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12-letter words containing m, o, t, i, v

  • modificative — (grammar) That which modifies or qualifies, as a word or clause.
  • motivational — the act or an instance of motivating, or providing with a reason to act in a certain way: I don't understand what her motivation was for quitting her job. Synonyms: motive, inspiration, inducement, cause, impetus.
  • motive power — any power used to impart motion; any source of mechanical energy.
  • motivelessly — Without a motive.
  • motor-driven — propelled or made to function by means of a motor
  • movie rating — a classification of a film as according to the age of viewers thought suitable to see it, and which can differ according to the level in the film of violent content, sexual content, etc
  • multi-voiced — having a voice of a specified kind (usually used in combination): shrill-voiced.
  • multi-volume — consisting of or encompassing several volumes: a multivolume encyclopedia.
  • multivarious — Many and various.
  • multivoltine — producing several broods in one year, as certain silkworm moths; polyvoltine.
  • nemorivagant — Lb rare wandering in the woods.
  • nomenclative — relating to the act of naming
  • noncombative — Not combative.
  • nonimitative — not tending to imitate, not involving imitation
  • nonnormative — Not normative.
  • normotensive — characterized by normal arterial tension or blood pressure.
  • ovariotomies — Plural form of ovariotomy.
  • ovariotomist — a surgeon who performs ovariotomies
  • overdominant — excessively dominant
  • overdramatic — of or relating to the drama.
  • overemphatic — excessive or undue emphasis.
  • overestimate — to estimate at too high a value, amount, rate, or the like: Don't overestimate the car's trade-in value.
  • overmaturity — (of a tree or forest) the state of having ceased to grow or have commercial value
  • overmedicate — to treat with medicine or medicaments.
  • overmultiply — to increase too much or too often
  • overoptimism — a disposition or tendency to look on the more favorable side of events or conditions and to expect the most favorable outcome.
  • overoptimist — someone who is too optimistic
  • overshipment — an act or instance of shipping freight or cargo.
  • overtime ban — a refusal by employees to work overtime
  • overtime pay — a higher than normal rate of pay, for work done as overtime
  • parma violet — a variety of the sweet violet, Viola odorata, that is the source of an essential oil used in perfumery.
  • performative — (of an expression or statement) performing an act by the very fact of being uttered, as with the expression “I promise,” that performs the act of promising.
  • piet-my-vrou — a cuckoo, Notococcyx solitarius, having a red breast
  • postmedieval — occurring or existing after the Middle Ages, of or related to the period after the Middle Ages
  • preformative — a prefixture in Semitic languages
  • provitamin a — carotene.
  • remotivation — the act or an instance of motivating, or providing with a reason to act in a certain way: I don't understand what her motivation was for quitting her job. Synonyms: motive, inspiration, inducement, cause, impetus.
  • semivitreous — partially vitreous.
  • stakhanovism — a method for increasing production by rewarding individual initiative, developed in the Soviet Union in 1935.
  • svga monitor — (hardware, graphics)   A monitor capable of displaying the output of an SVGA card.
  • thermomotive — pertaining to motion produced by heat.
  • tidal volume — the volume of water associated with a rising tide
  • time to live — (TTL) A field in the Internet Protocol header which indicates how many more hops this packet should be allowed to make before being discarded or returned.
  • unmotivating — to provide with a motive, or a cause or reason to act; incite; impel.
  • variant form — a way of writing a word which is used by some people as an alternative to the standard or generally accepted form
  • ventromedial — relating to both the ventral and medial surfaces, or to the front and to the middle
  • victorianism — the distinctive character, thought, tendencies, etc., of the Victorian period.
  • visceromotor — of or relating to the normal movements of the viscera, especially the digestive tract.
  • voluntaryism — voluntarism (def 2).
  • volunteerism — voluntarism (def 2).
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