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11-letter words containing m, e, n, o

  • open market — an unrestricted competitive market in which any buyer and seller is free to participate.
  • open sesame — any marvelously effective means for bringing about a desired result: Wealth is the open sesame to happiness.
  • open system — a region separated from its surroundings by a boundary that admits a transfer of matter or energy across it.
  • open-minded — having or showing a mind receptive to new ideas or arguments.
  • oppenheimer — J(ulius) Robert, 1904–67, U.S. nuclear physicist.
  • orangewoman — a female member of the Orangemen
  • ordainments — Plural form of ordainment.
  • orientalism — a peculiarity or idiosyncrasy of the peoples of Asia, especially the East.
  • ornamentals — Plural form of ornamental.
  • ornamenting — Present participle of ornament.
  • ornamentist — a person who adorns or decorates, esp professionally
  • ostensorium — ostensory.
  • other woman — a woman who is romantically or sexually involved with another woman's husband or lover, especially a woman who is having an affair with a married man.
  • outdoorsmen — Plural form of outdoorsman.
  • outline map — a map which only provides very basic information so that more details can be added
  • outmaneuver — to outwit, defeat, or frustrate by maneuvering.
  • outnumbered — to exceed in number.
  • over-demand — to ask for with proper authority; claim as a right: He demanded payment of the debt.
  • overconsume — to destroy or expend by use; use up.
  • overemoting — Present participle of overemote.
  • overgarment — an outer garment.
  • overmanning — overstaffing
  • overpayment — to pay more than (an amount due): I received a credit after overpaying the bill.
  • oxygen mask — a masklike device placed or worn over the nose and mouth when inhaling supplementary oxygen from an attached tank.
  • oxymorphone — a potent semisynthetic morphine-derived narcotic analgesic, C 1 7 H 1 9 NO 4 , used as a substitute for morphine.
  • oysterwoman — a woman who gathers, cultivates, or sells oysters.
  • pandemonian — a noisy and disorderly person
  • pandemonium — wild uproar or unrestrained disorder; tumult or chaos.
  • panicmonger — a person who spreads panic
  • panomphaean — understood universally
  • paper money — currency in paper form, such as government and bank notes, as distinguished from metal currency.
  • peanut worm — any small, unsegmented, marine worm of the phylum Sipuncula, that when disturbed retracts its anterior portion into the body, giving the appearance of a peanut seed.
  • peeping tom — a person who obtains sexual gratification by observing others surreptitiously, especially a man who looks through windows at night.
  • pelargonium — any plant of the genus Pelargonium, the cultivated species of which are usually called geranium. Compare geranium (def 2).
  • penciliform — having a pencillike shape.
  • pentamerous — consisting of or divided into five parts.
  • pentastomid — tongue worm.
  • pentatonism — the use of a five-tone scale.
  • pentium pro — (processor)   (Known as "P6" during development) Intel's successor to the Pentium processor, in development Jan 1995, generally available 1995-11-01. The P6 has an internal RISC architecture with a CISC-RISC translator, 3-way superscalar execution, and out-of order execution (or "speculative execution", which Intel calls "Dynamic Execution"). It also features branch prediction and register renaming, and is superpipelined (14 stages). The P6 is made as a two-chip assembly: the first chip is the CPU and 16 kilobyte first-level cache (5.5 million transistors) and the other is a 256 (or 512) kilobyte second-level cache (15 million transistors). The first version has a clock rate of 133 Mhz and consumes about 20W of power. It is about twice as fast as the 100 MHz Pentium. The original 0.35 micron versions of the Pentium Pro released on 1995-11-01 run at 150 and 166 Mhz for desktop machines and up to 200 Mhz for servers. Heat disspation is about 20 Watts. The Pentium Pro is optimised for 32-bit software and runs 16-bit software slower than the original Pentium. The successor was the Pentium II.
  • performance — a musical, dramatic, or other entertainment presented before an audience.
  • permutation — the act of permuting or permutating; alteration; transformation.
  • personalism — Also called personal idealism. a modern philosophical movement locating ultimate value and reality in persons, human or divine.
  • petalomania — the condition in which a flower has proportionately more petals than is normal
  • phanerogams — any of the Phanerogamia, a former primary division of plants comprising those having reproductive organs; a flowering plant or seed plant (opposed to cryptogam).
  • phantomlike — an apparition or specter.
  • phonematics — phonemics.
  • phonemicize — to transcribe into phonemic symbols.
  • phoneticism — a phonetic scheme of writing
  • piedmontese — a native or inhabitant of Piedmont, Italy.
  • piedmontite — a mineral, similar to epidote but containing manganese: found in schists and manganese ores.
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