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7-letter words containing s, i, m, p

  • jimpest — Superlative form of jimp.
  • limpets — Plural form of limpet.
  • lipomas — Plural form of lipoma.
  • lumpish — resembling a lump.
  • maclisp — (language)   A dialect of Lisp developed at MIT AI Lab in 1966, known for its efficiency and programming facilities. MacLisp was later used by Project MAC, Mathlab and Macsyma. It ran on the PDP-10. It introduced the LEXPR (a function with variable arity), macros, arrays, and CATCH/THROW. MacLisp was one of two main branches of LISP (the other being Interlisp). In 1981 Common LISP was begun in an effort to combine the best features of both.
  • magpies — Plural form of magpie.
  • malpais — Southwestern U.S. an extensive area of rough, barren lava flows.
  • manship — The characteristic of being a man; maleness; masculinity; manliness; manhood.
  • mappist — (archaic) cartographer.
  • mapwise — from a mapping point of view
  • memphis — a group of international designers and architects, formed in the 1980s and based in Milan, whose work is characterized by the use of bold colors, geometric shapes, and unconventional, often playful, designs.
  • mendips — a range of limestone hills in SW England, in N Somerset: includes the Cheddar Gorge and numerous caves. Highest point: 325 m (1068 ft)
  • midship — in or belonging to the middle part of a ship.
  • midstep — During a step.
  • milksop — a weak or ineffectual person.
  • miscopy — to copy incorrectly: to miscopy an address.
  • mishaps — Plural form of mishap.
  • miskeep — to keep or look after wrongly, badly, or carelessly
  • mispage — page wrongly
  • mispaid — Simple past tense and past participle of mispay.
  • mispart — to part wrongly
  • mispell — Misspelling of misspell.
  • mispelt — Misspelling of misspelt.
  • mispick — a pick or filling yarn that has failed to interlace with the warp as a result of a mechanical defect in the loom.
  • misplan — (transitive) To plan badly or incorrectly.
  • misplay — a wrong or bad play.
  • misstep — a wrong step.
  • misstop — (rare) To stop badly or wrongly.
  • mist up — be covered with condensation
  • mistype — a number of things or persons sharing a particular characteristic, or set of characteristics, that causes them to be regarded as a group, more or less precisely defined or designated; class; category: a criminal of the most vicious type.
  • moshpit — The moshpit at a rock concert is the area in front of the stage where people jump up and down.
  • mps iii — Solving matrices and producing reports. "MPS III DATAFORM User Manual", Management Science Systems (1976).
  • mumpish — Sullen or sulky.
  • muspike — a N American freshwater fish developed by cross-breeding muskellunge and pike
  • orphism — the religious or philosophical system of the Orphic school.
  • pastime — something that serves to make time pass agreeably; a pleasant means of amusement, recreation, or sport: to play cards as a pastime.
  • pessima — the lowest or worst state of affairs
  • phasmid — any insect of the order Phasmida, comprising the walking sticks and leaf insects.
  • phlomis — a plant that belongs to the genus Phlomis and family Labiatae or Lamiaceae
  • photism — a form of synesthesia in which a visual sensation, as of color or form, is produced by the sense of touch, hearing, etc.
  • pianism — the artistry and technique of a pianist.
  • pietism — a movement, originating in the Lutheran Church in Germany in the 17th century, that stressed personal piety over religious formality and orthodoxy.
  • pismire — an ant.
  • plasmic — Anatomy, Physiology. the liquid part of blood or lymph, as distinguished from the suspended elements.
  • plasmid — a segment of DNA independent of the chromosomes and capable of replication, occurring in bacteria and yeast: used in recombinant DNA procedures to transfer genetic material from one cell to another.
  • plasmin — fibrinolysin.
  • plenism — the philosophical theory that there are no vacuums in nature
  • plumist — a person who makes ornamental plumes
  • prelims — preliminary.
  • premise — Also, premiss. Logic. a proposition supporting or helping to support a conclusion.
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