6-letter words containing m, e, t, a
- magret — A fillet of meat cut from a breast of duck.
- makest — Archaic second-person singular form of make.
- maketh — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of make.
- malate — a salt or ester of malic acid.
- malest — a person bearing an X and Y chromosome pair in the cell nuclei and normally having a penis, scrotum, and testicles, and developing hair on the face at adolescence; a boy or man.
- mallet — a hammerlike tool with a head commonly of wood but occasionally of rawhide, plastic, etc., used for driving any tool with a wooden handle, as a chisel, or for striking a surface.
- malted — germinated grain, usually barley, used in brewing and distilling.
- malter — (dated) A person who makes malt; a maltster.
- mammet — maumet.
- mantel — a construction framing the opening of a fireplace and usually covering part of the chimney breast in a more or less decorative manner.
- mantle — a construction framing the opening of a fireplace and usually covering part of the chimney breast in a more or less decorative manner.
- market — an open place or a covered building where buyers and sellers convene for the sale of goods; a marketplace: a farmers' market.
- marted — Simple past tense and past participle of mart.
- martel — Charles, Charles Martel.
- marten — any of several slender, chiefly arboreal carnivores of the genus Martes, of northern forests, having a long, glossy coat and bushy tail.
- masted — Having masts.
- master — botmaster
- matane — a city in E Quebec, in SE Canada, on the St. Lawrence River.
- maters — British Informal. mother1 .
- mateys — Plural form of matey.
- mather — Cotton, 1663–1728, American clergyman and author.
- maties — Plural form of maty.
- matjes — Plural form of matje.
- matoke — (in Uganda) the flesh of bananas, boiled and mashed as a food
- matres — Plural form of mater.
- matted — having a dull or lusterless surface: matte paint; a matte complexion; a photograph with a matte finish.
- matter — a dull or dead surface, often slightly roughened, as on metals, paint, paper, or glass.
- mattes — Plural form of matte.
- mattie — a young herring with undeveloped roe
- mature — complete in natural growth or development, as plant and animal forms: a mature rose bush.
- maumet — British Dialect. a doll, puppet, scarecrow, or other figure built to resemble a human being. an empty-headed or mindless person.
- mayest — 2nd person singular present indicative of may1 .
- mayten — a tree, Maytenus boaria, native to Chile, having narrow leaves and drooping branches, planted as a street tree in Florida and southern California.
- meatal — an opening or foramen, especially in a bone or bony structure, as the opening of the ear or nose.
- meated — Fed; fattened.
- meatus — an opening or foramen, especially in a bone or bony structure, as the opening of the ear or nose.
- mecate — Southwestern U.S. a rope made of horsehair or sometimes maguey.
- mental — of or relating to the chin.
- mentat — (language) (After the human computers in Frank Herbert's SF classic, "Dune") An object-oriented distributed language developed at the University of Virginia some time before Dec 1987. Mentat is an extension of C++ and is portable to a variety of MIMD architectures. By 1994 Mentat was available for Sun-3, Sun-4, iPSC/2 with plans for Mach, iPSC860, RS/6000 and Iris. The language is now (May 1998) supported in a new project, Legion. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
- mentha — (botany) Any of the mint genus Mentha, mints and similar species.
- meseta — a plateau
- meta 5 — Early syntax-directed compiler-compiler, used for translating one high-level language to another. Versions: META II, META-3.
- metage — the official measurement of contents or weight.
- metals — Plural form of metal.
- metaph — metaphor
- metate — a flat stone that has a shallow depression in the upper surface for holding maize or other grains to be ground with a mano.
- metepa — a substance, C9H18N3OP, that is used in pest control to sterilize male insects
- micate — to add mica to
- miseat — to eat unhealthily or improperly
- moated — Surrounded with a moat.