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11-letter words containing m, d, l

  • mineralized — Simple past tense and past participle of mineralize.
  • minimalised — to make minimal: to minimalize tax increases.
  • minimalized — to make minimal: to minimalize tax increases.
  • misanalyzed — Simple past tense and past participle of misanalyze.
  • misbalanced — badly balanced
  • misbelieved — Simple past tense and past participle of misbelieve.
  • misdealings — Plural form of misdealing.
  • misdoubtful — doubting; distrustful
  • misemployed — Simple past tense and past participle of misemploy.
  • misguidedly — misled; mistaken: Their naive actions were a misguided attempt to help the poor.
  • mishallowed — falsely hallowed or revered
  • mishandling — to handle badly; maltreat: to mishandle a dog.
  • mislabelled — to label wrongly, incorrectly, or misleadingly: to mislabel a bottle of medicine.
  • misleadings — Plural form of misleading.
  • mispleading — a mistake in pleading, as a misjoinder of parties or a misstatement of a cause of action.
  • mixed grill — an assortment of several kinds of broiled or grilled meats, and usually vegetables, served together, as a lamb chop, a pork sausage, a piece of liver, grilled tomatoes, and mushrooms.
  • mixed layer — the surface layer of water, seasonally varying in thickness, that is at almost uniform temperature owing to agitation by waves and wind.
  • mixed salad — a salad consisting of mixed salad vegetables, such as lettuce, tomato, cucumber, etc
  • moclobemide — A drug used to treat depression and social anxiety.
  • modal logic — (logic)   An extension of propositional calculus with operators that express various "modes" of truth. Examples of modes are: necessarily A, possibly A, probably A, it has always been true that A, it is permissible that A, it is believed that A. "It is necessarily true that A" means that things being as they are, A must be true, e.g. "It is necessarily true that x=x" is TRUE while "It is necessarily true that x=y" is FALSE even though "x=y" might be TRUE. Adding modal operators [F] and [P], meaning, respectively, henceforth and hitherto leads to a "temporal logic". Flavours of modal logics include: Propositional Dynamic Logic (PDL), Propositional Linear Temporal Logic (PLTL), Linear Temporal Logic (LTL), Computational Tree Logic (CTL), Hennessy-Milner Logic, S1-S5, T. C.I. Lewis, "A Survey of Symbolic Logic", 1918, initiated the modern analysis of modality. He developed the logical systems S1-S5. JCC McKinsey used algebraic methods (Boolean algebras with operators) to prove the decidability of Lewis' S2 and S4 in 1941. Saul Kripke developed the relational semantics for modal logics (1959, 1963). Vaughan Pratt introduced dynamic logic in 1976. Amir Pnuelli proposed the use of temporal logic to formalise the behaviour of continually operating concurrent programs in 1977.
  • model plane — a small-scale model of an aircraft, which may or may not be able to fly
  • model stock — Model stock is the maintenance of adequate levels of stock of an item so that an adequate supply is always available for selling.
  • modock wool — territory wool.
  • modularised — to form or organize into modules, as for flexibility.
  • modularized — having been made modular or relating to the use of modular concepts or forms
  • modulations — Plural form of modulation.
  • moldability — a hollow form or matrix for giving a particular shape to something in a molten or plastic state.
  • molendinary — a mill
  • molly-guard — /mol'ee-gard/ [University of Illinois] A shield to prevent tripping of some Big Red Switch by clumsy or ignorant hands. Originally used of the plexiglass covers improvised for the BRS on an IBM 4341 after a programmer's toddler daughter (named Molly) frobbed it twice in one day. Later generalised to covers over stop/reset switches on disk drives and networking equipment.
  • mollycoddle — a man or boy who is used to being coddled; a milksop.
  • mollydooker — (UK, Australia, slang) A left-handed person.
  • molybdenite — a soft, graphitelike mineral, molybdenum sulfide, MoS 2 , occurring in foliated masses or scales: the principal ore of molybdenum.
  • molybdenous — containing bivalent molybdenum.
  • monadically — Biology. any simple, single-celled organism. any of various small, flagellate, colorless ameboids with one to three flagella, especially of the genus Monas.
  • monday club — (in Britain) a club made up of right-wing Conservatives who originally met together for lunch on Monday: founded in 1961
  • moneylender — a person or organization whose business it is to lend money at interest.
  • mongrelized — Simple past tense and past participle of mongrelize.
  • monodactyly — having only one digit or claw.
  • monodelphic — having a sole set of reproductive organs
  • monopolised — Simple past tense and past participle of monopolise.
  • monopolized — Simple past tense and past participle of monopolize.
  • montbéliard — an industrial town in E France: former capital of the duchy of Burgundy. Pop: 27 570 (1999)
  • moonlighted — Simple past tense and past participle of moonlight.
  • morcellated — Simple past tense and past participle of morcellate.
  • mortadellas — Plural form of mortadella.
  • mortal mind — the illusion that mind and life arise from matter and are subject to death. Compare mind (def 19).
  • mosaic gold — Chemistry. stannic sulfide.
  • mother lode — Mining. a rich or important lode.
  • motherlands — Plural form of motherland.
  • motor lodge — motel.
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