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13-letter words containing m, e, o, w, i, n

  • academic gown — a loose garment like a very light coat with wide sleeves worn over a person's outer clothes and indicating academic status
  • aircraftwomen — Plural form of aircraftwoman.
  • ammonia water — ammonia (def 2).
  • atomic weapon — a weapon in which energy is provided by nuclear fission
  • businesswoman — A businesswoman is a woman who works in business.
  • disemboweling — Present participle of disembowel.
  • disempowering — Present participle of disempower.
  • dormer window — in sloping roof
  • fellow inmate — sb in same prison
  • homeownership — a person who owns a home.
  • house-warming — a party to celebrate a person's or family's move to a new home.
  • housewarmings — Plural form of housewarming.
  • internet worm — (networking, security)   The November 1988 worm perpetrated by Robert T. Morris. The worm was a program which took advantage of bugs in the Sun Unix sendmail program, Vax programs, and other security loopholes to distribute itself to over 6000 computers on the Internet. The worm itself had a bug which made it create many copies of itself on machines it infected, which quickly used up all available processor time on those systems. Some call it "The Great Worm" in a play on Tolkien (compare elvish, elder days). In the fantasy history of his Middle Earth books, there were dragons powerful enough to lay waste to entire regions; two of these (Scatha and Glaurung) were known as "the Great Worms". This usage expresses the connotation that the RTM hack was a sort of devastating watershed event in hackish history; certainly it did more to make non-hackers nervous about the Internet than anything before or since.
  • magnetic wood — wood containing fine particles of nickel-zinc ferrite which absorb microwave radio signals, used to line rooms where mobile phone use is undesirable
  • measuringworm — the larva of any geometrid moth, which progresses by bringing the rear end of the body forward and then advancing the front end.
  • medicine show — a traveling troupe, especially in the late 1800s, offering entertainment in order to attract customers for the patent medicines or purported cures proffered for sale.
  • melvin conway — (person)   An early proto-hacker who wrote an assembler for the Burroughs 220 called SAVE and (probably) formulated Conway's Law.
  • mid wicket on — mid on.
  • minstrel show — a once popular type of stage show featuring comic dialogue, song, and dance in highly conventionalized patterns, performed by a troupe of actors traditionally comprising two end men, a chorus in blackface, and an interlocutor. Developed in the U.S. in the 19th century, this entertainment portrayed negative racial stereotypes and declined in popularity in the 20th century.
  • mooring screw — a broad, augerlike anchor used for securing buoys in soft-bottomed lakes, rivers, etc.
  • mooring tower — a mast or tower to which a balloon or airship may be moored
  • mother-in-law — the mother of one's husband or wife.
  • mount whitney — a mountain in E California: the highest peak in the Sierra Nevada Mountains and in continental US (excluding Alaska). Height: 4418 m (14 495 ft)
  • mountain view — city in WC Calif., near San Jose: pop. 71,000
  • mouthwatering — very appetizing in appearance, aroma, or description: a mouth-watering dessert.
  • narrow-minded — having or showing a prejudiced mind, as persons or opinions; biased.
  • neo-darwinism — the theory of evolution as expounded by later students of Charles Darwin, especially Weismann, holding that natural selection accounts for evolution and denying the inheritance of acquired characters.
  • new economics — Keynesianism.
  • nominal wages — minimum pay
  • painted woman — a prostitute; slut.
  • piers plowman — (The Vision Concerning Piers Plowman) an alliterative poem written in three versions (1360–99), ascribed to William Langland.
  • seminole wars — a series of conflicts in 1818–19 between American forces under Andrew Jackson and the Seminole Indians in Spanish-controlled eastern Florida.
  • swimming hole — a place, as in a stream or creek, where there is water deep enough to use for swimming.
  • te waipounamu — a Māori name for New Zealand's South Island
  • unwomanliness — the quality or state of being unwomanly
  • unworkmanlike — not appropriate to or befitting a good workman
  • wearisomeness — causing weariness; fatiguing: a difficult and wearisome march.
  • well-combined — made by combining; joined; united, as in a chemical compound.
  • well-informed — having extensive knowledge, as in one particular subject or in a variety of subjects.
  • winston-salem — a city in N North Carolina.
  • wishbone boom — a boom on a sailboard having two arms that are joined at the mast and at the foot of the sail. The windsurfer holds onto it for support and to steer the sailboard
  • women in love — a novel (1920) by D. H. Lawrence.
  • woolly-minded — showing a vague or muddled way of thinking
  • working-women — a woman who is regularly employed.
  • worrisomeness — The property of being worrisome.
  • yellow mombin — a tropical American tree, Spondias mombin, having yellowish-white flowers and yellow, oval, edible fruit.

On this page, we collect all 13-letter words with M-E-O-W-I-N. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 13-letter word that contains in M-E-O-W-I-N to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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