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11-letter words containing m, a, r, k, e

  • march break — a school holiday, usually for a week, during March
  • marker buoy — a buoy used to distinguish or mark something
  • market boat — a boat that transfers fish from a fishing fleet to a market on shore.
  • market data — Market data is information gathered about the demand for goods, such as the number of units sold, and the value of goods sold.
  • market rent — (in Britain) the rent chargeable for accommodation, allowing for the scarcity of that kind of property and the willingness of tenants to pay
  • market test — If a company carries out a market test, it asks a group of people to try a new product or service and give their opinions on it.
  • market town — a town where a regularly scheduled market is held.
  • marketplace — an open area in a town where a market is held.
  • marking pen — marker (def 10).
  • marksperson — A marksman or markswoman.
  • marlinspike — a pointed iron implement used in separating the strands of rope in splicing, marling, etc.
  • mary leakey — Louis Seymour Bazett [baz-it] /ˈbæz ɪt/ (Show IPA), 1903–72, British archaeologist and anthropologist.
  • mass market — general public
  • mass-market — (of products) produced and distributed in large quantities and intended to appeal to the widest range of consumers.
  • master disk — an original disk from which duplicates are made
  • master-work — masterpiece.
  • masterworks — Plural form of masterwork.
  • matchmakers — Plural form of matchmaker.
  • meadowlarks — Plural form of meadowlark.
  • meat market — a market where meat is sold
  • mekhitarist — a member of an order of Armenian monks founded in Constantinople in the 18th century and following the rule of St. Benedict.
  • memory bank — the complete records, archives, or the like of an organization, country, etc.
  • memory leak — (programming)   A leak in a program's dynamic store allocation logic that causes it to fail to reclaim memory in the heap after it has finished using it, eventually causing the program to fail due to lack of memory. These problems were severe on older machines with small, fixed-size address spaces, and special "leak detection" tools were written to diagnose them. The introduction of virtual memory made memory leaks a less serious problem, although if you run out of virtual memory, it means you've got a *real* leak! See aliasing bug.
  • merrymakers — Plural form of merrymaker.
  • merrymaking — the act of taking part gaily or enthusiastically in some festive or merry celebration.
  • metalworker — A person who shapes metal.
  • meter marks — special markings stamped onto privately franked mail by a machine
  • mile-marker — a numbered milepost along a highway: used as a way of determining the exact location of a vehicle.
  • minute mark — the symbol ′ used for minutes of arc and linear feet
  • mock orange — Also called syringa. any of various shrubs belonging to the genus Philadelphus, of the saxifrage family, especially P. coronarius, a widely cultivated species having fragrant white flowers.
  • money-maker — a person engaged in or successful at acquiring much money.
  • moneymakers — Plural form of moneymaker.
  • monkey bars — children's climbing frame
  • movie maker — someone who produces films or movies
  • moviemakers — Plural form of moviemaker.
  • multimarket — an open place or a covered building where buyers and sellers convene for the sale of goods; a marketplace: a farmers' market.
  • multitasker — Computers. (of a single CPU) to execute two or more jobs concurrently.
  • near-market — (of rates and amounts) similar to the market rate or amount
  • noisemakers — Plural form of noisemaker.
  • nonmarketed — Unmarketed.
  • open market — an unrestricted competitive market in which any buyer and seller is free to participate.
  • papermaking — the art or action of making paper
  • park-miller — A pseudorandom number generation algorithm which was discredited by Marsaglia and Steve Sullivanin in the July 1993 CACM.
  • phrasemaker — a person who is skilled in coining well-turned phrases; phraseologist.
  • policymaker — a person responsible for making policy, especially in government.
  • primary key — (database)   A unique identifier, often an integer, that labels a certain row in a table of a relational database. When this value occurs in other tables as a reference to a particular row in the first table it is called a "foreign key". Some RDBMSes can generate a new unique identifier each time a new row is inserted, others merely allow a column to be constrained to contain unique values. A table may have multiple candidate keys, from which the primary key is chosen. The primary key should be an arbitrary value, such as an autoincrementing integer. This avoids dependence on uniqueness, permanence and format of existing columns with real-world meaning (e.g. a person's name) or other external identifier (e.g. social security number). There should be enough possible primary key values to cater for the current and expected number of rows, bearing in mind that a wider column will generally be slower to process.
  • quark model — a scheme that explains the quantum numbers of all the baryons and mesons by assuming that baryons are composed of three quarks and mesons of a quark and an antiquark, with different combinations of quark and antiquark flavors giving different sets of quantum numbers.
  • repeat mark — a sign on a piece of music instructing the player to replay a certain passage or section
  • rheumaticky — affected with rheumatism
  • ripple mark — one of the wavy lines or ridges produced, especially on sand, by the action of waves, wind, or the like.
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