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11-letter words containing t, a, n, m, i

  • predicament — an unpleasantly difficult, perplexing, or dangerous situation.
  • predominant — having ascendancy, power, authority, or influence over others; preeminent.
  • predominate — to be the stronger or leading element or force.
  • prenominate — mentioned beforehand.
  • preromantic — of, relating to, or of the nature of romance; characteristic or suggestive of the world of romance: a romantic adventure.
  • preterminal — situated at or forming the end or extremity of something: a terminal feature of a vista.
  • prevailment — the action of prevailing
  • print media — the industry that is engaged in the printing and dissemination of news through newspapers and magazines
  • printmaking — the art or technique of making prints, especially as practiced in engraving, etching, drypoint, woodcut or serigraphy.
  • proclaimant — someone who proclaims
  • prognathism — having protrusive jaws; having a gnathic index over 103.
  • promotional — advancement in rank or position.
  • pronatalism — the policy or practice of encouraging the bearing of children, especially government support of a higher birthrate.
  • protagonism — the leading character, hero, or heroine of a drama or other literary work.
  • proximation — next; nearest; immediately before or after in order, place, occurrence, etc.
  • pump-action — (of a shotgun or rifle) having an action that extracts the empty case, loads, and cocks the piece by means of a hand-operated lever that slides backward and forward; slide-action.
  • pumpstation — A pumpstation is a place with pumps and equipment for pumping fluids from one place to another.
  • quantum bit — the fundamental unit of information in a quantum computer, capable of existing in two states, 0 or 1, simultaneously or at a different time.
  • quart minor — Piquet. a sequence of four cards of the same suit, as an ace, king, queen, and jack (quart major) or king, queen, jack, and ten (quart minor)
  • quint major — an organ stop sounding a fifth higher than the corresponding digitals.
  • rationalism — the principle or habit of accepting reason as the supreme authority in matters of opinion, belief, or conduct.
  • reactionism — of, pertaining to, marked by, or favoring reaction, especially extreme conservatism or rightism in politics; opposing political or social change.
  • realignment — an adjustment to a line; arrangement in a straight line.
  • reanimation — to restore to life; resuscitate.
  • reclamation — the reclaiming of desert, marshy, or submerged areas or other wasteland for cultivation or other use.
  • recombinant — of or resulting from new combinations of genetic material: recombinant cells.
  • recriminate — to bring a countercharge against an accuser.
  • reformation — the act of reforming; state of being reformed.
  • refrainment — to abstain from an impulse to say or do something (often followed by from): I refrained from telling him what I thought.
  • regimentals — of or relating to a regiment.
  • relationism — a doctrine maintaining the existence of relations between things
  • remediation — the correction of something bad or defective.
  • remigration — the act or process of returning or migrating back to the place of origin
  • retinaculum — Anatomy, Zoology. any of various small structures that hook, clasp, or bind other structures to move them or hold them in place.
  • rifacimento — a recast or adaptation, as of a literary or musical work.
  • ring magnet — a ring-shaped permanent magnet.
  • romanticise — to make romantic; invest with a romantic character: Many people romanticize the role of an editor.
  • romanticism — romantic spirit or tendency.
  • romanticist — an adherent of romanticism in literature or art (contrasted with classicist).
  • romanticize — to make romantic; invest with a romantic character: Many people romanticize the role of an editor.
  • rudimentary — pertaining to rudiments or first principles; elementary: a rudimentary knowledge of geometry.
  • ruminations — to chew the cud, as a ruminant.
  • saint-simonComte de, 1760–1825, French philosopher and social scientist.
  • salinometer — an instrument for measuring the amount of salt in a solution.
  • saltimbanco — a charlatan or fake
  • samuel ting — Samuel C(hao) C(hung) [chou choo ng] /tʃaʊ tʃʊŋ/ (Show IPA), born 1936, U.S. physicist: Nobel prize 1976.
  • sand martin — the bank swallow.
  • santa maria — (italics) the flagship used by Columbus when he made his first voyage of discovery to America in 1492.
  • scambaiting — the practice of pretending to fall for fraudulent online schemes in order to waste the time of the perpetrators
  • sedimentary — of, relating to, or of the nature of sediment.
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