9-letter words containing a, n, i, m
- montaging — Present participle of montage.
- montaigne — Michel Eyquem [mee-shel e-kem] /miˈʃɛl ɛˈkɛm/ (Show IPA), Seigneur de, 1533–92, French essayist.
- montclair — a city in NE New Jersey.
- mordicant — Biting; acrid.
- morganite — rose-colored beryl.
- mortaring — Present participle of mortar.
- mortician — funeral director.
- mount isa — a city in NE Australia in NW Queensland: mining of copper and other minerals. Pop: 20 525 (2001)
- mountains — Plural form of mountain.
- mountainy — living in, located in, or related to mountains
- mournival — a card game whose object is to gain a set of four aces, kings, queens, or knaves in one hand
- movieland — a place where many motion pictures are made, especially Hollywood, California.
- mridangam — an ancient drum of India shaped like a long conical barrel with two tuned heads of different sizes.
- mujahedin — Alt form mujahideen.
- mujahidin — Alternative form of mujahideen; Plural form of mujahid.
- mulligans — Plural form of mulligan.
- mullingar — a town in N central Republic of Ireland, the county town of Co Westmeath; site of cathedral; cattle raised. Pop: 15 621 (2002)
- multiband — Having or employing multiple bands, especially frequency bands.
- multibank — of or involving more than one bank
- multician — (jargon, person) /muhl-ti'shn/ A term coined at Honeywell, ca. 1970 for a competent user of Multics. Perhaps oddly, no one has ever promoted the analogous "Unician".
- multilane — (of a road or of vehicular traffic) Having more than one lane of traffic traveling in at least one direction.
- multiscan — (hardware) A monitor that can synchronise to a variety of horizontal scan rates and refresh rates, allowing it to display images at different resolutions.
- mundanity — the condition or quality of being mundane; mundaneness.
- municipal — of or relating to a town or city or its local government: municipal elections.
- muscadine — a grape, Vitis rotundifolia, of the southern U.S., having dull purple, thick-skinned musky fruit and being the origin of many grape varieties.
- muscarine — a poisonous compound, C 8 H 1 9 NO 3 , found in certain mushrooms, especially fly agaric, and in decaying fish.
- muscatine — a city in E Iowa, on the Mississippi.
- musicians — Plural form of musician.
- musomania — An obsession with music.
- mutagenic — capable of inducing mutation or increasing its rate.
- mutations — Biology. a sudden departure from the parent type in one or more heritable characteristics, caused by a change in a gene or a chromosome. an individual, species, or the like, resulting from such a departure.
- mutuation — (obsolete) The act of borrowing or exchanging.
- myelinate — Of, related to, or composed of myelin.
- myoclonia — a disease characterized by myoclonus.
- myomantic — of or relating to myomancy
- myostatin — (protein) A protein that acts as an inhibitor to the growth of muscle tissue.
- nail bomb — an explosive device packed with nails or similar metal objects that act as shrapnel.
- narcotism — habitual use of narcotics.
- nationism — (sociolinguistics) The practical concerns of running a nation, especially seen as divorced from emotional beliefs about national identity.
- naumachia — a mock sea fight, given as a spectacle among the ancient Romans.
- near miss — a strike by a missile that is not a direct hit but is close enough to damage the target.
- nemophila — any of a genus, Nemophila, of low-growing hairy annual plants, esp N. menziesii, grown for its blue or white flowers: family Hydrophyllaceae
- neogamist — A person recently married; newlywed.
- neonomian — someone who holds to neonomianism
- nephalism — teetotalism; abstinence from alcohol
- ner tamid — a lamp that is set above and in front of the Holy Ark in a synagogue and is kept burning constantly.
- neurinoma — A schwannoma.
- new media — developing forms of media, usually electronic, regarded as being experimental.
- newmanism — the views and theories of John Henry Newman before his conversion to the Roman Catholic Church, in which he held that the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England are compatible with Roman Catholicism.
- newmanite — an adherent of John Henry Newman.