12-letter words containing s, i, l, c, d, e
- social media — websites and other online means of communication that are used by large groups of people to share information and to develop social and professional contacts: Many businesses are utilizing social media to generate sales.
- social order — structure or hierarchy of society
- soldier crab — a small blue Australian estuarine crab of the Mictyris genus usually found in large numbers
- solid rocket — any of various rockets using solid fuel
- south euclid — a city in NE Ohio, near Cleveland.
- split second — a fraction of a second.
- stickhandler — a hockey or lacrosse player, esp. one who is talented at stickhandling.
- strait-laced — excessively strict in conduct or morality; puritanical; prudish: strait-laced censors.
- street child — Street children are homeless children who live outdoors in a city and live by begging or stealing.
- subcivilized — not quite civilized
- subduplicate — of the square root of ratios
- succeedingly — being that which follows; subsequent; ensuing: laws to benefit succeeding generations.
- testiculated — like a testicle, esp in shape
- transdialect — to translate (speech, writing, etc.) into a different dialect.
- tropicalised — to make tropical, as in character or appearance.
- unclassified — not assigned to a class or category; not arranged according to characteristics: Reported instances fall into two main types, with a few unclassified anomalies.
- undiscipline — the trait or characteristic of not having discipline
- unidealistic — of or relating to idealism or idealists.
- unsocialized — to make social; make fit for life in companionship with others.
- vascularised — (of a tissue or embryo) to develop or extend blood vessels or other fluid-bearing vessels or ducts; become vascular.
- vascularized — rendered vascular by the formation of new blood vessels.
- zinc sulfide — a white to yellow, crystalline powder, ZnS, soluble in acids, insoluble in water, occurring naturally as wurtzite and sphalerite: used as a pigment and as a phosphor on x-ray and television screens.