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11-letter words containing ose

  • discomposed — Simple past tense and past participle of discompose.
  • discomposes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of discompose.
  • disenclosed — Simple past tense and past participle of disenclose.
  • eglandulose — eglandular
  • endocytosed — Ingested via endocytosis.
  • esquamulose — Not covered in scales or scale-like objects; having a smooth skin.
  • exposedness — The state or quality of being exposed.
  • femtosecond — One quadrillionth of a second.
  • folliculose — having or resembling follicles
  • franz josef — Francis Joseph I.
  • french rose — Provence rose.
  • fruticulose — (botany) Like, or pertaining to, a small shrub.
  • garden hose — tube for spraying plants with water
  • golden rose — a gold, bejeweled ornament in the form of a rose or spray of roses, blessed and presented by the pope in recognition of service to the Holy See.
  • goose bumps — If you get goose bumps, the hairs on your skin stand up so that it is covered with tiny bumps. You get goose bumps when you are cold, frightened, or excited.
  • goose creek — a town in SE South Carolina.
  • goose flesh — goose bumps.
  • goose grass — cleavers.
  • goosefishes — Plural form of goosefish.
  • goosepimple — Alt form goose pimple.
  • goosetongue — The plant sneezewort.
  • goosewinged — (of a square sail) having the lee clew furled while the weather clew is held taut.
  • grandiosely — affectedly grand or important; pompous: grandiose words.
  • guelderrose — snowball (sense 2)
  • half-closed — having or forming a boundary or barrier: He was blocked by a closed door. The house had a closed porch.
  • homosexuals — Plural form of homosexual.
  • in close-up — If you see something in close-up, you see it in great detail in a photograph or piece of film which has been taken very near to the subject.
  • infructuose — Not yielding fruit.
  • isoseismals — Plural form of isoseismal.
  • jocoserious — Simultaneously jocular and serious; mixing mirth with serious matters.
  • joseph raffJoseph Joachim, 1822–82, Swiss composer.
  • josephinite — a mineral alloy of nickel and iron
  • ketopentose — (carbohydrate) A pentose that is also a ketose.
  • ketotetrose — (carbohydrate) Any ketose having four carbon atoms.
  • king closer — a brick of regular length and thickness, used in building corners, having a long bevel from a point on one side to one about halfway across the adjacent end.
  • lentiginose — (botany) Bearing numerous dots resembling freckles.
  • lethal dose — the amount of a drug or other agent that if administered to an animal or human will prove fatal
  • levoglucose — a sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , having several optically different forms, the common dextrorotatory form (dextroglucose, or -glucose) occurring in many fruits, animal tissues and fluids, etc., and having a sweetness about one half that of ordinary sugar, and the rare levorotatory form (levoglucose, or -glucose) not naturally occurring.
  • loose bytes — Commonwealth hackish term for the padding bytes or shims many compilers insert between members of a record or structure to cope with alignment requirements imposed by the machine architecture.
  • loose cover — a fitted but easily removable cloth cover for a chair, sofa, etc
  • loose metal — shingle on a road
  • loose order — a formation in which soldiers, units, etc, are widely separated from each other
  • loose scrum — a play in which a bunch of players gather around an opponent's dropped ball and then attempt to gain possession of the ball.
  • loose-weave — loosely woven
  • loosestrife — any of various plants belonging to the genus Lysimachia, of the primrose family, having clusters of usually yellow flowers, as L. vulgaris (garden loosestrife) or L. quadrifolia (whorled loosestrife)
  • lose ground — the solid surface of the earth; firm or dry land: to fall to the ground.
  • lose out on — to fail to secure or make use of
  • maglemosean — of, relating to, or characteristic of the first Mesolithic culture of the northern European plain, adapted to forest and waterside habitats and characterized by flint axes, microliths, and bone and antler equipment used in hunting and fishing.
  • mallow rose — a rose mallow of the genus Hibiscus.
  • maltotriose — (carbohydrate) A maltooligosaccharide consisting of three glucose units.
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