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9-letter words containing t, r, o, s, i

  • pistoleer — a person, especially a soldier, who uses or is armed with a pistol.
  • pistolero — a member of an armed band of roving mounted bandits.
  • pistolier — a person, especially a soldier, who uses or is armed with a pistol.
  • pistorius — Oscar (Leonard Carl), born 1986, South African sprinter in races for below-the-knee amputees; winner of six Paralympic gold medals (2004–2012); found guilty of the murder of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp (1983–2013)
  • pogromist — a person who participates in a pogrom
  • pooterish — characteristic of or resembling the fictional character Pooter, esp in being bourgeois, genteel, or self-important
  • port said — a seaport in NE Egypt at the Mediterranean end of the Suez Canal.
  • porticoes — a structure consisting of a roof supported by columns or piers, usually attached to a building as a porch.
  • portieres — a curtain hung in a doorway, either to replace the door or for decoration.
  • posteriad — toward the posterior; posteriorly.
  • posterior — situated behind or at the rear of; hinder (opposed to anterior).
  • posterity — succeeding or future generations collectively: Judgment of this age must be left to posterity.
  • posterize — to humiliate (a sporting opponent) by performing a dramatic feat against them
  • postiller — a writer of postils; an annotator
  • postrider — (formerly) a person who rode post; a mounted mail carrier.
  • posttrial — Law. the examination before a judicial tribunal of the facts put in issue in a cause, often including issues of law as well as those of fact. the determination of a person's guilt or innocence by due process of law.
  • posturing — the relative disposition of the parts of something.
  • posturise — to posture; pose.
  • posturize — to posture; pose.
  • potteriesthe, a district in central England famous for the manufacture of pottery and china. The towns comprising this district were combined in 1910 to form Stoke-on-Trent.
  • pretorius — Andries Wilhelmus Jacobus [ahn-drees vil-hel-moo s yah-kaw-boo s] /ˈɑn dris vɪlˈhɛl mʊs yɑˈkɔ bʊs/ (Show IPA), 1799–1853, and his son Marthinus Wessels [mahr-tee-noo s ves-uh ls] /mɑrˈti nʊs ˈvɛs əls/ (Show IPA) 1819–1901, Boer soldiers and statesmen in South Africa.
  • proctitis — inflammation of the rectum and anus.
  • profilist — a person who creates a profile
  • profiters — Often, profits. pecuniary gain resulting from the employment of capital in any transaction. Compare gross profit, net profit. the ratio of such pecuniary gain to the amount of capital invested. returns, proceeds, or revenue, as from property or investments.
  • progestin — any substance having progesteronelike activity.
  • prologist — a prologue writer or performer
  • propontis — Marmara
  • proptosis — the forward displacement of an organ.
  • proscript — a proscription or prohibition
  • prosodist — an expert in prosody.
  • prostasis — (in a classical temple) a pronaos or prostas before a cella.
  • prostatic — Also, prostatic [pro-stat-ik] /prɒˈstæt ɪk/ (Show IPA). of or relating to the prostate gland.
  • prosthion — the most forward projecting point of the anterior surface of the upper jaw, in the midsagittal plane.
  • prothesis — the addition of a sound or syllable at the beginning of a word, as in Spanish escala “ladder” from Latin scala.
  • protistan — any of various one-celled organisms, classified in the kingdom Protista, that are either free-living or aggregated into simple colonies and that have diverse reproductive and nutritional modes, including the protozoans, eukaryotic algae, and slime molds: some classification schemes also include the fungi and the more primitive bacteria and blue-green algae or may distribute the organisms between the kingdoms Plantae and Animalia according to dominant characteristics.
  • protistic — of or relating to the kingdom Protista
  • protoavis — a fossil bird of the genus Protoavis, from the Triassic Period, having a birdlike, partly toothless jaw structure, a tail and hind legs resembling those of the dinosaur, and the hollow bones and keellike breast that are characteristic of modern birds: the oldest known avian type, preceding the archaeopteryx by an estimated 75 million years.
  • proustian — of, relating to, or resembling Marcel Proust, his writings, or the middle-class and aristocratic worlds he described.
  • proustite — a mineral, silver arsenic sulfide, Ag 3 AsS 3 , occurring in scarlet crystals and masses: a minor ore of silver; ruby silver.
  • psoriatic — a common chronic, inflammatory skin disease characterized by scaly patches.
  • quicksort — A sorting algorithm with O(n log n) average time complexity. One element, x of the list to be sorted is chosen and the other elements are split into those elements less than x and those greater than or equal to x. These two lists are then sorted recursively using the same algorithm until there is only one element in each list, at which point the sublists are recursively recombined in order yielding the sorted list. This can be written in Haskell:
  • radio set — an apparatus that receives radio signals
  • radiocast — a radiobroadcast.
  • radiosity — (graphics)   A method for rendering a view of a three-dimensional scene that provides realistic lighting effects, such as interobject reflections and color bleeding. Radiosity methods are computationally intense, due to the use of linear systems of equations and the spatial complexity of large scenes.
  • rainspout — waterspout (def 1).
  • rainstorm — a storm with heavy rain.
  • recordist — Also called sound recordist. Movies. the person in charge of sound recording on a film set. Compare mixer.
  • recosting — the price paid to acquire, produce, accomplish, or maintain anything: the high cost of a good meal.
  • redeposit — to place for safekeeping or in trust, especially in a bank account: He deposited his paycheck every Friday.
  • reformist — a person who advocates or practices reform; reformer.
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