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12-letter words containing s, o, m, e, d

  • disembroiled — Simple past tense and past participle of disembroil.
  • disempowered — Simple past tense and past participle of disempower.
  • disenamoured — to disillusion; disenchant (usually used in the passive and followed by of or with): He was disenamored of working in the city.
  • disendowment — The act of depriving of an endowment or endowments.
  • disgorgement — The act of disgorging, particularly in the legal sense.
  • disharmonize — (intransitive) To cause disorder.
  • dislodgement — to remove or force out of a particular place: to dislodge a stone with one's foot.
  • disopyramide — a substance, C 21 H 29 N 3 O, used in its phosphate form in the symptomatic and prophylactic treatment of certain cardiac arrhythmias.
  • disportments — to divert or amuse (oneself).
  • disseminator — to scatter or spread widely, as though sowing seed; promulgate extensively; broadcast; disperse: to disseminate information about preventive medicine.
  • distemperoid — resembling distemper.
  • domestic cat — feline kept as a pet
  • domestic pig — Sus scrofa; an artiodactyl mammal of the African and Eurasian family Suidae, having a long head with a movable snout and a thick bristle-covered skin
  • domesticable — to convert (animals, plants, etc.) to domestic uses; tame.
  • domestically — of or relating to the home, the household, household affairs, or the family: domestic pleasures.
  • domesticated — to convert (animals, plants, etc.) to domestic uses; tame.
  • domesticates — Plural form of domesticate.
  • domesticized — Simple past tense and past participle of domesticize.
  • dominatrices — Plural form of dominatrixThe 'Concise Oxford English Dictionary' [Eleventh Edition].
  • don't ask me — You reply 'don't ask me' when you do not know the answer to a question, usually when you are annoyed or surprised that you have been asked.
  • douglas-homeAlexander Frederick (Baron Home of the Hirsel) 1903–1995, British statesman and politician: prime minister 1963–64.
  • dream vision — a conventional device used in narrative verse, employed especially by medieval poets, that presents a story as told by one who falls asleep and dreams the events of the poem: Dante's Divine Comedy exemplifies the dream vision in its most developed form.
  • dromaeosaurs — Plural form of dromaeosaur.
  • dyer's-broom — woadwaxen.
  • dynamometers — Plural form of dynamometer.
  • dyotheletism — the teaching that Christ had both a divine will and a human will
  • dysmenorrhea — painful menstruation.
  • embroiderers — Plural form of embroiderer.
  • embroideries — Plural form of embroidery.
  • enamoredness — Quality of being enamored; love; infatuation.
  • endometritis — Inflammation of the endometrium.
  • endomorphism — changes in a cooling body of igneous rock brought about by assimilation of fragments of, or chemical reaction with, the surrounding country rock
  • endorsements — Plural form of endorsement.
  • endosmometer — an instrument for measuring the action of endosmosis
  • endosymbiont — (ecology) An organism that lives within the body or cells of another organism.
  • ethosuximide — A particular anticonvulsant drug.
  • eunuchoidism — A syndrome in males with a lack of sex characteristics due to lack of proper male sex hormones.
  • extemporised — Simple past tense and past participle of extemporise.
  • flemish bond — a brickwork bond having alternate stretchers and headers in each course, each header being centered above and below a stretcher.
  • flindermouse — (obsolete) A bat (the mammal).
  • foreadmonish — (rare, transitive) To admonish beforehand, or before the act or event.
  • formal dress — clothing for elegant or solemn occasions
  • fundusectomy — (surgery) The surgical removal of the fundus of an organ, such as the uterus or the stomach.
  • gastrodermal — the inner cell layer of the body of an invertebrate.
  • gastrodermis — the inner cell layer of the body of an invertebrate.
  • gladsomeness — (archaic) gladness.
  • goldsmithery — the occupation of a goldsmith
  • gormandizers — gourmandise1 .
  • grandmothers — Plural form of grandmother.
  • gynodioecism — the condition of having flowers that are only female in one example of a plant and flowers that have stamens and pistils in another example of a plant of the same species
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