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12-letter words containing s, t, r, i, p

  • politicaster — an ill-suited or disliked politician
  • polycentrism — the doctrine that a plurality of independent centers of leadership, power, or ideology may exist within a single political system, especially Communism.
  • polygraphist — an instrument for receiving and recording simultaneously tracings of variations in certain body activities.
  • polyhistoric — relating to a polyhistor
  • polyneuritis — inflammation of several nerves at the same time; multiple neuritis.
  • poodle skirt — 1950s-style woman's circular skirt
  • porismatical — porismatic
  • post-fordism — the idea that modern industrial production has moved away from mass production in huge factories, as pioneered by Henry Ford, towards specialized markets based on small flexible manufacturing units
  • post-primary — first or highest in rank or importance; chief; principal: his primary goals in life.
  • post-pyloric — the opening between the stomach and the duodenum.
  • postabortion — Also called voluntary abortion. the removal of an embryo or fetus from the uterus in order to end a pregnancy.
  • postbrachial — belonging to the arm, foreleg, wing, pectoral fin, or other forelimb of a vertebrate.
  • postcardlike — (of a scene) resembling a postcard
  • postdelivery — of, relating to, or occurring after a delivery
  • poster child — a child appearing on a poster for a charitable organization.
  • poster paint — an opaque, water-based, typically bright-colored paint with a glue-size or gum binder, that is suitable for use on posters and is usually packaged in jars.
  • posteriority — the state or quality of being posterior.
  • posteruptive — occurring after a volcanic eruption
  • postexercise — bodily or mental exertion, especially for the sake of training or improvement of health: Walking is good exercise.
  • postimperial — of, relating to, or designating the period after an empire
  • postliminary — of or relating to postliminy
  • postliterate — of or relating to a (hypothetical) time or stage in society when literacy is no longer necessary or valued
  • postmeridian — of or relating to the afternoon.
  • postmistress — a woman in charge of a post office.
  • postorgasmic — of or relating to the period after an orgasm
  • postprandial — after a meal, especially after dinner: postprandial oratory; a postprandial brandy.
  • postromantic — of or relating to the period after Romanticism
  • postsurgical — pertaining to or involving surgery or surgeons.
  • potato crisp — potato chip.
  • power assist — a procedure for supplementing or replacing the manual effort needed to operate a device or system, often by hydraulic, electrical, or mechanical means.
  • practicalism — devotion to practical matters.
  • practicalist — devotion to practical matters.
  • pragmaticism — the pragmatist philosophy of C. S. Peirce, chiefly a theory of meaning: so called by him to distinguish it from the pragmatism of William James.
  • pragmaticist — a follower of the doctrine of pragmatism
  • praiseworthy — deserving of praise; laudable: a praiseworthy motive.
  • pratincolous — living in a meadow.
  • pre-disaster — a calamitous event, especially one occurring suddenly and causing great loss of life, damage, or hardship, as a flood, airplane crash, or business failure.
  • pre-discount — to deduct a certain amount from (a bill, charge, etc.): All bills that are paid promptly will be discounted at two percent.
  • pre-estimate — to form an approximate judgment or opinion regarding the worth, amount, size, weight, etc., of; calculate approximately: to estimate the cost of a college education.
  • pre-existing — to exist beforehand.
  • pre-position — to position in advance or beforehand: to preposition troops in anticipated trouble spots.
  • pre-socratic — of or relating to the philosophers or philosophical systems of the period before the Socratic period.
  • precisionist — (sometimes initial capital letter) a style of painting developed to its fullest in the U.S. in the 1920s, associated especially with Charles Demuth, Georgia O'Keeffe, and Charles Sheeler, and characterized by clinically precise, simple, and clean-edged rendering of architectural, industrial, or urban scenes usually devoid of human activity or presence.
  • predesignate — to designate beforehand.
  • predestinate — Theology. to foreordain by divine decree or purpose.
  • preestablish — to establish beforehand.
  • pregustation — the act of tasting beforehand
  • prehistorian — an authority on or specialist in prehistory
  • prenticeship — an apprenticeship
  • preparations — measures done in order to prepare for something; provisions
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