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9-letter words containing m, a, n, e, r

  • in camera — a judge's private office.
  • incremate — (transitive) To cremate.
  • inmigrate — to move or settle into a different part of one's country or home territory.
  • inner man — a person's spiritual or intellectual being.
  • intermale — occurring between males
  • intermate — To mate with a member of another species or group.
  • inumbrate — (obsolete) To shade; to darken.
  • jerseyman — a native or inhabitant of the island of Jersey.
  • kairomone — A chemical substance emitted by an organism and detected by another of a different species that gains advantage from this, e.g., a parasite seeking a host.
  • kingmaker — a person who has great power and influence in the choice of a ruler, candidate for public office, business leader, or the like.
  • ladderman — a firefighter who is a member of a hook-and-ladder company.
  • lamartine — Alphonse Marie Louis de Prat de [al-fawns ma-ree lwee duh pra duh] /alˈfɔ̃s maˈri lwi də pra də/ (Show IPA), 1790–1869, French poet, historian, and statesman.
  • lambaréné — a town in W Gabon on the Ogooué River: site of the hospital built by Albert Schweitzer, who died and was buried there (1965). Pop: 9000 (2003 est)
  • lamebrain — a dunce; booby; fool.
  • lamenters — Plural form of lamenter.
  • lampooner — Someone who lampoons; someone who pokes fun.
  • lawmonger — an inferior lawyer
  • lawnmower — a hand-operated or motor-driven machine for cutting the grass of a lawn.
  • letterman — a person who has earned a letter in an interscholastic or intercollegiate activity, especially a sport.
  • limerance — Alternative form of limerence.
  • line mark — a trademark covering all items of a particular product line.
  • liveryman — an owner of or an employee in a livery stable.
  • long ream — 500 sheets of paper
  • lumberman — a person who deals in lumber.
  • luminaire — A complete electric light unit (used especially in technical contexts).
  • machinery — an assemblage of machines or mechanical apparatuses: the machinery of a factory.
  • mackinder — Sir Halford John. 1861–1947, British geographer noted esp for his work in political geography. His writings include Democratic Ideas and Reality (1919)
  • madperson — (gender-neutral) A madman or madwoman.
  • madrilene — a consommé flavored with tomato, frequently jelled and served cold.
  • madrileno — a native or inhabitant of Madrid, Spain.
  • magaziner — Someone who writes for a magazine.
  • magnetars — Plural form of magnetar.
  • magnetron — a two-element vacuum tube in which the flow of electrons is under the influence of an external magnetic field, used to generate extremely short radio waves.
  • magnifier — a person or thing that magnifies.
  • maharanee — (formerly) the wife of a maharajah.
  • main verb — a word used as the final verb in a verb phrase, expressing the lexical meaning of the verb phrase, as drink in I don't drink, going in I am going, or spoken in We have spoken.
  • mainbrace — a brace leading to a main yard.
  • mainframe — a large computer, often the hub of a system serving many users.
  • mainliner — Slang. a person who mainlines.
  • mainprise — (legal, historical) A writ directed to the sheriff, commanding him to take sureties, called mainpernors, for the prisoner's appearance, and to let him go at large.
  • malanders — a dry, scabby or scurfy eruption or scratch behind the knee in a horse's foreleg.
  • male fern — a bright-green fern, Dryopteris filix-mas, of Europe and northeastern North America.
  • malingers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of malinger.
  • malingery — The spirit or practices of a malingerer; malingering.
  • mammering — to stammer or mutter.
  • man power — the power supplied by human physical exertions: an ancient building constructed entirely by man power.
  • man-eater — an animal, especially a tiger or lion, that eats or is said to eat human flesh.
  • man-hater — someone, esp a woman, who dislikes or hates men
  • mandarine — Alternative spelling of mandarin (in the term
  • mandrakes — a narcotic, short-stemmed European plant, Mandragora officinarum, of the nightshade family, having a fleshy, often forked root somewhat resembling a human form.
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