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9-letter words containing m, l, n

  • luminesce — to exhibit luminescence.
  • lumpenism — Lumpen beliefs or behaviour.
  • lumpiness — full of lumps: lumpy gravy.
  • lumpingly — clumsily and heavily
  • luna moth — a large, pale-green, American moth, Actias luna, having purple-brown markings, lunate spots, and long tails.
  • lunchmeat — luncheon meat.
  • lunchroom — a room, as in a school, where light meals or snacks can be bought or where food brought from home may be eaten.
  • lunchtime — a period set aside for eating lunch or the period of an hour or so, beginning roughly at noon, during which lunch is commonly eaten.
  • lungworms — Plural form of lungworm.
  • lutuamian — a member of a group of American Indian peoples including the Modoc and the Klamath.
  • lymington — a market town in S England, in SW Hampshire, on the Solent: yachting centre and holiday resort. Pop: 14 227 (2001)
  • lynch mob — A lynch mob is an angry crowd of people who want to kill someone without a trial, because they believe that person has committed a crime.
  • macdonaldJames Ramsay, 1866–1937, British statesman and labor leader: prime minister 1924, 1929–35.
  • maclaurinColin, 1698–1746, Scottish mathematician.
  • maclennan — (John) Hugh, 1907–90, Canadian novelist and essayist.
  • macmillan — Donald Baxter [bak-ster] /ˈbæk stər/ (Show IPA), 1874–1970, U.S. arctic explorer.
  • madeleine — a small shell-shaped cake made of flour, eggs, sugar, and butter and baked in a mold.
  • madonsela — Thuli (ˈtʊlɪ). born 1962, South African advocate; in her term as Public Protector (2009–16) she was noted for exposing political corruption
  • madrilene — a consommé flavored with tomato, frequently jelled and served cold.
  • madrileno — a native or inhabitant of Madrid, Spain.
  • magdalena — a river in SW Colombia, flowing N to the Caribbean. 1060 miles (1705 km) long.
  • magdalenethe, Mary Magdalene.
  • magnaflux — to test (iron or steel) for defects using the Magnaflux method.
  • magnalium — an alloy of magnesium and aluminum, sometimes also containing copper, nickel, tin, and lead.
  • magnolias — Plural form of magnolia.
  • mailwoman — (rare) A female postal worker.
  • mailwomen — Plural form of mailwoman.
  • main line — a fashionable residential district west of Philadelphia.
  • main loop — (programming)   The top-level control flow construct in an input- or event-driven program, the one which receives and acts or dispatches on the program's input events. See also driver.
  • mainlined — Simple past tense and past participle of mainline.
  • mainliner — Slang. a person who mainlines.
  • mainsails — Plural form of mainsail.
  • malaguena — a Spanish dance similar to the fandango, originating in Málaga.
  • malanders — a dry, scabby or scurfy eruption or scratch behind the knee in a horse's foreleg.
  • malathion — an organic phosphate insecticide, C 10 H 19 O 6 S 2 P, of relatively low toxicity for mammals.
  • malaysian — a native or inhabitant of Malaysia.
  • maldivian — a republic in the Indian Ocean, SW of India, consisting of about 2000 islands: British protectorate 1887–1965. 115 sq. mi. (298 sq. km). Capital: Male.
  • male fern — a bright-green fern, Dryopteris filix-mas, of Europe and northeastern North America.
  • malengine — a wicked plan or deceit
  • malignant — disposed to cause harm, suffering, or distress deliberately; feeling or showing ill will or hatred.
  • maligning — to speak harmful untruths about; speak evil of; slander; defame: to malign an honorable man.
  • malignity — the state or character of being malign; malevolence; intense ill will; spite.
  • malingers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of malinger.
  • malingery — The spirit or practices of a malingerer; malingering.
  • malintent — Malicious intent.
  • malnormal — (mathematics) Of, pertaining to, or exhibiting malnormality.
  • maltalent — an evil intention
  • mammalian — an animal of the class Mammalia; mammal.
  • man-child — a male child; boy; son.
  • manacling — Present participle of manacle.
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