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11-letter words containing o, u, e, m

  • noncomputer — Not of or pertaining to computers.
  • nonconsumer — a person who refrains from using or purchasing certain resources, products, or services
  • noncustomer — a person who is not the customer of a particular establishment, or a person who does not buy a product or service
  • nonvenomous — (of an animal) having a gland or glands for secreting venom; able to inflict a poisoned bite, sting, or wound: a venomous snake.
  • normanesque — in the style of Norman architecture, a variety of Romanesque architecture.
  • nototherium — an extinct Pleistocene rhinoceros-sized marsupial of the genus Nototherium, related to the wombats
  • nourishment — something that nourishes; food, nutriment, or sustenance.
  • nucleoplasm — the protoplasm of the nucleus of a cell.
  • nucleosomal — Of or pertaining to a nucleosome.
  • nucleosomes — Plural form of nucleosome.
  • null method — a method of measurement using an electrical device, as a Wheatstone bridge, in which the quantity to be measured is balanced by an opposing known quantity that is varied until the resultant of the two is zero.
  • number work — simple arithmetic and similar mathematical procedures as used and studied at primary level
  • numerations — Plural form of numeration.
  • obscurement — The act of obscuring, or the state of being obscured.
  • oceanariums — Plural form of oceanarium.
  • oecumenical — general; universal.
  • oligomerous — having a small number of component parts
  • ombrogenous — (of plants) able to flourish in wet conditions
  • ombudswomen — Plural form of ombudswoman.
  • omega minus — an unstable negatively charged elementary particle, classified as a baryon, that has a mass 3273 times that of the electron
  • ominousness — portending evil or harm; foreboding; threatening; inauspicious: an ominous bank of dark clouds.
  • on the jump — in a hurry
  • orthohelium — (physics) Form of the helium atom in which the spins of the two electrons are parallel.
  • ostensorium — ostensory.
  • our time(s) — When you refer to our time or our times you are referring to the present period in the history of the world.
  • out of time — having passed a deadline
  • out-compete — to strive to outdo another for acknowledgment, a prize, supremacy, profit, etc.; engage in a contest; vie: to compete in a race; to compete in business.
  • out-migrate — to leave a region, community, etc., to move or settle into a different part of one's country or home territory: People are no longer out-migrating from the South in such large numbers.
  • outdoorsmen — Plural form of outdoorsman.
  • outline map — a map which only provides very basic information so that more details can be added
  • outmaneuver — to outwit, defeat, or frustrate by maneuvering.
  • outnumbered — to exceed in number.
  • outperforms — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outperform.
  • over-assume — to take for granted or without proof: to assume that everyone wants peace. Synonyms: suppose, presuppose; postulate, posit.
  • overconsume — to destroy or expend by use; use up.
  • overmeasure — an excessive or surplus measure or amount: an overmeasure of exuberance.
  • overmuscled — having muscles developed to excess
  • pandemonium — wild uproar or unrestrained disorder; tumult or chaos.
  • peanut worm — any small, unsegmented, marine worm of the phylum Sipuncula, that when disturbed retracts its anterior portion into the body, giving the appearance of a peanut seed.
  • pelargonium — any plant of the genus Pelargonium, the cultivated species of which are usually called geranium. Compare geranium (def 2).
  • pentamerous — consisting of or divided into five parts.
  • pentium pro — (processor)   (Known as "P6" during development) Intel's successor to the Pentium processor, in development Jan 1995, generally available 1995-11-01. The P6 has an internal RISC architecture with a CISC-RISC translator, 3-way superscalar execution, and out-of order execution (or "speculative execution", which Intel calls "Dynamic Execution"). It also features branch prediction and register renaming, and is superpipelined (14 stages). The P6 is made as a two-chip assembly: the first chip is the CPU and 16 kilobyte first-level cache (5.5 million transistors) and the other is a 256 (or 512) kilobyte second-level cache (15 million transistors). The first version has a clock rate of 133 Mhz and consumes about 20W of power. It is about twice as fast as the 100 MHz Pentium. The original 0.35 micron versions of the Pentium Pro released on 1995-11-01 run at 150 and 166 Mhz for desktop machines and up to 200 Mhz for servers. Heat disspation is about 20 Watts. The Pentium Pro is optimised for 32-bit software and runs 16-bit software slower than the original Pentium. The successor was the Pentium II.
  • permutation — the act of permuting or permutating; alteration; transformation.
  • petrol pump — a device at a filling station that is used to deliver petrol to the tank of a car and which displays the quantity, quality, and usually the cost of the petrol delivered
  • pleiomerous — (of a flower) having a greater than normal number of parts
  • plumigerous — wearing or possessing feathers
  • pluviometer — rain gauge.
  • pneumathode — a band or pore of aerating tissue, esp along the stipes of ferns
  • pneumectomy — pneumonectomy.
  • pneumograph — a device for recording graphically the respiratory movements of the thorax.
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