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11-letter words containing m, e, r, p

  • primigenial — relating to an early stage of existence; primitive
  • primitively — being the first or earliest of the kind or in existence, especially in an early age of the world: primitive forms of life.
  • print media — the industry that is engaged in the printing and dissemination of news through newspapers and magazines
  • prize money — money offered, won, or received in prizes.
  • pro memoria — a formal note used in diplomacy as a record of a subject that has been discussed.
  • pro tempore — temporarily; for the time being.
  • problematic — of the nature of a problem; doubtful; uncertain; questionable.
  • procerebrum — (in certain invertebrates) the front part of the central nervous system
  • proctodaeum — proctodeum.
  • procurement — the act of procuring, or obtaining or getting by effort, care, or the use of special means: The organ procurement procedure is very complicated.
  • producement — production
  • profeminist — advocating social, political, legal, and economic rights for women equal to those of men.
  • programable — capable of being programmed.
  • progressism — the philosophy of a progressist
  • project mac — (project)   A project suggested by J C R Licklider; its founding director was MIT Prof. Robert M Fano. MAC stood for Multiple Access Computers on the 5th floor of Tech Square, and Man and Computer on the 9th floor. The major efforts were Corbato's Multics development and Marvin Minsky's Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. In 1963 Project MAC hosted a summer study, which brought many well-known computer scientists to Cambridge to use CTSS and to discuss the future of computing. Funding for Project MAC was provided by the Information Processing Techniques Office of the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense. See also Early PL/I, MacLisp, MACSYMA, MDL, Multipop-68, OCAL.
  • projectment — a design or projection
  • prolegomena — a preliminary discussion; introductory essay, as prefatory matter in a book; a prologue.
  • prolongment — to lengthen out in time; extend the duration of; cause to continue longer: to prolong one's stay abroad.
  • promenading — a stroll or walk, especially in a public place, as for pleasure or display.
  • prominently — standing out so as to be seen easily; conspicuous; particularly noticeable: Her eyes are her most prominent feature.
  • promiseless — without promise
  • promo video — a video or short film that promotes or advertises something
  • prompt side — the part of the stage that in the U.S. is to the right and in Britain to the left as one faces the audience. Abbreviation: P.S.
  • promptitude — promptness.
  • promulgated — to make known by open declaration; publish; proclaim formally or put into operation (a law, decree of a court, etc.).
  • promycelium — a short filament produced in the germination of a spore that bears small spores and then dies.
  • proper time — appropriate moment
  • proper-name — Grammar. a noun that is used to denote a particular person, place, or thing, as Lincoln, Sarah, Pittsburgh, and Carnegie Hall.
  • propylamine — an isomeric amine of propyl
  • proselytism — the act or fact of becoming a proselyte; conversion.
  • prosenchyma — the tissue characteristic of the woody and bast portions of plants, consisting typically of long, narrow cells with pointed ends.
  • prostomiate — having a prostomium.
  • protonemata — a primary, usually filamentous structure produced by the germination of the spore in mosses and certain related plants, and from which the leafy plant which bears the sexual organs arises as a lateral or terminal shoot.
  • protophloem — the part of the primary phloem that develops first, consisting of narrow, thin-walled cells.
  • provokement — the act or instance of provoking
  • proximately — next; nearest; immediately before or after in order, place, occurrence, etc.
  • proximities — nearness in place, time, order, occurrence, or relation.
  • pseudomorph — an irregular or unclassifiable form.
  • pseudoprime — A backgammon prime (six consecutive occupied points) with one point missing. This term is an esoteric pun derived from a mathematical method that, rather than determining precisely whether a number is prime (has no divisors), uses a statistical technique to decide whether the number is "probably" prime. A number that passes this test is called a pseudoprime. The hacker backgammon usage stems from the idea that a pseudoprime is almost as good as a prime: it does the job of a prime until proven otherwise, and that probably won't happen.
  • psychometer — a device for measuring mental or psychological activity
  • psychometry — Psychology. psychometrics.
  • pteropodium — the foot of a pteropod.
  • pump prices — petrol prices
  • pure merino — a free settler rather than a convict
  • pure-minded — having a mind that is free from moral taint or defilement
  • pylorectomy — the surgical removal of all or part of the pylorus, often including the adjacent portion of the stomach (partial gastrectomy)
  • pyramid bet — a set of bets on two or more horse races or other sporting events in which the stake and winnings from the first bet automatically become the stake in the next bet, and so on as long as each bet wins.
  • pyrgeometer — an instrument for measuring the loss of heat by radiation from the earth's surface
  • pyrobitumen — any of the dark, solid hydrocarbons including peat, coal, and bituminous shale.
  • re-emphasis — special stress laid upon, or importance attached to, anything: The president's statement gave emphasis to the budgetary crisis.
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