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12-letter words containing l, p, a, t

  • fort pulaski — Count Casimir [kaz-uh-meer] /ˈkæz əˌmɪər/ (Show IPA), 1748–79, Polish patriot; general in the American Revolutionary army.
  • fortran-plus — Fortran for the DAP parallel machine, implements many Fortran 90 features.
  • french pleat — curtain, draperies
  • gaff topsail — Also called fore-and-aft topsail. a jib-headed fore-and-aft sail set above a gaff.
  • gaff-topsail — Also called fore-and-aft topsail. a jib-headed fore-and-aft sail set above a gaff.
  • galactophore — a galactophorous duct.
  • galactoscope — a lactoscope.
  • gamopetalous — having the petals united.
  • gastroplasty — any plastic surgery on the stomach.
  • geopolitical — the study or the application of the influence of political and economic geography on the politics, national power, foreign policy, etc., of a state.
  • geopotential — the difference between the potential energy of a mass at a given altitude and the potential energy of an identical mass at sea level, equivalent to the energy required to move the mass from sea level to the given altitude.
  • get anyplace — to have any success
  • giant planet — any of the planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, characterized by large mass, low density, and an extensive atmosphere
  • glacis plate — the frontal plate armour on a tank
  • gloria patri — the short hymn “Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.”.
  • glottal stop — a plosive consonant whose occlusion and release are accomplished chiefly at the glottis, as in the Scottish articulation of the t- sound of little, bottle, etc.
  • glyptography — the description or study of engraved gems or other stones.
  • gold therapy — administration of gold salts as a treatment for disease, especially rheumatoid arthritis.
  • gold-plating — the incorporation of costly and unnecessary features or refinements into a product or structure.
  • graphologist — the study of handwriting, especially when regarded as an expression of the writer's character, personality, abilities, etc.
  • grapple shot — a grapnellike projectile fired from a gun and used as a hold for the end of a line in rescue operations or in kedging.
  • great plague — the bubonic plague that occurred in London in 1665 and killed about 15 percent of the city's population.
  • great plains — a semiarid region E of the Rocky Mountains, in the U.S. and Canada.
  • ground plate — Electricity. a metal plate for making a ground connection to the earth.
  • guilty party — the person or people responsible for an offence or misdeed
  • hair implant — the insertion of synthetic fibers or human hair into the scalp to cover baldness.
  • haliplankton — plankton living in sea water
  • haptoglobins — Plural form of haptoglobin.
  • hautes-alpes — a department in SE France. 2179 sq. mi. (5645 sq. km). Capital: Gap.
  • health stamp — a postage stamp with a surcharge that is used to support a health camp
  • heliotherapy — treatment of disease by means of sunlight.
  • hello packet — (networking, communications)   An OSPF packet sent periodically on each network interface, real or virtual, to discover and test connections to neighbours. Hello packets are multicast on physical networks capable of multicasting or broadcasting to enable dynamic router discovery. They include the parameters that routers connected to a common network must agree on. Hello packets increase network resilience by, e.g., allowing a router to establish a secondary connection when a primary connection fails.
  • hematocolpos — (medicine) A medical condition in which the vagina fills with menstrual blood, often caused by the combination of menstruation with an imperforate hymen.
  • hemiplankton — plankton that spend part of their life cycle in a vegetative state on the sea bottom, riverbed, etc. (opposed to holoplankton).
  • hepaticology — the scientific study of bryophyte plants known as hepatics or liverworts
  • hepatomegaly — an abnormal enlargement of the liver, usually associated with liver disease or heart failure.
  • hernioplasty — an operation for the repair of a hernia.
  • heteroplasia — the replacement of normal cells by abnormal cells, as in cancer.
  • heteroplasty — the repair of lesions with tissue from another individual or species.
  • holophrastic — using or consisting of a single word that functions as a phrase or sentence.
  • holoplankton — plankton that spend their entire life cycle as free-swimming organisms (opposed to hemiplankton).
  • hospital bed — a bed having side rails that can be raised or lowered and a mattress base in three jointed sections so that the head, foot, or middle may be raised by a crank or motor, allowing a patient to lie in various positions, as a therapeutic aid or for comfort.
  • hospitalised — to place in a hospital for medical care or observation: The doctor hospitalized grandfather as soon as she checked his heart.
  • hospitalists — Plural form of hospitalist.
  • hospitalized — to place in a hospital for medical care or observation: The doctor hospitalized grandfather as soon as she checked his heart.
  • hospitalizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hospitalize.
  • humble plant — sensitive plant (def 1).
  • hymenoplasty — (medicine) Plastic surgery affecting a woman's hymen, usually involving reconstruction to the unbroken condition ordinarily characteristic of virginity.
  • hyper-lethal — of, relating to, or causing death; deadly; fatal: a lethal weapon; a lethal dose.
  • hyperdactyly — the presence of extra fingers or toes.
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