0%

7-letter words containing n, c, m

  • endemic — (of a disease or condition) regularly found among particular people or in a certain area.
  • entomic — (zoology) Relating to insects; entomological.
  • enzymic — Of, pertaining to, or using enzymes; enzymatic.
  • faceman — a miner who works at the coalface, esp one who uses explosives
  • genomic — a full set of chromosomes; all the inheritable traits of an organism.
  • gnumacs — /gnoo'maks/ [contraction of "GNU Emacs"] Often-heard abbreviated name for the GNU project's flagship tool, Emacs. Used especially in contrast with GOSMACS.
  • hackman — the driver of a hack or taxi.
  • hackmen — Plural form of hackman.
  • ice man — a man whose business is gathering, storing, selling, or delivering ice.
  • iconism — The formation of a figure, representation, or semblance; a delineation or description.
  • iconium — ancient name of Konya.
  • incomer — a person who comes in.
  • incomes — Plural form of income.
  • jackman — (motor racing) A member of the pit crew responsible for lifting the car with a jack.
  • laceman — (dated) A male dealer in lace.
  • limacon — a plane curve generated by the locus of a point on a line at a fixed distance from the point of intersection of the line with a fixed circle, as the line revolves about a point on the circumference of the circle. Equation: r = a cosθ + b.
  • lockman — (Scotland, archaic) A public executioner.
  • locoman — a locomotive engine driver.
  • locomen — Plural form of locoman.
  • macaron — a round, colored cookie consisting of a ganache or buttercream filling between two halves made from beaten egg whites mixed with sugar and ground almonds.
  • macdink — /mak'dink/ To make many incremental and unnecessary cosmetic changes to a program or file. Often the subject of the macdinking would be better off without them. The Macintosh is said to encourage such behaviour. See also fritterware, window shopping.
  • macedon — Also, Macedon [mas-i-don] /ˈmæs ɪˌdɒn/ (Show IPA). an ancient kingdom in the Balkan Peninsula, in S Europe: now a region in N Greece, SW Bulgaria, and the Republic of Macedonia.
  • machans — Plural form of machan.
  • machaon — a son of Asclepius who was famed as a healer and who served as physician of the Greeks in the Trojan War.
  • machine — an apparatus consisting of interrelated parts with separate functions, used in the performance of some kind of work: a sewing machine.
  • mack on — a pimp.
  • macking — a pimp.
  • maclean — Donald. 1913–83, British civil servant, who spied for the Russians: fled to the former Soviet Union (with Guy Burgess) in 1951
  • macrons — Plural form of macron.
  • mahican — a tribe or confederacy of Algonquian-speaking North American Indians, centralized formerly in the upper Hudson valley.
  • malonic — of or derived from malonic acid; propanedioic.
  • manacle — a shackle for the hand; handcuff.
  • mancala — (games, board games) A generic name applied to various board games in which a move consists of emptying a pit and then its contents are sown one by one into ensuing pits.
  • manchet — a kind of white bread made from the finest flour.
  • mandioc — (obsolete) manioc.
  • maniack — Obsolete form of maniac.
  • maniacs — Plural form of maniac.
  • manicou — The common opossum, taxonomic name Didelphis marsupialis.
  • manjack — a west Indian tree with slimy fruit
  • manpack — a compact load able to be carried by one person
  • manteca — a town in central California.
  • mantric — Hinduism. a word or formula, as from the Veda, chanted or sung as an incantation or prayer.
  • marchen — a German fairy tale or fictional story
  • marcian — a.d. 392?–457, emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire 450–457.
  • marcion — a.d. c100–c160, Christian Gnostic.
  • marconi — Guglielmo [goo-lyel-maw] /guˈlyɛl mɔ/ (Show IPA), Marchese, 1874–1937, Italian electrical engineer and inventor, especially in the field of wireless telegraphy: Nobel Prize in physics 1909.
  • mascons — Plural form of mascon.
  • masonic — Of or pertaining to stonemasons or masonry.
  • maunche — a conventional representation of a sleeve with a flaring end, used as a charge.
  • mayence — French name of Mainz.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?