt of permanganic acid: they are purple crystalline solids, mostly soluble in water, and are strong oxidizing agents | [noun] Potassium permanganate PERMUTATIONAL (17) PETROCHEMICAL (24) [noun] Any compound derived from petroleum or natural gas | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the such compounds, or the industry that produces them PHARMACOGNOSY (26) [noun] A branch of pharmacology that studies medical substances that are derived from natural sources, and their recognition. PHARMACOLOGIC (25) [adjective] Of or having to do with pharmacology. PHARMACOPEIAL (24) PHARMACOPEIAS (24) [noun] An official book describing medicines or other pharmacological substances, especially their use, preparation, and regulation. | [noun] A collection of drugs. PHARMACOPOEIA (24) [noun] An official book describing medicines or other pharmacological substances, especially their use, preparation, and regulation. | [noun] A collection of drugs. PHENMETRAZINE (29) PHENOMENALISM (22) [noun] The doctrine that physical objects exist only as perceptual phenomena or sensory stimuli PHENOMENALIST (20) PHENOMENOLOGY (24) [noun] The study of structures of consciousness as experienced from the first-person point of view. | [noun] A movement based on this, originated about 1905 by Edmund Husserl. PHENTOLAMINES (20) PHILHARMONICS (25) PHILHELLENISM (23) PHILISTINISMS (20) PHILLUMENISTS (20) [noun] A person who collects match-related items, like matchbox labels, matchboxes, matchbooks, or matchbook covers. PHLEBOTOMISTS (22) PHOTOCHEMICAL (27) [adjective] Of, relating to, or produced by photochemistry or by photochemical reactions PHOTOCHEMISTS (25) PHOTOCHROMISM (27) PHOTOCOMPOSED (25) PHOTOCOMPOSER (24) PHOTOCOMPOSES (24) PHOTOEMISSION (20) [noun] The ejection of electrons from the surface of a solid by incident electromagnetic radiation PHOTOEMISSIVE (23) PHOTOMONTAGES (21) [noun] A composite image combining two or more photographs. | [noun] The art of constructing such images. PHOTOPOLYMERS (25) [noun] Any polymer that reacts to light with a physical or chemical change, used especially for teeth fillings PHOTOTROPISMS (22) PHRAGMOPLASTS (23) PHRASEMAKINGS (25) PHRASEMONGERS (21) PHYCOMYCETOUS (30) PHYSIOGNOMIES (24) [noun] The art or pseudoscience of deducing the predominant temper and other characteristic qualities of the mind from the outward appearance, especially from the features of the face. | [noun] The face or countenance, with respect to the temper of the mind; particular configuration, cast, or expression of countenance, as denoting character. | [noun] The art of telling fortunes by inspection of the features. PHYSOSTIGMINE (24) [noun] A parasympathomimetic, a reversible cholinesterase inhibitor alkaloid of the Calabar bean, used to treat certain medical conditions. PHYTOCHEMICAL (30) [noun] Any chemical substance characteristic of plants. | [noun] Any chemical or nutrient derived from a plant source; a phytonutrient. | [adjective] Pertaining to the chemistry of plants. PHYTOCHEMISTS (28) PHYTOHORMONES (26) PICTORIALISMS (19) PIGMENTATIONS (18) PLANETESIMALS (17) [noun] Any of many small, solid astronomical objects that orbit a star and form protoplanets through mutual gravitational attraction. PLASMODESMATA (20) [noun] A microscopic channel traversing the cell walls of plant cells and some algal cells, enabling transport and communication between them. PLATYHELMINTH (26) [noun] Any flatworm of the phylum Platyhelminthes. PLEOMORPHISMS (24) PLETHYSMOGRAM (26) PNEUMATICALLY (22) PNEUMATOLYTIC (22) PNEUMATOPHORE (22) [noun] A gas-filled sac or float of some colonial marine coelenterates, such as the Portuguese man-of-war. | [noun] An aerial root, in mangroves etc., specialized for gaseous exchange. | [noun] An apparatus consisting of a bag with a tube and mouthpiece, which may be attached to the body. The bag contains oxygen to be breathed by the wearer in rescue work in mines, etc. PNEUMONECTOMY (24) [noun] The surgical removal of all or part of a lung. PNEUMONITISES (17) POCOCURANTISM (21) POIKILOTHERMS (24) [noun] A cold-blooded animal POLARIMETRIES (17) POLIOMYELITIS (20) [noun] Acute infection by the poliovirus, especially of the motor neurons in the spinal cord and brainstem, leading to muscle weakness, paralysis and sometimes deformity. POLYCENTRISMS (22) POLYCHOTOMIES (25) POLYCHOTOMOUS (25) POLYCHROMATIC (27) [adjective] Showing a variety, or a change, of colours; having many colours; multicoloured. | [adjective] (of electromagnetic radiation) Composed of more than one wavelength. POLYCYTHEMIAS (28) POLYEMBRYONIC (27) POLYGLOTTISMS (21) POLYMORPHISMS (27) [noun] The ability to assume different forms or shapes. | [noun] The coexistence, in the same locality, of two or more distinct forms independent of sex, not connected by intermediate gradations, but produced from common parents. | [noun] The feature pertaining to the dynamic treatment of data elements based on their type, allowing for an instance of a method to have several definitions. POLYRIBOSOMAL (22) POLYRIBOSOMES (22) [noun] A cluster of ribosomes, connected by mRNA, that collectively synthesizes protein POMPOUSNESSES (19) POSTEMBRYONAL (22) POSTEMBRYONIC (24) POSTEMERGENCE (20) POSTEMERGENCY (23) POSTMODERNISM (20) [noun] Any style in art, architecture, literature, philosophy, etc., that reacts against an earlier modernist movement. | [noun] An attitude of skepticism or irony toward modernist ideologies, often questioning the assumptions of Enlightenment rationality and rejecting the idea of objective truth. POSTMODERNIST (18) [noun] An advocate or follower of postmodernism. | [adjective] Postmodern POSTPONEMENTS (19) [noun] A delay, as a formal delay in a proceeding. POSTTRAUMATIC (19) POSTTREATMENT (17) POSTVASECTOMY (25) POTENTIOMETER (17) [noun] A user-adjustable 3 terminal variable resistor that can be used as a voltage divider. | [noun] An instrument that measures a voltage by opposing it with a precise fraction of a known voltage, and without drawing current from the unknown source. PRAGMATICALLY (23) [adverb] In a pragmatic manner. | [adverb] In terms of pragmatics. PRAGMATICISMS (22) PRAGMATICISTS (20) PRASEODYMIUMS (23) PREADMISSIONS (18) PREAMPLIFIERS (22) [noun] A voltage amplifier for amplifying a low-level input signal; its output is the input to a higher-level amplifier. PRECOMBUSTION (21) PRECOMMITMENT (23) PREDETERMINED (19) [verb] To determine or decide in advance. | [verb] To doom by previous decree; to foredoom. | [adjective] Determined in advance PREDETERMINER (18) [noun] (grammar) The function of a phrase that precedes a determiner in a noun phrase and modifies the head noun. PREDETERMINES (18) [verb] To determine or decide in advance. | [verb] To doom by previous decree; to foredoom. PREDOMINANCES (20) PREDOMINANTLY (21) [adverb] In a predominant manner. Most commonly or frequently by a large margin. PREDOMINATELY (21) [adverb] In a predominate manner; predominantly. PREDOMINATING (19) [verb] To dominate, have control, or succeed by superior numbers or size. | [verb] To be prominent; to loom large; to be the chief component of a whole. | [verb] To dominate or hold power over, especially through numerical advantage; to outweigh. PREDOMINATION (18) [noun] The act or state of predominating; ascendency; predominance. PREECLAMPSIAS (21) PREEMPLOYMENT (24) PREENROLLMENT (17) PREEXPERIMENT (26) PREFIGUREMENT (21) PREFORMATIONS (20) PREFORMATTING (21) PREFORMULATED (21) PREFORMULATES (20) PRELIMINARIES (17) [noun] A preparation for a main matter; an introduction. | [noun] Any of a series of sports events that determine the finalists | [noun] A relatively minor contest that precedes a major one, especially in boxing PRELIMINARILY (20) [adverb] In a preliminary manner. PREMATURENESS (17) PREMATURITIES (17) PREMEDITATING (19) [verb] To meditate, consider, or plan beforehand; to think about and revolve in the mind beforehand. PREMEDITATION (18) [noun] The act of planning or plotting something in advance, especially a crime. PREMEDITATIVE (21) PREMEDITATORS (18) PREMENOPAUSAL (19) [adjective] Having not yet undergone menopause PREMILLENNIAL (17) [noun] One who believes in the advent of Christ before the new millennium. | [adjective] Occurring before, or in anticipation of, a new millennium PREMOISTENING (18) PREMONITORILY (20) PRENOMINATING (18) PRENOMINATION (17) PREORDAINMENT (18) PREPROGRAMING (21) [verb] To program something in advance. | [verb] To predispose to certain thoughts or behaviours. PREPROGRAMMED (23) [verb] To program something in advance. | [verb] To predispose to certain thoughts or behaviours. PRERETIREMENT (17) PRESENTIMENTS (17) [noun] A premonition; a feeling that something, often of undesirable nature, is going to happen. PRESETTLEMENT (17) PRESUMPTIVELY (25) PRETERMISSION (17) PRETERMITTING (18) [verb] To intentionally disregard something, allow it to go unnoticed, or change the subject in response to someone's comment; to omit or fail to carry out something; to prematurely terminate or interrupt something. PRETOURNAMENT (17) PRETREATMENTS (17) [noun] Any treatment received before some other process. PRIMATOLOGIES (18) PRIMATOLOGIST (18) PRIMITIVENESS (20) PRIMITIVISTIC (22) PRIMITIVITIES (20) PRIMOGENITORS (18) [noun] An initial ancestor. PRIMOGENITURE (18) [noun] The state of being the firstborn of the children of the same parents. | [noun] The principle that the eldest child has an exclusive right of inheritance. | [noun] An instance of such a right of inheritance, established by custom or law. PRISMATICALLY (22) PROBLEMATICAL (21) [adjective] Doubtful or disputed | [adjective] Dubious or ambiguous PROCLAMATIONS (19) [noun] A statement which is proclaimed; formal public announcement. PROGRAMMABLES (22) PROGRESSIVISM (21) [noun] A political ideology that favours progress towards better conditions in society. PROLEGOMENOUS (18) PROMISCUITIES (19) PROMISCUOUSLY (22) PROMOTABILITY (22) PROMOTIVENESS (20) PROMULGATIONS (18) PRONOUNCEMENT (19) [noun] An official public announcement. | [noun] An utterance. PROSTATECTOMY (22) [noun] The surgical removal of part or all of the prostate gland. PROTACTINIUMS (19) PROTECTIONISM (19) [noun] A system or policy of protecting the domestic producers of a product from foreign competition by imposing tariffs, quotas, duties or other barriers on importations. PROVINCIALISM (22) [noun] The quality of being provincial; having provincial tastes, mentality, manners. | [noun] A word or locution characteristic of a region or district. PROXIMATENESS (24) PSEUDOMONADES (19) PSEUDOMORPHIC (25) PSYCHODYNAMIC (31) PSYCHOLOGISMS (26) PSYCHOMETRICS (27) [noun] The design of psychological tests to measure intelligence, aptitude and personality; and the analysis and interpretation of their results. PSYCHOMETRIES (25) PSYCHOSOMATIC (27) [adjective] Pertaining to both the mind and the body. | [adjective] Pertaining to physical diseases, symptoms etc. which have mental causes. PSYCHROMETERS (25) [noun] Any of several instruments used to measure the relative humidity of the atmosphere; especially a wet-and-dry-bulb hygrometer. PSYCHROMETRIC (27) PTERIDOSPERMS (20) [noun] Any of various extinct gymnosperms, of the division Pteridospermatophyta, resembling ferns, but producing seeds instead of spores PUMPERNICKELS (25) PUSILLANIMITY (20) [noun] The quality or state of being pusillanimous; the vice of being timid and cowardly, and thus not living up to one's full potential; pusillanimousness. PUSILLANIMOUS (17) [adjective] Showing ignoble cowardice, or contemptible timidity. PYRHELIOMETER (23) PYRIDOXAMINES (28) PYRIMETHAMINE (25) [noun] A folic acid antagonist, used in the prophylactic treatment of malaria PYROMORPHITES (25) QUADRUMVIRATE (28) [noun] A group of four people, especially a council of four men sharing office or rule. QUARRELSOMELY (27) QUARTERMASTER (24) [noun] An officer whose duty is to provide quarters, provisions, storage, clothing, fuel, stationery, and transportation for a regiment or other body of troops, and superintend the supplies. | [noun] A petty officer who attends to the helm, binnacle, signals, and the like, under the direction of the master. QUINQUENNIUMS (33) [noun] A period of five years. RACEMIZATIONS (26) RADIOCHEMICAL (23) [noun] Any compound containing one of more atoms of a radioactive isotope; a radiolabel or radiotracer | [adjective] Of or pertaining to radiochemistry | [adjective] Describing a chemical change that is the result of ionizing radiation RADIOCHEMISTS (21) RADIOELEMENTS (16) [noun] Any element whose currently known isotopes are all radioactive. RADIOTHORIUMS (19) RAMIFICATIONS (20) [noun] A branching-out, the act or result of developing branches; specifically the divergence of the stem and limbs of a plant into smaller ones, or of similar developments in blood vessels, anatomical structures etc. | [noun] An offshoot of a decision, fact etc.; a consequence or implication, especially one which complicates a situation. | [noun] An arrangement of branches. RANDOMIZATION (25) RAPPROCHEMENT (24) [noun] The reestablishment of cordial relations, particularly between two countries; a reconciliation. RAZZAMATAZZES (51) REACCLIMATIZE (28) READJUSTMENTS (23) [noun] A second, or subsequent adjustment REAFFIRMATION (21) [noun] An act of reaffirming; a second or subsequent affirmation. REAPPOINTMENT (19) REARRANGEMENT (16) [noun] The process of rearranging. | [noun] A rearrangement reaction. REASSEMBLAGES (18) REASSESSMENTS (15) [noun] The act of reassessing; a second or subsequent assessment. REASSIGNMENTS (16) [noun] The act of reassigning; a second or subsequent assignment. REATTACHMENTS (20) RECOMBINATION (19) [noun] Combination a second or subsequent time. | [noun] The formation of genetic combinations in offspring that are not present in the parents | [noun] The reverse of dissociation RECOMMENDABLE (22) RECOMMISSIONS (19) [verb] To give a new commission or to validate an existing commission. | [verb] To put back in service (undoing decommissioning). RECOMMITMENTS (21) RECOMPILATION (19) RECOMPOSITION (19) [noun] Composition again or anew; the process or result of recomposing RECOMPUTATION (19) RECONCILEMENT (19) RECONTAMINATE (17) RECRIMINATING (18) [verb] To accuse in return, state an accusation in return. RECRIMINATION (17) [noun] The act of recriminating. | [noun] A counter or mutual accusation. RECRIMINATIVE (20) [adjective] Recriminatory RECRIMINATORY (20) [adjective] In the way of recriminations. REDEMPTIONERS (18) REDEPLOYMENTS (21) [noun] The act of redeploying. | [noun] A new deployment. REDETERMINING (17) [verb] To determine again REDEVELOPMENT (21) [noun] The process of developing something anew. | [noun] The demolition of old, redundant or unfashionable buildings or infrastructure and the construction of new ones on the same site. REDUCTIONISMS (18) REEMBROIDERED (19) REEMPHASIZING (30) [verb] To emphasize again; to reiterate. REEMPLOYMENTS (22) REENGAGEMENTS (17) REENLISTMENTS (15) REEXAMINATION (22) [noun] A second or subsequent examination. | [noun] Subsequent questioning of a witness after cross-examination. | [noun] In United States patent law, a procedure under which an issued patent is returned to the examiner to determine if it remains valid in light of newly discovered prior art. REFLECTOMETER (20) [noun] An instrument used to measure the reflectance of a surface. REFLECTOMETRY (23) REFORMABILITY (23) REFORMATIONAL (18) REFORMATORIES (18) [noun] A prison, especially one for juveniles; a reform school. REFORMULATING (19) [verb] To formulate again or differently. REFORMULATION (18) REFRACTOMETER (20) [noun] An optical instrument used to measure the refractive index of a substance. REFRACTOMETRY (23) REFURBISHMENT (23) [noun] The act of refurbishing; renovation. REGIMENTATION (16) REIMBURSEMENT (19) [noun] The act of compensating someone for an expense. REIMPORTATION (17) REIMPOSITIONS (17) [noun] The act of reimposing; the act of imposing something again. REIMPRESSIONS (17) REINDICTMENTS (18) REINFORCEMENT (20) [noun] The act, process, or state of reinforcing or being reinforced. | [noun] A thing that reinforces. | [noun] (in the plural) Additional troops or materiel sent to support a military action. REINSTATEMENT (15) [noun] The act of restoring something to its previous state. REINVESTMENTS (18) [noun] The condition of being reinvested | [noun] A second or subsequent investment in the same thing REMANUFACTURE (20) REMATERIALIZE (24) REMEASUREMENT (17) REMEDIABILITY (21) REMEMBRANCERS (21) [noun] A person who reminds someone. | [noun] A memento or souvenir. | [noun] A recorder, or municipal judge. REMILITARIZED (25) [verb] To militarize (a demilitarized area) again. REMILITARIZES (24) [verb] To militarize (a demilitarized area) again. REMINISCENCES (19) [noun] An act of remembering long-past experiences, often fondly. | [noun] A mental image thus remembered. REMINISCENTLY (20) REMONSTRANCES (17) [noun] A remonstration; disapproval; a formal, usually written, objection or protest. REMONSTRANTLY (18) REMONSTRATING (16) [verb] To object; to express disapproval (with, against). | [verb] Specifically, to lodge an official objection (especially by means of a remonstrance) with a monarch or other ruling body. | [verb] (often with an object consisting of direct speech or a clause beginning with that) To state or plead as an objection, formal protest, or expression of disapproval. REMONSTRATION (15) REMONSTRATIVE (18) REMONSTRATORS (15) REMORSELESSLY (18) REMOTIVATIONS (18) REMOVABLENESS (20) REMUNERATIONS (15) [noun] Something given in exchange for goods or services rendered. | [noun] A payment for work done; wages, salary, emolument. | [noun] A recompense for a loss; compensation. REMYTHOLOGIZE (31) RENOMINATIONS (15) RENOUNCEMENTS (17) REPLENISHMENT (20) [noun] The act of replenishing. | [noun] A new supply of something. REPROGRAMMING (21) [verb] To program anew or differently. | [verb] (by extension) To make a fundamental change to the behaviour or habits of. | [verb] To shift funds appropriated for one government program to a different government program. REPUBLICANISM (21) [noun] The political ideology of being a citizen in a state as a republic under which the people hold popular sovereignty. RESETTLEMENTS (15) [noun] The transportation of a group of people to a new settlement RESPIROMETERS (17) [noun] A device used to measure the rate of respiration of living organisms, such as plants or fish. | [noun] An apparatus for supplying air to a diver under water. RESPIROMETRIC (19) RESSENTIMENTS (15) RESTIMULATING (16) RESTIMULATION (15) RESUBMISSIONS (17) [noun] The act or process of resubmitting; a second or subsequent submission RESYSTEMATIZE (27) RETRANSFORMED (19) RETRANSMITTED (16) [verb] To transmit again. RETRENCHMENTS (20) [noun] A curtailment or reduction. | [noun] A defensive work constructed within a fortification to make it more defensible by allowing defenders to retreat into and fight from it even after the enemy has taken the outer work. RHABDOMANCERS (23) RHABDOMANCIES (23) RHADAMANTHINE (22) RHEUMATICALLY (23) RHODOMONTADES (20) RHOMBOHEDRONS (24) [noun] A prism with six faces, each a rhombus. RHYTHMICITIES (26) RHYTHMIZATION (33) RISORGIMENTOS (16) ROENTGENOGRAM (17) [noun] An X-ray image. ROMANIZATIONS (24) ROMANTICISING (18) [verb] To interpret or view something in a romantic (unrealistic, idealized) manner. | [verb] To think or act in a romantic manner. ROMANTICIZING (27) [verb] To interpret or view something in a romantic (unrealistic, idealized) manner. | [verb] To think or act in a romantic manner. RUDIMENTARILY (19) RUMBUSTIOUSLY (20) RUTHERFORDIUM (22) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Rf) with an atomic number of 104. | [noun] A rejected name for seaborgium. SACCHARIMETER (22) SACCHAROMETER (22) [noun] A hydrometer used to measure the sugar content of a liquid. SACCHAROMYCES (27) SACERDOTALISM (18) SACRAMENTALLY (20) SADOMASOCHISM (23) [noun] The practices of sadism and masochism collectively, usually in reference to consensual practices within the BDSM community. | [noun] Sadism and masochism: the (often sexual) enjoyment by one person of both inflicting and receiving pain. SADOMASOCHIST (21) SALESMANSHIPS (20) SALMONBERRIES (17) [noun] A bush, Rubus spectabilis, found on the Pacific coast of North America. | [noun] The fruit from this bush, similar in appearance and texture to the blackberry and raspberry. SALMONELLOSES (15) SALMONELLOSIS (15) [noun] Any of several diseases caused by infection with Salmonella bacteria SALVATIONISMS (18) SANCTIMONIOUS (17) [adjective] Making a show of being morally better than others, especially hypocritically pious. | [adjective] Holy, devout. SANSCULOTTISM (17) SCALARIFORMLY (23) SCANDALMONGER (19) [noun] A person who trades in gossip; one who collects and disseminates rumors. SCAPEGOATISMS (20) SCHEMATICALLY (25) SCHISMATIZING (30) SCHOLASTICISM (22) [noun] A tradition or school of philosophy, originating in the Middle Ages, that combines classical philosophy with Catholic theology SCHOOLMARMISH (25) SCHOOLMASTERS (20) [noun] A male teacher. | [noun] Male teacher in charge of a school, usually a small one. | [noun] Anything that teaches. SCHUSSBOOMERS (22) SCLERENCHYMAS (25) SCLERODERMATA (18) SCRIMSHANDERS (21) [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. | [verb] To engrave fanciful designs on (shells, whales' teeth, etc.). SCRUMPTIOUSLY (22) SECESSIONISMS (17) SECTARIANISMS (17) SECTIONALISMS (17) SEDIMENTATION (16) [noun] The separation of a suspension of solid particles into a concentrated slurry and a supernatant liquid, either to concentrate the solid or to clarify the liquid. SEDIMENTOLOGY (20) SEGMENTATIONS (16) [noun] The act or an instance of dividing into segments | [noun] The state of being divided into segments | [noun] The partitioning of an image into groups of pixels SEISMOGRAPHER (21) SEISMOGRAPHIC (23) SEISMOLOGICAL (18) SEISMOLOGISTS (16) SEISMOMETRIES (17) SEMASIOLOGIES (16) SEMIARIDITIES (16) SEMIAUTOMATIC (19) [noun] A semi-automatic firearm, especially such a pistol. | [noun] A semi-automatic transmission | [adjective] Partially automatic. SEMICIVILIZED (30) [adjective] Somewhat or partially civilized. SEMICLASSICAL (19) [adjective] Describing classical music of broad, popular appeal | [adjective] Describing any of various approximations to either relativistic or quantum mechanical physics that retains elements of classical physics SEMICONDUCTOR (20) [noun] A substance with electrical properties intermediate between a good conductor and a good insulator. SEMICONSCIOUS (19) [adjective] Neither fully conscious nor unconscious, partially aware but confused or distracted. SEMIDIAMETERS (18) [noun] The apparent radius of a star etc, when viewed from Earth. | [noun] A radius: half of a diameter. SEMIEMPIRICAL (21) SEMIEVERGREEN (19) SEMIFINALISTS (18) SEMILEGENDARY (20) SEMILITERATES (15) [noun] A person who is semiliterate. SEMIMONTHLIES (20) SEMIPARASITES (17) SEMIPARASITIC (19) SEMIPERMANENT (19) [adjective] Neither temporary nor entirely permanent; of indefinite duration. SEMIPERMEABLE (21) [adjective] Permeable to some things and not to others, as a cell membrane which allows some molecules through but blocks other substances. SEMIPOLITICAL (19) SEMIPORCELAIN (19) SEMIRELIGIOUS (16) SEMISEDENTARY (19) SEMISYNTHETIC (23) [noun] Any compound that is synthesized by chemically modifying a natural material. | [adjective] Synthesized by chemically modifying a natural material SEMITONICALLY (20) SEMPITERNALLY (20) SENSITOMETERS (15) [noun] An instrument used to measure the sensitivity of photographic film to light. SENSITOMETRIC (17) SENTIMENTALLY (18) SHAMELESSNESS (18) SIGMOIDOSCOPY (24) [noun] Internal examination of the sigmoid colon SLEDGEHAMMERS (22) [noun] A hammer that consists of a large, heavy, broad and flat block of metal (the head) attached to a handle typically 0.5 meter to 1 meter long. The sledgehammer's design is meant to allow it to be swung powerfully, and to distribute force over a wide area upon impact. SLIPSTREAMING (18) [verb] To take advantage of the suction produced by a slipstream by travelling immediately behind the slipstream generator. | [verb] To incorporate additional software (such as patches) into an existing installer. SLUMPFLATIONS (20) SMALLHOLDINGS (20) [noun] A piece of land, smaller than a farm, used for the cultivation of vegetables or the breeding of animals. | [noun] A small plantation or land with a small number of slaves (generally 19 or less). Contrasted with middling plantation (20-49 slaves) and large plantation (50+ and owned by planters). SNOWMOBILINGS (21) SNOWMOBILISTS (20) SOCIOECONOMIC (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to social and economic factors. SOLEMNIZATION (24) SOMATOLOGICAL (18) SOMATOPLEURES (17) [noun] A fold of tissue, in the embryo of a vertebrate, from which the walls of the body and the amnion develop. SOMATOSENSORY (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the perception of sensory stimuli produced by the skin or internal organs SOMATOSTATINS (15) SOMATOTROPHIN (20) [noun] A polypeptide growth hormone produced by the human pituitary gland SOMATOTROPINS (17) [noun] A polypeptide growth hormone produced by the human pituitary gland SOMERSAULTING (16) [verb] To perform a somersault. | [noun] An instance of performing a somersault. SOMNAMBULATED (20) SOMNAMBULATES (19) SOMNAMBULISMS (21) SOMNAMBULISTS (19) SOMNIFACIENTS (20) SPASMODICALLY (23) SPECTINOMYCIN (24) [noun] An aminocyclitol antibiotic produced by the bacterium Streptomyces spectabilis. SPECTROMETERS (19) [noun] An optical instrument for measuring the absorption of light by chemical substances; typically it will plot a graph of absorption versus wavelength or frequency, and the patterns produced are used to identify the substances present, and their internal structure. SPECTROMETRIC (21) SPERMATOCYTES (22) [noun] A male gametocyte, from which a spermatozoon develops. SPERMATOGENIC (20) SPERMATOGONIA (18) [noun] Any of the undifferentiated cells in the male gonads that become spermatocytes; a spermatoblast SPERMATOPHORE (22) [noun] A spermospore. | [noun] A capsule or pocket enclosing a number of spermatozoa, found in many annelids, brachiopods, insects, mollusks, and crustaceans. SPERMATOPHYTE (25) [noun] Any plant that bears seeds rather than spores SPERMATOZOANS (26) SPERMATOZOIDS (27) [noun] A motile, ciliated male gamete produced in the antheridium of an alga, fern or gymnosperm. SPHYGMOGRAPHS (30) [noun] A mechanical device used to measure blood pressure and pulse. SPIRITUALISMS (17) SPLENECTOMIES (19) [noun] The surgical removal of the spleen. SPLENECTOMIZE (28) SPOKESMANSHIP (26) SPORTSMANLIKE (21) SPORTSMANSHIP (22) [noun] The behaviour exhibited in playing sports, either good or bad. | [noun] The good attitude/behaviour displayed by players of a game; fairness, determination, winning or losing gracefully. SQUEAMISHNESS (27) STABLISHMENTS (20) STANDPATTISMS (18) STATESMANLIKE (19) STATESMANSHIP (20) [noun] The craft or skill of being a statesman, of leading a government well. STATIONMASTER (15) [noun] The person in charge of a railroad station, usually an employee of a particular railroad by which the station is owned, but sometimes an employee of a separate corporation, such as one owning a station used by two or more railroads. STEAMROLLERED (16) [verb] To level a road using a steamroller | [verb] To proceed ruthlessly against all opposition as if with an overwhelming force; to overpower STEREOISOMERS (15) [noun] One of a set of the isomers of a compound that exhibits stereoisomerism STERNFOREMOST (18) STICHOMYTHIAS (26) STICHOMYTHIES (26) STIGMASTEROLS (16) STIGMATICALLY (21) STOICHIOMETRY (23) [noun] The study and calculation of quantitative (measurable) relationships of the reactants and products in chemical reactions (chemical equations). | [noun] The quantitative relationship between the reactants and products of a specific reaction or equation. STRATOCUMULUS (17) [noun] A principal low-level cloud type, predominantly stratiform, in the form of a gray and/or whitish layer or patch, which nearly always has dark parts and is nonfibrous. STREPTOMYCETE (22) [noun] Any bacterium of the family Streptomycetaceae STREPTOMYCINS (22) STROMATOLITES (15) [noun] A laminated, columnar, rock-like structure constituting a large share of all fossils from 3.5 to 0.5 billion years ago, with some still being formed at present, some or all of which result from the deposit of minerals by microorganisms such as cyanobacteria. STROMATOLITIC (17) STRUCTURALISM (17) [noun] A theory of sociology that views elements of society as part of a cohesive, self-supporting structure. | [noun] A school of biological thought that deals with the law-like behaviour of the structure of organisms and how it can change, emphasising that organisms are wholes, and therefore that change in one part must necessarily take into account the inter-connected nature of the entire organism. | [noun] The theory that a human language is a self-contained structure related to other elements which make up its existence. SUBASSEMBLIES (19) [noun] An assembly that is assembled with others to form a larger assembly SUBBITUMINOUS (19) SUBCOMMISSION (21) SUBCOMMITTEES (21) [noun] A committee formed by an existing committee, comprising a subset of its members. SUBCOMPONENTS (21) SUBDEPARTMENT (20) SUBEMPLOYMENT (24) SUBGOVERNMENT (21) SUBJECTIVISMS (29) SUBLIMENESSES (17) SUBMANDIBULAR (20) [adjective] Below the mandible; submaxillary SUBMILLIMETER (19) SUBOPTIMIZING (29) SULFANILAMIDE (19) [noun] Any of a class of amino substituted aromatic sulfonamides that are used as antifungal antibiotics; but especially the parent compound 4-aminobenzenesulfonamide SUMMABILITIES (19) SUMMARIZATION (26) SUMMERSAULTED (18) [verb] To perform a somersault. SUMPTUOUSNESS (17) SUPERCOMPUTER (21) [noun] Any computer that has a far greater processing power than others of its day; typically they use more than one core and are housed in large clean rooms with high air flow to permit cooling. Typical uses are weather forecasting, nuclear simulations and animations. SUPERCRIMINAL (19) SUPERDIPLOMAT (20) SUPEREMINENCE (19) SUPERFAMILIES (20) [noun] A taxonomic category above family and below order (and its subdivisions). | [noun] A large group of related proteins or other molecules. SUPERHUMANITY (23) SUPERIMPOSING (20) [verb] To place an object over another object, usually in such a way that both will be visible. | [verb] To establish a structural system over, independently of underlying structures. | [noun] The process, or the result of superimposing SUPERMAJORITY (27) [noun] Any qualified majority, specified in advance of a vote, required for the vote to be passed SUPERMILITANT (17) SUPERMINISTER (17) SUPERNORMALLY (20) SUPERNUMERARY (20) [noun] A person who works in a group, association, or public office without forming part of the regular staff (the numerary). | [noun] An extra or walk-on, often non-speaking, in a film or play; a spear carrier. | [noun] Something which is beyond the prescribed or standard amount or number. SUPERORGANISM (18) SUPERPREMIUMS (21) SUPERREALISMS (17) SUPERROMANTIC (19) SUPERSALESMAN (17) SUPERSALESMEN (17) SUPERSTARDOMS (18) SUPERSYMMETRY (25) [noun] A theory that attempts to unify the fundamental physical forces and which proposes a physical symmetry between bosons and fermions. SUPPLEMENTALS (19) SUPPLEMENTARY (22) [noun] Something additional; an extra. | [adjective] Additional; added to supply what is wanted. SUPPLEMENTERS (19) SUPPLEMENTING (20) [verb] To provide or make a supplement to something. SUPREMENESSES (17) SWORDSMANSHIP (24) SYCOPHANTISMS (25) SYMBIOTICALLY (25) SYMBOLIZATION (29) SYMMETALLISMS (22) SYMMETRICALLY (25) SYMPATHECTOMY (30) [noun] The surgical cutting of a nerve in the sympathetic nervous system. SYMPATHOLYTIC (28) [noun] Any medicine having this effect. | [adjective] That opposes the stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system. SYMPATRICALLY (25) SYMPHONICALLY (28) SYMPHONIOUSLY (26) SYNCHROMESHES (26) SYNDACTYLISMS (24) SYRINGOMYELIA (22) [noun] A disorder in which a cyst or cavity forms within the spinal cord, possibly leading to stiffness or paralysis. SYRINGOMYELIC (24) SYSTEMATISING (19) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATIZERS (27) SYSTEMATIZING (28) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. | [noun] The process by which something is systematized; a systematization. SYSTEMIZATION (27) TAXONOMICALLY (27) TEEMINGNESSES (16) TELECOMMUTERS (19) TELECOMMUTING (20) [verb] To work from home, sometimes for part of a working day or week, using a computer connected to one's employer's network or via the Internet. | [noun] The practice of using telecommunications technology to do one's work at a location remote from one's office, such as one's home, an Internet café, etc. TELEFACSIMILE (20) [noun] Fax TELEMARKETERS (19) TELEMARKETING (20) [noun] The business of selling products or services by making unsolicited telephone calls to potential customers. TELEVANGELISM (19) TELLUROMETERS (15) TEMERARIOUSLY (18) TEMPERAMENTAL (19) [adjective] (notcomp) Of, related to, or caused by temperament. | [adjective] Subject to changing and unpredictable emotional states; moody, capricious; sometimes used figuratively to describe user-unfriendly or unstable machines or software that are either complicated and/or have poorly written instructions and are subsequently difficult to operate. TEMPERATENESS (17) TEMPESTUOUSLY (20) TEMPORALITIES (17) [noun] The condition of being bounded in time (of being temporal.) TEMPORALIZING (27) TEMPORARINESS (17) TEMPORIZATION (26) TENDEROMETERS (16) TENSIOMETRIES (15) TERMINATIONAL (15) TERMINATIVELY (21) TERMINOLOGIES (16) [noun] The doctrine of terms; a theory of terms or appellations; a treatise on terms, a system of specialized terms. | [noun] The set of terms actually used in any business, art, science, or the like; nomenclature; technical terms. TETRADYNAMOUS (19) THALASSAEMIAS (18) THAUMATURGIES (19) THAUMATURGIST (19) THEATRICALISM (20) THEOCENTRISMS (20) THERIOMORPHIC (25) [adjective] Having the form of a beast THERMOCHEMIST (25) THERMOCOUPLES (22) [noun] A transducer consisting of two different metals welded together at each end; a voltage is produced that is proportional to the difference in temperature between the two junctions (one of which is normally held at a known temperature) THERMODYNAMIC (26) THERMOELEMENT (20) THERMOFORMING (24) [verb] To use a method of shaping, especially for thermoplastics, while hot | [noun] Manufacturing process where a plastic sheet is heated to a pliable forming temperature, formed to a specific shape in a mold and trimmed to create a usable product. THERMOGRAPHER (24) THERMOGRAPHIC (26) THERMOMETRIES (20) THERMONUCLEAR (20) [adjective] Of, or relating to the fusion of atomic nuclei at high temperatures. | [adjective] Of, or relating to the use of atomic weapons based on such fusion, especially as distinguished from those based on fission. THERMOPHILOUS (23) THERMOPLASTIC (22) [noun] A plastic with this property. | [adjective] Softening when heated and hardening when cooled, and thus able to be moulded THERMOSETTING (19) [adjective] Becoming permanently hard or solidifying when heated; used especially of synthetic plastics such as Bakelite. THERMOSPHERES (23) [noun] The layer of the Earth's atmosphere directly above the mesosphere and directly below the exosphere. THERMOSPHERIC (25) THERMOSTATING (19) THERMOSTATTED (19) THERMOTROPISM (22) [noun] Thermotropic movement of a plant or plant part in response to changes in temperature. THIGMOTROPISM (23) [noun] Growth or motion in response to touch THIMBLERIGGED (23) THIMBLERIGGER (22) THORACOTOMIES (20) [noun] The surgical procedure of making an incision into the chest, normally as a first step to gain access to the thoracic organs, such as the heart, the lungs, and the esophagus. THROMBOKINASE (24) THUNDERSTORMS (19) [noun] A storm consisting of thunder and lightning produced by a cumulonimbus, usually accompanied with heavy rain, wind, and sometimes hail; and in rarer cases sleet, freezing rain, or snow. THYMECTOMIZED (35) THYMECTOMIZES (34) THYROIDECTOMY (27) TIMBERDOODLES (19) TOASTMISTRESS (15) [noun] A female toastmaster. TOMBOYISHNESS (23) TONSILLECTOMY (20) [noun] The surgical removal of the tonsils, especially the palatine tonsils. Frequently accompanied by an adenoidectomy. TOOTHSOMENESS (18) TOXOPLASMOSES (24) TOXOPLASMOSIS (24) [noun] A disease, caused by the parasite Toxoplasma gondii, that primarily affects felids, but also other mammals including humans. TRACHEOTOMIES (20) [noun] A surgical procedure in which an incision is made into the trachea, through the neck, and a tube inserted so as to make an artificial opening in order to assist breathing. TRAGICOMEDIES (19) [noun] The genre of drama that combines elements of tragedy and comedy. | [noun] A drama that combines elements of tragedy and comedy. TRAMPOLININGS (18) TRAMPOLINISTS (17) TRANSAMINASES (15) [noun] Any of a group of enzymes that catalyze transamination. TRANSFORMABLE (20) TRANSHUMANCES (20) TRANSMEMBRANE (19) [noun] A transmembrane protein, or the transmembrane portion of a protein | [adjective] Traversing a cellular membrane | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a transmembrane protein or segment TRANSMIGRATED (17) [verb] To migrate to another country. | [verb] (of the soul) To pass into another body after death. TRANSMIGRATES (16) [verb] To migrate to another country. | [verb] (of the soul) To pass into another body after death. TRANSMIGRATOR (16) TRANSMISSIBLE (17) [adjective] Able to be transmitted. TRANSMISSIONS (15) [noun] The act of transmitting, e.g. data or electric power. | [noun] The fact of being transmitted. | [noun] Something that is transmitted, such as a message, picture or a disease; the sending of such a thing. TRANSMITTABLE (17) TRANSMITTANCE (17) [noun] A transmission | [noun] The fraction of incident light, or other radiation, that passes through a substance TRANSMOUNTAIN (15) TRANSMUTATION (15) [noun] Change, alteration. | [noun] The conversion of one thing into something else; transformation. | [noun] Specifically, the supposed transformation of one element into another, especially of a base metal into gold. TRANSMUTATIVE (18) TRANSSHIPMENT (20) TRANSVESTISMS (18) TRAUMATICALLY (20) TREMULOUSNESS (15) TRIAMCINOLONE (17) TRICHROMATISM (22) TRIGONOMETRIC (18) TRILITERALISM (15) TRIMETHOPRIMS (22) TRIUMPHALISMS (22) TRIUMPHALISTS (20) TROUBLEMAKERS (21) [noun] One who causes trouble, especially one who does so deliberately. | [noun] A complainer. TROUBLEMAKING (22) TROUBLESOMELY (20) TSUTSUGAMUSHI (19) TUMORIGENESES (16) TUMORIGENESIS (16) [noun] Production of a new tumor or tumors. | [noun] The process involved in the production of a new tumor or tumors. TURBIDIMETERS (18) [noun] An optical instrument that measures the turbidity of a fluid containing suspended particles. TURBIDIMETRIC (20) ULTRAFAMILIAR (18) ULTRAFEMININE (18) ULTRALEFTISMS (18) ULTRAMARATHON (18) [noun] A running race over a distance longer than 42.195 km, the length of a standard marathon. ULTRAMILITANT (15) ULTRAMONTANES (15) [noun] Someone who acknowledges the supremacy of the Pope ULTRAREALISMS (15) ULTRAROMANTIC (17) UMBELLIFEROUS (20) UMBILICATIONS (19) UNACCOMPANIED (22) [adjective] Travelling without companions | [adjective] Performed or scored without accompaniment; solo UNAMBIGUOUSLY (21) [adverb] In a manner that is not ambiguous; leaving no doubt; clearly UNASSIMILABLE (17) UNASSIMILATED (16) [adjective] Not assimilated. UNCEREMONIOUS (17) [adjective] Not ceremonious. UNCHARISMATIC (22) [adjective] Not charismatic; lacking charisma. UNCIRCUMCISED (22) [adjective] Not circumcised, intact. | [adjective] (by extension) Not Jewish or Muslim; gentile | [adjective] Spiritually impure; irreligious. UNCOMFORTABLE (22) [adjective] Not comfortable; causing discomfort. | [adjective] Experiencing discomfort. | [adjective] Uneasy or anxious. UNCOMFORTABLY (25) [adverb] In an uncomfortable manner. UNCOMPENSATED (20) [adjective] Not compensated; having no compensation. | [adjective] Not paid for one's work. UNCOMPETITIVE (22) [adjective] That does not involve competition; not competitive UNCOMPLAINING (20) [adjective] Without complaint; patient and tolerant UNCOMPLICATED (22) [verb] To remove complications from. | [adjective] Simple, not complicated, basic. UNCONFORMABLE (22) [adjective] Not conformable. | [adjective] Exhibiting unconformity. UNCONFORMABLY (25) UNCONSUMMATED (20) [adjective] Not consummated UNCUSTOMARILY (20) UNDERCLASSMAN (18) UNDERCLASSMEN (18) UNDEREMPHASES (21) UNDEREMPHASIS (21) UNDEREMPLOYED (22) [adjective] Employed in a job that offers fewer work hours than desired. UNDERESTIMATE (16) [noun] An estimate that is too low. | [verb] To perceive (someone or something) as having a lower value, quantity, worth, etc., than what he/she/it actually has. UNDERGARMENTS (17) [noun] Any garment worn underneath others, especially one worn next to the skin; an item of underwear. | [noun] (in the plural) Temple garments worn by the followers of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. UNDERLAYMENTS (19) UNDERPAYMENTS (21) UNDERWHELMING (23) [adjective] Failing to interest; not as exciting as promised or expected. UNEMBARRASSED (18) [adjective] Not embarrassed UNEMBELLISHED (21) [adjective] Plain, unadorned, or simple. UNEMOTIONALLY (18) UNEMPLOYABLES (22) [noun] An individual who is not suited to employment. UNEMPLOYMENTS (22) UNFAMILIARITY (21) [noun] Lack of familiarity; ignorance or inexperience. UNFORTHCOMING (24) [adjective] Not forthcoming; laconic or uncooperative UNGENTLEMANLY (19) [adjective] Not gentlemanly; not adhering to the high moral standards expected of a gentleman; impolite, unchivalrous, or indecent. | [adverb] In a manner not befitting a gentleman. UNGRAMMATICAL (20) [adjective] In violation of one or more of the rules and conventions of a language as defined by the grammar, resulting in unacceptable or incorrect usage. UNHOMOGENIZED (29) UNIFORMNESSES (18) UNIMAGINATIVE (19) [adjective] Not imaginative. UNIMPASSIONED (18) [adjective] Not impassioned; lacking passion; without emotion. UNIMPEACHABLE (24) [adjective] Not able to be impeached or reproached. | [adjective] Blameless. | [adjective] Beyond doubt. UNIMPEACHABLY (27) UNINFORMATIVE (21) [adjective] Lacking useful or interesting information UNINTIMIDATED (17) UNITARIANISMS (15) UNIVERSALISMS (18) UNMALICIOUSLY (20) UNMANIPULATED (18) UNMANLINESSES (15) UNMENTIONABLE (17) [noun] Something not to be discussed in polite society. | [adjective] Not mentionable UNMETABOLIZED (27) UNMITIGATEDLY (20) UNNILPENTIUMS (17) UNNILQUADIUMS (25) UNPERFORMABLE (22) UNPROBLEMATIC (21) [adjective] Not problematic (presenting problems) or controversial. UNPROMISINGLY (21) UNRECLAIMABLE (19) UNREMINISCENT (17) UNREMITTINGLY (19) UNSENTIMENTAL (15) [adjective] Not sentimental. UNSETTLEMENTS (15) UNSYMMETRICAL (22) [adjective] Not symmetrical. UNSYMPATHETIC (25) [adjective] Not sympathetic UNTRANSFORMED (19) [adjective] Not transformed; free of any transformation UNWHOLESOMELY (24) UPPERCLASSMAN (21) [noun] A junior or senior student in a school or college. UPPERCLASSMEN (21) [noun] A junior or senior student in a school or college. VASECTOMIZING (30) [verb] To perform a vasectomy VEGETARIANISM (19) [noun] The practice of following a vegetarian diet. VENTRILOQUISM (27) VENTURESOMELY (21) VERISIMILARLY (21) VERMICULATION (20) [noun] The process of being turned into a worm. | [noun] The state of being infested or consumed by worms. | [noun] A pattern of irregular wavy lines resembling worms or their casts or tracks, found on the plumage of birds, used to decorate artworks and buildings, etc. VERNACULARISM (20) VICTIMIZATION (29) [noun] An act that victimizes or exploits someone. | [noun] Adversity as a result of being a victim. VICTIMOLOGIES (21) [noun] The study of the victims of crime, and especially of the reasons why some people are more prone to be victims. VICTIMOLOGIST (21) VISCOSIMETERS (20) [noun] A viscometer. VISCOSIMETRIC (22) VOCATIONALISM (20) VOLUNTARYISMS (21) VOLUNTEERISMS (18) VOUCHSAFEMENT (26) WAFFLESTOMPER (26) WARMONGERINGS (20) WATERMANSHIPS (23) WEARISOMENESS (18) WEISENHEIMERS (21) [noun] (mildly humorous) A self-assertive and arrogant person; a know-it-all or smart aleck. WELCOMENESSES (20) WELTSCHMERZES (32) WHIGMALEERIES (22) WHIMSICALNESS (23) WHOLESOMENESS (21) WIMPISHNESSES (23) WINSOMENESSES (18) WITENAGEMOTES (19) WOMANLINESSES (18) WORRISOMENESS (18) XEROPHTHALMIA (30) [noun] A condition due to a deficiency of vitamin A where the conjunctiva and cornea become dry. The condition starts with conjunctival xerosis and night blindness and progresses to corneal xerosis and, later, a severe condition called keratomalacia. XEROPHTHALMIC (32) YELLOWHAMMERS (26) [noun] A passerine bird, Emberiza citrinella, of western Eurasia, which is mainly yellow in colour. | [noun] The northern flicker, Colaptes auratus. | [noun] A native or resident of the American state of Alabama. ZOMBIFICATION (31) ZOOSPORANGIUM (27)

14-Letter Words (1677)

ABSENTMINDEDLY (23) ABSTEMIOUSNESS (18) [noun] The practice of restraining oneself from indulging in food, drink, or other pleasures; moderation and self-denial. ABSTRACTIONISM (20) [noun] The creation, principles, or ideals of abstractions, in particular art. | [noun] The presentation of ideas in an abstract manner. ACCELEROMETERS (20) [noun] An instrument for measuring acceleration. | [noun] An instrument made for detecting and measuring vibrations. ACCOMMODATIONS (23) [noun] (usually a mass noun) Lodging in a dwelling or similar living quarters afforded to travellers in hotels or on cruise ships, or prisoners, etc. | [noun] (physical) Adaptation or adjustment. | [noun] (personal) Adaptation or adjustment. ACCOMPANIMENTS (24) [noun] A part, usually performed by instruments, that gives support or adds to the background in music, or adds for ornamentation; also, the harmony of a figured bass. | [noun] That which accompanies; something that attends as a circumstance, or which is added to give greater completeness to the principal thing, or by way of ornament, or for the sake of symmetry. ACCOMPLISHABLE (27) [adjective] Capable of being accomplished; practicable. ACCOMPLISHMENT (27) [noun] The act of accomplishing; completion; fulfilment. | [noun] That which completes, perfects, or equips thoroughly; acquirement; attainment; that which constitutes excellence of mind, or elegance of manners, acquired by education or training. | [noun] Something accomplished; an achievement. ACCUMULATIVELY (26) [adverb] In a manner that increases or builds up gradually over time; by accumulation. ACCUSTOMATIONS (20) ACCUSTOMEDNESS (21) [noun] The state of being accustomed or familiar with something through repeated experience or exposure. ACETAMINOPHENS (23) [noun] Plural of acetaminophen, a common over-the-counter pain reliever and fever reducer. ACETAZOLAMIDES (28) [noun] Plural of acetazolamide, a diuretic drug used to treat glaucoma, altitude sickness, and certain types of epilepsy. ACHROMATICALLY (26) [adverb] In a manner lacking color or without chromatic aberration; in an achromatic way. ACKNOWLEDGMENT (27) [noun] The act of acknowledging | [noun] The act of recognizing in a particular character or relationship; recognition of existence, authority, truth, or genuineness. | [noun] A reward or other expression or token of gratitude. ACTINOMORPHIES (23) [noun] The plural of actinomorphy, referring to the property of having radial symmetry, as in flowers or organisms with parts arranged around a central axis. ACTINOMYCETOUS (23) [adjective] Relating to or caused by actinomycetes, a group of filamentous bacteria that resemble fungi. ADENOCARCINOMA (21) [noun] Any of several forms of carcinoma that originate in glandular tissue ADMEASUREMENTS (19) [noun] Apportionment. ADMINISTRATING (18) [verb] To administer | [verb] The act or function of providing maintenance and general housekeeping for computer systems, networks, peripheral equipment, etc. ADMINISTRATION (17) [noun] The act of administering; government of public affairs; the service rendered, or duties assumed, in conducting affairs; the conducting of any office or employment; direction. | [noun] A body that administers; the executive part of government; the persons collectively who are entrusted with the execution of laws and the superintendence of public affairs; the chief magistrate and his cabinet or council; or the council, or ministry, alone, as in Great Britain. | [noun] The act of administering, or tendering something to another; dispensation. ADMINISTRATIVE (20) [adjective] Of or relating to administering or administration. ADMINISTRATORS (17) [noun] One who administers affairs; one who directs, manages, executes, or dispenses, whether in civil, judicial, political, or ecclesiastical affairs; a manager | [noun] A person who manages or settles the estate of an intestate, or of a testator when there is no competent executor; one to whom the right of administration has been committed by competent authority | [noun] One who is responsible for software installation, management, information and maintenance of a computer or network ADMINISTRATRIX (24) [noun] A female administrator. ADMIRABILITIES (19) [noun] The quality or state of being admirable; worthy of admiration. ADVERTISEMENTS (20) [noun] A commercial solicitation designed to sell some commodity, service or similar. | [noun] A public notice. | [noun] A recommendation of a particular product, service or person. ADVERTIZEMENTS (29) [noun] Plural of advertisement; public notices or announcements promoting a product, service, or event. | [noun] An archaic or alternative spelling of "advertisements" used historically in English publications. AERODYNAMICIST (22) [noun] A scientist or engineer who specializes in the study of aerodynamics and the motion of air around objects. AFOREMENTIONED (20) [noun] The one or ones mentioned previously. | [adjective] Previously mentioned. AGGIORNAMENTOS (18) [noun] The plural of aggiornamento, referring to modernizations or updates, particularly in the context of the Roman Catholic Church's efforts to update its practices and doctrines. AGGLOMERATIONS (18) [noun] The act or process of collecting in a mass; a heaping together. | [noun] State of being collected in a mass; a mass; cluster. | [noun] An extended city area comprising the built-up area of a central city and any suburbs linked by continuous urban area. AGGRANDIZEMENT (28) [noun] The act of increasing one's power, wealth, or status, often in a way that is considered excessive or undeserved. | [noun] The process of making something appear greater or more important than it actually is. ALDOSTERONISMS (17) ALLELOMORPHISM (23) ALMIGHTINESSES (20) ALPHANUMERICAL (23) AMATEURISHNESS (19) AMBASSADORSHIP (24) AMBASSADRESSES (19) [noun] A female ambassador. | [noun] The wife of an ambassador. AMBIDEXTROUSLY (29) AMICABLENESSES (20) AMINOACIDURIAS (19) [noun] A medical condition characterized by the presence of excessive amino acids in the urine. AMINOPEPTIDASE (21) [noun] An enzyme that catalyzes the removal of amino acids from the N-terminal end of proteins or peptides. AMINOPHYLLINES (24) [noun] Plural of aminophylline, a bronchodilator medication used to treat asthma and other respiratory conditions, consisting of a combination of theophylline and ethylenediamine. AMITRIPTYLINES (21) [noun] Plural of amitriptyline, a tricyclic antidepressant medication used to treat depression and certain pain conditions. AMMONIFICATION (23) [noun] The biological process by which organic nitrogen compounds are decomposed and converted into ammonia or ammonium compounds, typically by bacteria in soil or water. AMPHIBIOUSNESS (23) AMPHIPROSTYLES (26) [noun] A building with porticoes at both the front and back ends. AMPLIFICATIONS (23) [noun] The act, or result of amplifying, enlarging, extending or adding. | [noun] The act, or result of independently increasing some quantity, especially voltage, power or current. | [noun] Gain. ANAGRAMMATICAL (21) [adjective] Being or relating to an anagram. ANAGRAMMATIZED (29) [verb] To produce an anagram of; to transpose the letters of. ANAGRAMMATIZES (28) [verb] To produce an anagram of; to transpose the letters of. ANALPHABETISMS (23) [noun] The state or condition of being illiterate or unable to read and write. | [noun] Illiterate or poorly written expressions or statements. ANATHEMATIZING (29) [verb] To cause to be, or to declare as, an anathema or evil. ANIMADVERSIONS (20) [noun] A criticism, a critical remark. | [noun] The state or characteristic of being animadversive. ANIMALIZATIONS (25) [noun] The plural form of animalization, referring to instances of depicting, treating, or characterizing someone or something as an animal or with animal-like qualities. ANISOMETROPIAS (18) [noun] A refractive condition of the eye in which the two eyes have different refractive powers, causing unequal focusing ability. | [noun] Plural of anisometropia. ANTEPENULTIMAS (18) ANTHROPOMETRIC (23) [adjective] Of, or relating to anthropometry ANTHROPOMORPHS (26) [noun] Creatures or characters that have human characteristics or form. | [verb] Third person singular or plural of anthropomorph, meaning to attribute human characteristics to non-human things. ANTIALCOHOLISM (21) ANTIARRHYTHMIC (27) [adjective] Acting to prevent or treat cardiac arrhythmias. | [noun] A drug or agent that prevents or treats irregular heartbeats. ANTICAPITALISM (20) [noun] Opposition to or resistance against capitalism as an economic system. ANTICOMMERCIAL (22) ANTICOMMUNISMS (22) [noun] Plural of anticommunism; opposition to communism or communist ideology and practices. ANTICOMMUNISTS (20) [noun] One who is opposed to the tenets of communism. ANTIDEFAMATION (20) ANTIDEMOCRATIC (21) [adjective] Opposed to the tenets of democracy. ANTIDROMICALLY (22) [adverb] In a direction opposite to the normal or usual course, particularly in medical or physiological contexts relating to nerve impulses or blood flow traveling backward along a vessel or nerve. ANTIGOVERNMENT (20) [adjective] Opposed to a government currently in power. | [adjective] Opposed to government in general. ANTIHISTAMINES (19) [noun] A drug or substance that counteracts the effects of a histamine. Commonly used to alleviate the symptoms of hay fever and other allergies. ANTIHISTAMINIC (21) [adjective] Counteracting or opposing the effects of histamine in the body. | [noun] A drug or substance that counteracts histamine effects, used to treat allergies and allergic reactions. ANTIHOMOSEXUAL (26) ANTIHUMANISTIC (21) ANTILIBERALISM (18) ANTILOGARITHMS (20) [noun] The number of which a given number is the logarithm (to a given base). ANTIMANAGEMENT (19) ANTIMECHANISTS (21) ANTIMETABOLITE (18) [noun] Any substance that competes with, or inhibits the normal metabolic process, often by acting as an analogue of an essential metabolite ANTIMICROBIALS (20) [noun] An agent that destroys microbes, inhibits their growth, or prevents or counteracts their pathogenic action ANTIMILITARISM (18) [noun] Opposition to military power, military institutions, or the use of armed force as a means of resolving conflicts. ANTIMILITARIST (16) [noun] A person who opposes militarism or the maintenance of a large military establishment. | [adjective] Of or relating to opposition to militarism. ANTIMODERNISTS (17) [noun] People who oppose or reject modernism, particularly in religious, artistic, or cultural contexts. ANTIMONARCHIST (21) [noun] One who is opposed to monarchy. | [adjective] Opposed to monarchy. ANTIMONOPOLIST (18) [noun] A person who opposes monopolies or works to prevent the formation of monopolistic practices. ANTINOMIANISMS (18) [noun] Plural of antinomianism, the theological or philosophical belief that moral laws are not binding on those who are saved or enlightened. | [noun] Instances or expressions of the doctrine that rejects established moral or legal principles as invalid. ANTIQUARIANISM (25) [noun] The study, collection, or appreciation of antiquities and things of the past; scholarly interest in ancient or old objects and history. ANTIRADICALISM (19) ANTIRHEUMATICS (21) [noun] Drugs or agents that are used to treat rheumatism or rheumatoid arthritis. ANTIRITUALISMS (16) ANTISPASMODICS (21) [noun] A drug that suppresses spasms. ANTITERRORISMS (16) [noun] The plural form of antiterrorism, referring to policies, measures, or activities designed to prevent or combat terrorism. APOCALYPTICISM (27) [noun] Belief in or expectation of an imminent apocalypse or catastrophic end of the world. | [noun] A religious or philosophical movement based on apocalyptic beliefs and interpretations of prophetic texts. APOSEMATICALLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that serves as a warning to potential predators through conspicuous coloration or behavior. APPENDECTOMIES (23) [noun] The surgical procedure for the removal of the vermiform appendix. APPENDICECTOMY (28) [noun] The surgical procedure for the removal of the vermiform appendix APPORTIONMENTS (20) [noun] The act of apportioning or the state of being apportioned. | [noun] The distribution of members of the House of Representatives according to the population of the various states. | [noun] The allocation of direct taxation according to the population of the various states. APPROXIMATIONS (27) [noun] The act, process or result of approximating. | [noun] An imprecise solution or result that is adequate for a defined purpose. | [noun] The act of bringing together the edges of tissue to be sutured. ARCHIMANDRITES (22) [noun] The superior of a large monastery, or group of monasteries, in the Orthodox Church. | [noun] An honorary title sometimes given to a monastic priest. ARGUMENTATIONS (17) [noun] Inference based on reasoning from given propositions. | [noun] An exchange of arguments | [noun] The addition of arguments to a model; parameterization. ARITHMETICALLY (24) [adverb] In a manner relating to or using arithmetic; according to mathematical principles or calculation. ARITHMETICIANS (21) [noun] One with expertise in arithmetic; a mathematician. AROMATHERAPIES (21) [noun] Plural of aromatherapy; therapeutic practices using aromatic plant oils and essences to promote physical and psychological well-being. AROMATHERAPIST (21) [noun] A practitioner who uses aromatic oils and scents to promote physical and psychological well-being. AROMATIZATIONS (25) [noun] The plural of aromatization, the chemical process of converting a compound into an aromatic compound or adding aromatic characteristics to a substance. ARRONDISSEMENT (17) [noun] An administrative division in some French- or Dutch-speaking countries | [noun] A borough, a submunicipal administrative division ASCERTAINMENTS (18) [noun] Plural of ascertainment; the act or process of determining or discovering something with certainty. | [noun] In genetics, the process of identifying individuals or families with a particular trait for inclusion in a study. ASSIMILABILITY (21) [noun] The quality or state of being capable of being assimilated or absorbed into a group, culture, or system. ASSOCIATIONISM (18) [noun] A theory that association (of experiences etc) is the basis of consciousness and mental activity ASSUMABILITIES (18) ASTRONOMICALLY (21) [adverb] To an extremely large degree; in a manner