9-letter words containing e, m, d, i
- memorized — Simple past tense and past participle of memorize.
- menadione — a synthetic yellow crystalline powder, C 1 1 H 8 O 2 , insoluble in water, used as a vitamin K supplement.
- mendacity — the quality of being mendacious; untruthfulness; tendency to lie.
- mendelian — of or relating to Gregor Mendel or to his laws of heredity.
- mendelism — the theories of heredity advanced by Gregor Mendel.
- mendicant — begging; practicing begging; living on alms.
- mendicate — (ambitransitive) To beg.
- mendicity — mendicancy.
- mendocino — Cape, a cape in NW California: the westernmost point in California.
- meniscoid — a crescent or a crescent-shaped body.
- menticide — the systematic effort to undermine and destroy a person's values and beliefs, as by the use of prolonged interrogation, drugs, torture, etc., and to induce radically different ideas.
- mentioned — to refer briefly to; name, specify, or speak of: Don't forget to mention her contribution to the project.
- mercified — Simple past tense and past participle of mercify.
- meridians — Plural form of meridian.
- mermithid — (zoology) Any member of the Mermithidae.
- meropidan — any insectivorous bird of the family Meropidae
- metallide — to provide (a metal or alloy) with a diffused coating of a metal or metalloid by electrolysis at high temperature in order to impart a particular surface property to the base metal.
- metalloid — a nonmetal that in combination with a metal forms an alloy.
- meteoroid — any of the small bodies, often remnants of comets, traveling through space: when such a body enters the earth's atmosphere it is heated to luminosity and becomes a meteor.
- methodism — the doctrines, polity, beliefs, and methods of worship of the Methodists.
- methodist — a member of the largest Christian denomination that grew out of the revival of religion led by John Wesley: stresses both personal and social morality and has an Arminian doctrine and, in the U.S., a modified episcopal polity.
- methodius — Saint (Apostle of the Slavs) a.d. c825–885, Greek missionary in Moravia (brother of Saint Cyril).
- methodize — to reduce (something) to a method.
- methoxide — methylate (def 1).
- metridium — any sea anemone of the genus Metridium, common in cooler waters of the Northern Hemisphere.
- metrified — Simple past tense and past participle of metrify.
- microcode — one or more microinstructions.
- microdose — (medicine) A very low dose (especially of radiation therapy).
- microreid — /mi:'kroh-reed/ See bogosity.
- mid-level — middle-level.
- mid-price — at a medium or average price; not particularly expensive nor particularly cheap
- mid-range — You can use mid-range to describe products or services which are neither the most expensive nor the cheapest of their type.
- midcourse — the middle of a course.
- middleman — a person who plays an economic role intermediate between producer and retailer or consumer.
- middlemen — a person who plays an economic role intermediate between producer and retailer or consumer.
- middlesex — a former county in SE England, now part of Greater London.
- middleton — Thomas, c1570–1627, English dramatist.
- midengine — of or relating to a configuration in which the engine is located behind the driver and between the front and rear wheels: midengine sports car; midengine design.
- midgetism — (not in technical use) an extremely small person having normal physical proportions.
- midheaven — the point of a horoscope corresponding to the zenith: the cusp of the tenth house.
- midianite — a member of an ancient desert people of northwest Arabia near the Gulf of Aqaba, believed to have descended from Midian.
- midinette — a young Parisian saleswoman or seamstress.
- midlander — a native or inhabitant of the Midlands of England
- midpriced — Alternative spelling of mid-priced.
- midseason — The middle part of a season, such as a sporting, television, or growing season.
- midspread — (statistics) The interquartile range.
- midstream — the middle of a stream.
- midstride — In the middle of a stride.
- midsummer — the middle of summer.
- midweekly — midweek.