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8-letter words containing o, m, i, t

  • midmonth — the middle of the month
  • midpoint — a point at or near the middle of, or equidistant from, both ends, as of a line: the midpoint of a boundary.
  • midstory — the layer of vegetation in a forest that consists of those trees whose height is in between the heights of the smallest and tallest trees
  • miglitol — A particular oral antidiabetic drug.
  • migrator — (computing) A computer program that helps move objects between locations, e.g. from a legacy system to a new technology.
  • milepost — any of a series of posts set up to mark distance by miles, as along a highway, or an individual post showing the distance to or from a place.
  • milkwort — any plant or shrub of the genus Polygala, formerly supposed to increase the secretion of milk.
  • miltonia — any of various epiphytic tropical American orchids of the genus Miltonia, having sprays of showy, flat, variously colored flowers.
  • miltonic — of or relating to the poet Milton or his writings.
  • minamoto — a member of a powerful family in Japan that ruled as shoguns from 1192 to 1333.
  • minatory — menacing; threatening.
  • mind out — to be careful or pay attention
  • miniator — to illuminate (a manuscript) in red; rubricate.
  • minimoto — a reduced-size replica racing motorcycle powered by a two-stroke petrol engine and used for racing
  • minorite — Friar Minor.
  • minority — the smaller part or number; a number, part, or amount forming less than half of the whole.
  • minotaur — Classical Mythology. a monster, the offspring of Pasiphaë and the Cretan bull, that had the head of a bull on the body of a man: housed in the Cretan Labyrinth, it was fed on human flesh until Theseus, helped by Ariadne, killed it.
  • mirliton — kazoo.
  • misallot — to allot wrongly
  • misatone — to atone wrongly or improperly
  • misbegot — Misbegotten; unlawfully or irregularly begotten; of bad origin.
  • miscount — an erroneous counting; miscalculation.
  • misdoubt — doubt or suspicion.
  • misletoe — Archaic form of mistletoe.
  • mispoint — (transitive) To point improperly; to punctuate wrongly.
  • misquote — a quotation that is incorrect.
  • misroute — Divert or direct to the wrong place or by the wrong route.
  • miss out — to fail to hit or strike: to miss a target.
  • mistcoat — (in house painting or interior decoration) a coat of thinner, sometimes pigmented, applied to a finish coat of paint to increase its luster.
  • misthrow — (transitive) To throw incorrectly.
  • mistouch — To touch inappropriately, wrongly or by mistake.
  • mistutor — to teach badly or wrongly
  • miswrote — to trace or form (characters, letters, words, etc.) on the surface of some material, as with a pen, pencil, or other instrument or means; inscribe: Write your name on the board.
  • mitogens — Plural form of mitogen.
  • mitzvoth — any of the collection of 613 commandments or precepts in the Bible and additional ones of rabbinic origin that relate chiefly to the religious and moral conduct of Jews.
  • moatlike — Resembling a moat or some aspect of one.
  • mobility — the quality of being mobile.
  • mocktail — a nonalcoholic cocktail.
  • modalist — an adherent of modalism
  • modality — the quality or state of being modal.
  • mode bit — A flag, usually in hardware, that selects between two (usually quite different) modes of operation. The connotations are different from flag bit in that mode bits are mainly written during a boot or set-up phase, are seldom explicitly read, and seldom change over the lifetime of an ordinary program. The classic example was the EBCDIC-vs.-ASCII bit (#12) of the Program Status Word of the IBM 360. Another was the bit on a PDP-12 that controlled whether it ran the PDP-8 or the LINC instruction set.
  • modelist — a person who makes models, as of airplanes.
  • moieties — Plural form of moiety.
  • moistens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of moisten.
  • moistest — moderately or slightly wet; damp.
  • moistful — loaded with or full of wetness or moisture
  • moistify — to cause to become wet or moist
  • moisture — condensed or diffused liquid, especially water: moisture in the air.
  • molality — the number of moles of solute per kilogram of solvent.
  • molarity — the number of moles of solute per liter of solution.
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