0%

11-letter words containing m, o, s, u

  • nonvenomous — (of an animal) having a gland or glands for secreting venom; able to inflict a poisoned bite, sting, or wound: a venomous snake.
  • normanesque — in the style of Norman architecture, a variety of Romanesque architecture.
  • nostradamus — (Michel de Nostredame) 1503–66, French astrologer.
  • not so much — less
  • nourishment — something that nourishes; food, nutriment, or sustenance.
  • nucleoplasm — the protoplasm of the nucleus of a cell.
  • nucleosomal — Of or pertaining to a nucleosome.
  • nucleosomes — Plural form of nucleosome.
  • numerations — Plural form of numeration.
  • obscurement — The act of obscuring, or the state of being obscured.
  • oceanariums — Plural form of oceanarium.
  • oligomerous — having a small number of component parts
  • ombrogenous — (of plants) able to flourish in wet conditions
  • ombudswoman — a woman employed to investigate complaints against government or institutional officials, employers, etc.
  • ombudswomen — Plural form of ombudswoman.
  • omega minus — an unstable negatively charged elementary particle, classified as a baryon, that has a mass 3273 times that of the electron
  • ominousness — portending evil or harm; foreboding; threatening; inauspicious: an ominous bank of dark clouds.
  • omnifarious — of all forms, varieties, or kinds.
  • omnivourous — Misspelling of omnivorous.
  • opportunism — the policy or practice, as in politics, business, or one's personal affairs, of adapting actions, decisions, etc., to expediency or effectiveness regardless of the sacrifice of ethical principles.
  • organistrum — a stringed instrument played by two people
  • ostensorium — ostensory.
  • our time(s) — When you refer to our time or our times you are referring to the present period in the history of the world.
  • outdoorsman — a person devoted to outdoor sports and recreational activities, as hiking, hunting, fishing, or camping.
  • outdoorsmen — Plural form of outdoorsman.
  • outperforms — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outperform.
  • outsmarting — Present participle of outsmart.
  • outswimming — Present participle of outswim.
  • over-assume — to take for granted or without proof: to assume that everyone wants peace. Synonyms: suppose, presuppose; postulate, posit.
  • overconsume — to destroy or expend by use; use up.
  • overmeasure — an excessive or surplus measure or amount: an overmeasure of exuberance.
  • overmuscled — having muscles developed to excess
  • pentamerous — consisting of or divided into five parts.
  • phosphonium — the positively charged group PH 4 + .
  • piano music — printed music intended to be played on the piano
  • piston pump — A piston pump is a pump which moves fluid by the movement up and down of a disk or short cylinder inside a tube.
  • pittosporum — any of various shrubs or trees of the genus Pittosporum, native to warm regions of the Old World, many species of which are cultivated as ornamentals for their attractive foliage, flowers, or fruit.
  • play possum — opossum.
  • pleiomerous — (of a flower) having a greater than normal number of parts
  • plumigerous — wearing or possessing feathers
  • plutonomist — a person who studies or has expertise in plutonomy
  • pneumonitis — inflammation of the lung caused by a virus or exposure to irritating substances.
  • pneumostome — a breathing hole in the mantle of a gastropod.
  • polyamorous — noting or relating to polyamory, the practice or condition of participating simultaneously in more than one serious romantic or sexual relationship with the knowledge and consent of all partners.
  • polychasium — a form of cymose inflorescence in which each axis produces more than two lateral axes.
  • polyonymous — having or known by several or many names.
  • pompelmouse — a large citrus fruit
  • positronium — a short-lived atomic system consisting of a positron and an electron bound together.
  • post-bellum — of or during the period after a war, esp the American Civil War
  • postscenium — a wing on either side of the stage of an ancient Greek or Roman theatre where props could be stored and actors could prepare; a parascenium
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?