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9-letter words containing m, e, o, r, a

  • more than — a greater number or amount than
  • morecambe — a port and resort in NW England, in NW Lancashire on Morecambe Bay (an inlet of the Irish Sea). Pop (with Heysham): 49 569 (2001)
  • morganite — rose-colored beryl.
  • mortalise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of mortalize.
  • mortalize — (transitive) To make mortal.
  • mortgaged — a conveyance of an interest in property as security for the repayment of money borrowed.
  • mortgagee — a person to whom property is mortgaged.
  • mortgager — a person who mortgages property.
  • mortgages — Plural form of mortgage.
  • mosbacherEmil, Jr ("Bus") 1922–1997, U.S. yacht racer and government official.
  • mossbauer — Rudolf L [roo-dawlf] /ˈru dɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1929–2011, German physicist: Nobel prize 1961.
  • motorable — Which can be traveled on by motor cars.
  • motorcade — a procession or parade of automobiles or other motor vehicles.
  • mouse-ear — short for mouse-ear chickweed
  • mousetrap — a trap for mice, especially one consisting of a rectangular wooden base on which a metal spring is mounted.
  • mucronate — having an abruptly projecting point, as a feather or leaf.
  • myelogram — an x-ray photograph of the spinal cord, following administration of a radiopaque substance into the spinal subarachnoid space.
  • myoneural — of or relating to both muscle and nerve.
  • name-drop — mention famous person to impress
  • nameboard — a signboard that identifies a place or object.
  • nanometer — one billionth of a meter. Abbreviation: nm.
  • nanometre — An SI subunit of length equal to 10-9 metres. Symbol: nm.
  • nathemore — nevermore
  • near home — concerning one deeply
  • nephogram — a photograph of a cloud
  • neurinoma — A schwannoma.
  • neuromast — a group of innervated sensory cells occurring along the lateral line of fishes and aquatic amphibians.
  • no matter — the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made.
  • nonameric — Of or pertaining to a nonamer.
  • nonfarmer — a person who is not a farmer
  • nonmarket — an open place or a covered building where buyers and sellers convene for the sale of goods; a marketplace: a farmers' market.
  • nonmature — not mature; immature
  • normalise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of normalize.
  • normalize — to make normal.
  • normandie — a former province of N France, on the English Channel: settled by Vikings under Rollo in the 10th century; scene of the Allied landings in 1944. Chief town: Rouen
  • normanize — to make or become Norman in character, style, customs, etc
  • normative — of or relating to a norm, especially an assumed norm regarded as the standard of correctness in behavior, speech, writing, etc.
  • numerator — Arithmetic. the term of a fraction, usually above the line, that indicates the number of equal parts that are to be added together; the dividend placed over a divisor: The numerator of the fraction 2/3 is 2. Compare denominator (def 1).
  • oarswomen — Plural form of oarswoman.
  • obamacare — a federal law providing for a fundamental reform of the U.S. healthcare and health insurance system, signed by President Barack Obama in 2010: formally called Affordable Care Act or Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
  • obumbrate — to darken, overshadow, or cloud.
  • octameter — consisting of eight measures or feet.
  • oddsmaker — a person who calculates or predicts the outcome of a contest, as in sports or politics, and sets betting odds.
  • oenogarum — Garum diluted with wine.
  • omnirange — a radio navigational aid in which stations emit distinctive signals on each of 360 degrees, giving the bearing of each degree with reference to magnetic north.
  • on camera — a device for capturing a photographic image or recording a video, using film or digital memory.
  • on remand — in custody or on bail awaiting trial or completion of one's trial
  • on stream — If something such as a new factory or a new system comes on stream or is brought on stream, it begins to operate or becomes available.
  • on-stream — in or into regular operation, especially as part of a system, assembly line, or the like: When the new printing press goes on-stream, we'll be able to print twice as many newspapers a day.
  • one-armed — having only one arm
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