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12-letter words containing m, o, r, l

  • promulgation — to make known by open declaration; publish; proclaim formally or put into operation (a law, decree of a court, etc.).
  • proper psalm — a psalm used only on a particular day or feast
  • prosyllogism — a syllogism the conclusion of which is used as a premise of another syllogism; any of the syllogisms included in a polysyllogism except the last.
  • prothalamion — a song or poem written to celebrate a marriage.
  • prothalamium — prothalamion.
  • protoplasmic — Biology. (no longer in technical use) the colloidal and liquid substance of which cells are formed, excluding horny, chitinous, and other structural material; the cytoplasm and nucleus.
  • puerto limon — Limón (def 2).
  • pulvilliform — resembling a pulvillus
  • pyramidology — a belief system based on the supposed occult significance of the Egyptian pyramids
  • pyrochemical — pertaining to or producing chemical change at high temperatures.
  • pyromaniacal — a compulsion to set things on fire.
  • quadrinomial — consisting of four terms.
  • quasi-normal — conforming to the standard or the common type; usual; not abnormal; regular; natural.
  • radioelement — a radioactive element.
  • ragman rolls — Usually, ragman rolls. a series of documents in which the Scottish nobles acknowledged their allegiance to Edward I of England, 1291–92 and 1296.
  • rattail comb — a comb for the hair having a narrow, pointed handle used in styling the hair.
  • redeployment — to transfer (a unit, a person, supplies, etc.) from one theater of operations to another.
  • redoublement — the act of redoubling
  • reemployment — an act or instance of employing someone or something.
  • reenrollment — the act or process of enrolling.
  • reflectogram — an image of an under-drawing or image taken from beneath the surface of paint in a work of art
  • reform flask — an English salt-glazed stoneware flask of the early 19th century formed as an effigy of one of the figures connected with the Reform Bill of 1832.
  • reg-symbolic — An early system on the IBM 704.
  • remote login — (networking)   A client-server program and protocol that provides an interactivel command line interface to a remote computer, using a protocol over a computer network, simulating a locally attached terminal.
  • repromulgate — to make known by open declaration; publish; proclaim formally or put into operation (a law, decree of a court, etc.).
  • rheumatology — the study and treatment of rheumatic diseases.
  • rhombohedral — a solid bounded by six rhombic planes.
  • rock climber — sb who scales mountains
  • rolling mill — a mill where ingots, slabs, sheets, etc., of usually hot metal are passed between rolls to give them a certain thickness or cross-sectional form.
  • roman a clef — a novel that represents historical events and characters under the guise of fiction.
  • roman candle — a firework consisting of a tube that sends out a shower of sparks and a succession of balls of fire.
  • roman collar — clerical collar.
  • roman-fleuve — saga (def 3).
  • romantically — of, relating to, or of the nature of romance; characteristic or suggestive of the world of romance: a romantic adventure.
  • root climber — a plant that clings to a surface and climbs by means of adventitious roots, as the ivy, Hedera helix.
  • rotflmaoastc — (chat)   Rolling on the floor laughing my ass (or arse) off and scaring the cat. The superlative form of ROTFL.
  • royal family — the immediate family of a reigning monarch.
  • salamandroid — an amphibian of the genus Salamandra
  • salmon brick — a soft, imperfectly fired brick having a reddish-orange color.
  • salmon trout — a European trout, Salmo trutta.
  • salutatorium — a porch or room in a monastery or church serving as a meeting or almsgiving place for monks or priests and the laity.
  • samuel loverSamuel, 1797–1868, Irish novelist, painter, and songwriter.
  • samuel morse — Jedidiah [jed-i-dahy-uh] /ˌdʒɛd ɪˈdaɪ ə/ (Show IPA), 1761–1826, U.S. geographer and Congregational clergyman (father of Samuel F. B. Morse).
  • schoolmaster — a man who presides over or teaches in a school.
  • sclerodermic — of or relating to a scleroderm or to sclerodermia; hard-skinned
  • sea milkwort — a maritime plant, Glaux maritima, having small, pinkish-white flowers.
  • self-mockery — gentle humour at one's own expense
  • self-torment — an act or instance of tormenting oneself, as with worry or guilt.
  • semi-popular — regarded with favor, approval, or affection by people in general: a popular preacher.
  • semiarboreal — (of animals) spending half or some of their life in trees
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