9-letter words containing m, a, r, i, t, n
- inamorato — a man who loves or is loved; male sweetheart or lover.
- incremate — (transitive) To cremate.
- informant — a person who informs or gives information; informer.
- inmigrant — a person who in-migrates.
- inmigrate — to move or settle into a different part of one's country or home territory.
- instagram — a photo-sharing application for computers and mobile phones
- intermale — occurring between males
- intermate — To mate with a member of another species or group.
- inumbrate — (obsolete) To shade; to darken.
- 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.
- laminator — to separate or split into thin layers.
- maistring — ruling or subduing
- mannerist — a habitual or characteristic manner, mode, or way of doing something; distinctive quality or style, as in behavior or speech: He has an annoying mannerism of tapping his fingers while he talks. They copied his literary mannerisms but always lacked his ebullience.
- manticore — a legendary monster with a man's head, horns, a lion's body, and the tail of a dragon or, sometimes, a scorpion.
- marginate — having a margin.
- marinated — Simple past tense and past participle of marinate.
- marinates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of marinate.
- marinette — a city in NE Wisconsin.
- marinetti — Emilio Filippo Tommaso [e-mee-lyaw fee-leep-paw tawm-mah-zaw] /ɛˈmi lyɔ fiˈlip pɔ tɔmˈmɑ zɔ/ (Show IPA), 1876–1944, Italian writer.
- marketing — an open place or a covered building where buyers and sellers convene for the sale of goods; a marketplace: a farmers' market.
- martin ii — died a.d. 884, pope 882–884.
- martin iv — (Simon de BrieorSimon de Brion) c1210–85, French ecclesiastic: pope 1281–85.
- martineau — Harriet, 1802–76, English novelist and economist.
- martinets — Plural form of martinet.
- martingal — Alternative form of martingale (piece of harness for a horse).
- martinmas — a church festival, November 11, in honor of St. Martin.
- martinson — Harry Edmund [har-ee ed-muh nd;; Swedish hah-ri ed-moo nt] /ˈhær i ˈɛd mənd;; Swedish ˈhɑ rɪ ˈɛd mʊnt/ (Show IPA), 1904–78, Swedish novelist and poet: Nobel prize 1974.
- martyring — a person who willingly suffers death rather than renounce his or her religion.
- marxisant — sympathetic to Marxism
- mastering — a person with the ability or power to use, control, or dispose of something: a master of six languages; to be master of one's fate.
- maternity — the state of being a mother; motherhood.
- matriliny — the tracing of descent through the mother's line of a family.
- matrimony — the state of being married; marriage: He was married in 1870 and lived in matrimony 12 years.
- matrixing — an electronic method of processing quadraphonic sound for recording in a two-channel form, for reconversion to four channels when played back.
- matronize — to cause to become matronly; cause to act as, or fulfill the role of, matron.
- mattering — the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made.
- mauritian — an island in the Indian Ocean, E of Madagascar. 720 sq. mi. (1865 sq. km).
- mcpartlin — Antony. born 1975, British television presenter, who appears with Declan Donnelly as Ant and Dec
- mentorial — Of or relating to a mentor.
- mertensia — any of various plants belonging to the genus Mertensia, of the borage family, including the lungworts and the Virginia cowslip.
- metrician — a metrist.
- migrating — Present participle of migrate.
- migration — the process or act of migrating.
- minecraft — a type of warship for sweeping mines at sea.
- miniature — a representation or image of something on a small or reduced scale.
- minitrack — a system for tracking satellites, space vehicles, or rockets by means of radio waves.
- minotaurs — Plural form of minotaur.
- mintmarks — Plural form of mintmark.
- miscreant — depraved, villainous, or base.
- mishanter — a misfortune; mishap.