0%

10-letter words containing a, d, m, s, i, t

  • hard times — a period of difficulties or hardship.
  • heidenstam — Verner von [ver-nuh r fawn] /ˈvɛr nər fɔn/ (Show IPA), 1859–1940, Swedish poet and novelist: Nobel Prize 1916.
  • humidistat — an instrument for measuring and controlling humidity.
  • lammastide — the season of Lammas.
  • magistrand — a fourth-year university student
  • magnetised — Simple past tense and past participle of magnetise.
  • magnitudes — Plural form of magnitude.
  • manifested — readily perceived by the eye or the understanding; evident; obvious; apparent; plain: a manifest error.
  • mastermind — to plan and direct (a usually complex project or activity), especially skillfully: Two colonels had masterminded the revolt.
  • masticated — Simple past tense and past participle of masticate.
  • mastodonic — a massive, elephantlike mammal of the genus Mammut (Mastodon), that flourished worldwide from the Miocene through the Pleistocene epochs and, in North America, into recent times, having long, curved upper tusks and, in the male, short lower tusks.
  • mastodynia — (medicine) mastalgia; pain in the breast.
  • matricides — Plural form of matricide.
  • medallists — Plural form of medallist.
  • media star — a person who is well-known because of frequent appearances in the mass media
  • mediastina — Plural form of mediastinum.
  • mediations — Plural form of mediation.
  • mediatised — to annex (a principality) to another state, while allowing certain rights to its former sovereign.
  • medicaster — A quack doctor; someone who pretends to have medical knowledge.
  • mendicants — Plural form of mendicant.
  • metalloids — Plural form of metalloid.
  • misandrist — hatred of males.
  • miscreated — miscreated.
  • miseducate — to educate improperly.
  • mislocated — to misplace.
  • mismatched — Simple past tense and past participle of mismatch.
  • misrelated — Simple past tense and past participle of misrelate.
  • mistrayned — deluded or incorrectly trained
  • mistreated — Simple past tense and past participle of mistreat.
  • modalities — the quality or state of being modal.
  • moderatism — A doctrine of moderation (in any field).
  • mortalised — Simple past tense and past participle of mortalise.
  • most-divan — sliced and baked in a casserole with broccoli and hollandaise sauce.
  • mutualised — Simple past tense and past participle of mutualise.
  • mydriatics — Plural form of mydriatic.
  • nystagmoid — having a similarity to or characteristics of nystagmus
  • prismatoid — a polyhedron having its vertices lying on two parallel planes.
  • pyramidist — an expert in the structure and history of the Egyptian pyramids
  • radio mast — transmission tower
  • remediates — to settle (disputes, strikes, etc.) as an intermediary between parties; reconcile.
  • sedimental — of, relating to, or of the nature of sediment.
  • sidestream — (of cigarette smoke) inhaled by passive smokers
  • smaragdite — a green, foliated member of the amphibole group.
  • smartdrive — (storage, product)   A Microsoft MS DOS disk cache program to speed up disk access. For most users, a 1MB cache is sufficient. Devoting more memory to the cache offers diminishing returns, since the additional cache hits become fewer (and the extra memory could be better used to reduce swapping). Typing SMARTDRV /S at a DOS prompt shows the cache size, a hit-and-miss report, and information about which drives are being cached. The hit-and-miss statistics are crucial for gauging the effectiveness of SmartDrive settings. A score in the high 80s shows that SmartDrive is well configured. Run SMARTDRV /S several times during a Windows session and note the-hit-and-miss figures each time. If your percentage usually falls below 80 percent, you should consider increasing the cache size. You can edit the SMARTDRV line in your AUTOEXEC.BAT file to increase both the InitCacheSize and the WinCacheSize parameters. SmartDrive Monitor is an undocumented Windows program that comes with DOS 6.0 for logging and controling the cache.
  • spasmodist — a person who is spasmodic, especially in style, as a writer, painter, etc.
  • spermatoid — resembling sperm.
  • stadimeter — an instrument for determining the distance between an observer and an object of known height by measurement of the angle subtended by the object.
  • stand firm — be resolute
  • stimulated — to rouse to action or effort, as by encouragement or pressure; spur on; incite: to stimulate his interest in mathematics.
  • streamside — the land on the sides of a stream.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?