10-letter words containing m, a, i, e
- infamonize — to make infamous
- infirmarer — the infirmarian of a mediaeval monastery
- inflamable — a former spelling of inflammable
- informable — to give or impart knowledge of a fact or circumstance to: He informed them of his arrival.
- ingeminate — to repeat; reiterate.
- inhumanely — not humane; lacking humanity, kindness, compassion, etc.
- inimicable — adverse in tendency or effect; unfavorable; harmful: a climate inimical to health.
- inimitable — incapable of being imitated or copied; surpassing imitation; matchless.
- inmarriage — endogamy
- innominate — having no name; nameless; anonymous.
- innumeracy — unfamiliar with mathematical concepts and methods; unable to use mathematics; not numerate.
- innumerate — unfamiliar with mathematical concepts and methods; unable to use mathematics; not numerate.
- inseminate — to inject semen into (the female reproductive tract); impregnate.
- instalment — the act of installing.
- intemerate — inviolate; undefiled; unsullied; pure.
- interframe — (signal processing) A video frame which is compressed to express only the change from a reference frame.
- interhuman — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or having the nature of people: human frailty.
- intermarry — to become connected by marriage, as two families, tribes, castes, or religions.
- intermedia — using or involving several media, as dance, slides, electronic music, film, and painting, simultaneously; multimedia.
- intermodal — pertaining to or suitable for transportation involving more than one form of carrier, as truck and rail, or truck, ship, and rail.
- intermural — of, relating to, or taking place between two or more institutions, cities, etc.: an intermural track meet.
- interramal — situated between the rami
- intimacies — Plural form of intimacy.
- intimately — associated in close personal relations: an intimate friend.
- intimidate — to make timid; fill with fear.
- intraframe — (signal processing) A video frame which does not depend on any other frame for rendering, but simply presents fixed image. Usually subject to spatial compression.
- ironmaster — the master of a foundry or ironworks; a manufacturer of iron.
- irremeable — permitting no return to the original place or condition; irreversible.
- ishmaelite — a descendant of Ishmael, the traditional ancestor of the Arab peoples.
- isoaminile — a drug formerly used to suppress coughing. Formula: C16H24N2
- isogametes — one of a pair of conjugating gametes, exhibiting no differences in form, size, structure, or sex.
- isomerases — Plural form of isomerase.
- isoseismal — noting or pertaining to equal intensity of earthquake shock.
- isothermal — occurring at constant temperature.
- james otis — Elisha Graves, 1811–61, U.S. inventor.
- jamesonite — a metallic, dark-gray mineral, lead and iron antimony sulfide: formerly mined for lead.
- jiggermast — a small mast set well aft in a boat or ship; mizzenmast.
- kairomones — Plural form of kairomone.
- kentishman — a native or inhabitant of Kent, England.
- kerygmatic — the preaching of the gospel of Christ, especially in the manner of the early church.
- ketonaemia — an excess of ketone bodies in the blood
- kiloampère — one thousand amperes
- kilogramme — (British) alternative spelling of kilogram.
- kinematics — the branch of mechanics that deals with pure motion, without reference to the masses or forces involved in it.
- kingmakers — Plural form of kingmaker.
- kitembilla — a shrub or small tree, Dovyalis hebecarpa, of India and Sri Lanka, having velvety, maroon-purple fruit.
- lacemaking — the art, act, or process of making lace.
- lageniform — shaped like a flask; having an enlarged base tapering to a narrow neck.
- lake ilmen — a lake in NW Russia, in the Novgorod Region: drains through the Volkhov River into Lake Ladoga. Area: between 780 sq km (300 sq miles) and 2200 sq km (850 sq miles), according to the season
- lake urmia — a shallow lake in NW Iran, at an altitude of 1300 m (4250 ft): the largest lake in Iran, varying in area from 4000–6000 sq km (1500–2300 sq miles) between autumn and spring