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11-letter words containing men

  • attachments — Plural form of attachment.
  • attainments — Plural form of attainment.
  • attaintment — conviction of a crime
  • attendement — the state or act of intending or purposing
  • augmentable — Capable of being augmented or increased.
  • augmentless — (grammar) lacking augment.
  • awesomeness — causing or inducing awe; inspiring an overwhelming feeling of reverence, admiration, or fear: an awesome sight.
  • battlements — The battlements of a castle or fortress consist of a wall built round the top, with gaps through which guns or arrows can be fired.
  • bedevilment — to torment or harass maliciously or diabolically, as with doubts, distractions, or worries.
  • bedizenment — That which bedizens.
  • beguilement — to influence by trickery, flattery, etc.; mislead; delude.
  • benightment — the state of being in physical, moral, or intellectual darkness
  • bereavement — Bereavement is the sorrow you feel or the state you are in when a relative or close friend dies.
  • besiegement — the state of being besieged
  • betrothment — the act or state of being betrothed; engagement.
  • bewitchment — the state of being bewitched
  • blemishment — a flaw or blemish
  • bombardment — A bombardment is a strong and continuous attack of gunfire or bombing.
  • brisingamen — the magic necklace worn by Freya.
  • bss segment — Block Started by Symbol
  • burnishment — the act or process of burnishing
  • businessmen — a man regularly employed in business, especially a white-collar worker, executive, or owner.
  • camerawomen — Plural form of camerawoman.
  • cantonments — Plural form of cantonment.
  • cashierment — the action of rejecting or dismissing
  • catechumens — Plural form of catechumen.
  • cattlewomen — Plural form of cattlewoman.
  • cefmenoxime — A particular third-generation cephalosporin antibiotic.
  • cementation — the process of heating a solid with a powdered material to modify the properties of the solid, esp the heating of wrought iron, surrounded with charcoal, to 750–900°C to produce steel
  • cementatory — possessing the quality to firmly unite or cement
  • chastenment — the process of chastening
  • cherishment — the act or process of cherishing
  • churchwomen — Plural form of churchwoman.
  • clement iii — (Paolo Scolari) died 1191, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1187–91.
  • clement vii — original name Giulio de' Medici. 1478–1534, pope (1523–34): refused to authorize the annulment of the marriage of Henry VIII of England to Catherine of Aragon (1533)
  • clement xii — (Lorenzo Corsini) 1652–1740, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1730–40.
  • clement xiv — (Giovanni Vincenzo Antonio Ganganelli; Lorenzo Ganganelli) 1705–74, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1769–74.
  • clementines — an official compilation of decretals named after Clement V and issued in 1317 which forms part of the Corpus Juris Canonici
  • clergywomen — Plural form of clergywoman.
  • coalignment — Alignment together.
  • commandment — The Ten Commandments are the ten rules of behaviour which, according to the Old Testament of the Bible, people should obey.
  • commendable — If you describe someone's behaviour as commendable, you approve of it or are praising it.
  • commendably — worthy of praise: She did a commendable job of informing all the interested parties.
  • commendator — a person who holds a commendam
  • commensally — In a commensal manner.
  • comment out — (programming)   To surround a section of code with comment delimiters or to prefix every line in the section with a comment marker. This prevents it from being compiled or interpreted. It is often done to temporarily disable the code, e.g. during debugging or when the code is redundant or obsolete, but is being left in the source to make the intent of the active code clearer. The word "comment" is sometimes replaced with whatever syntax is used to mark comments in the language in question, e.g. "hash out" (shell script, Perl), "REM out" (BASIC), etc. Compare condition out.
  • commentable — a remark, observation, or criticism: a comment about the weather.
  • commentated — Simple past tense and past participle of commentate.
  • commentator — A commentator is a broadcaster who gives a radio or television commentary on an event.
  • commitments — the act of committing.
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