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12-letter words containing a, n, c, m, p, t

  • contemplable — able to be contemplated
  • contemplated — to look at or view with continued attention; observe or study thoughtfully: to contemplate the stars.
  • contemplates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of contemplate.
  • contemplator — to look at or view with continued attention; observe or study thoughtfully: to contemplate the stars.
  • contemporary — Contemporary things are modern and relate to the present time.
  • contemptable — Contemptible.
  • cosmopolitan — A cosmopolitan place or society is full of people from many different countries and cultures.
  • counterstamp — a stamp added to a stamped paper or document as a qualifying mark.
  • craftmanship — Alternative form of craftsmanship.
  • cryptogamian — of or relating to cryptogams
  • cryptomnesia — the reappearance of a suppressed or forgotten memory which is mistaken for a new experience
  • cryptomonads — Plural form of cryptomonad.
  • decompensate — to undergo decompensation due to disease or impairment
  • displacement — the act of displacing.
  • emancipating — Present participle of emancipate.
  • emancipation — The fact or process of being set free from legal, social, or political restrictions; liberation.
  • emancipators — Plural form of emancipator.
  • emancipatory — Of or pertaining to emancipation or to an emancipator.
  • emancipatrix — A woman, girl, or any other entity treated as female who emancipates; a female emancipator.
  • emplacements — Plural form of emplacement.
  • encompasseth — Archaic third-person singular form of encompass.
  • extracampine — (psychiatry, of hallucination) Beyond the possible sensory field.
  • impeachments — Plural form of impeachment.
  • implications — something implied or suggested as naturally to be inferred or understood: to resent an implication of dishonesty.
  • importancies — Plural form of importancy.
  • imprecations — Plural form of imprecation.
  • in-compliant — not compliant; unyielding.
  • incompatible — not compatible; unable to exist together in harmony: She asked for a divorce because they were utterly incompatible.
  • incompatibly — In an incompatible manner.
  • incomputable — incapable of being computed; incalculable.
  • incomputably — In an incomputable way.
  • intemperance — excessive or immoderate indulgence in alcoholic beverages.
  • intercompany — a number of individuals assembled or associated together; group of people.
  • intercompare — (of members of a group) to compare each member against all other members
  • intracompany — occurring within a company, especially between employees or branches of the company.
  • itching palm — a grasping nature; avarice
  • kleptomaniac — a person who has kleptomania.
  • magnetic dip — to plunge (something, as a cloth or sponge) temporarily into a liquid, so as to moisten it, dye it, or cause it to take up some of the liquid: He dipped the brush into the paint bucket.
  • magnetooptic — pertaining to the effect of magnetism upon the propagation of light.
  • mantelpieces — Plural form of mantelpiece.
  • manuscriptal — (obsolete) Of or pertaining to manuscript.
  • meat packing — the business or industry of slaughtering cattle and other meat animals and processing the carcasses for sale, sometimes including the packaging of processed meat products.
  • micropayment — A very small payment made each time a user accesses an Internet page or service.
  • misanthropic — of, relating to, or characteristic of a misanthrope.
  • misplacement — to put in a wrong place.
  • mispunctuate — to punctuate incorrectly.
  • monosynaptic — having or relating to a sole synapse
  • multiplicand — a number to be multiplied by another.
  • municipality — a city, town, or other district possessing corporate existence and usually its own local government.
  • name capture — (reduction)   In beta reduction, when a term containing a free occurrence of a variable v is substituted into another term where v is bound the free v becomes spuriously bound or "captured". E.g. (\ x . \ y . x y) y --> \ y . y y (WRONG) This problem arises because two distinct variables have the same name. The most common solution is to rename the bound variable using alpha conversion: (\ x . \ y' . x y') y --> \ y' . y y' Another solution is to use de Bruijn notation. Note that the argument expression, y, contained a free variable. The whole expression above must therefore be notionally contained within the body of some lambda abstraction which binds y. If we never reduce inside the body of a lambda abstraction (as in reduction to weak head normal form) then name capture cannot occur.
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