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8-letter words containing m, a, t, e, u

  • mangbetu — a member of a people of the northeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo.
  • mansuete — gentle or tame
  • maquette — a small model or study in three dimensions for either a sculptural or an architectural project.
  • maturate — Pathology. to suppurate.
  • maturely — complete in natural growth or development, as plant and animal forms: a mature rose bush.
  • maturers — complete in natural growth or development, as plant and animal forms: a mature rose bush.
  • maturest — complete in natural growth or development, as plant and animal forms: a mature rose bush.
  • maumetry — Archaic form of mammetry.
  • mcteague — a novel (1899) by Frank Norris.
  • meatuses — Plural form of meatus.
  • megahurt — (computer slang, rare) megahertz.
  • minutiae — Usually, minutiae. precise details; small or trifling matters: the minutiae of his craft.
  • modulate — to regulate by or adjust to a certain measure or proportion; soften; tone down.
  • montague — (in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet) the family name of Romeo. Compare Capulet.
  • mousemat — a piece of material on which a computer mouse is moved
  • mudspate — mudflow.
  • mule-fat — a composite shrub, Baccharis viminea, of California, having willowlike leaves and clustered flowers, growing in riverbeds.
  • multiage — Concerning more than one age.
  • muricate — covered with short, sharp points.
  • muscadet — a white grape grown especially in the lower Loire Valley region of France.
  • muscatel — a sweet wine made from muscat grapes.
  • mustache — the hair growing on the upper lip.
  • mutagens — Plural form of mutagen.
  • mutative — to change; alter.
  • muteable — Capable of being muted.
  • mutilate — to injure, disfigure, or make imperfect by removing or irreparably damaging parts: Vandals mutilated the painting.
  • nembutal — pentobarbital sodium
  • neumatic — any of various symbols representing from one to four notes, used in the musical notation of the Middle Ages but now employed solely in the notation of Gregorian chant in the liturgical books of the Roman Catholic Church.
  • nu-metal — a type of rock music popular from the late 1990s, featuring much of the sound typical of heavy metal but also influenced by rap and hip-hop
  • numerate — to represent numbers by symbols.
  • nutmeats — the kernel of a nut, usually edible.
  • ommateum — compound eye.
  • outdream — to exceed in dreaming
  • outgleam — to gleam more than
  • outshame — to shame greatly or surpass in shamefulness
  • peamouth — a minnow, Mylocheilus caurinus, of northwestern U.S. and British Columbian waters.
  • petaluma — a city in W California, N of San Francisco.
  • plumbate — a compound formed from lead oxide
  • pumicate — to pound or rub smooth with pumice
  • ramentum — a scraping, shaving, or particle.
  • routeman — a person who works in a specified area or covers a specific route, as a mail carrier or truckdriver.
  • ruminate — to chew the cud, as a ruminant.
  • seamount — a submarine mountain rising several hundred fathoms above the floor of the sea but having its summit well below the surface of the water.
  • simulate — to create a simulation, likeness, or model of (a situation, system, or the like): to simulate crisis conditions.
  • soulmate — a person with whom one has a strong affinity, shared values and tastes, and often a romantic bond: I married my soul mate; you don't get much luckier than that.
  • soupmeat — beef used for making soup stock.
  • spumante — Italian. any sparkling wine.
  • squamate — provided or covered with squamae or scales; scaly.
  • staumrel — stupid; half-witted.
  • steam up — water in the form of an invisible gas or vapor.
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