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11-letter words containing m, i, e, l

  • promycelium — a short filament produced in the germination of a spore that bears small spores and then dies.
  • propylamine — an isomeric amine of propyl
  • proselytism — the act or fact of becoming a proselyte; conversion.
  • proximately — next; nearest; immediately before or after in order, place, occurrence, etc.
  • psammophile — a plant or animal that thrives in sand
  • psilomelane — a common mineral consisting of a mixture of pyrolusite and other oxides of manganese, usually found in black, rounded masses: an ore of manganese.
  • publishment — publication.
  • quitclaimed — Simple past tense and past participle of quitclaim.
  • rambouillet — one of a breed of hardy sheep, developed from the Merino, yielding good mutton and a fine grade of wool.
  • random line — a trial survey line run from a station toward a predetermined point that cannot be seen from the station.
  • readme file — (convention, documentation)   A text file traditionally included in the top-level directory of a software distribution, containing pointers to documentation, credits, revision history, notes, etc. Originally found in Unix source distributions, the convention has spread to many other products. The file may be named README, READ.ME, ReadMe or readme.txt or some other variant. In the Macintosh and IBM PC worlds, software is not usually distributed in source form, and the README is more likely to contain user-oriented material like last-minute documentation changes, error workarounds, and restrictions. The README convention probably follows the famous scene in Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures In Wonderland" in which Alice confronts magic munchies labeled "Eat Me" and "Drink Me".
  • real income — the amount of goods and services that money income will buy.
  • realignment — an adjustment to a line; arrangement in a straight line.
  • reclaimable — to bring (uncultivated areas or wasteland) into a condition for cultivation or other use.
  • reclaimably — in a reclaimable manner
  • reclamation — the reclaiming of desert, marshy, or submerged areas or other wasteland for cultivation or other use.
  • red admiral — the commander in chief of a fleet.
  • reform bill — any of the bills passed by Parliament (1832, 1867, 1884) providing for an increase in the number of voters in elections for the House of Commons, especially the bill of 1832 by which many rotten boroughs were disfranchised.
  • regimentals — of or relating to a regiment.
  • regionalism — Government. the principle or system of dividing a city, state, etc., into separate administrative regions.
  • reimplement — any article used in some activity, especially an instrument, tool, or utensil: agricultural implements.
  • relationism — a doctrine maintaining the existence of relations between things
  • religionism — excessive or exaggerated religious zeal.
  • remodelling — to model again.
  • renormalize — to normalize again, to cause to conform to norms or a normal state again
  • reptiliform — having the form or appearance of a reptile
  • restimulate — to stimulate again, reactivate
  • retinaculum — Anatomy, Zoology. any of various small structures that hook, clasp, or bind other structures to move them or hold them in place.
  • ride cymbal — a medium-sized cymbal suspended over a set of drums, used for maintaining rhythm patterns since the advent of bop
  • ripple mark — one of the wavy lines or ridges produced, especially on sand, by the action of waves, wind, or the like.
  • roche limit — the minimum distance below which a moon orbiting a celestial body would be disrupted by tidal forces or below which a moon would not have formed.
  • roller mill — any mill that pulverizes, flattens, or otherwise changes material, as grain, by passing it between rolls.
  • rollicksome — rollicking; frolicsome.
  • rose family — the plant family Rosaceae, characterized by trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants having compound or simple leaves with stipules, flowers typically with five sepals and five petals, and fruit in a variety of forms, many of which are fleshy and edible, and including the almond, apple, apricot, blackberry, cherry, cinquefoil, hawthorn, peach, pear, plum, raspberry, rose, spirea, and strawberry.
  • safety film — Photography. a film having a nonflammable base of triacetate cellulose.
  • salinometer — an instrument for measuring the amount of salt in a solution.
  • samuel ting — Samuel C(hao) C(hung) [chou choo ng] /tʃaʊ tʃʊŋ/ (Show IPA), born 1936, U.S. physicist: Nobel prize 1976.
  • satellitium — a group of three or more planets lying in one sign of the zodiac
  • schematical — based on a scheme or structured arrangement
  • school time — the period of the day or year when children are at school
  • schorlomite — a mineral that is black in colour and belongs to the garnet group
  • scopolamine — a colorless, syrupy, water-soluble alkaloid, C 1 7 H 2 1 NO 4 , obtained from certain plants of the nightshade family, used chiefly as a sedative and mydriatic and to alleviate the symptoms of motion sickness.
  • screamingly — If you say that something is, for example, screamingly funny or screamingly boring, you mean that it is extremely funny or extremely boring.
  • self-mailer — an advertisement, booklet, or the like, that has space for a name, address, and postage and can be mailed without a wrapper or envelope.
  • self-making — the act of a person or thing that makes: The making of a violin requires great skill.
  • self-minded — having a certain kind of mind (usually used in combination): strong-minded.
  • self-moving — capable of moving without an external agency.
  • semasiology — semantics, especially the study of semantic change.
  • semi-annual — occurring, done, or published every half year or twice a year; semiyearly.
  • semi-circle — A semi-circle is one half of a circle, or something having the shape of half a circle.
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