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10-letter words containing e, n, t, r, o, m

  • importuned — Simple past tense and past participle of importune.
  • importuner — One who importunes.
  • importunes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of importune.
  • indemnitor — a person or company that gives indemnity.
  • intermezzo — a short dramatic, musical, or other entertainment of light character, introduced between the acts of a drama or opera.
  • intermodal — pertaining to or suitable for transportation involving more than one form of carrier, as truck and rail, or truck, ship, and rail.
  • intermodel — Between models.
  • ironmaster — the master of a foundry or ironworks; a manufacturer of iron.
  • lemon tree — plant: bears lemons
  • leominster — a city in N Massachusetts.
  • line storm — equinoctial storm.
  • lion-tamer — a person who trains lions, esp for entertainment in a circus
  • lobsterman — a person who traps lobsters.
  • lobstermen — Plural form of lobsterman.
  • long metre — a stanzaic form consisting of four octosyllabic lines, used esp for hymns
  • maceration — the act or process of macerating.
  • macrotrend — A large-scale trend.
  • magnetrons — Plural form of magnetron.
  • main store — main memory
  • mandelbrot — designating or of any of various sets of points used in the study of chaos to generate fractals
  • manometers — Plural form of manometer.
  • manometric — Of or pertaining to manometry, or measured using a manometer.
  • marathoner — a runner who competes in a marathon.
  • marcionite — a member of a Gnostic ascetic sect that flourished from the 2nd to 7th century a.d. and that rejected the Old Testament and denied the incarnation of God in Christ.
  • marionette — a puppet manipulated from above by strings attached to its jointed limbs.
  • matronized — Simple past tense and past participle of matronize.
  • matronlike — Like a matron; sedate; grave; matronly.
  • matterhorn — a mountain on the border of Switzerland and Italy, in the Pennine Alps. 14,780 feet (4505 meters).
  • mecopteran — mecopterous.
  • menstruous — pertaining to menstruation.
  • mentioners — Plural form of mentioner.
  • mentorship — a wise and trusted counselor or teacher.
  • mesenteron — midgut.
  • methoprene — a synthetic insect juvenile hormone, C 1 9 H 3 4 O 3 , used as a biological pesticide primarily on mosquito and fly larvae to prevent maturing to the adult state.
  • metric ton — a unit of 1000 kilograms, equivalent to 2204.62 avoirdupois pounds.
  • metromania — A mania for writing poetry, especially doggerel.
  • metronomes — Plural form of metronome.
  • metronomic — a mechanical or electrical instrument that makes repeated clicking sounds at an adjustable pace, used for marking rhythm, especially in practicing music.
  • metronymic — derived from the name of a mother or other female ancestor.
  • microlenat — /mi:"-kroh-len"-*t/ The unit of bogosity, written uL; the consensus is that this is the largest unit practical for everyday use. The microLenat, originally invented by David Jefferson, was promulgated as an attack against noted computer scientist Doug Lenat by a tenured graduate student at CMU. Doug had failed the student on an important exam for giving only "AI is bogus" as his answer to the questions. The slur is generally considered unmerited, but it has become a running gag nevertheless. Some of Doug's friends argue that *of course* a microLenat is bogus, since it is only one millionth of a Lenat. Others have suggested that the unit should be redesignated after the grad student, as the microReid.
  • microtones — any musical interval smaller than a semitone, specifically, a quarter tone.
  • microtrend — A very small, specific trend or vogue.
  • minestrone — a thick vegetable soup, often containing herbs, beans, bits of pasta, etc., and served with Parmesan cheese.
  • ministroke — transient ischemic attack.
  • minor term — deductive reasoning.
  • minorities — Plural form of minority.
  • minoritise — Alternative spelling of minoritize.
  • minoritize — (transitive) to make a minority.
  • misconster — Obsolete form of misconstrue (16th-17th c.).
  • miseration — (obsolete) commiseration.
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