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11-letter words containing t, o, p, l, e, s

  • epsom salts — Epsom salts is a kind of white powder which you can mix with water and drink as a medicine to help you empty your bowels.
  • expostulate — Express strong disapproval or disagreement.
  • false topaz — citrine (def 2).
  • field sport — Hunting, shooting birds, and fishing with a rod are referred to as field sports when they are done mainly for pleasure.
  • floatplanes — Plural form of floatplane.
  • foretopsail — (nautical) the sail draped from the foretopmast.
  • genioplasty — Mentoplasty.
  • geopolitics — the study or the application of the influence of political and economic geography on the politics, national power, foreign policy, etc., of a state.
  • gospel oath — an oath sworn on the Gospels
  • graptolites — Plural form of graptolite.
  • hectopascal — An SI unit of pressure and stress equal to 100 pascals.
  • helicopters — Plural form of helicopter.
  • heliophytes — a plant that grows best in full sunlight.
  • heliotropes — Plural form of heliotrope.
  • heptathlons — Plural form of heptathlon.
  • heteroplasm — (pathology) Tissue growing in a part of the body where it does not normally occur.
  • hospitalise — (British spelling) alternative spelling of hospitalize.
  • hospitalize — to place in a hospital for medical care or observation: The doctor hospitalized grandfather as soon as she checked his heart.
  • hospitaller — a member of the religious and military order (Knights Hospitalers or Knights of St. John of Jerusalem) originating about the time of the first Crusade (1096–99) and taking its name from a hospital at Jerusalem.
  • house plant — an ornamental plant that is grown indoors or adapts well to indoor culture.
  • houseplants — Plural form of houseplant.
  • hyperbolist — One who uses hyperbole; an exaggerator.
  • hypohalites — Plural form of hypohalite.
  • hyposulfite — Also called hydrosulfite. a salt of hyposulfurous acid.
  • impetuously — of, relating to, or characterized by sudden or rash action, emotion, etc.; impulsive: an impetuous decision; an impetuous person.
  • in lockstep — When members of the armed forces march in lockstep, they march very close to each other.
  • incompletes — Plural form of incomplete.
  • interlopers — Plural form of interloper.
  • isospectral — (mathematics) Having the same spectrum.
  • joggle post — a wooden king post having notches or raised areas for receiving and supporting the feet of struts.
  • kinetoplast — A mass of mitochondrial DNA lying close to the nucleus in some flagellate protozoa.
  • kleptocrats — Plural form of kleptocrat.
  • last gospel — in the order of service for the Mass, the final reading of a Gospel lesson.
  • lepromatous — the swollen lesion of leprosy.
  • leptospiral — relating to, caused by, or characteristic of leptospires
  • leucoplasts — Plural form of leucoplast.
  • lister-plow — Also called lister plow, middlebreaker, middlebuster. a plow with a double moldboard, used to prepare the ground for planting by producing furrows and ridges.
  • lithophytes — Plural form of lithophyte.
  • lithosphere — the solid portion of the earth (distinguished from atmosphere, hydrosphere).
  • liver spots — a form of chloasma in which irregularly shaped light-brown spots occur on the skin.
  • lobster pot — a trap for catching lobsters, typically a box made of wooden slats with a funnellike entrance to the bait.
  • lost pleiad — See under Pleiades (def 1).
  • lymphocytes — Plural form of lymphocyte.
  • mentoplasty — plastic surgery to correct a functional or cosmetic deformity of the chin.
  • metapodials — Plural form of metapodial.
  • most-lupine — pertaining to or resembling the wolf.
  • mount siple — a mountain in Antarctica, on the coast of Byrd Land. Height: 3100 m (10 171 ft)
  • multiperson — a human being, whether an adult or child: The table seats four persons.
  • nemophilist — (rare) One who is fond of forests or forest scenery; a haunter of the woods.
  • neopopulist — pertaining to a revival of populism, especially a sophisticated form appealing to commonplace values and prejudices.
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