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13-letter words containing o, n, e, s, g, a

  • magnetographs — Plural form of magnetograph.
  • magnetometers — Plural form of magnetometer.
  • magnetooptics — the branch of physics that deals with magnetooptic phenomena.
  • magnetosheath — the region between the magnetopause of the earth or of some other planet and the shock front caused by the solar wind.
  • magnetosphere — the outer region of the earth's ionosphere, where the earth's magnetic field controls the motion of charged particles, as in the Van Allen belts. Compare magnetopause.
  • magnetostatic — Of or pertaining to magnetostatics.
  • magnoliaceous — belonging to the plant family Magnoliaceae.
  • managed bonds — investment in a combination of fixed interest securities, equities, gilts, and property, in which an investment manager, acting on a client's behalf, varies the amount invested in each according to the returns expected
  • manganiferous — containing manganese.
  • mango madness — the irrational behaviour of a person suffering from the effects of living in tropical heat
  • mating season — the period during each year when a particular bird, animal, or fish mates
  • measuring rod — ruler, gauge, stick for measuring
  • measuringworm — the larva of any geometrid moth, which progresses by bringing the rear end of the body forward and then advancing the front end.
  • megalomaniacs — Plural form of megalomaniac.
  • megasporangia — a sporangium containing megaspores.
  • melanogenesis — the production of melanin
  • memorialising — Present participle of memorialise.
  • micrognuemacs — (text, tool)   (mg) A Public Domain Emacs-style editor modified from MicroEmacs to be more compatible with GNU Emacs. mg is essentially free, it is not associated with the GNU project, and does not have the GNU copyright restrictions. It is a small, fast, portable editor for people who can't run real Emacs thing for one reason or another. It has few if any of the MicroEmacs features that were incompatible with GNU Emacs and adds missing features that seemed essential. MicroGnuEmacs is derived from, and aims to replace, v30 of MicroEmacs, the latest version from the original MicroEmacs author Dave Conroy. The chief contributors were Mike Meyer <[email protected]>, Mic Kaczmarczik <[email protected]>, Bob Larson, and Dave Brower <[email protected]>. mg version 1a of 1986-11-16 works with 4.2BSD, 4.3BSD, Ultrix-32, OS9/68k, VMS, Amiga, System V, Eunice. It is included in base OpenBSD. It should also support MS-DOS, PC-DOS and the Rainbow.
  • miscegenation — marriage or cohabitation between two people from different racial groups, especially, in the U.S., between a black person and a white person: In 1968 the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that state laws prohibiting miscegenation were unconstitutional.
  • misgovernance — to govern or manage badly.
  • modern greats — (at Oxford University) the Honour School of Philosophy, Politics, and Economics
  • moneychangers — Plural form of moneychanger.
  • morse signals — signals encoded using the Morse Code
  • mousetrapping — Present participle of mousetrap.
  • nasopharynges — Plural form of nasopharynx.
  • neonatologist — the study of the development and disorders of newborn children.
  • neurosurgical — Of, or pertaining to neurosurgery.
  • new stone age — the Neolithic period.
  • newgroup wars — /n[y]oo'groop worz/ [Usenet] The salvos of dueling "newgroup" and "rmgroup" messages sometimes exchanged by persons on opposite sides of a dispute over whether a newsgroup should be created net-wide, or (even more frequently) whether an obsolete one should be removed. These usually settle out within a week or two as it becomes clear whether the group has a natural constituency (usually, it doesn't). At times, especially in the completely anarchic alt hierarchy, the names of newsgroups themselves become a form of comment or humour; e.g. the spinoff of alt.swedish.chef.bork.bork.bork from alt.tv.muppets in early 1990, or any number of specialised abuse groups named after particularly notorious flamers, e.g. alt.weemba.
  • nitrogen base — Chemistry, Biochemistry. a nitrogen-containing organic compound that has the chemical properties of a base, especially a pyrimidine or purine: Four nitrogen bases are present in a DNA molecule.
  • noise masking — the use of noise to cancel out another sound, as with a white noise machine.
  • noise shaping — (communications)   Spectral noise transformation in a quantisation processes. Noise is "colourised" in the time domain an/or frequency domain by adding parts of the previous sample. The SNR bandwidth and SNR time integral stay the same, so some noise decreases, some increases, but overall noise always increases. An example of noise shaping in the frequency domain is quantisation of samples on a Compact Disc to reduce noise below -98 dB. The are different algorithms with slightly different filters, e.g. Super Bitmapping, 4D Recording. A time domain example is MPEG-4 AAC TNS, which is a method to enhance quality by temporal forming of the noise in a transform block.
  • nominal wages — minimum pay
  • non-dangerous — full of danger or risk; causing danger; perilous; risky; hazardous; unsafe.
  • non-designate — to mark or point out; indicate; show; specify.
  • nonagenarians — Plural form of nonagenarian.
  • nonaggression — abstention from aggression, especially by a nation.
  • nonaggressive — Not aggressive.
  • nonce-bashing — violent attacks against rapists, child molesters, or sexual offenders, esp inside a prison
  • nondecreasing — not decreasing.
  • nongregarious — (zoology) Not gregarious; solitary. Compare 'ungregarious'.
  • nonincreasing — not increasing.
  • nonsegregated — Not segregated.
  • north sea gas — natural gas extracted from deposits beneath the North Sea
  • norwegian sea — part of the Arctic Ocean, N and E of Iceland and between Greenland and Norway.
  • nosogeography — the study of the geographical causes and distribution of diseases.
  • not a sausage — nothing at all
  • ocean springs — a town in SE Mississippi.
  • octagon house — a type of American house, c. 1850, having an octagonal perimeter to reduce exterior wall area.
  • octagon scale — a scale used in laying out octagonal figures of various sizes.
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