9-letter words containing g, r, e, n
- magaziner — Someone who writes for a magazine.
- magnetars — Plural form of magnetar.
- magnetron — a two-element vacuum tube in which the flow of electrons is under the influence of an external magnetic field, used to generate extremely short radio waves.
- magnifier — a person or thing that magnifies.
- malingers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of malinger.
- malingery — The spirit or practices of a malingerer; malingering.
- mammering — to stammer or mutter.
- mangalore — a city and port in SW Karnataka state, in SW India.
- mangroves — Plural form of mangrove.
- margarine — a butterlike product made of refined vegetable oils, sometimes blended with animal fats, and emulsified, usually with water or milk.
- marginate — having a margin.
- marketing — an open place or a covered building where buyers and sellers convene for the sale of goods; a marketplace: a farmers' market.
- marveling — something that causes wonder, admiration, or astonishment; a wonderful thing; a wonder or prodigy: The new bridge is an engineering marvel.
- massinger — Philip, 1583–1640, English dramatist: collaborated with John Fletcher.
- mastering — a person with the ability or power to use, control, or dispose of something: a master of six languages; to be master of one's fate.
- matronage — the state of being a matron.
- mattering — the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made.
- measuring — Ascertain the size, amount, or degree of (something) by using an instrument or device marked in standard units or by comparing it with an object of known size.
- megatrend — a major trend or movement.
- menagerie — a collection of wild or unusual animals, especially for exhibition.
- menninger — Charles Frederick, 1862–1953, and his sons Karl Augustus, 1893–1990, and William Claire, 1899–1966, U.S. psychiatrists.
- mentoring — a wise and trusted counselor or teacher.
- merengues — Plural form of merengue.
- merganser — any of several fish-eating diving ducks of the subfamily Merginae, having a narrow bill hooked at the tip and serrated at the edges.
- meringues — Plural form of meringue.
- messenger — a person who carries a message or goes on an errand for another, especially as a matter of duty or business.
- mid-range — You can use mid-range to describe products or services which are neither the most expensive nor the cheapest of their type.
- migraines — Plural form of migraine.
- ming tree — any of various trees or shrubs used in bonsai arrangements, especially when shaped to have flat-topped, asymmetrical branches.
- misgender — to refer to or address (a person, especially one who is transgender) with a pronoun, noun, or adjective that inaccurately represents the person's gender or gender identity: At first my teacher misgendered me.
- misgovern — to govern or manage badly.
- mistering — (initial capital letter) a conventional title of respect for a man, prefixed to the name and to certain official designations (usually written as the abbreviation Mr.).
- mithering — Present participle of mither.
- moldering — to turn to dust by natural decay; crumble; disintegrate; waste away: a house that had been left to molder.
- monergism — the doctrine that the Holy Ghost acts independently of the human will in the work of regeneration. Compare synergism (def 3).
- mongering — a person who is involved with something in a petty or contemptible way (usually used in combination): a gossipmonger.
- morganite — rose-colored beryl.
- morphogen — A chemical agent able to cause or determine morphogenesis.
- mothering — a female parent.
- murdering — Present participle of murder.
- mustanger — a person who engages in mustanging.
- mustering — Present participle of muster.
- muttering — to utter words indistinctly or in a low tone, often as if talking to oneself; murmur.
- narghiles — Plural form of narghile.
- narguileh — hookah
- nattering — to talk incessantly; chatter.
- naughtier — disobedient; mischievous (used especially in speaking to or about children): Weren't we naughty not to eat our spinach?
- near gale — a wind of force seven on the Beaufort scale or from 32–38 mph
- necrology — a list of persons who have died within a certain time.
- necrosing — Present participle of necrose.