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13-letter words containing l, i, m, e

  • multimegawatt — producing or involving several million watts of power
  • multimetallic — comprising or involving more than one metal
  • multinucleate — having a nucleus.
  • multiparticle — comprising or involving several particles
  • multiple boot — dual boot
  • multiple shop — chain store.
  • multiple star — three or more stars lying close together in the celestial sphere and usually united in a single gravitational system.
  • multiplicable — capable of being multiplied.
  • multiplicated — Simple past tense and past participle of multiplicate.
  • multipresence — the quality or state of being multipresent
  • multiramified — having several branches or branchlike parts
  • multiregional — of, relating to or involving several regions
  • multisectoral — Involving multiple sectors.
  • multispectral — (of an airborne camera or scanner) capable of sensing and recording radiation from invisible as well as visible parts of the electromagnetic spectrum.
  • multistranded — having several strands
  • multisyllable — polysyllable.
  • multisystemic — Of, pertaining to or affecting more than one system or organ of the body.
  • multitalented — having talent or special ability; gifted.
  • multitemporal — (music) Having multiple tempos.
  • multiterminal — Having, or supporting, multiple terminals (in all senses).
  • multitheistic — Of or relating to multitheism.
  • multithreaded — multithreading
  • multivariable — having, involving or relying upon two or more variables, esp in statistics
  • municipalized — Simple past tense and past participle of municipalize.
  • muscle tissue — cell tissue that muscles are made of
  • mussel shrimp — any of numerous tiny marine and freshwater crustaceans of the subclass Ostracoda, having a shrimplike body enclosed in a hinged bivalve shell.
  • mutagenically — in a mutagenic manner
  • muzzleloading — Of a gun, having ammunition loaded from the front of the barrel where it will exit.
  • mycobacterial — (medicine) Of or pertaining to mycobacteria.
  • myelin sheath — a wrapping of myelin around certain nerve axons, serving as an electrical insulator that speeds nerve impulses to muscles and other effectors.
  • myelinisation — Alt form myelinization.
  • myelinization — Myelination.
  • myeloablative — Of, pertaining to, or causing myeloablation.
  • myelofibrosis — the replacement of bone marrow by fibrous tissue, characteristic of leukemia and certain other diseases.
  • myelofibrotic — of, relating to or affected by myelofibrosis
  • myrmecophiles — Plural form of myrmecophile.
  • myrtle family — the plant family Myrtaceae, characterized by mostly tropical trees and shrubs having aromatic, simple, usually opposite leaves, clusters of flowers, and fruit in the form of a berry or capsule, and including allspice, clove, eucalyptus, guava, and myrtles of the genus Myrtus.
  • naive realism — the theory that the world is perceived exactly as it is.
  • nanomaterials — Plural form of nanomaterial.
  • naphthylamine — (organic compound) Either of two isomeric primary amines derived from naphthalene; they occur in crude oil, and are used in the preparation of dyes and other compounds.
  • nautical mile — a unit of distance used chiefly in navigation, equal to 6080.20 feet (1853.25 meters) in the U.S., now replaced by the international nautical mile.
  • necromantical — Alternative form of necromantic.
  • nemathelminth — any worm of the phylum Nemathelminthes (now usually broken up into several phyla), including the nematodes and hairworms, having an elongated, unsegmented, cylindrical body.
  • nematological — of or pertaining to nematology
  • neo-platonism — a philosophical system which was first developed in the 3rd century ad as a synthesis of Platonic, Pythagorean, and Aristotelian elements, and which, although originally opposed to Christianity, later incorporated it. It dominated European thought until the 13th century and re-emerged during the Renaissance
  • neocapitalism — a politico-economic theory combining elements of capitalism and socialism
  • neoclassicism — (often initial capital letter) Architecture. the trend or movement prevailing in the architecture of Europe, America, and various European colonies at various periods during the late 18th and early 19th centuries, characterized by the introduction and widespread use of Greek orders and decorative motifs, the subordination of detail to simple, strongly geometric overall compositions, the presence of light colors or shades, frequent shallowness of relief in ornamental treatment of façades, and the absence of textural effects.
  • neoliberalism — an outgrowth of the U.S. liberal movement, beginning in the late 1960s, that modified somewhat its traditional endorsement of all trade unions and opposition to big business and military buildup.
  • neoplasticism — the theory and practice of the de Stijl school, chiefly characterized by an emphasis on the formal structure of a work of art, and restriction of spatial or linear relations to vertical and horizontal movements as well as restriction of the artist's palette to black, white, and the primary colors.
  • neosurrealism — a revival of the 20th-century surrealism movement in art, especially painting and sculpture, depicting the imagery of dreams and the subconscious mind.
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