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12-letter words containing t, o, y, i, s

  • cytokinetics — (biology) The study of cytokinesis.
  • day hospital — part of a hospital that offers therapeutic services, where patients usually attend all day but go home or to a hospital ward at night
  • densitometry — Photography. an instrument for measuring the density of negatives.
  • desolatingly — in a way that desolates, in a desolating fashion
  • despiteously — in a despiteous or contemptuous manner
  • despotically — of, relating to, or of the nature of a despot or despotism; autocratic; tyrannical.
  • dicotyledons — Plural form of dicotyledon.
  • dictyostelic — Of or possessing a dictyostele.
  • diisocyanate — (chemistry) Any compound containing two isocyanate anions or functional groups, but especially such an organic compound used in the preparation of polyurethane.
  • disastrously — causing great distress or injury; ruinous; very unfortunate; calamitous: The rain and cold proved disastrous to his health.
  • discommodity — inconvenience; disadvantageousness.
  • discommunity — a lack of community
  • discongruity — incongruity.
  • discordantly — disagreeable to the ear; dissonant; harsh.
  • disjointedly — In a disjointed manner.
  • dislocatedly — in a dislocated manner
  • disloyalties — Plural form of disloyalty.
  • dispensatory — a book in which the composition, preparation, and uses of medicinal substances are described; a nonofficial pharmacopoeia.
  • dispiteously — in a manner that lacks pity
  • disquisitory — of or relating to disquisition
  • dissociality — the fact or characteristic of being dissocial
  • domestically — of or relating to the home, the household, household affairs, or the family: domestic pleasures.
  • dryopithecus — an extinct genus of generalized hominoids that lived in Europe and Africa during the Miocene Epoch and whose members are characterized by small molars and incisors.
  • dyotheletism — the teaching that Christ had both a divine will and a human will
  • dysfunctions — Plural form of dysfunction.
  • dystopianism — a society characterized by human misery, as squalor, oppression, disease, and overcrowding.
  • easy does it — If you say 'Easy does it', you are telling someone to be careful and not to use too much effort, especially when they are moving something large and awkward.
  • ectosymbiont — (biology) A partner in a symbiotic relationship that remains on the surface of its host or occupies a body cavity.
  • egoistically — In an egoistic manner.
  • egyptologist — Alternative spelling of Egyptologist.
  • electrolysis — Chemical decomposition produced by passing an electric current through a liquid or solution containing ions.
  • elytrigerous — having elytra
  • embryologist — An expert or specialist in embryology.
  • enantiostyly — the asymmetrical deflection of the style, either to the left or to the right of the floral axis
  • endosymbiont — (ecology) An organism that lives within the body or cells of another organism.
  • enhypostasia — personalities existing in union (Jesus Christ and God the Son)
  • enhypostatic — relating to enhypostasia
  • enteroclysis — A fluoroscopic X-ray of the small intestine.
  • enzymologist — A specialist in enzymology.
  • epistemology — The theory of knowledge, especially with regard to its methods, validity, and scope. Epistemology is the investigation of what distinguishes justified belief from opinion.
  • esoterically — In an esoteric manner.
  • ethnohistory — The branch of anthropology concerned with the history of peoples and cultures, especially non-Western ones.
  • etymologizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of etymologize.
  • ex hypothesi — in accordance with or following from the hypothesis stated
  • factitiously — In a factitious manner.
  • factory ship — a whaling ship equipped to process killed whales and to transport the oil and by-products.
  • fastidiously — excessively particular, critical, or demanding; hard to please: a fastidious eater.
  • felicitously — In a felicitous manner.
  • fictitiously — created, taken, or assumed for the sake of concealment; not genuine; false: fictitious names.
  • fifty-second — next after the fifty-first; being the ordinal number for 52.
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