0%

12-letter words containing g, e, m, s

  • microgrooves — Plural form of microgroove.
  • microsegment — a stretch of speech preceded and followed but not interrupted by juncture.
  • microsurgeon — a person who performs microsurgery
  • microsurgery — any of various surgical procedures performed under magnification and with small specialized instruments, permitting very delicate operations, as the reconnection of severed blood vessels and nerves.
  • middlingness — Quality of being middling.
  • milking shed — a building in which a herd of cows is milked
  • minas gerais — a state in E Brazil. 224,701 sq. mi. (581,975 sq. km). Capital: Belo Horizonte.
  • mineralogies — Plural form of mineralogy.
  • mineralogist — the science or study of minerals.
  • minesweeping — (nautical) The detection and safe disposal of mines.
  • misalignment — improperly aligned.
  • misbelieving — Present participle of misbelieve.
  • miscarriages — Plural form of miscarriage.
  • miscegenator — a person who advocates or engages in miscegenation
  • miscegenetic — Of, pertaining to, or being miscegenation; interracial (said primarily of marriages and other sexual or romantic relationships).
  • mischallenge — an improper challenge
  • misconfigure — Configure (a system or part of it) incorrectly.
  • misconjugate — Grammar. to inflect (a verb). to recite or display all or some subsets of the inflected forms of (a verb), in a fixed order: One conjugates the present tense of the verb “be” as “I am, you are, he is, we are, you are, they are.”.
  • misdemeaning — to misbehave (oneself).
  • misdiagnosed — Simple past tense and past participle of misdiagnose.
  • misdiagnoses — to make an incorrect diagnosis.
  • misdirecting — Present participle of misdirect.
  • misfeaturing — distorting the features
  • misgoverning — Present participle of misgovern.
  • mishappening — Present participle of mishappen.
  • misjudgement — Alternative form of misjudgment.
  • misjudgments — Plural form of misjudgment.
  • misknowledge — a misunderstanding or misconception
  • misleadingly — In a misleading manner.
  • mispleadings — Plural form of mispleading.
  • misreckoning — Present participle of misreckon.
  • misrecognize — (psychology, computing) To recognize in error.
  • missiologies — Plural form of missiology.
  • misspellings — Plural form of misspelling.
  • moeso-gothic — of the Moeso-Goths, their extinct East Germanic language, or their culture
  • mona passage — a strait between Hispaniola and Puerto Rico. 80 miles (129 km) wide.
  • monsterizing — Present participle of monsterize.
  • morphologies — Plural form of morphology.
  • mosaic image — the collective image produced by the ommatidia of a compound eye
  • mother goose — the fictitious author of a collection of nursery rhymes first published in London (about 1760) under the title of Mother Goose's Melody.
  • museological — Pertaining to museology.
  • mutable sign — any of the four astrological signs, Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius, or Pisces, that are grouped together because of their placement at the end of the seasons and characterized by the attribute of adaptability to circumstances.
  • myringoscope — an instrument for examining the eardrum
  • mythogenesis — the creation and development of myths
  • mythologizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mythologize.
  • nematologist — One who studies nematology.
  • nemean games — one of the great national festivals of ancient Greece, held at Nemea in the second and fourth year of each Olympiad.
  • newsmagazine — a periodical specializing in reports and commentaries on current events, usually issued weekly.
  • noise margin — (electronics)   The voltage difference between the guaranteed output level and the required input voltage level of a logic gate.
  • noise-making — a person or thing that makes noise, as a reveler on New Year's Eve, Halloween, etc., or a rattle, horn, or similar device used on such an occasion.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?