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11-letter words containing a, c, i, d, m

  • immedicably — In an immedicable way; incurably.
  • incompassed — Simple past tense and past participle of incompass.
  • indometacin — Alternative spelling of indomethacin.
  • kitchenmaid — a female servant who assists the cook.
  • lasiocampid — (zoology) Any member of the Lasiocampidae.
  • leucodermia — leucoderma
  • lucid dream — a dream in which the dreamer is aware that he or she is dreaming and can sometimes influence the course of the dream
  • lucid emacs — Xemacs
  • macadamized — Simple past tense and past participle of macadamize.
  • macadamizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of macadamize.
  • macdesigner — A design CASE tool for the Mac from Excel Software, Inc.
  • macrodontia — the condition of having abnormally large teeth.
  • madefaction — the process of making wet
  • maledicting — Present participle of maledict.
  • malediction — a curse; imprecation.
  • maledictory — a curse; imprecation.
  • maleic acid — a colorless, crystalline, water-soluble solid, C 4 H 4 O 4 , isomeric with fumaric acid, having an astringent, repulsive taste and faint acidulous odor: used in the manufacture of synthetic resins, the dyeing and finishing of textiles, and as a preservative for fats and oils.
  • manducating — Present participle of manducate.
  • manducation — The act of eating.
  • manuduction — the act of directing or guiding.
  • mariticidal — Of, or pertaining to, mariticide. Often used to describe a person.
  • medical man — a doctor of medicine
  • medicaments — Plural form of medicament.
  • medications — Plural form of medication.
  • medicinable — medicinal.
  • medicinally — of, relating to, or having the properties of a medicine; curative; remedial: medicinal properties; medicinal substances.
  • medicolegal — pertaining to medicine and law or to forensic medicine.
  • melodically — melodious.
  • mendacities — Plural form of mendacity.
  • mendication — The act or practice of begging; beggary.
  • merchandise — the manufactured goods bought and sold in any business.
  • merchandize — Alternative spelling of merchandise.
  • mesocardium — the double layer of splanchnic mesoderm supporting the embryonic heart.
  • metavanadic — designating or relating to an acid, HVO4, that is an oxyacid of vanadium
  • michigander — a native or inhabitant of Michigan.
  • microdomain — (biology) Any of several small regions of a cell membrane that has a distinct structure and a distinct function.
  • microdontia — abnormally small teeth.
  • microfarads — Plural form of microfarad.
  • microreader — a device for projecting an enlarged image of a microfilm or microphotograph, especially on a ground-glass screen.
  • midas touch — the ability to turn any business venture one is associated with into an extremely profitable one.
  • middlemarch — a novel (1871–72) by George Eliot.
  • misbalanced — badly balanced
  • miseducated — Simple past tense and past participle of miseducate.
  • misguidance — to guide wrongly; misdirect.
  • modal logic — (logic)   An extension of propositional calculus with operators that express various "modes" of truth. Examples of modes are: necessarily A, possibly A, probably A, it has always been true that A, it is permissible that A, it is believed that A. "It is necessarily true that A" means that things being as they are, A must be true, e.g. "It is necessarily true that x=x" is TRUE while "It is necessarily true that x=y" is FALSE even though "x=y" might be TRUE. Adding modal operators [F] and [P], meaning, respectively, henceforth and hitherto leads to a "temporal logic". Flavours of modal logics include: Propositional Dynamic Logic (PDL), Propositional Linear Temporal Logic (PLTL), Linear Temporal Logic (LTL), Computational Tree Logic (CTL), Hennessy-Milner Logic, S1-S5, T. C.I. Lewis, "A Survey of Symbolic Logic", 1918, initiated the modern analysis of modality. He developed the logical systems S1-S5. JCC McKinsey used algebraic methods (Boolean algebras with operators) to prove the decidability of Lewis' S2 and S4 in 1941. Saul Kripke developed the relational semantics for modal logics (1959, 1963). Vaughan Pratt introduced dynamic logic in 1976. Amir Pnuelli proposed the use of temporal logic to formalise the behaviour of continually operating concurrent programs in 1977.
  • monadically — Biology. any simple, single-celled organism. any of various small, flagellate, colorless ameboids with one to three flagella, especially of the genus Monas.
  • monocardian — a creature that has only one heart
  • mosaic gold — Chemistry. stannic sulfide.
  • multi-faced — having a specified kind of face or number of faces (usually used in combination): a sweet-faced child; the two-faced god.
  • multicasted — Transmitted in the form of a multicast.
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