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10-letter words containing m, o, t, e, l, s

  • molybdates — Plural form of molybdate.
  • monostable — (of an electric or electronic circuit) having only one stable state.
  • monostelic — having an individual or sole stele or cylindrical part in the middle of the stem or root of a plant that contains tubular-like vessels
  • moralities — Plural form of morality.
  • mortalised — Simple past tense and past participle of mortalise.
  • mortarless — a mixture of lime or cement or a combination of both with sand and water, used as a bonding agent between bricks, stones, etc.
  • motherless — a female parent.
  • motionless — without motion: a motionless statue.
  • motiveless — something that causes a person to act in a certain way, do a certain thing, etc.; incentive.
  • mouse belt — rat belt
  • mousetails — Plural form of mousetail.
  • myeloblast — an immature myelocyte.
  • myelocytes — Plural form of myelocyte.
  • nettlesome — causing irritation, vexation, or annoyance: to cope with a nettlesome situation.
  • obsoletism — A disused word or phrase; an archaism.
  • old master — an eminent artist of an earlier period, especially from the 15th to the 18th centuries.
  • palmerstonHenry John Temple, 3rd Viscount, 1784–1865, British statesman: prime minister 1855–58, 1859–65.
  • paste mold — a mold lined with a moist carbonized paste, for shaping glass as it is blown.
  • polemicist — a person who is engaged or versed in polemics.
  • polishment — the state of being polished or the action of polishing
  • polysemant — a word with multiple meanings
  • polytheism — the doctrine of or belief in more than one god or in many gods.
  • postbellum — occurring after a war, especially after the American Civil War: postbellum reforms.
  • problemist — someone who composes and solves problems, esp in chess or mathematics
  • ptolemaeus — a walled plain in the third quadrant of the face of the moon: about 90 miles (144 km) in diameter.
  • ptolemaist — an adherent or advocate of the Ptolemaic system of astronomy.
  • pulsometer — a pulsimeter.
  • removalist — a person or company that transports household effects to a new home
  • schoolmate — a companion or associate at school.
  • schooltime — the period during which schools are open
  • sclerotium — a vegetative, resting food-storage body in certain higher fungi, composed of a compact mass of hardened mycelia.
  • sclerotome — Embryology. the part of a mesodermal somite contributing to the development of the vertebrae and ribs.
  • sclerotomy — incision into the sclera, as to extract foreign bodies.
  • semiotical — of or relating to signs.
  • semipostal — a postage stamp sold by a government at a premium above its face value, the excess being used for a nonpostal purpose, as a charity.
  • shot metal — lead hardened with antimony and arsenic, used to manufacture shot for cartridges.
  • slot meter — a meter into which coins are inserted, in advance, to pay for electricity (as opposed to a meter that records the amount of electricity the customer has used, for which they are later billed, usually each quarter)
  • solacement — a comfort or consolation
  • somersault — an acrobatic movement, either forward or backward, in which the body rolls end over end, making a complete revolution.
  • speleothem — a natural structure within a cave
  • steam coal — coal with relatively high sulfur content, suited for generating steam but not for coking.
  • stelliform — star-shaped.
  • storm belt — an area of the earth's surface in which storms are frequent
  • storm cell — an air mass formed by powerful updrafts and downdrafts moving in convective loops, the smallest unit of a storm system.
  • streamflow — the water that flows in a specific stream site, especially its volume and rate of flow.
  • stylometry — the study of the style of something such as a written text so as to determine the author
  • tanglesome — tangled
  • teleostome — any fish of the division Teleostomi, including all bony fish except for the chondrichthyans
  • telomerase — an enzyme, active chiefly in tumors and reproductive cells, that causes telomeres to lengthen: facilitates cell division and may account for the immortality of cancer cells.
  • temerously — in a temerous manner
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