9-letter words containing u, l, t, i, m
- multipara — a woman who has borne two or more children, or who is parturient for the second time.
- multipart — a portion or division of a whole that is separate or distinct; piece, fragment, fraction, or section; constituent: the rear part of the house; to glue the two parts together.
- multipath — a way beaten, formed, or trodden by the feet of persons or animals.
- multipion — involving several or many pions
- multiplay — Denoting a compact disc player that can be stacked with a number of discs before needing to be reloaded.
- multiples — consisting of, having, or involving several or many individuals, parts, elements, relations, etc.; manifold.
- multiplet — a group of several related spectral lines, usually of nearly the same wavelengths.
- multiplex — having many parts or aspects: the multiplex problem of drug abuse.
- multipole — (physics) Any of a several forms of static or oscillating distributions of charge or magnetization.
- multiport — Computers. having more than one port.
- multirisk — (of insurance) covering several risks
- multirole — a part or character played by an actor or actress.
- multiroom — having several rooms
- multiscan — (hardware) A monitor that can synchronise to a variety of horizontal scan rates and refresh rates, allowing it to display images at different resolutions.
- multisite — Occupying, or occurring at multiple sites.
- multisize — having more than one size
- multistep — Involving multiple steps.
- multisync — (hardware) An NEC trademark term for multiscan. As NEC was the first to manufacture multiscan monitors the term is often used interchangeably with multiscan.
- multitask — Computers. (of a single CPU) to execute two or more jobs concurrently.
- multitide — Misspelling of multitude.
- multitier — Having many tiers; multitiered.
- multitone — having or characterized by more than one musical tone
- multitool — an implement, especially one held in the hand, as a hammer, saw, or file, for performing or facilitating mechanical operations.
- multitude — a great number; host: a multitude of friends.
- multiunit — a single thing or person.
- multiuser — (of a computer system) able to be used by a number of people simultaneously.
- multiview — an instance of seeing or beholding; visual inspection.
- multiwall — having a wall or casing composed of layers of material, often pressed closely together: multiwall bags for shipping grain.
- multiyear — Having a duration of multiple years.
- multizone — Of or pertaining to more than one zone.
- muralists — Plural form of muralist.
- musteline — belonging or pertaining to the family Mustelidae, including the martens, skunks, minks, weasels, badgers, and otters.
- mutilated — Simple past tense and past participle of mutilate.
- mutilates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mutilate.
- mutilator — to injure, disfigure, or make imperfect by removing or irreparably damaging parts: Vandals mutilated the painting.
- mutiliate — Misspelling of mutilate.
- mutualise — Alternative spelling of mutualize.
- mutualism — a relationship between two species of organisms in which both benefit from the association.
- mutualist — a relationship between two species of organisms in which both benefit from the association.
- mutuality — condition or quality of being mutual; reciprocity; mutual dependence.
- mutualize — to make mutual.
- nummulite — a fossil foraminifer of the genus Camerina (Nummulites), having a calcareous, usually disklike shell.
- occultism — belief in the existence of secret, mysterious, or supernatural agencies.
- penultima — the next to the last syllable in a word.
- plutonism — the intrusion of magma and associated deep-seated processes within the earth's crust.
- plutonium — a transuranic element with a fissile isotope of mass number 239 (plutonium 239) that can be produced from non-fissile uranium 238, as in a breeder reactor. Symbol: Pu; atomic number: 94.
- quitclaim — a transfer of all one's interest, as in a parcel of real estate, especially without a warranty of title.
- reptilium — a building for the public exhibition of reptiles.
- reticulum — any fine network, esp one in the body composed of cells, fibres, etc
- ritualism — adherence to or insistence on ritual.