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12-letter words containing e, m, a, r

  • menstruating — to undergo menstruation.
  • menstruation — the periodic discharge of blood and mucosal tissue from the uterus, occurring approximately monthly from puberty to menopause in nonpregnant women and females of other primate species.
  • mercantilism — mercantile practices or spirit; commercialism.
  • mercantilist — Of, pertaining to, or believing in mercantilism.
  • merchandised — the manufactured goods bought and sold in any business.
  • merchandiser — the manufactured goods bought and sold in any business.
  • merchandises — the manufactured goods bought and sold in any business.
  • merchandized — Simple past tense and past participle of merchandize.
  • merchandizer — Alternative spelling of merchandiser.
  • merchantable — marketable: merchantable war-surplus goods.
  • mercurialism — poisoning by mercury.
  • mercurialist — a person born under the planet Mercury
  • mercuriality — Mercurial behaviour.
  • mercurialize — to make mercurial, especially in temperament.
  • mercury mass — blue mass (def 1).
  • mergenthaler — Ottmar [ot-mahr;; German awt-mahr] /ˈɒt mɑr;; German ˈɔt mɑr/ (Show IPA), 1854–99, U.S. inventor of the Linotype, born in Germany.
  • meridianally — Along lines of meridian, longitudinally.
  • meridionally — In a meridional manner.
  • meristematic — consisting of or having the properties of meristem.
  • meristically — in a meristic manner
  • meritocratic — an elite group of people whose progress is based on ability and talent rather than on class privilege or wealth.
  • mermaid weed — any of several North American, aquatic plants of the genus Proserpinaca, having pinnately dissected leaves either above or below the water.
  • meroplankton — a floating mass of eggs and larvae of organisms that are nektonic or benthic in their adult stage; temporary plankton.
  • merry-andrew — a clown; buffoon.
  • merry-making — Merry-making is the activities of people who are enjoying themselves together in a lively way, for example by eating, drinking, or dancing.
  • mesabi range — a range of low hills in NE Minnesota, noted for major iron-ore deposits mined by the open-pit method.
  • mesmerically — In a mesmeric manner; by, or as if by, hypnotism.
  • mesoamerican — Alternative form of Mesoamerican.
  • mesocortical — Of or pertaining to the mesocortex.
  • mesogastrium — the mesentery of the embryonic stomach.
  • messageboard — Alternative spelling of message board.
  • meta-crystal — (language)   A language for transformations of Crystal programs. Implemented in T.
  • metabotropic — Describing a neurotransmitter or cell receptor whose action is mediated by metabolic functions (e.g. enzyme activation).
  • metacercaria — the encysted larva of a trematode, usually found in or on an aquatic intermediate host.
  • metachronism — An error in chronological ordering in which a character or an event is placed at too late a time.
  • metachronous — Medicine/Medical. occurring at a different time than a similar event: metachronous tumors.
  • metacinnabar — a polymorph of cinnabar, black mercuric sulfide, HgS.
  • metacomputer — an interconnected and balanced set of computers that operate as a single unit
  • metacultural — Relating to metaculture.
  • metal lumber — a brand of sheet metal pressed and welded together to form joists and studding.
  • metallograph — a microscope for observing the microstructure of metals.
  • metallurgist — the technique or science of working or heating metals so as to give them certain desired shapes or properties.
  • metalorganic — (chemistry) organometallic.
  • metalworkers — Plural form of metalworker.
  • metalworking — the act or technique of making metal objects.
  • metamaterial — (engineering, physics) any material that obtains its electromagnetic properties from its structure rather than from its chemical composition; especially a material engineered to have features of a size less than that of the wavelength of a class of electromagnetic radiation.
  • metamorphism — Geology. a change in the structure or constitution of a rock due to natural agencies, as pressure and heat, especially when the rock becomes harder and more completely crystalline.
  • metamorphist — a member of a group of 16th century Christians who believed that the humanly body of Jesus Christ metamorphosed into God during the Ascension
  • metamorphize — (transitive) To transform or change; metamorphose.
  • metamorphose — to change the form or nature of; transform.
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