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12-letter words containing b, l, y, m

  • hebdomadally — taking place, coming together, or published once every seven days; weekly: hebdomadal meetings; hebdomadal groups; hebdomadal journals.
  • hemimetaboly — Hemimetabolism.
  • humboldt bay — an inlet of the Pacific Ocean in NW California.
  • hypermutable — Of or in a state in which mutation is abnormally frequent.
  • immeasurably — incapable of being measured; limitless: the immeasurable vastness of the universe.
  • immovability — incapable of being moved; fixed; stationary.
  • immutability — not mutable; unchangeable; changeless.
  • impenetrably — not penetrable; that cannot be penetrated, pierced, entered, etc.
  • imperishably — In an imperishable manner.
  • imputability — The character of being imputable.
  • inadmissibly — In an inadmissible way.
  • incommutably — In an incommutable manner.
  • incomparably — beyond comparison; matchless or unequaled: incomparable beauty.
  • incompatibly — In an incompatible manner.
  • incomputably — In an incomputable way.
  • interminably — incapable of being terminated; unending: an interminable job.
  • irredeemably — not redeemable; incapable of being bought back or paid off.
  • irreformably — in an irreformable manner
  • irremediably — not admitting of remedy, cure, or repair: irremediable conduct.
  • irremissibly — In an irremissible manner; unpardonably.
  • lady's-thumb — a smartweed, Polygonum persicaria, of the buckwheat family, having pink or purplish flowers and lance-shaped leaves with a spot resembling a thumbprint.
  • locomobility — the ability to move from one place to another
  • lymphoblasts — Plural form of lymphoblast.
  • malleability — the state of being malleable, or capable of being shaped, as by hammering or pressing: the extreme malleability of gold.
  • mean well by — to have good intentions or friendly, helpful feelings toward
  • memorability — worth remembering; notable: a memorable speech.
  • microbiology — study of microorganisms
  • middy blouse — any of various loose blouses with a sailor collar, often extending below the waistline to terminate in a broad band or fold, as worn by sailors, women, or children.
  • molybdenosis — a disease of ruminants, especially cattle, caused by dietary intake of excessive molybdenum with resultant copper deficiency, characterized by persistent diarrhea and, especially around the eyes, a fading of coat pigment.
  • monkey block — Nautical. a single block that swivels.
  • monkey climb — a wrestling throw in which a contestant seizes his or her opponent's arms or neck, places his feet on the opponent's stomach, and falls backwards, straightening the legs and throwing the opponent over his or her head
  • monosyllabic — having only one syllable, as the word no.
  • monosyllable — a word of one syllable, as yes or no.
  • motorbicycle — a small, lightweight motorcycle.
  • mouldability — a hollow form or matrix for giving a particular shape to something in a molten or plastic state.
  • movable type — type from which text is printed directly in which each character is on a separate piece of metal.
  • mumblety-peg — a children's game played with a pocketknife, the object being to cause the blade to stick in the ground or a wooden surface by flipping the knife in a number of prescribed ways or from a number of prescribed positions.
  • myclobutanil — A triazole fungicide that works by inhibiting ergosterol biosynthesis.
  • myofibrillar — Of or pertaining to myofibrils.
  • myrtle beach — a town in E South Carolina.
  • numerability — the fact of having the ability to be counted
  • permeability — the property or state of being permeable.
  • plymouth bay — a small, well-protected bay on the coast of Massachusetts; the first permanent European settlement in New England; founded by the Pilgrim Fathers.
  • polyembryony — the production of more than one embryo from one egg.
  • polyribosome — polysome.
  • pre-assembly — an assembling or coming together of a number of persons, usually for a particular purpose: The principal will speak to all the students at Friday's assembly.
  • public enemy — a person or thing considered a danger or menace to the public, especially a wanted criminal widely sought by the F.B.I. and local police forces.
  • public money — money that has been collected by the state, usually through taxation
  • red mulberry — See under mulberry (def 2).
  • reg-symbolic — An early system on the IBM 704.
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