9-letter words containing eti
- mimetical — Alternative form of mimetic.
- mira ceti — a binary star one component of which, a red supergiant, is a long-period variable with an average period of 332 days
- monacetin — acetin.
- monetised — Simple past tense and past participle of monetise.
- monetized — Simple past tense and past participle of monetize.
- myricetin — (organic compound) A particular flavonol, found in many vegetables etc., that has antioxidant and other therapeutic properties.
- naiveties — Plural form of naivety.
- nimieties — Plural form of nimiety.
- ninetieth — next after the eighty-ninth; being the ordinal number for 90.
- nobiletin — (organic compound) An O-methylated flavone found in citrus peels.
- nonpoetic — not poetic
- nouthetic — Being or relating to a form of Evangelical Protestant pastoral counseling based upon the Bible and focused on Christ.
- nymphetic — relating to a nymphet
- oogenetic — Of or pertaining to oogenesis.
- palleting — a small, low, portable platform on which goods are placed for storage or moving, as in a warehouse or vehicle.
- palletize — to place (materials) upon pallets for handling or moving.
- panetiere — a small, decorative livery cupboard, made especially in Provence in the 18th century.
- pargeting — any of various plasters or roughcasts for covering walls or other surfaces, especially a mortar of lime, hair, and cow dung for lining chimney flues.
- peacetime — a time or period of peace: a large navy even in peacetime.
- pelletier — Wilfrid, 1896–1982, Canadian orchestra conductor.
- pelletify — to shape into pellets
- pelletize — to make or form (concentrated ore) into pellets.
- petillant — slightly sparkling.
- petiolate — having a petiole or peduncle.
- petiolule — a small petiole, as of a leaflet in a compound leaf.
- petit feu — a firing of ceramics at a low temperature.
- petit mal — a disorder of the nervous system, characterized either by mild, episodic loss of attention or sleepiness (petit mal) or by severe convulsions with loss of consciousness (grand mal)
- phenetics — classification of organisms based on measurable similarities and differences rather than genetic makeup and evolutionary descent.
- phonetics — (in Chinese writing) a written element that represents a sound and is used in combination with a radical to form a character.
- phonetism — the science of speech sounds and of writing phonetically
- phonetist — a person who uses or advocates phonetic spelling.
- phrenetic — frenetic.
- phyletics — phylogenetic classification.
- piagetian — of or relating to the theories developed by Jean Piaget.
- picketing — a post, stake, pale, or peg that is used in a fence or barrier, to fasten down a tent, etc.
- pietistic — a movement, originating in the Lutheran Church in Germany in the 17th century, that stressed personal piety over religious formality and orthodoxy.
- pocketing — a shaped piece of fabric attached inside or outside a garment and forming a pouch used especially for carrying small articles.
- poeticism — a poetic expression that has become hackneyed, forced, or artificial.
- poeticize — to make (thoughts, feelings, etc.) poetic; express in poetry.
- poeticule — an inferior poet
- pretibial — Anatomy. the inner of the two bones of the leg, that extend from the knee to the ankle and articulate with the femur and the talus; shinbone.
- prophetic — of or relating to a prophet: prophetic inspiration.
- prothetic — the addition of a sound or syllable at the beginning of a word, as in Spanish escala “ladder” from Latin scala.
- quercetin — a yellow, crystalline, slightly water-soluble powder, C 1 5 H 1 0 O 7 , obtained from the bark of the quercitron and other vegetable substances, used as a yellow dye; flavin.
- rabbeting — a deep notch formed in or near one edge of a board, framing timber, etc., so that something else can be fitted into it or so that a door or the like can be closed against it.
- racketing — Slang. an occupation, livelihood, or business. an easy or profitable source of livelihood.
- repletion — the condition of being abundantly supplied or filled; fullness.
- retiarius — a gladiator equipped with a net for casting over his opponent.
- reticella — a form of lace popular from the 15th to the 17th centuries
- reticence — the state of being reticent, or reserved, especially with regard to speaking freely; restraint: His natural reticence seemed to disappear under the influence of alcohol.