relating to astronomy or on a scale involving astronomical numbers. ASYMMETRICALLY (26) [adverb] In a manner lacking symmetry or balance; with unequal or irregular distribution or arrangement. ASYMPTOTICALLY (26) [adverb] In a manner approaching a limit or value but never quite reaching it; increasingly approaching but never attaining a specified condition or value. AUTOEROTICISMS (18) [noun] Plural of autoeroticism; sexual gratification obtained through self-stimulation or focus on one's own body. AUTOIMMUNITIES (18) [noun] Plural of autoimmunity; conditions in which the immune system attacks the body's own tissues and cells. AUTOMATICITIES (18) [noun] The quality or condition of being automatic; the ability to perform actions without conscious thought or effort. | [noun] In cardiology, the property of cardiac tissue to generate electrical impulses spontaneously. AUTOMATIZATION (25) [noun] The process of making something automatic or converting to automatic operation. | [noun] In psychology, the performance of an action without conscious thought or effort. AUTOMOBILITIES (18) [noun] The plural of automobility, referring to the social practices, systems, and cultures surrounding automobile use and mobility. | [noun] The capacity or freedom of movement enabled by automobiles. AUTORADIOGRAMS (18) [noun] A photograph image produced by placing a film in contact with a specimen containing (or treated with) radioactive material; an autoradiogram AXIOMATISATION (23) [noun] The process of establishing or reducing something to a set of axioms or fundamental principles. | [noun] In logic and mathematics, the act of formulating a system based on axioms. AXIOMATIZATION (32) [noun] The process of establishing a set of axioms or fundamental principles as the basis for a logical system or theory. AXISYMMETRICAL (30) [adjective] Having symmetry about an axis; symmetric with respect to rotation around a central axis. AZIDOTHYMIDINE (33) [noun] Zidovudine. BAMBOOZLEMENTS (31) [noun] The act or process of bamboozling or being bamboozled. BAROMETRICALLY (23) [adverb] In a manner relating to or measured by a barometer; according to atmospheric pressure measurements. BASIDIOMYCETES (24) [noun] Any fungus of the phylum Basidiomycota, that produces sexual spores on a basidium. BELEAGUERMENTS (19) [noun] Plural of beleaguerment; the act of besieging or harassing someone persistently. | [noun] States of being besieged or surrounded by difficulties. BENZIMIDAZOLES (37) [noun] A class of organic compounds containing a benzene ring fused to an imidazole ring, used in pharmaceuticals and as fungicides. BESTSELLERDOMS (19) BIBLIOMANIACAL (22) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of a bibliomania; obsessed with collecting books. BIBLIOPHILISMS (25) BICULTURALISMS (20) [noun] The plural form of biculturalism, referring to multiple instances or aspects of the coexistence and interaction of two distinct cultures within a society or individual. BIDIALECTALISM (21) BILDUNGSROMANS (20) [noun] Plural of bildungsroman; novels that depict the psychological and moral growth of the protagonist from youth to adulthood. BIOCHEMISTRIES (23) [noun] The plural of biochemistry; the study of chemical processes and substances occurring within living organisms. | [noun] The chemical compositions or processes characteristic of a particular organism or biological system. BIOGEOCHEMICAL (26) [noun] A geochemical of biological origin | [adjective] Of or pertaining to biogeochemistry BIOLUMINESCENT (20) [adjective] Capable of producing light through a chemical reaction within living organisms. BIOMATHEMATICS (25) [noun] The application of mathematics to the study of biological systems and processes BIOMETEOROLOGY (22) [noun] The study of the relationship between atmospheric conditions (the weather) and living organisms. BIOREGIONALISM (19) [noun] The belief that naturally-defined regions (bioregions or ecoregions) should be the basis of political or cultural identity BIOREMEDIATION (19) [noun] The use of biological organisms, usually microorganisms, to remove contaminants, especially from polluted water BIOSYSTEMATICS (23) [noun] Taxonomy based upon statistical data of the evolution of organisms BIOSYSTEMATIST (21) BIOTELEMETRIES (18) [noun] The plural of biotelemetry, the remote measurement and monitoring of biological data from living organisms, typically using electronic devices and wireless transmission. BIPARTISANISMS (20) [noun] The plural form of bipartisanship, referring to multiple instances or types of cooperative political approaches involving two parties. BITUMINIZATION (27) [noun] The process of converting organic material into bitumen or bituminous substances through heat and pressure. | [noun] The geological process by which sedimentary organic matter is transformed into crude oil and natural gas. BLACKGUARDISMS (26) BLACKSMITHINGS (28) [noun] The plural form of blacksmithing, referring to multiple instances or types of the craft of working with metal at a forge. BLEPHAROSPASMS (25) [noun] Involuntary spasmodic contractions of the eyelid muscles, causing repeated blinking or eye closure. BLIMPISHNESSES (23) [noun] Plural of blimpishness; the quality or state of being blimpish (characterized by old-fashioned, reactionary, or narrow-minded attitudes). BOLOMETRICALLY (23) [adverb] In a manner relating to or using a bolometer, an instrument that measures radiant energy by detecting changes in electrical resistance caused by heat absorption. BOTTOMLESSNESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being bottomless; the condition of having no bottom or no limit. BOULEVERSEMENT (21) [noun] A sudden and complete overthrow or reversal of the established order; a radical upheaval or transformation. BRAINSTORMINGS (19) [noun] Plural of brainstorming; group or individual sessions where ideas are generated freely without criticism. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of brainstorm; to engage in the process of generating creative ideas. BREMSSTRAHLUNG (22) [noun] The electromagnetic radiation produced by the deceleration of a charged particle, such as an electron, when it is deflected by another charged particle, such as an atomic nucleus BRINKSMANSHIPS (27) [noun] The plural form of brinkmanship, which is the practice of pursuing a dangerous policy to the brink of disaster before backing down, often used in political or military contexts. BROMOCRIPTINES (22) [noun] Plural of bromocriptine, a dopamine agonist medication used to treat hyperprolactinemia and Parkinson's disease. BUREAUCRATISMS (20) [noun] Plural of bureaucratism; excessive adherence to bureaucratic procedures and rules, or the practice of conducting administration through multiple departments and hierarchical levels. CABINETMAKINGS (25) [noun] The plural of cabinetmaking, referring to the craft or work of making fine furniture and wooden cabinets. | [noun] Products or items produced by the cabinetmaking craft. CAMOUFLAGEABLE (24) CAMPANOLOGISTS (21) [noun] People who study or practice bell-ringing, particularly the art of ringing church bells in sequences. CAMPYLOBACTERS (27) [noun] Any bacteria of the genus Campylobacter; a principal cause of food poisoning CAMPYLOTROPOUS (25) [adjective] (of an ovule) curved or bent so that the micropyle points toward the hilum, with the embryo sac curved along one side. CARCINOMATOSES (20) [noun] Plural of carcinomatosis; the widespread dissemination of cancer throughout the body or a particular organ system. CARCINOMATOSIS (20) [noun] The widespread presence of carcinomas that have metastasized throughout the body. CARCINOSARCOMA (22) [noun] A malignant tumor composed of both carcinomatous and sarcomatous tissue. CARDIOMYOPATHY (30) [noun] The deterioration of the myocardium. CATASTROPHISMS (23) [noun] The plural of catastrophism, a geological theory proposing that Earth's features were shaped by sudden, violent, and large-scale natural events rather than gradual processes. CATECHOLAMINES (23) [noun] Any of a class of aromatic amines derived from pyrocatechol that are hormones produced by the adrenal gland. CEPHALOMETRIES (23) [noun] Plural of cephalometry, the measurement of the dimensions of the head and face, typically used in orthodontics and anthropology. CEREMONIALISMS (20) [noun] The plural of ceremonialism, referring to excessive adherence to or emphasis on ceremonial forms and rituals. | [noun] Instances or practices of emphasizing ceremony and formal ritual in religious or social contexts. CEREMONIALISTS (18) [noun] People who emphasize or practice ceremony and formal rituals. | [noun] Those who believe in or advocate for the importance of ceremonial observances. CERULOPLASMINS (20) [noun] Plural of ceruloplasmin, a blue copper-containing protein found in blood plasma that plays a key role in iron metabolism and copper transport. CHEMISORPTIONS (23) [noun] The process of chemical adsorption in which molecules adhere to a surface through chemical bonding, forming a single layer of atoms or molecules. | [noun] Plural of chemisorption, instances or types of chemical adsorption processes. CHEMORECEPTION (25) [noun] The biological process by which organisms detect and respond to chemical stimuli in their environment. CHEMORECEPTIVE (28) [adjective] Relating to or denoting the detection of chemical substances by sensory receptors. CHEMORECEPTORS (25) [noun] A sense organ, or one of its cells (such as those for the sense of taste or smell), that can respond to a chemical stimulus; a chemosensor CHEMOSURGERIES (22) [noun] Plural of chemosurgery, a surgical technique using chemical agents to destroy tissue, particularly used in treating skin conditions and removing lesions. CHEMOSYNTHESES (27) [noun] The plural of chemosynthesis, the process by which organisms produce energy and organic compounds from chemical reactions, typically using inorganic substances rather than sunlight. CHEMOSYNTHESIS (27) [noun] The production of carbohydrates and other compounds from simple compounds such as carbon dioxide, using the oxidation of chemical nutrients as a source of energy rather than sunlight; it is limited to certain bacteria and fungi CHEMOSYNTHETIC (29) [adjective] Relating to or denoting an organism that obtains energy from chemical reactions rather than sunlight, typically found in deep-sea hydrothermal vents and other extreme environments. CHEMOTAXONOMIC (32) CHEMOTHERAPIES (26) [noun] Plural of chemotherapy; medical treatments using chemical substances to treat disease, especially cancer. CHEMOTHERAPIST (26) CHLAMYDOSPORES (27) [noun] A thick-walled spore that is the resting stage of some bacteria. CHLORPROMAZINE (32) [noun] A synthetic drug used as a tranquillizer, sedative, and antiemetic. It is a phenothiazine derivative. CHLORPROPAMIDE (26) CHOLANGIOGRAMS (23) [noun] Plural of cholangiogram, a radiographic image of the bile ducts obtained after injection of a contrast medium. CHOLESTYRAMINE (24) [noun] A bile acid sequestrant drug used to lower cholesterol levels in the blood. CHONDROCRANIUM (24) [noun] The developing skull, composed of cartilage, of an embryo before ossification CHORDAMESODERM (25) CHRESTOMATHIES (24) [noun] A collection of written passages, used to learn an unfamiliar language. | [noun] A collection of choice passages from an author or authors. CHROMATICITIES (23) [noun] The quality of color in terms of its hue and saturation, independent of brightness; the color coordinates that specify the chromaticity of a color on a chromaticity diagram. CHROMATOGRAPHS (27) [noun] A machine that performs chromatography by gas or liquid separation. CHROMATOGRAPHY (30) [noun] Any of various techniques for the qualitative or quantitative separation of the components of mixtures of compounds; all characterised by the use of a mobile phase (gas or liquid) moving relative to a stationary phase (liquid or solid) - the differences between the rates of migration of the compounds between the two phases effects the separation. CHROMATOPHORES (26) [noun] Pigment-containing cells in the skin of certain animals, such as cephalopods and fish, that can change color and pattern by expanding or contracting. | [noun] Structures in plants containing pigments that give color to flowers, fruits, and leaves. CHROMODYNAMICS (29) [noun] The study of the relationship between those quarks that possess the quantum property of color, and exchange gluons; more fully quantum chromodynamics. CHROMOPROTEINS (23) [noun] Proteins that contain a colored prosthetic group or pigment, such as hemoglobin or chlorophyll-binding proteins. CHRONOMETRICAL (23) [adjective] Relating to or measured by a chronometer; precise in timekeeping or time measurement. CHRYSANTHEMUMS (29) [noun] Any of many flowering perennial plants, of the genus Chrysanthemum, native to China, that have showy radiate heads. CHURCHMANSHIPS (31) [noun] The plural of churchmanship, referring to the qualities, skills, or practices associated with being a churchman or the conduct and principles of the clergy. CINEMATOGRAPHS (24) [noun] A camera that could develop its own film and served as its own projector. CINEMATOGRAPHY (27) [noun] The art, process, or job of filming movies. | [noun] Motion picture photography. CIRCUMAMBULATE (24) [verb] To walk around something in a circle, especially for a ritual purpose. CIRCUMFERENCES (25) [noun] The line that bounds a circle or other two-dimensional figure | [noun] The length of such a line | [noun] The surface of a round or spherical object CIRCUMLOCUTION (22) [noun] A roundabout or indirect way of speaking; the use of more words than necessary to express an idea. | [noun] A roundabout expression. CIRCUMLOCUTORY (25) [adjective] Characterised by circumlocution; periphrastic; verbose. CIRCUMNAVIGATE (24) [verb] To travel completely around somewhere or something, especially by sail. | [verb] To circumvent or bypass. | [verb] To sail around the world. CIRCUMSCISSILE (22) [adjective] Opening or splitting around a transverse line, with the top coming off like a lid, as in certain seed capsules or anthers. CIRCUMSCRIBING (25) [verb] To draw a line around; to encircle. | [verb] To limit narrowly; to restrict. | [verb] To draw the smallest circle or higher-dimensional sphere that has (a polyhedron, polygon, etc.) in its interior. CIRCUMSPECTION (24) [noun] Attention to all the facts and circumstances of a case; consideration of all that is pertinent. | [noun] Caution, watchfulness, or vigilance fueled by such awareness. CIRCUMSTANTIAL (20) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Something incidental to the main subject, but of less importance. | [adjective] Pertaining to or dependent on circumstances, especially as opposed to essentials; incidental, not essential. | [adjective] Abounding with minor circumstances; in great detail; particular. CIRCUMVALLATED (24) [verb] To surround with, or as if with, a rampart. CIRCUMVALLATES (23) [verb] To surround with, or as if with, a rampart. CIRCUMVENTIONS (23) [noun] The act of evading by going around (bypassing). | [noun] The act of prevailing over another by fraud or deception CIRCUMVOLUTION (23) [noun] The act of revolution, rotation or gyration around an axis. | [noun] Anything winding or sinuous. CLIMATOLOGICAL (21) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of the climate or long-term weather patterns of a region. CLIMATOLOGISTS (19) [noun] Scientists who study climate and atmospheric conditions over long periods of time. CLIOMETRICIANS (20) [noun] Historians who use statistical and quantitative methods to analyze economic and social history. CLITORECTOMIES (20) [noun] Plural of clitorectomy, the surgical removal of the clitoris. CLITORIDECTOMY (24) [noun] The surgical procedure to remove all or part of the clitoris; female circumcision COASTGUARDSMAN (20) [noun] A member of a coast guard service responsible for maritime law enforcement, search and rescue operations, and coastal patrol duties. COASTGUARDSMEN (20) [noun] Plural of coastguardsman; members of a coast guard service responsible for maritime safety, rescue operations, and coastal security. COLLOQUIALISMS (27) [noun] A colloquial word or phrase; a common spoken expression. | [noun] Colloquial style of speaking. COMBUSTIBILITY (25) [noun] The quality or state of being able to catch fire and burn easily; flammability. COMMANDERSHIPS (26) [noun] The plural of commandership; positions or offices of a commander, or the rank, authority, or term of service of a commander. COMMEMORATIONS (22) [noun] The act of commemorating; an observance or celebration to honor the memory of some person or event. | [noun] That which serves the purpose of commemorating; a memorial. | [noun] The specification of individual saints in the prayers for the dead; the great festival of the Oxford academic year, usually taking place on the third Wednesday after Trinity Sunday. COMMEMORATIVES (25) [noun] An object made to commemorate a person, mark an event, etc. | [noun] A postage stamp issued to commemorate, usually a person or event; also commonly applied to thematic (topical) stamp issues. COMMENSURATELY (23) [adverb] In a manner or degree that is proportionate or corresponding to something else in size, extent, or importance. COMMENSURATION (20) COMMERCIALISED (23) [verb] To apply business methodology to something in order to profit | [verb] To exploit something for maximum financial gain, sometimes by sacrificing quality COMMERCIALISES (22) [verb] To apply business methodology to something in order to profit | [verb] To exploit something for maximum financial gain, sometimes by sacrificing quality COMMERCIALISMS (24) [noun] The plural form of commercialism, referring to multiple instances or aspects of the principles and practices of commerce and profit-seeking in business and society. COMMERCIALISTS (22) [noun] Plural of commercialist; people who emphasize or prioritize commercial interests and profit over other considerations. | [noun] People engaged in commerce or business activities. COMMERCIALIZED (32) [verb] To apply business methodology to something in order to profit | [verb] To exploit something for maximum financial gain, sometimes by sacrificing quality COMMERCIALIZES (31) [verb] To apply business methodology to something in order to profit | [verb] To exploit something for maximum financial gain, sometimes by sacrificing quality COMMISERATIONS (20) [noun] The act of commiserating; sorrow for the hardships or afflictions of another; pity; compassion. COMMISSIONAIRE (20) [noun] One entrusted with a (small) commission, such as an errand; especially, an attendant or subordinate employee in a public office, hotel, etc. | [noun] A uniformed doorman. | [noun] An undisclosed agent under European civil law. COMMITTEEWOMAN (25) [noun] A woman who is a member of a committee. | [noun] A woman who is a local leader of a political party. COMMITTEEWOMEN (25) [noun] A woman who is a member of a committee. | [noun] A woman who is a local leader of a political party. COMMODIOUSNESS (21) [noun] The quality or state of being commodious; spaciousness or roomy comfort. COMMONSENSIBLE (22) COMMONSENSICAL (22) [adjective] Based on or in accordance with common sense; showing practical judgment and reasoning. COMMUNICATIONS (22) [noun] The act or fact of communicating anything; transmission. | [noun] The concept or state of exchanging data or information between entities. | [noun] A message; the essential data transferred in an act of communication. COMMUNITARIANS (20) [noun] People who advocate for or emphasize the importance of community values, interests, and collective welfare over individualism. COMMUNIZATIONS (29) COMPANIONSHIPS (25) [noun] The state of having or being a companion. | [noun] An association, a fellowship. | [noun] The state of being a journeyman. COMPARABLENESS (22) [noun] The quality or state of being comparable; the ability to be compared or worthy of comparison. COMPARATIVISTS (23) [noun] Scholars or practitioners who use the comparative method to analyze and compare different cultures, languages, literary works, or other phenomena. COMPARTMENTING (23) [verb] To arrange in separate compartments. COMPASSIONATED (21) COMPASSIONATES (20) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "compassionate," meaning to feel or show compassion for someone; to sympathize with. | [adjective] Showing or expressing compassion; sympathetic. COMPASSIONLESS (20) [adjective] Without compassion; hardhearted. COMPATIBLENESS (22) [noun] The quality or state of being compatible; the ability to exist or work together without conflict. COMPENSABILITY (25) [noun] The quality or state of being compensable; the capacity to be compensated or worthy of compensation. COMPENSATIONAL (20) COMPLEMENTIZER (31) [noun] A subordinating conjunction that can convert a clause into a complement clause, i.e. one that completes a grammatical construction in the predicate and that describes or is identified with the subject or object. COMPLETENESSES (20) [noun] The plural form of completeness; the state or quality of being complete or finished in multiple instances or aspects. COMPOSEDNESSES (21) [noun] The plural of composedness; the quality or state of being calm, self-controlled, and not easily disturbed. COMPREHENDIBLE (26) COMPREHENSIBLE (25) [adjective] Able to be comprehended. COMPREHENSIBLY (28) [adverb] In a manner that can be understood or grasped by the mind; intelligibly. COMPREHENSIONS (23) [noun] Thorough understanding | [noun] The totality of intensions, that is, attributes, characters, marks, properties, or qualities, that the object possesses, or else the totality of intensions that are pertinent to the context of a given discussion. | [noun] A compact syntax for generating a list in some functional programming languages. COMPULSIVENESS (23) [noun] The quality or state of being compulsive; an irresistible urge to perform an action repeatedly. | [noun] In psychology, a repetitive behavior or mental act performed to reduce anxiety or follow obsessive thoughts. COMPULSIVITIES (23) [noun] The plural of compulsivity; instances or states of being compulsive, characterized by irresistible urges to perform repetitive actions or behaviors. COMPUTERIZABLE (31) COMPUTERPHOBES (27) COMPUTERPHOBIA (27) COMPUTERPHOBIC (29) CONCEPTUALISMS (22) [noun] Plural of conceptualism; artistic or philosophical movements that emphasize the idea or concept behind a work rather than its physical form or execution. CONCERTMASTERS (20) [noun] The first violin in a symphony orchestra; normally plays violin solos CONCERTMEISTER (20) [noun] The leader of the first violin section in an orchestra, serving as the concertmaster's assistant or the principal violinist in some European orchestras. CONDUCTIMETRIC (23) [adjective] Relating to the measurement of electrical conductivity or the method of analysis using conductimetry. CONDUCTOMETRIC (23) [adjective] Relating to or involving the measurement of electrical conductivity, particularly in chemistry and analytical procedures. CONFIRMABILITY (26) CONFIRMATIONAL (21) CONFORMATIONAL (21) [adjective] Relating to the three-dimensional arrangement of atoms in a molecule or the different spatial arrangements (conformations) that a molecule can adopt through rotation of bonds. CONGLOMERATEUR (19) CONGLOMERATING (20) [verb] To combine together into a larger mass. | [verb] To combine together into a larger corporation. CONGLOMERATION (19) [noun] That which consists of many previously separate parts. | [noun] An instance of conglomerating, a coming together of separate parts. CONGLOMERATIVE (22) CONGLOMERATORS (19) [noun] Plural of conglomerator; entities or individuals that combine or merge different elements into a unified whole, particularly in business contexts where companies merge to form conglomerates. CONSTRUCTIVISM (23) [noun] A Russian movement in modern art characterized by the creation of nonrepresentational geometric objects using industrial materials. | [noun] A philosophy that asserts the need to construct a mathematical object to prove it exists. | [noun] A psychological epistemology which argues that humans generate knowledge and meaning from their experiences. CONTAMINATIONS (18) [noun] The act or process of contaminating | [noun] Something which contaminates. | [noun] A process whereby words with related meanings come to have similar sounds. CONTEMPLATIONS (20) [noun] The act of contemplating; musing; being highly concentrated in thought | [noun] Holy meditation. | [noun] The act of looking forward to a future event CONTEMPLATIVES (23) [noun] Someone who has dedicated themselves to religious contemplation. CONTEMPORARIES (20) [noun] Someone or something living at the same time, or of roughly the same age as another. | [noun] Something existing at the same time. CONTEMPORARILY (23) [adverb] In a manner that is contemporary or occurring at the same time; at the present time or in modern fashion. CONTEMPORIZING (30) [verb] Making something contemporary or relevant to the present time; adapting something to modern standards or practices. CONTEMPTUOUSLY (23) [adverb] In a disrespectful or discourteous manner; condescendingly. CONTERMINOUSLY (21) [adjective] Sharing a common boundary or border; having the same limits or extent. | [adverb] In a manner that shares boundaries or is coterminous. CONTUMACIOUSLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that shows stubborn resistance to authority or an obstinate refusal to obey. CONTUMELIOUSLY (21) [adverb] In a manner that is insulting, disrespectful, or abusive. COPOLYMERIZING (33) [verb] To polymerize so as to form a copolymer CORPORATIVISMS (23) [noun] Plural of corporativism, a political or economic system based on the organization of society into corporate groups or guilds representing different professions or interests, often associated with fascist or authoritarian governance structures. COSMETOLOGISTS (19) COSMOCHEMISTRY (28) COSMOGRAPHICAL (26) COSMOLOGICALLY (24) COSMOPOLITISMS (22) COUNTERCLAIMED (21) [verb] To file a counterclaim. COUNTERDEMANDS (20) COUNTEREXAMPLE (27) [noun] An exception to a proposed general rule; a specific instance of the falsity of a universally quantified statement. COUNTERMANDING (20) [verb] To revoke (a former command); to cancel or rescind by giving an order contrary to one previously given. | [verb] To recall a person or unit with such an order. | [verb] To prohibit. COUNTERMARCHED (24) [verb] To march back along the same route COUNTERMARCHES (23) [noun] A march back along the same route | [verb] To march back along the same route COUNTERMEASURE (18) [noun] Any action taken to counteract or correct another. