10-letter words containing s, o, y, m, i
- numinosity — Quality of being numinous.
- numinously — In a numinous manner.
- nystagmoid — having a similarity to or characteristics of nystagmus
- old-boyism — support of or participation in an old-boy network.
- orismology — the science of defining the technical or special terms of a particular subject or field of study.
- osmolality — The concentration of a solution expressed as the total number of solute particles per kilogram.
- osmolarity — The concentration of a solution expressed as the total number of solute particles per liter.
- otomycosis — (pathology) a fungal ear infection.
- oversimply — in an oversimple manner
- paroxysmic — any sudden, violent outburst; a fit of violent action or emotion: paroxysms of rage.
- polygamist — a person who practices or favors polygamy.
- polygenism — the theory that the human race has descended from two or more ancestral types.
- polymastia — the condition of having more than the normal number of breasts
- polymastic — a person with a polymastic condition
- polymerise — to subject to polymerization.
- polymerism — Chemistry. a polymeric state.
- polytheism — the doctrine of or belief in more than one god or in many gods.
- postliminy — the right by which persons and things taken in war are restored to their former status when coming again under the power of the nation to which they belonged.
- promissory — containing or implying a promise.
- pyrrhonism — the Skeptic doctrines of Pyrrho and his followers.
- sanctimony — pretended, affected, or hypocritical religious devotion, righteousness, etc.
- schizogamy — reproduction characterized by division of the organism into sexual and asexual parts, as in certain polychaetes.
- scyphiform — shaped like a cup or goblet.
- seismology — the science or study of earthquakes and their phenomena.
- semeiology — the study of signs and symbols; semiotics.
- semicolony — a country which is partly colonial or which is officially independent but which in fact depends on or is dominated by another country
- ship money — a tax levied to finance the fitting out of warships: abolished 1640
- side money — (in a poker game) the money or chips in a side pot.
- simon says — a children's game in which all players must imitate only those movements and commands of a leader that are preceded by the words “Simon says.”.
- simulatory — to create a simulation, likeness, or model of (a situation, system, or the like): to simulate crisis conditions.
- smoky hill — a river flowing E from E Colorado to the Republican River in central Kansas. 540 miles (870 km) long.
- sociometry — the measurement of attitudes of social acceptance or rejection through expressed preferences among members of a social grouping.
- somniloquy — the act of talking in one's sleep
- spirometry — an instrument for determining the capacity of the lungs.
- squamosity — the state or condition of being covered with, formed of, resembling, or consisting of scales
- symbionese — of, relating to, or characteristic of the Symbionese Liberation Army or its adherents.
- symbolical — serving as a symbol of something (often followed by of).
- symbolises — to be a symbol of; stand for or represent in the manner of a symbol.
- symbolisms — the practice of representing things by symbols, or of investing things with a symbolic meaning or character.
- symbolizer — a person or thing that symbolizes something else
- symbolizes — to be a symbol of; stand for or represent in the manner of a symbol.
- symphilous — of or relating to symphilism
- symphonion — a 19th-century mechanical music player
- symphonist — a composer who writes symphonies.
- symphonize — to play or sound together harmoniously.
- symposiast — a person who attends or participates in a symposium.
- symptomize — to be a symptom or sign of.
- synonymise — to give synonyms for (a word, name, etc.); furnish with synonyms.
- synonymist — a specialist in the study or compiling of synonyms.
- synonymity — a word having the same or nearly the same meaning as another in the language, as happy, joyful, elated. A dictionary of synonyms and antonyms (or opposites), such as Thesaurus.com, is called a thesaurus.