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12-letter words containing b, o, n, m

  • imbibitional — relating to imbibition
  • immobilising — Present participle of immobilise.
  • immobilizing — Present participle of immobilize.
  • immunoglobin — (immunology, protein) Any protein that functions as an antibody.
  • impardonable — (obsolete) unpardonable.
  • imponderable — not ponderable; that cannot be precisely determined, measured, or evaluated.
  • imprisonable — capable of being imprisoned or incarcerated
  • in mothballs — a small ball of naphthalene or sometimes of camphor for placing in closets or other storage areas to repel moths from clothing, blankets, etc.
  • incommutable — not exchangeable.
  • incommutably — In an incommutable manner.
  • incomparable — beyond comparison; matchless or unequaled: incomparable beauty.
  • incomparably — beyond comparison; matchless or unequaled: incomparable beauty.
  • 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.
  • inconsumable — not consumable; incapable of being consumed.
  • incumbent on — holding an indicated position, role, office, etc., currently: the incumbent officers of the club.
  • informidable — (obsolete) Not formidable; not to be feared or dreaded.
  • innominables — trousers
  • insubmission — Lack of submission; disobedience.
  • know by name — to have heard of without having met
  • labia minora — female genitals: inner folds of skin
  • lambda point — the temperature of approximately 2.186 K, at which the transition from helium I to superfluid helium II occurs.
  • lemon butter — a spread made of butter flavored with lemon
  • lobotomising — Present participle of lobotomise.
  • machine bolt — a threaded fastener, used with a nut for connecting metal parts, having a thread diameter of about 1/4 inch (6.4 mm) or more and a square or hexagonal head for tightening by a wrench.
  • male bonding — the process by which two or more men or boys become emotionally attached to each another
  • manoeuvrable — Alternative spelling of maneuverable.
  • mantelboards — Plural form of mantelboard.
  • marimbaphone — (obsolete, music) A kind of percussion idiophone, like the marimba but with steel keys instead of wood, developed in early 20th century United States.
  • marine borer — any mollusc or crustacean that lives usually in warm seas and destroys wood by boring into and eating it. The gribble and shipworm are the best known since they penetrate any wood in favourable water
  • mastoid bone — a large, bony prominence on the base of the skull behind the ear, containing air spaces that connect with the middle ear cavity.
  • masturbation — the stimulation or manipulation of one's own genitals, especially to orgasm; sexual self-gratification.
  • medicine box — a small box used to hold medicines
  • melanoblasts — Plural form of melanoblast.
  • melon baller — a small cooking utensil with a handle and a rounded scoop, which you insert into a melon and twist to extract a ball of flesh
  • mental block — inability to recall
  • metabolising — Present participle of metabolise.
  • metabolizing — Present participle of metabolize.
  • metabonomics — (biochemistry, genetics) metabolomics.
  • michel baron — Michel [mee-shel] /miˈʃɛl/ (Show IPA), (Michel Boyron) 1653–1729, French actor.
  • microbalance — a balance for weighing minute quantities of material.
  • microbrewing — Small-scale commercial brewing, as carried out in a microbrewery.
  • mind-blowing — overwhelming; astounding: Spending a week in the jungle was a mind-blowing experience.
  • mindboggling — That causes the mind to boggle; that is beyond one's ability to understand or figure out; bewildering; mystifying.
  • mobile phone — any wireless telephone that operates over a relatively large area, as a cell phone or PCS phone.
  • mobilisation — The act of mobilising.
  • mobilization — to assemble or marshal (armed forces, military reserves, or civilian persons of military age) into readiness for active service.
  • mockingbirds — Plural form of mockingbird.
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