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11-letter words containing t, a, s, i, n, e

  • miniaturise — (British) alternative spelling of miniaturize.
  • ministerial — pertaining to the ministry of religion, or to a minister or other member of the clergy.
  • misanthrope — a comedy (1666) by Molière.
  • miscegenate — (US) to mix or blend.
  • miscreation — miscreated.
  • misrelation — an erroneous or imperfect relation
  • misteaching — Present participle of misteach.
  • mistreading — a wrongdoing or misdemeanour
  • mistreating — Present participle of mistreat.
  • mizzenmasts — Plural form of mizzenmast.
  • moderations — the quality of being moderate; restraint; avoidance of extremes or excesses; temperance.
  • molestation — to bother, interfere with, or annoy.
  • monasteries — Plural form of monastery.
  • multiplanes — Plural form of multiplane.
  • mundanities — the condition or quality of being mundane; mundaneness.
  • mutagenesis — the origin and development of a mutation.
  • myxasthenia — defective secretion of mucus.
  • nationalise — To bring a private company under the control of a specific government.
  • native bush — indigenous forest
  • natriuresis — excretion of sodium in the urine.
  • naturalised — (British) Simple past tense and past participle of naturalise.
  • naturalizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of naturalize.
  • naughtiness — disobedient; mischievous (used especially in speaking to or about children): Weren't we naughty not to eat our spinach?
  • nearsighted — seeing distinctly at a short distance only; myopic.
  • necessitate — to make necessary or unavoidable: The breakdown of the car necessitated a change in our plans.
  • negationist — the act of denying: He shook his head in negation of the charge.
  • negotiables — Plural form of negotiable.
  • negotiators — Plural form of negotiator.
  • nematocides — Plural form of nematocide.
  • nematodirus — any parasitic nematode worm of the genus Nematodirus
  • neo-dadaist — a minor art movement chiefly of the 1960s reviving some of the objectives of dada but placing emphasis on the importance of the work of art produced rather than on the concept generating the work.
  • neo-fascist — any of various political movements or beliefs inspired by or reminiscent of fascism or Nazism.
  • neofascists — Plural form of neofascist.
  • neosilicate — (chemistry) any simple silicate mineral in which the SiO4 tetrahedra are isolated and have metal ions as neighbours.
  • neovitalism — a new or revived form of the belief that life is a vital principle (vitalism)
  • neovitalist — someone who holds to the theory of neovitalism
  • neutralised — Simple past tense and past participle of neutralise.
  • neutralises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of neutralise.
  • neutralists — a person who advocates or adheres to a policy of strict neutrality in foreign affairs.
  • neutralizes — (American spelling) alternative spelling of neutralisest; Third-person singular simple present indicative form of neutralize.
  • new castile — a region in central Spain: formerly a province. 27,933 sq. mi. (72,346 sq. km).
  • newscasting — a broadcast of news on radio or television.
  • nietzschean — the philosophy of Nietzsche, emphasizing the will to power as the chief motivating force of both the individual and society.
  • night snake — a nocturnal, mildly venomous New World snake, Hypsiglena torquata, having a gray or yellowish body marked with dark brown spots.
  • nightdreams — Plural form of nightdream.
  • nightshades — Plural form of nightshade.
  • nitrogenase — an enzyme complex that catalyzes the reduction of molecular nitrogen in the nitrogen-fixation process of bacteria.
  • nitrosamine — any of a series of compounds with the type formula R 2 NNO, some of which are carcinogenic, formed in cured meats by the conversion of nitrite.
  • nitrosourea — any of various lipid-soluble, synthetic or naturally occurring alkylating agents that can cross the blood-brain barrier: used in the treatment of certain brain cancers.
  • nominatives — Plural form of nominative.
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