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10-letter words containing m, e, i, s, t, r

  • miscreator — a person or entity that creates wrongly
  • misentreat — to treat badly; mistreat
  • miseration — (obsolete) commiseration.
  • misfeature — a distorted feature.
  • misfortune — adverse fortune; bad luck.
  • mispredict — to declare or tell in advance; prophesy; foretell: to predict the weather; to predict the fall of a civilization.
  • misprinted — Simple past tense and past participle of misprint.
  • misrelated — Simple past tense and past participle of misrelate.
  • misreports — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of misreport.
  • misterioso — mysterious, strange, or weird.
  • mistflower — a North American composite plant, Eupatorium coelestinum, having heads of blue flowers.
  • mistrayned — deluded or incorrectly trained
  • mistreated — Simple past tense and past participle of mistreat.
  • mistresses — Plural form of mistress.
  • mistressly — relating to a female who is skilled or expert in a particular area
  • mistrusted — Simple past tense and past participle of mistrust.
  • mistruster — One who mistrusts.
  • misventure — an unfortunate undertaking; misadventure.
  • miswritten — to trace or form (characters, letters, words, etc.) on the surface of some material, as with a pen, pencil, or other instrument or means; inscribe: Write your name on the board.
  • miter post — meeting post.
  • miterworts — Plural form of miterwort.
  • moderatism — A doctrine of moderation (in any field).
  • modernists — Plural form of modernist.
  • moisturise — to add or restore moisture to (something): to moisturize one's skin with lotion; to moisturize air.
  • moisturize — to add or restore moisture to (something): to moisturize one's skin with lotion; to moisturize air.
  • molarities — Plural form of molarity.
  • monetarism — a doctrine holding that changes in the money supply determine the direction of a nation's economy.
  • monetarist — a doctrine holding that changes in the money supply determine the direction of a nation's economy.
  • monitories — Plural form of monitory.
  • monstering — a severe reprimand or scolding; highly critical verbal attack
  • monsterize — To make something or another into a monster or the appearance of.
  • montessori — Maria [muh-ree-uh;; Italian mah-ree-ah] /məˈri ə;; Italian mɑˈri ɑ/ (Show IPA), 1870–1952, Italian educator.
  • moonstrike — the act of landing a spacecraft on the moon
  • moralities — Plural form of morality.
  • mortalised — Simple past tense and past participle of mortalise.
  • mortuaries — Plural form of mortuary.
  • mothership — a vessel or craft that services others operating far from a home port or center.
  • motorbikes — Plural form of motorbike.
  • mousterian — of or relating to a Middle Paleolithic culture of Neanderthal man dating to the early upper Pleistocene Epoch (c100,000–40,000 b.c.) and consisting of five or more stone-artifact traditions in Europe whose characteristic tools are side scrapers and points.
  • movie star — famous film actor
  • multi-user — (operating system)   A term describing an operating system or application program that can be used by several people concurrently; opposite of single-user. Unix is an example of a multi-user operating system, whereas most (but not all) versions of Microsoft Windows are intended to support only one user at a time. A multi-user system, by definition, supports concurrent processing of multiple tasks (once known as "time-sharing") or true parallel processing if it has multiple CPUs. While batch processing systems often ran jobs for serveral users concurrently, the term "multi-user" typically implies interactive access. Before Ethernet networks were commonplace, multi-user systems were accessed from a terminal (e.g. a vt100) connected via a serial line (typically RS-232). This arrangement was eventually superseded by networked personal computers, perhaps sharing files on a file server. With the wide-spread availability of Internet connections, the idea of sharing centralised resources is becoming trendy again with cloud computing and managed applications, though this time it is the overhead of administering the system that is being shared rather than the cost of the hardware. In gaming, both on PCs and games consoles, the equivalent term is multi-player, though the first multi-player games (e.g. ADVENT) were on multi-user computers.
  • multiverse — (in physics and cosmology) a hypothetical collection of identical or diverse universes, including our own.
  • mutessarif — an administrator or governor of a sanjak or province in the former Ottoman Empire
  • mutterings — Plural form of muttering.
  • mysterioso — misterioso
  • mysterious — full of, characterized by, or involving mystery: a mysterious occurrence.
  • n terminus — the amino end of a protein molecule.
  • neutralism — the policy or advocacy of maintaining strict neutrality in foreign affairs.
  • nightmares — Plural form of nightmare.
  • numerosity — very many; being or existing in great quantity: numerous visits; numerous fish.
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