10-letter words containing o, m, e, n, t
- copayments — Plural form of copayment.
- cost money — If you say that something costs money, you mean that it has to be paid for, and perhaps cannot be afforded.
- coterminal — having the same border or covering the same area.
- counterman — a man who works on a lunch counter or behind the counter of a cafe
- countermen — Plural form of counterman.
- countrymen — a native or inhabitant of one's own country.
- couplement — the action of coupling or the state of being coupled
- covermount — A covermount is a small gift attached to the front cover of a magazine.
- cremations — Plural form of cremation.
- cyanometer — an instrument used for measuring the blueness of the sky
- decimation — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
- defamation — Defamation is the damaging of someone's good reputation by saying something bad and untrue about them.
- demantoids — Plural form of demantoid.
- demicanton — either of the two parts of certain Swiss cantons
- demolition — The demolition of a building is the act of deliberately destroying it, often in order to build something else in its place.
- demon star — Algol.
- demonetise — To remove the status of legal tender from a coin etc. and remove it from circulation.
- demonetize — to deprive (a metal) of its capacity as a monetary standard
- demounting — Present participle of demount.
- den mother — a woman who supervises meetings of a den of Cub Scouts
- denominate — to give a specific name to; designate
- denotement — A sign, indication.
- denouement — In a book, play, or series of events, the denouement is the sequence of events at the end, when things come to a conclusion.
- deployment — The deployment of troops, resources, or equipment is the organization and positioning of them so that they are ready for quick action.
- deportment — Your deportment is the way you behave, especially the way you walk and move.
- dermatogen — a meristem at the apex of stems and roots that gives rise to the epidermis
- devotement — The state of being devoted, or set apart by a vow.
- devourment — the act of devouring
- dimetrodon — an extinct carnivorous mammallike reptile, of the genus Dimetrodon, dominant in North America during the Permian Period, up to 10 feet (3.1 meter) long and usually bearing spinal sails.
- diremption — a sharp division into two parts; disjunction; separation.
- dismounted — Pertaining to a horseman who has gotten off his horse, or to something which has been removed from its usual mounting, as with a statue off its pedestal, a framed picture from a wall, or a chandelier hanging from a ceiling.
- disownment — to refuse to acknowledge as belonging or pertaining to oneself; deny the ownership of or responsibility for; repudiate; renounce: to disown one's heirs; to disown a published statement.
- documental — Also, documental [dok-yuh-men-tl] /ˌdɒk yəˈmɛn tl/ (Show IPA). pertaining to, consisting of, or derived from documents: a documentary history of France.
- documented — a written or printed paper furnishing information or evidence, as a passport, deed, bill of sale, or bill of lading; a legal or official paper.
- documenter — a written or printed paper furnishing information or evidence, as a passport, deed, bill of sale, or bill of lading; a legal or official paper.
- dolcemente — softly; sweetly
- dominative — dominating; controlling.
- downmarket — Toward or relating to the cheaper or less prestigious sector of the market.
- downstream — upstream
- earthwoman — a female inhabitant or native of the planet Earth.
- earthwomen — Plural form of earthwoman.
- ebionitism — The system or doctrine of the Ebionites.
- eboulement — a collapse; cave-in.
- econometer — a device in a car that informs the driver of how much fuel they are consuming
- econometry — Econometrics.
- economists — Plural form of economist.
- ectoenzyme — exoenzyme.
- edmundston — a city in NW New Brunswick, in SE Canada, on the upper part of the St. John River.
- eighteenmo — Octodecimo (as a paper size in printing).
- eliminator — One who, or that which, eliminates.