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Any of the devices and techniques used to impair the operational effectiveness of an enemy. COUNTERREFORMS (21) COUNTERSTREAMS (18) CRAFTSMANSHIPS (26) [noun] The quality of being a craftsman. | [noun] An example of a craftsman's work. CREDENTIALISMS (19) CRIMINALISTICS (20) [noun] The scientific processing and study of evidence of crimes. CRIMINOLOGICAL (21) CRIMINOLOGISTS (19) [noun] A person who is skilled in, or practices criminology CRYPTORCHIDISM (29) [noun] (andrology) The failure of one or both testes to descend into the scrotum CUMBERSOMENESS (22) CUMBROUSNESSES (20) CUMULATIVENESS (21) CUMULONIMBUSES (22) CYANOBACTERIUM (25) [noun] Any of very many photosynthetic prokaryotic microorganisms, of phylum Cyanobacteria, once known as blue-green algae. CYANOCOBALAMIN (25) [noun] A synthetic form of vitamin B12 (cobalamin). CYCLOHEXIMIDES (34) CYTOPHOTOMETRY (29) [noun] The analysis of the chemical composition of cells using a cytophotometer CYTOTAXONOMIES (28) DAMNABLENESSES (19) DECAMETHONIUMS (24) DECIMALIZATION (28) DECOMMISSIONED (22) [verb] To take out of service or to render unusable. | [verb] To remove or revoke a commission. | [verb] To remove or revoke a formal designation. DECOMPENSATING (22) DECOMPENSATION (21) [noun] The inability of a diseased or weakened organic system or organ to compensate for its deficiency, resulting in functional deterioration. | [noun] The deterioration of cognitive or emotional functionality in a person who is distressed or who suffers from a psychological disorder. DECOMPOSITIONS (21) [noun] A biological process through which organic material is reduced to e.g. compost. | [noun] The act of taking something apart, e.g. for analysis. | [noun] The splitting (of e.g. a matrix, an atom or a compound) into constituent parts. DECOMPRESSIONS (21) DECONTAMINATED (20) [verb] To remove contamination from (something), rendering it safe. DECONTAMINATES (19) [verb] To remove contamination from (something), rendering it safe. DECONTAMINATOR (19) DECRIMINALIZED (29) [verb] To change the laws so something is no longer a crime. DECRIMINALIZES (28) [verb] To change the laws so something is no longer a crime. DEFEMINIZATION (29) DEHUMANIZATION (29) [noun] The act or process of dehumanizing. DELEGITIMATION (18) DEMATERIALIZED (27) [verb] To disappear by becoming immaterial. | [verb] To cause something to disappear by becoming immaterial. | [verb] To remove the physical materials from (a process, etc.) DEMATERIALIZES (26) [verb] To disappear by becoming immaterial. | [verb] To cause something to disappear by becoming immaterial. | [verb] To remove the physical materials from (a process, etc.) DEMENTEDNESSES (18) DEMILITARIZING (27) [verb] To remove troops from an area. | [verb] To prevent troops from entering an area. | [verb] To return an area to civilian control. DEMINERALIZERS (26) DEMINERALIZING (27) [verb] To remove minerals or mineral salts from (a liquid). DEMISEMIQUAVER (31) [noun] A thirty-second note, drawn as a crotchet with three tails. DEMOBILIZATION (28) DEMOCRATICALLY (24) [adverb] In a democratic way. DEMOLITIONISTS (17) DEMONETIZATION (26) [noun] The act or process of demonetizing. DEMONSTRATIONS (17) [noun] The act of demonstrating; showing or explaining something. | [noun] An event at which something will be demonstrated. | [noun] Expression of one's feelings by outward signs. DEMONSTRATIVES (20) [noun] (grammar) A demonstrative word DEMORALIZATION (26) DEMORALIZINGLY (30) DEMULTIPLEXERS (26) DEMYELINATIONS (20) DEMYTHOLOGIZED (34) [verb] To remove the mythological elements of. DEMYTHOLOGIZER (33) DEMYTHOLOGIZES (33) [verb] To remove the mythological elements of. DENOMINATIONAL (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a denomination. DENSITOMETRIES (17) DENUMERABILITY (22) DEPARTMENTALLY (22) DEPIGMENTATION (20) DEPOLYMERIZING (32) [verb] To decompose a polymer into smaller fragments. | [adjective] That depolymerizes DERMATOGLYPHIC (28) DERMATOLOGICAL (20) DERMATOLOGISTS (18) [noun] A person who is skilled in, professes or practices dermatology. DETERMINATIONS (17) [noun] The act of determining, or the state of being determined. | [noun] Bringing to an end; termination; limit. | [noun] Direction or tendency to a certain end; impulsion. DETERMINATIVES (20) [noun] An ideogram used to mark semantic categories of words in logographic scripts. | [noun] (grammar) A member of a class of words functioning in a noun phrase to identify or distinguish a referent without describing or modifying it. Examples of determinatives include articles (a, the), demonstratives (this, those), cardinal numbers (three, fifty), and indefinite numerals (most, any, each). DETERMINEDNESS (18) DEXAMETHASONES (27) DIAGRAMMATICAL (22) DIAMONDIFEROUS (21) DIASTEREOMERIC (19) DIFFRACTOMETER (25) [noun] A device that uses diffraction (especially X-ray diffraction) to investigate the structure of matter. DIFFRACTOMETRY (28) DIMENHYDRINATE (24) DIMENSIONALITY (20) DIMINUTIVENESS (20) DIPHENYLAMINES (25) DIPLOMATICALLY (24) [adverb] In a diplomatic manner. | [adverb] (domain) From the perspective of diplomacy DISACCUSTOMING (22) DISAFFIRMANCES (25) DISAMBIGUATING (21) [verb] To remove ambiguities from; to make less ambiguous; to clarify or specify which of multiple possibilities, e.g. possible meanings of an ambiguous statement, applies, or to invite or require this. | [verb] To distinguish one word or lexical unit (from a different one which has a similar form). DISAMBIGUATION (20) DISAPPOINTMENT (21) [noun] A feeling of sadness or frustration when a strongly held expectation is not met. | [noun] A circumstance in which a strongly held expectation is not met. | [noun] That which causes feelings of disappointment. DISARRANGEMENT (18) DISBURDENMENTS (20) DISCOMBOBULATE (23) [verb] To throw into a state of confusion; to befuddle or perplex. DISCOMFORTABLE (24) DISCONCERTMENT (21) [noun] Disconcertedness DISCONTENTMENT (19) DISCOURAGEMENT (20) [noun] The loss of confidence or enthusiasm. | [noun] The act of discouraging. | [noun] Anything that discourages. DISCRIMINATING (20) [verb] To make distinctions. | [verb] (construed with against) To make decisions based on prejudice. | [verb] To set apart as being different; to mark as different; to separate from another by discerning differences; to distinguish. DISCRIMINATION (19) [noun] Discernment, the act of discriminating, discerning, distinguishing, noting or perceiving differences between things, with intent to understand rightly and make correct decisions. | [noun] The act of recognizing the 'good' and 'bad' in situations and choosing good. | [noun] (sometimes discrimination against) Distinct treatment of an individual or group to their disadvantage; treatment or consideration based on class or category rather than individual merit; partiality; prejudice; bigotry. DISCRIMINATIVE (22) [adjective] Having or relating to the ability to discriminate between things. | [adjective] (of an element, feature, attribute, etc.) Which serves to distinguish its bearer. DISCRIMINATORS (19) [noun] A person who discriminates or differentiates. | [noun] A test or variable, etc. that serves to distinguish between different things. | [noun] Any of several electronic devices that convert some property of a signal into an amplitude whose value is proportional to the difference between the value of the input signal and that of a standard. DISCRIMINATORY (22) [adjective] Of or pertaining to discrimination (in all senses). | [adjective] Showing prejudice or bias. DISEMBARKATION (23) DISEMBARRASSED (20) [verb] To get (someone) out of a difficult or embarrassing situation; to free (someone) from the embarrassment (of a situation); to relieve (someone of a burden, item of clothing, etc.) (often used reflexively). | [verb] To free (something) from complication. | [verb] To disentangle (two things); to distinguish. DISEMBARRASSES (19) [verb] To get (someone) out of a difficult or embarrassing situation; to free (someone) from the embarrassment (of a situation); to relieve (someone of a burden, item of clothing, etc.) (often used reflexively). | [verb] To free (something) from complication. | [verb] To disentangle (two things); to distinguish. DISEMBOWELLING (23) [verb] To take or let out the bowels or interior parts of; to eviscerate. | [verb] To take or draw from the body, as the web of a spider. | [noun] The act by which somebody is disembowelled. DISEMBOWELMENT (24) DISENCHANTMENT (22) [noun] The act of disenchanting or the state of being disenchanted. | [noun] Freeing from false belief or illusions. DISENCUMBERING (22) [verb] To remove an encumbrance or burden from (someone or something). DISENGAGEMENTS (19) DISEQUILIBRIUM (28) [noun] The loss of equilibrium or stability, especially due to an imbalance of forces. DISFIGUREMENTS (21) [noun] The result of disfiguring; the state of being disfigured DISFURNISHMENT (23) DISGRUNTLEMENT (18) DISHARMONIZING (30) DISHEARTENMENT (20) DISINFORMATION (20) [noun] Intentionally false information disseminated to deliberately confuse or mislead. DISINVESTMENTS (20) [noun] The process of disinvesting; negative investment. DISMANTLEMENTS (19) DISMEMBERMENTS (23) [noun] The act of dismembering. | [noun] The state or condition of being dismembered. | [noun] Removal from membership; detachment from an organization, group, etc. DISPARAGEMENTS (20) DISREMEMBERING (22) [verb] To fail to remember; to forget. DISSEMINATIONS (17) [noun] The act of disseminating, or the state of being disseminated; diffusion for propagation and permanence; a scattering or spreading abroad, as of ideas, beliefs, etc. DISSIMILATIONS (17) DISSIMILITUDES (18) DISSIMULATIONS (17) [noun] The act of concealing the truth; hypocrisy or deception. | [noun] Hiding one's feelings or intentions. DISTEMPERATURE (19) DIVERTISSEMENT (20) [noun] An entertaining diversion. | [noun] A short ballet within a larger work, usually providing a break from the main plot. DOCTRINAIRISMS (19) DOCUMENTALISTS (19) [noun] A person, especially a librarian, who is an expert in documents and documentation. DOCUMENTARIANS (19) [noun] A person whose profession is to create documentary films. | [noun] A person who writes software documentation. | [noun] A person who cares about communication and documentation. DOCUMENTARISTS (19) [noun] A maker of documentaries. DOCUMENTATIONS (19) DOGMATICALNESS (20) DOGMATIZATIONS (27) DOLOMITIZATION (26) DOMESTICATIONS (19) [noun] The act of domesticating, or accustoming to home; the action of taming wild animals or breeding plants. | [noun] The act of domesticating, or making a legal instrument recognized and enforceable in a jurisdiction foreign to the one in which the instrument was originally issued or created. | [noun] The act of domesticating a text. DOMICILIATIONS (19) DRAFTSMANSHIPS (25) DRAMATISATIONS (17) [noun] The act of dramatizing. | [noun] A version that has been dramatized. DRAMATIZATIONS (26) [noun] The act of dramatizing. | [noun] A version that has been dramatized. DREAMFULNESSES (20) DUMBFOUNDERING (24) ECHOCARDIOGRAM (25) [noun] The visual image formed by an echocardiograph. ECONOMETRICIAN (20) ECUMENICALISMS (22) EGALITARIANISM (17) [noun] The political doctrine that holds that all people in a society should have equal rights from birth. ELECTRODYNAMIC (24) ELECTROFORMING (22) ELECTROMAGNETS (19) [noun] A magnet which attracts metals only when electrically activated ELECTROMYOGRAM (24) [noun] The record produced by an electromyograph. ELECTROOSMOSES (18) ELECTROOSMOSIS (18) [noun] The migration of ions in a solvent through the capillaries of a membrane under the influence of an applied electric field ELECTROOSMOTIC (20) ELECTROTHERMAL (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the production of heat by electricity ELEMENTARINESS (16) EMBARRASSINGLY (22) [adverb] In an embarrassing manner. | [adverb] To the point of embarrassment; to an extreme or bewildering degree. | [adverb] Causing embarrassment. EMBARRASSMENTS (20) [noun] A state of discomfort arising from bashfulness or consciousness of having violated a social rule; humiliation. | [noun] A state of confusion arising from hesitation or difficulty in choosing. | [noun] A person or thing which is the cause of humiliation to another. EMBELLISHMENTS (23) [noun] An added touch; an ornamental addition; a flourish. EMBLEMATICALLY (25) EMBRANGLEMENTS (21) EMBRITTLEMENTS (20) EMOTIONALISTIC (18) EMOTIONALITIES (16) EMOTIONALIZING (26) [verb] To give something an emotional quality. | [verb] To make an emotional display. EMPATHETICALLY (26) EMULSIFICATION (21) ENANTIOMORPHIC (23) ENCEPHALOGRAMS (24) [noun] An image of the brain obtained by encephalography. ENCOMPASSMENTS (22) ENCOURAGEMENTS (19) [noun] The act of encouraging | [noun] Something that incites, supports, promotes, protects or advances; incentive | [noun] Words or actions that increase someone's confidence ENCYCLOPEDISMS (26) ENDARTERECTOMY (22) [noun] The surgical procedure to remove plaque from an artery. ENDOMETRITISES (17) ENDOPARASITISM (19) ENDOTHELIOMATA (20) ENHARMONICALLY (24) ENLIGHTENMENTS (20) [noun] An act of enlightening, or the state of being enlightened or instructed. | [noun] A concept in spirituality, philosophy and psychology related to achieving clarity of perception, reason and knowledge. ENORMOUSNESSES (16) ENSORCELLMENTS (18) [noun] Enchantment, bewitchment ENTERTAINMENTS (16) [noun] An activity designed to give pleasure, enjoyment, diversion, amusement, or relaxation to an audience, no matter whether the audience participates passively as in watching opera or a movie, or actively as in games. | [noun] A show put on for the enjoyment or amusement of others. | [noun] Maintenance or support. ENVENOMIZATION (28) EPHEMERALITIES (21) EPIDEMIOLOGIES (20) EPIDEMIOLOGIST (20) [noun] A scientist (often a medical doctor) who specializes in epidemiology. EPIDIDYMITISES (23) EPIGRAMMATISMS (23) EPIGRAMMATISTS (21) EPIGRAMMATIZED (31) EPIGRAMMATIZER (30) EPIGRAMMATIZES (30) EPISTEMOLOGIES (19) EPISTEMOLOGIST (19) ERGASTOPLASMIC (21) ESTABLISHMENTS (21) [noun] The act of establishing; a ratifying or ordaining; settlement; confirmation. | [noun] The state of being established, founded, etc.; fixed state. | [noun] That which is established; as a form of government, a permanent organization, business or force, or the place where one is permanently fixed for residence. ETHNOCENTRISMS (21) ETYMOLOGICALLY (25) EXCEPTIONALISM (27) [noun] The state of being special, exceptional or unique. | [noun] The belief that something (a nation, species etc.) is exceptional, superior or does not conform to an established norm. | [noun] A philosophy of prevention or of intervention. EXCOMMUNICATED (30) [verb] To officially exclude someone from membership of a church or religious community. | [verb] To exclude from any other group; to banish. EXCOMMUNICATES (29) [noun] A person so excluded. | [verb] To officially exclude someone from membership of a church or religious community. | [verb] To exclude from any other group; to banish. EXCOMMUNICATOR (29) EXHIBITIONISMS (28) EXISTENTIALISM (23) [noun] (not countable) A twentieth-century philosophical movement emphasizing the uniqueness of each human existence in freely making its self-defining choices. | [noun] The philosophical views of a particular thinker associated with the existentialist movement. EXOPHTHALMOSES (31) EXOPHTHALMUSES (31) EXOTHERMICALLY (31) EXPERIMENTALLY (28) [adverb] In the manner of an experiment EXPRESSIONISMS (25) EXTEMPORANEITY (28) EXTEMPORANEOUS (25) [adjective] Without preparation or advanced thought; offhand. EXTERMINATIONS (23) [noun] The act of exterminating; total destruction or eradication | [noun] Elimination. EXTINGUISHMENT (27) [noun] The act of extinguishing, putting out, or quenching, or the state of being extinguished. | [noun] The annihilation or extinction of a right or obligation. EXTRAEMBRYONIC (30) EXTRAPYRAMIDAL (29) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the neural pathways that are independent of the pyramidal tract FAMILIARNESSES (19) FASHIONMONGERS (23) FATHOMLESSNESS (22) FEARSOMENESSES (19) FEEBLEMINDEDLY (26) FELLMONGERINGS (21) FEMININENESSES (19) FERRIMAGNETISM (22) FERROMAGNESIAN (20) [adjective] That contains both iron and magnesium FERROMAGNETISM (22) FERROMANGANESE (20) FEUILLETONISMS (19) FIBROSARCOMATA (23) [noun] A fibroblastic sarcoma: a malignant tumor derived from fibrous connective tissue FLAGELLANTISMS (20) FLAMMABILITIES (23) FLANNELMOUTHED (23) FLIMFLAMMERIES (26) FORAMINIFERANS (22) FORESTALLMENTS (19) FORMALIZATIONS (28) FORMIDABLENESS (22) FORMLESSNESSES (19) FRAGMENTATIONS (20) [noun] The act of fragmenting or something fragmented; disintegration. | [noun] The process by which fragments of an exploding bomb scatter. | [noun] The breaking up and dispersal of a file into non-contiguous areas of a disk. FUNCTIONALISMS (21) FUNDAMENTALISM (22) [noun] The tendency to reduce a religion to its most fundamental tenets, based on strict interpretation of core texts. | [noun] (by extension) A rigid conformity to any set of basic tenets. | [noun] The belief that fundamental financial quantities are the best predictor of the price of a financial instrument. FUNDAMENTALIST (20) [noun] One who reduces religion to strict interpretation of core or original texts. | [noun] A trader who trades on the financial fundamentals of the companies involved, as opposed to a chartist or technician. | [noun] Originally referred to an adherent of an American Christian movement that began as a response to the rejection of the accuracy of the Bible, the alleged deity of Christ, Christ's atonement for humanity, the virgin birth, and miracles. GALACTOSAMINES (19) [noun] An amino derivative of the sugar galactose; found in glycolipids and in mucopolysaccharides GAMESOMENESSES (19) GEMUTLICHKEITS (26) GENERALISSIMOS (17) [noun] A supreme commander of the armed forces of a country, especially one who is also a political leader. GEOCHEMISTRIES (22) GEOMETRIZATION (26) GERMANIZATIONS (26) GERONTOMORPHIC (24) GERRYMANDERING (22) [verb] To divide a geographic area into voting districts in such a way as to give an unfair advantage to one party in an election. | [verb] (by extension) To draw dividing lines for other types of districts in an unintuitive way to favor a particular group or for other perceived gain. | [noun] The practice of redrawing electoral districts to gain an electoral advantage for a political party. GEWURZTRAMINER (29) GINGIVECTOMIES (23) GLADSOMENESSES (18) GLAMORIZATIONS (26) GLIOBLASTOMATA (19) [noun] A fast-growing, malignant tumor of the brain GONADECTOMIZED (30) GOVERNMENTALLY (23) GOVERNMENTESES (20) GRAMMATICALITY (24) GRANTSMANSHIPS (22) GRUESOMENESSES (17) GYNANDROMORPHS (26) [noun] An insect, crustacean or bird literally having physical characteristics of both sexes, usually displaying a bilateral difference. | [noun] A person having certain physical characteristics of both sexes. GYNANDROMORPHY (29) HANDICRAFTSMAN (25) [noun] A practitioner of a handicraft, usually male. HANDICRAFTSMEN (25) [noun] A practitioner of a handicraft, usually male. HANDSOMENESSES (20) HARMLESSNESSES (19) HARMONIOUSNESS (19) HARMONIZATIONS (28) [noun] An act of harmonizing. HEADMASTERSHIP (25) HEADMISTRESSES (20) [noun] A female school principal. HEMACYTOMETERS (26) [noun] A device used to count the number of blood cells in a volume of blood. HEMAGGLUTINATE (21) HEMAGGLUTININS (21) [noun] An antigenic glycoprotein that causes agglutination of red blood cells HEMEROCALLISES (21) HEMICELLULOSES (21) [noun] A mixture of several plant polysaccharides, of smaller molecular weight than cellulose, that are soluble in dilute alkali; they are involved in the manufacture of paper, and are used in the production of furfural and ethanol. HEMIMETABOLOUS (23) [adjective] Exhibiting hemimetabolism. HEMOCYTOMETERS (26) [noun] A device used to count the number of blood cells in a volume of blood. HEMOFLAGELLATE (23) HEMOGLOBINURIA (22) [noun] The presence of hemoglobin in the urine. HEMOGLOBINURIC (24) HEPATECTOMIZED (33) HEPATOMEGALIES (22) HERMAPHRODITES (25) [noun] An individual or organism possessing ambiguous sexual organs, typically including both types of gonads. | [noun] A person or thing possessing two opposing qualities. | [noun] A hermaphrodite brig. HERMAPHRODITIC (27) HETEROGAMETIES (20) HETEROMORPHISM (26) [noun] A diversity of form. | [noun] A feature that is heteromorphic. HETEROTHALLISM (22) HEXAMETHONIUMS (31) HEXOSAMINIDASE (27) HIPPOPOTAMUSES (25) [noun] A large, semi-aquatic, herbivorous (plant-eating) African mammal (Hippopotamus amphibius) HISTOCHEMISTRY (27) [noun] The branch of histology dealing with the chemistry of cells and tissues. HISTOPLASMOSES (21) HISTOPLASMOSIS (21) [noun] A lung disease caused by a fungus, Histoplasma capsulatum, often asymptomatic otherwise with symptoms similar to those of flu. HOLOMETABOLISM (23) HOLOMETABOLOUS (21) HOMELESSNESSES (19) HOMEOMORPHISMS (28) [noun] A continuous bijection from one topological space to another, with continuous inverse. | [noun] A similarity in the crystal structure of unrelated compounds HOMESICKNESSES (25) HOMOEROTICISMS (23) HOMOGENISATION (20) [noun] The act of making something homogenous, or the same throughout; or the tendency of something to become homogenous HOMOGENIZATION (29) [noun] The act of making something homogenous, or the same throughout; or the tendency of something to become homogenous HOMOTRANSPLANT (21) [noun] An allograft HOMOZYGOSITIES (32) HUMANISTICALLY (24) HUMIDIFICATION (25) HUMOROUSNESSES (19) HYDRODYNAMICAL (29) HYDROMECHANICS (30) [noun] Fluid mechanics, especially when dealing with water HYDROTHERMALLY (29) HYDROXYLAMINES (33) HYPERCALCEMIAS (28) HYPERCRITICISM (28) HYPEREMOTIONAL (24) HYPERGLYCEMIAS (30) HYPERIMMUNIZED (36) HYPERIMMUNIZES (35) HYPERLIPIDEMIA (27) [noun] An excess quantity of lipid in the blood; a symptom of several medical conditions. HYPERMASCULINE (26) HYPERMETABOLIC (28) HYPERMETROPIAS (26) HYPERMODERNIST (25) HYPERPIGMENTED (28) HYPERROMANTICS (26) HYPERSTIMULATE (24) HYPERURBANISMS (26) HYPERURICEMIAS (26) HYPODERMICALLY (30) HYPOMAGNESEMIA (27) [noun] The condition of having an abnormally low concentration of magnesium ions in the blood HYPOPHYSECTOMY (37) HYPOTHYROIDISM (31) [noun] The disease state caused by insufficient production of thyroid hormone by the thyroid gland. HYSTERECTOMIES (24) [noun] The surgical procedure to remove all of or part of the uterus. ILLEGITIMACIES (19) [noun] The state or condition of being illegitimate ILLEGITIMATELY (20) ILLIMITABILITY (21) ILLUMINATINGLY (20) IMAGINABLENESS (19) IMMATERIALISMS (20) IMMATERIALISTS (18) IMMATERIALIZED (28) IMMATERIALIZES (27) IMMETHODICALLY (27) IMMOBILIZATION (29) IMMODERATENESS (19) IMMOVABILITIES (23) IMMUNOBLOTTING (21) [noun] The use of immunoblots to analyse proteins. IMMUNOCHEMICAL (27) IMMUNOCHEMISTS (25) IMMUNOGENETICS (21) IMMUNOGENICITY (24) IMMUNOGLOBULIN (21) [noun] Any of the glycoproteins in blood serum that respond to invasion by foreign antigens and that protect the host by removing pathogens; an antibody. IMMUNOREACTIVE (23) IMMUNOSORBENTS (20) IMMUNOSUPPRESS (22) IMMUTABILITIES (20) IMPARTIALITIES (18) IMPASSABLENESS (20) IMPERATIVENESS (21) IMPERCIPIENCES (24) IMPERMANENCIES (22) IMPERMEABILITY (25) IMPERSONALIZED (28) IMPERSONALIZES (27) IMPERSONATIONS (18) [noun] The act of impersonating IMPERTINENCIES (20) IMPERVIOUSNESS (21) IMPLAUSIBILITY (23) IMPLEMENTATION (20) [noun] The process of moving an idea from concept to reality. In business, engineering and other fields, implementation refers to the building process rather than the design process. | [noun] A result of implementing something; a finished product, system or device. IMPLICITNESSES (20) IMPOLITENESSES (18) IMPOSSIBLENESS (20) IMPOVERISHMENT (26) [noun] The action of impoverishing someone. | [noun] The state of being impoverished. IMPRACTICALITY (25) IMPREGNABILITY (24) IMPRESSIBILITY (23) IMPRESSIONABLE (20) [noun] An impressionable person. | [adjective] Being easily influenced (especially of young people). IMPRESSIONISMS (20) IMPRESSIONISTS (18) [noun] One who adheres to the theory or method of impressionism. IMPRESSIVENESS (21) IMPROPERNESSES (20) IMPROVISATIONS (21) [noun] The act or art of composing and making music, poetry, and the like, extemporaneously | [noun] That which is improvised; an impromptu. | [noun] Musical technique, characteristic of blues music. IMPROVISATORES (21) IMPUTABILITIES (20) INCOMBUSTIBLES (22) INCOMMENSURATE (20) [adjective] Out of proportion (in size, degree or extent) with something else INCOMMODIOUSLY (24) INCOMMUNICABLE (24) [adjective] (of a disease etc) That cannot be communicated or transmitted | [adjective] (of a person) Who does not communicate freely; uncommunicative or reserved INCOMMUNICABLY (27) INCOMPETENCIES (22) INCOMPLETENESS (20) INCOMPRESSIBLE (22) [adjective] Not compressible. INCONFORMITIES (21) INCREMENTALISM (20) [noun] Any method of achieving a goal by means of a series of gradual increments, or small steps. INCREMENTALIST (18) INCRIMINATIONS (18) INDECOMPOSABLE (23) [noun] A vector space that cannot be decomposed. | [adjective] Not decomposable: unable to be decomposed. INDEMONSTRABLE (19) [adjective] Not able to be demonstrated or proved; unprovable INDEMONSTRABLY (22) INDETERMINABLE (19) [noun] An indeterminable thing or quantity. | [adjective] That is incapable of being measured. | [adjective] That is incapable of being ascertained. INDETERMINABLY (22) INDETERMINISMS (19) INDETERMINISTS (17) INDIFFERENTISM (23) [noun] The doctrine that all religions are equally valid. | [noun] (more broadly) Relativism, agnosticism; apathy, indifference. | [noun] An expression of such a doctrine or view. INDISCRIMINATE (19) [adjective] Without care or making distinctions, thoughtless. INDIVIDUALISMS (21) INDOMITABILITY (22) INDUSTRIALISMS (17) INFINITESIMALS (19) [noun] A non-zero quantity whose magnitude is smaller than any positive number (by definition it is not a real number). INFLAMMABILITY (26) INFLAMMATORILY (24) INHARMONIOUSLY (22) INIMITABLENESS (18) INSTRUMENTALLY (19) INSURMOUNTABLE (18) [adjective] Incapable of being passed over, surmounted, or overcome; insuperable INSURMOUNTABLY (21) INTERANIMATION (16) INTERCOMMUNION (20) [noun] Communion (association) between people or groups | [noun] The participation, together, in Holy Communion of people from different denominations | [noun] In Roman Catholicism, the theological principle which governs whether it is permissible for a Roman Catholic to partake of the Eucharist in a non-Catholic service, and vice versa INTERCOMMUNITY (23) [adjective] Between communities. | [noun] Intercommunication; reciprocal intercourse. INTERCOMPARING (21) INTERFEROGRAMS (20) [noun] An image produced by using an interferometer. INTERFEROMETER (19) [noun] Any of several instruments that use the interference of waves to determine wavelengths and wave velocities, determine refractive indices, measure small distances, temperature changes, stresses, and many other useful measurements. INTERFEROMETRY (22) INTERLACEMENTS (18) INTERMARRIAGES (17) [noun] Marriage between people belonging to different groups, such as different racial, ethnic, or religious groups; mixed marriage. INTERMEDIACIES (19) INTERMEDIARIES (17) [noun] An agent acting as a mediator between sides that may disagree. | [noun] An arranger of a contract or other agreement who is separate from the parties to the agreement | [noun] One or several stages of an event which occurs after the start and before the end. INTERMEDIATELY (20) INTERMEDIATING (18) [verb] To mediate, to be an intermediate. | [verb] To arrange, in the manner of a broker. INTERMEDIATION (17) INTERMENSTRUAL (16) INTERMETALLICS (18) INTERMITTENCES (18) INTERMITTENTLY (19) [adverb] Stopping or starting at intervals. INTERMOLECULAR (18) [adjective] From one molecule to another; between molecules INTERPERMEATED (19) INTERPERMEATES (18) INTERSEGMENTAL (17) [adjective] Between segments. INTERTWINEMENT (19) INTERVALOMETER (19) [noun] A device that measures intervals of time. INTIMATENESSES (16) INTIMIDATINGLY (21) INTRAMOLECULAR (18) [adjective] Between different parts of the same molecule. IRRATIONALISMS (16) IRREMOVABILITY (24) ISOCHROMOSOMES (23) ISOMERIZATIONS (25) ISOMORPHICALLY (26) KAPELLMEISTERS (22) [noun] A leader or conductor of a musical group such as an orchestra. | [noun] A term used during the baroque and classical period for the person in charge of music at a noble court. KREMLINOLOGIES (21) KREMLINOLOGIST (21) LACHRYMOSITIES (24) LAMELLIBRANCHS (23) [noun] Any marine or freshwater bivalve mollusk, of the class Lamellibranchia or Bivalvia; includes the clams, scallops and oysters LAMENTABLENESS (18) LARYNGECTOMEES (22) LARYNGECTOMIES (22) LEGITIMATIZING (27) [verb] To make legitimate. | [verb] To legalize. LEGITIMIZATION (26) LEUKEMOGENESES (21) LEUKEMOGENESIS (21) LIBERTARIANISM (18) [noun] A political philosophy maintaining that all persons are the absolute owners of their own lives, and should be free to do whatever they wish with their persons or property, provided they allow others that same liberty. | [noun] The doctrine of free will, as opposed to necessitarianism. LIEBFRAUMILCHS (26) LOGNORMALITIES (17) LONESOMENESSES (16) LONGSOMENESSES (17) LUKEWARMNESSES (23) LUMINOUSNESSES (16) LYMPHANGIOGRAM (28) LYMPHOGRAPHIES (30) LYMPHOSARCOMAS (28) MACHICOLATIONS (23) [noun] An opening between corbels that support a projecting parapet, or in the floor of a gallery or the roof of a portal, of a fortified building from which missiles can be shot or heated items dropped upon assailants attacking the base of the walls. | [noun] A projecting parapet with a series of such openings. MACHINEABILITY (26) MACROAGGREGATE (21) MACROECONOMICS (24) [noun] The study of the entire economy in terms of the total amount of goods and services produced, total income earned, the level of employment of productive resources, and the general behavior of prices. MACROEVOLUTION (21) [noun] Large-scale patterns or processes in the history of life, including the origins of novel organism designs, evolutionary trends, adaptive radiations and extinctions. MACROGLOBULINS (21) MACROMOLECULAR (22) MACROMOLECULES (22) [noun] A very large molecule, especially used in reference to large biological polymers (e.g. nucleic acids and proteins). MACRONUTRIENTS (18) [noun] Any of the elements required in large amounts by all living things. MACROSTRUCTURE (20) [noun] The gross structure of a material or tissue as visible to the unaided eye or at very low levels of magnification. | [noun] The gross structure of a pure metal or alloy, as revealed by magnifications of 10X or less. MAGNETIZATIONS (26) MAGNETOMETRIES (19) MAGNETOSPHERES (22) [noun] The comet-shaped region around Earth or another planet in which charged particles are trapped or deflected. Shaped by the solar wind and the planet's magnetic field. MAGNETOSPHERIC (24) MAGNIFICATIONS (22) [noun] The act of magnifying; enlargement; exaggeration. | [noun] The apparent enlargement of an object in an image. MAGNILOQUENCES (28) MAGNILOQUENTLY (29) MAIDENLINESSES (17) MALABSORPTIONS (20) MALACOSTRACANS (20) [noun] Any of very many crustaceans of the class Malacostraca MALADAPTATIONS (19) [noun] The state of being poorly adapted to an environment MALADJUSTMENTS (26) [noun] A poor or faulty adjustment, especially of a mechanism. | [noun] The inability to adapt oneself to the needs of others, or to the stresses of normal life. MALADMINISTERS (19) [verb] To administer wrongly or badly. MALAPERTNESSES (18) MALAPPORTIONED (21) MALARIOLOGISTS (17) MALCONTENTEDLY (22) MALFUNCTIONING (22) [verb] To function improperly | [verb] To fail to function | [noun] A malfunction. MALLEABILITIES (18) MALODOROUSNESS (17) [noun] The state or condition of being malodorous. MANAGEABLENESS (19) MANIFESTATIONS (19) [noun] The act or process of becoming manifest. | [noun] The embodiment of an intangible, or variable thing. | [noun] The symptoms or observable conditions which are seen as a result of some disease. MANIFOLDNESSES (20) MANIPULABILITY (23) [noun] The condition of being manipulable. MANIPULATIVELY (24) MANNERLINESSES (16) MANOMETRICALLY (23) MANUFACTURINGS (22) MARICULTURISTS (18) MARTYRIZATIONS (28) MARTYROLOGISTS (20) MASTERLINESSES (16) MASTIGOPHORANS (22) MATERIALNESSES (16) MATHEMATICALLY (26) [adverb] According to or using mathematics. MATHEMATICIANS (23) [noun] An expert on mathematics. MATRICULATIONS (18) [noun] Enrollment in a college or university | [noun] A pass in some university examinations | [noun] A registration of armorial bearings MEANINGFULNESS (20) MECHANIZATIONS (30) MEDDLESOMENESS (20) MEDITATIVENESS (20) MEGAKARYOCYTES (29) MEGAKARYOCYTIC (31) MEGALOMANIACAL (21) MEGALOPOLITANS (19) [noun] An inhabitant or a resident of