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9-letter words containing a, c, m, e, s, t

  • hecatombs — Plural form of hecatomb.
  • jacksmelt — a large silversides, Atherinopsis californiensis, found along the coast of California, that grows to a length of 22 inches (55 cm).
  • macerates — Plural form of macerate.
  • maculates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of maculate.
  • magnetics — the science of magnetism.
  • maieutics — the Socratic method of eliciting knowledge by a series of questions and answers
  • majestick — Archaic spelling of majestic.
  • maledicts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of maledict.
  • marcasite — Also called white iron pyrites. a common mineral, iron disulfide, FeS 2 , chemically similar to pyrite but crystallizing in the orthorhombic system.
  • masculate — (obsolete, transitive) To make strong.
  • masoretic — of or relating to the Masorah or the Masoretes.
  • mast cell — a large granular cell, common in connective tissue, that produces heparin, histamine, and serotonin.
  • masticate — Chew (food).
  • mastocyte — Mast cell.
  • matchless — having no equal; peerless; unequaled; incomparable: matchless courage.
  • mcalester — a city in E Oklahoma.
  • meatspace — The physical world, as opposed to cyberspace or a virtual environment.
  • mechanist — a person who believes in the theory of mechanism.
  • medicates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of medicate.
  • meniscate — resembling a meniscus
  • merchants — a person who buys and sells commodities for profit; dealer; trader.
  • metaclass — (programming)   The class of a class in an object-oriented programming language. A metaclass is a class whose instances are themselves classes. Typically there will only be one metaclass, called "Class" or similar, which is the class of all classes including itself. In some languages there will be no metaclass. The idea of a metaclass is closely associated with introspection - the ability of a program to access the structure and logic of itself or other programs.
  • metacryst — a crystal formed by recrystallization of minerals in a metamorphic rock.
  • metascope — a device for converting infrared radiation into visible light.
  • miscreant — depraved, villainous, or base.
  • miscreate — miscreated.
  • mislocate — to misplace.
  • moot case — a case dealing with an abstract question, or one seeking a judgement on a right before the right has been asserted
  • moschatel — a small plant, Adoxa moschatellina, having greenish or yellowish flowers with a musky odor.
  • moustache — the hair growing on the upper lip.
  • mucksweat — profuse sweat or a state of profuse sweating
  • muscatels — Plural form of muscatel.
  • muscatine — a city in E Iowa, on the Mississippi.
  • mustached — Having a mustache.
  • mustaches — Plural form of mustache.
  • outscream — to scream louder than
  • racemates — Plural form of racemate.
  • rest camp — a camp where soldiers rest
  • sack time — time spent sleeping.
  • sacrament — Ecclesiastical. a visible sign of an inward grace, especially one of the solemn Christian rites considered to have been instituted by Jesus Christ to symbolize or confer grace: the sacraments of the Protestant churches are baptism and the Lord's Supper; the sacraments of the Roman Catholic and Greek Orthodox churches are baptism, confirmation, the Eucharist, matrimony, penance, holy orders, and extreme unction.
  • salicetum — a plantation of willows
  • schematic — pertaining to or of the nature of a schema, diagram, or scheme; diagrammatic.
  • schematik — A NeXT front-end to MIT Scheme for the NeXT by Chris Kane and Max Hailperin <[email protected]>. Schematik provides syntax-knowledgeable text editing, graphics windows and a user-interface to an underlying MIT Scheme process. It comes with MIT Scheme 7.1.3 ready to install on the NeXT and requires NEXTSTEP. Version: 1.1.5.2.
  • selectman — (in most New England states) one of a board of town officers chosen to manage certain public affairs.
  • semantics — Linguistics. the study of meaning. the study of linguistic development by classifying and examining changes in meaning and form.
  • spermatic — of, relating to, or resembling sperm; seminal; generative.
  • steadicam — a mechanism for steadying a handheld camera, consisting of a shock-absorbing arm to which the camera is attached and a harness worn by the camera operator
  • stemmatic — of or relating to a textual stemma
  • stomacher — a richly ornamented garment covering the stomach and chest, worn by both sexes in the 15th and 16th centuries, and later worn under a bodice by women.
  • tagmemics — a school of linguistics deriving from American structuralism based on the work of Kenneth Lee Pike and using the tagmeme as the basic unit of grammatical analysis.
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