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13-letter words containing m, a, t, e, y

  • complicatedly — composed of elaborately interconnected parts; complex: complicated apparatus for measuring brain functions.
  • complimentary — If you are complimentary about something, you express admiration for it.
  • copy the mail — letters, packages, etc., that are sent or delivered by means of the postal system: Storms delayed delivery of the mail.
  • costume party — A costume party or costume ball is a party at which the guests try to look like famous people or people from history, from stories, or from particular professions.
  • cotemporality — The state or characteristic of existing or occurring during the same period of time.
  • cryptoclimate — the climate of a small area, as of confined spaces such as caves or houses (cryptoclimate) of plant communities, wooded areas, etc. (phytoclimate) or of urban communities, which may be different from that in the general region.
  • cyberactivism — Activism facilitated by the Internet.
  • dactylomegaly — abnormal enlargement of the fingers or toes.
  • dalton system — a method of progressive education whereby students contract to carry through on their own responsibility the year's work as divided up into monthly assignments.
  • daylight time — time set usually one hour ahead of the local standard time, widely adopted in the summer to provide extra daylight in the evening
  • deformability — Deformability is the degree to which applying a force can make a particle or solid change shape.
  • demonstratory — having the quality of demonstrating
  • demyelinating — Present participle of demyelinate.
  • demyelination — The removal of the myelin sheath from a nerve fibre, normally as a result of disease.
  • dermatography — a treatise or writing concerning the skin
  • dermatophytes — Plural form of dermatophyte.
  • dermatoplasty — any surgical operation on the skin, esp skin grafting
  • determinately — having defined limits; definite.
  • detrimentally — causing detriment, as loss or injury; damaging; harmful.
  • deuteranomaly — a milder form of deuteranopia; partial deuteranopia
  • diametrically — If you say that two things are diametrically opposed, you are emphasizing that they are completely different from each other.
  • dimethylamine — a colourless strong-smelling gas produced from ammonia and methanol, used to produce many industrial and pharmaceutical chemicals
  • dirty realism — a style of writing, originating in the US in the 1980s, which depicts in great detail the seamier or more mundane aspects of ordinary life
  • documentarily — Also, documental [dok-yuh-men-tl] /ˌdɒk yəˈmɛn tl/ (Show IPA). pertaining to, consisting of, or derived from documents: a documentary history of France.
  • domain theory — (theory)   A branch of mathematics introduced by Dana Scott in 1970 as a mathematical theory of programming languages, and for nearly a quarter of a century developed almost exclusively in connection with denotational semantics in computer science. In denotational semantics of programming languages, the meaning of a program is taken to be an element of a domain. A domain is a mathematical structure consisting of a set of values (or "points") and an ordering relation, <= on those values. Domain theory is the study of such structures. ("<=" is written in LaTeX as \subseteq) Different domains correspond to the different types of object with which a program deals. In a language containing functions, we might have a domain X -> Y which is the set of functions from domain X to domain Y with the ordering f <= g iff for all x in X, f x <= g x. In the pure lambda-calculus all objects are functions or applications of functions to other functions. To represent the meaning of such programs, we must solve the recursive equation over domains, D = D -> D which states that domain D is (isomorphic to) some function space from D to itself. I.e. it is a fixed point D = F(D) for some operator F that takes a domain D to D -> D. The equivalent equation has no non-trivial solution in set theory. There are many definitions of domains, with different properties and suitable for different purposes. One commonly used definition is that of Scott domains, often simply called domains, which are omega-algebraic, consistently complete CPOs. There are domain-theoretic computational models in other branches of mathematics including dynamical systems, fractals, measure theory, integration theory, probability theory, and stochastic processes. See also abstract interpretation, bottom, pointed domain.
  • drama therapy — a type of psychotherapy encouraging patients to use dramatic techniques to deal with emotional and psychological problems.
  • earnest money — money given by a buyer to a seller to bind a contract.
  • east malaysia — part of Malaysia, consisting of the states of Sabah and Sarawak, which occupy the N part of the island of Borneo
  • easter monday — the day after Easter, observed as a holiday in some places.
  • emergency tax — the tax a person pays on their income when it is not yet clear what tax band they should be assigned to
  • emphysematous — (medicine) Related, similar to or involving emphysema; swollen, bloated.
  • employability — (uncountable) The state or quality of being employable.
  • empty quarter — a desert in S Arabia, N of Hadhramaut and extending from Yemen to Oman. About 250,000 sq. mi. (647,500 sq. km).
  • empyreumatise — to render empyreumatic
  • empyreumatize — to infect or spoil with empyreuma
  • enantiomorphy — the state of being enantiomorphic
  • encephalotomy — The dissection of the brain.
  • endolymphatic — (anatomy) Pertaining to, or containing, endolymph.
  • enigmatically — Acting in a manner that suggests an enigma.
  • enumerability — The condition of being enumerable.
  • enzymatically — In terms of, or by using, enzymes.
  • epistemically — In a manner that pertains to knowledge.
  • erythematosus — (pathology) An eruption of red lesions.
  • examinability — The quality or state of being examinable.
  • extemporarily — In an extemporary manner.
  • exterminatory — Relating to or marked by extermination.
  • extralimitary — outside the limits or borders of an area
  • family credit — (formerly, in Britain) a means-tested allowance paid to low-earning families with one or more dependent children and one or both parents in work: replaced by Working Families' Tax Credit in 1999
  • feudal system — the political, military, and social system in the Middle Ages, based on the holding of lands in fief or fee and on the resulting relations between lord and vassal.
  • formal system — an uninterpreted symbolic system whose syntax is precisely defined, and on which a relation of deducibility is defined in purely syntactic terms; a logistic system
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