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6-letter words containing a, c, m

  • micmac — a member of a North American Indian people now living mostly in Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island.
  • midcap — (of investments) involving a medium amount of capital
  • mincha — the afternoon service
  • mirfac — Mathematics in Recognizable Form Automatically Compiled
  • misact — anything done, being done, or to be done; deed; performance: a heroic act.
  • mladic — Ratko (ˈratko). born 1943, Bosnian military figure, commander of the Bosnian Serb forces during the civil war of 1992–95; indicted by the UN for war crimes, including the massacre of 6000 Bosnian Muslims at Srebrenica (1995); his trial at an international criminal tribunal in the Hague began in 2012
  • mobcap — a soft cloth cap with a full crown, fitting down over the ears and frequently tying beneath the chin, formerly worn indoors by women.
  • modcal — A version of HP-PASCAL enhanced with system programming constructs, used internally by HP.
  • modica — Plural form of modicum.
  • mohacs — a city in S Hungary, on the Danube River: site of battles with Turkish forces, 1526 and 1687.
  • monaco — a principality on the Mediterranean coast, bordering SE France. ½ sq. mi. (1.3 sq. km).
  • monact — the spicule of a sponge that has a single-spiked structure
  • monica — a female given name.
  • morcha — (in India) a hostile demonstration against the government
  • mosaic — a picture or decoration made of small, usually colored pieces of inlaid stone, glass, etc.
  • mosiac — Do you mean Mosaic?
  • motuca — a Brazilian horsefly, Lepiselaga crassipes
  • mu car — a self-propelled railroad car, generally used in commuting service, equipped so that a train of such cars can be operated from any one of them.
  • mucate — a salt of mucic acid
  • mucosa — mucous membrane.
  • mudcap — to blast (a rock) with an explosive attached to it with a capping of clay.
  • mudcat — flathead catfish.
  • murcia — a city in SE Spain.
  • muscatSultanate of. Formerly Muscat and Oman. an independent sultanate in SE Arabia. About 82,800 sq. mi. (212,380 sq. km). Capital: Muscat.
  • mycale — a promontory in W Asia Minor, in present-day W Turkey, opposite Samos: site of a Persian defeat by the Greeks in 479 b.c.
  • mycota — an alternative taxonomic name for the kingdom Fungi.
  • myrica — the bark of the wax myrtle.
  • nam co — a salt lake in SW China, in SE Tibet at an altitude of 4629 m (15 186 ft). Area: about 1800 sq km (700 sq miles)
  • occamy — a metallic alloy that simulates the precious metals silver and gold
  • ockhamWilliam of, died 1349? English scholastic philosopher.
  • oomiac — umiak
  • pactum — a pact
  • pcmcia — (body, standard)   Personal Computer Memory Card International Association. (Or People Can't Memorise Computer Industry Acronyms).
  • pomace — the pulpy residue from apples or similar fruit after crushing and pressing, as in cider making.
  • raceme — a simple indeterminate inflorescence in which the flowers are borne on short pedicels lying along a common axis, as in the lily of the valley.
  • racism — a belief or doctrine that inherent differences among the various human racial groups determine cultural or individual achievement, usually involving the idea that one's own race is superior and has the right to dominate others or that a particular racial group is inferior to the others.
  • ramcat — a male cat
  • ramdac — Random Access Memory Digital-to-Analog Converter
  • romaic — demotic (def 5).
  • sacadm — (operating system)   (Service Access Controller Administration) A Unix (Solaris?) command for administering both ttymon and listen. It can be used to add and remove, start and stop, and enable and disable port monitors.
  • sachem — the chief of a tribe. the chief of a confederation.
  • sacrum — a bone resulting from the fusion of two or more vertebrae between the lumbar and the coccygeal regions, in humans being composed usually of five fused vertebrae and forming the posterior wall of the pelvis.
  • satcom — one of a series of privately financed geosynchronous communications satellites that provide television, voice, and data transmissions to the U.S.
  • scamel — a bird mentioned in Shakespeare's The Tempest
  • scampi — a large shrimp or prawn.
  • scamto — the argot of urban South African Black people
  • schama — Simon (Michael). born 1945, British historian, art critic, and broadcaster, based in the US; his work includes The Embarrassment of Riches (1987), Landscape and Memory (1995), and the BBC television series A History of Britain (2000–02)
  • schema — a diagram, plan, or scheme. Synonyms: outline, framework, model.
  • scramb — to scratch with nails or claws
  • scrawm — to scratch
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