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12-letter words containing g, e, o, p, l, i

  • psychologize — to make psychological investigations or speculations, especially those that are naive or uninformed.
  • pyroligneous — produced by the distillation of wood.
  • ranging pole — a pole for marking positions in surveying
  • retail group — a group of companies under single ownership, which sell goods to individual customers
  • ripe old age — advanced age
  • role playing — role-play used as a method of training or education
  • role-playing — a method of instruction or psychotherapy aimed at changing attitudes and behavior, in which participants act out designated roles relevant to real-life situations.
  • self-proving — to establish the truth or genuineness of, as by evidence or argument: to prove one's claim.
  • simple group — a group that has no normal subgroup except the group itself and the identity.
  • sloop-rigged — (of a sailboat) fore-and-aft rigged with a mainsail and a jib.
  • speleologist — the exploration and study of caves.
  • spot welding — fusing metal
  • stegophilist — a person who enjoys climbing up the outside of buildings
  • stool pigeon — a pigeon used as a decoy.
  • supercooling — to cool (a liquid) below its freezing point without producing solidification or crystallization; undercool.
  • teleshopping — electronic shopping via videotex or other interactive information service.
  • triple bogey — a score of three strokes over par on a hole.
  • unapologetic — containing an apology or excuse for a fault, failure, insult, injury, etc.: An apologetic letter to his creditors explained the delay.
  • uncompelling — tending to compel, as to force or push toward a course of action; overpowering: There were compelling reasons for their divorce.
  • wages policy — a government policy setting wages and wage increases for workers, for example, setting minimum wage requirements
  • webliography — a list of electronic documents, websites, or other resources available on the World Wide Web, especially those relating to a particular subject: a student's annotated webliography on Shakespeare.
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