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8-letter words containing c, i, n, a, m

  • menacing — something that threatens to cause evil, harm, injury, etc.; a threat: Air pollution is a menace to health.
  • meniscal — Pertaining to, or having the form of, a meniscus.
  • mescalin — Alternative form of mescaline.
  • mexicano — the Nahuatl language.
  • michigan — a state in the N central United States. 58,216 sq. mi. (150,780 sq. km). Capital: Lansing. Abbreviation: MI (for use with zip code), Mich.
  • midocean — The area in the middle of an ocean, far from shore.
  • milk can — large metal container for milk
  • minacity — menacing; threatening.
  • minarchy — (countable) Government with the least necessary power over its citizens.
  • minicabs — Plural form of minicab.
  • minicamp — A session run by a professional sports team to train particular players, or to test potential new players, before the main preseason training.
  • minicars — Plural form of minicar.
  • minijack — A small jack (electrical connector).
  • minorcan — of or relating to Minorca.
  • mishnaic — the collection of oral laws compiled about a.d. 200 by Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi and forming the basic part of the Talmud.
  • mixtecan — a branch of a family of American Indian languages spoken in central Mexico
  • mocassin — Alternative spelling of moccasin.
  • moccasin — a heelless shoe made entirely of soft leather, as deerskin, with the sole brought up and attached to a piece of u -shaped leather on top of the foot, worn originally by the American Indians.
  • monastic — of or relating to monasteries: a monastic library.
  • monoacid — having one replaceable hydrogen atom or hydroxyl radical.
  • morainic — Pertaining to a moraine.
  • muscadin — a person with monarchical sympathies during the French Revolution, especially from 1794 to 1796.
  • musician — a person who makes music a profession, especially as a performer of music.
  • neumatic — any of various symbols representing from one to four notes, used in the musical notation of the Middle Ages but now employed solely in the notation of Gregorian chant in the liturgical books of the Roman Catholic Church.
  • nickname — a name added to or substituted for the proper name of a person, place, etc., as in affection, ridicule, or familiarity: He has always loathed his nickname of “Whizzer.”.
  • nonclaim — Failure to make a legal claim.
  • nonmagic — Not magic; nonmagical.
  • omniarch — A ruler of the world.
  • pandemic — (of a disease) prevalent throughout an entire country, continent, or the whole world; epidemic over a large area.
  • pangamic — relating to pangamy
  • pemmican — dried meat pounded into a powder and mixed with hot fat and dried fruits or berries, pressed into a loaf or into small cakes, originally prepared by North American Indians.
  • pitchman — an itinerant vendor of small wares that are usually carried in a case with collapsible legs, allowing it to be set up or removed quickly.
  • romantic — of, relating to, or of the nature of romance; characteristic or suggestive of the world of romance: a romantic adventure.
  • scamming — a confidence game or other fraudulent scheme, especially for making a quick profit; swindle.
  • scamping — an unscrupulous and often mischievous person; rascal; rogue; scalawag.
  • scandium — a rare, trivalent, metallic element obtained from thortveitite. Symbol: Sc; atomic weight: 44.956; atomic number: 21; specific gravity: 3.0.
  • semantic — of, relating to, or arising from the different meanings of words or other symbols: semantic change; semantic confusion.
  • semuncia — a bronze coin produced during the period of the Roman Republic, weighing half an ounce, and equivalent in value to a twenty-fourth of an as at the time
  • shamanic — (especially among certain tribal peoples) a person who acts as intermediary between the natural and supernatural worlds, using magic to cure illness, foretell the future, control spiritual forces, etc.
  • simoniac — a person who practices simony.
  • smacking — smart, brisk, or strong, as a breeze.
  • stickman — croupier (def 1).
  • sycamine — a tree mentioned in the New Testament, probably the black mulberry.
  • tsunamic — an unusually large sea wave produced by a seaquake or undersea volcanic eruption.
  • tympanic — pertaining or belonging to a tympanum.
  • unicomal — COMmon Algorithmic Language
  • vlaminck — Maurice de [moh-rees duh] /moʊˈris də/ (Show IPA), 1876–1958, French painter.
  • winchman — a man who operates a winch
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