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11-letter words containing y, a, m, e, r

  • oneiromancy — divination through dreams.
  • onyx marble — Mexican onyx.
  • ovariectomy — the operation of removing one or both ovaries; oophorectomy.
  • overpayment — to pay more than (an amount due): I received a credit after overpaying the bill.
  • oyster farm — a place where oyster beds are kept.
  • oysterwoman — a woman who gathers, cultivates, or sells oysters.
  • pachydermal — having the characteristics of a pachyderm
  • pachydermia — an abnormal thickening of the skin
  • pachydermic — any of the thick-skinned, nonruminant ungulates, as the elephant, hippopotamus, and rhinoceros.
  • paper money — currency in paper form, such as government and bank notes, as distinguished from metal currency.
  • para-cymene — a colorless liquid, C 1 0 H 1 4 , derived from benzene, found in various essential oils, and obtained as a by-product of papermaking.
  • parenchymal — Botany. the fundamental tissue of plants, composed of thin-walled cells able to divide.
  • permanently — existing perpetually; everlasting, especially without significant change.
  • perth amboy — a seaport in E New Jersey.
  • poetry slam — a violent and noisy closing, dashing, or impact.
  • policymaker — a person responsible for making policy, especially in government.
  • polyspermia — the secretion of an excessive amount of semen.
  • preambulary — of, pertaining to or of the nature of a preamble; preliminary, introductory
  • preassembly — an assembling or coming together of a number of persons, usually for a particular purpose: The principal will speak to all the students at Friday's assembly.
  • preliminary — preceding and leading up to the main part, matter, or business; introductory; preparatory: preliminary examinations.
  • prematurely — occurring, coming, or done too soon: a premature announcement.
  • prematurity — occurring, coming, or done too soon: a premature announcement.
  • premonetary — of or relating to the coinage or currency of a country.
  • primary key — (database)   A unique identifier, often an integer, that labels a certain row in a table of a relational database. When this value occurs in other tables as a reference to a particular row in the first table it is called a "foreign key". Some RDBMSes can generate a new unique identifier each time a new row is inserted, others merely allow a column to be constrained to contain unique values. A table may have multiple candidate keys, from which the primary key is chosen. The primary key should be an arbitrary value, such as an autoincrementing integer. This avoids dependence on uniqueness, permanence and format of existing columns with real-world meaning (e.g. a person's name) or other external identifier (e.g. social security number). There should be enough possible primary key values to cater for the current and expected number of rows, bearing in mind that a wider column will generally be slower to process.
  • propylamine — an isomeric amine of propyl
  • prosenchyma — the tissue characteristic of the woody and bast portions of plants, consisting typically of long, narrow cells with pointed ends.
  • proximately — next; nearest; immediately before or after in order, place, occurrence, etc.
  • pyramid bet — a set of bets on two or more horse races or other sporting events in which the stake and winnings from the first bet automatically become the stake in the next bet, and so on as long as each bet wins.
  • radiothermy — therapy that utilizes the heat from a shortwave radio apparatus or diathermy machine.
  • rallymaster — an organizer and director of an automobile rally.
  • ray's bream — a species of bream Brama brama, common in southern European waters
  • ready money — money that is in hand or may be obtained quickly or easily; cash.
  • ready-mixed — blended in advance of being sold
  • reclaimably — in a reclaimable manner
  • reformatory — serving or designed to reform: reformatory lectures; reformatory punishments.
  • rheumaticky — affected with rheumatism
  • rhyme royal — a form of verse introduced into English by Chaucer, consisting of seven-line stanzas of iambic pentameter in which there are three rhymes, the first line rhyming with the third, the second with the fourth and fifth, and the sixth with the seventh.
  • ride cymbal — a medium-sized cymbal suspended over a set of drums, used for maintaining rhythm patterns since the advent of bop
  • rome beauty — a large, red variety of apple, used chiefly for baking.
  • rose family — the plant family Rosaceae, characterized by trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants having compound or simple leaves with stipules, flowers typically with five sepals and five petals, and fruit in a variety of forms, many of which are fleshy and edible, and including the almond, apple, apricot, blackberry, cherry, cinquefoil, hawthorn, peach, pear, plum, raspberry, rose, spirea, and strawberry.
  • rudimentary — pertaining to rudiments or first principles; elementary: a rudimentary knowledge of geometry.
  • salmonberry — the salmon-colored, edible fruit of a raspberry, Rubus spectabilis, of the Pacific coast of North America.
  • sand myrtle — an evergreen shrub, Leiophyllum buxifolium, of the heath family, native to the eastern U.S., having simple, leathery leaves and clusters of white or pink flowers.
  • sarcenchyme — the connective tissue of some sponges
  • screamingly — If you say that something is, for example, screamingly funny or screamingly boring, you mean that it is extremely funny or extremely boring.
  • sea lamprey — a parasitic marine lamprey, Petromyzon marinus, that spawns in fresh water along both Atlantic coasts and in the Great Lakes, where it is responsible for losses of economically valuable fish.
  • seamstressy — needlework
  • sedimentary — of, relating to, or of the nature of sediment.
  • shameworthy — deserving shame; denoting something a person ought to be ashamed of
  • slant rhyme — rhyme in which either the vowels or the consonants of stressed syllables are identical, as in eyes, light; years, yours.
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