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12-letter words containing ious

  • insalubrious — unfavorable to health; unwholesome.
  • labouriously — Alternative form of laboriously.
  • lasciviously — inclined to lustfulness; wanton; lewd: a lascivious, girl-chasing old man.
  • licentiously — In a licentious manner, rowdily, overwhelmed by passion and without control of appetites (especially sexual appetites).
  • loquaciously — In a loquacious manner.
  • lubriciously — In a lubricious manner.
  • lugubriously — In a lugubrious manner.
  • lusciousness — Property of being luscious.
  • mendaciously — In a lying or deceitful manner.
  • meretricious — alluring by a show of flashy or vulgar attractions; tawdry.
  • mischievious — Misconstruction of mischievous.
  • mock-serious — pretending to be serious as a joke, etc
  • multifarious — having many different parts, elements, forms, etc.
  • multivarious — Many and various.
  • mysteriously — full of, characterized by, or involving mystery: a mysterious occurrence.
  • non-spurious — not genuine, authentic, or true; not from the claimed, pretended, or proper source; counterfeit.
  • nonconscious — aware of one's own existence, sensations, thoughts, surroundings, etc.
  • nonreligious — of, relating to, or concerned with religion: a religious holiday.
  • nonvexatious — Not vexatious.
  • np-hilarious — (humour)   An algorithm whose complexity is a joke, either literally, as in BogoSort, or metaphorically.
  • nutritiously — In a way that provides nutrition; nourishment; food.
  • obreptitious — having the characteristics of acquiring something by deceitful means
  • obsequiously — characterized by or showing servile complaisance or deference; fawning: an obsequious bow.
  • ostentatious — characterized by or given to pretentious or conspicuous show in an attempt to impress others: an ostentatious dresser.
  • over-anxious — excessively anxious.
  • overcautious — excessively or unnecessarily cautious: Sometimes it doesn't pay to be overcautious in business.
  • parsimonious — characterized by or showing parsimony; frugal or stingy.
  • perfidiously — deliberately faithless; treacherous; deceitful: a perfidious lover.
  • perniciously — causing insidious harm or ruin; ruinous; injurious; hurtful: pernicious teachings; a pernicious lie.
  • pertinacious — holding tenaciously to a purpose, course of action, or opinion; resolute.
  • pervicacious — extremely willful; obstinate; stubborn.
  • precariously — dependent on circumstances beyond one's control; uncertain; unstable; insecure: a precarious livelihood.
  • preciousness — of high price or great value; very valuable or costly: precious metals.
  • precociously — unusually advanced or mature in development, especially mental development: a precocious child.
  • preconscious — Psychoanalysis. absent from but capable of being readily brought into consciousness.
  • prodigiously — extraordinary in size, amount, extent, degree, force, etc.: a prodigious research grant.
  • proditorious — traitorous
  • propitiously — presenting favorable conditions; favorable: propitious weather.
  • pugnaciously — inclined to quarrel or fight readily; quarrelsome; belligerent; combative.
  • querimonious — Complaining; querulous. (from 17th c.).
  • rambunctious — difficult to control or handle; wildly boisterous: a rambunctious child.
  • rebelliously — defying or resisting some established authority, government, or tradition; insubordinate; inclined to rebel.
  • sacrilegious — pertaining to or involving sacrilege: sacrilegious practices.
  • semi-serious — having some seriousness; partly serious.
  • semiprecious — (of a stone) having commercial value as a gem but not classified as precious, as the amethyst or garnet.
  • spaciousness — containing much space, as a house, room, or vehicle; amply large.
  • speciousness — apparently good or right though lacking real merit; superficially pleasing or plausible: specious arguments.
  • studiousness — disposed or given to diligent study: a studious boy.
  • subconscious — existing or operating in the mind beneath or beyond consciousness: the subconscious self. Compare preconscious, unconscious.
  • subdelirious — having the symptoms of subdelirium; suffering from subdelirium
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