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9-letter words containing a, g, n, o, m

  • money-bag — a bag for money.
  • moneybags — a bag for money.
  • mongolian — pertaining to Mongolia.
  • monogamic — monogamous.
  • monograms — Plural form of monogram.
  • monograph — a treatise on a particular subject, as a biographical study or study of the works of one artist.
  • monophagy — The feeding on a single type of food (e.g., a single plant species).
  • montaging — Present participle of montage.
  • montaigne — Michel Eyquem [mee-shel e-kem] /miˈʃɛl ɛˈkɛm/ (Show IPA), Seigneur de, 1533–92, French essayist.
  • montmagny — a city in S Quebec, in E Canada, on the St. Lawrence.
  • moon gate — (in Chinese architecture) a circular gateway in a wall.
  • moonglade — (poetic, rare) The bright reflection of moonlight on a body of water.
  • morganite — rose-colored beryl.
  • morganton — a town in central North Carolina.
  • mortaring — Present participle of mortar.
  • moyen age — Middle Ages.
  • muskogean — a family of American Indian languages of the southeastern U.S., including Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and several less well-known languages.
  • nanograms — Plural form of nanogram.
  • neogamist — A person recently married; newlywed.
  • nephogram — a photograph of a cloud
  • nomograph — a graph, usually containing three parallel scales graduated for different variables so that when a straight line connects values of any two, the related value may be read directly from the third at the point intersected by the line.
  • oenogarum — Garum diluted with wine.
  • ominating — Present participle of ominate.
  • omnigraph — a device for converting Morse Code signals that are punched on a tape into audio signals, used in the training of telegraph operators.
  • omnirange — a radio navigational aid in which stations emit distinctive signals on each of 360 degrees, giving the bearing of each degree with reference to magnetic north.
  • open game — a relatively simple game involving open ranks and files, permitting tactical play, and usually following symmetrical development
  • orangeism — the principles and practices of the Orangemen.
  • orangeman — a member of a secret society formed in the north of Ireland in 1795, having as its object the maintenance and political ascendancy of Protestantism.
  • orangemen — a member of a secret society formed in the north of Ireland in 1795, having as its object the maintenance and political ascendancy of Protestantism.
  • organisms — Plural form of organism.
  • orgasming — the physical and emotional sensation experienced at the peak of sexual excitation, usually resulting from stimulation of the sexual organ and usually accompanied in the male by ejaculation.
  • outmanage — (transitive) To surpass in management; to manage better than.
  • panegoism — a form of scepticism; subjective idealism
  • panlogism — the doctrine that the universe is a realization or act of the logos.
  • phenogram — a diagram depicting taxonomic relationships among organisms based on overall similarity of many characteristics without regard to evolutionary history or assumed significance of specific characters: usually generated by computer.
  • phonogram — a unit symbol of a phonetic writing system, standing for a speech sound, syllable, or other sequence of speech sounds without reference to meaning.
  • ploughman — A ploughman is a man whose job it is to plough the land, especially with a plough pulled by horses or oxen.
  • pygmalion — Classical Mythology. a sculptor and king of Cyprus who carved an ivory statue of a maiden and fell in love with it. It was brought to life, in response to his prayer, by Aphrodite.
  • sigmatron — a machine for generating X-rays
  • strongarm — (processor)   A collaborative project between Digital Equipment Corporation and Advanced RISC Machines Ltd. (ARM) announced on 1995-02-06 licensing the ARM RISC architecture to Digital Semiconductor for the development of high-performance, low power microprocessors. The StrongARM family of 32-bit RISC products developed under the agreement are faster versions of the existing ARM processors with a somewhat different instruction set. They are targetted at applications such as next-generation personal digital assistants with improved user interfaces and communications; interactive television and set-top products; video games and multimedia edutainment systems with realistic imaging, motion and sound; and digital imaging, including low cost digital image capture and photo-quality scanning and printing. The StrongARM family has limited software compatibility with the ARM6, ARM7 and ARM8 families due to its separate caches for data and instructions which causes self-modifying code to fail. The SA-110 is the first member of the family.
  • strongman — a person who performs remarkable feats of strength, as in a circus.
  • symbolang — Lapidus & Goldstein, 1965. Symbol manipulating Fortran subroutine package for IBM 7094, later CDC 6600.
  • topmaking — the art or science of blending wool to meet certain specifications
  • wagenboom — a South African tree
  • wampanoag — a member of a once-powerful North American Indian people who inhabited the area east of Narragansett Bay from Rhode Island to Cape Cod, Martha's Vineyard, and Nantucket at the time of the Pilgrim settlement.
  • warmonger — a person who advocates, endorses, or tries to precipitate war.
  • wokingham — a unitary authority in SE England, in Berkshire. Pop: 151 200 (2003 est). Area: 179 sq km (69 sq miles)
  • woomerang — boomerang.
  • young man — a male in early manhood.
  • zamboanga — a seaport on SW Mindanao, in the S Philippines.
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