9-letter words containing m, i, s, c
- mockeries — Plural form of mockery.
- mocktails — Plural form of mocktail.
- molochise — sacrifice to deity
- monachism — monasticism.
- monastics — Plural form of monastic.
- monecious — monoecious.
- monobasic — Chemistry. (of an acid) containing one replaceable hydrogen atom.
- monoecism — the state of having both male and female organs of reproduction
- monoicous — Alternative form of monoecious.
- monosemic — Of or pertaining to monosemy.
- monosomic — having one less than the usual diploid number of chromosomes.
- monostich — a poem or epigram consisting of a single metrical line.
- mosaicism — a condition in which an organism or part is composed of two or more genetically distinct tissues owing to experimental manipulation or to faulty distribution of genetic material during mitosis.
- mosaicist — a person who works in mosaic.
- mosaicked — a picture or decoration made of small, usually colored pieces of inlaid stone, glass, etc.
- moscovium — a highly radioactive element, of which only a few atoms have ever been produced. Symbol: Mc; atomic no: 115; atomic wt: 289
- ms office — Microsoft Office
- muckiness — The quality of being mucky.
- mucositis — A complication of some cancer therapies in which the lining of the digestive system becomes inflamed. Often seen as sores in the mouth.
- multicast — Send (data) across a computer network to several users at the same time.
- multidisc — comprising more than one disc
- multiscan — (hardware) A monitor that can synchronise to a variety of horizontal scan rates and refresh rates, allowing it to display images at different resolutions.
- multisync — (hardware) An NEC trademark term for multiscan. As NEC was the first to manufacture multiscan monitors the term is often used interchangeably with multiscan.
- munchkins — Plural form of munchkin.
- murchison — an intermittent river in W Australia, flowing SW to the Indian Ocean. 440 miles (708 km) long.
- muscadine — a grape, Vitis rotundifolia, of the southern U.S., having dull purple, thick-skinned musky fruit and being the origin of many grape varieties.
- muscarine — a poisonous compound, C 8 H 1 9 NO 3 , found in certain mushrooms, especially fly agaric, and in decaying fish.
- muscatine — a city in E Iowa, on the Mississippi.
- musciform — (botany) Having the appearance or form of a moss.
- muscle in — a tissue composed of cells or fibers, the contraction of which produces movement in the body.
- muscovite — a native or inhabitant of Moscow.
- music box — a box or case containing an apparatus for producing music mechanically, as by means of a comblike steel plate with tuned teeth sounded by small pegs or pins in the surface of a revolving cylinder or disk.
- musicales — Plural form of musicale.
- musically — of, relating to, or producing music: a musical instrument.
- musicians — Plural form of musician.
- musicless — without music
- mustachio — a mustache.
- mycerinus — king of ancient Egypt c2600–2570 b.c.: builder of the third great pyramid at ·El· Giza.
- mycosozin — any sozin that kills microorganisms.
- mycovirus — any fungus-infecting virus.
- myristica — (botany) Any member of the genus Myristica of nutmegs.
- mysticete — any whale of the suborder Mysticeti, as finback and humpback whales, characterized by a symmetrical skull, paired blowholes, and rows of baleen plates for feeding on plankton.
- mysticism — the beliefs, ideas, or mode of thought of mystics.
- mysticity — involving or characterized by esoteric, otherworldly, or symbolic practices or content, as certain religious ceremonies and art; spiritually significant; ethereal.
- mysticize — to make mystical; give mystical meaning to: to mysticize natural phenomena.
- mythicise — Alt form mythicize.
- mythicism — (theology) the scholarly opinion that the gospel is mythical.
- mytishchi — a city in the W Russian Federation in Europe, NE of Moscow.
- narcotism — habitual use of narcotics.
- neocosmic — Of or relating to the universe in its present state; specifically, relating to the races of human beings known to history.