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9-letter words containing a, c, m, t, i

  • creamiest — Superlative form of creamy.
  • cremating — Present participle of cremate.
  • cremation — to reduce (a dead body) to ashes by fire, especially as a funeral rite.
  • criminate — to charge with a crime; accuse
  • crotalism — a type of poisoning caused by ingestion of plants of the genus Crotalaria
  • culminant — highest or culminating
  • culminate — If you say that an activity, process, or series of events culminates in or with a particular event, you mean that event happens at the end of it.
  • cymbalist — A musician who plays the cymbals.
  • dalmatics — Plural form of dalmatic.
  • decimated — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
  • decimates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decimate.
  • decimator — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
  • decmate i — (computer)   The first in DEC's series of miniaturised PDP-8 computers based on the Intersil 6120 [Harris 6120?] microprocessor and dedicated to wordprocessing. The DECmate was DEC's original competition for the IBM PC. The DECmate I was introduced in 1980 as the successor to the WT78. The processor ran at 10 MHz, and was housed in a VT100 CRT terminal. It was a very limted model, no EAE option was available, memory was 32 Kwords. It used the RX02 8" dual floppy drive. Options were the DP278-A and -B communication ports and RL278: 1 to 4 RL02 cartridge disk drives.
  • diametric — of, relating to, or along a diameter
  • diastemic — a minor hiatus in an orderly succession of sedimentary rocks.
  • dichromat — a person whose vision can only distinguish two colours
  • dictamnus — (botany) A suffrutescent plant, Dictamnus albus (the only species in the genus), with strong perfume and showy flowers.
  • dogmatics — the study of the arrangement and statement of religious doctrines, especially of the doctrines received in and taught by the Christian church.
  • dramatics — (used with a singular or plural verb) the art of producing or acting dramas.
  • dynamitic — relating to dynamite or those who use dynamite for illegal reasons
  • eclamptic — Of or pertaining to eclampsia.
  • emaciated — Abnormally thin or weak, especially because of illness or a lack of food.
  • emaciates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of emaciate.
  • emication — the act of shining or sparkling
  • emittance — The quantity emitted (per unit area).
  • empaestic — embossed
  • emphatics — Plural form of emphatic.
  • emplastic — adhesive
  • encomiast — A person who publicly praises or flatters someone else.
  • enigmatic — Difficult to interpret or understand; mysterious.
  • enzymatic — Of, relating to, or caused by enzymes.
  • face time — time spent speaking or meeting with one or more people face to face, in contrast to phone conversations or other means of communication: Is he available for a couple of hours of face time?
  • face-time — Face-time is time that you spend talking directly to someone, rather than talking by phone or email.
  • formicant — (medicine,obsolete) Of the pulse: weak and rapid.
  • formicate — To move like ants.
  • geomantic — Of or relating to geomancy.
  • geomatics — The discipline of gathering, storing, processing, and delivering geographic information.
  • grammatic — Grammatical.
  • gymnastic — of or relating to physical exercises that develop and demonstrate strength, balance, and agility, especially such exercises performed mostly on special equipment.
  • hematinic — a medicine, as a compound of iron, that tends to increase the amount of hematin or hemoglobin in the blood.
  • hematitic — Of or pertaining to hematite, or resembling it.
  • ibm pc at — (computer)   ("Advanced Technology") A version of the IBM PC, released in Aug 1984 with an Intel 80286 processor, a 16-bit bus, a medium-speed hard disk and a 1.2 megabyte floppy disk drive. It had a larger case than the PC, which allowed it to accept "tall cards". The AT keyboard corrected the PC's non-standard placement of the return and left shift keys but shortened the backspace key, making it harder to reach.
  • idiomatic — peculiar to or characteristic of a particular language or dialect: idiomatic French.
  • imagistic — (often initial capital letter) a theory or practice of a group of poets in England and America between 1909 and 1917 who believed that poetry should employ the language of common speech, create new rhythms, have complete freedom in subject matter, and present a clear, concentrated, and precise image.
  • imbricate — overlapping in sequence, as tiles or shingles on a roof.
  • impactful — having or manifesting a great impact or effect: After the senator's impactful speech, her bill passed.
  • impacting — the striking of one thing against another; forceful contact; collision: The impact of the colliding cars broke the windshield.
  • impaction — an act or instance of impacting.
  • impactite — a glassy or crystalline material composed of slag and meteoric materials, produced by the impact of a meteorite striking the earth.
  • impactive — caused by impact: impactive pain.
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