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11-letter words containing n, e, r, s, t

  • starchiness — of, relating to, or of the nature of starch.
  • stark naked — Someone who is stark naked is completely naked.
  • stark-naked — absolutely naked.
  • startlement — to disturb or agitate suddenly as by surprise or alarm.
  • stationer's — a shop which sells stationery
  • steam organ — calliope (def 1).
  • steam train — a locomotive powered by steam
  • stearoptene — the oxygenated solid part of an essential oil (opposed to eleoptene).
  • steganogram — a coded message
  • stem canker — a disease of plants characterized by cankers on the stems and twigs and caused by any of several fungi.
  • stem ginger — ginger root in sugar syrup
  • stem-winder — a stemwinding watch.
  • stench trap — a trap in a sewer that by means of a water seal prevents the upward passage of foul-smelling gases
  • stenocardia — angina pectoris, a contraction of the heart or its vessels due to a lack of oxygen, causing severe chest pain
  • stenochrome — a printed design made using stenochromy
  • stenochromy — the art of printing designs made of more than one colour using a single impression
  • stenography — the art of writing in shorthand.
  • stenohygric — able to withstand only a narrow range of humidity
  • stentmaster — a person who determines the amount of tax owed by the denizens of a town or parish
  • stentorious — stentorian.
  • step-parent — a stepfather or stepmother.
  • stepanakert — a city in and the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, within Azerbaijan.
  • stereoblind — lacking the ability to see in three dimensions through both eyes
  • stereophony — the state or condition of being stereophonic.
  • stern-drive — inboard-outboard (def 1).
  • stern-wheel — propelled by a paddle wheel at the stern.
  • sternotribe — (of a flower) having contact with the sternum of an insect
  • sternutator — a chemical agent causing nose irritation, coughing, etc.
  • stevedoring — the act or practice of loading or unloading a ship, ship's cargo, etc
  • stevengraph — a small picture woven in colored silk thread: introduced in 1879 and mass-produced on a Jacquard-type loom.
  • stipendiary — receiving a stipend; performing services for regular pay.
  • stone broke — having no money whatsoever.
  • stone fruit — a fruit with a stone or hard endocarp, as a peach or plum; drupe.
  • stone river — a river in central Tennessee, flowing NW to the Cumberland River. Compare Murfreesboro.
  • stone-broke — having no money whatsoever.
  • stonecutter — a person who cuts or carves stone.
  • stoneground — (of wheat or other grain) ground between millstones, especially those made of burstone, so as to retain the whole of the grain and preserve nutritional content.
  • stoneroller — an American minnow, Campostoma anomalum, named from its habit of moving stones as it feeds.
  • stonewaller — to engage in stonewalling.
  • stoneworker — any construction, as walls or the like, of stone; stone masonry.
  • stony-broke — completely without money; penniless
  • store brand — an item offered for sale under a store's own label.
  • store front — Store fronts are the windows of stores that can be looked into from the street, often displaying the types of product each store sells.
  • strain gage — A strain gage is a sensor for measuring the amount of strain on a solid surface.
  • stramineous — of or resembling straw.
  • strand line — a shoreline, especially one from which the sea or a lake has receded.
  • strandloper — a member of an extinct tribe of Khoikhoi or Bushmen who lived on seafood gathered on the beaches of southern Africa
  • strangeness — the quality or condition of being strange.
  • strangulate — Pathology, Surgery. to compress or constrict (a duct, intestine, vessel, etc.) so as to prevent circulation or suppress function.
  • strap hinge — a hinge having a flap, especially a long one, attached to one face of a door or the like.
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