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12-letter words containing c, l, i, p, e, s

  • plaid screen — [XEROX PARC] A "special effect" that occurs when certain kinds of memory smashes overwrite the control blocks or image memory of a bit-mapped display. The term "salt and pepper" may refer to a different pattern of similar origin. Though the term as coined at PARC refers to the result of an error, some of the X demos induce plaid-screen effects deliberately as a display hack.
  • plainclothes — Plainclothes police officers wear ordinary clothes instead of a police uniform.
  • pleiochasium — a flowering system in which several buds come out at the same time
  • poeticalness — the characteristic of being poetical
  • police state — a nation in which the police, especially a secret police, summarily suppresses any social, economic, or political act that conflicts with governmental policy.
  • policeperson — a member of a police force.
  • policymakers — a person responsible for making policy, especially in government.
  • poliorcetics — the science of siegecraft
  • politicaster — an ill-suited or disliked politician
  • polycentrism — the doctrine that a plurality of independent centers of leadership, power, or ideology may exist within a single political system, especially Communism.
  • polytheistic — pertaining to, characterized by, or adhering to polytheism, the doctrine that there is more than one god or many gods: Science thrived in the polytheistic culture of ancient Greece.
  • porcelainous — made of or resembling porcelain
  • porcellanise — to bake into porcelain
  • postcardlike — (of a scene) resembling a postcard
  • postelection — the selection of a person or persons for office by vote.
  • poster child — a child appearing on a poster for a charitable organization.
  • precariously — dependent on circumstances beyond one's control; uncertain; unstable; insecure: a precarious livelihood.
  • precessional — the act or fact of preceding; precedence.
  • preclassical — occurring or existing in, produced during or characteristic of a period prior to the classical period
  • precociously — unusually advanced or mature in development, especially mental development: a precocious child.
  • preeclampsia — Pathology. a form of toxemia of pregnancy, characterized by hypertension, fluid retention, and albuminuria, sometimes progressing to eclampsia.
  • preschooling — the education of preschool children.
  • prescribable — to lay down, in writing or otherwise, as a rule or a course of action to be followed; appoint, ordain, or enjoin.
  • preselection — to select in advance; choose beforehand.
  • primal scene — a child's first real or imagined observation of parental sexual intercourse.
  • primulaceous — belonging to the plant family Primulaceae.
  • problematics — problems or difficulties in a particular situation or subject
  • processional — of, relating to, or characteristic of a procession.
  • proclivities — natural or habitual inclination or tendency; propensity; predisposition: a proclivity to meticulousness.
  • prolificness — producing offspring, young, fruit, etc., abundantly; highly fruitful: a prolific pear tree.
  • proscribable — to denounce or condemn (a thing) as dangerous or harmful; prohibit.
  • prosectorial — characteristic of a prosector
  • psi particle — any of a family of mesons consisting of a charmed quark and a charmed antiquark.
  • psychologize — to make psychological investigations or speculations, especially those that are naive or uninformed.
  • ptyalectasis — spontaneous or surgical dilatation of a salivary duct.
  • public house — British. a tavern.
  • respectively — in precisely the order given; sequentially.
  • scafell pike — a mountain in NW England, in Cumberland: highest peak in England. 3210 feet (978 meters).
  • schappe silk — a yarn or fabric of or similar to spun silk.
  • schiaparelli — Elsa [el-sah] /ˈɛl sɑ/ (Show IPA), 1890–1973, French fashion designer, born in Italy.
  • scolopendrid — any myriapod of the order Scolopendrida, including many large, poisonous centipedes.
  • scopes trialJohn Thomas, 1901–70, U.S. high-school teacher whose teaching of the Darwinian theory of evolution became a cause célèbre (Scopes Trial or Monkey Trial) in 1925.
  • seed capital — small sum invested in new business
  • semipellucid — somewhat pellucid; partially translucent or transparent
  • semitropical — subtropical.
  • septuplicate — a group, series, or set of seven identical copies (usually preceded by in).
  • seraphically — of, like, or befitting a seraph.
  • sextuplicate — a group, series, or set of six identical copies: The application is to be submitted in sextuplicate.
  • short splice — a splice used when an increased thickness of the united rope is not objectionable, made by unlaying the rope ends a certain distance, uniting them so that their strands overlap, then tucking each alternately over and under others several times.
  • siderophilic — having characteristics of siderophile
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