11-letter words containing o, t, l, i
- nonmilitant — Not militant.
- nonmilitary — Not belonging to, characteristic of, or involving the armed forces; civilian.
- nonmotility — the state of being nonmotile
- nonmystical — not mystical
- nonnational — One who is not a national.
- nonrational — agreeable to reason; reasonable; sensible: a rational plan for economic development.
- nonrelative — a person who is connected with another or others by blood or marriage.
- nonsilicate — Mineralogy. any of the largest group of mineral compounds, as quartz, beryl, garnet, feldspar, mica, and various kinds of clay, consisting of SiO 2 or SiO 4 groupings and one or more metallic ions, with some forms containing hydrogen. Silicates constitute well over 90 percent of the rock-forming minerals of the earth's crust.
- nonsolution — a proposed solution to a problem that is deemed inadequate or not a real solution
- nontactical — Not tactical.
- nontangible — Intangible.
- nonterminal — Alternative spelling of non-terminal.
- nontropical — not located in or originating from the tropics, not having the characteristics of the tropics
- nonvalidity — the quality of being nonvalid or invalid, a lack of validity
- nonvertical — being in a position or direction perpendicular to the plane of the horizon; upright; plumb.
- nonvirulent — Not virulent.
- nonvolatile — not volatile.
- normal time — the standard length of time allowed for a match before any extra time, such as injury time, is added
- normalities — conforming to the standard or the common type; usual; not abnormal; regular; natural.
- normatively — of or relating to a norm, especially an assumed norm regarded as the standard of correctness in behavior, speech, writing, etc.
- northcliffe — Viscount, Alfred Charles William Harmsworth.
- northerlies — Plural form of northerly.
- nostalgists — Plural form of nostalgist.
- notaphilist — a person who studies or collects paper money
- notionalist — someone more concerned with the semantic content of language than with the formal structure
- notionality — The state or property of being notional.
- notoriously — widely and unfavorably known: a notorious gambler. Synonyms: infamous, egregious, outrageous, arrant, flagrant, disreputable.
- novelettish — Resembling or characteristic of a novelette.
- novelettist — a person who writes novelettes
- nucleotides — any of a group of molecules that, when linked together, form the building blocks of DNA or RNA: composed of a phosphate group, the bases adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine, and a pentose sugar, in RNA the thymine base being replaced by uracil.
- nullipotent — (mathematics, computing) Describing an action which has no side effect. Queries are typically nullipotent: they return useful data, but do not change the data structure queried. Contrast with idempotent.
- nummulation — the red blood corpuscles in a small amount of blood that produce a formation akin to a heap of coins
- nutritional — the act or process of nourishing or of being nourished.
- object lisp — (language) An object-oriented Lisp developed by Lisp Machines Inc. (LMI) in about 1987. Object Lisp was based on nested closures and operator shadowing. Several competing object-orientated extensions to Lisp were around at the time, such as Flavors, in use by Symbolics; Common Objects, developed by Hewlett-Packard; and CommonLoops in use by Xerox. LMI submitted the specification as a candidate for an object-oriented standard for Common Lisp, but it was defeated in favour of CLOS.
- objectional — Objectionable.
- objectively — something that one's efforts or actions are intended to attain or accomplish; purpose; goal; target: the objective of a military attack; the objective of a fund-raising drive.
- obligations — Plural form of obligation.
- obligements — Plural form of obligement.
- obliquation — the fact or process of veering or moving in an oblique or slantwise direction
- obliquities — Plural form of obliquity.
- obliquitous — the state of being oblique.
- obliterable — Capable of being obliterated.
- obliterated — to remove or destroy all traces of; do away with; destroy completely.
- obliterates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of obliterate.
- obliterator — to remove or destroy all traces of; do away with; destroy completely.
- obliviation — Total removal or erasure.
- obstetrical — of or relating to the care and treatment of women in childbirth and during the period before and after delivery.
- obstinately — firmly or stubbornly adhering to one's purpose, opinion, etc.; not yielding to argument, persuasion, or entreaty.
- obtrusively — having or showing a disposition to obtrude, as by imposing oneself or one's opinions on others.
- occidentals — Plural form of occidental.