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10-letter words containing m, a, i, e

  • coimbatore — an industrial city in SW India, in W Tamil Nadu. Pop: 923 085 (2001)
  • colemanite — a colourless or white glassy mineral consisting of hydrated calcium borate in monoclinic crystalline form. It occurs with and is a source of borax. Formula: Ca2B6O11.5H2O
  • collimated — Simple past tense and past participle of collimate.
  • collimates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of collimate.
  • combinable — capable of combining or being combined.
  • come again — Some people say 'Come again?' when they want you to repeat what you have just said.
  • come alive — If people, places, or events come alive, they start to be lively again after a quiet period. If someone or something brings them alive, they cause them to come alive.
  • comedietta — a short comic stage or musical production
  • comiserate — Obsolete spelling of commiserate.
  • comitative — (of a case) expressing accompaniment
  • commercial — Commercial means involving or relating to the buying and selling of goods.
  • compatible — If things, for example systems, ideas, and beliefs, are compatible, they work well together or can exist together successfully.
  • compendial — Related to a compendium that serves as a standard, such as the w British Pharmacopoeia, or the w US Pharmacopeia.
  • compilable — (computing) That can be compiled.
  • complained — to express dissatisfaction, pain, uneasiness, censure, resentment, or grief; find fault: He complained constantly about the noise in the corridor.
  • complainer — A complainer is someone who complains a lot about their problems or about things they do not like.
  • compliable — compliant
  • compliance — a disposition to yield to or comply with others
  • complicate — To complicate something means to make it more difficult to understand or deal with.
  • conacreism — the Irish system of letting farming land for a season or for eleven months
  • cosmetical — relating to cosmetics
  • coterminal — having the same border or covering the same area.
  • cream pail — an open bowl of silver having a ladle or spoon for serving cream.
  • creameries — Plural form of creamery.
  • creaminess — containing cream.
  • cremations — Plural form of cremation.
  • crematoria — a crematory.
  • crime wave — When more crimes than usual are committed in a particular place, you can refer to this as a crime wave.
  • culminated — Simple past tense and past participle of culminate.
  • culminates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of culminate.
  • cumulative — If a series of events have a cumulative effect, each event makes the effect greater.
  • cysteamine — a drug used to treat cystine excretion or radiation sickness
  • daemonical — Of or relating to daemons; diabolical.
  • dairywomen — Plural form of dairywoman.
  • daminozide — a plant-growth retardant, C 6 H 12 N 2 O 3 , used commercially on apples.
  • damoiselle — a damsel
  • damselfish — any small tropical percoid fish of the family Pomacentridae, having a brightly coloured deep compressed body
  • deafmutism — unable to hear and speak.
  • dealmaking — The making of commercial, financial or political deals.
  • deaminases — Plural form of deaminase.
  • deaminated — Simple past tense and past participle of deaminate.
  • deaminates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deaminate.
  • decametric — relating to or calculated by a decametre or measure equivalent to ten metres
  • decay time — the time required for a collection of atoms of a particular radionuclide to decay to a fraction of the initial number equal to 1/e, where e = 2.7182818 …, used as the base of natural logarithms.
  • decimalise — (British spelling) alternative spelling of decimalize.
  • decimalism — a method or practice based on units, divisions, or multiples of ten
  • decimalist — a person who is in favour of decimalism
  • decimalize — to change (a system, number, etc) to the decimal system
  • decimating — Present participle of decimate.
  • decimation — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
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