12-letter words containing stor
- store credit — A store credit is a document offered by a store to a customer who returns an item not eligible for a refund. It can be used to buy other goods at the store.
- store-bought — commercially made rather than homemade.
- storey house — (in W Africa) a house having more than one storey
- storiologist — a person who studies storiology
- stork's-bill — Also called heron's-bill. any of various plants belonging to the genus Erodium, of the geranium family, having deeply lobed leaves, loose clusters of pink, purple, white, or yellow flowers, and long, slender fruit.
- storm cellar — a cellar or underground chamber for refuge during violent storms; cyclone cellar.
- storm center — the center of a cyclonic storm, the area of lowest pressure and of comparative calm.
- storm centre — the centre of a cyclonic storm, etc, where pressure is lowest
- storm collar — a high collar on a coat
- storm petrel — any of several small, tube-nosed seabirds of the family Hydrobatidae, usually having black or sooty-brown plumage with a white rump.
- storm signal — a visual signal, as a flag, giving advance notice of a heavy storm, used especially along coastal areas.
- storm troops — shock troops
- storm window — a supplementary window sash for protecting a window against drafts, driving rain, etc.
- storm-lashed — badly affected by storms
- storm-tossed — thrown up and down or side to side by a storm
- stormfulness — the quality or state of being stormful
- stormtrooper — Stormtroopers were members of a private Nazi army who were well-known for being violent.
- story writer — author of prose fiction
- storytelling — the telling or writing of stories.
- thunderstorm — a transient storm of lightning and thunder, usually with rain and gusty winds, sometimes with hail or snow, produced by cumulonimbus clouds.
- unhistorical — of, pertaining to, treating, or characteristic of history or past events: historical records; historical research.
- unrestorable — to bring back into existence, use, or the like; reestablish: to restore order.