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11-letter words containing m, i, n, s

  • misstepping — Present participle of misstep.
  • mistakingly — an error in action, calculation, opinion, or judgment caused by poor reasoning, carelessness, insufficient knowledge, etc.
  • misteaching — Present participle of misteach.
  • mistinguett — original name Jeanne-Marie Bourgeois. 1875–1956, French dancer, chanteuse, and entertainer
  • mistracking — track system.
  • mistreading — a wrongdoing or misdemeanour
  • mistreating — Present participle of mistreat.
  • mistrusting — Present participle of mistrust.
  • mit license — (legal, software)   A popular open source software license. The MIT License is very permissive, allowing "any person ... to deal in the Software without restriction" as long as they preserve the copyright notice and the license itself. It also includes the usual disclaimers.
  • mitigations — the act of mitigating, or lessening the force or intensity of something unpleasant, as wrath, pain, grief, or extreme circumstances: Social support is the most important factor in the mitigation of stress among adolescents.
  • mixing desk — music: DJ's console
  • mizzenmasts — Plural form of mizzenmast.
  • mochaccinos — Plural form of mochaccino.
  • moderations — the quality of being moderate; restraint; avoidance of extremes or excesses; temperance.
  • modernising — Present participle of modernise.
  • modernistic — modern.
  • modernities — Plural form of modernity.
  • modulations — Plural form of modulation.
  • molestation — to bother, interfere with, or annoy.
  • monarchists — Plural form of monarchist.
  • monasteries — Plural form of monastery.
  • monasticism — the monastic system, condition, or mode of life.
  • monergistic — the doctrine that the Holy Ghost acts independently of the human will in the work of regeneration. Compare synergism (def 3).
  • monitorship — (especially formerly) a student appointed to assist in the conduct of a class or school, as to help take attendance or keep order.
  • monkey fist — a ball-like knot used as an ornament or as a throwing weight at the end of a line.
  • monkey suit — a tuxedo or full-dress suit.
  • monkeyshine — Usually, monkeyshines. a frivolous or mischievous prank; monkey business.
  • monoblastic — having a single layer, as an embryo in the blastula stage or developing from a single layer.
  • monoblepsis — a condition of the eyesight in which there is no problem with vision when one eye is involved but there is impairment to vision that uses both eyes
  • monochasial — Relating to the monochasium.
  • monochasium — a form of cymose inflorescence in which the main axis produces only a single branch.
  • monoclinous — (of a plant, species, etc.) having both the stamens and pistils in the same flower.
  • monocracies — Plural form of monocracy.
  • monogamists — Plural form of monogamist.
  • monogastric — (biology) Having a simple single-chambered stomach.
  • monogenesis — the hypothetical descent of the human race from a single pair of individuals.
  • monogenists — the theory that the human race has descended from a single pair of individuals or a single ancestral type.
  • monohybrids — Plural form of monohybrid.
  • monolatrism — Belief in multiple deities but worship of only one.
  • monolithism — an obelisk, column, large statue, etc., formed of a single block of stone.
  • monologuist — a form of dramatic entertainment, comedic solo, or the like by a single speaker: a comedian's monologue.
  • monophysite — a person who maintains that Christ has one nature, partly divine and partly human.
  • monopolised — Simple past tense and past participle of monopolise.
  • monopolises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of monopolise.
  • monopolists — Plural form of monopolist.
  • monopolizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of monopolize.
  • monopsonies — Plural form of monopsony.
  • monopsonist — the sole buyer in a monopsony
  • monorhinous — having a single, median nostril, as the cyclostomes.
  • monseigneur — a French title of honor given to princes, bishops, and other persons of eminence.
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