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11-letter words containing a, t, i, c, s, m

  • encomiastic — Of or relating to an encomiast.
  • esemplastic — Unifying; having the power to shape disparate things into a unified whole.
  • facsimilist — a person who makes facsimiles
  • formalistic — strict adherence to, or observance of, prescribed or traditional forms, as in music, poetry, and art.
  • gastronomic — the art or science of good eating.
  • gum elastic — rubber1 (def 1).
  • gymnastical — Alternative form of gymnastic.
  • haemostatic — That promotes haemostasis.
  • harmonicist — Someone who plays the harmonica.
  • harmonistic — pertaining to a harmonist or harmony.
  • hemiacetals — Plural form of hemiacetal.
  • hemistichal — of or relating to a hemistich
  • hemostatics — arresting hemorrhage, as a drug; styptic.
  • hetaerismic — of or relating to courtesans
  • hetairismic — relating to hetairism, concubinage
  • homeostatic — the tendency of a system, especially the physiological system of higher animals, to maintain internal stability, owing to the coordinated response of its parts to any situation or stimulus that would tend to disturb its normal condition or function.
  • homoblastic — (of a plant or plant part) showing no difference in form between the juvenile and the adult structures
  • homoplastic — correspondence in form or structure, owing to a similar environment.
  • importances — the quality or state of being important; consequence; significance.
  • informatics — the study of information processing; computer science.
  • insectarium — a place in which a collection of living insects is kept, as in a zoo.
  • intercampus — the grounds, often including the buildings, of a college, university, or school.
  • isomagnetic — noting or pertaining to points of equal magnetic force.
  • isometrical — Dated form of isometric.
  • lacrimators — Plural form of lacrimator.
  • logomachist — One who starts fights about the meaning of words.
  • machinators — Plural form of machinator.
  • macintoshes — Plural form of macintosh.
  • macrosmatic — Having a good sense of smell.
  • magistratic — relating to a magistrate
  • manicurists — Plural form of manicurist.
  • manneristic — a habitual or characteristic manner, mode, or way of doing something; distinctive quality or style, as in behavior or speech: He has an annoying mannerism of tapping his fingers while he talks. They copied his literary mannerisms but always lacked his ebullience.
  • manuscripts — Plural form of manuscript.
  • martensitic — Of or pertaining to the mineral martensite.
  • masculation — Making masculine; giving male characteristics.
  • masculinist — Characterized by or denoting attitudes or values held to be typical of men.
  • masculinity — pertaining to or characteristic of a man or men: masculine attire.
  • masochistic — Psychiatry. having a condition in which sexual gratification depends on suffering, physical pain, and humiliation.
  • mass action — Mass action is the effect when continuously adding reactants (= substances that are used in a reaction) to a reaction causes it to generate products continuously.
  • masterpiece — a person's greatest piece of work, as in an art.
  • mastic tree — a small Mediterranean anacardiaceous evergreen tree, Pistacia lentiscus, that yields the resin mastic
  • masticating — Present participle of masticate.
  • mastication — The process of chewing.
  • masticatory — of, relating to, or used in or for mastication.
  • matchsticks — Plural form of matchstick.
  • mathematics — (used with a singular verb) the systematic treatment of magnitude, relationships between figures and forms, and relations between quantities expressed symbolically.
  • matronymics — Plural form of matronymic.
  • mccarthyism — the practice of making accusations of disloyalty, especially of pro-Communist activity, in many instances unsupported by proof or based on slight, doubtful, or irrelevant evidence.
  • mechanistic — of or relating to the theory of mechanism or to mechanists.
  • mechitarist — a member of an order of Armenian monks founded in Constantinople in the 18th century and following the rule of St. Benedict.
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