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11-letter words containing o, n, s, m

  • centromeres — Plural form of centromere.
  • centrosomal — Of or pertaining to a centrosome or centrosomes.
  • centrosomes — Plural form of centrosome.
  • centrosomic — Relating to the centrosome.
  • ceremonials — Plural form of ceremonial.
  • ceremonious — especially or excessively polite or formal
  • ceylon moss — a red East Indian seaweed, Gracilaria lichenoides, from which agar is made
  • chaenomeles — any of a genus of deciduous shrubs within the family Rosaceae, native to East Asia
  • chain-smoke — Someone who chain-smokes smokes cigarettes or cigars continuously.
  • champignons — Plural form of champignon.
  • championess — a female champion
  • chemosensor — A cell in a sense organ that can convert a chemical stimulus into some form of action.
  • chironomids — Plural form of chironomid.
  • chloramines — Plural form of chloramine.
  • chrismation — a rite of initiation involving anointing with chrism and taking place at the same time as baptism
  • christendom — All the Christian people and countries in the world can be referred to as Christendom.
  • chronograms — Plural form of chronogram.
  • chrysomonad — any golden-yellow to brown freshwater algae of the class Chrysomonadales (phylum Chrysophyta), living singly or in colonies; blooms may color the water brown.
  • chum salmon — a large salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) with pale flesh, found in the N Pacific
  • cinemagoers — Plural form of cinemagoer.
  • cinemascope — an anamorphic process of wide-screen film projection in which an image of approximately twice the usual width is squeezed into a 35mm frame and then screened by a projector having complementary lenses
  • clinometers — Plural form of clinometer.
  • coenobitism — the practice of coenobites
  • cognitivism — the meta-ethical thesis that moral judgments state facts and so are either true or false
  • colonialism — Colonialism is the practice by which a powerful country directly controls less powerful countries and uses their resources to increase its own power and wealth.
  • columnistic — belonging or relating to a columnist
  • combinators — Plural form of combinator.
  • combustions — Plural form of combustion.
  • comediennes — Plural form of comedienne.
  • comicalness — The state or quality of being comical.
  • commandants — Plural form of commandant.
  • commandeers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commandeer.
  • commensally — In a commensal manner.
  • commissions — Plural form of commission.
  • commitments — the act of committing.
  • common cost — costs assignable to two or more products, operations, departments, etc., of a company.
  • common lisp — (language)   A dialect of Lisp defined by a consortium of companies brought together in 1981 by the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Companies included Symbolics, Lisp Machines, Inc., Digital Equipment Corporation, Bell Labs., Xerox, Hewlett-Packard, Lawrence Livermore Labs., Carnegie-Mellon University, Stanford University, Yale, MIT and USC Berkeley. Common Lisp is lexically scoped by default but can be dynamically scoped. Common Lisp is a large and complex language, fairly close to a superset of MacLisp. It features lexical binding, data structures using defstruct and setf, closures, multiple values, types using declare and a variety of numerical types. Function calls allow "&optional", keyword and "&rest" arguments. Generic sequence can either be a list or an array. It provides formatted printing using escape characters. Common LISP now includes CLOS, an extended LOOP macro, condition system, pretty printing and logical pathnames. Implementations include AKCL, CCL, CLiCC, CLISP, CLX, CMU Common Lisp, DCL, KCL, MCL and WCL. Mailing list: <[email protected]>.
  • common salt — salt1 (def 1).
  • common seal — the official seal of a corporate body
  • commonloops — (language)   Xerox's object-oriented Lisp which led to CLOS. See also Portable CommonLoops.
  • commonsense — sound practical judgment that is independent of specialized knowledge, training, or the like; normal native intelligence.
  • communalise — Alternative form of communalize.
  • communalism — a system or theory of government in which the state is seen as a loose federation of self-governing communities
  • communalist — An advocate of communalism.
  • communiques — Misspelling of communiqués.
  • communistic — of, characteristic of, or relating to communism
  • communities — Plural form of community.
  • compactness — joined or packed together; closely and firmly united; dense; solid: compact soil.
  • comparisons — Plural form of comparison.
  • compassings — contrivances or schemes
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