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8-letter words containing m, o, u, s, l

  • multitos — (operating system)   (MTOS) A new version of TOS. MultiTOS's main advantage was support for pre-emptive multitasking and memory protection. It also supported the latest (and far superior) versions of GEM. MultiTOS was supplied with the Falcon030 range of computers from Atari. It is a little known fact that the MultiTOS kernel was based heavily on the freeware OS MinT which was developed long before Atari got MultiTOS working.
  • musculo- — muscle, muscle and
  • outsmell — to have a more powerful smell than
  • outsmile — to outdo in smiling or overcome by smiling
  • plumbous — containing bivalent lead.
  • populism — the political philosophy of the People's party.
  • ramulose — having many small branches.
  • scholium — Often, scholia. an explanatory note or comment. an ancient annotation upon a passage in a Greek or Latin text.
  • slumlord — a landlord who owns slum buildings, especially one who fails to maintain or improve the buildings and charges tenants exorbitant rents.
  • slummock — to move heavily and awkwardly
  • smoulder — to burn without flame; undergo slow or suppressed combustion.
  • smouldry — smouldering
  • solarium — a glass-enclosed room, porch, or the like, exposed to the sun's rays, as at a seaside hotel or for convalescents in a hospital.
  • solatium — something given in compensation for inconvenience, loss, injury, or the like; recompense.
  • soralium — (in a lichen) a group of soredia.
  • soulmate — a person with whom one has a strong affinity, shared values and tastes, and often a romantic bond: I married my soul mate; you don't get much luckier than that.
  • stamboul — Istanbul
  • stormful — having many storms; stormy
  • sump oil — the waste oil from engines
  • tumulose — having mounds; full of mounds; tumular.
  • tumulous — having mounds; full of mounds; tumular.
  • turmoils — a state of great commotion, confusion, or disturbance; tumult; agitation; disquiet: mental turmoil caused by difficult decisions.
  • unseldom — regularly
  • unsolemn — unceremonious
  • volumist — an author or someone who produces a volume
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