0%

12-letter words containing p, e, r, m, a, s

  • hypermarkets — Plural form of hypermarket.
  • hyperosmolar — Of, pertaining to, or as a result of hyperosmolarity.
  • hyperrealism — interest in or concern for the actual or real, as distinguished from the abstract, speculative, etc.
  • hypersarcoma — a growth of proud or fungous flesh
  • hypersomniac — a tendency to sleep excessively.
  • imperforates — Plural form of imperforate.
  • imperialised — Simple past tense and past participle of imperialise.
  • imperialists — Plural form of imperialist.
  • imperishable — not subject to decay; indestructible; enduring.
  • imperishably — In an imperishable manner.
  • impersonally — In an impersonal manner.
  • impersonated — to assume the character or appearance of; pretend to be: He was arrested for impersonating a police officer.
  • impersonates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impersonate.
  • impersonator — a person who pretends to be another.
  • implicatures — Plural form of implicature.
  • importancies — Plural form of importancy.
  • imprecations — Plural form of imprecation.
  • impressional — a strong effect produced on the intellect, feelings, conscience, etc.
  • imprisonable — capable of being imprisoned or incarcerated
  • james harperJames, 1795–1869, and his brothers John, 1797–1875, (Joseph) Wesley, 1801–70, and Fletcher, 1806–77, U.S. printers and publishers.
  • lamplighters — Plural form of lamplighter.
  • lamprophyres — Plural form of lamprophyre.
  • laparotomies — Plural form of laparotomy.
  • leprosariums — Plural form of leprosarium.
  • litmus paper — a strip of paper impregnated with litmus, used as a chemical indicator.
  • macropterous — having long or large wings or fins.
  • madreporites — Plural form of madreporite.
  • malpractices — Plural form of malpractice.
  • manspreading — the practice by a male passenger on public transport of sitting with his legs wide apart, so denying space to passengers beside him
  • marine corps — a branch of the U.S. Armed Forces trained for land, sea, and air combat, typically for land combat in conjunction with an amphibious or airborne landing, and whose commandant is responsible to the secretary of the navy.
  • marketplaces — Plural form of marketplace.
  • marlinespike — a pointed iron implement used in separating the strands of rope in splicing, marling, etc.
  • marlingspike — Alternative spelling of marlinspike.
  • mass-produce — to produce or manufacture (goods) in large quantities, especially by machinery.
  • massotherapy — treatment by massage.
  • master point — a point awarded to a bridge player who has won or placed in an officially recognized tournament.
  • master print — an original copy of a cinema film that can be used to produce other copies
  • masterpieces — Plural form of masterpiece.
  • mastigophore — Any flagellate of the phylum Mastigophora.
  • meanspirited — petty; small-minded; ungenerous: a meanspirited man, unwilling to forgive.
  • media person — a person who works in the mass media
  • median strip — a paved, planted, or landscaped strip in the center of a highway that separates lanes of traffic going in opposite directions.
  • mediatorship — the position of a mediator
  • meganthropus — a proposed genus of extinct, late lower Pleistocene primates based on two large lower jaws found in Java, and believed to be either Australopithecine or human.
  • melanophores — Plural form of melanophore.
  • melrose park — a city in NE Illinois, near Chicago.
  • metamorphism — Geology. a change in the structure or constitution of a rock due to natural agencies, as pressure and heat, especially when the rock becomes harder and more completely crystalline.
  • metamorphist — a member of a group of 16th century Christians who believed that the humanly body of Jesus Christ metamorphosed into God during the Ascension
  • metamorphose — to change the form or nature of; transform.
  • metamorphous — metamorphic.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?