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10-letter words containing d, a, m, e, s, r

  • medicaster — A quack doctor; someone who pretends to have medical knowledge.
  • melodramas — Plural form of melodrama.
  • mesa verde — a national park in SW Colorado: ruins of prehistoric cliff dwellings. 80 sq. mi. (207 sq. km).
  • mesocardia — the double layer of splanchnic mesoderm supporting the embryonic heart.
  • mesodermal — the middle germ layer of a metazoan embryo.
  • mignardise — A bite-sized dessert sometimes served at the end of a meal.
  • misaddress — to address incorrectly or improperly: to misaddress a letter.
  • misbranded — Simple past tense and past participle of misbrand.
  • miscarried — Simple past tense and past participle of miscarry.
  • mischarged — Simple past tense and past participle of mischarge.
  • miscreated — miscreated.
  • misdeclare — to make known or state clearly, especially in explicit or formal terms: to declare one's position in a controversy.
  • misreading — Present participle of misread.
  • misrelated — Simple past tense and past participle of misrelate.
  • mistrayned — deluded or incorrectly trained
  • mistreated — Simple past tense and past participle of mistreat.
  • miswandred — having strayed or become lost or gone off course
  • ml threads — SML/NJ with mutual exclusion primitives similar to those in Modula-2+ and Mesa. Written by Greg Morrisett <[email protected]>. Implementations for Motorola 68020, SPARC and MIPS and VAX- and MIPS-based multiprocessors.
  • moderatism — A doctrine of moderation (in any field).
  • moderators — Plural form of moderator.
  • modularise — to form or organize into modules, as for flexibility.
  • mortalised — Simple past tense and past participle of mortalise.
  • motorcades — Plural form of motorcade.
  • muckspread — to muckrake
  • mud stream — mudflow.
  • muscardine — any of several fungi which cause disease in silkworms
  • muster day — the annual day for enrollment in the militia of all able men aged 18 to 45, according to a law established in 1792 and in effect until after the Civil War.
  • normalised — normalisation
  • nursemaids — Plural form of nursemaid.
  • oddsmakers — Plural form of oddsmaker.
  • old master — an eminent artist of an earlier period, especially from the 15th to the 18th centuries.
  • order arms — (in the manual of arms in close-order drill) a position in which the rifle is held at the right side, with its butt on the ground.
  • outsmarted — to get the better of (someone); outwit.
  • parmenides — flourished c450 b.c, Greek Eleatic philosopher.
  • postmarked — an official mark stamped on letters and other mail, serving as a cancellation of the postage stamp and indicating the place, date, and sometimes time of sending or receipt.
  • prestamped — stamped in advance
  • randomness — proceeding, made, or occurring without definite aim, reason, or pattern: the random selection of numbers.
  • randomwise — in a random manner
  • red salmon — sockeye salmon.
  • remediates — to settle (disputes, strikes, etc.) as an intermediary between parties; reconcile.
  • reprimands — a severe reproof or rebuke, especially a formal one by a person in authority.
  • roberdsman — a robber
  • saddleroom — a room for storing saddlery
  • salamander — any tailed amphibian of the order Caudata, having a soft, moist, scaleless skin, typically aquatic as a larva and semiterrestrial as an adult: several species are endangered.
  • semisacred — partly or somewhat sacred; sacred to a limited degree; having some characteristics of the sacred
  • sidestream — (of cigarette smoke) inhaled by passive smokers
  • smaragdine — of or relating to emeralds.
  • smaragdite — a green, foliated member of the amphibole group.
  • smartdrive — (storage, product)   A Microsoft MS DOS disk cache program to speed up disk access. For most users, a 1MB cache is sufficient. Devoting more memory to the cache offers diminishing returns, since the additional cache hits become fewer (and the extra memory could be better used to reduce swapping). Typing SMARTDRV /S at a DOS prompt shows the cache size, a hit-and-miss report, and information about which drives are being cached. The hit-and-miss statistics are crucial for gauging the effectiveness of SmartDrive settings. A score in the high 80s shows that SmartDrive is well configured. Run SMARTDRV /S several times during a Windows session and note the-hit-and-miss figures each time. If your percentage usually falls below 80 percent, you should consider increasing the cache size. You can edit the SMARTDRV line in your AUTOEXEC.BAT file to increase both the InitCacheSize and the WinCacheSize parameters. SmartDrive Monitor is an undocumented Windows program that comes with DOS 6.0 for logging and controling the cache.
  • smear word — a slanderous, vilifying epithet.
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