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7-letter words containing m, a, c

  • crammed — If a place is crammed with things or people, it is full of them, so that there is hardly room for anything or anyone else.
  • crammer — A crammer is a school, teacher, or book which prepares students for an exam by teaching them a lot in a short time.
  • cramped — A cramped room or building is not big enough for the people or things in it.
  • cramper — a spiked metal plate used as a brace for the feet in throwing the stone
  • crampet — a cramp iron
  • crampon — Crampons are metal plates with spikes underneath which mountain climbers fasten to the bottom of their boots, especially when there is snow or ice, in order to make climbing easier.
  • cranium — Your cranium is the round part of your skull that contains your brain.
  • cranmer — Thomas. 1489–1556, the first Protestant archbishop of Canterbury (1533–56) and principal author of the Book of Common Prayer. He was burnt as a heretic by Mary I
  • creamed — the fatty part of milk, which rises to the surface when the liquid is allowed to stand unless homogenized.
  • creamer — Creamer is a white powder that is used in tea and coffee instead of milk.
  • crémant — (of wine) moderately sparkling
  • cremate — When someone is cremated, their dead body is burned, usually as part of a funeral service.
  • cremona — a city in N Italy, in Lombardy on the River Po: noted for the manufacture of fine violins in the 16th–18th centuries. Pop: 70 887 (2001)
  • crewman — A crewman is a member of a crew.
  • crimean — of or relating to the Crimea or its inhabitants
  • cullman — a city in N Alabama.
  • cumaean — of Cumae
  • cumarin — a fragrant crystalline substance, C 9 H 6 O 2 , obtained from the tonka bean, sweet clover, and certain other plants or prepared synthetically, used chiefly in soaps and perfumery.
  • cumbias — Plural form of cumbia.
  • cumbria — (since 1974) a county of NW England comprising the former counties of Westmorland and Cumberland together with N Lancashire: includes the Lake District mountain area and surrounding coastal lowlands with the Pennine uplands in the extreme east. Administrative centre: Carlisle. Pop: 489 800 (2003 est). Area: 6810 sq km (2629 sq miles)
  • cumquat — kumquat
  • cumshaw — (used, esp formerly, by beggars in Chinese ports) a present or tip
  • curcuma — any tropical Asian tuberous plant of the genus Curcuma, such as C. longa, which is the source of turmeric, and C. zedoaria, which is the source of zedoary: family Zingiberaceae
  • cushman — Charlotte Saunders [sawn-derz,, sahn-] /ˈsɔn dərz,, ˈsɑn-/ (Show IPA), 1816–76, U.S. actress.
  • cwmbran — a new town in SE Wales, in Torfaen county borough, developed in the 1950s. Pop: 47 254 (2001)
  • cymaise — a pewter wine jar having a spout, a fixed handle on the side opposite the spout, and a bail for carrying.
  • cymatia — cymatium.
  • cymatic — (physics) Of or pertaining to cymatics.
  • cymbals — Plural form of cymbal.
  • cystoma — a cystic tumor.
  • czardom — the domain of a czar.
  • czarism — the Russian government under the czars
  • dashcam — a small video camera situated on the dashboard of a vehicle, used to record the view through the windscreen
  • datacom — Data communications.
  • decamer — An oligomer having ten subunits.
  • decamps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decamp.
  • decimal — A decimal is a fraction that is written in the form of a dot followed by one or more numbers which represent tenths, hundredths, and so on: for example .5, .51, .517.
  • deckman — A man who works on the deck of a ship.
  • declaim — If you declaim, you speak dramatically, as if you were acting in a theatre.
  • decuman — a huge wave
  • demarco — Tom DeMarco proposed a form of structured analysis.
  • dharmic — (of religion or beliefs) of Indian origin
  • dicamba — a white crystalline solid used as a weedkiller
  • digicam — A digital camera.
  • discman — a small portable CD player with light headphones
  • dockman — A man who works on a dock.
  • domical — domelike.
  • 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.
  • ducdame — a nonsensical refrain used in Shakespeare's As You Like It
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