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11-letter words containing s, i, r, p

  • expressible — Able to be expressed.
  • expressibly — In an expressible way.
  • expressions — Plural form of expression.
  • expromissor — a person who agrees to undertake the debt of another person
  • extemporise — (intransitive) To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise.
  • fair-spoken — speaking or spoken in a courteous, civil, or plausible manner; smooth-spoken.
  • fiberscopes — Plural form of fiberscope.
  • fibroplasia — the formation of fibrous tissue.
  • field sport — Hunting, shooting birds, and fishing with a rod are referred to as field sports when they are done mainly for pleasure.
  • field-strip — to take apart (a weapon) for cleaning, lubrication, and repair or for inspection.
  • film script — a script containing dialogue and directions for a film; a screenplay
  • finger post — a post with one or more directional signs, terminating in a pointed finger or hand.
  • fingerpicks — Plural form of fingerpick.
  • fire escape — an apparatus or structure used to escape from a burning building, as a metal stairway down an outside wall.
  • fire-polish — to smooth (glass) by reheating to remove tool marks or other imperfections in the surface.
  • fissiparism — (biology) reproduction by spontaneous fission.
  • fissiparity — (biology) The quality of being fissiparous.
  • fissiparous — reproducing by fission.
  • foetiparous — (of a marsupial) bearing young before they are fully developed.
  • food prices — the prices that consumers are charged for food
  • forcepslike — Resembling a forceps.
  • foreglimpse — a revelation or glimpse of the future.
  • foremanship — The position of a foreman.
  • foretopsail — (nautical) the sail draped from the foretopmast.
  • fortepianos — Plural form of fortepiano.
  • foundership — The condition of having founded something.
  • frangipanis — Plural form of frangipani.
  • free spirit — a person with a highly individual or unique attitude, lifestyle, or imagination; nonconformist.
  • friendships — Plural form of friendship.
  • frost point — the temperature of the air at which hoarfrost begins to form.
  • gamotropism — the tendency of gametes to attract each other
  • gemmiparous — producing or reproducing by buds or gemmae.
  • generalship — skill as commander of a large military force or unit.
  • geographies — the science dealing with the areal differentiation of the earth's surface, as shown in the character, arrangement, and interrelations over the world of such elements as climate, elevation, soil, vegetation, population, land use, industries, or states, and of the unit areas formed by the complex of these individual elements.
  • geostrophic — of or relating to the balance between the Coriolis force and the horizontal pressure force in the atmosphere.
  • ghostscript — (graphics, tool)   The GNU interpreter for PostScript and PDF, with previewers for serval systems and many fonts. Ghostscript was originally written by L. Peter Deutsch <[email protected]> of Aladdin Enterprises. The first public release was v1.0 on 1988-08-11.
  • gingersnaps — Plural form of gingersnap.
  • graian alps — a mountain range in France and Italy, in the W Alps. Highest peak, Gran Paradiso, 13,324 feet (4061 meters).
  • grapefruits — Plural form of grapefruit.
  • graphicness — The quality of being graphic: grotesqueness or vividness.
  • graptolites — Plural form of graptolite.
  • grass snipe — the pectoral sandpiper.
  • gravisphere — the area in which the gravitational force of a celestial body is predominant.
  • greasepaint — an oily mixture of melted tallow or grease and a pigment, used by actors, clowns, etc., for making up their faces.
  • guttersnipe — a person belonging to or characteristic of the lowest social group in a city.
  • gypsiferous — containing gypsum.
  • hairsprings — Plural form of hairspring.
  • handsprings — Plural form of handspring.
  • hardscaping — Hardscape.
  • harpsichord — a keyboard instrument, precursor of the piano, in which the strings are plucked by leather or quill points connected with the keys, in common use from the 16th to the 18th century, and revived in the 20th.
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