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10-letter words containing s, y, m

  • imposingly — very impressive because of great size, stately appearance, dignity, elegance, etc.: Notre Dame, Rheims, and other imposing cathedrals of France.
  • impossibly — not possible; unable to be, exist, happen, etc.
  • in summary — to sum up, to conclude
  • infamously — having an extremely bad reputation: an infamous city.
  • isodynamic — pertaining to or characterized by equality of force, intensity, or the like.
  • isoenzymes — Plural form of isoenzyme.
  • james espy — James Pollard [pol-erd] /ˈpɒl ərd/ (Show IPA), 1785–1860, U.S. meteorologist.
  • karyograms — Plural form of karyogram.
  • karyoplasm — nucleoplasm.
  • karyosomes — Plural form of karyosome.
  • kerseymere — a heavily fulled woolen cloth constructed in twill weave and finished with a fine nap.
  • kymographs — Plural form of kymograph.
  • lachrymals — Plural form of lachrymal.
  • lachrymose — suggestive of or tending to cause tears; mournful.
  • lady's man — a man who strives especially to please women and to attract their attention and admiration.
  • lamb's fry — lamb's offal, esp lamb's testicles, as food
  • lammas day — August 1, formerly observed in England as a harvest festival. In Scotland Lammas is a quarter day
  • lazy sml2c — A lazy version sml2c. Portable, written in SML. Language extensions include first-class continuations, asynchronous signal handling. E-mail: <[email protected]>. ftp://dravido.soar.cs.cmu.edu/usr/nemo/sml2c.
  • leiomyomas — Plural form of leiomyoma.
  • lonesomely — In a lonesome manner, in a way missing companionship.
  • longsomely — lengthily, slowly, and tediously
  • luminosity — luminance (def 2).
  • luminously — radiating or reflecting light; shining; bright.
  • lyme grass — type of perennial dune grass
  • lyme regis — a resort in S England, in Dorset, on the English Channel: noted for finds of prehistoric fossils. Pop: 4406 (2001)
  • lymphatics — Plural form of lymphatic.
  • lysenkoism — a genetic doctrine formulated by Lysenko and asserting that acquired characteristics are inheritable.
  • lysimachus — 361?–281 b.c, Macedonian general: king of Thrace 306–281.
  • lysimetric — of or relating to the measurement of solubility
  • macanalyst — An analysis CASE tool for the Macintosh from Excel Software, Inc.
  • macrocytes — Plural form of macrocyte.
  • magistracy — the office or function of a magistrate.
  • malinovsky — Rodion Yakovlevich [ruh-dyi-awn yah-kuh-vlyi-vyich] /rə dyɪˈɔn ˈyɑ kə vlyɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1898–1967, Russian army officer: minister of defense of the U.S.S.R. 1957–67.
  • malmesburyWilliam of, William of Malmesbury.
  • mama's boy — a boy or man showing excessive attachment to or dependence on his mother.
  • manifestly — readily perceived by the eye or the understanding; evident; obvious; apparent; plain: a manifest error.
  • mansionary — a resident or dweller
  • many-sided — having many sides.
  • mary janes — flat or low-heeled shoes for women or girls, usually with a rounded toe and a single strap that buckles across the instep
  • mason city — a city in N Iowa.
  • mastectomy — the operation of removing all or part of the breast or mamma.
  • master key — a key that will open a number of different locks, the proper keys of which are not interchangeable.
  • mastodynia — (medicine) mastalgia; pain in the breast.
  • mastopathy — any disease of the breast.
  • matryoshka — Each of a set of brightly painted hollow wooden dolls of varying sizes, designed to nest inside one another.
  • maurolycus — a walled plain in the fourth quadrant of the face of the moon: about 70 miles (110 km) in diameter.
  • mayakovski — Vladimir Vladimirovich [vlad-uh-meer vlad-uh-meer-uh-vich;; Russian vluh-dyee-myir vluh-dyee-myi-ruh-vyich] /ˈvlæd əˌmɪər ˌvlæd əˈmɪər əˌvɪtʃ;; Russian vlʌˈdyi myɪr vlʌˈdyi myɪ rə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1893–1930, Russian poet.
  • mayonnaise — a thick dressing of egg yolks, vinegar or lemon juice, oil, and seasonings, used for salads, sandwiches, vegetable dishes, etc.
  • mcguffey'sWilliam Holmes, 1800–73, U.S. educator: editor of the Eclectic Readers, a series of school readers.
  • mcreynoldsJames Clark, 1862–1946, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1914–41.
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