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7-letter words containing m, a, s, t, r

  • amherst — Jeffrey, 1st Baron Amherst. 1717–97, British general who defeated the French in Canada (1758–60): governor general of British North America (1761–63)
  • amorist — a lover or a writer about love
  • amtracs — Plural form of amtrac.
  • armlets — Plural form of armlet.
  • armpits — Plural form of armpit.
  • armrest — The armrests on a chair are the two pieces on either side that support your arms when you are sitting down.
  • artemis — the virgin goddess of the hunt and the moon: the twin sister of Apollo
  • atriums — Plural form of atrium.
  • castrum — (historical) Among the Ancient Romans, a building or plot of land used as a military defensive position.
  • ditmarsRaymond Lee, 1876–1942, U.S. zoologist and author.
  • durmast — a European oak, Quercus petraea, yielding a heavy, elastic wood used for furniture and in the construction of buildings.
  • farmost — farthest, most distant
  • formats — Plural form of format.
  • hamster — any of several short-tailed, stout-bodied, burrowing rodents, as Cricetus cricetus, of Europe and Asia, having large cheek pouches.
  • harmest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of harm.
  • harmost — a person serving the ancient Spartans as governor of a subject or conquered town.
  • imparts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impart.
  • lamster — a fugitive from the law.
  • maestri — Plural form of maestro.
  • maestro — an eminent composer, teacher, or conductor of music: Toscanini and other great maestros.
  • magrets — Plural form of magret.
  • maistre — Josephe de (ʒozɛf də). 1753–1821, French writer and diplomat, noted for his extreme reactionary views, expounded in such works as Les Soirées de St Petersbourg (1821)
  • maistry — (obsolete) mastery.
  • mansart — Jules Hardouin [zhyl ar-dwan] /ʒül arˈdwɛ̃/ (Show IPA), (Jules Hardouin) 1646–1708, French architect: chief architectural director for Louis XIV.
  • mantras — Plural form of mantra.
  • marisat — one of a series of geostationary communications satellites that relay telecommunications between ships at sea and shore stations.
  • maritsa — a river in S Europe, flowing from S Bulgaria along the boundary between Greece and European Turkey and into the Aegean. 300 miles (485 km) long.
  • markets — Plural form of market.
  • marmots — Plural form of marmot.
  • marstonJohn, c1575–1634, English dramatist and satirical poet.
  • martens — Plural form of marten.
  • martins — Archer John Porter [ahr-cher] /ˈɑr tʃər/ (Show IPA), 1910–2002, English biochemist: Nobel Prize in chemistry 1952.
  • martyrs — Plural form of martyr.
  • marxist — an adherent of Karl Marx or his theories.
  • masters — a degree awarded by a graduate school or department, usually to a person who has completed at least one year of graduate study.
  • mastery — command or grasp, as of a subject: a mastery of Italian.
  • matrass — a rounded, long-necked glass container, formerly used for distilling and dissolving substances.
  • matress — Archaic form of mattress.
  • matrons — Plural form of matron.
  • matross — an artilleryman who ranked below a gunner and who acted as a gunner's assistant, aiding in the loading and firing of guns
  • matsuri — A solemn festival celebrated periodically at Shinto shrines in Japan.
  • matters — the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made.
  • matures — complete in natural growth or development, as plant and animal forms: a mature rose bush.
  • maurist — a member of the Benedictine “Congregation of St. Maur,” founded in France in 1618, distinguished for its scholarship and literary works: suppressed during the French Revolution.
  • measter — (obsolete, UK) eye dialect of master.
  • mercast — a broadcasting system used by U.S. agencies to deliver messages to government-operated ships.
  • mispart — to part wrongly
  • misrate — to rate or estimate incorrectly
  • mistral — Frédéric [frey-dey-reek] /freɪ deɪˈrik/ (Show IPA), 1830–1914, French Provençal poet: Nobel prize 1904.
  • miswart — /mis-wort/ [By analogy with misbug] A feature that superficially appears to be a wart but has been determined to be the Right Thing. For example, in some versions of the Emacs text editor, the "transpose characters" command exchanges the character under the cursor with the one before it on the screen, *except* when the cursor is at the end of a line, in which case the two characters before the cursor are exchanged. While this behaviour is perhaps surprising, and certainly inconsistent, it has been found through extensive experimentation to be what most users want. This feature is a miswart.

On this page, we collect all 7-letter words with M-A-S-T-R. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 7-letter word that contains in M-A-S-T-R to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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