0%

12-letter words containing o, s, i, e, t

  • for instance — a case or occurrence of anything: fresh instances of oppression.
  • for-instance — an instance or example: Give me a for-instance of what you mean.
  • fore-topsail — a topsail set on a foremast on a ship.
  • foredestined — Simple past tense and past participle of foredestine.
  • foresightful — care or provision for the future; provident care; prudence.
  • forestalling — Present participle of forestall.
  • forestaysail — a triangular sail set on a forestay; the innermost headsail of a vessel.
  • foretopsails — Plural form of foretopsail.
  • fornicatress — (obsolete) A woman guilty of fornication.
  • forrest city — a city in E Arkansas.
  • fort pickensAndrew, 1739–1817, American Revolutionary general.
  • fortepianist — the player of a fortepiano
  • fortresslike — Resembling a fortress in shape or impregnability.
  • forty-niners — a person, especially a prospector, who went to California in 1849 during the gold rush.
  • fosphenytoin — a prodrug that produces phenytoin and is taken to prevent or treat seizures.
  • foster child — a child raised by someone who is not its natural or adoptive parent.
  • four-striper — a captain in the U.S. Navy.
  • frictionless — surface resistance to relative motion, as of a body sliding or rolling.
  • frog sticker — Slang. a knife, especially one carried as a weapon.
  • frog-sticker — Slang. a knife, especially one carried as a weapon.
  • frontiersman — a person, especially a man, who lives on the frontier, especially in sparsely settled regions.
  • frontiersmen — a person, especially a man, who lives on the frontier, especially in sparsely settled regions.
  • frontispiece — an illustrated leaf preceding the title page of a book.
  • frozen stiff — feeling very cold
  • fructiferous — fruit-bearing; producing fruit.
  • fructosamine — (organic compound) A chemical compound that can be considered the result of a reaction between fructose and ammonia or an amine (with a molecule of water being released).
  • functionless — Lacking a function.
  • galactosemia — an inherited disorder characterized by the inability to metabolize galactose and requiring a galactose-free diet to avoid consequent mental retardation and eye, spleen, and liver abnormalities.
  • galactosides — Plural form of galactoside.
  • gas equation — an equation that equates the product of the pressure and the volume of one mole of a gas to the product of its thermodynamic temperature and the gas constant. The equation is exact for an ideal gas and is a good approximation for real gases at low pressures
  • gastrocnemii — Plural form of gastrocnemius.
  • gastrodermis — the inner cell layer of the body of an invertebrate.
  • gastronomies — Plural form of gastronomy.
  • gastrotomies — Plural form of gastrotomy.
  • gelatigenous — (archaic) Producing or yielding gelatin.
  • generosities — Plural form of generosity.
  • gentilitious — relating to a gens
  • geochemistry — the science dealing with the chemical changes in and the composition of the earth's crust.
  • geomagnetism — the earth's magnetic field and associated phenomena.
  • geomagnetist — someone who studies, or is an expert in, geomagnetism
  • geophysicist — the branch of geology that deals with the physics of the earth and its atmosphere, including oceanography, seismology, volcanology, and geomagnetism.
  • geoscientist — a specialist in earth science.
  • geostrategic — Of, pertaining to, or using geostrategy.
  • germinations — Plural form of germination.
  • gersdorffite — a mineral, sulfide-arsenide of nickel, NiAsS, occurring in metallic, light-gray cubes.
  • gesticulator — to make or use gestures, especially in an animated or excited manner with or instead of speech.
  • get to grips — to deal with (a problem or subject)
  • ghost writer — a person who writes one or numerous speeches, books, articles, etc., for another person who is named as or presumed to be the author.
  • ghostwriters — Plural form of ghostwriter.
  • ghostwritten — Written by a ghostwriter.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?