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12-letter words containing m, u, l, i, g

  • mogul skiing — a skiing event in which skiers descend a slope which is covered in mounds of snow, making two jumps during the descent
  • moulin rouge — a dance hall in the Montmartre section of Paris, France, opened in 1889 and famous for its cancan dancers and the drawings of its performers and customers made there by Toulouse-Lautrec.
  • much obliged — expressions used when one wants to indicate that one is very grateful for something
  • mucilaginous — of, relating to, or secreting mucilage.
  • mud-slinging — an attempt to discredit one's competitor, opponent, etc., by malicious or scandalous attacks.
  • muir glacier — a glacier in SE Alaska, flowing SE from Mt. Fairweather into Glacier Bay. About 350 sq. mi. (905 sq. km).
  • mulligatawny — a curry-flavored soup of East Indian origin, made with chicken or meat stock.
  • multi-garnet — A better constraint system for Garnet. Version 2.1 by Michael Sannella <[email protected]>.
  • multiangular — having many angles; polyangular.
  • multicasting — the act or process of a person or thing that casts.
  • multigravida — a pregnant woman who has been pregnant two or more times.
  • multilingual — using or able to speak several or many languages with some facility.
  • multimegaton — (of a nuclear weapon) having several megatons of explosive power
  • multipathing — (computing) A network facility providing fault tolerance and load-spreading for network interface cards, each interface being assigned a static
  • multiplexing — having many parts or aspects: the multiplex problem of drug abuse.
  • multipronged — having or composed of several prongs: a multipronged electric plug.
  • multitasking — Computers. (of a single CPU) to execute two or more jobs concurrently.
  • museological — Pertaining to museology.
  • musicologist — the scholarly or scientific study of music, as in historical research, musical theory, or the physical nature of sound.
  • mutable sign — any of the four astrological signs, Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius, or Pisces, that are grouped together because of their placement at the end of the seasons and characterized by the attribute of adaptability to circumstances.
  • myoneuralgia — myalgia.
  • numerologist — A practitioner of numerology.
  • old guardism — political conservatism.
  • original gum — See o.g (def 1).
  • ornithogalum — any plant of the genus Ornithogalum
  • plum pudding — a rich steamed or boiled pudding containing raisins, currants, citron, spices, etc.
  • plumbaginous — containing graphite.
  • promulgation — to make known by open declaration; publish; proclaim formally or put into operation (a law, decree of a court, etc.).
  • quitclaiming — Present participle of quitclaim.
  • ruminatingly — in a ruminating manner
  • scribbly gum — any species of the genus Eucalyptus with smooth white bark marked with random patterns made by wood-boring insects
  • semiglobular — possessing the form of half a globe; hemispheric.
  • simple group — a group that has no normal subgroup except the group itself and the identity.
  • simple sugar — monosaccharide.
  • slumberingly — in a slumbering manner
  • sodium light — the light produced by a sodium lamp
  • sporangiolum — a small sporangium
  • tumbling box — a box, pivoted at two corners, used in the manner of a tumbling barrel.
  • unassumingly — modest; unpretentious.
  • unbecomingly — detracting from one's appearance, character, or reputation; unattractive or unseemly: an unbecoming hat; unbecoming language.
  • uncompelling — tending to compel, as to force or push toward a course of action; overpowering: There were compelling reasons for their divorce.
  • unglamorized — not glamorized
  • unimaginable — capable of being imagined or conceived.
  • unimpugnable — not capable of being challenged or criticized
  • unmeaningful — not meaningful; without significance.
  • unmoralising — not moralising
  • unmoralizing — not moralizing
  • unslumbering — not sleeping
  • williamsburg — a city in SE Virginia: colonial capital of Virginia; now restored to its original pre-Revolutionary style.
  • wing formula — a numerical representation of the relative lengths of the primary feathers of a bird's wing, used in identifying similar species, as flycatchers.
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