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11-letter words containing s, t, e, i, n, r

  • orchestrina — (musical instruments) orchestrion.
  • orchestrion — a mechanical musical instrument, resembling a barrel organ but more elaborate, for producing the effect of an orchestra.
  • ordainments — Plural form of ordainment.
  • orientalism — a peculiarity or idiosyncrasy of the peoples of Asia, especially the East.
  • orientalist — A person (especially a scholar) interested in the orient.
  • ornamentist — a person who adorns or decorates, esp professionally
  • orthogenics — the treatment of mentally and emotionally disturbed children
  • ostensorium — ostensory.
  • outswearing — Present participle of outswear.
  • outswingers — Plural form of outswinger.
  • overcasting — Meteorology. the condition of the sky when more than 95 percent covered by clouds.
  • overintense — too intense
  • overtension — the act of stretching or straining.
  • oxenstierna — Count Axel [ahk-suh l] /ˈɑk səl/ (Show IPA), 1583–1654, Swedish statesman.
  • oyster pink — a delicate pinkish-white colour, sometimes with a greyish tinge
  • paint horse — paint (def 6).
  • panel strip — one of a number of strips of wood or metal laid upon the surface of a wall, ceiling, etc., so as to divide it into a number of broad areas, usually in order to conceal joints between sheets of composition material forming the surface.
  • panspermist — someone who advocates panspermia
  • parenthesis — either or both of a pair of signs () used in writing to mark off an interjected explanatory or qualifying remark, to indicate separate groupings of symbols in mathematics and symbolic logic, etc.
  • partialness — being such in part only; not total or general; incomplete: partial blindness; a partial payment of a debt.
  • partnership — the state or condition of being a partner; participation; association; joint interest.
  • paternalism — the system, principle, or practice of managing or governing individuals, businesses, nations, etc., in the manner of a father dealing benevolently and often intrusively with his children: The employees objected to the paternalism of the old president.
  • paternalist — government: fatherly in style
  • perceptions — the act or faculty of perceiving, or apprehending by means of the senses or of the mind; cognition; understanding.
  • peritonitis — inflammation of the peritoneum, often accompanied by pain and tenderness in the abdomen, vomiting, constipation, and moderate fever.
  • persecution — the act of persecuting.
  • persian cat — a long-haired variety of the domestic cat, originally raised in Persia and Afghanistan.
  • persistence — the act or fact of persisting.
  • persistency — the act or fact of persisting.
  • persnickety — overparticular; fussy.
  • personalist — Also called personal idealism. a modern philosophical movement locating ultimate value and reality in persons, human or divine.
  • personality — the visible aspect of one's character as it impresses others: He has a pleasing personality.
  • personation — to act or portray (a character in a play, a part, etc.).
  • persorption — the deep penetration of a liquid into a highly porous solid, resulting in an intimate mixture.
  • pescatarian — a person whose diet is mostly vegetarian but includes fish and seafood.
  • pescetarian — a person whose diet is mostly vegetarian but includes fish and seafood.
  • pitchperson — a pitchman or pitchwoman
  • ponderosity — of great weight; heavy; massive.
  • praenestine — of or relating to the ancient town of Praeneste in Italy, or to the Latin dialect spoken there.
  • pre-notions — a preconception.
  • pre-testing — an advance or preliminary testing or trial, as of a new product.
  • predestined — to destine in advance; foreordain; predetermine: He seemed predestined for the ministry.
  • predynastic — of, relating to, or belonging to a time or period before the first dynasty of a nation, especially the period in Egypt before c3200 b.c.
  • preexistent — to exist beforehand.
  • preexisting — to exist beforehand.
  • preposition — any member of a class of words found in many languages that are used before nouns, pronouns, or other substantives to form phrases functioning as modifiers of verbs, nouns, or adjectives, and that typically express a spatial, temporal, or other relationship, as in, on, by, to, since.
  • presanctify — to sanctify ahead of an event
  • prescindent — tending to prescind
  • presenility — premature old age.
  • presentient — having a presentiment.
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