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13-letter words containing man

  • manufacturing — the making of goods or wares by manual labor or by machinery, especially on a large scale: the manufacture of television sets.
  • many-coloured — having many colours
  • market demand — demand for a particular product or commodity
  • megalomaniacs — Plural form of megalomaniac.
  • metasemantics — (linguistics) The part of metalanguage that deals with semantics.
  • micromanaging — Present participle of micromanage.
  • mild-mannered — If you describe someone as mild-mannered, you approve of them because they are gentle, kind, and polite.
  • mingle-mangle — a jumbled or confused mixture; hodgepodge.
  • mismanagement — The process or practice of managing ineptly, incompetently, or dishonestly.
  • morphinomania — an addiction to morphine or opium in which the addict secretly injects the substance
  • necromantical — Alternative form of necromantic.
  • nightwatchman — Someone who guards a premises at night.
  • nitromannitol — mannitol hexanitrate.
  • no man's land — an area between opposing armies, over which no control has been established.
  • no-man's land — No-man's land is an area of land that is not owned or controlled by anyone, for example the area of land between two opposing armies.
  • non-mandatory — authoritatively ordered; obligatory; compulsory: It is mandatory that all students take two years of math.
  • nonmanagement — Not a member of management.
  • nonmanagerial — pertaining to management or a manager: managerial functions; the managerial class of society.
  • norman french — Also called Norman. the French dialect of the Normans or of Normandy.
  • nymphomaniacs — Plural form of nymphomaniac.
  • of many parts — having many different abilities
  • of many words — talkative
  • old man river — a name for the Mississippi River
  • ombudsmanship — The position or office of an ombudsman.
  • one-upmanship — the art or practice of achieving, demonstrating, or assuming superiority in one's rivalry with a friend or opponent by obtaining privilege, status, status symbols, etc.: the one-upmanship of getting into the president's car pool.
  • orchidomaniac — a person who is obsessed with or has a passion for orchids
  • ornithomantic — relating to ornithomancy
  • outdoorswoman — a woman devoted to outdoor sports and recreational activities.
  • outmaneuvered — Simple past tense and past participle of outmaneuver.
  • outmanipulate — to surpass in manipulation
  • outmanoeuvred — Simple past tense and past participle of outmanoeuvre.
  • overdemanding — excessively demanding
  • painted woman — a prostitute; slut.
  • pan-germanism — the idea or advocacy of a union of all the German peoples in a single political organization or state.
  • party manners — polite behaviour
  • permanent set — the change in shape of a material that results when the load to which it is subjected causes the elastic limit to be exceeded and is then removed
  • permanent way — the roadbed and track of a railroad.
  • piers plowman — (The Vision Concerning Piers Plowman) an alliterative poem written in three versions (1360–99), ascribed to William Langland.
  • premandibular — situated in front of the mandible
  • privateersman — an officer or sailor of a privateer.
  • quartodeciman — one of a group of early Christians who observed Easter on the day of the Jewish Passover regardless of whether or not it was Sunday
  • remand centre — correctional facility
  • remanufacture — to refurbish (a used product) by renovating and reassembling its components: to remanufacture a vacuum cleaner.
  • reperformance — a musical, dramatic, or other entertainment presented before an audience.
  • rhadamanthine — Classical Mythology. a son of Zeus and Europa, rewarded for the justice he exemplified on earth by being made, after his death, a judge in the Underworld, where he served with his brothers Minos and Aeacus.
  • rhodesian man — an extinct Pleistocene human whose cranial remains were found at Kabwe, in Zambia: formerly in some classifications Homo rhodesiensis but now considered archaic Homo sapiens.
  • roman holiday — a public spectacle or controversy marked by barbarism, vindictiveness, or scandal.
  • roman letters — a typeface used in ancient Roman inscriptions
  • roman numeral — one of the numerals in the ancient Roman system of notation, still used for certain limited purposes, as in some pagination, dates on buildings, etc. The common basic symbols are I, (=1), V, (=5), X, (=10), L, (=50), C, (=100), D, (=500), and M, (=1000). The Roman numerals for one to nine are: I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX. A bar over a letter multiplies it by 1000; thus, X̅ equals 10,000. Integers are written according to these two rules: If a letter is immediately followed by one of equal or lesser value, the two values are added; thus, XX equals 20, XV equals 15, VI equals 6. If a letter is immediately followed by one of greater value, the first is subtracted from the second; thus, IV equals 4, XL equals 40, CM equals 900. Examples: XLVII(=47), CXVI(=116), MCXX(=1120), MCMXIV(=1914). Roman numerals may be written in lowercase letters, though they appear more commonly in capitals.
  • romantic lead — a person who plays the main character in a romantic film or play
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