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11-letter words containing m, r, s

  • gemmiparous — producing or reproducing by buds or gemmae.
  • geocentrism — A belief that Earth is the center of the universe and does not move.
  • geoisotherm — isogeotherm.
  • germaneness — The property of being germane.
  • glamorously — In a glamorous manner.
  • glamourless — Without glamour; unglamorous, mundane.
  • glamourpuss — a glamorous person, esp a woman
  • glass maker — the art of making glass or glassware.
  • glass-maker — the art of making glass or glassware.
  • glassmakers — Plural form of glassmaker.
  • glimmerings — Plural form of glimmering.
  • glumiferous — having glumes
  • gomme syrup — simple syrup.
  • goniometers — Plural form of goniometer.
  • gonochorism — (biology) The situation in which the individuals of a species are of one of two distinct sexes, and retain that sexuality throughout their lives.
  • gormandizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gormandize.
  • gourmandise — unrestrained enjoyment of fine foods, wines, and the like.
  • gourmandism — a person who is fond of good eating, often indiscriminatingly and to excess.
  • gourmet sex — lovemaking that is particularly passionate, enjoyable, and imaginative
  • governments — Plural form of government.
  • grammarians — Plural form of grammarian.
  • gramophones — Plural form of gramophone.
  • grandmaster — the head of a military order of knighthood, a lodge, fraternal order, or the like.
  • gravimeters — Plural form of gravimeter.
  • green stamp — Citizens Band Radio Slang. a speeding ticket. Usually, Green Stamps. money; currency.
  • grimm's law — the statement of the regular pattern of consonant correspondences presumed to represent changes from Proto-Indo-European to Germanic, according to which voiced aspirated stops became voiced obstruents, voiced unaspirated stops became unvoiced stops, and unvoiced stops became unvoiced fricatives: first formulated in 1820–22 by Jakob Grimm, though the facts had been noted earlier by Rasmus Rask.
  • grouse moor — a moor where grouse live or are hunted
  • guardswoman — A female guardsman.
  • guardswomen — Plural form of guardswoman.
  • gulf stream — a warm ocean current flowing N from the Gulf of Mexico, along the E coast of the U.S., to an area off the SE coast of Newfoundland, where it becomes the western terminus of the North Atlantic Current.
  • gummiferous — producing gum
  • gutturalism — The quality of being guttural.
  • gymnasiarch — (in ancient Greece) a magistrate who superintended the gymnasia and public games in certain cities.
  • gymnosperms — Plural form of gymnosperm.
  • gymnospermy — The property of being gymnospermous.
  • gyrocompass — a navigational compass containing a gyroscope rotor, that, when adjusted for the latitude and speed of the vessel or aircraft, indicates the direction of true north along the surface of the earth or communicates this information to one or more gyro repeaters.
  • hammerlocks — Plural form of hammerlock.
  • hammersmith — a borough of Greater London, England.
  • hammersteinOscar, 1847?–1919, U.S. theatrical manager, born in Germany.
  • hammerstone — an ancient stone tool used as a hammer, as for chipping flint, processing food, or breaking up bones.
  • hamstringed — (in humans and other primates) any of the tendons that bound the ham of the knee.
  • harassments — Plural form of harassment.
  • harem pants — a kind of baggy trousers worn by women, made of lightweight fabric and closefitting at the ankles
  • harmfulness — causing or capable of causing harm; injurious: a harmful idea; a harmful habit.
  • harmolodics — the technique of each musician in a group simultaneously improvising around the melodic and rhythmic patterns in a tune, rather than one musician improvising on its underlying harmonic pattern while the others play an accompaniment
  • harmonicist — Someone who plays the harmonica.
  • harmonising — Present participle of harmonise.
  • harmonistic — pertaining to a harmonist or harmony.
  • harmonizers — Plural form of harmonizer.
  • harrumphers — Plural form of harrumpher.
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