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12-letter words containing s, e, o, f

  • four-flusher — a person who makes false or pretentious claims; bluffer.
  • four-striper — a captain in the U.S. Navy.
  • fourdriniers — Plural form of fourdrinier.
  • fourfoldness — the quality of consisting of four parts
  • fourses cake — a traditional English bread made with lard, dried fruit, and spices
  • fox software — (company)   Developers of FoxBASE+ and FoxPRO. Fox Software merged with Microsoft around 1992. Addresss: Perrysburg, OH, USA.
  • fox squirrel — any of several North American arboreal squirrels varying in color and of an exceptionally large size.
  • francophones — Plural form of francophone.
  • french doors — a door having glass panes throughout or nearly throughout its length.
  • french shore — either of two stretches of coastline inhabited mainly by Francophone Canadians: the W coast of Newfoundland and the SW coast of Nova Scotia between Yarmouth and Digby.
  • french toast — bread dipped in a batter of egg and milk and sautéed until brown, usually served with syrup or sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon.
  • fresco secco — the technique of painting in watercolors on dry plaster. Also called dry fresco, secco. Compare fresco (def 1).
  • fresh out of — having just run out of supplies of
  • frictionless — surface resistance to relative motion, as of a body sliding or rolling.
  • frog sticker — Slang. a knife, especially one carried as a weapon.
  • frog-sticker — Slang. a knife, especially one carried as a weapon.
  • frolicsomely — In a frolicsome manner.
  • frondescence — the process or period of putting forth leaves, as a tree, plant, or the like.
  • frondiferous — Producing fronds.
  • frontiersman — a person, especially a man, who lives on the frontier, especially in sparsely settled regions.
  • frontiersmen — a person, especially a man, who lives on the frontier, especially in sparsely settled regions.
  • frontispiece — an illustrated leaf preceding the title page of a book.
  • frontrunners — Plural form of frontrunner.
  • frozen stiff — feeling very cold
  • fructiferous — fruit-bearing; producing fruit.
  • fructosamine — (organic compound) A chemical compound that can be considered the result of a reaction between fructose and ammonia or an amine (with a molecule of water being released).
  • fulton sheen — Fulton (John) 1895–1979, U.S. Roman Catholic clergyman, writer, and teacher.
  • fumariaceous — belonging to the plant family Fumariaceae.
  • functionless — Lacking a function.
  • fundusectomy — (surgery) The surgical removal of the fundus of an organ, such as the uterus or the stomach.
  • fungus stone — the Canadian tuckahoe, Polyporus tuberaster, an irregularly spherical mass of fungus mycelium and earth, forming a pseudosclerotium.
  • furfuraceous — of or containing bran.
  • future shock — physical and psychological disturbance caused by a person's inability to cope with very rapid social and technological change.
  • galeniferous — Of a mineral or deposit that contains galena.
  • gersdorffite — a mineral, sulfide-arsenide of nickel, NiAsS, occurring in metallic, light-gray cubes.
  • gillyflowers — Plural form of gillyflower.
  • give offense — to offend; anger, insult, etc.
  • glandiferous — bearing nuts or acorns
  • globeflowers — Plural form of globeflower.
  • gonfaloniers — Plural form of gonfalonier.
  • good offices — Someone's good offices are the help that they give to other people who are trying to achieve something.
  • griseofulvin — an antibiotic, C 17 H 17 ClO 6 , obtained from a species of Penicillium, used in the treatment of ringworm and other fungous infections of the skin.
  • guide fossil — index fossil.
  • gulf of suez — the NW arm of the Red Sea: linked with the Mediterranean by the Suez Canal
  • half section — a part that is cut off or separated.
  • half serious — of, showing, or characterized by deep thought.
  • half-section — a part that is cut off or separated.
  • half-serious — of, showing, or characterized by deep thought.
  • head for sth — If you a have a head for something, you can deal with it easily. For example, if you have a head for figures, you can do arithmetic easily, and if you have a head for heights, you can climb to a great height without feeling afraid.
  • headforemost — headfirst (def 1).
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