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9-letter words containing m, a

  • amaryllid — a plant of the amaryllis family
  • amaryllis — an amaryllidaceous plant, Amaryllis belladonna, native to southern Africa and having large lily-like reddish or white flowers
  • amassable — of a nature that can be amassed
  • amassment — the act of amassing
  • amaterasu — the Japanese Shinto goddess personifying the sun.
  • amatorial — of or relating to lovers or lovemaking; expressive of love: amatory poems; an amatory look.
  • amatorian — amatorial
  • amatoxins — Plural form of amatoxin.
  • amaurosis — blindness, esp when occurring without observable damage to the eye
  • amaurotic — partial or total loss of sight, especially in the absence of a gross lesion or injury.
  • amazement — Amazement is the feeling you have when something surprises you very much.
  • amazingly — causing great surprise or sudden wonder.
  • amazonian — Amazonian means related to the area around the river Amazon.
  • amazonite — a green variety of microcline used as a gemstone. Formula: KAlSi3O8
  • ambagious — ambiguous
  • ambarella — Otaheite apple.
  • ambassade — (obsolete) The mission of an ambassador.
  • ambassage — a message sent by an embassy
  • amberfish — amberjack.
  • ambergris — Ambergris is a waxy substance produced by sperm whales. It is used to make some perfumes.
  • amberjack — any of several large carangid fishes of the genus Seriola, esp S. dumerili, with golden markings when young, occurring in tropical and subtropical Atlantic waters
  • amberlite — various insoluble cross-linked polymers used in water-treatment processes and in pharmacy
  • ambiently — In an ambient way.
  • ambiguate — To make a situation or something more ambiguous.
  • ambiguity — If you say that there is ambiguity in something, you mean that it is unclear or confusing, or it can be understood in more than one way.
  • ambiguous — If you describe something as ambiguous, you mean that it is unclear or confusing because it can be understood in more than one way.
  • ambipolar — (of plasmas and semiconductors) involving both positive and negative charge carriers
  • ambitions — an earnest desire for some type of achievement or distinction, as power, honor, fame, or wealth, and the willingness to strive for its attainment: Too much ambition caused him to be disliked by his colleagues.
  • ambitious — Someone who is ambitious has a strong desire to be successful, rich, or powerful.
  • ambleside — a town in NW England, in Cumbria: a tourist centre for the Lake District. Pop: 3064 (2001)
  • amblyopia — impaired vision with no discernible damage to the eye or optic nerve
  • amblyopic — Of, relating to, or suffering from amblyopia.
  • ambrosiac — Having the qualities of ambrosia; delicious.
  • ambrosial — of or fit for the gods; divine
  • ambrosian — exceptionally pleasing to taste or smell; especially delicious or fragrant.
  • ambrotype — an early type of glass negative that could be made to appear as a positive by backing it with black varnish or paper
  • ambulacra — Plural form of ambulacrum.
  • ambulance — An ambulance is a vehicle for taking people to and from hospital.
  • ambulante — a portable tea table, used in 18th-century France.
  • ambulated — Simple past tense and past participle of ambulate.
  • ambulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ambulate.
  • ambulator — a person who walks
  • ambulette — a motor vehicle designed for transporting disabled people
  • ambuscade — an ambush
  • ambuscado — an ambush
  • ambushing — an act or instance of lying concealed so as to attack by surprise: The highwaymen waited in ambush near the road.
  • amd 29000 — (processor)   A RISC microprocessor descended from the Berkley RISC design. Like the SPARC design that was introduced shortly afterward, the 29000 has a large register set split into local and global sets. But though it was introduced before the SPARC, it has a more elegant method of register management. The 29000 has 64 global registers, in comparison to the SPARC's eight. In addition, the 29000 allows variable sized windows allocated from the 128 register stack cache. The current window or stack frame is indicated by a stack pointer, a pointer to the caller's frame is stored in the current frame, like in an ordinary stack (directly supporting stack languages like C, a CISC-like philosophy). Spills and fills occur only at the ends of the cache, and registers are saved/loaded from the memory stack. This allows variable window sizes, from 1 to 128 registers. This flexibility, plus the large set of global registers, makes register allocation easier than in SPARC. There is no special condition code register - any general register is used instead, allowing several condition codes to be retained, though this sometimes makes code more complex. An instruction prefetch buffer (using burst mode) ensures a steady instruction stream. To reduce delays caused by a branch to another stream, the first four new instructions are cached and next time a cached branch (up to sixteen) is taken, the cache supplies instructions during the initial memory access delay. Registers aren't saved during interrupts, allowing the interrupt routine to determine whether the overhead is worthwhile. In addition, a form of register access control is provided. All registers can be protected, in blocks of 4, from access. These features make the 29000 useful for embedded applications, which is where most of these processors are used, allowing it the claim to be "the most popular RISC processor". The 29000 also includes an MMU and support for the AMD 29027 FPU.
  • amd 29027 — (processor)   The FPU for the AMD 29000.
  • amebiasis — infestation with amoebas, esp. with a protozoan (Entamoeba histolytica) parasitic in the intestines or liver
  • amebiform — That resembles an amoeba / ameba.
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