9-letter words containing a, r, n, g, m, e
- germinant — beginning to grow or develop; germinating.
- germinate — to begin to grow or develop.
- gravamens — Plural form of gravamen.
- greenmail — the practice of buying a large block of a company's stock in order to force a rise in stock prices or an offer by the company to repurchase that block of stock at an inflated price to thwart a possible takeover bid.
- guardsmen — Plural form of guardsman.
- gunmakers — Plural form of gunmaker.
- hammering — The sound or action of hammering something.
- hampering — to hold back; hinder; impede: A steady rain hampered the progress of the work.
- imagineer — a person who practices or is skilled in imagineering.
- imbrangle — embrangle.
- imre nagy — Imre [im-re] /ˈɪm rɛ/ (Show IPA), 1896–1958, Hungarian political leader: premier 1953–55, 1956.
- inmigrate — to move or settle into a different part of one's country or home territory.
- kingmaker — a person who has great power and influence in the choice of a ruler, candidate for public office, business leader, or the like.
- lawmonger — an inferior lawyer
- long ream — 500 sheets of paper
- magaziner — Someone who writes for a magazine.
- magnetars — Plural form of magnetar.
- magnetron — a two-element vacuum tube in which the flow of electrons is under the influence of an external magnetic field, used to generate extremely short radio waves.
- magnifier — a person or thing that magnifies.
- malingers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of malinger.
- malingery — The spirit or practices of a malingerer; malingering.
- mammering — to stammer or mutter.
- mangalore — a city and port in SW Karnataka state, in SW India.
- mangroves — Plural form of mangrove.
- margarine — a butterlike product made of refined vegetable oils, sometimes blended with animal fats, and emulsified, usually with water or milk.
- marginate — having a margin.
- marketing — an open place or a covered building where buyers and sellers convene for the sale of goods; a marketplace: a farmers' market.
- marveling — something that causes wonder, admiration, or astonishment; a wonderful thing; a wonder or prodigy: The new bridge is an engineering marvel.
- massinger — Philip, 1583–1640, English dramatist: collaborated with John Fletcher.
- mastering — a person with the ability or power to use, control, or dispose of something: a master of six languages; to be master of one's fate.
- matronage — the state of being a matron.
- mattering — the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made.
- measuring — Ascertain the size, amount, or degree of (something) by using an instrument or device marked in standard units or by comparing it with an object of known size.
- megatrend — a major trend or movement.
- menagerie — a collection of wild or unusual animals, especially for exhibition.
- merganser — any of several fish-eating diving ducks of the subfamily Merginae, having a narrow bill hooked at the tip and serrated at the edges.
- mid-range — You can use mid-range to describe products or services which are neither the most expensive nor the cheapest of their type.
- migraines — Plural form of migraine.
- morganite — rose-colored beryl.
- mustanger — a person who engages in mustanging.
- nephogram — a photograph of a cloud
- nightmare — a terrifying dream in which the dreamer experiences feelings of helplessness, extreme anxiety, sorrow, etc.
- oenogarum — Garum diluted with wine.
- 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.
- 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.
- pentagram — a five-pointed, star-shaped figure made by extending the sides of a regular pentagon until they meet, used as an occult symbol by the Pythagoreans and later philosophers, by magicians, etc.
- 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.
- regiminal — relating to a regimen