a megalopolis. MEGASCOPICALLY (26) MEGASPORANGIUM (22) MEGASPOROPHYLL (27) MELODRAMATISED (20) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATISES (19) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATISTS (19) MELODRAMATIZED (29) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATIZES (28) [verb] To make melodramatic. MEMORABILITIES (20) MENDACIOUSNESS (19) MERCANTILISTIC (20) MERCAPTOPURINE (22) MERCERIZATIONS (27) MERCHANDISINGS (23) MERCHANDIZINGS (32) MERCIFULNESSES (21) MERETRICIOUSLY (21) MESDEMOISELLES (19) [noun] Courtesy title for an unmarried woman in France or a French-speaking country. | [noun] (jocular or affected) A young woman or girl, especially one who is French or French-speaking. MESOTHELIOMATA (21) METAFICTIONIST (21) METALINGUISTIC (19) METALLIZATIONS (25) METALLOGRAPHER (22) METALLOGRAPHIC (24) METAMORPHOSING (24) [verb] (of a moth or insect) To undergo metamorphosis. | [verb] (by extension) To undergo some transformation. | [verb] To transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance. METAPHORICALLY (26) [adverb] (manner) In a metaphoric manner; not literally; by means of metaphor. | [adverb] Used to draw attention that what follows is a metaphor, not to be taken literally METAPHOSPHATES (26) [noun] Any salt or ester of metaphosphoric acid. METAPHYSICALLY (29) METAPHYSICIANS (26) [noun] A philosopher who specializes in the scholarly study of metaphysics. METAPSYCHOLOGY (30) [noun] The philosophical study of psychology and of the mind. | [noun] A set of principles governing Freudian psychology. | [noun] The study of how human experience forms, filters perception and shapes identity. METASTATICALLY (21) METATHETICALLY (24) METEMPSYCHOSES (28) [noun] Transmigration of the soul, especially its reincarnation after death. METEMPSYCHOSIS (28) [noun] Transmigration of the soul, especially its reincarnation after death. METEORITICISTS (18) METEOROLOGICAL (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to meteorology. METEOROLOGISTS (17) [noun] A person who studies meteorology | [noun] A weather forecaster METHEMOGLOBINS (24) METHODICALNESS (22) METHODOLOGICAL (23) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or using methodology METHODOLOGISTS (21) METHOXYFLURANE (32) METHYLXANTHINE (32) METICULOSITIES (18) METICULOUSNESS (18) METRONIDAZOLES (26) METRONOMICALLY (23) MICROANATOMIES (20) MICROBAROGRAPH (26) MICROBIOLOGIES (21) MICROBIOLOGIST (21) [noun] A scientist whose speciality is microbiology. MICROBREWERIES (23) [noun] A small commercial brewery, often one serving a single pub at which it is physically located; in the United States, often used to indicate a brewery that produces fewer than 15,000 barrels of beer annually. MICROCASSETTES (20) MICROCEPHALICS (27) MICROCEPHALIES (25) MICROCIRCUITRY (25) MICROCOMPUTERS (24) [noun] A computer designed around a microprocessor, smaller than a minicomputer or a mainframe. MICROECONOMICS (24) [noun] The field of economics that deals with small-scale economic activities such as those of an individual or company. MICROELECTRODE (21) MICROEVOLUTION (21) [noun] Small-scale changes in the history of life, such as changes in allele frequencies in a population (over a few generations); also known as change at or below the species level. MICROFIBRILLAR (23) MICROFILAMENTS (23) [noun] A very fine (thin) filament. MICROGRAVITIES (22) MICROINJECTING (28) [noun] Injecting via microinjection MICROINJECTION (27) MICROMETEORITE (20) [noun] An extraterrestrial particle, less than a millimeter in size, that has survived entry into the atmosphere without melting MICROMETEOROID (21) [noun] An extraterrestrial particle less than a millimeter in size MICROMINIATURE (20) MICRONUTRIENTS (18) [noun] A mineral, vitamin or other substance that is essential, even in very small quantities, for growth or metabolism. MICROORGANISMS (21) [noun] An organism that is too small to be seen by the unaided eye, especially a single-celled organism, such as a bacterium. MICROPARTICLES (22) [noun] An extremely small particle. MICROPLANKTONS (24) MICROPROCESSOR (22) [noun] The entire CPU of a computer on a single integrated circuit (chip). MICROPROJECTOR (29) MICROPUBLISHER (25) MICROPULSATION (20) MICROPUNCTURES (22) MICROSPHERICAL (25) MICROSPORANGIA (21) [noun] A case, capsule or container that holds microspores. MICROSPOROCYTE (25) MICROSTRUCTURE (20) [noun] The fine structure of a material or tissue as revealed by microscopy. | [noun] The fine structure of a pure metal or alloy, as revealed by magnifications of 25X or greater. | [noun] Fine-scale structure in such variables as temperature, salinity, velocity, etc. MICROSURGERIES (19) MICROTECHNIQUE (32) MILITANTNESSES (16) MILITARIZATION (25) MILLENARIANISM (18) [noun] A belief in a coming religious millennium, especially the belief in a coming thousand-year reign of peace heralded by the Second Coming of Christ; utopianism, belief in a coming era of peace and prosperity. MILLENNIALISMS (18) MILLENNIALISTS (16) MILLIROENTGENS (17) MINDLESSNESSES (17) MINERALIZATION (25) MIRACULOUSNESS (18) MIRTHFULNESSES (22) MISALLOCATIONS (18) MISAPPLICATION (22) MISAPPREHENDED (25) [verb] To interpret incorrectly; to misunderstand. | [adjective] Misunderstood. MISAPPROPRIATE (22) [verb] To take something for wrong or illegal purposes. | [verb] To embezzle. MISARTICULATED (19) MISARTICULATES (18) MISASSUMPTIONS (20) MISATTRIBUTING (19) [verb] To erroneously attribute; to falsely ascribe; used especially of authorship. MISATTRIBUTION (18) MISCALCULATING (21) [verb] To calculate incorrectly. | [verb] To make a gross error in judgement. MISCALCULATION (20) [noun] An incorrect or mistaken calculation MISCEGENATIONS (19) MISCHANNELLING (22) MISCLASSIFYING (25) [verb] To classify incorrectly. MISCOMPUTATION (22) MISCONCEPTIONS (22) [noun] A mistaken belief, a wrong idea MISCONNECTIONS (20) MISCORRELATION (18) MISDESCRIPTION (21) [noun] An inaccurate description, often fraudulent. MISEMPHASIZING (33) MISEMPLOYMENTS (25) MISESTIMATIONS (18) MISEVALUATIONS (19) MISFUNCTIONING (22) MISGOVERNMENTS (22) MISIDENTIFYING (24) [verb] To mistake the identity. MISIMPRESSIONS (20) MISINFORMATION (21) [noun] Information that is incorrect. MISINTERPRETED (19) [verb] To make an incorrect interpretation; to misunderstand. MISMANAGEMENTS (21) [noun] The process or practice of managing ineptly, incompetently, or dishonestly. MISORIENTATION (16) MISPERCEPTIONS (22) [noun] An incorrect perception. MISPOSITIONING (19) MISPROGRAMMING (24) MISPRONOUNCING (21) [verb] To pronounce (a word, phrase, etc.) incorrectly. | [noun] Mispronunciation MISREGISTERING (18) MISREMEMBERING (23) [verb] To remember incorrectly. | [noun] An instance of remembering something incorrectly. MISREPRESENTED (19) [verb] To represent falsely; to inaccurately portray something. MISSIONIZATION (25) MISTRANSCRIBED (21) MISTRANSCRIBES (20) MISTRANSLATING (17) [verb] To translate incorrectly. MISTRANSLATION (16) MISUNDERSTANDS (18) [verb] To understand incorrectly, while believing one has understood correctly. MISUTILIZATION (25) MITOGENICITIES (19) MODERATENESSES (17) MODERATORSHIPS (22) MODERNISATIONS (17) [noun] The process of modernizing. MODERNIZATIONS (26) [noun] The process of modernizing. MODULABILITIES (19) MOLLIFICATIONS (21) MONEYGRUBBINGS (25) MONGRELIZATION (26) MONOCARBOXYLIC (32) MONOCHROMATISM (25) [noun] The condition of being monochromatic | [noun] The condition of being totally colour blind; achromatopsia MONOCHROMATORS (23) [noun] An optical device, consisting of one or more slits, that selects a narrow band of wavelengths from a broader spectrum. MONOCOTYLEDONS (22) [noun] Any plant whose seedlings typically have one cotyledon (seed leaf) (in contrast to the two cotyledons typical of dicots), thereby belonging to the taxonomic monocots, formerly variously known as Monocotyledones, Monocotyledonae, or Liliopsida, a class in the angiosperms (Angiospermae), the flowering plants. MONOGLYCERIDES (23) MONOLITHICALLY (24) MONOMANIACALLY (23) MONOMETALLISMS (20) MONOMETALLISTS (18) MONONUCLEOTIDE (19) MONOPHONICALLY (26) MONOPOLIZATION (27) MONOPROPELLANT (20) [noun] Any propellant that consists of a single substance, or of a mixture of fuel and oxidant in the same container MONOSACCHARIDE (24) [noun] A simple sugar such as glucose, fructose or deoxyribose that has a single ring MONOTHEISTICAL (21) MONOTONICITIES (18) MONOTONOUSNESS (16) MONOUNSATURATE (16) MONUMENTALIZED (28) [verb] To make something become or appear monumental MONUMENTALIZES (27) [verb] To make something become or appear monumental MORALISTICALLY (21) MORGANATICALLY (22) MORTIFICATIONS (21) [noun] The act of mortifying. | [noun] A sensation of extreme shame or embarrassment. | [noun] The death of part of the body. MOTHERLESSNESS (19) MOTHERLINESSES (19) MOTIONLESSNESS (16) MOTIVATIONALLY (22) MOUNTAINEERING (17) [noun] The sport of climbing mountains. MOURNFULNESSES (19) MOVELESSNESSES (19) MUCILAGINOUSLY (22) MUDDLEHEADEDLY (26) MULLIGATAWNIES (20) MULTICHAMBERED (26) MULTICHARACTER (23) MULTICOMPONENT (22) MULTICONDUCTOR (21) MULTIDIALECTAL (19) MULTIELECTRODE (19) MULTIEMPLOYERS (23) MULTIFACTORIAL (21) [noun] A generalisation of a factorial in which each element to be multiplied differs from the next by an integer (e.g. n(n-3)(n-6)(n-9)...) | [adjective] Involving, or controlled by multiple factors | [adjective] (of a trait) Involving multiple genetic and/or environmental factors MULTIFORMITIES (21) MULTIFREQUENCY (33) MULTILATERALLY (19) MULTILINGUALLY (20) MULTIMEGAWATTS (22) MULTIMOLECULAR (20) MULTINATIONALS (16) [noun] A multinational company. MULTINUCLEATED (19) MULTIPARAMETER (20) MULTIPLICATION (20) [noun] The process of computing the sum of a number with itself a specified number of times, or any other analogous binary operation that combines other mathematical objects. | [noun] A calculation involving multiplication. | [noun] The process of multiplying or increasing in number; increase. MULTIPLICATIVE (23) [noun] (grammar) A grammatical adverbial case in Finnish. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to multiplication. | [adjective] (of a function, etc.) Distributive over multiplication. MULTIPLICITIES (20) [noun] The state of being made of multiple diverse elements. | [noun] The number of values for which a given condition holds. | [noun] A large indeterminate number. MULTIPOTENTIAL (18) MULTIPROCESSOR (20) [noun] A computer that has multiple CPUs or execution units under an integrated control. MULTIRACIALISM (20) MULTIRELIGIOUS (17) MULTIVERSITIES (19) [noun] A kind of modern, large-scale university, open to all, proposed by Clark Kerr in the 1960s. MUMMIFICATIONS (25) MUNICIPALITIES (20) [noun] A district with a government that typically encloses no other governed districts; a borough, city, or incorporated town or village. | [noun] The governing body of such a district. MUNICIPALIZING (30) [verb] To convert into a municipality MUSICALIZATION (27) MUTAGENICITIES (19) MUTINOUSNESSES (16) MUTUALIZATIONS (25) MYELENCEPHALIC (28) MYELENCEPHALON (26) MYRMECOLOGICAL (26) MYRMECOLOGISTS (24) MYRMECOPHILOUS (28) MYSTERIOUSNESS (19) MYSTIFICATIONS (24) MYTHOLOGICALLY (28) NAMELESSNESSES (16) NAPHTHYLAMINES (27) NEOCLASSICISMS (20) NEOCOLONIALISM (18) [noun] The control or domination by a powerful country over weaker ones (especially former colonies) by the use of economic pressure, political suppression and cultural dominance. NEOLIBERALISMS (18) NEOPLASTICISMS (20) NEPHELOMETRIES (21) NEPHRECTOMIZED (33) NEPHRECTOMIZES (32) NEURAMINIDASES (17) NEUROANATOMIES (16) NEUROANATOMIST (16) NEUROBLASTOMAS (18) [noun] A form of cancer that affects the ganglia in various parts of the body NEUROCHEMICALS (23) [noun] A chemical substance that is involved in neural activity, such as a neurotransmitter NEUROCHEMISTRY (24) [noun] The branch of neuroscience concerned with the chemistry of the nervous system NEUROFIBROMATA (21) [noun] A benign tumor composed of Schwann cells NEWSPAPERWOMAN (26) [noun] A woman who works in the production of the text of a newspaper; a reporter, editor, etc. NEWSPAPERWOMEN (26) [noun] A woman who works in the production of the text of a newspaper; a reporter, editor, etc. NOMENCLATORIAL (18) NONACHIEVEMENT (24) NONATTACHMENTS (21) NONCHARISMATIC (23) NONCHROMOSOMAL (23) NONCOMBUSTIBLE (22) [noun] (mostly plural) Any substance that is not combustible. | [adjective] That will not readily ignite and burn. NONCOMMITMENTS (22) NONCOMMITTALLY (23) NONCOMMUTATIVE (23) NONCOMPETITION (20) NONCOMPETITIVE (23) [adjective] That does not involve competition or rivalry. NONCOMPETITORS (20) NONCOMPLIANCES (22) NONCOMPLICATED (23) NONCONFORMANCE (23) NONCONFORMISMS (23) NONCONFORMISTS (21) [noun] A member of a church separated from the Church of England; a Protestant dissenter. | [noun] Loosely, a Christian who does not conform to the doctrines of an established church. | [noun] Someone who does not conform to accepted beliefs, customs or practices. NONCONSUMPTION (20) NONCONSUMPTIVE (23) NONDEVELOPMENT (22) NONDIMENSIONAL (17) NONDOCUMENTARY (22) NONEMERGENCIES (19) [noun] Something that is not an emergency NONEMPLOYMENTS (23) NONENFORCEMENT (21) NONENGAGEMENTS (18) NONEQUILIBRIUM (27) NONFILAMENTOUS (19) NONFULFILLMENT (22) NONGEOMETRICAL (19) NONGRAMMATICAL (21) NONHOMOGENEOUS (20) NONHOMOSEXUALS (26) NONIMPLICATION (20) NONIMPORTATION (18) NONINFLAMMABLE (23) [adjective] Not inflammable. NONINFORMATION (19) NONINSTALLMENT (16) NONINVOLVEMENT (22) NONMECHANISTIC (23) NONMEMBERSHIPS (25) NONMONETARISTS (16) NONOBJECTIVISM (30) NONPERFORMANCE (23) [noun] A failure to perform a task, especially a task that one was legally bound to do. NONPROGRAMMERS (21) NONRECOMBINANT (20) NONSYMMETRICAL (23) NONTERMINATING (17) NORMALIZATIONS (25) [noun] Any process that makes something more normal or regular, which typically means conforming to some regularity or rule, or returning from some state of abnormality. | [noun] Standardization, act of imposing standards or norms or rules or regulations. | [noun] In relational database design, a process that breaks down data into record groups for efficient processing, by eliminating redundancy. NOVEMDECILLION (22) NUMEROUSNESSES (16) NUMINOUSNESSES (16) NUMISMATICALLY (23) NYMPHOMANIACAL (28) OBSTRUCTIONISM (20) [noun] A deliberate policy of obstructing something, especially a political process or body. ODONTOGLOSSUMS (18) [noun] Any of very many orchids of the genus Odontoglossum. OLEOMARGARINES (17) [noun] Margarine OMBUDSMANSHIPS (26) OMNICOMPETENCE (24) OMPHALOSKEPSES (27) OMPHALOSKEPSIS (27) ONOMATOLOGISTS (17) OOPHORECTOMIES (23) [noun] Surgical removal of one or both ovaries. OPERATIONALISM (18) [noun] A philosophy that attempts to define all scientific concepts in terms of specified operations or procedures of observation and measurement OPHTHALMOLOGIC (27) OPHTHALMOSCOPE (28) [noun] An instrument for examining the interior of the eye (that is, for ophthalmoscopy). OPHTHALMOSCOPY (31) OPTIMISTICALLY (23) [adverb] In an optimistic manner. ORGANISMICALLY (22) ORGANOMETALLIC (19) [noun] Any organometallic compound. | [adjective] Of, or relating to organic compounds having a metal atom directly bonded to a carbon atom ORNAMENTATIONS (16) ORTHOCHROMATIC (26) [adjective] Being uniformly sensitive across the entire visible range, and thus reproducing colours faithfully | [adjective] Sensitive to all colours except red ORTHOMOLECULAR (21) [adjective] Relating to the theory that mental illness is the result of chemical deficiencies, and can be cured with vitamins and the like OSMOREGULATION (17) [noun] The homeostatic regulation of osmotic pressure in the body in order to maintain a certain water content (concentration of electrolytes, pH, etc). OSMOREGULATORY (20) OSTEOSARCOMATA (18) [noun] A type of cancer of the bone OUTMANEUVERING (20) [verb] To perform movements more adroitly or successfully than. OUTMANIPULATED (19) OUTMANIPULATES (18) OVARIECTOMIZED (31) [verb] To remove the ovaries from. OVERADJUSTMENT (27) OVERASSESSMENT (19) OVERCOMMITMENT (25) OVERCOMMITTING (24) [verb] To make excessive commitments, either beyond one's ability or beyond what is reasonable OVERCOMPENSATE (23) [verb] To do an excessive amount in one area in an effort to overcome a perceived lack in another area. | [verb] To provide with excessive pay or reward for work performed. OVERCOMPLIANCE (25) OVERCOMPLICATE (25) [verb] To make something excessively complicated. OVERCOMPRESSED (24) OVERCOMPRESSES (23) OVERDETERMINED (21) [adjective] (of a problem or question) Having more constraints or causes than necessary to determine a solution or result. | [adjective] (of a system of linear equations) Having more equations than variables. | [adjective] (usually psychoanalysis) Determined by multiple causes in such a way that any of the causes on its own would be sufficient to account for the effect. OVERDOCUMENTED (23) OVERDOMINANCES (22) OVERDRAMATIZED (30) [verb] To dramatize to excess; to make overdramatic. OVERDRAMATIZES (29) [verb] To dramatize to excess; to make overdramatic. OVEREMPHASIZED (34) [verb] To place too much emphasis on; to overstate the importance of. OVEREMPHASIZES (33) [verb] To place too much emphasis on; to overstate the importance of. OVERENTHUSIASM (22) [noun] Excessive enthusiasm. OVERESTIMATING (20) [verb] To judge or calculate too highly. OVERESTIMATION (19) [noun] An excessive estimation. OVERGLAMORIZED (30) OVERGLAMORIZES (29) OVERHOMOGENIZE (32) OVERIMPRESSING (22) OVERINVESTMENT (22) [noun] Excessive investment, especially in one particular area OVERMATURITIES (19) OVERMEDICATING (23) OVERMEDICATION (22) OVEROPTIMISTIC (23) [adjective] Excessively optimistic. OVERORNAMENTED (20) OVERPROGRAMING (23) OVERPROGRAMMED (25) OVERREFINEMENT (22) OVERSIMPLIFIED (25) [adjective] Having been simplified to the point where important information is not conveyed. | [verb] To explain or present something in a way that excludes important information for the sake of brevity, or of making the explanation or presentation easy to understand. OVERSIMPLIFIES (24) [verb] To explain or present something in a way that excludes important information for the sake of brevity, or of making the explanation or presentation easy to understand. OVERSIMPLISTIC (23) [adjective] Too simplistic. OVERSTATEMENTS (19) [noun] An exaggeration; a statement in excess of what is reasonable. | [noun] The tendency to overstate. OVERSTIMULATED (20) [verb] To stimulate to an excessive degree; to expose to excessive stimulation. | [adjective] Excessively stimulated OVERSTIMULATES (19) [verb] To stimulate to an excessive degree; to expose to excessive stimulation. OVERTREATMENTS (19) OVERWHELMINGLY (29) [adverb] In an overwhelming manner; very greatly or intensely. OXYHEMOGLOBINS (32) OXYMORONICALLY (31) PACHYDERMATOUS (27) PAEDOMORPHISMS (26) PAEDOMORPHOSES (24) PAEDOMORPHOSIS (24) [noun] The retention of juvenile traits by an adult; neoteny PALEOMAGNETISM (21) [noun] The study of the strength and direction of the Earth's magnetic field as it has changed over geologic time. PALEOMAGNETIST (19) PAMPHLETEERING (24) [verb] To publish and distribute pamphlets as a form of propaganda. | [noun] The printing and distribution of pamphlets, especially as propaganda. PANCREATECTOMY (25) [noun] The procedure to remove part or all of the pancreas. PAPILLOMAVIRUS (23) [noun] Any variety of virus which causes warts PARAJOURNALISM (25) PARALLELOGRAMS (19) [noun] A convex quadrilateral in which each pair of opposite edges are parallel and of equal length. | [noun] (Gaelic games) either of two rectangular areas (respectively the large parallelogram and the small parallelogram) abutting the goal line in front of the goal. (Since 1986 officially named the large rectangle and small rectangle, though the older names are still occasionally used.) PARAMAGNETISMS (21) PARAMETERIZING (28) [verb] To describe in terms of parameters. | [verb] To rewrite (a database query, etc.) as a template into which parameters can be inserted. PARAMETRICALLY (23) PARENCHYMATOUS (26) [adjective] Of or pertaining to parenchyma | [adjective] Consisting of or relating to the cellular tissue making up the softer parts of leaves, pulp of fruits, bark and pith of stems, etc. PARSIMONIOUSLY (21) PARTICULARISMS (20) [noun] The principle that only certain people are chosen by God for salvation. | [noun] An exclusive focus on a particular group, area, sect etc. | [noun] The principle that individual states, races of a federation etc. may act independently of a central authority. PASSEMENTERIES (18) PATRESFAMILIAS (21) [noun] A man who is the head of a household, family or tribe. PEDESTRIANISMS (19) PENICILLAMINES (20) PERAMBULATIONS (20) PEREMPTORINESS (20) PERFECTIONISMS (23) PERFORMABILITY (26) PERMEABILITIES (20) PERMISSIBILITY (23) PERMISSIVENESS (21) [noun] The relative likelihood of something or someone to grant permission or allow something to happen. PERMITTIVITIES (21) [noun] A property of a dielectric medium that determines the forces that electric charges placed in the medium exert on each other. PETROCHEMICALS (25) [noun] Any compound derived from petroleum or natural gas PETROCHEMISTRY (26) [noun] The branch of chemistry that deals with petroleum, natural gas and their derivatives. PHANTASMAGORIA (22) [noun] A popular 18th- and 19th-century form of theatre entertainment whereby ghostly apparitions are formed. | [noun] A series of events involving rapid changes in light intensity and colour. | [noun] A dreamlike state where real and imagined elements are blurred together. PHANTASMAGORIC (24) PHARMACEUTICAL (25) [noun] A pharmaceutical or pharmacological preparation or product; a drug. | [adjective] Of, or relating to pharmacy or pharmacists. PHARMACOLOGIES (24) PHARMACOLOGIST (24) PHARMACOPOEIAL (25) PHARMACOPOEIAS (25) [noun] An official book describing medicines or other pharmacological substances, especially their use, preparation, and regulation. | [noun] A collection of drugs. PHENMETRAZINES (30) PHENOMENALISMS (23) PHENOMENALISTS (21) PHILHELLENISMS (24) PHLEGMATICALLY (27) PHOTOCHEMISTRY (29) [noun] The study of photochemical reactions. PHOTOCHROMISMS (28) PHOTOCOMPOSERS (25) PHOTOCOMPOSING (26) PHOTOEMISSIONS (21) PHOTOGRAMMETRY (27) [noun] The making of precise measurements from photographs. | [noun] The making of maps from photographs, especially from aerial surveying. PHOTOPERIODISM (24) [noun] The growth, development and other responses of plants and animals according to the length of day and/or night. PHYSIOGNOMICAL (27) PHYSOSTIGMINES (25) PHYTOCHEMISTRY (32) [noun] The scientific study of the chemicals found in plants. | [noun] The collection of chemicals and chemical processes found in a particular plant. PINEALECTOMIES (20) PINEALECTOMIZE (29) PLASMAPHERESES (23) PLASMAPHERESIS (23) [noun] A procedure in which whole blood is removed from a donor or patient and centrifuged to isolate blood cells that are resuspended in a compatible solution and re-injected into the donor or patient. PLATYHELMINTHS (27) [noun] Any flatworm of the phylum Platyhelminthes. PLETHYSMOGRAMS (27) PLETHYSMOGRAPH (30) [noun] An instrument for measuring changes in volume within an organ or whole body (usually via fluctuations in the amount of fluid it contains). PNEUMATICITIES (20) PNEUMATOLOGIES (19) PNEUMATOPHORES (23) [noun] A gas-filled sac or float of some colonial marine coelenterates, such as the Portuguese man-of-war. | [noun] An aerial root, in mangroves etc., specialized for gaseous exchange. | [noun] An apparatus consisting of a bag with a tube and mouthpiece, which may be attached to the body. The bag contains oxygen to be breathed by the wearer in rescue work in mines, etc. PNEUMOCONIOSES (20) PNEUMOCONIOSIS (20) [noun] A disease of the lungs caused by inhalation of particulate matter. PNEUMOTHORACES (23) PNEUMOTHORAXES (28) POCOCURANTISMS (22) POIKILOTHERMIC (27) POLYACRYLAMIDE (27) [noun] Any of a range of cross-linked polymers of acrylamide; used to form soft gels for making contact lenses etc. POLYEMBRYONIES (26) POLYMERISATION (21) POLYMERIZATION (30) POLYMORPHOUSLY (29) POSTAMPUTATION (20) POSTHUMOUSNESS (21) POSTMASTECTOMY (25) POSTMASTERSHIP (23) POSTMENOPAUSAL (20) [adjective] (of a symptom or condition) Subsequent to the menopause. | [adjective] (of a person) Having experienced menopause. POSTMILLENNIAL (18) [adjective] Pertaining to the belief that the Second Coming will take place after the millennium. | [adjective] Pertaining to the period following the year 1000 or (now more usually) following the year 2000. POSTMISTRESSES (18) [noun] A female postmaster POSTMODERNISMS (21) POSTMODERNISTS (19) [noun] An advocate or follower of postmodernism. POSTRETIREMENT (18) POTENTIOMETERS (18) [noun] A user-adjustable 3 terminal variable resistor that can be used as a voltage divider. | [noun] An instrument that measures a voltage by opposing it with a precise fraction of a known voltage, and without drawing current from the unknown source. POTENTIOMETRIC (20) PREARRANGEMENT (19) PRECOMBUSTIONS (22) PRECOMMITMENTS (24) PREDETERMINERS (19) [noun] (grammar) The function of a phrase that precedes a determiner in a noun phrase and modifies the head noun. PREDETERMINING (20) [verb] To determine or decide in advance. | [verb] To doom by previous decree; to foredoom. PREDEVELOPMENT (24) PREDOMINANCIES (21) PREDOMINATIONS (19) PREFIGUREMENTS (22) PREFORMULATING (22) PREMANUFACTURE (23) PREMAXILLARIES (25) PREMEDITATEDLY (23) PREMEDITATIONS (19) [noun] The act of planning or plotting something in advance, especially a crime. PREMENSTRUALLY (21) PREMILLENARIAN (18) PRENOMINATIONS (18) PREORDAINMENTS (19) PREPERFORMANCE (25) PREPROGRAMMING (24) [verb] To program something in advance. | [verb] To predispose to certain thoughts or behaviours. PRESENTIMENTAL (18) PRESUMPTUOUSLY (23) PRESYMPTOMATIC (27) PRETERMINATION (18) PRETERMISSIONS (18) PRIMATOLOGICAL (21) PRIMATOLOGISTS (19) PRIMOGENITURES (19) PROGRESSIVISMS (22) PRONOUNCEMENTS (20) [noun] An official public announcement. | [noun] An utterance. PRONUNCIAMENTO (20) [noun] A manifesto or formal proclamation of rebellion, particularly in Spain, Portugal and Latin America. PROTECTIONISMS (20) PROVINCIALISMS (23) [noun] The quality of being provincial; having provincial tastes, mentality, manners. | [noun] A word or locution characteristic of a region or district. PSEUDOMORPHISM (26) PSEUDOMORPHOUS (24) PSEUDONYMITIES (22) PSEUDONYMOUSLY (25) PSYCHOCHEMICAL (33) PSYCHODRAMATIC (29) PSYCHODYNAMICS (32) [noun] The dynamic interplay between forces that govern human behaviour. PSYCHOSOMATICS (28) PSYCHROMETRIES (26) PYRHELIOMETERS (24) PYRHELIOMETRIC (26) PYRIMETHAMINES (26) PYROMETALLURGY (25) [noun] Any process that uses high temperatures to transform either metals or their ores. PYROMETRICALLY (26) QUADRUMVIRATES (29) [noun] A group of four people, especially a council of four men sharing office or rule. QUALMISHNESSES (28) QUARTERMASTERS (25) [noun] An officer whose duty is to provide quarters, provisions, storage, clothing, fuel, stationery, and transportation for a regiment or other body of troops, and superintend the supplies. | [noun] A petty officer who attends to the helm, binnacle, signals, and the like, under the direction of the master. RADIOCHEMISTRY (25) [noun] The chemistry of radioactive substances | [noun] The use of radioisotopes to study the kinetics of chemical reactions RADIOSTRONTIUM (17) RADIOTELEMETRY (20) RAMBUNCTIOUSLY (23) RAMPAGEOUSNESS (19) RANDOMIZATIONS (26) RAPPROCHEMENTS (25) [noun] The reestablishment of cordial relations, particularly between two countries; a reconciliation. REACCLIMATIZED (30) REACCLIMATIZES (29) REACTIONARYISM (21) REAFFIRMATIONS (22) [noun] An act of reaffirming; a second or subsequent affirmation. REAPPOINTMENTS (20) REARRANGEMENTS (17) [noun] The process of rearranging. | [noun] A rearrangement reaction. RECOMBINATIONS (20) [noun] Combination a second or subsequent time. | [noun] The formation of genetic combinations in offspring that are not present in the parents | [noun] The reverse of dissociation RECOMMENCEMENT (24) RECOMMENDATION (21) [noun] An act of recommending. | [noun] That which is recommended. | [noun] A commendation or endorsement. RECOMMENDATORY (24) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a recommendation RECOMMISSIONED (21) [verb] To give a new commission or to validate an existing commission. | [verb] To put back in service (undoing decommissioning). | [adjective] Commissioned again RECOMPILATIONS (20) RECOMPOSITIONS (20) [noun] Composition again or anew; the process or result of recomposing RECOMPUTATIONS (20) RECONCILEMENTS (20) RECONFIRMATION (21) RECONTAMINATED (19) RECONTAMINATES (18) RECRIMINATIONS (18) [noun] The act of recriminating. | [noun] A counter or mutual accusation. REDEVELOPMENTS (22) [noun] The process of developing something anew. | [noun] The demolition of old, redundant or unfashionable buildings or infrastructure and the construction of new ones on the same site. REEMBROIDERING (20) REEXAMINATIONS (23) [noun] A second or subsequent examination. | [noun] Subsequent questioning of a witness after cross-examination. | [noun] In United States patent law, a procedure under which an issued patent is returned to the examiner to determine if it remains valid in light of newly discovered prior art. REFLECTOMETERS (21) [noun] An instrument used to measure the reflectance of a surface. REFORMULATIONS (19) REFRACTOMETERS (21) [noun] An optical instrument used to measure the refractive index of a substance. REFRACTOMETRIC (23) REFURBISHMENTS (24) [noun] The act of refurbishing; renovation. REGIMENTATIONS (17) REIMBURSEMENTS (20) [noun] The act of compensating someone for an expense. REIMPLANTATION (18) REIMPORTATIONS (18) REINFORCEMENTS (21) [noun] The act, process, or state of reinforcing or being reinforced. | [noun] A thing that reinforces. | [noun] (in the plural) Additional troops or materiel sent to support a military action. REINSTATEMENTS (16) [noun] The act of restoring something to its previous state. RELINQUISHMENT (28) REMANUFACTURED (22) REMANUFACTURER (21) REMANUFACTURES (21) REMARKABLENESS (22) REMATERIALIZED (26) REMATERIALIZES (25) REMEASUREMENTS (18) REMILITARIZING (26) [verb] To militarize (a demilitarized area) again. REMINISCENTIAL (18) [adjective] Of or relating to remembering; reminiscent. | [adjective] (of a person) Having a tendency to reminisce REMOBILIZATION (27) REMONETIZATION (25) REMONSTRATIONS (16) REMORSEFULNESS (19) REMOVABILITIES (21) REMUNERATIVELY (22) REMYTHOLOGIZED (33) REMYTHOLOGIZES (32) REPLENISHMENTS (21) [noun] The act of replenishing. | [noun] A new supply of something. REPROGRAMMABLE (23) REPUBLICANISMS (22) RESPIROMETRIES (18) RESTIMULATIONS (16) RESTRICTIONISM (18) RESYSTEMATIZED (29) RESYSTEMATIZES (28) RETINOBLASTOMA (18) [noun] A malignant tumour of the retina; a hereditary condition found mostly in children. RETRANSFORMING (20) RETRANSMISSION (16) [noun] The transmission of something again, especially over a different medium or at a different time RETRANSMITTING (17) [verb] To transmit again. RHEUMATOLOGIES (20) RHEUMATOLOGIST (20) RHOMBENCEPHALA (28) RHYTHMIZATIONS (34) ROENTGENOGRAMS (18) [noun] An X-ray image. RUMORMONGERING (20) RUTHERFORDIUMS (23) SABERMETRICIAN (20) SACCHARIMETERS (23) SACCHAROMETERS (23) [noun] A hydrometer used to measure the sugar content of a liquid. SACERDOTALISMS (19) SACRAMENTALISM (20) SACRAMENTALIST (18) SADOMASOCHISMS (24) SADOMASOCHISTS (22) SANSCULOTTISMS (18) SCANDALMONGERS (20) [noun] A person who trades in gossip; one who collects and disseminates rumors. SCHEMATIZATION (30) SCHISMATICALLY (26) SCHOLASTICISMS (23) SCHOOLMASTERLY (24) SCHOOLMISTRESS (21) [noun] A woman in charge of a school. SCINTILLOMETER (18) SEAMLESSNESSES (16) SEDIMENTATIONS (17) SEDIMENTOLOGIC (20) SEISMOGRAPHERS (22) SEISMOGRAPHIES (22) SELFSAMENESSES (19) SEMASIOLOGICAL (19) SEMIAUTOMATICS (20) [noun] A semi-automatic firearm, especially such a pistol. | [noun] A semi-automatic transmission SEMIAUTONOMOUS (18) [adjective] Partially, but not fully, autonomous. SEMICENTENNIAL (18) SEMICOMMERCIAL (24) SEMICONDUCTING (22) [adjective] That has the characteristics of a semiconductor SEMICONDUCTORS (21) [noun] A substance with electrical properties intermediate between a good conductor and a good insulator. SEMIDARKNESSES (21) SEMIOFFICIALLY (27) SEMIOLOGICALLY (22) SEMIPORCELAINS (20) SEMIRETIREMENT (18) [noun] A state of partial retirement, working only part-time or occasionally SEMPITERNITIES (18) SENSATIONALISM (16) [noun] The use of sensational subject matter, style or methods, or the sensational subject matter itself; behavior, published materials, or broadcasts that are intentionally controversial, exaggerated, lurid, loud, or attention-grabbing. Especially applied to news media in a pejorative sense that they are reporting in a manner to gain audience or notoriety but at the expense of accuracy and professionalism. | [noun] A theory of philosophy that all knowledge is ultimately derived from the senses. SENSITOMETRIES (16) SENTIMENTALISE (16) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SENTIMENTALISM (18) [noun] A liking for sentimental things | [noun] An overly sentimental thing or condition; bathos or sentimentality | [noun] A view according to which morality is somehow grounded in moral sentiments or emotions. SENTIMENTALIST (16) SENTIMENTALITY (19) [noun] An act or state of being sentimental. SENTIMENTALIZE (25) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SERIOCOMICALLY (23) SERVOMECHANISM (26) [noun] A mechanical device for controlling large amounts of power by means of smaller amounts of power and correcting the performance of the device using feedback | [noun] Any system which controls motion automatically using feedback SHAMEFACEDNESS (25) SHAMEFULNESSES (22) SILVERSMITHING (23) SIMPLEMINDEDLY (25) SIMPLIFICATION (23) [noun] The act of simplifying or something that has been simplified | [noun] A valid simple argument SIMPLISTICALLY (23) SIMULTANEITIES (16) SIMULTANEOUSLY (19) [adverb] Occurring at the same time. SLEDGEHAMMERED (24) [verb] To strike with a sledgehammer. SOLEMNIZATIONS (25) SOMATOTROPHINS (21) [noun] A polypeptide growth hormone produced by the human pituitary gland SOMNAMBULATING (21) SOMNAMBULATION (20) SOMNAMBULISTIC (22) SPATIOTEMPORAL (20) [adjective] Of, concerning, or existing in both space and time. | [adjective] Of or concerning spacetime. SPECTINOMYCINS (25) SPECTROMETRIES (20) SPERMATOGONIAL (19) SPERMATOGONIUM (21) [noun] Any of the undifferentiated cells in the male gonads that become spermatocytes; a spermatoblast SPERMATOPHORES (23) [noun] A spermospore. | [noun] A capsule or pocket enclosing a number of spermatozoa, found in many annelids, brachiopods, insects, mollusks, and crustaceans. SPERMATOPHYTES (26) [noun] Any plant that bears seeds rather than spores SPERMATOPHYTIC (28) SPERMIOGENESES (19) SPERMIOGENESIS (19) SPLENECTOMIZED (30) SPLENECTOMIZES (29) SPLENOMEGALIES (19) SPOKESMANSHIPS (27) SPORTFISHERMAN (24) SPORTFISHERMEN (24) SPORTSMANSHIPS (23) STAPEDECTOMIES (21) STATESMANSHIPS (21) STATIONMASTERS (16) [noun] The person in charge of a railroad station, usually an employee of a particular railroad by which the station is owned, but sometimes an employee of a separate corporation, such as one owning a station used by two or more railroads. STEAMROLLERING (17) [verb] To level a road using a steamroller | [verb] To proceed ruthlessly against all opposition as if with an overwhelming force; to overpower STEREOCHEMICAL (23) [adjective] Of or pertaining to stereochemistry STEREOISOMERIC (18) STIGMATIZATION (26) [noun] The process or act of stigmatizing. | [noun] The production of stigmata upon the body. STOICHIOMETRIC (23) [adjective] Of, or relating to stoichiometry. | [adjective] (of reactants, or of elements in a compound) Existing in a ratio of small integers. STONEMASONRIES (16) STREPTOMYCETES (23) [noun] Any bacterium of the family Streptomycetaceae STRUCTURALISMS (18) SUBATMOSPHERIC (25) SUBCOMMISSIONS (22) SUBCOMMUNITIES (22) SUBDEPARTMENTS (21) SUBDEVELOPMENT (24) SUBEMPLOYMENTS (25) SUBGOVERNMENTS (22) SUBMANDIBULARS (21) SUBMAXILLARIES (25) SUBMETACENTRIC (22) SUBMICROSCOPIC (26) [adjective] Smaller than microscopic; too small to be seen even with a microscope SUBMISSIVENESS (21) [noun] The state or quality of being submissive. SUBNORMALITIES (18) SULFANILAMIDES (20) [noun] Any of a class of amino substituted aromatic sulfonamides that are used as antifungal antibiotics; but especially the parent compound 4-aminobenzenesulfonamide SUMMARIZATIONS (27) SUMMERSAULTING (19) [verb] To perform a somersault. SUPERAMBITIOUS (20) SUPERCOMPUTERS (22) [noun] Any computer that has a far greater processing power than others of its day; typically they use more than one core and are housed in large clean rooms with high air flow to permit cooling. Typical uses are weather forecasting, nuclear simulations and animations. SUPERCRIMINALS (20) SUPERDIPLOMATS (21) SUPEREMINENCES (20) SUPEREMINENTLY (21) SUPERHUMANNESS (21) SUPERIMPOSABLE (22) SUPERINCUMBENT (22) [adjective] Lying or resting on something else; overlying. SUPERMASCULINE (20) SUPERMILITANTS (18) SUPERMINISTERS (18) SUPERNORMALITY (21) SUPERORGANISMS (19) SUPERPHENOMENA (23) SUPERSTIMULATE (18) SUPERSYMMETRIC (25) SUPRAMOLECULAR (20) [adjective] Consisting of many molecules; of scale or complexity greater than that of a molecule. SUPRASEGMENTAL (19) [noun] An effect on speech, such as length, stress, tone, and phonation type, that extends over more than one segment of sounds. | [adjective] Of or relating to a suprasegmental. | [adjective] More than a segment. SWORDSMANSHIPS (25) SYMBOLIZATIONS (30) SYMMETRIZATION (30) SYMPATHOLYTICS (29) [noun] Any medicine having this effect. SYMPTOMATOLOGY (27) [noun] The science that studies the symptoms of diseases. | [noun] All the symptoms of a particular disease. SYRINGOMYELIAS (23) SYSTEMATICALLY (24) [adverb] In an organized manner; utilising a system. SYSTEMATICNESS (21) SYSTEMIZATIONS (28) TALISMANICALLY (21) TARSOMETATARSI (16) [noun] The large bone next the foot in the leg of a bird. It is formed by the union of the distal part of the tarsus with the metatarsus. TASKMISTRESSES (20) [noun] A woman who assigns tasks; a female overseer. TATTERDEMALION (17) [noun] A person with tattered clothing. | [adjective] Tattered. TELEFACSIMILES (21) [noun] Fax TELEMARKETINGS (21) TELEMETRICALLY (21) TELEVANGELISMS (20) TEMPORIZATIONS (27) TERMINABLENESS (18) TERMINOLOGICAL (19) TERRITORIALISM (16) TETRAGRAMMATON (19) THAUMATURGISTS (20) THEATRICALISMS (21) THERMALIZATION (28) THERMOCHEMICAL (28) THERMOCHEMISTS (26) THERMODYNAMICS (27) [noun] The science of the conversions between heat and other forms of energy. THERMOELECTRIC (23) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or exhibiting thermoelectricity THERMOELEMENTS (21) THERMOFORMABLE (26) THERMOGRAPHERS (25) THERMOGRAPHIES (25) THERMOJUNCTION (28) THERMOLABILITY (24) THERMOMAGNETIC (24) THERMOPLASTICS (23) [noun] A plastic with this property. THERMORECEPTOR (23) THERMOREGULATE (20) [verb] To regulate the body temperature (by thermoregulation) THERMOREMANENT (21) THERMOSTATTING (20) THERMOTROPISMS (23) THIGMOTROPISMS (24) THIMBLEBERRIES (23) [noun] Rubus parviflorus, a species of Rubus, native to western and northern North America, from Alaska east to Ontario and Minnesota, and south to northern Mexico. | [noun] The fruit of the above plant. | [noun] The black raspberry, Rubus occidentalis. THIMBLERIGGERS (23) THIMBLERIGGING (24) THROMBOEMBOLIC (27) THROMBOKINASES (25) THROMBOPLASTIC (25) THROMBOPLASTIN (23) [noun] A protease that converts prothrombin to thrombin during the clotting of blood THYMECTOMIZING (36) TIMELESSNESSES (16) TIMOROUSNESSES (16) TIRESOMENESSES (16) TOILSOMENESSES (16) TRACHEOSTOMIES (21) [noun] A surgical procedure in which an incision is made into the trachea, through the neck, and a tube inserted so as to make an artificial opening in order to assist breathing TRADITIONALISM (17) [noun] The adherence to traditional views or practices, especially with regard to cultural or religious matters. | [noun] The continuation of theological rituals on the basis that the ritual has always completed, rather than the ritual being a manifestation of theology. | [noun] A philosophical system which makes tradition the supreme criterion and rule of certitude; the doctrine that human reason is of itself radically unable to know with certainty any truth or, at least, the fundamental truths of the metaphysical, moral, and religious order. TRANSAMINATION (16) [noun] The transfer of an amino group from an amino acid to another molecule TRANSFORMATION (19) [noun] The act of transforming or the state of being transformed. | [noun] A marked change in appearance or character, especially one for the better. | [noun] The replacement of the variables in an algebraic expression by their values in terms of another set of variables; a mapping of one space onto another or onto itself; a function that changes the position or direction of the axes of a coordinate system. TRANSFORMATIVE (22) [adjective] That causes transformation TRANSMIGRATING (18) [verb] To migrate to another country. | [verb] (of the soul) To pass into another body after death. TRANSMIGRATION (17) TRANSMIGRATORS (17) TRANSMIGRATORY (20) TRANSMISSIVITY (22) [noun] A measure of the capacity of a material to transmit radiation (the ratio of the amounts of energy transmitted and received) | [noun] A measure of the capacity of a saturated aquifer to transmit water horizontally. SI units: m²/s. Symbol: T. TRANSMITTANCES (18) [noun] A transmission | [noun] The fraction of incident light, or other radiation, that passes through a substance TRANSMOGRIFIED (21) [adjective] Altered, transformed, or mutated into a form that is grotesque or amusing. | [verb] To completely alter the form of. | [verb] To completely alter one's form. TRANSMOGRIFIES (20) [verb] To completely alter the form of. | [verb] To completely alter one's form. TRANSMUTATIONS (16) [noun] Change, alteration. | [noun] The conversion of one thing into something else; transformation. | [noun] Specifically, the supposed transformation of one element into another, especially of a base metal into gold. TRANSSEXUALISM (23) TRANSSHIPMENTS (21) TRAUMATIZATION (25) TREMENDOUSNESS (17) TREPONEMATOSES (18) TREPONEMATOSIS (18) TRIAMCINOLONES (18) TRICHOMONACIDE (24) TRICHOMONIASES (21) TRICHOMONIASIS (21) [noun] A common sexually transmitted disease caused by the parasite Trichomonas vaginalis and infecting the urinary tract or vagina. TRICHOTOMOUSLY (24) TRICHROMATISMS (23) TRIDIMENSIONAL (17) TRIGONOMETRIES (17) TRIHALOMETHANE (22) TRILITERALISMS (16) TROUBLEMAKINGS (23) TSUTSUGAMUSHIS (20) TUMORIGENICITY (22) TUMULTUOUSNESS (16) TURBIDIMETRIES (19) TURBOMACHINERY (26) ULTIMATENESSES (16) ULTIMOGENITURE (17) [noun] A system of inheritance in which the youngest son or youngest child inherits an estate. ULTRACOMPETENT (20) ULTRAGLAMOROUS (17) ULTRAMARATHONS (19) [noun] A running race over a distance longer than 42.195 km, the length of a standard marathon. ULTRAMASCULINE (18) ULTRAMICROTOME (20) ULTRAMICROTOMY (23) ULTRAMILITANTS (16) ULTRAMINIATURE (16) ULTRAMODERNIST (17) ULTRAMONTANISM (18) UMBRAGEOUSNESS (19) UNACADEMICALLY (24) UNACCLIMATIZED (30) UNACCOMMODATED (24) UNACCUSTOMEDLY (24) UNAMBIVALENTLY (24) UNASSUMINGNESS (17) UNBECOMINGNESS (21) UNCIRCUMCISION (22) UNCOMMONNESSES (20) UNCOMMUNICABLE (24) UNCOMPREHENDED (25) UNCOMPROMISING (23) [adjective] Inflexible and unwilling to negotiate or make concessions. | [adjective] Principled. UNCOMPUTERIZED (30) UNCONFORMITIES (21) [noun] A lack of conformity | [noun] A gap in time in rock strata, where erosion occurs while deposition slows or stops UNCONTAMINATED (19) [adjective] Not contaminated; unpolluted. UNCONTEMPLATED (21) UNCONTEMPORARY (23) UNDEREMPHASIZE (31) [verb] To place insufficient emphasis on. UNDERESTIMATED (18) [verb] To perceive (someone or something) as having a lower value, quantity, worth, etc., than what he/she/it actually has. UNDERESTIMATES (17) [noun] An estimate that is too low. | [verb] To perceive (someone or something) as having a lower value, quantity, worth, etc., than what he/she/it actually has. UNDERSTATEMENT (17) [noun] An incomplete statement, particularly: UNDETERMINABLE (19) UNDOGMATICALLY (23) UNDOMESTICATED (20) [adjective] Not domesticated UNDRAMATICALLY (22) UNEMPHATICALLY (26) UNIDIMENSIONAL (17) [adjective] One-dimensional UNIFORMITARIAN (19) UNILLUMINATING (17) UNMANNERLINESS (16) UNMENTIONABLES (18) [noun] Something not to be discussed in polite society. | [noun] Undergarments, underwear, drawers | [noun] Genitals UNPREMEDITATED (20) [adjective] Performed, but not planned or thought out in advance; extemporaneous, but not unintentional. UNPROGRAMMABLE (23) UNROMANTICALLY (21) UNROMANTICIZED (28) UNSEEMLINESSES (16) UNSYSTEMATIZED (29) UNTIMELINESSES (16) UTILITARIANISM (16) [noun] A system of ethics based on the premise that something's value may be measured by its usefulness. | [noun] The theory that action should be directed toward achieving the "greatest happiness for the greatest number of people" (hedonistic universalism), or one of various related theories. VEGETARIANISMS (20) VENOMOUSNESSES (19) VENTRILOQUISMS (28) VERISIMILITUDE (20) [noun] The property of seeming true, of resembling reality; resemblance to reality, realism. | [noun] A statement which merely appears to be true. | [noun] Faithfulness to its own rules; internal cohesion. VERMICULATIONS (21) VERNACULARISMS (21) VICTIMIZATIONS (30) [noun] An act that victimizes or exploits someone. | [noun] Adversity as a result of being a victim. VICTIMOLOGISTS (22) VOCATIONALISMS (21) VOLUMETRICALLY (24) VOLUMINOSITIES (19) VOLUMINOUSNESS (19) VOUCHSAFEMENTS (27) WAFFLESTOMPERS (27) WHIMSICALITIES (24) WOMANISHNESSES (22) WORDSMITHERIES (23) XEROPHTHALMIAS (31) ZOMBIFICATIONS (32)

15-Letter Words (1114)

ABSTRACTIONISMS (21) [noun] Plural of abstractionism; artistic or philosophical movements emphasizing abstract forms and rejecting realistic representation. | [noun] The practice or theory of creating abstract art that prioritizes non-representational expression over literal depiction. ACCLIMATIZATION (30) [noun] The act of acclimatizing; the process of inuring to a new climate, or the state of being so inured. | [noun] The climatic adaptation of an organism that has been moved to a new environment. ACCOMMODATINGLY (28) [adverb] In a manner that is helpful, cooperative, or willing to adjust to meet others' needs or preferences. ACCOMMODATIONAL (24) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by accommodation; involving compromise or adjustment to meet different needs or preferences. ACCOMPLISHMENTS (28) [noun] The act of accomplishing; completion; fulfilment. | [noun] That which completes, perfects, or equips thoroughly; acquirement; attainment; that which constitutes excellence of mind, or elegance of manners, acquired by education or training. | [noun] Something accomplished; an achievement. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT (28) [noun] The act of acknowledging | [noun] The act of recognizing in a particular character or relationship; recognition of existence, authority, truth, or genuineness. | [noun] A reward or other expression or token of gratitude. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (28) [noun] The act of acknowledging | [noun] The act of recognizing in a particular character or relationship; recognition of existence, authority, truth, or genuineness. | [noun] A reward or other expression or token of gratitude. ACRIMONIOUSNESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being acrimonious; bitterness or harshness in tone, manner, or speech. ADENOCARCINOMAS (22) [noun] Any of several forms of carcinoma that originate in glandular tissue ADMINISTRATIONS (18) [noun] The act of administering; government of public affairs; the service rendered, or duties assumed, in conducting affairs; the conducting of any office or employment; direction. | [noun] A body that administers; the executive part of government; the persons collectively who are entrusted with the execution of laws and the superintendence of public affairs; the chief magistrate and his cabinet or council; or the council, or ministry, alone, as in Great Britain. | [noun] The act of administering, or tendering something to another; dispensation. ADMIRABLENESSES (20) [noun] The plural form of admirableness; the quality or state of being worthy of admiration. ADMISSIBILITIES (20) [noun] The plural of admissibility; the quality or state of being allowable or acceptable, especially in legal proceedings or arguments. ADRENALECTOMIES (20) [noun] Plural of adrenalectomy; surgical procedures involving the removal of one or both adrenal glands. AERODYNAMICALLY (26) [adverb] In a manner relating to or concerned with the interaction of air and solid bodies moving through it, or designed to reduce air resistance. AERODYNAMICISTS (23) [noun] Plural of aerodynamicist; scientists or engineers who study the motion of air and the effects of air on objects moving through it. AGGRANDIZEMENTS (29) [noun] Plural of aggrandizement; the act of increasing the power, wealth, or importance of someone or something. | [noun] Exaggerated representations or descriptions made to enhance prestige or status. AGRIBUSINESSMAN (20) AGRIBUSINESSMEN (20) [noun] Plural of agribusinessman; people who engage in the production, processing, and distribution of agricultural products on a large commercial scale. ALGORITHMICALLY (26) ALLELOMORPHISMS (24) ALUMINOSILICATE (19) [noun] Any of many silicate minerals, such as feldspar and zeolite, in which a proportion of the Si4+ ions are replaced by Al3+, the excess negative charge being balanced by extra sodium, potassium or calcium ions. AMBASSADORSHIPS (25) AMBIDEXTERITIES (27) AMBIGUOUSNESSES (20) AMBISEXUALITIES (26) AMBITIOUSNESSES (19) AMINOPEPTIDASES (22) [noun] Enzymes that catalyze the removal of amino acids from the N-terminus of proteins or peptides. AMMONIFICATIONS (24) [noun] The plural of ammonification, the process by which organic nitrogen compounds are broken down into ammonia or ammonium compounds, typically by bacteria in soil or water. | [noun] Instances or acts of converting nitrogenous organic matter into ammonia through bacterial decomposition. AMORPHOUSNESSES (22) [noun] The plural of amorphousness; the quality or state of being amorphous or lacking a definite form or shape. AMPHIDIPLOIDIES (26) [noun] Plural of amphidiploid, referring to organisms that contain two complete sets of chromosomes from each of two different species. AMPHITHEATRICAL (27) [adjective] Relating to or resembling an amphitheater; arranged in a circular or tiered formation. | [adjective] Characteristic of or suitable for performance in an amphitheater; theatrical in a grand or elaborate manner. ANAGRAMMATIZING (30) [verb] To produce an anagram of; to transpose the letters of. ANCYLOSTOMIASES (22) [noun] Plural of ancylostomiasis; infections caused by hookworms of the genus Ancylostoma, characterized by anemia and protein deficiency in humans. ANCYLOSTOMIASIS (22) [noun] Infection by the hookworm Ancylostoma. ANIMATRONICALLY (22) ANKYLOSTOMIASES (24) [noun] Plural of ankylostomiasis, a parasitic disease caused by hookworms that attach to the intestinal wall, characterized by anemia and protein deficiency. ANKYLOSTOMIASIS (24) [noun] Infection by the hookworm Ancylostoma. ANOMALOUSNESSES (17) [noun] The plural form of anomalousness, referring to multiple instances or qualities of being anomalous or deviating from what is standard, normal, or expected. ANONYMOUSNESSES (20) [noun] The plural form of anonymousness; the quality or state of being anonymous. ANTEPENULTIMATE (19) [noun] Two before the last in a series. e.g. (..., antepenultimate, penultimate, ultimate) | [noun] The syllable that comes two before the last in a word. | [adjective] Two before the last, i.e., the one immediately before the penultimate, in a series. ANTHROPOMETRIES (22) [noun] Plural of anthropometry; the scientific measurement and study of human body dimensions and proportions. ANTHROPOMORPHIC (29) [adjective] Having the form of a human | [adjective] (of animals, inanimate objects, and non-human entities) Given attributes of human beings. ANTHROPOPATHISM (27) [noun] The attribution of human feelings, thoughts, or characteristics to non-human things, such as animals, objects, or natural phenomena. ANTICAPITALISMS (21) [noun] Plural of anticapitalism; opposition to or rejection of capitalism as an economic system. ANTICLERICALISM (21) [noun] Opposition to the political power and influence of the clergy or the church in secular affairs. ANTICLIMACTICAL (23) ANTICOLONIALISM (19) [noun] Opposition to colonialism; a political movement or ideology that opposes colonial rule and advocates for the independence of colonized nations. ANTICOMPETITIVE (24) [adjective] Acting to hinder or obstruct competition. ANTIDEVELOPMENT (23) ANTIFERROMAGNET (21) [noun] A material whose magnetic moments are aligned in opposite directions in an alternating pattern, resulting in zero net magnetic moment. ANTIHISTAMINICS (22) [noun] Drugs that counteract the effects of histamine, used to treat allergic reactions and related conditions. ANTILIBERALISMS (19) [noun] Plural of antiliberalism; opposition to or rejection of liberal political or economic principles and policies. ANTIMATERIALISM (19) ANTIMATERIALIST (17) ANTIMETABOLITES (19) [noun] Any substance that competes with, or inhibits the normal metabolic process, often by acting as an analogue of an essential metabolite ANTIMILITARISMS (19) [noun] The plural form of antimilitarism, referring to opposition to militarism or military institutions and policies. ANTIMILITARISTS (17) [noun] People who oppose militarism or the maintenance of a large military establishment. ANTIMONARCHICAL (24) [adjective] Opposed to or against the principles of monarchy or monarchical government. ANTIMONARCHISTS (22) [noun] One who is opposed to monarchy. ANTIMONOPOLISTS (19) [noun] People who oppose monopolies or work to prevent the formation of monopolistic business practices. | [noun] Advocates or supporters of antitrust legislation and policies designed to break up large corporations. ANTIQUARIANISMS (26) [noun] Plural of antiquarianism; the study, collection, or practice of being interested in antiquities or ancient things. | [noun] Characteristics or practices typical of antiquarians or those devoted to the study of rare and old objects. ANTIRADICALISMS (20) ANTIRATIONALISM (17) ANTIROMANTICISM (21) ANTISENTIMENTAL (17) APOCALYPTICISMS (28) [noun] Plural of apocalypticism; beliefs or ideologies centered on the end of the world or a final, catastrophic event. | [noun] Religious or philosophical movements emphasizing imminent divine judgment and the end times. ARCHAEBACTERIUM (26) [noun] Any primitive bacteria-like organism in the kingdom Archaea. ARGUMENTATIVELY (24) [adverb] In a manner characterized by or involving argument; in a way that presents reasons or evidence for a position. AROMATHERAPISTS (22) [noun] Practitioners who use aromatic oils and plant essences to promote health and well-being through inhalation, massage, or other methods. ARRONDISSEMENTS (18) [noun] An administrative division in some French- or Dutch-speaking countries | [noun] A borough, a submunicipal administrative division ASSIMILATIONISM (19) ASSIMILATIONIST (17) [noun] An advocate of the policy or practice of the assimilation of immigrant or other minority cultures into a mainstream culture. