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7-letter words containing c, r, e, m

  • embrace — An act of holding someone closely in one's arms.
  • emocore — Emo (the original style of hardcore punk rock).
  • empiric — A person who, in medicine or other branches of science, relies solely on observation and experiment.
  • encharm — to enchant; bewitch
  • excimer — An unstable molecule that is formed in an excited state by the combination of two smaller molecules or atoms and rapidly dissociates with emission of radiation. Such species are utilized in some kinds of lasers.
  • grecism — the spirit of Greek thought, art, etc.
  • grimace — a facial expression, often ugly or contorted, that indicates disapproval, pain, etc.
  • homeric — of, relating to, or suggestive of Homer or his poetry.
  • imbrace — Obsolete spelling of embrace.
  • incomer — a person who comes in.
  • keramic — ceramic.
  • macaber — gruesome and horrifying; ghastly; horrible.
  • macabre — gruesome and horrifying; ghastly; horrible.
  • maceral — any of the organic units that constitute coal: equivalent to any of the mineral constituents of a rock
  • machree — my dear.
  • maciverLoren, 1909–1998, U.S. painter.
  • macrame — an elaborately patterned lacelike webbing made of hand-knotted cord, yarn, or the like, and used for wall decorations, hanging baskets, garments, accessories, etc.
  • marceau — Marcel [mahr-sel;; French mar-sel] /mɑrˈsɛl;; French marˈsɛl/ (Show IPA), 1923–2007, French actor and mime.
  • marcels — Plural form of marcel.
  • marched — Simple past tense and past participle of march.
  • marchen — a German fairy tale or fictional story
  • marcher — an inhabitant of, or an officer or lord having jurisdiction over, a march or border territory.
  • marchesFrancis Andrew, 1825–1911, U.S. philologist and lexicographer.
  • marcuseHerbert, 1898–1979, U.S. political and social philosopher, born in Germany.
  • matcher — a person or thing that equals or resembles another in some respect.
  • matrice — Obsolete form of matrix.
  • maurice — German Moritz. 1521–53, German general: elector of Saxony 1547–53.
  • mcbride — Willie John. born 1940, Irish Rugby Union footballer. A forward, he played for Ireland (1962–75) and the British Lions (1962–74)
  • mcclureSamuel Sidney, 1857–1949, U.S. editor and publisher, born in Ireland.
  • mcenroeJohn Patrick, born 1959, U.S. tennis player.
  • mcgwireMark David, born 1963, U.S. baseball player.
  • mchenry — a town in NE Illinois.
  • mclarenNorman, 1914–87, Canadian film director and animator, born in Scotland.
  • meercat — Alt form meerkat.
  • menorca — Minorca.
  • meramec — a river in SE Missouri, flowing generally E to the Mississippi River below St. Louis. 207 miles (333 km) long.
  • mercado — a market.
  • mercast — a broadcasting system used by U.S. agencies to deliver messages to government-operated ships.
  • mercers — Plural form of mercer.
  • mercery — a mercer's shop.
  • merchet — (obsolete) In Middle Ages England, a fine paid to a lord on a daughter's marriage, in recompense for the loss of a worker.
  • mercian — of or relating to Mercia, its inhabitants, or their dialect.
  • mercier — Désiré Joseph [dey-zee-rey zhaw-zef] /deɪ ziˈreɪ ʒɔˈzɛf/ (Show IPA), 1851–1926, Belgian cardinal and patriot.
  • mercies — compassionate or kindly forbearance shown toward an offender, an enemy, or other person in one's power; compassion, pity, or benevolence: Have mercy on the poor sinner.
  • mercify — (obsolete, rare, transitive) To have mercy on; to pity. (16th-19th c.).
  • mercury — Chemistry. a heavy, silver-white, highly toxic metallic element, the only one that is liquid at room temperature; quicksilver: used in barometers, thermometers, pesticides, pharmaceutical preparations, reflecting surfaces of mirrors, and dental fillings, in certain switches, lamps, and other electric apparatus, and as a laboratory catalyst. Symbol: Hg; atomic weight: 200.59; atomic number: 80; specific gravity: 13.546 at 20°C; freezing point: −38.9°C; boiling point: 357°C.
  • meropic — having the ability to speak
  • merrickDavid (David Margulies) 1912–2000, U.S. theatrical producer.
  • mesarch — Botany. (of a primary xylem or root) developing from both the periphery and the center; having the older cells surrounded by the younger cells.
  • metrics — Mathematics. a nonnegative real-valued function having properties analogous to those of the distance between points on a real line, as the distance between two points being independent of the order of the points, the distance between two points being zero if, and only if, the two points coincide, and the distance between two points being less than or equal to the sum of the distances from each point to an arbitrary third point.
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