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11-letter words containing s, e, t, l, m

  • magisterial — of, relating to, or befitting a master; authoritative; weighty; of importance or consequence: a magisterial pronouncement by the director of the board.
  • mailed fist — superior force, especially military force, when presented as a threat: The country showed its mailed fist in negotiations.
  • maladjusted — badly or unsatisfactorily adjusted, especially in relationship to one's social circumstances, environment, etc.
  • malcontents — Plural form of malcontent.
  • malefactors — Plural form of malefactor.
  • malignities — Plural form of malignity.
  • maltese cat — a bluish-gray variety of the domestic cat.
  • maltese dog — one of a breed of toy dogs having a long, straight, silky white coat.
  • maltotriose — (carbohydrate) A maltooligosaccharide consisting of three glucose units.
  • mandlestone — The amygdaloid.
  • manipulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of manipulate.
  • manstealing — the act of kidnapping.
  • mantelshelf — mantel (def 2).
  • manteltrees — Plural form of manteltree.
  • mare's-tail — a long narrow cirrus cloud whose flowing appearance somewhat resembles a horse's tail.
  • mars violet — a dark grayish-purple color.
  • martingales — Plural form of martingale.
  • master file — Computers. a permanent file, periodically updated, that serves as an authoritative source of data.
  • master plan — A master plan is a clever plan that is intended to help someone succeed in a very difficult or important task.
  • master-plan — to construct a master plan for: to master-plan one's career.
  • masterclass — a small class for advanced students, especially a class in performance skills conducted by a distinguished musician.
  • masterfully — dominating; self-willed; imperious.
  • matchlessly — In a matchless manner.
  • materialise — to come into perceptible existence; appear; become actual or real; be realized or carried out: Our plans never materialized.
  • materialism — preoccupation with or emphasis on material objects, comforts, and considerations, with a disinterest in or rejection of spiritual, intellectual, or cultural values.
  • materialist — a person who is markedly more concerned with material things than with spiritual, intellectual, or cultural values.
  • maternalism — of, pertaining to, having the qualities of, or befitting a mother: maternal instincts.
  • mayoralties — Plural form of mayoralty.
  • mediastinal — a median septum or partition between two parts of an organ, or paired cavities of the body.
  • medievalist — an expert in medieval history, literature, philosophy, etc.
  • megaloblast — an abnormally large, immature, and dysfunctional red blood cell found in the blood of persons with pernicious anemia or certain other disorders.
  • melanoblast — an undifferentiated cell that develops into a melanophore or melanocyte.
  • melanocytes — Plural form of melanocyte.
  • melba toast — narrow slices of thin, crisp toast.
  • melioristic — the doctrine that the world tends to become better or may be made better by human effort.
  • memorialist — a person who writes memorials.
  • menstrually — In a menstrual manner; in terms of the menses.
  • mentalising — Present participle of mentalise.
  • mentalistic — the doctrine that objects of knowledge have no existence except in the mind of the perceiver.
  • mentalities — Plural form of mentality.
  • mentionless — Without a mention; unmentioned.
  • mentoplasty — plastic surgery to correct a functional or cosmetic deformity of the chin.
  • meroblastic — (of certain eggs) undergoing partial cleavage, resulting in unequal blastomeres.
  • mesha stele — Moabite Stone.
  • mesoblastic — (biology) of, relating to, or resembling the mesoblast.
  • mesothelial — (anatomy) Of or pertaining to the mesothelium.
  • mesothelium — epithelium of mesodermal origin, which lines the body cavities.
  • met-english — A Fortran-like language designed at Metropolitan Life in the early 1960s. It had support for variable-length bit fields. Most MetLife DP in the 1960s and 1970s was in Met-English. It was originally developed for Honeywell machines, but many programs still run under IBM MVS via a Honeywell emulator.
  • metabolised — Simple past tense and past participle of metabolise.
  • metabolises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of metabolise.
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