0%

12-letter words containing d, e, c, m

  • multitracked — (music) Recorded on multiple tracks.
  • muscle-bound — having enlarged and inelastic muscles, as from excessive exercise.
  • musical ride — a display by riders on horseback of manoeuvres to music, esp by members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
  • mycocecidium — a gall caused by a parasitic fungus.
  • needle match — a bitterly fought contest between two competitors or teams who bear each other a grudge
  • nicotinamide — a colorless, crystalline, water-soluble solid, C 6 H 6 N 2 O, the amide of nicotinic acid, and a component of the vitamin-B complex, found in meat, liver, fish, whole wheat, and eggs: used in medicine chiefly as an agent for preventing or treating human pellagra or animal black tongue.
  • non-domestic — of or relating to the home, the household, household affairs, or the family: domestic pleasures.
  • noncommitted — not committed
  • nondomiciled — of, relating to, or denoting a person who is not domiciled in his or her country of origin
  • nonmedically — In a nonmedical manner.
  • nonmedicinal — Not medicinal.
  • normed space — any vector space on which a norm is defined.
  • obcompressed — compressed or flattened in a way opposite to the usual, as back to front instead of side to side.
  • old mine cut — a brilliant cut, common in the 19th century, retaining a relatively high proportion of the original stone and having a large culet and small table compared to modern brilliants.
  • oleandomycin — a macrolide antibiotic used to treat skin infections
  • omnidistance — the distance between an omnirange station and a receiver.
  • once removed — relative: one generation older
  • opendocument — (file format, standard)   (ODF, ISO/IEC 26300, OASIS Open Document Format for Office Applications) An XML file format for office documents, such as spreadsheets, charts, presentations, databases and word processing. OpenDocument was developed by the Open Office XML technical committee of the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) consortium. It is based on the XML format originally created and implemented by the OpenOffice.org office suite. OpenDocument is an open standard, i.e. freely available and implementable. Compare OOXML.
  • orchidectomy — orchiectomy.
  • organic mode — (programming)   A term used by COCOMO to describe a project that is developed in a familiar, stable environment. The product is similar to previously developed products. Most people connected with the project have extensive experience in working with related systems and have a thorough understanding of the project. The project contains a minimum of innovative data processing architectures or algorithms. The product requires little innovation and is relatively small, rarely greater than 50,000 DSIs.
  • ormond beach — a town in NE Florida.
  • overconsumed — Simple past tense and past participle of overconsume.
  • overdocument — to document excessively
  • overdramatic — of or relating to the drama.
  • overmedicate — to treat with medicine or medicaments.
  • pachydermous — any of the thick-skinned, nonruminant ungulates, as the elephant, hippopotamus, and rhinoceros.
  • paedomorphic — showing signs of paedomorphism
  • para-medical — related to the medical profession in a secondary or supplementary capacity.
  • payment card — A payment card is a plastic card which you use like a credit card, but which takes the money directly from your bank account.
  • picture mold — a molding near a ceiling from which pictures can be suspended.
  • pimelic acid — a crystalline compound, C 7 H 1 2 O 4 , soluble in alcohol and ether: used in polymers and as a plasticizer.
  • predominance — the state, condition, or quality of being predominant: the predominance of the rich over the poor.
  • premedicated — to treat with medicine or medicaments.
  • promuscidate — shaped like a proboscis
  • pseudocoelom — the body cavity of certain invertebrate metazoan animals between the body wall and the intestine, which is not lined with a mesodermal epithelium.
  • pseudoscheme — A translator from Scheme to Common Lisp by Jonathan Rees <[email protected]>. Version 2.8. It conforms to all of R3RS except call/cc and requires Common Lisp. Runs on Lucid, Symbolics CL, VAX Lisp, Explorer CL. Mailing list: [email protected]
  • purple medic — a plant, Medicago sativa, of the legume family, usually having bluish-purple flowers, originating in the Near East and widely cultivated as a forage crop.
  • racemic acid — an isomeric modification of tartaric acid that is sometimes found in the juice of grapes in conjunction with the common dextrorotatory form and is optically inactive but can be separated into the two usual isomeric forms, dextrorotatory and levorotatory.
  • radiomimetic — (of drugs) producing effects similar to those produced by X-rays
  • readmittance — the act or process of admitting someone or something again
  • recommending — to present as worthy of confidence, acceptance, use, etc.; commend; mention favorably: to recommend an applicant for a job; to recommend a book.
  • reduced mass — a quantity obtained when one particle is moving about another, larger particle that is also moving, equivalent to the mass of the smaller particle, were the larger particle not moving, and equal to the quotient of the product of the two masses divided by their sum.
  • reductionism — the theory that every complex phenomenon, especially in biology or psychology, can be explained by analyzing the simplest, most basic physical mechanisms that are in operation during the phenomenon.
  • reindictment — an act of indicting.
  • reward claim — a claim granted to a miner who discovered gold in a new area
  • rhytidectomy — face-lift.
  • roman candle — a firework consisting of a tube that sends out a shower of sparks and a succession of balls of fire.
  • romanticized — interpreted according to romantic precepts
  • salicylamide — a compound of ammonia and gualtheria oil
  • sarcoadenoma — adenosarcoma.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?