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13-letter words containing mi

  • discommission — (transitive) To deprive of a commission or trust.
  • disconfirming — Not confirming.
  • disconformity — Geology. the surface of a division between parallel rock strata, indicating interruption of sedimentation: a type of unconformity.
  • discriminable — capable of being discriminated or distinguished.
  • discriminably — So as to be discriminable; distinguishably.
  • discriminants — Plural form of discriminant.
  • discriminated — Simple past tense and past participle of discriminate.
  • discriminates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of discriminate.
  • discriminator — a person or thing that discriminates.
  • disilluminate — to darken
  • disseminating — to scatter or spread widely, as though sowing seed; promulgate extensively; broadcast; disperse: to disseminate information about preventive medicine.
  • dissemination — the act of disseminating, or spreading widely: The Internet allows for the rapid dissemination of information.
  • disseminative — to scatter or spread widely, as though sowing seed; promulgate extensively; broadcast; disperse: to disseminate information about preventive medicine.
  • disseminators — Plural form of disseminator.
  • dissimilarity — unlikeness; difference.
  • dissimilating — Present participle of dissimilate.
  • dissimilation — the act of making or becoming unlike.
  • dissimilative — to modify by dissimilation.
  • dissimilatory — to modify by dissimilation.
  • dissimilitude — unlikeness; difference; dissimilarity.
  • dolly mixture — a mixture of small coloured sweets
  • domical vault — cloistered vault.
  • domiciliaries — of or relating to a domicile, or place of residence.
  • domiciliating — Present participle of domiciliate.
  • domiciliation — to domicile.
  • domineeringly — In a domineering manner.
  • domino effect — the cumulative effect that results when one event precipitates a series of like events.
  • domino theory — a theory that if one country is taken over by an expansionist, especially Communist, neighbor, party, or the like, the nearby nations will be taken over one after another.
  • don't mind me — You say 'Don't mind me' to apologize for your presence when you think that it might embarrass someone, and to tell them to carry on with what they were doing or about to do.
  • double-minded — wavering or undecided in mind.
  • drape forming — thermoforming of plastic sheeting over an open mold by a combination of gravity and a vacuum.
  • dumb terminal — (hardware)   A type of terminal that consists of a keyboard and a display screen that can be used to enter and transmit data to, or display data from, a computer to which it is connected. A dumb terminal, in contrast to an intelligent terminal, has no independent processing capability or auxiliary storage and thus cannot function as a stand-alone device. The dumbest kind of terminal is a glass tty. The next step up has a minimally addressable cursor but no on-screen editing or other features normally supported by an intelligent terminal. Once upon a time, when glass ttys were common and addressable cursors were something special, what is now called a dumb terminal could pass for a smart terminal.
  • dynamic range — the range of signal amplitudes over which an electronic communications channel can operate within acceptable limits of distortion. The range is determined by system noise at the lower end and by the onset of overload at the upper end
  • dynamic scope — (language)   In a dynamically scoped language, e.g. most versions of Lisp, an identifier can be referred to, not only in the block where it is declared, but also in any function or procedure called from within that block, even if the called procedure is declared outside the block. This can be implemented as a simple stack of (identifier, value) pairs, accessed by searching down from the top of stack for the most recent instance of a given identifier. The opposite is lexical scope. A common implementation of dynamic scope is shallow binding.
  • dyslipidaemia — Alternative spelling of dyslipidemia.
  • economic good — a commodity or service that can be utilized to satisfy human wants and that has exchange value.
  • economic rent — the return on a productive resource, as land or labor, that is greater than the amount necessary to keep the resource producing or on a product in excess of what would have been the return except for some unique factor.
  • economization — The act or practice of using resources to the best effect.
  • elastic limit — the greatest stress that can be applied to a material without causing permanent deformation
  • electrochemic — electrochemical
  • emigrationist — a person who promotes emigration
  • enantiodromia — (psychiatry, according to Carl Jung) The principle whereby the superabundance of one force inevitably produces its opposite, as with physical equilibrium.
  • enantiodromic — relating to enantiodromia
  • encomiastical — Alternative form of encomiastic.
  • enterotoxemia — Blood poisoning caused by an enterotoxin.
  • epidemiologic — Of or pertaining to epidemiology.
  • epistemically — In a manner that pertains to knowledge.
  • ergonomically — In an ergonomic manner.
  • euphemistical — Archaic form of euphemistic.
  • examinability — The quality or state of being examinable.
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