9-letter words containing m, a, c, n, e
- namecheck — A public mention or listing of the name of a person or thing such as a product, especially in acknowledgment or for publicity purposes.
- namespace — (computing) A conceptual space that groups classes, identifiers, etc. to avoid conflicts with items in unrelated code that have the same names.
- nicknamed — Simple past tense and past participle of nickname.
- nicknamer — One who bestows a nickname.
- nicknames — Plural form of nickname.
- nicomedia — an ancient city in NW Asia Minor, at the head of the Gulf of Astacus, in present-day Turkey: modern Izmit is on its site.
- nonameric — Of or pertaining to a nonamer.
- numerical — of or relating to numbers; of the nature of a number.
- oenomancy — a type of prophecy or foretelling that involves analysing wine and its qualities and characteristics
- omittance — The act of omitting something.
- on camera — a device for capturing a photographic image or recording a video, using film or digital memory.
- pachynema — the third stage of prophase in meiosis, during which each chromosome pair separates into sister chromatids with some breakage and crossing over of genes.
- parchment — the skin of sheep, goats, etc., prepared for use as a material on which to write.
- permeance — the act of permeating.
- placement — the act of placing.
- placename — the name given to or held by a geographical location, as a town, city, village, etc.
- pneumatic — of or relating to air, gases, or wind.
- policeman — a member of a police force or body.
- premenace — something that threatens to cause evil, harm, injury, etc.; a threat: Air pollution is a menace to health.
- remanence — the magnetic flux that remains in a magnetic circuit after an applied magnetomotive force has been removed.
- romanesco — a variety of green cauliflower
- sacrament — Ecclesiastical. a visible sign of an inward grace, especially one of the solemn Christian rites considered to have been instituted by Jesus Christ to symbolize or confer grace: the sacraments of the Protestant churches are baptism and the Lord's Supper; the sacraments of the Roman Catholic and Greek Orthodox churches are baptism, confirmation, the Eucharist, matrimony, penance, holy orders, and extreme unction.
- scamander — ancient name of the river Menderes.
- screaming — uttering screams.
- selectman — (in most New England states) one of a board of town officers chosen to manage certain public affairs.
- semantics — Linguistics. the study of meaning. the study of linguistic development by classifying and examining changes in meaning and form.
- semblance — outward aspect or appearance.
- semuncial — of or pertaining to a semuncia or to half an ounce
- showmance — a romance between two stars that only lasts for the run of the show
- sickleman — a person reaping with a sickle
- slamdance — to hurl oneself repeatedly into or through a crowd at a rock concert
- space man — space writer.
- spanaemic — relating to a lack of red corpuscles in blood
- sun cream — a chemical, usually in the form of a cream, applied to exposed skin to block out all or almost all of the ultraviolet rays of the sun
- tenaculum — Surgery. a small sharp-pointed hook set in a handle, used for seizing and picking up parts in operations and dissections.
- theomancy — divination or prophecy by an oracle or by people directly inspired by a god
- unamerced — not amerced or punished
- uncharmed — marked by good fortune or privilege: a charmed life.
- unclaimed — to demand by or as by virtue of a right; demand as a right or as due: to claim an estate by inheritance.
- unclamped — to fasten with or fix in a clamp.
- uncle sam — a personification of the government or people of the U.S.: represented as a tall, lean man with white chin whiskers, wearing a blue tailcoat, red-and-white-striped trousers, and a top hat with a band of stars.
- undecimal — related to the number 11
- unmanacle — to release (a prisoner) from manacles
- unmatched — a person or thing that equals or resembles another in some respect.
- yachtsmen — Irregular plural form of yachtsman.
- zuckerman — Solly (ˈsɒlɪ), Baron. 1904–93, British zoologist, born in South Africa; chief scientific adviser (1964–71) to the British Government. His books include The Social Life of Monkeys (1932) and the autobiography From Apes to Warlords (1978)