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12-letter words containing a, i, r, m, l

  • frankalmoign — a form of tenure by which religious bodies held lands, esp on condition of praying for the soul of the donor
  • franked mail — official mail sent by members of Congress, the vice president, and other authorized officials. Compare frank1 (defs 6–9).
  • fraternalism — of or befitting a brother or brothers; brotherly.
  • gastric mill — a gizzard in decapod crustaceans, as lobsters, crabs, and shrimps, having an arrangement of teeth and small bones for grinding food and bristles for filtering small particles.
  • gelatiniform — Having the form of gelatin.
  • germanophile — a person who is friendly toward or admires or studies Germany or German culture.
  • giant fulmar — either of two large white or brownish petrels of the genus Macronectes, of the Antarctic Ocean and adjacent seas.
  • gila monster — a large, venomous lizard, Heloderma suspectum, of the southwestern U.S. and northwestern Mexico, covered with beadlike scales of yellow, orange, and black.
  • glacier milk — water flowing in a stream from the snout of a glacier and containing particles of rock
  • glamour girl — a girl or woman whose appearance or lifestyle is considered glamorous by popular standards.
  • godzillagram — (networking)   /god-zil'*-gram/ (From Japan's national hero and datagram) 1. A network packet that in theory is a broadcast to every machine in the universe. The typical case is an IP datagram whose destination IP address is [255.255.255.255]. Fortunately, few gateways are foolish enough to attempt to implement this case! 2. A network packet of maximum size. An IP Godzillagram has 65,536 octets. Compare super source quench.
  • gold farming — the practice of selling virtual assets gained in a computer game for real money
  • gourd family — the plant family Cucurbitaceae, characterized by tendril-bearing vines, either trailing or climbing and having alternate, palmately lobed leaves, often large yellow or greenish flowers, and many-seeded, fleshy fruit with a hard rind, and including the cucumber, gourd, melon, pumpkin, and squash.
  • gram calorie — calorie (def 1a). Abbreviation: g-cal.
  • grape family — the plant family Vitaceae, characterized by woody climbing vines with tendrils, having alternate, simple or compound leaves, and bearing clusters of small flowers and berries, and including Boston ivy, grape, grape ivy, and Virginia creeper.
  • grass family — the large plant family Gramineae (or Poaceae), characterized by mostly herbaceous but sometimes woody plants with hollow and jointed stems, narrow sheathing leaves, petalless flowers borne in spikelets, and fruit in the form of seedlike grain, and including bamboo, sugar cane, numerous grasses, and cereal grains such as barley, corn, oats, rice, rye, and wheat.
  • gravicembalo — a harpsichord.
  • grimaldi man — a type of Aurignacian man having a negroid appearance, thought to be a race of Cro-Magnon man
  • grimsel pass — an Alpine pass in S Switzerland. 7159 feet (2184 meters) high.
  • hair implant — the insertion of synthetic fibers or human hair into the scalp to cover baldness.
  • hair removal — depilatory treatment
  • hamartiology — the doctrine of sin in Christian theology
  • hammer drill — a rock drill operated by compressed air in which the boring bit is not attached to the reciprocating piston
  • harlem river — tidal river separating Manhattan Island from the Bronx &, with Spuyten Duyvil Creek, connecting the East River with the Hudson: c. 8 mi (12.9 km)
  • harmonic law — any one of three laws governing planetary motion: each planet revolves in an ellipse, with the sun at one focus; the line connecting a planet to the sun sweeps out equal areas in equal periods of time (law of areas) or the square of the period of revolution of each planet is proportional to the cube of the semimajor axis of the planet's orbit (harmonic law)
  • harmonically — pertaining to harmony, as distinguished from melody and rhythm.
  • harmoniously — marked by agreement in feeling, attitude, or action: a harmonious group.
  • harmonizable — That can be harmonized.
  • haulage firm — a firm that transports goods by lorry
  • heimskringla — a book of the 13th century narrating the history of the kings of Norway by Snorri Sturluson.
  • hellgramites — Plural form of hellgramite.
  • hellgrammite — the aquatic larva of a dobsonfly, used as bait in fishing.
  • hemerocallis — the genus comprising the day lilies.
  • hemodialyzer — artificial kidney.
  • hemorrhoidal — Usually, hemorrhoids. Pathology. an abnormally enlarged vein mainly due to a persistent increase in venous pressure, occurring inside the anal sphincter of the rectum and beneath the mucous membrane (internal hemorrhoid) or outside the anal sphincter and beneath the surface of the anal skin (external hemorrhoid)
  • hermetically — so as to be airtight: hermetically sealed.
  • heroicomical — blending heroic and comic elements: a heroicomic poem.
  • hibernaculum — a protective case or covering, especially for winter, as of an animal or a plant bud.
  • hill farming — the activity and business of having a hill farm
  • hiram revelsHiram Rhoades [rohdz] /roʊdz/ (Show IPA), 1822–1901, U.S. clergyman, educator, and politician: first black senator 1870–71.
  • holidaymaker — vacationer.
  • horometrical — Relating to horometry.
  • humeral veil — a fringed scarf, usually white and ornamented in the middle, worn over the shoulders by a priest or subdeacon during certain parts of a High Mass.
  • hyperkalemia — an abnormally high concentration of potassium in the blood.
  • hyperkalemic — Having a high percentage of potassium in one's blood.
  • hyperlipemia — excessive amounts of fat and fatty substances in the blood; lipemia.
  • hypermagical — produced by or as if by magic: The change in the appearance of the room was magical.
  • hyperrealism — interest in or concern for the actual or real, as distinguished from the abstract, speculative, etc.
  • hypervolemia — (medicine) An abnormal increase in the volume of blood circulating through the body.
  • ian maclarenJames Dewey, born 1928, U.S. biologist: Nobel Prize in medicine 1962.
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