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12-letter words containing r, o, m, t, e

  • motor-driven — propelled or made to function by means of a motor
  • motor-minded — disposed to perceive one's environment in terms of mechanical or muscular activity.
  • motorbicycle — a small, lightweight motorcycle.
  • motormouthed — (of a person) Being a motor mouth; inclined to talk too much.
  • motorscooter — A motorcycle or moped with a step-through frame.
  • mount carmel — a mountain ridge in NW Israel, extending from the Samarian Hills to the Mediterranean. Highest point: about 540 m (1800 ft)
  • mount desert — island off the S coast of Me.: resort: c. 100 sq mi (259 sq km)
  • mount elbert — a mountain in central Colorado, in the Sawatch range. Height: 4399 m (14 431 ft)
  • mount erebus — a volcano in Antarctica, on Ross Island: discovered by Sir James Ross in 1841 and named after his ship. Height: 3794 m (12 448 ft)
  • mount vernon — the home and tomb of George Washington in NE Virginia, on the Potomac, 15 miles (24 km) below Washington, D.C.
  • mountaineers — Plural form of mountaineer.
  • mouse arrest — (jargon)   Getting busted for violating an on-line service's rule of conduct. "Sorry I couldn't get back to you. AOL put me under mouse arrest."
  • mouse trails — (operating system)   A feature (usually of Graphical User Interfaces) which causes the mouse pointer to leave a trail across the screen. This is done by keeping track of the last eight or so (maybe configurable) pointer positions, and only erasing the oldest. This means that at any time, there may be up to eight pointers on the screen, but if the mouse is still, they will all be in the same position, and so only one will be visible. When the mouse moves, it appears to leave a trail of pointers behind it, and this can dramatically increase the visibility of the pointer when using LCD screens. The older ones had such long persistence that a single mouse pointer, when moving, tended to be completely invisible, and on a cluttered screen, was very difficult to find.
  • mousetrapped — Simple past tense and past participle of mousetrap.
  • mousquetaire — musketeer.
  • mouthbreeder — any of several fishes of the genera Tilapia and Haplochromis, that hatch and care for their young in the mouth.
  • mouthbrooder — A freshwater cichlid fish that protects its eggs (and in some cases its young) by carrying them in its mouth.
  • movie rating — a classification of a film as according to the age of viewers thought suitable to see it, and which can differ according to the level in the film of violent content, sexual content, etc
  • mucoproteins — Plural form of mucoprotein.
  • mucopurulent — containing or composed of mucus and pus.
  • multi-storey — A multi-storey building has several floors at different levels above the ground.
  • multicolored — of several or many colors.
  • multiproblem — characterized by or experiencing several problems
  • multipronged — having or composed of several prongs: a multipronged electric plug.
  • multipurpose — able to be used for several purposes: a multipurpose lawn spray.
  • multisensory — of or relating to the senses or sensation.
  • multistoried — Multi-storey.
  • multitowered — comprising several towers
  • musterbation — Alt form musturbation.
  • muttonbirder — a person who hunts muttonbirds
  • mycobacteria — Plural form of mycobacterium.
  • mycoparasite — a parasitic fungus whose host is another fungus.
  • mycoproteins — Plural form of mycoprotein.
  • myrmecophyte — A plant that lives in association with a colony of ants. The degree of association varies and is assumed to be symbiotic in some cases.
  • mysteriously — full of, characterized by, or involving mystery: a mysterious occurrence.
  • mystery tour — an excursion to an unspecified destination
  • mythographer — a person who collects or records myths in writing.
  • mythologizer — One who, or that which, mythologizes.
  • nanocomputer — (architecture)   /nan'oh-k*m-pyoo'tr/ A computer with molecular-sized switching elements. Designs for mechanical nanocomputers which use single-molecule sliding rods for their logic have been proposed. The controller for a nanobot would be a nanocomputer. Some nanocomputers can also be called quantum computers because quantum physics plays a major role in calculations. Richard P. Feynman is still cited today for his work in this area.
  • nanomaterial — A material having particles or constituents of nanoscale dimensions, or one that is produced by nanotechnology.
  • nemorivagant — Lb rare wandering in the woods.
  • neoformation — a new and abnormal growth of tissue; tumor; neoplasm.
  • neotribalism — Ideology that humans have evolved to live in a tribal, as opposed to a modern society.
  • neoytterbium — ytterbium.
  • nephelometer — Bacteriology. an apparatus containing a series of barium chloride standards used to determine the number of bacteria in a suspension.
  • nephelometry — Bacteriology. an apparatus containing a series of barium chloride standards used to determine the number of bacteria in a suspension.
  • nephrostomes — Plural form of nephrostome.
  • nephrotomies — Plural form of nephrotomy.
  • nestorianism — one of a sect of followers of Nestorius who denied the hypostatic union and were represented as maintaining the existence of two distinct persons in Christ.
  • neurectomies — Plural form of neurectomy.
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