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12-letter words containing m, i, s, t

  • disinterment — to take out of the place of interment; exhume; unearth.
  • dislodgement — to remove or force out of a particular place: to dislodge a stone with one's foot.
  • dispensement — Dispensation (handing out or distribution).
  • dispersement — Misspelling of disbursement.
  • dispiritment — the state of being dispirited
  • displacement — the act of displacing.
  • disportments — to divert or amuse (oneself).
  • disseminated — to scatter or spread widely, as though sowing seed; promulgate extensively; broadcast; disperse: to disseminate information about preventive medicine.
  • disseminates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disseminate.
  • disseminator — to scatter or spread widely, as though sowing seed; promulgate extensively; broadcast; disperse: to disseminate information about preventive medicine.
  • dissenterism — the beliefs and practices of dissenters
  • dissepiments — Plural form of dissepiment.
  • disseverment — Disseverance.
  • dissimilated — Simple past tense and past participle of dissimilate.
  • dissimulated — Simple past tense and past participle of dissimulate.
  • dissimulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dissimulate.
  • dissimulator — One who dissimulates.
  • dissymmetric — Asymmetric.
  • distemperate — (obsolete) immoderate.
  • distemperoid — resembling distemper.
  • distomatosis — liver-rot.
  • distributism — a socioeconomic theory and system advocating widespread ownership of private property and the means of production: based on late 19th-century Catholic teachings on economic and social justice.
  • district man — a legman who covers a beat for a newspaper.
  • dithyrambist — a writer or performer of dithyrambs
  • domestic cat — feline kept as a pet
  • domestic pig — Sus scrofa; an artiodactyl mammal of the African and Eurasian family Suidae, having a long head with a movable snout and a thick bristle-covered skin
  • domesticable — to convert (animals, plants, etc.) to domestic uses; tame.
  • domestically — of or relating to the home, the household, household affairs, or the family: domestic pleasures.
  • domesticated — to convert (animals, plants, etc.) to domestic uses; tame.
  • domesticates — Plural form of domesticate.
  • domesticized — Simple past tense and past participle of domesticize.
  • dominatrices — Plural form of dominatrixThe 'Concise Oxford English Dictionary' [Eleventh Edition].
  • dramaturgist — A person who composes a drama and directs its representation; a playwright.
  • drillmasters — Plural form of drillmaster.
  • duncan smith — (George) Iain. born 1954, British politician; leader of the Conservative Party (2001–03); secretary of state for work and pensions (2010–2016)
  • dusty miller — Botany. any of several composite plants, as Centaurea cineraria, Senecio cineraria, or the beach wormwood, having pinnate leaves covered with whitish pubescence. rose campion.
  • duty chemist — a dispensing chemist's that is open to the public for a specific period when other chemists are closed
  • dyotheletism — the teaching that Christ had both a divine will and a human will
  • dysphemistic — Of, pertaining to, or being a dysphemism.
  • dysrhythmias — Plural form of dysrhythmia.
  • dystopianism — a society characterized by human misery, as squalor, oppression, disease, and overcrowding.
  • e-thrombosis — a clot in the bloodstream caused by long periods spent being physically inactive at a computer
  • earth summit — a summit conference of 100 or more earth leaders debating global environmental and development issues, specifically the summit held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, but the term is also applied e.g. to a projected similar event in 2012
  • eastern time — the civil time officially adopted for a country or region, usually the civil time of some specific meridian lying within the region. The standard time zones in the U.S. (Atlantic time, Eastern time, Central time, Mountain time, Pacific time, Yukon time, Alaska-Hawaii time, and Bering time) use the civil times of the 60th, 75th, 90th, 105th, 120th, 135th, 150th, and 165th meridians respectively, the difference of time between one zone and the next being exactly one hour.
  • econometrics — the application of statistical and mathematical techniques in solving problems as well as in testing and demonstrating theories.
  • econometrist — An econometrician.
  • ecotarianism — the principle or practice of avoiding eating any foods whose production or transportation are considered ecologically damaging
  • ecoterrorism — Violence carried out to further environmentalist ends.
  • ectosymbiont — (biology) A partner in a symbiotic relationship that remains on the surface of its host or occupies a body cavity.
  • effusiometer — an apparatus for determining rates of effusion of gases, usually used for measuring molecular weights
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