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12-letter words containing s, e, m, i, c

  • majestically — characterized by or possessing majesty; of lofty dignity or imposing aspect; stately; grand: the majestic Alps.
  • majesticness — The quality of being majestic.
  • make sb sick — disgust sb morally
  • maledictions — Plural form of malediction.
  • malefactions — Plural form of malefaction.
  • malignancies — Plural form of malignancy.
  • malpractices — Plural form of malpractice.
  • manicure set — a set of small tools designed for trimming and caring for the nails
  • mantelpieces — Plural form of mantelpiece.
  • manu-service — denoting a business that involves both the manufacture of goods and the provision of after-sales services
  • marcellus ii — (Marcello Cervini) 1501–55, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1555.
  • mare crisium — (Sea of Crises) a dark plain in the first quadrant of the face of the moon: about 66,000 sq. mi. (170,000 sq. km).
  • 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.
  • masculinized — Simple past tense and past participle of masculinize.
  • mass society — a society whose members are characterized by having segmentalized, impersonal relations, a high degree of physical and social mobility, a spectator relation to events, and a pronounced tendency to conform to external popular norms.
  • mastectomies — Plural form of mastectomy.
  • masterpieces — Plural form of masterpiece.
  • matriarchies — Plural form of matriarchy.
  • matriculates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of matriculate.
  • mechanicians — Plural form of mechanician.
  • mechatronics — The synergistic combination of mechanical engineering, electronic engineering and software engineering for the study of automata from an engineering perspective and the control of advanced hybrid systems.
  • media circus — excessive news coverage
  • mediocrities — the state or quality of being mediocre.
  • melancholics — Plural form of melancholic.
  • melancholies — a gloomy state of mind, especially when habitual or prolonged; depression.
  • memory stick — computing: flashcard, dongle
  • mendaciously — In a lying or deceitful manner.
  • meniscectomy — the surgical excision of a meniscus, as of the knee joint.
  • mercantilism — mercantile practices or spirit; commercialism.
  • mercantilist — Of, pertaining to, or believing in mercantilism.
  • merchandised — the manufactured goods bought and sold in any business.
  • merchandiser — the manufactured goods bought and sold in any business.
  • merchandises — the manufactured goods bought and sold in any business.
  • mercifulness — full of mercy; characterized by, expressing, or showing mercy; compassionate: a merciful God.
  • mercurialism — poisoning by mercury.
  • mercurialist — a person born under the planet Mercury
  • meretricious — alluring by a show of flashy or vulgar attractions; tawdry.
  • meristematic — consisting of or having the properties of meristem.
  • meristically — in a meristic manner
  • mesmerically — In a mesmeric manner; by, or as if by, hypnotism.
  • mesoamerican — Alternative form of Mesoamerican.
  • mesocephalic — having a head with a cephalic index between that of dolichocephaly and brachycephaly.
  • mesocortical — Of or pertaining to the mesocortex.
  • mesolecithal — centrolecithal.
  • metabolomics — the study of all the metabolites present in cells, tissues, and organs
  • metabonomics — (biochemistry, genetics) metabolomics.
  • metachronism — An error in chronological ordering in which a character or an event is placed at too late a time.
  • metafictions — Plural form of metafiction.
  • metagenomics — (genetics) The study of genomes recovered from environmental samples; especially the differentiation of genomes from multiple organisms or individuals, either in a symbiotic relationship, or at a crime scene.
  • metaphrastic — a person who translates or changes a literary work from one form to another, as prose into verse.
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