0%

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

  • incrossbreed — to breed (animals) by crossbreeding inbred parents, whether of the same or of different breeds
  • indian bison — the gaur.
  • indisposable — Not disposable.
  • indissoluble — not dissoluble; incapable of being dissolved, decomposed, undone, or destroyed.
  • indissolubly — not dissoluble; incapable of being dissolved, decomposed, undone, or destroyed.
  • inhospitable — not inclined to, or characterized by, hospitality, as persons or actions; unfriendly.
  • inhospitably — not inclined to, or characterized by, hospitality, as persons or actions; unfriendly.
  • inkblot test — any of various psychological tests in which varied patterns formed by blots of ink are interpreted by the subject.
  • innominables — trousers
  • inobservable — Unobservable.
  • inobservance — lack of attention; inattention; heedlessness: drowsy inobservance.
  • insalubrious — unfavorable to health; unwholesome.
  • insolubility — incapable of being dissolved: insoluble salts.
  • insolubilize — to make incapable of dissolving: a resin insolubilized by heat.
  • insubjection — lack of subjection, or the state of being disobedient to an authority, such as a government
  • insubmission — Lack of submission; disobedience.
  • insupposable — Incapable of being supposed; inconceivable.
  • interrobangs — Plural form of interrobang.
  • jettisonable — to cast (goods) overboard in order to lighten a vessel or aircraft or to improve its stability in an emergency.
  • job analysis — a detailed study of the requirements necessary to complete a job, taking into consideration chiefly the order of operation, material and machinery needed, and the necessary qualifications of workers.
  • johannesburg — a city in S Transvaal, in the NE Republic of South Africa.
  • joseph brantJoseph (Thayendanegea) 1742–1807, Mohawk Indian chief who fought on the side of the British in the American Revolution.
  • jungle books — a series of jungle stories in two volumes (1894, 1895) by Rudyard Kipling.
  • keep tabs on — a small flap, strap, loop, or similar appendage, as on a garment, used for pulling, hanging, or decoration.
  • kinesophobia — Fear of movement.
  • knowableness — the quality of being knowable
  • knucklebones — (in humans) any of the bones forming a knuckle of a finger.
  • labor-saving — A labor-saving device or idea makes it possible for you to do something with less effort than usual.
  • labour pains — the pains felt during the contractions of childbirth
  • laboursaving — reducing (human) effort, hard work, or labour
  • last but one — next to last
  • libidinosity — lustfulness
  • libidinously — In a libidinous manner.
  • lobotomising — Present participle of lobotomise.
  • loganberries — Plural form of loganberry.
  • louise boganLouise, 1897–1970, U.S. poet.
  • lubrications — Plural form of lubrication.
  • lucubrations — Plural form of lucubration.
  • mantelboards — Plural form of mantelboard.
  • 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.
  • melanoblasts — Plural form of melanoblast.
  • metabolising — Present participle of metabolise.
  • metabonomics — (biochemistry, genetics) metabolomics.
  • mobilisation — The act of mobilising.
  • mockingbirds — Plural form of mockingbird.
  • 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.
  • monosyllabic — having only one syllable, as the word no.
  • monosyllable — a word of one syllable, as yes or no.
  • montebrasite — a mineral, lithium aluminum hydroxyl phosphate, LiAlPO 4 (OH), isomorphous with amblygonite, used as an ore of lithium.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?