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10-letter words containing s, e, p, m

  • compressor — A compressor is a machine or part of a machine that squeezes gas or air and makes it take up less space.
  • compromise — A compromise is a situation in which people accept something slightly different from what they really want, because of circumstances or because they are considering the wishes of other people.
  • compulsive — You use compulsive to describe people or their behaviour when they cannot stop doing something wrong, harmful, or unnecessary.
  • compuserve — CompuServe Information Service
  • copayments — Plural form of copayment.
  • copolymers — Plural form of copolymer.
  • creampuffs — Plural form of creampuff.
  • creepmouse — an informal tickling game played with small children
  • dampcourse — a horizontal layer of impervious material in a brick wall, fairly close to the ground, to stop moisture rising
  • date stamp — an adjustable rubber stamp for recording the date
  • date-stamp — to stamp the date on, as with a date stamp: He date-stamped every letter received.
  • decomposed — having been subject to decomposition
  • decomposer — any organism in a community, such as a bacterium or fungus, that breaks down dead tissue enabling the constituents to be recycled to the environment
  • decomposes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decompose.
  • decompress — to relieve (a substance) of pressure or (of a substance) to be relieved of pressure
  • deemphasis — Alternative spelling of de-emphasis.
  • despotisms — Plural form of despotism.
  • despumated — Simple past tense and past participle of despumate.
  • deutoplasm — nutritive material in a cell, esp the yolk in a developing ovum
  • diplomates — Plural form of diplomate.
  • discompose — to upset the order of; disarrange; disorder; unsettle: The breeze discomposed the bouquet.
  • disempower — to deprive of influence, importance, etc.: Voters feel they have become disempowered by recent political events.
  • disimprove — (transitive, rare) to make worse.
  • dispermous — having two seeds.
  • dove prism — a prism that inverts a beam of light, often used in a telescope to produce an erect image.
  • dreamscape — a dreamlike, often surrealistic scene.
  • dysphemism — the substitution of a harsh, disparaging, or unpleasant expression for a more neutral one.
  • ecmascript — (language)   (ECMA standard 262, ISO standard 16262) The standardised version of the core JavaScript language.
  • ectomorphs — Plural form of ectomorph.
  • emacs lisp — (language)   A dialect of Lisp used to implement the higher layers of the Free Software Foundation's editor, GNU Emacs. Sometimes abbreviated to "elisp". An enormous number of Emacs Lisp packages have been written including modes for editing many programming languages and interfaces to many Unix programs.
  • emancipist — (Australia, historical) In penal colonies of early Australia, a convict who had been pardoned for good conduct; sometimes inclusively a convict whose sentence had completed, though one such was more usually called an expiree.
  • emparadise — to turn (a place or state) into a paradise
  • empathised — Simple past tense and past participle of empathise.
  • empathises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of empathise.
  • empathizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of empathize.
  • empedocles — ?490–430 bc, Greek philosopher and scientist, who held that the world is composed of four elements, air, fire, earth, and water, which are governed by the opposing forces of love and discord
  • empennages — Plural form of empennage.
  • emphasised — Simple past tense and past participle of emphasise.
  • emphasises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of emphasise.
  • emphasized — Simple past tense and past participle of emphasize.
  • emphasizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of emphasize.
  • emphysemic — Relating to emphysema.
  • empiricism — The theory that all knowledge is derived from sense-experience. Stimulated by the rise of experimental science, it developed in the 17th and 18th centuries, expounded in particular by John Locke, George Berkeley, and David Hume.
  • empiricist — An advocate or supporter of empiricism.
  • emplastron — a plaster containing a balm or medication
  • emplastrum — a medicated plaster
  • empty nest — (())
  • endomorphs — Plural form of endomorph.
  • ephemerals — Plural form of ephemeral.
  • ephemerids — Plural form of ephemerid.
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