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11-letter words containing g, e, t, o

  • somatogenic — developing from somatic cells.
  • sopping wet — soaked, dripping
  • soteriology — the doctrine of salvation through Jesus Christ.
  • sound stage — a large, soundproof studio used for filming motion pictures.
  • south ogden — a town in N Utah.
  • southbridge — a town in S Massachusetts.
  • sovereignty — the quality or state of being sovereign, or of having supreme power or authority.
  • sovietology — Kremlinology.
  • spectrogram — a representation or photograph of a spectrum.
  • spectrology — the study of ghosts, phantoms, or apparitions.
  • sponge bath — a bath in which the bather is cleaned by a wet sponge or washcloth dipped in water, without getting into a tub of water.
  • sponge tree — huisache.
  • sports page — newspaper page carrying sports results
  • spot height — the elevation of a certain point.
  • spotted gum — an Australian eucalyptus tree, Eucalyptus maculata
  • steam organ — calliope (def 1).
  • steatopygia — extreme accumulation of fat on and about the buttocks, especially of women.
  • steatopygic — extreme accumulation of fat on and about the buttocks, especially of women.
  • steganogram — a coded message
  • stegosaurus — any of a suborder (Stegosauria) of large ornithischian dinosaurs of the Upper Jurassic having a small head and heavy bony plates with sharp spikes down the backbone
  • stenography — the art of writing in shorthand.
  • stenohygric — able to withstand only a narrow range of humidity
  • stereograph — a single or double picture for a stereoscope.
  • stereoimage — the single three-dimensional image perceived in the brain by the coordination of the two slightly different views seen by the eyes.
  • stevedoring — the act or practice of loading or unloading a ship, ship's cargo, etc
  • stoke poges — a village in S Buckinghamshire, in S England, W of London: the churchyard here is believed to be the setting of Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard.
  • stoneground — (of wheat or other grain) ground between millstones, especially those made of burstone, so as to retain the whole of the grain and preserve nutritional content.
  • storm surge — an abnormal rise in the level of the sea along a coast caused by the onshore winds of a severe cyclone.
  • stourbridge — an industrial town in W central England, in Dudley unitary authority, West Midlands. Pop: 55 480 (2001)
  • streetology — knowledge of how to get along in an urban neighborhood; street smarts.
  • strong gale — a wind of 47–54 miles per hour (21–24 m/sec).
  • strong meat — anything arousing fear, anger, repulsion, etc, except among a tolerant or receptive minority
  • strong side — the side of the offensive line where the tight end is positioned, thereby the side having the greater number of players.
  • struggle on — If you struggle on, you continue doing something rather than stopping, even though it is difficult.
  • subcategory — a subordinate category or a division of a category.
  • sugarcoated — to cover with sugar: to sugarcoat a pill.
  • suggestions — the act of suggesting.
  • superegoist — an exceptionally selfish or self-centred person; someone who is very self-important
  • supergrowth — exceptional growth; very rapid growth
  • superstrong — extremely strong
  • sweat lodge — (especially among North American Indians) a special building used for cleansing and purifying one's body by sweating, in which heated water is poured over heated stones to produce steam.
  • swing voter — to cause to move to and fro, sway, or oscillate, as something suspended from above: to swing one's arms in walking.
  • swingometer — a device used in television broadcasting during a general election to indicate the swing of votes from one political party to another
  • tautologize — to use tautology.
  • technologic — of or relating to technology; relating to science and industry.
  • teetotaling — of or relating to, advocating, or pledged to total abstinence from intoxicating drink.
  • telecottage — a communal workplace, situated in a rural area, which contains computers and other facilities linked into a communications network, thereby enabling people to work from remote locations
  • teleologist — the doctrine that final causes exist.
  • telephoning — an apparatus, system, or process for transmission of sound or speech to a distant point, especially by an electric device.
  • telescoping — an optical instrument for making distant objects appear larger and therefore nearer. One of the two principal forms (refracting telescope) consists essentially of an objective lens set into one end of a tube and an adjustable eyepiece or combination of lenses set into the other end of a tube that slides into the first and through which the enlarged object is viewed directly; the other form (reflecting telescope) has a concave mirror that gathers light from the object and focuses it into an adjustable eyepiece or combination of lenses through which the reflection of the object is enlarged and viewed. Compare radio telescope.
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