7-letter words containing m, a, c, h
- dashcam — a small video camera situated on the dashboard of a vehicle, used to record the view through the windscreen
- dharmic — (of religion or beliefs) of Indian origin
- drachma — a cupronickel coin and monetary unit of modern Greece until the euro was adopted, equal to 100 lepta. Abbreviation: dr., drch.
- drachms — Plural form of drachm.
- duchamp — Marcel [mar-sel] /marˈsɛl/ (Show IPA), 1887–1968, French painter, in U.S. after 1915 (brother of Raymond Duchamp-Villon and Jacques Villon).
- ecthyma — a contagious viral disease of sheep and goats and occasionally of humans, marked by vesicular and pustular lesions on the lips.
- encharm — to enchant; bewitch
- hackman — the driver of a hack or taxi.
- hackmen — Plural form of hackman.
- hamachi — The Japanese name for Pacific yellowtail, especially when used in sushi and sashimi.
- hamitic — (especially formerly) the non-Semitic branches of the Afroasiatic language family.
- hammock — hummock (def 1).
- hazchem — a word used on warning signs to indicate the presence of hazardous chemicals
- headcam — a camera that is worn on the front of the head and records video from the wearer's point of view.
- hematic — of or relating to blood; hemic.
- humacao — a city in E Puerto Rico.
- impeach — to accuse (a public official) before an appropriate tribunal of misconduct in office.
- joachim — Joseph [yoh-zef] /ˈyoʊ zɛf/ (Show IPA), 1831–1907, Hungarian violinist and composer.
- kamichi — A South American bird with a long, slender, horn-like ornament on its head and two sharp spurs on each wing, the horned screamer, Anhima cornuta.
- l'chaim — a toast used in drinking to a person's health or well-being.
- lechaim — a drinking toast
- macbeth — died 1057, king of Scotland 1040–57.
- macchia — A shrubland biota in Mediterranean countries, typically consisting of densely-growing evergreen shrubs.
- machado — Joaquim Maria (ʒuaˈkɪ maˈria). 1839–1908, Brazilian author of novels and short stories, whose novels include Epitaph of a Small Winner (1881) and Dom Casmurro (1899)
- machair — (geology) A type of calcerous sandy terrain formed mostly from seashells, found by the coast in areas of Scotland and Ireland.
- machala — a city in SW Ecuador.
- machans — Plural form of machan.
- machaon — a son of Asclepius who was famed as a healer and who served as physician of the Greeks in the Trojan War.
- machaut — Guillaume de [French gee-yohm duh] /French giˈyoʊm də/ (Show IPA), Guillaume de Machaut.
- machete — a large heavy knife used especially in Latin-American countries in cutting sugarcane and clearing underbrush and as a weapon.
- machida — a city in E central Honshu, Japan, on the Tsurumi River: a suburb of Tokyo.
- machine — an apparatus consisting of interrelated parts with separate functions, used in the performance of some kind of work: a sewing machine.
- machree — my dear.
- machzor — machzors, Hebrew. mahzor.
- mahican — a tribe or confederacy of Algonquian-speaking North American Indians, centralized formerly in the upper Hudson valley.
- malachi — a Minor Prophet of the 5th century b.c.
- malachy — Saint. 1094–1148, Irish prelate; he became Archbishop of Armagh (1132) and founded (1142) the first Cistercian abbey in Ireland. Feast day: Nov 3
- malchus — (Malchus) a.d. c233–c304, Greek philosopher.
- malicho — mischief or wrongdoing
- manchet — a kind of white bread made from the finest flour.
- marched — Simple past tense and past participle of march.
- marchen — a German fairy tale or fictional story
- marcher — an inhabitant of, or an officer or lord having jurisdiction over, a march or border territory.
- marches — Francis Andrew, 1825–1911, U.S. philologist and lexicographer.
- matched — Simple past tense and past participle of match.
- matcher — a person or thing that equals or resembles another in some respect.
- matches — Plural form of match.
- matchet — Machete.
- matchup — a pairing or combining; linkage: a match-up of federal funds with state aid.
- mathcad — A symbolic mathematics environment.