9-letter words containing s, t, r, i, m, e
- mortifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mortify.
- motorised — Alternative spelling of motorized (equipped with a motor).
- multiuser — (of a computer system) able to be used by a number of people simultaneously.
- muster in — to assemble (troops, a ship's crew, etc.), as for battle, display, inspection, orders, or discharge.
- mustering — Present participle of muster.
- mutineers — A person, esp. a soldier or sailor, who rebels or refuses to obey the orders of a person in authority.
- myristate — (chemistry) any salt or ester of myristic acid.
- mysterial — (obsolete) mysterious.
- mysteries — Plural form of mystery.
- mysterium — (chemistry, alchemy, now historical) Any of various unknown elements thought to make up existing forms of matter, or a substance seen as an elemental or pure form of something else.
- mystifier — to perplex (a person) by playing upon the person's credulity; bewilder purposely.
- neoterism — an innovation in language, as a new word, term, or expression.
- optimiser — Alternative spelling of optimizer.
- osmeteria — glands in some caterpillars that secrete foul-smelling substances to deter predators
- palmister — a person telling fortunes by reading palms
- peristome — Botany. the one or two circles of small, pointed, toothlike appendages around the orifice of a capsule or urn of mosses, appearing when the lid is removed.
- petrinism — the body of theological doctrine taught by, or attributed to, the apostle Peter.
- predatism — the state of living as a predator or by predation.
- prelatism — prelacy; episcopacy.
- presummit — of the period prior to a summit
- prettyism — an affectedly pretty style
- ranterism — a radical 17th-century Christian doctrine based on a personal relationship with the Holy Spirit and disregard of formal worship
- redtapism — excessive formality and routine required before official action can be taken.
- reformist — a person who advocates or practices reform; reformer.
- remoisten — to moisten again, to add new moisture to
- restiform — (esp of bundles of nerve fibres) shaped like a cord or rope; cordlike
- rudiments — When you learn the rudiments of something, you learn the simplest or most essential things about it.
- runesmith — a student, writer, transcriber, or decipherer of runes.
- rust mite — any of various mites that cause brown or reddish patches on leaves and fruit.
- salimeter — salinometer.
- sarmiento — a city in E Argentina, a suburb of Buenos Aires.
- sawtimber — trees suitable for sawing into planks, boards, etc.
- semierect — partly erect
- semitruck — tractor-trailer.
- septarium — a concretionary nodule or mass, usually of calcium carbonate or of argillaceous carbonate of iron, traversed within by a network of cracks filled with calcite and other minerals.
- septemvir — a member of a seven-man ruling body in ancient Rome.
- septiform — sevenfold
- side trim — a decorative feature on the side of a car
- spearmint — an aromatic herb, Mentha spicata, having lance-shaped leaves used for flavoring.
- spermatia — Botany. the nonmotile male gamete of a red alga.
- spermatic — of, relating to, or resembling sperm; seminal; generative.
- spermatid — Cell Biology. one of the cells that result from the meiotic divisions of a spermatocyte and mature into spermatozoa.
- streaming — a body of water flowing in a channel or watercourse, as a river, rivulet, or brook. Synonyms: rill, run, streamlet, runnel.
- submitter — to give over or yield to the power or authority of another (often used reflexively).
- summiteer — a participant in a summit meeting.
- swimmeret — (in many crustaceans) one of a number of abdominal limbs or appendages, usually adapted for swimming and for carrying eggs, as distinguished from other limbs adapted for walking or seizing.
- symmetric — characterized by or exhibiting symmetry; well-proportioned, as a body or whole; regular in form or arrangement of corresponding parts.
- tasimeter — a device for measuring small temperature changes. It depends on the changes of pressure resulting from expanding or contracting solids
- temporise — to be indecisive or evasive to gain time or delay acting.
- tenebrism — a school, style, or method of painting, adopted chiefly by 17th-century Spanish and Neapolitan painters, esp Caravaggio, characterized by large areas of dark colours, usually relieved with a shaft of light