11-letter words containing m, e, r, i, t
- imprecatory — to invoke or call down (evil or curses), as upon a person.
- impregnated — to make pregnant; get with child or young.
- impregnates — to make pregnant; get with child or young.
- impregnator — to make pregnant; get with child or young.
- impressment — the act of impressing people or property into public service or use.
- impropriate — to transfer (property, rights, etc) from the Church into lay hands
- impropriety — the quality or condition of being improper; incorrectness.
- improvement — an act of improving or the state of being improved.
- improvident — not provident; lacking foresight; incautious; unwary.
- improvisate — To improvise; to extemporize.
- imprudently — Without prudence; in an imprudent manner.
- in aeternum — forever.
- in extremis — in extremity.
- in terms of — a word or group of words designating something, especially in a particular field, as atom in physics, quietism in theology, adze in carpentry, or district leader in politics.
- incremation — Burning; especially, the act of burning a dead body; cremation.
- incremental — increasing or adding on, especially in a regular series: small, incremental tax hikes.
- incremented — Simple past tense and past participle of increment.
- incriminate — to accuse of or present proof of a crime or fault: He incriminated both men to the grand jury.
- indemnitors — a person or company that gives indemnity.
- indorsement — approval or sanction: The program for supporting the arts won the government's endorsement.
- inerrantism — belief in a document's truth and freedom from error.
- infantrymen — Plural form of infantryman.
- infirmative — (obsolete) Tending to weaken, annul, or make void.
- infirmities — Plural form of infirmity.
- inforcement — Archaic form of enforcement.
- informative — giving information; instructive: an informative book.
- informatize — (of a country, region, etc) to undergo the development of an information-based economy on an extensive scale
- injury time — sport: stoppage time, extension of play by time spent treating injured players
- insectarium — a place in which a collection of living insects is kept, as in a zoo.
- insectiform — resembling an insect
- inseminator — a technician who introduces prepared semen into the genital tract of breeding animals, especially cows and mares, for artificial insemination.
- instreaming — A flowing in; influx.
- instruments — Plural form of instrument.
- integralism — the belief that one's religious convictions should dictate one's political and social actions.
- intemperant — a person who is intemperate, esp in his or her consumption of alcohol
- intemperate — given to or characterized by excessive or immoderate indulgence in alcoholic beverages.
- interatomic — between atoms.
- intercampus — the grounds, often including the buildings, of a college, university, or school.
- intercommon — to share in the use of a common.
- interfamily — a basic social unit consisting of parents and their children, considered as a group, whether dwelling together or not: the traditional family. a social unit consisting of one or more adults together with the children they care for: a single-parent family.
- interiorism — a theory that truth is discovered by introspection rather than by examination of the outside world.
- intermeddle — to take part in a matter, especially officiously; meddle.
- intermedial — occurring or situated between two points, extremes, places, etc
- intermedium — (in tetrapods) a carpal in the center of the wrist joint, or a tarsal in the center of the ankle joint.
- intermeshed — Simple past tense and past participle of intermesh.
- intermeshes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of intermesh.
- intermezzos — Plural form of intermezzo.
- interminate — Without end or limit; boundless; infinite.
- intermingle — Mix or mingle together.
- intermitted — to discontinue temporarily; suspend.