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9-letter words containing m, u, s, t, e

  • minutiose — attentive to very small details
  • misquoted — Simple past tense and past participle of misquote.
  • misquoter — a person who quotes others inaccurately or incorrectly
  • misquotes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of misquote.
  • misrouted — a course, way, or road for passage or travel: What's the shortest route to Boston?
  • modulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of modulate.
  • moistured — Supplied with moisture.
  • moistures — Plural form of moisture.
  • molestful — (obsolete) troublesome; vexatious.
  • momentous — of great or far-reaching importance or consequence: a momentous day.
  • momentums — Plural form of momentum.
  • monuments — Plural form of monument.
  • most-euro — European: a Euro expert.
  • mot juste — the exact, appropriate word.
  • mouldiest — Superlative form of mouldy.
  • mouse mat — (hardware)   (U.S.: "mouse pad") A small sheet with a special surface for a rolling ball mouse to move on. Most mouse mats are sheets of rubber or foam about 20cm by 25cm and about 5mm thick with one side covered with cloth or sometimes hard plastic. Deluxe versions come combined with a wrist rest. It is rare to find a mouse mat which does not carry some form of advertisement for some company or other. They are such a common free gift that few people actually have to buy one. Mats are supposed to provide better traction and a clean, lint-free surface over which to move but it debatable whether they are useful at all, or whether any appropriate surface (preferably hard, even, flat, and clean) is as good. Howevever, some mice which use optical (e.g. Sun) or radio-frequency sensors (e.g. ?) to detect motion (instead of using a rolling ball) will only work on specially designed mouse mats. Critics may consider this to be part of the connector conspiracy, though the designers would claim greater reliability due to the absence of moving parts.
  • mousetail — (botany) Any plant of the genus Ivesia, in the rose family.
  • mousetrap — a trap for mice, especially one consisting of a rectangular wooden base on which a metal spring is mounted.
  • moustache — the hair growing on the upper lip.
  • mouthless — Without a mouth.
  • mucksweat — profuse sweat or a state of profuse sweating
  • mulattoes — Plural form of mulatto.
  • multidose — (pharmacy) Containing multiple doses.
  • multiples — consisting of, having, or involving several or many individuals, parts, elements, relations, etc.; manifold.
  • multisite — Occupying, or occurring at multiple sites.
  • multisize — having more than one size
  • multistep — Involving multiple steps.
  • multiuser — (of a computer system) able to be used by a number of people simultaneously.
  • mummerset — an imitation West Country accent used in drama
  • munimentsmuniments, Law. a document, as a title deed or a charter, by which rights or privileges are defended or maintained.
  • murrelets — Plural form of murrelet.
  • muscatels — Plural form of muscatel.
  • muscatine — a city in E Iowa, on the Mississippi.
  • muscovite — a native or inhabitant of Moscow.
  • musketeer — a soldier armed with a musket.
  • musketoon — (now historical) A firearm, similar to a musket but with a shorter barrel and a large bore. (from 17th c.).
  • mussitate — to mutter; mumble.
  • must-have — A must-have is something modern that many people want to have.
  • must-read — a piece of literature or writing considered important or classic; writing that should or must be read.
  • mustached — Having a mustache.
  • mustaches — Plural form of mustache.
  • mustanger — a person who engages in mustanging.
  • musteline — belonging or pertaining to the family Mustelidae, including the martens, skunks, minks, weasels, badgers, and otters.
  • muster in — to assemble (troops, a ship's crew, etc.), as for battle, display, inspection, orders, or discharge.
  • mustering — Present participle of muster.
  • mustiness — having an odor or flavor suggestive of mold, as old buildings, long-closed rooms, or stale food.
  • mute swan — a commonly domesticated soundless white swan, Cygnus olor, of Europe and Asia.
  • mutilates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mutilate.
  • mutineers — A person, esp. a soldier or sailor, who rebels or refuses to obey the orders of a person in authority.
  • mutoscope — A motion-picture device of the late nineteenth century, to be viewed by one person at a time through a peephole.
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