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12-letter words containing m, e, n, h, a, d

  • admonishment — to caution, advise, or counsel against something.
  • adrenochrome — a chemical pigment produced by the oxidation of adrenaline
  • agathodaemon — A benevolent spirit as opposed to a cacodemon (an evil daemon).
  • alfred mahan — Alfred Thayer [they-er] /ˈθeɪ ər/ (Show IPA), 1840–1914, U.S. naval officer and writer on naval history.
  • amphidentate — (of a ligand) able to coordinate through either of two different atoms, as in CN–
  • blandishment — the act of blandishing; cajolery
  • campshedding — to line (the bank of a river) with campshot.
  • chimneyboard — a partition or a cover to shut off a fireplace
  • come to hand — to become available; be received
  • dehumanising — Present participle of dehumanise.
  • dehumanizing — denying or depriving of dignity
  • demonography — a treatise on demons.
  • diamond head — promontory in SE Oahu, Hawaii, near Honolulu, consisting of the rim of an extinct volcanic crater
  • diathermancy — the property of transmitting infrared radiation
  • diazomethane — a yellow odourless explosive gas, used as a methylating agent. Formula: CH2:N:N
  • diethylamine — (organic compound) The secondary amine (CH3CH2)2NH.
  • diminishable — That may be diminished.
  • disharmonize — (intransitive) To cause disorder.
  • drum machine — a device that simulates percussion sounds in various combinations and rhythms, and can alter digitally stored drum sounds or make digital recordings of drum sounds.
  • dysmenorrhea — painful menstruation.
  • earth almond — chufa.
  • echinodermal — (zoology) Relating or belonging to the echinoderms.
  • edvard munch — Edvard [ed-vahrd] /ˈɛd vɑrd/ (Show IPA), 1863–1944, Norwegian painter and graphic artist.
  • empty-handed — carrying nothing
  • endothelioma — Any of various mostly benign neoplasms derived from the endothelium of blood vessels or lymph channels.
  • ephemeridian — relating to ephemera
  • foreadmonish — (rare, transitive) To admonish beforehand, or before the act or event.
  • grandmothers — Plural form of grandmother.
  • habilimented — Clothed.
  • haemodynamic — Alternative spelling of hemodynamic.
  • haemosiderin — Alternative form of hemosiderin.
  • hamming code — (algorithm)   Extra, redundant bits added to stored or transmitted data for the purposes of error detection and correction. Named after the mathematician Richard Hamming, Hamming codes greatly improve the reliability of data, e.g. from distant space probes, where it is impractical, because of the long transmission delay, to correct errors by requesting retransmission.
  • hand-me-down — an article of clothing passed on to another person after being used, outgrown, etc.: The younger children wore the hand-me-downs of the older ones.
  • handsomeness — The quality of being handsome.
  • have in mind — to remember
  • hemodynamics — the branch of physiology dealing with the forces involved in the circulation of the blood.
  • hereditament — any inheritable estate or interest in property.
  • home and dry — If you say that someone is, in British English home and dry, or in American English home free, you mean that they have been successful or that they are certain to be successful.
  • homesteading — a dwelling with its land and buildings, occupied by the owner as a home and exempted by a homestead law from seizure or sale for debt.
  • hope diamond — a sapphire-blue Indian diamond, the largest blue diamond in the world, weighing 44.5 carats and supposedly cut from a bigger diamond that was once part of the French crown jewels: now in the Smithsonian Institution.
  • huffman code — Huffman coding
  • human comedy — French La Comédie Humaine. a collected edition of tales and novels in 17 volumes (1842–48) by Honoré de Balzac.
  • human shield — a person or group of people located or intentionally placed in a potential line of fire or in an area likely to be attacked.
  • hyperdynamic — (physiology) Describing an increase in both blood pressure and pulse pressure.
  • indomethacin — a substance, C 19 H 16 ClNO 4 , with anti-inflammatory, antipyretic, and analgesic properties: used in the treatment of certain kinds of arthritis and gout.
  • lymphadenoma — an enlarged lymph node.
  • machine code — (language)   The representation of a computer program that is read and interpreted by the computer hardware (rather than by some other machine code program). A program in machine code consists of a sequence of "instructions" (possibly interspersed with data). An instruction is a binary string, (often written as one or more octal, decimal or hexadecimal numbers). Instructions may be all the same size (e.g. one 32-bit word for many modern RISC microprocessors) or of different sizes, in which case the size of the instruction is determined from the first word (e.g. Motorola 68000) or byte (e.g. Inmos transputer). The collection of all possible instructions for a particular computer is known as its "instruction set". Each instruction typically causes the Central Processing Unit to perform some fairly simple operation like loading a value from memory into a register or adding the numbers in two registers. An instruction consists of an op code and zero or more operands. Different processors have different instruction sets - the collection of possible operations they can perform. Execution of machine code may either be hard-wired into the central processing unit or it may be controlled by microcode. The basic execution cycle consists of fetching the next instruction from main memory, decoding it (determining which action the operation code specifies and the location of any arguments) and executing it by opening various gates (e.g. to allow data to flow from main memory into a CPU register) and enabling functional units (e.g. signalling to the ALU to perform an addition). Humans almost never write programs directly in machine code. Instead, they use programming languages. The simplest kind of programming language is assembly language which usually has a one-to-one correspondence with the resulting machine code instructions but allows the use of mnemonics (ASCII strings) for the "op codes" (the part of the instruction which encodes the basic type of operation to perform) and names for locations in the program (branch labels) and for variables and constants. Other languages are either translated by a compiler into machine code or executed by an interpreter
  • machine head — a metal peg-and-gear mechanism for tuning a string on an instrument such as a guitar
  • machine word — word (def 10).
  • machine-made — made or constructed by machine

On this page, we collect all 12-letter words with M-E-N-H-A-D. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 12-letter word that contains in M-E-N-H-A-D to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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