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

  • home-care — of, relating to, or designating care, especially medical care, given or received at home: a member of the hospital's home-care staff.
  • homecraft — skills used in the home
  • ice cream — a frozen food containing cream or milk and butterfat, sugar, flavoring, and sometimes eggs.
  • ice maker — machine that makes ice cubes
  • icemakers — Plural form of icemaker.
  • imbracery — embracery.
  • imbricate — overlapping in sequence, as tiles or shingles on a roof.
  • imperical — A mirror\u2013nearer merger misspelling of empirical.
  • imprecate — to invoke or call down (evil or curses), as upon a person.
  • in camera — a judge's private office.
  • incremate — (transitive) To cremate.
  • jim clark — Dr. James H. Clark
  • kachumber — a salad of chopped onion, tomato, cucumber, and (sometimes) other vegetables, typically seasoned with chilli and coriander, served as an accompaniment to a main meal
  • la cumbre — Uspallata Pass.
  • lacemaker — A person who makes lace.
  • lachrymal — of or relating to tears.
  • lacrimary — of or relating to tears or the lacrimal glands
  • lacrimoso — sad or mournful
  • lambrusco — a semisweet, lightly effervescent red wine from Italy.
  • lanciform — shaped like a lance: lanciform windows.
  • latecomer — a person who arrives late: The latecomers were seated after the overture.
  • lcm chair — Eames chair (def 1).
  • limerance — Alternative form of limerence.
  • lockmaker — a person who makes locks
  • lombardic — a native or inhabitant of Lombardy.
  • lumbrical — any of four wormlike muscles in the palm of the hand and in the sole of the foot.
  • macabrely — In a macabre manner.
  • macaronic — composed of or characterized by Latin words mixed with vernacular words or non-Latin words given Latin endings.
  • macaroons — Plural form of macaroon.
  • macarthurDouglas, 1880–1964, U.S. general: supreme commander of allied forces in SW Pacific during World War II and of UN forces in Korea 1950–51.
  • macbinary — (file format)   An eight-bit wide representation of the data and resource forks of an Macintosh file and of relevant Finder information. MacBinary files are recognised as "special" by several MacIntosh terminal emulators. These emulators, using Kermit or XMODEM or any other file transfer protocol, can separate the incoming file into forks and appropriately modify the Desktop to display icons, types, creation dates, and the like.
  • maccaroni — macaroni.
  • macerated — to soften or separate into parts by steeping in a liquid.
  • macerates — Plural form of macerate.
  • macerator — to soften or separate into parts by steeping in a liquid.
  • macgregor — Joanna (Clare). born 1959, British concert pianist and broadcaster; recordings include the "crossover" album Play (2001)
  • machinery — an assemblage of machines or mechanical apparatuses: the machinery of a factory.
  • machmeter — a device that indicates airspeed relative to the speed of sound.
  • mackellar — Dorothea. 1885–1968, Australian poet, who wrote My Country, Australia's best known poem
  • mackerels — Plural form of mackerel.
  • mackerras — Sir Charles. 1925–2010, Australian conductor, esp of opera
  • mackinder — Sir Halford John. 1861–1947, British geographer noted esp for his work in political geography. His writings include Democratic Ideas and Reality (1919)
  • maclaurinColin, 1698–1746, Scottish mathematician.
  • macquarie — a river in SE Australia, in New South Wales, flowing NW to the Darling River. 750 miles (1210 km) long.
  • macro sap — Macro processing modification of SAP. D.E. Eastwood and D.M. McIlroy, unpublished memorandum, Bell Labs 1959. Led to TRAC.
  • macroalga — Large algae, often living attached in dense beds, such as kelp.
  • macrobian — Having an exceptionally long life span.
  • macrocode — a single code that contains a set of instructions.
  • macrocopy — an enlargement of printed material for easier reading
  • macrocosm — the great world or universe; the universe considered as a whole (opposed to microcosm).
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