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10-letter words containing s, t, o, m, u

  • multifoils — Plural form of multifoil.
  • multisport — designed or used for a variety of sports.
  • multistory — (of a building) having several or many stories.
  • multivious — having many ways, paths or directions
  • murtherous — (archaic) Intending, or likely to commit murder; bloodthirsty or homicidal.
  • muscovites — Plural form of muscovite.
  • mush-mouth — a person who speaks indistinctly.
  • mustachios — A long or elaborate mustache.
  • muster out — to discharge from military service
  • mutinously — disposed to, engaged in, or involving revolt against authority.
  • muttonfish — ocean pout.
  • myrtaceous — belonging to the Myrtaceae, the myrtle family of plants. Compare myrtle family.
  • mystagogue — someone who instructs others before initiation into religious mysteries or before participation in the sacraments.
  • mysterious — full of, characterized by, or involving mystery: a mysterious occurrence.
  • myxomatous — a soft tumor composed of connective and mucoid tissue.
  • numerators — Plural form of numerator.
  • numerosity — very many; being or existing in great quantity: numerous visits; numerous fish.
  • numinosity — Quality of being numinous.
  • octamerous — consisting of or divided into eight parts.
  • octomerous — octamerous.
  • oedematous — (British spelling) Alternative form of edematous.
  • osmeterium — a glandular process on the first thoracic segment of many caterpillars that emits a noxious odor to ward off predators.
  • out-scheme — a plan, design, or program of action to be followed; project.
  • outmatches — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outmatch.
  • outmeasure — to measure out
  • outnumbers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outnumber.
  • outpromise — to promise more than
  • outsmarted — to get the better of (someone); outwit.
  • periosteum — the normal investment of bone, consisting of a dense, fibrous outer layer, to which muscles attach, and a more delicate, inner layer capable of forming bone.
  • polytomous — the act or process of dividing into more than three parts.
  • portsmouth — a seaport in S Hampshire, in S England, on the English Channel: chief British naval station.
  • postbellum — occurring after a war, especially after the American Civil War: postbellum reforms.
  • posthumous — arising, occurring, or continuing after one's death: a posthumous award for bravery.
  • postpartum — of or noting the period of time following childbirth; after delivery.
  • postulatum — a postulate
  • prometheus — a Titan, the father of Deucalion and brother of Atlas and Epimetheus, who taught humankind various arts and was sometimes said to have shaped humans out of clay and endowed them with the spark of life. For having stolen fire from Olympus and given it to humankind in defiance of Zeus, he was chained to a rock where an eagle daily tore at his liver, until he was finally released by Hercules.
  • prosternum — the ventral sclerite of the prothorax of an insect.
  • prostomium — the unsegmented, preoral portion of the head of certain lower invertebrates.
  • ptolemaeus — a walled plain in the third quadrant of the face of the moon: about 90 miles (144 km) in diameter.
  • pulsometer — a pulsimeter.
  • pumy stone — a piece of pumice stone
  • quantasome — any of numerous particles in a chloroplast, part of the thylakoid and functioning in photosynthesis.
  • reaccustom — to familiarize by custom or use; habituate: to accustom oneself to cold weather.
  • resumption — the act of resuming; a reassumption, as of something previously granted.
  • salbutamol — the international generic name for albuterol.
  • sanatorium — a hospital for the treatment of chronic diseases, as tuberculosis or various nervous or mental disorders.
  • sanitorium — a facility for housing patients with long-term illnesses
  • sclerotium — a vegetative, resting food-storage body in certain higher fungi, composed of a compact mass of hardened mycelia.
  • scout camp — organized outdoor activity for boys
  • simulation — imitation or enactment, as of something anticipated or in testing.
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