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10-letter words containing p, a, r, m

  • jumpstarts — Plural form of jumpstart.
  • kaempferol — (organic compound) A flavonoid, isolated from tea and other plants, that may reduce the risk of heart disease.
  • karyolymph — The liquid part of the nucleus of a cell.
  • karyoplasm — nucleoplasm.
  • kiloampère — one thousand amperes
  • kymographs — Plural form of kymograph.
  • kymography — The use of a kymograph.
  • labor camp — Also called slave labor camp. a penal colony where inmates are forced to work.
  • lagomorphs — Plural form of lagomorph.
  • lampadaire — a pedestal of the Empire period for a lamp or candelabrum.
  • lamper eel — lamprey.
  • lampholder — a fixture for an electric light bulb
  • lampoonery — a sharp, often virulent satire directed against an individual or institution; a work of literature, art, or the like, ridiculing severely the character or behavior of a person, society, etc.
  • laparotome — a cutting instrument for performing a laparotomy.
  • laparotomy — incision through the abdominal wall.
  • linear map — (mathematics)   (Or "linear transformation") A function from a vector space to a vector space which respects the additive and multiplicative structures of the two: that is, for any two vectors, u, v, in the source vector space and any scalar, k, in the field over which it is a vector space, a linear map f satisfies f(u+kv) = f(u) + kf(v).
  • loperamide — a substance, C 29 H 33 ClN 2 O 2 , used in the treatment of diarrhea.
  • lump sugar — sugar in small blocks
  • lymphogram — A diagnostic image produced by lymphography.
  • mabe pearl — a smooth cultured pearl cultivated in a hemispherical shape so that it has one flat and one convex surface.
  • macphersonJames, 1736–96, Scottish author and translator.
  • macrocarpa — (NZ) The Monterey cypress.
  • macrograph — a representation of an object that is of the same size as or larger than the object.
  • macrophage — a large white blood cell, occurring principally in connective tissue and in the bloodstream, that ingests foreign particles and infectious microorganisms by phagocytosis.
  • macrophyte — a plant, especially a marine plant, large enough to be visible to the naked eye.
  • macropores — Plural form of macropore.
  • macroprism — a prism belonging to an orthorhombic crystal found between the macropinacoid and the unit prism
  • macroscope — A wide-field imaging device.
  • macrospore — megaspore.
  • madrepores — Plural form of madrepore.
  • madreporic — Resembling, or pertaining to, the genus Madrepora.
  • magstripes — Plural form of magstripe.
  • mailperson — A mailman or mailwoman.
  • mainpernor — a person who gives a guarantee that a prisoner will appear in court
  • mainspring — the principal spring in a mechanism, as in a watch.
  • malapropos — inappropriate; out of place; inopportune; untimely: a malapropos remark.
  • mammograph — A machine for taking X-ray pictures of the breasts (mammaries).
  • manuscript — the original text of an author's work, handwritten or now usually typed, that is submitted to a publisher.
  • map turtle — any of several aquatic turtles of the genus Graptemys, as G. geographica, of the eastern and central U.S., usually having yellow stripes on the head and neck.
  • mapinguari — Alternative form of mapinguary.
  • mapinguary — A legendary red-furred ground-dwelling sloth-like creature said to live in the Amazon rainforests of Brazil and Bolivia.
  • march past — a parade or procession, especially of troops past a reviewing stand.
  • march-past — a parade or procession, especially of troops past a reviewing stand.
  • marco polo — Marco [mahr-koh] /ˈmɑr koʊ/ (Show IPA), c1254–1324, Venetian traveler.
  • mareograph — marigraph.
  • marigraphs — Plural form of marigraph.
  • mark spitz — Mark (Andrew) born 1950, U.S. swimmer: winner of seven gold medals in 1972 summer Olympic Games.
  • marker pen — a pen with a thick tip made of felt
  • market cap — A market cap is the total market value of all the shares in a company.
  • marprelate — Martin, the pen name of the anonymous author or authors of a series of satirical Puritan tracts (1588–89), attacking the bishops of the Church of England
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