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8-letter words containing c, r, a, m

  • miracles — Plural form of miracle.
  • miracula — An implementation of a subset of Miranda by Stefan Kahrs <[email protected]>, LFCS, no modules or files. Can be interactively switched between eager and lazy evaluation. Portable source in C from the author.
  • miscarry — to have a miscarriage of a fetus.
  • mistrace — to trace incorrectly
  • mistrack — To track incorrectly.
  • mithraic — of Mithras or Mithraism
  • mizrachi — a Zionist movement, founded in 1902, chiefly devoted to furthering the integration of Zionism and religious orthodoxy.
  • mobocrat — One who favours a form of government in which the unintelligent populace rules without restraint.
  • monarchs — a hereditary sovereign, as a king, queen, or emperor.
  • monarchy — a state or nation in which the supreme power is actually or nominally lodged in a monarch. Compare absolute monarchy, limited monarchy.
  • monocarp — a plant that dies after having once borne fruit.
  • monocrat — a person favoring monocracy.
  • morainic — Pertaining to a moraine.
  • mordancy — the quality of being mordant; sharpness.
  • mordecai — the cousin and guardian of Esther who delivered the Jews from the destruction planned by Haman. Esther 2–8.
  • moroccan — French Maroc. Spanish Marruecos. a kingdom in NW Africa: formed from a sultanate that was divided into two protectorates (French Morocco and Spanish Morocco) and an international zone. 172,104 sq. mi. (445,749 sq. km). Capital: Rabat. Compare Tangier Zone.
  • motorcar — Chiefly British. an automobile.
  • mouchard — a police informer or spy
  • muck bar — a rough bar of wrought iron, rolled from blooms of iron extracted from a puddling furnace.
  • muckrake — to search for and expose real or alleged corruption, scandal, or the like, especially in politics.
  • mud crab — a large edible crab, Scylla serrata, of Australian mangrove regions
  • multicar — involving several cars
  • muriatic — (not in scientific use) of or derived from muriatic acid.
  • muricate — covered with short, sharp points.
  • muscular — of or relating to muscle or the muscles: muscular strain.
  • nmr scan — a medical examination performed with an MR scanner.
  • nomarchy — one of the provinces into which modern Greece is divided.
  • normalcy — the quality or condition of being normal, as the general economic, political, and social conditions of a nation; normality: After months of living in a state of tension, all yearned for a return to normalcy.
  • numeracy — to represent numbers by symbols.
  • omniarch — A ruler of the world.
  • orgasmic — 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.
  • outcharm — to exceed in charming
  • outmarch — to march faster or farther than.
  • overcame — simple past tense of overcome.
  • overcram — (transitive) To cram too full; to overstuff.
  • pharmacy — Also called pharmaceutics. the art and science of preparing and dispensing drugs and medicines.
  • picloram — a colorless powder, C 6 H 3 Cl 3 N 2 O 2 , used as a systemic herbicide for controlling annual weeds and deep-rooted perennials on noncrop land.
  • picogram — one trillionth of a gram. Abbreviation: pg.
  • pockmark — Usually, pockmarks. scars or pits left by a pustule in smallpox or the like.
  • proclaim — to announce or declare in an official or formal manner: to proclaim war.
  • racemate — a salt or ester of racemic acid.
  • racemism — (of a compound) the state of being optically inactive and separable into two other substances of the same chemical composition as the original substance, one of which is dextrorotatory and the other levorotatory, as racemic acid.
  • racemize — to change or cause to change into a racemic mixture
  • racemoid — racemic
  • racemose — Botany. having the form of a raceme. arranged in racemes.
  • racemous — racemose.
  • rampancy — a rampant condition or position.
  • ranchman — a rancher.
  • re-claim — to claim or demand the return or restoration of, as a right, possession, etc.
  • recamierMadame (Jeanne Françoise Julie Adélaïde Bernard) 1777–1849, French social leader in the literary and political circles of Paris.
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