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13-letter words containing d, e, m, n, t, s

  • easter monday — the day after Easter, observed as a holiday in some places.
  • endometriosis — A condition resulting from the appearance of endometrial tissue outside the uterus and causing pelvic pain.
  • endosmometric — relating to the measurement of endosmotic action
  • endosymbiotic — Of or pertaining to endosymbiosis.
  • endotheliomas — Plural form of endothelioma.
  • eudaemonistic — Of or pertaining to eudaemonism.
  • hereditaments — Plural form of hereditament.
  • idiomaticness — Idiomaticity.
  • immediateness — The state of being immediate; immediacy.
  • incommodities — Plural form of incommodity.
  • indeterminism — the doctrine that human actions, though influenced somewhat by preexisting psychological and other conditions, are not entirely governed by them but retain a certain freedom and spontaneity.
  • intermediates — Plural form of intermediate.
  • intermodalism — pertaining to or suitable for transportation involving more than one form of carrier, as truck and rail, or truck, ship, and rail.
  • judgmentalism — Judgmental behaviour or attitude.
  • kidderminster — an ingrain carpet 36 inches (91 cm) wide.
  • lady's mantle — any of various rosaceous plants of the N temperate genus Alchemilla, having small green flowers
  • last judgment — judgment (def 8).
  • lymphadenitis — inflammation of a lymphatic gland.
  • magnetic disk — Also called disk, hard disk. a rigid disk coated with magnetic material, on which data and programs can be stored.
  • maiden castle — an ancient fortification in Dorsetshire, England, first erected c250 b.c. over the remains of Neolithic and Bronze Age settlements of c2000–c1500 b.c.
  • maladjustment — bad or unsatisfactory adjustment.
  • maladminister — to administer or manage badly or inefficiently: The mayor was a bungler who maladministered the city budget.
  • maladroitness — lacking in adroitness; unskillful; awkward; bungling; tactless: to handle a diplomatic crisis in a very maladroit way.
  • mandatoriness — The quality or state of being mandatory.
  • market trends — changes and developments in buying and selling in the market
  • masterminding — to plan and direct (a usually complex project or activity), especially skillfully: Two colonels had masterminded the revolt.
  • mean distance — the arithmetic mean of the greatest and least distances of a planet from the sun, used in stating the size of an orbit; the semimajor axis.
  • mean-spirited — petty; small-minded; ungenerous: a meanspirited man, unwilling to forgive.
  • medicamentous — of or relating to medicaments
  • meths drinker — a person who drinks methylated spirits
  • midwesterners — Plural form of midwesterner, an alternative capitalization of 'Midwesterner'.
  • misadjustment — Wrong or unsuitable adjustment.
  • misadventured — (obsolete) unfortunate.
  • misadventurer — a person who experiences misadventure or misfortune
  • misadventures — Plural form of misadventure.
  • misadvertence — inadvertence
  • miscoordinate — of the same order or degree; equal in rank or importance.
  • misdemeanants — Plural form of misdemeanant.
  • misidentified — Simple past tense and past participle of misidentify.
  • misidentifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of misidentify.
  • mispositioned — condition with reference to place; location; situation.
  • misredemption — illegal or fraudulent traffic in consumer product coupons, including mail theft and counterfeiting.
  • mistranslated — Simple past tense and past participle of mistranslate.
  • misunderstand — to take (words, statements, etc.) in a wrong sense; understand wrongly.
  • misunderstood — improperly understood or interpreted.
  • moderationist — a person who favors, supports, or promotes moderation.
  • modern greats — (at Oxford University) the Honour School of Philosophy, Politics, and Economics
  • modernisation — Alternative spelling of modernization.
  • modesty panel — a panel across the front of a desk, especially an office desk, designed to conceal the legs of a person seated at it.
  • modus tollens — the principle that whenever a conditional statement and the negation of its consequent are given to be true, the negation of its antecedent may be validly inferred, as in if it's Tuesday this must be Belgium and this isn't Belgium so it's not Tuesday
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