0%

9-letter words containing i, n, a, p, r, o

  • parkinson — a common neurologic disease believed to be caused by deterioration of the brain cells that produce dopamine, occurring primarily after the age of 60, characterized by tremors, especially of the fingers and hands, muscle rigidity, shuffling gait, slow speech, and a masklike facial expression.
  • parodying — a humorous or satirical imitation of a serious piece of literature or writing: his hilarious parody of Hamlet's soliloquy.
  • parroting — any of numerous hook-billed, often brilliantly colored birds of the order Psittaciformes, as the cockatoo, lory, macaw, or parakeet, having the ability to mimic speech and often kept as pets.
  • parsimony — extreme or excessive economy or frugality; stinginess; niggardliness.
  • parsonish — like a parson
  • partition — a division into or distribution in portions or shares.
  • parvoline — any of various isomeric ptomaines found in liquid derived from decaying animal matter or bituminous coals
  • pastoring — a minister or priest in charge of a church.
  • patrimony — an estate inherited from one's father or ancestors.
  • patronise — to give (a store, restaurant, hotel, etc.) one's regular patronage; trade with.
  • patronize — to give (a store, restaurant, hotel, etc.) one's regular patronage; trade with.
  • peribonca — a river in central Quebec, Canada, flowing S to Lake St. John. 280 miles (451 km) long.
  • peronista — Peronist.
  • pervasion — to become spread throughout all parts of: Spring pervaded the air.
  • petrosian — Tigran (tiɡˈran). 1929–84, Soviet chess player; world champion (1963–69)
  • pharaonic — (sometimes lowercase) of or like a Pharaoh: living in Pharaonic splendor.
  • piano bar — a cocktail lounge featuring live piano music.
  • pickaroon — to act or operate as a pirate or brigand.
  • pignorate — to pledge or pawn
  • piperonal — a white, crystalline, water-insoluble aldehyde, C 8 H 6 O 3 , which darkens on exposure to light: used chiefly in perfumery and organic synthesis.
  • plainwork — simple needlework, such as hemming, as distinct from fancywork
  • planiform — having a flattened shape, as an anatomical joint.
  • pomerania — a former province of NE Germany, now mostly in NW Poland.
  • porcelain — a strong, vitreous, translucent ceramic material, biscuit-fired at a low temperature, the glaze then fired at a very high temperature.
  • poriferan — any animal of the phylum Porifera, comprising the sponges.
  • portinari — Cândido [kahn-dee-doo] /ˈkɑ̃ di dʊ/ (Show IPA), 1903–62, Brazilian painter.
  • portolani — a descriptive atlas of the Middle Ages, giving sailing directions and providing charts showing rhumb lines and the location of ports and various coastal features.
  • preaction — the process or state of acting or of being active: The machine is not in action now.
  • predation — depredation; plundering.
  • predomain — (theory)   A domain with no bottom element.
  • prelation — the setting of one above another
  • prenomina — praenomen.
  • preobtain — to obtain in advance
  • preordain — to ordain beforehand; foreordain.
  • privation — lack of the usual comforts or necessaries of life: His life of privation began to affect his health.
  • proaction — the process or state of acting or of being active: The machine is not in action now.
  • probation — the act of testing.
  • profanity — the quality of being profane; irreverence.
  • prolactin — an anterior pituitary polypeptide hormone that stimulates lactation by the mammary glands at parturition in mammals, the activity of the crop in birds, and in some mammalian species the production of progesterone by the corpus luteum.
  • prolamine — any of the class of simple proteins, as gliadin, hordein, or zein, found in grains, soluble in dilute acids, alkalis, and alcohols, and insoluble in water, neutral salt solutions, and absolute alcohol.
  • prolation — the time relationship between a semibreve and a minim in mensural notation.
  • promazine — a compound, C 17 H 20 N 2 S, used as a tranquilizer.
  • pronation — rotation of the hand or forearm so that the surface of the palm is facing downward or toward the back (opposed to supination).
  • prorating — to make an arrangement on a basis of proportional distribution.
  • proration — to make an arrangement on a basis of proportional distribution.
  • prosimian — belonging or pertaining to the primate suborder Prosimii, characterized by nocturnal habits, a long face with a moist snout, prominent whiskers, large mobile ears, and large, slightly sideways-facing eyes, comprising the lemur, loris, potto, bush baby, and aye-aye. Compare anthropoid.
  • prosodian — a person skilled in prosody
  • protamine — any of a group of arginine-rich, strongly basic proteins that are not coagulated by heat, occurring primarily in the sperm of fish.
  • protistan — any of various one-celled organisms, classified in the kingdom Protista, that are either free-living or aggregated into simple colonies and that have diverse reproductive and nutritional modes, including the protozoans, eukaryotic algae, and slime molds: some classification schemes also include the fungi and the more primitive bacteria and blue-green algae or may distribute the organisms between the kingdoms Plantae and Animalia according to dominant characteristics.
  • proustian — of, relating to, or resembling Marcel Proust, his writings, or the middle-class and aristocratic worlds he described.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?