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to assimilationism or assimilationists; that promotes or advocates assimilationism. ASSOCIATIONISMS (19) ATMOSPHERICALLY (27) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of the atmosphere; in a way that creates or conveys a particular mood or ambiance. AUTOMATIZATIONS (26) [noun] The plural form of automatization, referring to the processes of making something automatic or the results of such processes. | [noun] In psychology, the processes by which learned behaviors become automatic and require less conscious attention. AUTOTRANSFORMER (20) [noun] A transformer with a single winding, output being taken from taps AXIOMATISATIONS (24) [noun] The plural of axiomatisation; instances of establishing or organizing something according to axioms or fundamental principles, particularly in logic and mathematics. AXIOMATIZATIONS (33) [noun] Plural of axiomatization; the process of establishing or organizing a system of axioms or fundamental principles. AZIDOTHYMIDINES (34) [noun] Plural of azidothymidine, a nucleoside analog drug used as an antiretroviral medication in the treatment of HIV infection. BASIDIOMYCETOUS (25) [adjective] Relating to or belonging to the Basidiomycetes, a large group of fungi that produce spores on club-shaped structures called basidia. BATHYMETRICALLY (30) [adverb] In a manner relating to the measurement of ocean depths or the study of underwater topography. BIDIALECTALISMS (22) [noun] The practice or condition of being bidialectal, or the ability to use two dialects of the same language fluently. | [noun] Instances or examples of bidialectal language use or switching between two dialects. BIOGEOCHEMICALS (27) BIOGEOCHEMISTRY (28) [noun] The study of the chemical processes and cycles that occur in the Earth's crust, atmosphere, and biosphere, involving the interaction of geological and biological systems. BIOLUMINESCENCE (23) [noun] The emission of light by a living organism (such as a firefly). BIOMATHEMATICAL (26) BIOMECHANICALLY (29) [adverb] With regard to biomechanics. BIOREGIONALISMS (20) [noun] Plural of bioregionalism, the practice of organizing political, cultural, or economic systems based on natural geographic and ecological boundaries rather than political borders. BIOREMEDIATIONS (20) [noun] The plural of bioremediation, which is the use of living organisms to remove or neutralize pollutants from contaminated soil or water. BIOSYSTEMATISTS (22) [noun] Scientists who study the classification and evolutionary relationships of living organisms using systematic methods and biological data. BITUMINIZATIONS (28) [noun] The plural of bituminization, which is the process of treating or converting something with bitumen, a sticky petroleum product used in road construction and waterproofing. BLAMELESSNESSES (19) [noun] The plural of blamelessness; the quality or state of being free from blame or guilt. BLAMEWORTHINESS (25) [noun] The quality or state of being deserving of blame or censure. BLASPHEMOUSNESS (24) [noun] The quality or state of being blasphemous; the characteristic of showing contempt or disrespect toward something sacred or holy. BOULEVERSEMENTS (22) [noun] Plural of bouleversement; sudden upheavals or complete overthrowing of established systems or conditions. BREMSSTRAHLUNGS (23) [noun] Electromagnetic radiation produced by the deceleration of charged particles, especially electrons, in matter. BUMPTIOUSNESSES (21) [noun] The plural form of bumptiousness, meaning the quality of being bumptious (self-assertive or arrogant in an obnoxious way). CARCINOSARCOMAS (23) [noun] Tumors composed of both carcinomatous (cancerous epithelial) and sarcomatous (cancerous connective tissue) elements. CARDIOPULMONARY (25) [adjective] Of or pertaining to both the heart and the lungs. CATACLYSMICALLY (29) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characterized by a cataclysm; catastrophically or disastrously. CENTROSYMMETRIC (26) [adjective] Having symmetry about a central point, such that for every point there exists an identical point on the opposite side of the center at an equal distance. CEREMONIOUSNESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being ceremonious; formal, elaborate, or punctilious observance of ceremony or etiquette. CHEMOAUTOTROPHY (30) [noun] A form of autotrophy in which an organism obtains energy from chemical reactions rather than light, using inorganic compounds as energy sources. CHEMORECEPTIONS (26) [noun] The physiological processes by which organisms detect and respond to chemical stimuli in their environment. | [noun] Sensory systems that allow detection of chemical substances. CHEMOTACTICALLY (29) [adverb] In a manner relating to the movement of an organism in response to chemical stimuli. CHEMOTAXONOMIES (31) [noun] The classification of organisms based on their chemical composition and biochemical characteristics. CHEMOTAXONOMIST (31) CHEMOTHERAPISTS (27) [noun] Plural of chemotherapist; medical professionals who administer chemotherapy treatments to cancer patients. CHLORAMPHENICOL (29) [noun] A broad-spectrum antibiotic originally derived from the bacterium Streptomyces venezuelae but now produced synthetically CHLORPROMAZINES (33) [noun] Plural of chlorpromazine, a phenothiazine antipsychotic drug used to treat schizophrenia and other psychiatric disorders. CHLORPROPAMIDES (27) [noun] A sulfonylurea class antidiabetic drug used to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus. CHOLECYSTECTOMY (32) [noun] The surgical procedure to remove the gall bladder CHOLESTYRAMINES (25) [noun] Plural of cholestyramine, a medication used to lower cholesterol levels by binding bile acids in the intestines. CHONDROCRANIUMS (25) [noun] The cartilaginous skeleton of the head in vertebrates, particularly in embryos and certain fish species where the skull is composed of cartilage rather than bone. CHORDAMESODERMS (26) CHORIOCARCINOMA (26) [noun] A malignant, trophoblastic cancer, usually of the placenta. CHROMATOGRAPHED (29) [verb] Past tense of chromatograph; to separate and analyze substances using chromatography. CHROMATOGRAPHER (28) [noun] A person who operates or specializes in chromatography, a laboratory technique for separating chemical mixtures. CHROMATOGRAPHIC (30) [adjective] Relating to or produced by chromatography, a technique for separating and analyzing mixtures of substances. CINEMATOGRAPHER (25) [noun] A photographer who operates a movie camera, or who oversees the operations of the cameras and lighting when making a film. | [noun] One who exhibits motion pictures; a projectionist. CINEMATOGRAPHIC (27) [adjective] Of or relating to cinematography; pertaining to the production of motion pictures or the art of filming. | [adjective] Suitable for or characteristic of cinema; having qualities that make something work well as a film. CIRCUMAMBIENTLY (28) CIRCUMAMBULATED (26) [verb] To walk around something in a circle, especially for a ritual purpose. CIRCUMAMBULATES (25) [verb] To walk around something in a circle, especially for a ritual purpose. CIRCUMFERENTIAL (24) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a circumference | [adjective] Circuitous, indirect or roundabout CIRCUMLOCUTIONS (23) [noun] A roundabout or indirect way of speaking; the use of more words than necessary to express an idea. | [noun] A roundabout expression. CIRCUMNAVIGATED (26) [verb] To travel completely around somewhere or something, especially by sail. | [verb] To circumvent or bypass. | [verb] To sail around the world. CIRCUMNAVIGATES (25) [verb] To travel completely around somewhere or something, especially by sail. | [verb] To circumvent or bypass. | [verb] To sail around the world. CIRCUMNAVIGATOR (25) [noun] A person who sails or travels around the world or around an entire body of water. CIRCUMSCRIPTION (25) [noun] The act of circumscribing or the quality of being circumscribed. | [noun] Anything that circumscribes or a circumscribed area. | [noun] The definition of what does and does not belong to a given taxon, from a particular taxonomic viewpoint or taxonomic system. CIRCUMSPECTIONS (25) [noun] Attention to all the facts and circumstances of a case; consideration of all that is pertinent. | [noun] Caution, watchfulness, or vigilance fueled by such awareness. CIRCUMSTANTIATE (21) [verb] To support or prove with circumstances or detailed evidence; to substantiate. CIRCUMVALLATING (25) [verb] To surround with, or as if with, a rampart. CIRCUMVALLATION (24) [noun] A rampart or other defensive entrenchment that entirely encircles the position being defended. CIRCUMVOLUTIONS (24) [noun] The act of revolution, rotation or gyration around an axis. | [noun] Anything winding or sinuous. CLAMOROUSNESSES (19) [noun] The plural form of clamorousness; the quality or state of being clamorous, characterized by loud and persistent noise or insistent demands. CLEISTOGAMOUSLY (23) [adverb] In a manner characteristic of cleistogamy, the process of self-pollination that occurs in flowers that remain closed. CODETERMINATION (20) [noun] Cooperation between management and workers in making policy COENZYMATICALLY (36) COLLENCHYMATOUS (27) [adjective] Relating to or composed of collenchyma, a type of plant tissue that provides mechanical support in stems and petioles. COMBATIVENESSES (24) [noun] The plural form of combativeness; the quality or state of being combative or inclined to fight or argue. COMBINATORIALLY (24) [adverb] In a manner relating to the selection, arrangement, or combination of items from a set; according to the principles of combinatorics. COMFORTABLENESS (24) [noun] The quality or state of being comfortable; comfort. COMMEMORATIVELY (29) [adverb] In a manner that serves to commemorate or honor the memory of someone or something. COMMENSURATIONS (21) [noun] The act or process of making things commensurable or comparable; measurements that are proportionate or corresponding to each other. COMMERCIALISING (24) [verb] To apply business methodology to something in order to profit | [verb] To exploit something for maximum financial gain, sometimes by sacrificing quality COMMERCIALISTIC (25) [adjective] Characteristic of or emphasizing commerce and profit-making rather than artistic or cultural value. | [adjective] Excessively focused on buying and selling goods for monetary gain. COMMERCIALITIES (23) [noun] The plural of commerciality; the quality or state of being commercial or having commercial value. | [noun] Commercial aspects, interests, or considerations in business or media. COMMERCIALIZING (33) [verb] To apply business methodology to something in order to profit | [verb] To exploit something for maximum financial gain, sometimes by sacrificing quality COMMISERATINGLY (25) [adverb] In a manner expressing sympathy or pity for someone's misfortune. COMMISSIONAIRES (21) [noun] One entrusted with a (small) commission, such as an errand; especially, an attendant or subordinate employee in a public office, hotel, etc. | [noun] A uniformed doorman. | [noun] An undisclosed agent under European civil law. COMMODIFICATION (27) [noun] The assignment of a commercial value to something previously valueless. COMMONPLACENESS (25) [noun] The quality or state of being commonplace; the condition of being ordinary, unoriginal, or lacking distinction. COMMUNICABILITY (28) [noun] The quality or state of being communicable; the capacity to be communicated or transmitted. | [noun] In medicine, the ability of a disease to be transmitted from one person to another. COMMUNICATIONAL (23) COMMUNICATIVELY (29) [adverb] In a manner that involves or relates to communication; so as to convey information or exchange ideas effectively. COMMUNISTICALLY (26) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of communism or communist principles and practices. COMMUTATIVITIES (24) [noun] The plural of commutativity, referring to the mathematical property that the order of operands does not affect the result of an operation (as in addition: a + b = b + a). COMPARABILITIES (23) [noun] The quality or state of being comparable; the ability to be compared or likened to something else. | [noun] (plural) Instances or aspects of things that can be compared. COMPARATIVENESS (24) COMPASSIONATELY (24) [adverb] In a manner showing sympathetic concern for the suffering of others. COMPASSIONATING (22) COMPATIBILITIES (23) [noun] The quality or state of being compatible; the ability of things to exist or work together without conflict. COMPENDIOUSNESS (22) [noun] The quality of being compendious; the state of being concise and comprehensive in a condensed form. COMPETITIVENESS (24) [noun] The state of being competitive. COMPLEMENTARIES (23) [noun] Plural of complementary; things that complete or enhance each other perfectly. | [noun] In business, products or services that are often used together and increase each other's value. COMPLEMENTARILY (26) [adverb] In a manner that completes or goes well with something else, serving as a complement. COMPLEMENTARITY (26) [noun] The state or characteristic of being complementary. | [noun] A semantic relationship between two words wherein negative use of one entails the affirmative of the other with no gradability; the relation of binary antonyms. COMPLEMENTATION (23) [noun] The replacement of a set by its complement | [noun] The interaction between two genetic units such that an organism can function normally if either one is defective | [noun] (grammar) The relationship of a phrase to its predicate COMPLEMENTIZERS (32) [noun] A subordinating conjunction that can convert a clause into a complement clause, i.e. one that completes a grammatical construction in the predicate and that describes or is identified with the subject or object. COMPLICATEDNESS (24) [noun] The quality or state of being complicated; complexity. COMPLIMENTARILY (26) [adverb] In a manner that compliments or expresses praise. | [adverb] Without charge or cost; free of charge. COMPOSITIONALLY (24) [adverb] In a manner relating to the composition or structure of something. | [adverb] With regard to how something is composed or put together. COMPREHENSIVELY (30) [adverb] In a comprehensive manner; in an all-inclusive or wide-ranging fashion. COMPRESSIBILITY (26) [noun] The degree to which something is compressible. | [noun] The product of pressure and molar volume divided by the product of the gas constant and the absolute temperature. COMPTROLLERSHIP (26) [noun] The office, position, or authority of a comptroller, who is a financial officer responsible for auditing accounts and controlling expenditures. COMPUTABILITIES (23) [noun] The plural of computability; the quality or state of being computable or capable of being calculated or determined by a computer or mathematical process. COMPUTATIONALLY (24) [adverb] In a computational manner | [adverb] Using computation COMPUTERIZATION (30) [noun] The act of computerizing something, or something computerized. COMPUTERPHOBIAS (28) COMRADELINESSES (20) CONCERTMEISTERS (21) [noun] The plural of concertmaster, the leader of the violin section in an orchestra or the principal first violin player. CONFESSIONALISM (22) [noun] A political system in which power is distributed among groups defined by religious affiliation. | [noun] In art and literature, the practice of making personal confessions or revelations a central feature of the work. CONFIRMEDNESSES (23) CONGLOMERATEURS (20) CONGLOMERATIONS (20) [noun] That which consists of many previously separate parts. | [noun] An instance of conglomerating, a coming together of separate parts. CONSTRUCTIVISMS (24) [noun] Plural of constructivism, an artistic and architectural movement that emphasizes functional design and industrial materials. | [noun] Plural of constructivism, a philosophical approach to mathematics and logic that rejects certain classical principles. CONTEMPLATIVELY (27) [adverb] In a manner involving deep or serious thought; reflectively or meditatively. CONTEMPORANEITY (24) [noun] The quality or state of being contemporary; existence or occurrence at the same time. | [noun] The state of being of the same age or period. CONTEMPORANEOUS (21) [adjective] Existing or created in the same period of time. CONTEMPTIBILITY (26) [noun] The quality or state of being contemptible; the condition of deserving contempt. CONVENTIONALISM (22) [noun] The practice or principle of adhering to established conventions, customs, or traditional norms. | [noun] In philosophy, the view that truth or meaning is determined by human convention rather than by objective reality. CORYNEBACTERIUM (26) [noun] Any bacterium, of the genus Corynebacterium, many of which are pathogenic or parasitic. COSMOPOLITANISM (23) COULOMETRICALLY (24) COUNTERARGUMENT (20) [noun] An argument that is opposed to another argument. COUNTERCAMPAIGN (24) COUNTERCLAIMING (22) [verb] To file a counterclaim. COUNTEREXAMPLES (28) [noun] An exception to a proposed general rule; a specific instance of the falsity of a universally quantified statement. COUNTERMARCHING (25) [verb] To march back along the same route | [noun] A countermarch. COUNTERMEASURES (19) [noun] Any action taken to counteract or correct another. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Any of the devices and techniques used to impair the operational effectiveness of an enemy. COUNTERMELODIES (20) [noun] A secondary or supplemental melody played simultaneously with the primary melody. COUNTERMOVEMENT (24) [noun] A movement in opposition, or retaliation to another. COUNTERREFORMER (22) CRIMINALIZATION (28) [noun] The act of making a previously legal activity illegal, the act of making something a criminal offence. | [noun] The act of turning someone into a criminal by making their activities illegal. CRYPTORCHIDISMS (30) CRYPTOSPORIDIUM (27) [noun] A protozoan, of the genus Cryptosporidium, that is an intestinal parasite of humans and other vertebrates; can cause diarrhea and other symptoms in cases of low immunity CUSTOMARINESSES (19) CYANOCOBALAMINE (26) CYANOCOBALAMINS (26) CYCLOHEXYLAMINE (37) CYTOCHEMISTRIES (27) CYTOMEGALOVIRUS (26) [noun] Any of several herpes viruses, of the genus Cytomegalovirus, that attack the salivary glands CYTOPHOTOMETRIC (29) CYTOPLASMICALLY (29) DAMAGEABILITIES (21) DECIMALIZATIONS (29) DECOMMISSIONING (23) [verb] To take out of service or to render unusable. | [verb] To remove or revoke a commission. | [verb] To remove or revoke a formal designation. DECOMPENSATIONS (22) DECOMPOSABILITY (27) DECONTAMINATING (21) [verb] To remove contamination from (something), rendering it safe. DECONTAMINATION (20) [noun] The process of removing contamination, particularly the cleaning off of dangerous materials. DECONTAMINATORS (20) DECRIMINALIZING (30) [verb] To change the laws so something is no longer a crime. DEFEMINIZATIONS (30) DEGLAMORIZATION (28) DEHUMANIZATIONS (30) DELEGITIMATIONS (19) DEMAGNETIZATION (28) DEMANDINGNESSES (20) DEMATERIALIZING (28) [verb] To disappear by becoming immaterial. | [verb] To cause something to disappear by becoming immaterial. | [verb] To remove the physical materials from (a process, etc.) DEMISEMIQUAVERS (32) [noun] A thirty-second note, drawn as a crotchet with three tails. DEMOBILIZATIONS (29) DEMOCRATIZATION (29) [noun] The introduction of democracy, its functions or principles, to an area or country which did not have democracy previously. | [noun] The spread of democracy as a concept. | [noun] The making more democratic of a political system. DEMOGRAPHICALLY (29) [adverb] In a demographic manner. DEMONETIZATIONS (27) DEMONSTRABILITY (23) DEMONSTRATIONAL (18) DEMONSTRATIVELY (24) DEMORALIZATIONS (27) DEMYSTIFICATION (26) DEMYTHOLOGIZERS (34) DEMYTHOLOGIZING (35) [verb] To remove the mythological elements of. DEPARTMENTALIZE (29) [verb] To organize something into departments DEPIGMENTATIONS (21) DERMATOGLYPHICS (29) [noun] The patterns of loops, arches and whorls on the skin of the fingers and feet. | [noun] The study of such patterns. DETERMINATENESS (18) DEUTERANOMALIES (18) DEUTERANOMALOUS (18) DEVELOPMENTALLY (26) [adverb] In terms of development. DIASTEREOISOMER (18) [noun] A stereoisomer having multiple chiral centres; a diastereoisomer cannot normally be superimposed on the mirror image of another. DICHOTOMIZATION (32) DICHOTOMOUSNESS (23) DIFFRACTOMETERS (26) [noun] A device that uses diffraction (especially X-ray diffraction) to investigate the structure of matter. DIFFRACTOMETRIC (28) DIMENHYDRINATES (25) DIPHENHYDRAMINE (30) [noun] An antihistamine and anticholinergic drug that blocks the effect of histamine at H1 receptor sites, relieving allergy symptoms. Diphenhydramine also reduces smooth muscle contraction, increases heart rate, and sedates the user by blocking muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs). DISAMBIGUATIONS (21) DISAPPOINTMENTS (22) [noun] A feeling of sadness or frustration when a strongly held expectation is not met. | [noun] A circumstance in which a strongly held expectation is not met. | [noun] That which causes feelings of disappointment. DISARRANGEMENTS (19) DISCOMBOBULATED (25) [verb] To throw into a state of confusion; to befuddle or perplex. | [adjective] Confused, embarrassed, upset. | [adjective] Broken, mixed up. DISCOMBOBULATES (24) [verb] To throw into a state of confusion; to befuddle or perplex. DISCONCERTMENTS (22) [noun] Disconcertedness DISCONFORMITIES (23) [noun] A type of unconformity in which erosion or lack of deposition has occurred between two parallel sedimentary strata. | [noun] Nonconformity DISCONTENTMENTS (20) DISCOURAGEMENTS (21) [noun] The loss of confidence or enthusiasm. | [noun] The act of discouraging. | [noun] Anything that discourages. DISCRIMINATIONS (20) [noun] Discernment, the act of discriminating, discerning, distinguishing, noting or perceiving differences between things, with intent to understand rightly and make correct decisions. | [noun] The act of recognizing the 'good' and 'bad' in situations and choosing good. | [noun] (sometimes discrimination against) Distinct treatment of an individual or group to their disadvantage; treatment or consideration based on class or category rather than individual merit; partiality; prejudice; bigotry. DISEMBARKATIONS (24) DISEMBARRASSING (21) [verb] To get (someone) out of a difficult or embarrassing situation; to free (someone) from the embarrassment (of a situation); to relieve (someone of a burden, item of clothing, etc.) (often used reflexively). | [verb] To free (something) from complication. | [verb] To disentangle (two things); to distinguish. DISEMBOWELMENTS (25) DISENCHANTMENTS (23) [noun] The act of disenchanting or the state of being disenchanted. | [noun] Freeing from false belief or illusions. DISENTANGLEMENT (19) DISEQUILIBRIUMS (29) DISFURNISHMENTS (24) DISGRUNTLEMENTS (19) DISHEARTENMENTS (21) DISILLUSIONMENT (18) [noun] A feeling of disappointment, akin to depression, arising from the realization that something is not what it was expected or believed to be, possibly accompanied by philosophical angst from having one's beliefs challenged. | [noun] The act of freeing from an illusion; the state of being freed therefrom. DISINFORMATIONS (21) DISSIMILARITIES (18) [noun] Lack of similarity or lack of likeness in appearance to something else. DISTEMPERATURES (20) DITHIOCARBAMATE (25) DITHYRAMBICALLY (31) DIVERTISSEMENTS (21) [noun] An entertaining diversion. | [noun] A short ballet within a larger work, usually providing a break from the main plot. DOCUMENTATIONAL (20) DOLOMITIZATIONS (27) DOMINEERINGNESS (19) DRAMATURGICALLY (24) DREAMLESSNESSES (18) ECCLESIASTICISM (23) [noun] Strong attachment to ecclesiastical customs and practices. ECHINODERMATOUS (23) ECHOCARDIOGRAMS (26) [noun] The visual image formed by an echocardiograph. ECLAIRCISSEMENT (21) [noun] An explanation of something obscure or unknown; clarification, enlightenment. ECONOMETRICALLY (24) ECONOMETRICIANS (21) EGALITARIANISMS (18) ELECTROCHEMICAL (26) ELECTRODYNAMICS (25) [noun] The phenomena associated with moving electric charges, and their interaction with electric and magnetic fields; the study of these phenomena. ELECTROMAGNETIC (22) [adjective] Relating to electromagnetism ELECTROMYOGRAMS (25) [noun] The record produced by an electromyograph. ELECTROMYOGRAPH (28) EMANCIPATIONIST (21) EMBRYOLOGICALLY (28) EMOTIONLESSNESS (17) EMPLOYABILITIES (24) EMULSIFICATIONS (22) ENANTIOMORPHISM (24) ENANTIOMORPHOUS (22) ENDOPARASITISMS (20) ENFRANCHISEMENT (25) [noun] The act of enfranchising | [noun] A release from slavery | [noun] The investiture with any of several municipal privileges ENTEROBACTERIUM (21) ENTOMOLOGICALLY (23) ENUMERABILITIES (19) ENVENOMIZATIONS (29) ENVIRONMENTALLY (23) [adverb] In a manner affecting the environment. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL (23) [adjective] Of or pertaining to epidemiology. EPIDEMIOLOGISTS (21) [noun] A scientist (often a medical doctor) who specializes in epidemiology. EPIGRAMMATIZERS (31) EPIGRAMMATIZING (32) EPIPHENOMENALLY (27) EPISTEMOLOGICAL (22) [adjective] Of or pertaining to epistemology or theory of knowledge, as a field of study. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to knowing or cognizing, as a mental activity. EPISTEMOLOGISTS (20) EPITHELIOMATOUS (22) EQUALITARIANISM (26) ESTIMABLENESSES (19) ETHNOMUSICOLOGY (26) [noun] The study of music and culture; the study of music as it relates to its cultural context. EUDIOMETRICALLY (23) EUPHEMISTICALLY (27) [adverb] In a euphemistic manner. EXCEPTIONALISMS (28) EXCOMMUNICATING (31) [verb] To officially exclude someone from membership of a church or religious community. | [verb] To exclude from any other group; to banish. EXCOMMUNICATION (30) [noun] The act of excommunicating, disfellowshipping or ejecting; especially an ecclesiastical censure whereby the person against whom it is pronounced is, for the time, cast out of the communication of the church; exclusion from fellowship in things spiritual. EXCOMMUNICATIVE (33) EXCOMMUNICATORS (30) EXCREMENTITIOUS (26) EXEMPLARINESSES (26) EXEMPLIFICATION (31) EXISTENTIALISMS (24) EXOTHERMICITIES (29) EXPERIMENTALISM (28) EXPERIMENTALIST (26) EXPERIMENTATION (26) [noun] The act of experimenting; practice by experiment. | [noun] A set of actions and observations, performed to verify or falsify a hypothesis or to research a causal relationship between phenomena. EXTEMPORISATION (26) EXTEMPORIZATION (35) EXTINGUISHMENTS (28) [noun] The act of extinguishing, putting out, or quenching, or the state of being extinguished. | [noun] The annihilation or extinction of a right or obligation. FAMILIARIZATION (29) [noun] The act, process or result of familiarizing. FERRIMAGNETISMS (23) FERROMAGNETISMS (23) FERROMANGANESES (21) FORMIDABILITIES (23) FORMULARIZATION (29) FRAGMENTARINESS (21) FUNDAMENTALISMS (23) [noun] The tendency to reduce a religion to its most fundamental tenets, based on strict interpretation of core texts. | [noun] (by extension) A rigid conformity to any set of basic tenets. | [noun] The belief that fundamental financial quantities are the best predictor of the price of a financial instrument. FUNDAMENTALISTS (21) [noun] One who reduces religion to strict interpretation of core or original texts. | [noun] A trader who trades on the financial fundamentals of the companies involved, as opposed to a chartist or technician. | [noun] Originally referred to an adherent of an American Christian movement that began as a response to the rejection of the accuracy of the Bible, the alleged deity of Christ, Christ's atonement for humanity, the virgin birth, and miracles. FUTILITARIANISM (20) GASTRONOMICALLY (23) GENTLEMANLINESS (18) GEOMAGNETICALLY (24) GEOMETRIZATIONS (27) GEOMORPHOLOGIES (24) GEOMORPHOLOGIST (24) GERMINABILITIES (20) GEWURZTRAMINERS (30) GLAMOROUSNESSES (18) GOVERNMENTALISM (23) GOVERNMENTALIST (21) GOVERNMENTALIZE (30) GRAMMATICALNESS (22) GRAVIMETRICALLY (26) GYNANDROMORPHIC (29) HEADMASTERSHIPS (26) HELIOMETRICALLY (25) HELMINTHOLOGIES (24) HEMAGGLUTINATED (23) HEMAGGLUTINATES (22) HEMATOPORPHYRIN (30) HEMOCHROMATOSES (27) HEMOCHROMATOSIS (27) [noun] A metabolic disorder causing iron deposits in the body, also called bronze diabetes. HEMODYNAMICALLY (31) HEMOFLAGELLATES (24) HEMOGLOBINURIAS (23) HERMAPHRODITISM (28) HERMENEUTICALLY (25) HETEROCHROMATIC (27) [adjective] Having more than one colour; relating to heterochromia | [adjective] Of light, having more than one wavelength | [adjective] Of or relating to heterochromatin HETEROCHROMATIN (25) [noun] Heterochromatic tightly coiled chromosome material; believed to be genetically inactive HETEROMORPHISMS (27) HETEROTHALLISMS (23) HEXOSAMINIDASES (28) HISTOCHEMICALLY (30) HOLOMETABOLISMS (24) HOMEOPATHICALLY (30) HOMOGENEOUSNESS (21) HOMOGENISATIONS (21) HOMOGENIZATIONS (30) HOMOSEXUALITIES (27) [noun] The state of being sexually attracted primarily or exclusively to persons of the same sex. | [noun] Sexual activity with a person of the same sex. HOMOSOCIALITIES (22) HOMOTRANSPLANTS (22) [noun] An allograft HUMANITARIANISM (22) [noun] Humanitarian philosophy or practice. HUMIDIFICATIONS (26) HUMORLESSNESSES (20) HYDRODYNAMICIST (30) HYDROMECHANICAL (31) HYDROMETALLURGY (28) HYPERCATABOLISM (29) HYPERCRITICISMS (29) HYPEREXCITEMENT (34) HYPERIMMUNIZING (37) HYPERINSULINISM (25) HYPERLIPIDEMIAS (28) HYPERMETABOLISM (29) HYPERMOBILITIES (27) HYPERMODERNISTS (26) HYPERMUTABILITY (30) HYPERPARASITISM (27) HYPERSOMNOLENCE (27) HYPERSTIMULATED (26) HYPERSTIMULATES (25) HYPERTHYROIDISM (32) [noun] The excessive production of hormones by the thyroid. | [noun] The pathological condition resulting from these excess hormones. HYPOMAGNESEMIAS (28) HYPOPITUITARISM (27) [noun] A decrease in secretion of one or more of the eight hormones normally produced by the pituitary gland. HYPOTHYROIDISMS (32) HYSTERECTOMIZED (35) [verb] To perform a hysterectomy upon. IDIOMATICNESSES (20) IGNOMINIOUSNESS (18) ILLIMITABLENESS (19) IMAGINARINESSES (18) IMAGINATIVENESS (21) IMITATIVENESSES (20) IMMATERIALITIES (19) IMMATERIALIZING (29) IMMEDIATENESSES (20) IMMISCIBILITIES (23) IMMOBILIZATIONS (30) IMMORTALIZATION (28) IMMOVABLENESSES (24) IMMUNOASSAYABLE (24) IMMUNOBLOTTINGS (22) IMMUNOCHEMISTRY (29) [noun] The study of the structure of antibody molecules (immunoglobulins) and of their ability to bind with antigens of diverse chemical structure IMMUNOCOMPETENT (25) [adjective] Having a functioning immune system. IMMUNODEFICIENT (25) IMMUNODIAGNOSES (21) IMMUNODIAGNOSIS (21) IMMUNODIFFUSION (26) [noun] A technique used to detect the reaction between an antigen and an antibody by observing the behavior of a combination of such species as they diffuse through a gel IMMUNOGLOBULINS (22) [noun] Any of the glycoproteins in blood serum that respond to invasion by foreign antigens and that protect the host by removing pathogens; an antibody. IMMUNOLOGICALLY (25) IMMUNOMODULATOR (22) IMMUNOPATHOLOGY (28) IMMUNOTHERAPIES (24) IMMUTABLENESSES (21) IMPALPABILITIES (23) IMPASSABILITIES (21) IMPASSIBILITIES (21) IMPASSIVENESSES (22) IMPECCABILITIES (25) IMPECUNIOSITIES (21) IMPECUNIOUSNESS (21) IMPENETRABILITY (24) IMPERFECTNESSES (24) IMPERIOUSNESSES (19) IMPERISHABILITY (27) IMPERSONALITIES (19) IMPERSONALIZING (29) IMPETUOUSNESSES (19) IMPLACABILITIES (23) IMPLEMENTATIONS (21) [noun] The process of moving an idea from concept to reality. In business, engineering and other fields, implementation refers to the building process rather than the design process. | [noun] A result of implementing something; a finished product, system or device. IMPLICATIVENESS (24) IMPONDERABILITY (25) IMPORTUNATENESS (19) IMPOSSIBILITIES (21) [noun] Something that is impossible. | [noun] The quality of being impossible. | [noun] The state of being unable to do something. IMPOVERISHMENTS (27) [noun] The action of impoverishing someone. | [noun] The state of being impoverished. IMPRECISENESSES (21) IMPREGNABLENESS (22) IMPRESSIONISTIC (21) [adjective] Pertaining to or characterized by impressionism. | [adjective] Based on subjective reactions or feelings; not systematically researched or arrived at. | [adjective] Based on impression rather than reason or fact; based on trying to impress somebody rather than trying for accuracy. IMPROBABILITIES (23) [noun] The quality or state of being improbable; unlikelihood. | [noun] That which is improbable; an improbable event or result. IMPROVABILITIES (24) IMPROVISATIONAL (22) [adjective] Having the nature of an improvisation. IMPROVISATORIAL (22) IMPULSIVENESSES (22) INADMISSIBILITY (23) INANIMATENESSES (17) INCOMMENSURABLE (23) [noun] An incommensurable value or quantity; an irrational number. | [adjective] Of two real numbers, such that their ratio is not a fraction of two integers. | [adjective] (arithmetics) Of two integers, having no common integer divisor except 1. INCOMMENSURABLY (26) INCOMMUNICATIVE (26) [adjective] Uncommunicative. INCOMPARABILITY (26) INCOMPATIBILITY (26) [noun] The quality or state of being incompatible; inconsistency; irreconcilability. INCOMPREHENSION (24) [noun] Lack of comprehension or understanding; inability to understand. INCREMENTALISMS (21) INCREMENTALISTS (19) INDEMNIFICATION (23) [noun] The act or process of indemnifying, preserving, or securing against loss, damage, or penalty. | [noun] A reimbursement of loss, damage, or penalty. | [noun] The state of being indemnified. INDETERMINACIES (20) INDETERMINATELY (21) INDETERMINATION (18) [noun] Lack of determination; an unsettled or wavering state, as of the mind. | [noun] Lack of fixed or stated direction. INDETERMINISTIC (20) INDIFFERENTISMS (24) INDOMITABLENESS (20) INFINITESIMALLY (23) INFLAMMABLENESS (24) INFORMATIONALLY (23) INFORMATIVENESS (23) INFUNDIBULIFORM (26) INHOMOGENEITIES (21) INSTRUMENTALISM (19) [noun] In the philosophy of science, the view that concepts and theories are merely useful instruments whose worth is measured not by whether the concepts and theories are true or false (or correctly depict reality), but how effective they are in explaining and predicting phenomena. INSTRUMENTALIST (17) [noun] One who plays a musical instrument, as distinguished from a vocalist INSTRUMENTALITY (20) [noun] The quality or condition of being instrumental; serving a purpose, being useful. | [noun] A governmental organ with a specific purpose. | [noun] Something that is instrumental; an instrument. INSTRUMENTATION (17) [noun] The act of using or adapting as an instrument; a series or combination of instruments | [noun] The arrangement of a musical composition for performance by a number of different instruments; orchestration; instrumental composition; composition for an orchestra or military band. | [noun] The act or manner of playing upon musical instruments; performance INTELLECTUALISM (19) [noun] The use or development of the intellect. | [noun] The doctrine that knowledge is derived from pure reason. | [noun] The use of mental attributes as a criterion or value (intellectual racism). INTEMPERATENESS (19) INTERANIMATIONS (17) INTERCOMMUNIONS (21) [noun] Communion (association) between people or groups | [noun] The participation, together, in Holy Communion of people from different denominations | [noun] In Roman Catholicism, the theological principle which governs whether it is permissible for a Roman Catholic to partake of the Eucharist in a non-Catholic service, and vice versa INTERCOMPARISON (21) INTERFEROMETERS (20) [noun] Any of several instruments that use the interference of waves to determine wavelengths and wave velocities, determine refractive indices, measure small distances, temperature changes, stresses, and many other useful measurements. INTERFEROMETRIC (22) INTERMEDIATIONS (18) INTERMITTENCIES (19) INTERMODULATION (18) INTERPAROXYSMAL (29) INTERPERMEATING (20) INTERTWINEMENTS (20) INTERVALOMETERS (20) [noun] A device that measures intervals of time. INTERVENTIONISM (20) INTRAMUSCULARLY (22) IRREFORMABILITY (25) KREMLINOLOGISTS (22) LARYNGECTOMIZED (33) LEGITIMIZATIONS (27) LEUKAEMOGENESES (22) LEUKAEMOGENESIS (22) LIBERTARIANISMS (19) LIGHTSOMENESSES (21) LIMITLESSNESSES (17) LOATHSOMENESSES (20) LOGARITHMICALLY (26) LYMPHADENITISES (26) LYMPHADENOPATHY (34) [noun] An abnormal enlargement of the lymph nodes; it is often a nonspecific sign of infection but is also often of obscure origin and benign. LYMPHANGIOGRAMS (29) LYMPHOGRANULOMA (28) LYMPHOSARCOMATA (29) MACHINABILITIES (24) MACROAGGREGATED (23) MACROAGGREGATES (22) MACROCOSMICALLY (28) MACROEVOLUTIONS (22) MACROPHOTOGRAPH (30) MACROSCOPICALLY (28) MACROSTRUCTURAL (21) MACROSTRUCTURES (21) [noun] The gross structure of a material or tissue as visible to the unaided eye or at very low levels of magnification. | [noun] The gross structure of a pure metal or alloy, as revealed by magnifications of 10X or less. MAGISTRATICALLY (23) MAGNANIMOUSNESS (20) MAGNETOELECTRIC (22) MAINTAINABILITY (22) MAJORITARIANISM (26) MALADMINISTERED (21) [verb] To administer wrongly or badly. MALADROITNESSES (18) MALDISTRIBUTION (20) [noun] Bad or undesirable distribution of wealth, resources etc. MALICIOUSNESSES (19) MALPRACTITIONER (21) MANAGEABILITIES (20) MANEUVERABILITY (25) MARGINALIZATION (27) [noun] The act of marginalizing or something marginalized. MARKETABILITIES (23) MARRIAGEABILITY (23) MARTENSITICALLY (22) MARVELOUSNESSES (20) MASCULINIZATION (28) MASOCHISTICALLY (27) MASTERFULNESSES (20) MASTOIDECTOMIES (22) MATERFAMILIASES (22) MATERIALIZATION (26) MATHEMATIZATION (31) MEANINGLESSNESS (18) MEASURABILITIES (19) MECHANISTICALLY (27) MECHANOCHEMICAL (31) MECHANORECEPTOR (26) [noun] Any receptor that provides an organism with information about mechanical changes in its environment, such as movement, tension and pressure MEDULLOBLASTOMA (22) [noun] A malignant type of brain tumour that originates in the cerebellum MEGACORPORATION (22) MEGAGAMETOPHYTE (29) MEGASPOROPHYLLS (28) MELLIFLUOUSNESS (20) MELODIOUSNESSES (18) MELODRAMATISING (21) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATIZING (30) [verb] To make melodramatic. MEMORABLENESSES (21) MENSURABILITIES (19) MERCAPTOPURINES (23) MERCENARINESSES (19) MERCHANTABILITY (27) MERCILESSNESSES (19) MERCURIALNESSES (19) MERITORIOUSNESS (17) MEROBLASTICALLY (24) METAFICTIONISTS (22) METALINGUISTICS (20) [noun] The branch of linguistics that studies language and its relationship to culture and society. METALLOGRAPHERS (23) METALLOGRAPHIES (23) METALLURGICALLY (23) METAMATHEMATICS (26) [noun] A branch of mathematics dealing with mathematical systems and their nature. METAMORPHICALLY (29) METASTABILITIES (19) METHAMPHETAMINE (29) [noun] A highly addictive phenethylamine stimulant drug, similar to cocaine. Its systematic (IUPAC) name is (S)-N-methyl-1-phenylpropan-2-amine. METHOXYFLURANES (33) METHYLCELLULOSE (25) METHYLMERCURIES (27) METHYLPHENIDATE (29) [noun] A stimulant used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and narcolepsy, better known by the trade name Ritalin METHYLXANTHINES (33) MICROANALYTICAL (24) MICROANATOMICAL (23) MICROBAROGRAPHS (27) MICROBIOLOGICAL (24) MICROBIOLOGISTS (22) [noun] A scientist whose speciality is microbiology. MICROCOSMICALLY (28) MICRODISSECTION (22) MICROEARTHQUAKE (35) MICROELECTRODES (22) MICROELECTRONIC (23) MICROEVOLUTIONS (22) MICROGAMETOCYTE (27) MICROINJECTIONS (28) MICROMANAGEMENT (24) MICROMETEORITES (21) [noun] An extraterrestrial particle, less than a millimeter in size, that has survived entry into the atmosphere without melting MICROMETEORITIC (23) MICROMETEOROIDS (22) [noun] An extraterrestrial particle less than a millimeter in size MICROMORPHOLOGY (30) MICROPHOTOGRAPH (30) [noun] A photograph so reduced in size that it must be viewed through a lens or a microscope. | [noun] A photograph taken through a microscope, an enlarged picture of a very small item or area; a photomicrograph. | [verb] To create such a photograph MICROPHOTOMETER (26) MICROPHOTOMETRY (29) MICROPHYSICALLY (32) MICROPOROSITIES (21) MICROPROCESSORS (23) [noun] The entire CPU of a computer on a single integrated circuit (chip). MICROPROJECTION (30) MICROPROJECTORS (30) MICROPUBLISHERS (26) MICROPUBLISHING (27) MICROPULSATIONS (21) MICRORADIOGRAPH (26) MICROSCOPICALLY (28) MICROSEISMICITY (26) MICROSPORANGIUM (24) [noun] A case, capsule or container that holds microspores. MICROSPOROCYTES (26) MICROSPOROPHYLL (29) MICROSTRUCTURAL (21) MICROSTRUCTURES (21) [noun] The fine structure of a material or tissue as revealed by microscopy. | [noun] The fine structure of a pure metal or alloy, as revealed by magnifications of 25X or greater. | [noun] Fine-scale structure in such variables as temperature, salinity, velocity, etc. MICROTECHNIQUES (33) MICROTONALITIES (19) MILITARIZATIONS (26) MILLENARIANISMS (19) MILLIONAIRESSES (17) [noun] A woman whose wealth is greater than one million dollars, or the local currency. MINERALIZATIONS (26) MINERALOGICALLY (23) MINIATURIZATION (26) MISAPPLICATIONS (23) MISAPPREHENDING (26) [verb] To interpret incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISAPPREHENSION (24) [noun] A failure to understand something; an illusion, misconception or misunderstanding. MISAPPROPRIATED (24) [verb] To take something for wrong or illegal purposes. | [verb] To embezzle. MISAPPROPRIATES (23) [verb] To take something for wrong or illegal purposes. | [verb] To embezzle. MISARTICULATING (20) MISATTRIBUTIONS (19) MISCALCULATIONS (21) [noun] An incorrect or mistaken calculation MISCEGENATIONAL (20) MISCELLANEOUSLY (22) MISCHARACTERIZE (33) MISCHIEVOUSNESS (25) MISCOMPUTATIONS (23) MISCONSTRUCTION (21) [noun] A misunderstanding or misinterpretation resulting from the use of the wrong meaning of a word that has multiple meanings. | [noun] (grammar) An ungrammatical phrase. MISCORRELATIONS (19) MISDESCRIPTIONS (22) [noun] An inaccurate description, often fraudulent. MISDISTRIBUTION (20) MISERABLENESSES (19) MISGUIDEDNESSES (20) MISINFORMATIONS (22) MISINTERPRETING (20) [verb] To make an incorrect interpretation; to misunderstand. MISORIENTATIONS (17) MISRECOLLECTION (21) MISREGISTRATION (18) MISREPRESENTING (20) [verb] To represent falsely; to inaccurately portray something. | [noun] A misrepresentation. MISSIONIZATIONS (26) MISTRANSCRIBING (22) MISTRANSLATIONS (17) MISTRUSTFULNESS (20) MISUTILIZATIONS (26) MISVOCALIZATION (31) MODIFIABILITIES (23) MOMENTARINESSES (19) MOMENTOUSNESSES (19) MONGRELIZATIONS (27) MONOCHROMATISMS (26) MONOCRYSTALLINE (22) [adjective] Having a single crystalline form MONOMOLECULARLY (24) MONONUCLEOTIDES (20) MONOPOLIZATIONS (28) MONOPROPELLANTS (21) [noun] Any propellant that consists of a single substance, or of a mixture of fuel and oxidant in the same container MONOSACCHARIDES (25) [noun] A simple sugar such as glucose, fructose or deoxyribose that has a single ring MONOSPECIFICITY (29) MONOSYLLABICITY (27) MONOUNSATURATED (18) [adjective] (of an organic compound) having a single double or triple bond MONOUNSATURATES (17) MONSTROUSNESSES (17) MONTMORILLONITE (19) [noun] Any of a group of soft, clay-like silicate minerals having many industrial and technical uses. MONUMENTALITIES (19) MONUMENTALIZING (29) [verb] To make something become or appear monumental MORPHOLOGICALLY (28) MORPHOPHONEMICS (31) [noun] Morphophonology MOUNTAINEERINGS (18) MOUNTAINOUSNESS (17) MOUNTEBANKERIES (23) MOUTHWATERINGLY (27) MULTICURRENCIES (21) MULTIDISCIPLINE (22) MULTIDIVISIONAL (21) MULTIFUNCTIONAL (22) [adjective] Having multiple functions MULTILATERALISM (19) [noun] Unbiased trade between nations, in contrast to bilateralism. | [noun] A system by which nations consult others in matters of foreign policy, by way of organisations such as the United Nations. MULTILATERALIST (17) [noun] An advocate of multilateralism. | [adjective] Supporting or advocating multilateralism. MULTILINGUALISM (20) MULTIMILLENNIAL (19) MULTIPLICATIONS (21) [noun] The process of computing the sum of a number with itself a specified number of times, or any other analogous binary operation that combines other mathematical objects. | [noun] A calculation involving multiplication. | [noun] The process of multiplying or increasing in number; increase. MULTIPOLARITIES (19) MULTIPROCESSING (22) [noun] Computation using one more than one processor. MULTIPROCESSORS (21) [noun] A computer that has multiple CPUs or execution units under an integrated control. MULTIRACIALISMS (21) MULTITUDINOUSLY (21) MULTIWAVELENGTH (27) MURDEROUSNESSES (18) MUSCULOSKELETAL (23) [adjective] Of, or relating to both muscles and the skeleton MUSICALIZATIONS (28) NECROMANTICALLY (24) NEOCOLONIALISMS (19) NEOCONSERVATISM (22) [noun] A right wing political movement that opposes liberalism in economic areas and supports an interventionist foreign policy. NEPHRECTOMIZING (34) NEUROANATOMICAL (19) NEUROANATOMISTS (17) NEUROBLASTOMATA (19) NINCOMPOOPERIES (23) NONACHIEVEMENTS (25) NONASTRONOMICAL (19) NONCHARISMATICS (24) NONCOMPRESSIBLE (23) NONCOMPUTERIZED (31) NONCONFORMANCES (24) NONCONFORMITIES (22) NONCONSUMPTIONS (21) NONCONTEMPORARY (24) NONDEPARTMENTAL (20) NONDEVELOPMENTS (23) NONENFORCEMENTS (22) NONEQUILIBRIUMS (28) NONEXPERIMENTAL (26) NONFLAMMABILITY (27) NONFULFILLMENTS (23) NONGOVERNMENTAL (21) [adjective] Not governmental; not derived from a government; civilian. NONIMPLICATIONS (21) NONIMPORTATIONS (19) NONINFLAMMATORY (25) NONINFORMATIONS (20) NONINFRINGEMENT (21) NONINSTALLMENTS (17) NONINSTRUMENTAL (17) NONINTIMIDATING (19) NONINVOLVEMENTS (23) NONMATHEMATICAL (24) NONMATRICULATED (20) NONMETAPHORICAL (24) NONMETROPOLITAN (19) [noun] One who is not a metropolitan. | [adjective] Not metropolitan. NONOBJECTIVISMS (31) NONPERFORMANCES (24) NONRANDOMNESSES (18) NONRECOMBINANTS (21) NONSEDIMENTABLE (20) NONSIMULTANEOUS (17) NONUNIFORMITIES (20) NORMATIVENESSES (20) NOVEMDECILLIONS (23) OBSTRUCTIONISMS (21) OLIGOMERIZATION (27) OMNICOMPETENCES (25) OMNIDIRECTIONAL (20) [adjective] In every direction, especially of a radio system capable of transmitting or receiving signals in all directions, or of a microphone capable of detecting sound from all directions. | [adjective] Having a ring-shaped radiation pattern, with equal radiation in all azimuthal directions. OPENMOUTHEDNESS (23) OPERATIONALISMS (19) OPHTHALMOLOGIES (26) OPHTHALMOLOGIST (26) [noun] A medical doctor specializing in the eye: deficiencies of vision requiring correction, and diseases. Compare optometrist. OPHTHALMOSCOPES (29) [noun] An instrument for examining the interior of the eye (that is, for ophthalmoscopy). OPHTHALMOSCOPIC (31) ORGANOMERCURIAL (20) ORGANOMETALLICS (20) OSMOREGULATIONS (18) OSTEOMYELITISES (20) OUTDOORSMANSHIP (23) OUTMANIPULATING (20) OVERACHIEVEMENT (28) OVERADJUSTMENTS (28) OVERASSESSMENTS (20) OVERCOMMITMENTS (26) OVERCOMMUNICATE (26) OVERCOMPENSATED (25) [verb] To do an excessive amount in one area in an effort to overcome a perceived lack in another area. | [verb] To provide with excessive pay or reward for work performed. OVERCOMPENSATES (24) [verb] To do an excessive amount in one area in an effort to overcome a perceived lack in another area. | [verb] To provide with excessive pay or reward for work performed. OVERCOMPLIANCES (26) OVERCOMPLICATED (27) [adjective] Excessively complicated | [verb] To make something excessively complicated. OVERCOMPLICATES (26) [verb] To make something excessively complicated. OVERCOMPRESSING (25) OVERCONSUMPTION (24) [noun] Excessive consumption OVERDEVELOPMENT (26) OVERDOCUMENTING (24) OVERDRAMATIZING (31) [verb] To dramatize to excess; to make overdramatic. OVEREMBELLISHED (26) [verb] To embellish excessively. OVEREMBELLISHES (25) [verb] To embellish excessively. OVEREMPHASIZING (35) [verb] To place too much emphasis on; to overstate the importance of. OVERENTHUSIASMS (23) OVERESTIMATIONS (20) [noun] An excessive estimation. OVERFAMILIARITY (26) OVERGLAMORIZING (31) OVERHOMOGENIZED (34) OVERHOMOGENIZES (33) OVERIMAGINATIVE (24) OVERINVESTMENTS (23) [noun] Excessive investment, especially in one particular area OVERMEDICATIONS (23) OVERORNAMENTING (21) OVERPROGRAMMING (26) OVERREFINEMENTS (23) OVERSIMPLIFYING (29) [verb] To explain or present something in a way that excludes important information for the sake of brevity, or of making the explanation or presentation easy to understand. OVERSTIMULATING (21) [verb] To stimulate to an excessive degree; to expose to excessive stimulation. OVERSTIMULATION (20) PALEOMAGNETISMS (22) PALEOMAGNETISTS (20) PARAJOURNALISMS (26) PARAMETRIZATION (28) PARAMYXOVIRUSES (32) [noun] Any member of the Paramyxoviridae family of negative-sense single-stranded RNA viruses responsible for a number of human and animal diseases. PARANORMALITIES (19) PARASYMPATHETIC (29) [adjective] Of or relating to the part of the autonomic nervous system that inhibits or opposes the effects of the sympathetic nervous system. PARLIAMENTARIAN (19) [noun] A member of a parliament, congress or an elected national legislative body of another name. | [noun] A person well-versed in parliamentary procedure. | [noun] An officer in most legislative bodies charged with being well-versed in the parliamentary rules of that legislative house, and whose rulings are taken as authoritative, to be appealed only to the whole of the house itself under special rules. PERMANENTNESSES (19) PERMISSIBLENESS (21) PESSIMISTICALLY (24) PHANTASMAGORIAS (23) [noun] A popular 18th- and 19th-century form of theatre entertainment whereby ghostly apparitions are formed. | [noun] A series of events involving rapid changes in light intensity and colour. | [noun] A dreamlike state where real and imagined elements are blurred together. PHARMACEUTICALS (26) [noun] A pharmaceutical or pharmacological preparation or product; a drug. PHARMACODYNAMIC (32) PHARMACOGNOSIES (25) PHARMACOGNOSTIC (27) PHARMACOKINETIC (30) PHARMACOLOGICAL (27) [adjective] Of or having to do with pharmacology. PHARMACOLOGISTS (25) PHARMACOTHERAPY (32) [noun] The use of pharmaceuticals to treat disease PHENOMENALISTIC (24) PHENOMENOLOGIES (23) PHENOMENOLOGIST (23) PHONOCARDIOGRAM (26) [noun] An image produced by a phonocardiograph. PHONOGRAMICALLY (28) PHOTOCHEMICALLY (32) PHOTOGRAMMETRIC (27) PHOTOJOURNALISM (29) [noun] A form of journalism in which a story is told primarily through photographs and other images PHOTOMECHANICAL (29) [adjective] Of or relating to any of several methods of printing via a plate which has been prepared photographically, and can contain both text and images PHOTOMETRICALLY (27) PHOTOMICROGRAPH (30) [noun] A photograph taken using a microscope. | [verb] To photograph through a microscope. PHOTOMULTIPLIER (24) [noun] A device, normally in the form of a tube, that uses a photocathode to convert photons into photoelectrons which are then amplified PHOTOPERIODISMS (25) PHRASEMONGERING (24) PHYSICOCHEMICAL (34) [adjective] Dependent on the joint action of both physical and chemical processes. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to physical chemistry. PHYTOCHEMICALLY (35) PINEALECTOMIZED (31) PINEALECTOMIZES (30) PLAINCLOTHESMAN (24) PLAINCLOTHESMEN (24) PLANIMETRICALLY (24) PLATYHELMINTHIC (30) PLETHYSMOGRAPHS (31) [noun] An instrument for measuring changes in volume within an organ or whole body (usually via fluctuations in the amount of fluid it contains). PLETHYSMOGRAPHY (34) PLEUROPNEUMONIA (21) [noun] Inflammation of the pleura and lungs; a combination of pleurisy and pneumonia, especially a kind of contagious and fatal lung disease of cattle and pigs, caused by infection by Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae. PNEUMONECTOMIES (23) [noun] The surgical removal of all or part of a lung. POLIOMYELITIDES (23) POLYACRYLAMIDES (28) POLYMERISATIONS (22) POLYMERIZATIONS (31) POLYMORPHICALLY (32) POSTHEMORRHAGIC (28) POSTMASTERSHIPS (24) POSTMILLENARIAN (19) POSTSTIMULATION (19) POSTSTIMULATORY (22) PREARRANGEMENTS (20) PREFORMATIONIST (22) PREIMPLANTATION (21) [adjective] Prior to implantation. PREMANUFACTURED (25) PREMANUFACTURES (24) PREMATURENESSES (19) PREMILLENARIANS (19) PREMILLENNIALLY (22) PREMODIFICATION (25) PRETERMINATIONS (19) PRIMITIVENESSES (22) PROBLEMATICALLY (26) PROFESSIONALISM (22) [noun] The status, methods, character or standards expected of a professional or of a professional organization, such as reliability, discretion, evenhandedness, and fair play. | [noun] The use of professionals rather than amateurs in any sport etc. PROGRAMMABILITY (27) PROMISCUOUSNESS (21) PROMOTABILITIES (21) PROMOTIVENESSES (22) PRONUNCIAMENTOS (21) [noun] A manifesto or formal proclamation of rebellion, particularly in Spain, Portugal and Latin America. PROSTATECTOMIES (21) [noun] The surgical removal of part or all of the prostate gland. PROXIMATENESSES (26) PSEUDOCOELOMATE (22) PSEUDOMORPHISMS (27) PSYCHOCHEMICALS (34) PSYCHOMETRICIAN (29) [noun] A person who administers psychometric tests. PSYCHOTOMIMETIC (31) [noun] Any psychotomimetic drug, such as LSD. | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) That induces a temporary state of altered perception and symptoms similar to those of psychosis (such as hallucinations). PUSILLANIMITIES (19) PUSILLANIMOUSLY (22) QUARRELSOMENESS (26) RADIOCHEMICALLY (28) RADIOMETRICALLY (23) RADIOSTRONTIUMS (18) RADIOTELEMETRIC (20) REACCLIMATIZING (31) REACTIONARYISMS (22) REAPPORTIONMENT (21) RECHROMATOGRAPH (28) RECOMBINATIONAL (21) RECOMMENCEMENTS (25) RECOMMENDATIONS (22) [noun] An act of recommending. | [noun] That which is recommended. | [noun] A commendation or endorsement. RECOMMISSIONING (22) [verb] To give a new commission or to validate an existing commission. | [verb] To put back in service (undoing decommissioning). RECONFIRMATIONS (22) RECONTAMINATING (20) RECONTAMINATION (19) REDETERMINATION (18) REESTABLISHMENT (22) [noun] The condition of being reestablished; restoration. | [noun] A second or subsequent establishment. REFLECTOMETRIES (22) REFORMABILITIES (22) REFRACTOMETRIES (22) REIMPLANTATIONS (19) RELINQUISHMENTS (29) REMANUFACTURERS (22) REMANUFACTURING (23) REMATERIALIZING (27) REMEDIABILITIES (20) REMEMBERABILITY (26) REMOBILIZATIONS (28) REMONETIZATIONS (26) REMONSTRATIVELY (23) REMORSELESSNESS (17) REMOVABLENESSES (22) REMYTHOLOGIZING (34) RESTRICTIONISMS (19) RESYSTEMATIZING (30) RETINOBLASTOMAS (19) RETRANSMISSIONS (17) [noun] The transmission of something again, especially over a different medium or at a different time RHEUMATOLOGISTS (21) RHOMBENCEPHALON (29) [noun] The hindbrain ROMANTICIZATION (28) RUDIMENTARINESS (18) RUMBUSTIOUSNESS (19) RUMORMONGERINGS (21) SABERMETRICIANS (21) SACCHAROMYCETES (29) SACRAMENTALISMS (21) SACRAMENTALISTS (19) SADOMASOCHISTIC (25) [adjective] Of or relating to sadomasochism or sadomasochists. SANCTIMONIOUSLY (22) SCHEMATIZATIONS (31) SCHISTOSOMIASES (22) SCHISTOSOMIASIS (22) [noun] Any of various diseases of humans caused by parasitic blood flukes of the genus Schistosoma. SCHOOLMASTERISH (25) SCINTILLOMETERS (19) SEDIMENTOLOGIES (19) SEDIMENTOLOGIST (19) SEMIABSTRACTION (21) SEMICENTENNIALS (19) SEMICOLONIALISM (21) SEMICRYSTALLINE (22) [adjective] Partially crystalline (and partially amorphous). SEMICYLINDRICAL (25) SEMIDOCUMENTARY (25) [noun] A drama (film, book or TV) that presents a fictional story incorporating many factual details or actual events | [adjective] Of such a drama SEMILOGARITHMIC (25) SEMIPORNOGRAPHY (28) SEMIRETIREMENTS (19) [noun] A state of partial retirement, working only part-time or occasionally SEMISUBMERSIBLE (23) [noun] A specialised marine vessel with good stability and seakeeping characteristics, often used in offshore roles such as oil drilling. SEMITERRESTRIAL (17) SEMITRANSLUCENT (19) SEMITRANSPARENT (19) [adjective] Allowing some visibility but partially clouded or obscured; translucent. SENSATIONALISMS (17) SENTIMENTALISED (18) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SENTIMENTALISES (17) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SENTIMENTALISMS (19) SENTIMENTALISTS (17) SENTIMENTALIZED (27) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SENTIMENTALIZES (26) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SERVOMECHANISMS (27) [noun] A mechanical device for controlling large amounts of power by means of smaller amounts of power and correcting the performance of the device using feedback | [noun] Any system which controls motion automatically using feedback SHAMELESSNESSES (20) SIGMOIDOSCOPIES (23) SILVERSMITHINGS (24) SIMPLIFICATIONS (24) [noun] The act of simplifying or something that has been simplified | [noun] A valid simple argument SLEDGEHAMMERING (25) [verb] To strike with a sledgehammer. SOMNAMBULATIONS (21) SPERMATOGENESES (20) SPERMATOGENESIS (20) [noun] The process of sperm production in the testes. SPLENECTOMIZING (31) SQUEAMISHNESSES (29) STEREOCHEMISTRY (25) [noun] The branch of chemistry that involves the spatial arrangement of the atoms of molecules, and studies how this affects the physical and chemical properties of such species | [noun] The effect of such spatial arrangement on the chemistry of a particular compound STEREOISOMERISM (19) STIGMATIZATIONS (27) STOICHIOMETRIES (22) SUBCOMMISSIONED (24) SUBDEVELOPMENTS (25) SUBMETACENTRICS (23) SUBOPTIMIZATION (30) SUMPTUOUSNESSES (19) SUPERGOVERNMENT (23) SUPERHUMANITIES (22) SUPERIMPOSITION (21) SUPERMAJORITIES (26) [noun] Any qualified majority, specified in advance of a vote, required for the vote to be passed SUPERNATURALISM (19) SUPERNUMERARIES (19) [noun] A person who works in a group, association, or public office without forming part of the regular staff (the numerary). | [noun] An extra or walk-on, often non-speaking, in a film or play; a spear carrier. | [noun] Something which is beyond the prescribed or standard amount or number. SUPERPARASITISM (21) SUPERPATRIOTISM (21) SUPERPHENOMENON (24) SUPERSTIMULATED (20) SUPERSTIMULATES (19) SUPERSYMMETRIES (24) SUPPLEMENTATION (21) [noun] The act of supplementing | [noun] Something added as a supplement SYMMETRICALNESS (24) SYMMETRIZATIONS (31) SYMPATHECTOMIES (29) [noun] The surgical cutting of a nerve in the sympathetic nervous system. SYMPATHETICALLY (30) [adverb] Owing to or showing evidence of "sympathy", or affinity; happening through or demonstrating correspondences, whether occult or physiological. | [adverb] In a manner which demonstrates a sharing in the feelings of others; compassionately. SYMPATHOMIMETIC (31) [noun] Any medicine with this effect. | [adjective] That produces effects similar to those of the sympathetic nervous system. SYMPTOMATICALLY (29) SYMPTOMATOLOGIC (27) SYSTEMATIZATION (29) TACHYARRHYTHMIA (34) TARSOMETATARSUS (17) [noun] The large bone next the foot in the leg of a bird. It is formed by the union of the distal part of the tarsus with the metatarsus. TATTERDEMALIONS (18) [noun] A person with tattered clothing. TEMERARIOUSNESS (17) TEMPERAMENTALLY (24) TEMPERATENESSES (19) TEMPESTUOUSNESS (19) TEMPORARINESSES (19) TERATOCARCINOMA (21) [noun] A malignant tumor, most often found in the testes. TERRITORIALISMS (17) TETRAGRAMMATONS (20) TETRAMETHYLLEAD (24) THERMALIZATIONS (29) THERMOCHEMISTRY (30) [noun] The study of the thermodynamics of chemical reactions. THERMODYNAMICAL (28) THERMOJUNCTIONS (29) THERMOPERIODISM (25) THERMORECEPTORS (24) THERMOREGULATED (22) [verb] To regulate the body temperature (by thermoregulation) THERMOREGULATES (21) [verb] To regulate the body temperature (by thermoregulation) THERMOREGULATOR (21) THERMOREMANENCE (24) THERMOSTABILITY (25) THROMBOEMBOLISM (28) [noun] An embolism caused by a blood clot carried in the bloodstream from its place of origin. THROMBOPLASTINS (24) THYROIDECTOMIES (26) TOASTMISTRESSES (17) [noun] A female toastmaster. TOMBOYISHNESSES (25) TONSILLECTOMIES (19) [noun] The surgical removal of the tonsils, especially the palatine tonsils. Frequently accompanied by an adenoidectomy. TOOTHSOMENESSES (20) TOTALITARIANISM (17) [noun] A system of government in which the people have virtually no authority and the state wields absolute control, for example, a dictatorship. TRADITIONALISMS (18) TRANSAMINATIONS (17) TRANSFORMATIONS (20) [noun] The act of transforming or the state of being transformed. | [noun] A marked change in appearance or character, especially one for the better. | [noun] The replacement of the variables in an algebraic expression by their values in terms of another set of variables; a mapping of one space onto another or onto itself; a function that changes the position or direction of the axes of a coordinate system. TRANSILLUMINATE (17) [verb] To pass light easily through an object, body part, or liquid. TRANSMIGRATIONS (18) TRANSMISSOMETER (19) TRANSMOGRIFYING (25) [verb] To completely alter the form of. | [verb] To completely alter one's form. TRANSSEXUALISMS (24) TRAUMATIZATIONS (26) TREMULOUSNESSES (17) TRICHOMONACIDAL (25) TRICHOMONACIDES (25) TRIGONOMETRICAL (20) TRIHALOMETHANES (23) TROUBLESOMENESS (19) TRYPANOSOMIASES (22) TRYPANOSOMIASIS (22) [noun] Any of several diseases or infections caused by a trypanosome. ULTIMOGENITURES (18) ULTRACOMMERCIAL (23) ULTRADEMOCRATIC (22) ULTRALIBERALISM (19) ULTRAMARATHONER (20) ULTRAMICROSCOPE (23) [noun] A microscope that uses bright illumination against a black background to view small particles ULTRAMICROTOMES (21) ULTRAMODERNISTS (18) ULTRAMONTANISMS (19) UNACCOMMODATING (25) [adjective] Not accommodating. UNCEREMONIOUSLY (22) [adverb] In an unceremonious manner, abruptly, without the due formalities. UNCIRCUMCISIONS (23) UNCLIMBABLENESS (23) UNCOMMUNICATIVE (26) [adjective] Tending not to communicate; not communicating. UNCOMPASSIONATE (21) [adjective] Not compassionate. UNCOMPLAININGLY (25) UNCOMPLIMENTARY (26) [adjective] Not complimentary; negative or insulting. UNCOMPREHENDING (26) [adjective] Lacking comprehension or understanding. UNCOMPROMISABLE (25) UNDEMONSTRATIVE (21) [adjective] Not given to showing emotion or feelings; reserved or distant. UNDEREMPHASIZED (33) [adjective] Insufficiently emphasized UNDEREMPHASIZES (32) [verb] To place insufficient emphasis on. UNDEREMPLOYMENT (25) UNDERESTIMATING (19) [verb] To perceive (someone or something) as having a lower value, quantity, worth, etc., than what he/she/it actually has. UNDERESTIMATION (18) [noun] An underestimate UNDERINVESTMENT (21) UNDERSTATEMENTS (18) [noun] An incomplete statement, particularly: UNEMPLOYABILITY (27) UNFAMILIARITIES (20) [noun] Lack of familiarity; ignorance or inexperience. UNIFORMITARIANS (20) UNIMAGINATIVELY (24) UNINFORMATIVELY (26) UNMELODIOUSNESS (18) UNMITIGATEDNESS (19) UNPARLIAMENTARY (22) [adjective] Unsuitable to be used in parliament | [adjective] Contrary to the rules of parliament UNSPORTSMANLIKE (23) [adjective] Violating the accepted standards of sportsmanship UNSYMMETRICALLY (27) UTILITARIANISMS (17) VENTURESOMENESS (20) VERISIMILITUDES (21) WARMHEARTEDNESS (24) WEARISOMENESSES (20) WHATCHAMACALLIT (30) [noun] A metasyntactic term used for any object whose actual name the speaker does not know or cannot remember; a doodad, gizmo, thingamajig, thingy. WHIMSICALNESSES (25) WHOLESOMENESSES (23) WORRISOMENESSES (20)

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This page lists all wordscapes words containing the letter M. Whether you're playing Wordscapes, looking for crossword answers, or solving a word puzzle, this list gives you every valid word to choose from. Click any word to use our word unscrambler and see all possible words from those letters.

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