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11-letter words containing e, m, s, i

  • english elm — a species, U. procera of the genus Ulmus.
  • enlistments — Plural form of enlistment.
  • enrichments — Plural form of enrichment.
  • entailments — Plural form of entailment.
  • enthusiasms — Plural form of enthusiasm.
  • enticements — Plural form of enticement.
  • enzymolysis — a biochemical decomposition, such as a fermentation, that is catalysed by an enzyme
  • epaminondas — ?418–362 bc, Greek Theban statesman and general: defeated the Spartans at Leuctra (371) and Mantinea (362) and restored power in Greece to Thebes
  • ephemerides — Plural form of ephemeris.
  • epic simile — an extended simile, as used in the epic poetry of Homer and other writers
  • epidermises — Plural form of epidermis.
  • epigastrium — The part of the upper abdomen immediately over the stomach.
  • epimorphism — (category theory) A morphism p such that for any other pair of morphisms f and g, if f \\circ p = g \\circ p, then f = g.
  • epithalamus — A part of the dorsal forebrain including the pineal gland and a region in the roof of the third ventricle of the brain.
  • epitomising — Present participle of epitomise.
  • erastianism — the theory that the state should have authority over the church in ecclesiastical matters
  • eremacausis — A gradual oxidation from exposure to air and moisture, as in the decay of old trees or dead animals.
  • esemplastic — Unifying; having the power to shape disparate things into a unified whole.
  • eskimo roll — a manoeuvre that causes a kayak to return to an upright position after capsizing
  • esotericism — The tendency to promote or desire the esoteric.
  • estheticism — aestheticism
  • estimations — Plural form of estimation.
  • etymologies — Plural form of etymology.
  • etymologise — (British spelling) alternative spelling of etymologize.
  • etymologist — A lexicographer or linguist who specializes in etymology (the origins of words).
  • eudaemonism — A system of ethics that bases moral value on the likelihood that good actions will produce happiness.
  • eudaemonist — A supporter of eudaemonism.
  • eudiometers — Plural form of eudiometer.
  • euphemistic — Using or of the nature of a euphemism.
  • eurhythmics — Alternative spelling of eurythmics.
  • eurhythmist — a person who teaches or practises eurhythmics
  • europeanism — belief in or advocacy of political unification and economic integration among European nations
  • evanishment — A vanishing; a disappearance.
  • examinators — Plural form of examinator.
  • excitements — Plural form of excitement.
  • exclusivism — The action or policy of excluding a person or group from a place, group, or privilege.
  • exemplifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of exemplify.
  • exhumations — Plural form of exhumation.
  • exotericism — The quality of being widely known or exoteric.
  • experiments — Plural form of experiment.
  • expromissor — a person who agrees to undertake the debt of another person
  • extemporise — (intransitive) To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise.
  • externalism — Excessive regard for outward form in religion.
  • extremities — Plural form of extremity.
  • familiarise — to make (onself or another) well-acquainted or conversant with something.
  • farm-sitter — a person who takes temporary charge of a farm during the absence or incapacity of the owner.
  • field mouse — any of various short-tailed mice or voles inhabiting fields and meadows.
  • filamentous — composed of or containing filaments.
  • file system — (operating system)   (FS, or "filesystem") 1. A system for organizing directories and files, generally in terms of how it is implemented in the disk operating system. E.g., "The Macintosh file system is just dandy as long as you don't have to interface it with any other file systems". 2. The collection of files and directories stored on a given drive (floppy drive, hard drive, disk partition, logical drive, RAM drive, etc.). E.g., "mount attaches a named file system to the file system hierarchy at the pathname location directory [...]" -- Unix manual page for "mount(8)". As an extension of this sense, "file system" is sometimes used to refer to the representatation of the file system's organisation (e.g. its file allocation table) as opposed the actual content of the files in the file system.
  • filmsetting — photocomposition.
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