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

  • malefaction — an evil deed; crime; wrongdoing.
  • malfunction — failure to function properly: a malfunction of the liver; the malfunction of a rocket.
  • mancipation — (obsolete) slavery.
  • mancipatory — relating to mancipation
  • manducation — The act of eating.
  • manuduction — the act of directing or guiding.
  • marcantonio — Raimondi, Marcantonio.
  • masculation — Making masculine; giving male characteristics.
  • 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.
  • mastication — The process of chewing.
  • masticatory — of, relating to, or used in or for mastication.
  • match point — (in tennis, squash, handball, etc.) the point that if won would enable the scorer or the scorer's side to win the match.
  • matronymics — Plural form of matronymic.
  • mechatronic — relating to mechatronics
  • medications — Plural form of medication.
  • meiotically — Pertaining to, or during, meiosis.
  • melanocytic — Of or pertaining to melanocytes.
  • mendication — The act or practice of begging; beggary.
  • meritocracy — an elite group of people whose progress is based on ability and talent rather than on class privilege or wealth.
  • meroblastic — (of certain eggs) undergoing partial cleavage, resulting in unequal blastomeres.
  • mesoblastic — (biology) of, relating to, or resembling the mesoblast.
  • mesognathic — having medium, slightly protruding jaws.
  • metabolical — Alternative form of metabolic.
  • metachrosis — the ability of some animals, such as chameleons, to change their colour
  • metafiction — fiction that discusses, describes, or analyzes a work of fiction or the conventions of fiction.
  • metamorphic — pertaining to or characterized by change of form, or metamorphosis.
  • metasomatic — Of or pertaining to metasomatism.
  • metatrophic — requiring dead organic matter for food.
  • metonymical — having the nature of metonymy.
  • metrication — the act, process, or result of establishing the metric system as the standard system of measurement.
  • micro saint — (simulation)   A general purpose simulation tool from US company Micro Analysis and Design.
  • micro-party — a small political party, esp one focusing on a single issue
  • microdontia — abnormally small teeth.
  • microgamete — (in heterogamous reproduction) the smaller and, usually, the male of two conjugating gametes.
  • micronation — an entity, typically existing only on the internet or within the private property of its members, that lays claim to sovereign status as an independent nation, but which is unrecognized by real nations
  • microsmatic — (of humans and certain animals) having a poor sense of smell
  • microtrauma — (medicine) Any small, insignificant injury, but especially one of a series (such as suffered by athletes) that can lead to major injury.
  • midas touch — the ability to turn any business venture one is associated with into an extremely profitable one.
  • misallocate — to allocate mistakenly or improperly: to misallocate resources.
  • miscitation — an erroneous citation
  • miscreation — miscreated.
  • mislocation — to misplace.
  • misocapnist — (rare) One who hates tobacco smoke.
  • mitotically — the usual method of cell division, characterized typically by the resolving of the chromatin of the nucleus into a threadlike form, which condenses into chromosomes, each of which separates longitudinally into two parts, one part of each chromosome being retained in each of two new cells resulting from the original cell.
  • monarchists — Plural form of monarchist.
  • monasticism — the monastic system, condition, or mode of life.
  • monoblastic — having a single layer, as an embryo in the blastula stage or developing from a single layer.
  • monogastric — (biology) Having a simple single-chambered stomach.
  • monticulate — having low rising mounds or protrusions
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