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11-letter words containing of

  • most of all — above all else
  • mothproofed — Simple past tense and past participle of mothproof.
  • mothproofer — an agent that prevents moths from destroying materials or garments
  • myofilament — a threadlike filament of actin or myosin that is a component of a myofibril.
  • nannofossil — any fossil so small that it is near or below the limit of resolution of a light microscope.
  • nanofossils — Plural form of nanofossil.
  • nasofrontal — of or relating to the nasal and frontal bones
  • neofascists — Plural form of neofascist.
  • neurofibril — a fibril of a nerve cell.
  • next of kin — a person's nearest relative or relatives: The newspaper did not publish the names of casualties until the next of kin had been notified.
  • ninth of av — Tishah b'Av.
  • nonofficial — a person appointed or elected to an office or charged with certain duties.
  • north of 60 — the area of Canada lying north of a latitude of °N
  • not hear of — to forbid or refuse to consider
  • not much of — not to any appreciable degree or extent
  • of all time — If you say that someone or something is, for example, the best writer of all time, or the most successful film of all time, you mean that they are the best or most successful that there has ever been.
  • of one mind — If a number of people are of one mind, of like mind, or of the same mind, they all agree about something.
  • of that ilk — of the place of the same name: used to indicate that the person named is proprietor or laird of the place named
  • of the hour — most prominent at this time
  • off balance — If you are off balance, you are in an unsteady position and about to fall.
  • off message — straying from or contradicting the central theme or official message of a political, business, or other organization: The last speaker was way off-message with his bad jokes and irrelevant anecdotes.
  • off the air — a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and minute amounts of other gases that surrounds the earth and forms its atmosphere.
  • off the bat — straight away, from the very start
  • off the map — no longer important or in existence (esp in the phrase wipe off the map)
  • off the top — from gross income
  • off-licence — a license permitting the sale of sealed bottles of alcoholic beverages to be taken away from the premises by the purchaser.
  • off-license — a license permitting the sale of sealed bottles of alcoholic beverages to be taken away from the premises by the purchaser.
  • off-message — straying from or contradicting the central theme or official message of a political, business, or other organization: The last speaker was way off-message with his bad jokes and irrelevant anecdotes.
  • off-putting — provoking uneasiness, dislike, annoyance, or repugnance; disturbing or disagreeable.
  • off-reserve — located on or living in a place that is not part of a designated Indian reserve
  • off-roading — driving on unmade terrain
  • off-the-job — done, received, or happening away from or while not at one's job: off-the-job research.
  • off-the-peg — ready-to-wear.
  • offenceless — Alternative form of offenseless.
  • offenseless — without offense.
  • offensively — causing resentful displeasure; highly irritating, angering, or annoying: offensive television commercials.
  • offer price — cost of sth being offered for sale
  • offertories — Plural form of offertory.
  • offhandedly — cavalierly, curtly, or brusquely: to reply offhand.
  • office girl — a girl or young woman employed in an office to run errands, do odd jobs, etc.
  • office park — a complex of office buildings located on land planted with lawns, trees, bushes, etc.
  • office work — work normally carried out in an office, for example clerical or administrative work for an organization
  • officership — a person who holds a position of rank or authority in the army, navy, air force, or any similar organization, especially one who holds a commission.
  • officialdom — the class or entire body of officials; officials as a whole.
  • officialese — a style of language used in some official statements, often criticized for its use of polysyllabic jargon and obscure, pretentiously wordy phrasing.
  • officialise — to make official; place under official authority or control.
  • officialism — excessive attention to official regulations and routines.
  • officialize — to make official; place under official authority or control.
  • officiating — Present participle of officiate Serving in an official capacity or serving as an official at a contest.
  • officiation — to perform the office of a member of the clergy, as at a divine service.
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