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

  • maintopmast — (nautical) The topmast of the mainmast.
  • maintopsail — a topsail set on the mainmast.
  • malapropist — a person who regularly makes malapropisms
  • malposition — faulty or wrong position, especially of a part or organ of the body or of a fetus in the uterus.
  • mammoplasty — reconstruction or alteration in size or contour of the female breast.
  • master copy — an original copy, stencil, tape, etc, from which duplicates are made
  • mastoplasty — (surgery) Plastic surgery of a breast to alter its shape or size.
  • mecopterans — Plural form of mecopteran.
  • mecopterous — belonging or pertaining to the insect order Mecoptera, comprising the scorpionflies and hangingflies.
  • megaphonist — Someone who uses a megaphone.
  • mentoplasty — plastic surgery to correct a functional or cosmetic deformity of the chin.
  • mesopotamia — an ancient region in W Asia between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers: now part of Iraq.
  • mesotherapy — a cosmetic procedure in which minute doses of medication, vitamins, etc, are injected repeatedly into the mesodermal tissue under the skin to promote fat loss
  • mesotrophic — (of freshwater lakes) containing medium levels of nutrients
  • metanephros — one of the three embryonic excretory organs of higher vertebrates, becoming the permanent and functional kidney.
  • metaphorist — a creator or user of metaphors
  • metapodials — Plural form of metapodial.
  • 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.
  • miphiboseth — Mephibosheth.
  • misanthrope — a comedy (1666) by Molière.
  • misanthropy — hatred, dislike, or distrust of humankind.
  • misocapnist — (rare) One who hates tobacco smoke.
  • misoprostol — A drug used for various purposes including the prevention of drug-induced gastric ulcers and the inducement of abortions, having the chemical formula C22H38O5.
  • misposition — condition with reference to place; location; situation.
  • misreported — Simple past tense and past participle of misreport.
  • mitropoulos — Dimitri [dih-mee-tree;; Greek th ee-mee-tree] /dɪˈmi tri;; Greek ðiˈmi tri/ (Show IPA), 1897–1960, Greek symphony orchestra conductor in the U.S.
  • monitorship — (especially formerly) a student appointed to assist in the conduct of a class or school, as to help take attendance or keep order.
  • monophysite — a person who maintains that Christ has one nature, partly divine and partly human.
  • monopolists — Plural form of monopolist.
  • monopsonist — the sole buyer in a monopsony
  • monostrophe — a poem in which all the strophes or stanzas are of the same metrical form.
  • morse taper — a taper that is one of a standard series used in the shank of tools to fit a matching taper in the mandrel of a machine tool
  • mosstrooper — a marauder who operated in the mosses, or bogs, of the border between England and Scotland in the 17th century.
  • most-lupine — pertaining to or resembling the wolf.
  • most-pontic — pertaining to the Pontus Euxinus or to Pontus.
  • mother ship — a vessel or craft that services others operating far from a home port or center.
  • motherships — Plural form of mothership.
  • motorsports — Plural form of motorsport.
  • mount siple — a mountain in Antarctica, on the coast of Byrd Land. Height: 3100 m (10 171 ft)
  • mouthpieces — Plural form of mouthpiece.
  • multiparous — of or relating to a multipara.
  • multiperson — a human being, whether an adult or child: The table seats four persons.
  • multipiston — having more than one piston
  • mustard pot — a small pot, of glass, silver, etc, placed on the table to serve mustard
  • muttonchops — The whiskers on a man's cheek when shaped like a meat chop, narrow at the top and broad and rounded at the bottom.
  • mycophagist — a fungus-eating organism.
  • myographist — a person who has expert knowledge of muscles
  • mythopoesis — Creation of myth.
  • naturopaths — Plural form of naturopath.
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