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11-letter words containing i, n, h

  • machine-gun — to shoot at with a machine gun.
  • machineable — Alternative form of machinable.
  • machineguns — Plural form of machinegun.
  • machinelike — like a machine, as in regular movement or uniform pattern of operation: to conduct business with machinelike efficiency.
  • machineries — an assemblage of machines or mechanical apparatuses: the machinery of a factory.
  • macintoshes — Plural form of macintosh.
  • maidenheads — Plural form of maidenhead.
  • maidenhoods — Plural form of maidenhood.
  • main chance — an opportunity offering the greatest gain: Being ambitious, he always had an eye for the main chance.
  • main gauche — a dagger of the 16th and 17th centuries, held in the left hand in dueling and used to parry the sword of an opponent.
  • managership — a person who has control or direction of an institution, business, etc., or of a part, division, or phase of it.
  • manchineels — Plural form of manchineel.
  • manhandling — to handle roughly.
  • maniaphobia — Fear of being insane.
  • manichaeism — the system of religious doctrines, including elements of Gnosticism, Zoroastrianism, Christianity, Buddhism, etc, taught by the Persian prophet Mani about the 3rd century ad. It was based on a supposed primordial conflict between light and darkness, or goodness and evil
  • manila hemp — a fibrous material made from the leafstalks of the abacá, Musa textilis, used for making ropes, fabrics, etc.
  • mannishness — The condition of being mannish; manliness or masculinity.
  • marathonian — a native or inhabitant of Marathon.
  • marathoning — the sport of running marathons
  • marchioness — marquise (defs 1, 2).
  • marshalling — a military officer of the highest rank, as in the French and some other armies. Compare field marshal.
  • mashie iron — a club with an iron head, the face having more slope than a mid-mashie but less slope than a mashie.
  • match point — (in tennis, squash, handball, etc.) the point that if won would enable the scorer or the scorer's side to win the match.
  • matchmaking — An attempt to make two people romantically interested in each other, especially an attempt to set up a date between people or to arrange a marriage.
  • matt finish — a dull finish or surface, as opposed to a shiny one
  • matthiessenPeter, 1927–2014, U.S. novelist and travel writer.
  • mawkishness — characterized by sickly sentimentality; weakly emotional; maudlin.
  • mechanicals — (US) mechanical fixtures and fittings.
  • mechanician — a person skilled in constructing, working, or repairing machines; mechanic; machinist.
  • mechanistic — of or relating to the theory of mechanism or to mechanists.
  • mechanizing — Present participle of mechanize.
  • mechatronic — relating to mechatronics
  • megaphoning — Present participle of megaphone.
  • megaphonist — Someone who uses a megaphone.
  • melancholia — a mental condition characterized by great depression of spirits and gloomy forebodings.
  • melancholic — disposed to or affected with melancholy; gloomy.
  • melanochroi — a postulated subdivision of the Caucasoid race, characterized by dark hair and pale complexion
  • melolonthid — any of various scarab beetles whose larvae feed chiefly on roots, including the cockchafers and June bugs
  • melpomenish — Tragic; relating to tragedy in a literary or theatrical work.
  • menorrhagia — excessive menstrual discharge.
  • menoschesis — suppression of menstruation.
  • mephenytoin — A hydantoin used as an anticonvulsant.
  • merchandise — the manufactured goods bought and sold in any business.
  • merchandize — Alternative spelling of merchandise.
  • merchanting — the act of selling commodities
  • mesognathic — having medium, slightly protruding jaws.
  • mesonephric — one of the three embryonic excretory organs of vertebrates, becoming the functional kidney of fishes and amphibians and becoming part of the tubules or ductules in the reproductive systems of higher vertebrates.
  • met-english — A Fortran-like language designed at Metropolitan Life in the early 1960s. It had support for variable-length bit fields. Most MetLife DP in the 1960s and 1970s was in Met-English. It was originally developed for Honeywell machines, but many programs still run under IBM MVS via a Honeywell emulator.
  • metanephric — one of the three embryonic excretory organs of higher vertebrates, becoming the permanent and functional kidney.
  • metanephroi — Plural form of metanephros.
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