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

  • midget golf — miniature golf.
  • mildewproof — able to withstand or repel the effect of mildew.
  • misfortuned — (archaic) unlucky, unfortunate.
  • misfortunes — adverse fortune; bad luck.
  • misinformed — to give false or misleading information to.
  • monkey fist — a ball-like knot used as an ornament or as a throwing weight at the end of a line.
  • 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.
  • mortiferous — deadly; fatal.
  • most-deform — deformed; ugly.
  • mothercraft — skill and knowledge in looking after children
  • mothproofed — Simple past tense and past participle of mothproof.
  • mothproofer — an agent that prevents moths from destroying materials or garments
  • 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.
  • neo-fascism — a modern right-wing political movement that includes significant elements of fascism, esp inspired by fascist Italy
  • new milford — a town in W Connecticut.
  • nonfeminist — a person who is not a feminist
  • 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.
  • of one mind — If a number of people are of one mind, of like mind, or of the same mind, they all agree about something.
  • off message — straying from or contradicting the central theme or official message of a political, business, or other organization: The last speaker was way off-message with his bad jokes and irrelevant anecdotes.
  • off the map — no longer important or in existence (esp in the phrase wipe off the map)
  • off-message — straying from or contradicting the central theme or official message of a political, business, or other organization: The last speaker was way off-message with his bad jokes and irrelevant anecdotes.
  • offshoreman — a person who works offshore, especially on an offshore oil rig.
  • old flemish — the Flemish language before c1300.
  • omnificence — creating all things; having unlimited powers of creation.
  • out of time — having passed a deadline
  • outperforms — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outperform.
  • overfreedom — the state of being too forward, free, or liberal
  • overperform — to carry out; execute; do: to perform miracles.
  • oyster farm — a place where oyster beds are kept.
  • passeriform — of or relating to the order Passeriformes; passerine.
  • 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.
  • performance — a musical, dramatic, or other entertainment presented before an audience.
  • podetiiform — shaped like a podetium.
  • pre-confirm — to make valid or binding by some formal or legal act; sanction; ratify: to confirm a treaty; to confirm her appointment to the Supreme Court.
  • premodified — to change somewhat the form or qualities of; alter partially; amend: to modify a contract.
  • prime focus — the focal point of the objective lens or primary mirror of a telescope
  • profeminist — advocating social, political, legal, and economic rights for women equal to those of men.
  • re-modified — to change somewhat the form or qualities of; alter partially; amend: to modify a contract.
  • 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.
  • reformation — the act of reforming; state of being reformed.
  • reformative — the improvement or amendment of what is wrong, corrupt, unsatisfactory, etc.: social reform; spelling reform.
  • reformatory — serving or designed to reform: reformatory lectures; reformatory punishments.
  • reformatted — the shape and size of a book as determined by the number of times the original sheet has been folded to form the leaves. Compare duodecimo, folio (def 2), octavo, quarto.
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