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11-letter words containing i, t, s, l, o

  • multipiston — having more than one piston
  • multisonant — having many sounds
  • multisource — Employing multiple sources.
  • multistorey — Alternative spelling of multi-storey.
  • musculation — (anatomy) The muscular system of an animal, or of any of its parts.
  • museologist — the systematic study of the organization, management, and function of a museum.
  • music stool — a stool you sit on when playing a musical instrument
  • mustard oil — oil expressed from the seed of mustard, used chiefly in making soap.
  • mutilations — Plural form of mutilation.
  • mycologists — Plural form of mycologist.
  • myoinositol — an isomer of inositol found in muscle
  • mythologies — Plural form of mythology.
  • mythologise — to classify, explain, or write about myths.
  • mythologist — an expert in mythology.
  • nationalise — To bring a private company under the control of a specific government.
  • nationalism — spirit or aspirations common to the whole of a nation.
  • nationalist — a person devoted to nationalism.
  • necrologist — a list of persons who have died within a certain time.
  • negotiables — Plural form of negotiable.
  • nemophilist — (rare) One who is fond of forests or forest scenery; a haunter of the woods.
  • neologistic — a new word, meaning, usage, or phrase.
  • neopopulist — pertaining to a revival of populism, especially a sophisticated form appealing to commonplace values and prejudices.
  • neosilicate — (chemistry) any simple silicate mineral in which the SiO4 tetrahedra are isolated and have metal ions as neighbours.
  • neovitalism — a new or revived form of the belief that life is a vital principle (vitalism)
  • neovitalist — someone who holds to the theory of neovitalism
  • nephroliths — a renal calculus; kidney stone.
  • neurologist — a physician specializing in neurology.
  • neutrophils — Plural form of neutrophil.
  • nippleworts — Plural form of nipplewort.
  • nitromersol — a brownish-yellow or yellow, granular, water-insoluble powder, C 7 H 5 HgNO 3 : used in alkaline solution chiefly as an antiseptic.
  • noctilucous — (obsolete) Shining in the night; luminescent.
  • non-clastic — Biology. breaking up into fragments or separate portions; dividing into parts.
  • non-hostile — of, relating to, or characteristic of an enemy: a hostile nation.
  • non-sterile — free from living germs or microorganisms; aseptic: sterile surgical instruments.
  • nonhospital — not related to, identified with, or taking place in a hospital
  • nonisolated — Not isolated.
  • nonlistener — One who does not listen.
  • nonmystical — not mystical
  • nonsilicate — Mineralogy. any of the largest group of mineral compounds, as quartz, beryl, garnet, feldspar, mica, and various kinds of clay, consisting of SiO 2 or SiO 4 groupings and one or more metallic ions, with some forms containing hydrogen. Silicates constitute well over 90 percent of the rock-forming minerals of the earth's crust.
  • nonsolution — a proposed solution to a problem that is deemed inadequate or not a real solution
  • normalities — conforming to the standard or the common type; usual; not abnormal; regular; natural.
  • northerlies — Plural form of northerly.
  • nostalgists — Plural form of nostalgist.
  • notaphilist — a person who studies or collects paper money
  • notionalist — someone more concerned with the semantic content of language than with the formal structure
  • notoriously — widely and unfavorably known: a notorious gambler. Synonyms: infamous, egregious, outrageous, arrant, flagrant, disreputable.
  • novelettish — Resembling or characteristic of a novelette.
  • novelettist — a person who writes novelettes
  • nucleotides — any of a group of molecules that, when linked together, form the building blocks of DNA or RNA: composed of a phosphate group, the bases adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine, and a pentose sugar, in RNA the thymine base being replaced by uracil.
  • object lisp — (language)   An object-oriented Lisp developed by Lisp Machines Inc. (LMI) in about 1987. Object Lisp was based on nested closures and operator shadowing. Several competing object-orientated extensions to Lisp were around at the time, such as Flavors, in use by Symbolics; Common Objects, developed by Hewlett-Packard; and CommonLoops in use by Xerox. LMI submitted the specification as a candidate for an object-oriented standard for Common Lisp, but it was defeated in favour of CLOS.
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