0%

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

  • discerption — The action of pulling something apart.
  • doctorspeak — the language of physicians and other health professionals; specialized or technical jargon used by healthcare workers.
  • ecopolitics — the study of the interrelation between political and ecological issues and problems.
  • ectoplasmic — Relating to, or having the properties or appearance of, ectoplasm.
  • ectoplastic — ectoplasmic
  • episcopates — Plural form of episcopate.
  • eurosceptic — Alternative form of Eurosceptic.
  • expiscation — the act of fishing out or finding out by investigation
  • expiscatory — acting to expiscate; tending to expiscate
  • footscraper — a metal bar, set in a small frame and attached to a doorstep, used in cleaning mud from the bottoms of the shoes before entering a house.
  • fort casper — a fort in central Wyoming, near Casper: an important post on the Oregon Trail.
  • gastroscope — a lighted flexible tubular instrument passed through the mouth for examining the esophagus, stomach, and duodenum.
  • 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.
  • geostrophic — of or relating to the balance between the Coriolis force and the horizontal pressure force in the atmosphere.
  • hectopascal — An SI unit of pressure and stress equal to 100 pascals.
  • helicopters — Plural form of helicopter.
  • hepatocytes — Plural form of hepatocyte.
  • hepatoscopy — medical examination of the liver.
  • heteroptics — incorrect or perverted perception of what is seen; hallucinatory vision.
  • hippocrates — ("Father of Medicine") c460–c377 b.c, Greek physician.
  • hopscotched — Simple past tense and past participle of hopscotch.
  • hypocenters — Plural form of hypocenter.
  • hypocretins — Plural form of hypocretin.
  • hypsometric — Of or relating to the use of the hypsometer; hypsographic.
  • importances — the quality or state of being important; consequence; significance.
  • in lockstep — When members of the armed forces march in lockstep, they march very close to each other.
  • in prospect — expected, predicted
  • incompletes — Plural form of incomplete.
  • incomposite — not composite or consisting of parts; simple; not divisible into parts
  • inspections — Plural form of inspection.
  • isospectral — (mathematics) Having the same spectrum.
  • keratoscope — an instrument, as Placido's disk, for determining the symmetry of the curvature of the cornea.
  • keratoscopy — an instrument, as Placido's disk, for determining the symmetry of the curvature of the cornea.
  • kinetoscope — an early motion-picture device, invented by Edison, in which the film passed behind a peephole for viewing by a single viewer.
  • kleptocrats — Plural form of kleptocrat.
  • leucoplasts — Plural form of leucoplast.
  • lymphocytes — Plural form of lymphocyte.
  • macrophytes — Plural form of macrophyte.
  • master copy — an original copy, stencil, tape, etc, from which duplicates are made
  • mecopterans — Plural form of mecopteran.
  • mecopterous — belonging or pertaining to the insect order Mecoptera, comprising the scorpionflies and hangingflies.
  • mesotrophic — (of freshwater lakes) containing medium levels of nutrients
  • metoposcopy — the prediction of a person's fortune, or the reading of a person's character, through the examination of the forehead or face
  • microphytes — Plural form of microphyte.
  • mouthpieces — Plural form of mouthpiece.
  • nightscopes — Plural form of nightscope.
  • nociceptors — Plural form of nociceptor.
  • non-suspect — to believe to be guilty, false, counterfeit, undesirable, defective, bad, etc., with little or no proof: to suspect a person of murder.
  • nondescript — of no recognized, definite, or particular type or kind: a nondescript novel; a nondescript color.
  • object lisp — (language)   An object-oriented Lisp developed by Lisp Machines Inc. (LMI) in about 1987. Object Lisp was based on nested closures and operator shadowing. Several competing object-orientated extensions to Lisp were around at the time, such as Flavors, in use by Symbolics; Common Objects, developed by Hewlett-Packard; and CommonLoops in use by Xerox. LMI submitted the specification as a candidate for an object-oriented standard for Common Lisp, but it was defeated in favour of CLOS.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?