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9-letter words containing m, l, a

  • ambipolar — (of plasmas and semiconductors) involving both positive and negative charge carriers
  • 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.
  • ambrosial — of or fit for the gods; divine
  • 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
  • amendable — to alter, modify, rephrase, or add to or subtract from (a motion, bill, constitution, etc.) by formal procedure: Congress may amend the proposed tax bill.
  • amiloride — a potassium-sparing diuretic, C 6 H 8 ClN 7 O, used in the treatment of hypertension.
  • aminediyl — (organic chemistry) A nitrene.
  • aminylene — (organic chemistry) A nitrene.
  • amissible — likely to be lost
  • ammonical — (inorganic chemistry) Of or pertaining to ammonia.
  • amoralism — the doctrine or attitude that ignores or rejects moral vaues, or deems them to be irrelevant
  • amoralist — a person who adheres to the doctrine of amoralism
  • amorality — not involving questions of right or wrong; without moral quality; neither moral nor immoral.
  • amorously — inclined or disposed to love, especially sexual love: an amorous disposition.
  • amphibole — any of a large group of minerals consisting of the silicates of calcium, iron, magnesium, sodium, and aluminium, usually in the form of long slender dark-coloured crystals. Members of the group, including hornblende, actinolite, and tremolite, are common constituents of igneous rocks
  • amphiboly — ambiguity of speech, especially from uncertainty of the grammatical construction rather than of the meaning of the words, as in The Duke yet lives that Henry shall depose.
  • ampholyte — an amphoteric electrolyte
  • ampleness — fully sufficient or more than adequate for the purpose or needs; plentiful; enough: an ample supply of water; ample time to finish.
  • amplicons — Plural form of amplicon.
  • amplidyne — an electrodynamic amplifier which uses a small electrical signal to control the position of a large motor
  • amplified — Simple past tense and past participle of amplify.
  • amplifier — An amplifier is an electronic device in a radio or stereo system which causes sounds or signals to get louder.
  • amplifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of amplify.
  • amplitude — In physics, the amplitude of a sound wave or electrical signal is its strength.
  • amplosome — the short or stocky type of human body shape
  • ampullary — Of or pertaining to an ampulla.
  • ampullate — Having an ampulla; flask-shaped; bellied.
  • ampullula — a small ampulla.
  • amusingly — pleasantly entertaining or diverting: an amusing speaker.
  • amygdalae — Plural form of amygdala.
  • amygdalic — of almonds.
  • amygdalin — a white soluble bitter-tasting crystalline glycoside extracted from bitter almonds and stone fruits such as peaches and apricots. Formula: C6H5CHCNOC12H21O10
  • amygdules — Plural form of amygdule.
  • amyloidal — resembling an amyloid; starch-like
  • amylopsin — an enzyme of the pancreatic juice that converts starch into sugar; pancreatic amylase
  • anabolism — a metabolic process in which complex molecules are synthesized from simpler ones with the storage of energy; constructive metabolism
  • analcimic — characterized by the presence of analcite
  • analemmas — Plural form of analemma.
  • analogism — an argument or reason based on analogy
  • anemology — the study of winds
  • angleworm — an earthworm used as bait by anglers
  • anglicism — a word, phrase, or idiom peculiar to the English language, esp as spoken in England
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