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11-letter words containing f, e, m, l

  • metafemales — Plural form of metafemale.
  • microfilmed — Simple past tense and past participle of microfilm.
  • microfilmer — a person who microfilms
  • microfilter — a device plugged into a phone socket to separate the phone line from the broadband line
  • microrelief — surface features of the earth of small dimensions, commonly less than 50 feet (15 meters).
  • midfielders — Plural form of midfielder.
  • midget golf — miniature golf.
  • mildewproof — able to withstand or repel the effect of mildew.
  • millefleurs — A pattern of flowers and leaves used in tapestry, on porcelain, or in other decorative items.
  • mindfulness — the state or quality of being mindful or aware of something.
  • misbefallen — Simple past tense and past participle of misbefall.
  • montefeltro — an Italian noble family who ruled Urbino from the 13th to the 16th century. Federigo Montefeltro, duke of Urbino (1422–82), was a noted patron of the arts and military leader
  • montgolfier — a balloon raised by air heated from a fire in the lower part.
  • moonflowers — Plural form of moonflower.
  • moral fiber — Moral fiber is the quality of being determined to do what you think is right.
  • moral fibre — Moral fibre is the quality of being determined to do what you think is right.
  • multi-faced — having a specified kind of face or number of faces (usually used in combination): a sweet-faced child; the two-faced god.
  • musk flower — a sticky-hairy plant, Mimulus moschata, of the figwort family, native to northern and western North America, having pale-yellow flowers and a musky odor.
  • myofilament — a threadlike filament of actin or myosin that is a component of a myofibril.
  • myriad-leaf — an aquatic plant, Myriophyllum verticillatum, of the North Temperate Zone, having hairlike, submerged leaves.
  • new milford — a town in W Connecticut.
  • of all time — If you say that someone or something is, for example, the best writer of all time, or the most successful film of all time, you mean that they are the best or most successful that there has ever been.
  • old flemish — the Flemish language before c1300.
  • patelliform — having the form of a patella; shaped like a saucer, kneecap, or limpet shell.
  • penciliform — having a pencillike shape.
  • performable — to carry out; execute; do: to perform miracles.
  • perfumeless — without perfume; not perfumed or wearing perfume
  • pine family — the plant family Pinaceae, characterized by mostly evergreen, resinous trees having narrow, often needlelike leaves, male flowers in catkinlike clusters, and scaly female flowers that develop into fruit in the form of a woody cone, and including cedar (genus Cedrus), fir, hemlock, larch, pine, and spruce.
  • prime field — a field that contains no proper subset that is itself a field.
  • readme file — (convention, documentation)   A text file traditionally included in the top-level directory of a software distribution, containing pointers to documentation, credits, revision history, notes, etc. Originally found in Unix source distributions, the convention has spread to many other products. The file may be named README, READ.ME, ReadMe or readme.txt or some other variant. In the Macintosh and IBM PC worlds, software is not usually distributed in source form, and the README is more likely to contain user-oriented material like last-minute documentation changes, error workarounds, and restrictions. The README convention probably follows the famous scene in Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures In Wonderland" in which Alice confronts magic munchies labeled "Eat Me" and "Drink Me".
  • reform bill — any of the bills passed by Parliament (1832, 1867, 1884) providing for an increase in the number of voters in elections for the House of Commons, especially the bill of 1832 by which many rotten boroughs were disfranchised.
  • reformulate — to formulate again.
  • reptiliform — having the form or appearance of a reptile
  • rose family — the plant family Rosaceae, characterized by trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants having compound or simple leaves with stipules, flowers typically with five sepals and five petals, and fruit in a variety of forms, many of which are fleshy and edible, and including the almond, apple, apricot, blackberry, cherry, cinquefoil, hawthorn, peach, pear, plum, raspberry, rose, spirea, and strawberry.
  • rum truffle — a sweet resembling an edible fungus, of the European genus Tuber, in shape, flavoured with rum
  • safety film — Photography. a film having a nonflammable base of triacetate cellulose.
  • safety lamp — a miner's lamp in which the flame is protected by wire gauze to prevent the immediate ignition of explosive gases.
  • self-esteem — a realistic respect for or favorable impression of oneself; self-respect.
  • self-formed — external appearance of a clearly defined area, as distinguished from color or material; configuration: a triangular form.
  • self-mailer — an advertisement, booklet, or the like, that has space for a name, address, and postage and can be mailed without a wrapper or envelope.
  • self-making — the act of a person or thing that makes: The making of a violin requires great skill.
  • self-minded — having a certain kind of mind (usually used in combination): strong-minded.
  • self-moving — capable of moving without an external agency.
  • self-murder — suicide
  • self-reform — the improvement or amendment of what is wrong, corrupt, unsatisfactory, etc.: social reform; spelling reform.
  • semifluidic — of the nature of a semifluid; partially fluidic
  • smiley face — a digital icon, a sequence of keyboard symbols, or a handwritten or printed equivalent, that serves to represent a facial expression, as :‐) for a smiling face or ;‐) for a winking face. Compare emoticon.
  • smoke shelf — a ledge at the bottom of a smoke chamber, so made as to deflect or break downdrafts from the chimney.
  • still frame — continuous display of a single frame of a film or of a single picture from a television signal
  • sulfonamide — sulfa drug.
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