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10-letter words containing m, u, t, e

  • misventure — an unfortunate undertaking; misadventure.
  • mittimuses — Plural form of mittimus.
  • mittyesque — Walter Mitty.
  • moa hunter — the name given by anthropologists to the early Māori inhabitants of New Zealand
  • modern cut — any of several modifications or combinations of the brilliant cut, step cut, or table cut, having the girdle outline often in some novel form.
  • moisturise — to add or restore moisture to (something): to moisturize one's skin with lotion; to moisturize air.
  • moisturize — to add or restore moisture to (something): to moisturize one's skin with lotion; to moisturize air.
  • monestrous — of or relating to a mammal that has one estrus period per breeding season, as the dog.
  • monkey nut — a peanut.
  • monsterous — Misspelling of monstrous.
  • mont perdu — a mountain in NE Spain, in the central Pyrenees. Height: 3352 m (10 997 ft)
  • monumental — resembling a monument; massive or imposing.
  • monumented — something erected in memory of a person, event, etc., as a building, pillar, or statue: the Washington Monument.
  • morgenthauHenry, 1856–1946, U.S. financier and diplomat, born in Germany.
  • mortuaries — Plural form of mortuary.
  • mosquitoes — Plural form of mosquito.
  • mosquitoey — Swarming with mosquitoes.
  • motoneuron — motor neuron.
  • motorbuses — Plural form of motorbus.
  • moudiewart — a mole
  • mount etna — an active volcano in E Sicily: the highest volcano in Europe and the highest peak in Italy south of the Alps. Height: 3323 m (10 902 ft)
  • mount nebo — a mountain in Jordan, northeast of the Dead Sea: the highest point of a ridge known as Pisgah, from which Moses viewed the Promised Land just before his death (Deuteronomy 34:1). Height: 802 m (2631 ft)
  • mountained — having mountains
  • mountebank — A person who deceives others, especially in order to trick them out of their money; a charlatan.
  • mouse belt — rat belt
  • mousetails — Plural form of mousetail.
  • mousetraps — Plural form of mousetrap.
  • moustached — Having moustache.
  • moustaches — Plural form of moustache.
  • mousterian — of or relating to a Middle Paleolithic culture of Neanderthal man dating to the early upper Pleistocene Epoch (c100,000–40,000 b.c.) and consisting of five or more stone-artifact traditions in Europe whose characteristic tools are side scrapers and points.
  • mouth feel — the tactile sensation a food gives to the mouth: a creamy mouthfeel.
  • mouth-feel — the tactile sensation a food gives to the mouth: a creamy mouthfeel.
  • mouthiness — The property of being mouthy.
  • mouthpiece — a piece placed at or forming the mouth, as of a receptacle or tube.
  • mouvementé — hectic; animated
  • move about — fidget, be restless
  • mud stream — mudflow.
  • mud turtle — any of several small, freshwater turtles of the family Kinosternidae, of North and South America, as the dark-brown Kinosternon subrubrum, of the U.S.
  • muffuletta — a thick, round sandwich similar to a hero, typically containing ham, salami, and cheeses and topped with an olive salad, a specialty of New Orleans.
  • mug punter — a customer or client who is gullible and easily swindled
  • mule chest — a low chest with drawers, mounted on a low frame.
  • mule track — a track used by mules
  • mule train — a line of pack mules or a line of wagons drawn by mules.
  • muliebrity — womanly nature or qualities.
  • multi-hued — having the hue or color as specified (usually used in combination): many-hued; golden-hued.
  • multi-role — a part or character played by an actor or actress.
  • multi-user — (operating system)   A term describing an operating system or application program that can be used by several people concurrently; opposite of single-user. Unix is an example of a multi-user operating system, whereas most (but not all) versions of Microsoft Windows are intended to support only one user at a time. A multi-user system, by definition, supports concurrent processing of multiple tasks (once known as "time-sharing") or true parallel processing if it has multiple CPUs. While batch processing systems often ran jobs for serveral users concurrently, the term "multi-user" typically implies interactive access. Before Ethernet networks were commonplace, multi-user systems were accessed from a terminal (e.g. a vt100) connected via a serial line (typically RS-232). This arrangement was eventually superseded by networked personal computers, perhaps sharing files on a file server. With the wide-spread availability of Internet connections, the idea of sharing centralised resources is becoming trendy again with cloud computing and managed applications, though this time it is the overhead of administering the system that is being shared rather than the cost of the hardware. In gaming, both on PCs and games consoles, the equivalent term is multi-player, though the first multi-player games (e.g. ADVENT) were on multi-user computers.
  • multi-view — an instance of seeing or beholding; visual inspection.
  • multi-year — a period of 365 or 366 days, in the Gregorian calendar, divided into 12 calendar months, now reckoned as beginning Jan. 1 and ending Dec. 31 (calendar year or civil year) Compare common year, leap year.
  • multiarmed — having multiple arms
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