0%

10-letter words containing r, a, m, e, k

  • hammerkops — Plural form of hammerkop.
  • hammerlock — a hold in which one arm of an opponent is twisted and forced upward behind his back.
  • hemikaryon — a haploid nucleus.
  • homemakers — Plural form of homemaker.
  • house mark — a trademark that appears on and identifies all of a company's products.
  • housemaker — Homemaker.
  • imagemaker — a person, as a publicist, who specializes in creating images for companies, political candidates, etc.
  • jackhammer — a portable drill operated by compressed air and used to drill rock, break up pavement, etc.
  • job market — the total number of vacant jobs open to those seeking employment.
  • kaempferol — (organic compound) A flavonoid, isolated from tea and other plants, that may reduce the risk of heart disease.
  • kairomones — Plural form of kairomone.
  • karyosomes — Plural form of karyosome.
  • keratotomy — incision of the cornea.
  • kermanshah — a city in W Iran.
  • kernmantel — denoting a type of mountaineering rope
  • kerygmatic — the preaching of the gospel of Christ, especially in the manner of the early church.
  • kiloampère — one thousand amperes
  • kilogramme — (British) alternative spelling of kilogram.
  • kingmakers — Plural form of kingmaker.
  • kodachrome — (lowercase) a positive color transparency.
  • lacemakers — Plural form of lacemaker.
  • lake frome — a shallow salt lake in NE South Australia: intermittently filled with water. Length: 100 km (60 miles). Width: 48 km (30 miles)
  • lake mälar — a lake in S Sweden, extending 121 km (75 miles) west from Stockholm, where it joins with an inlet of the Baltic Sea (the Saltsjön). Area: 1140 sq km (440 sq miles)
  • lake urmia — a shallow lake in NW Iran, at an altitude of 1300 m (4250 ft): the largest lake in Iran, varying in area from 4000–6000 sq km (1500–2300 sq miles) between autumn and spring
  • landmarked — a prominent or conspicuous object on land that serves as a guide, especially to ships at sea or to travelers on a road; a distinguishing landscape feature marking a site or location: The post office served as a landmark for locating the street to turn down.
  • leukoderma — vitiligo.
  • lockmaster — one in charge of a canal lock
  • lossmakers — Plural form of lossmaker.
  • lukewarmly — In a lukewarm manner, tepidly, without extremeness.
  • lukewarmth — lukewarmness
  • lumberjack — a person who works at lumbering; logger.
  • maasbanker — (South Africa) A species of edible mackerel, Trachurus trachurus.
  • mail clerk — a person who performs clerical work in a post office
  • make after — to set off in pursuit of; chase
  • make merry — celebrate, be festive
  • make ready — the state or condition of being ready.
  • make water — colloquial
  • make-ready — Printing. the process of preparing a form for printing by overlays or underlays to equalize the impression.
  • mamaroneck — a city in SE New York.
  • markedness — strikingly noticeable; conspicuous: with marked success.
  • 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.
  • market day — the day on which a regular market is held
  • market-led — of or relating to an approach to business in which the customer's requirements are identified by market research before a product or service is released
  • marketable — readily salable.
  • marketably — readily salable.
  • marketeers — Plural form of marketeer.
  • marketings — Plural form of marketing.
  • marketroid — /mar'k*-troyd/ (Or "marketing slime", "marketeer", "marketing droid", "marketdroid") A member of a company's marketing department, especially one who promises users that the next version of a product will have features that are not actually scheduled for inclusion, are extremely difficult to implement, and/or are in violation of the laws of physics; and/or one who describes existing features (and misfeatures) in ebullient, buzzword-laden adspeak. Derogatory.
  • markiewicz — Constance, Countess, original name Constance Gore-Booth. 1868–1927, Irish nationalist, married to a Polish count. She fought in the Easter Rising (1916) and was sentenced to death but reprieved. The first woman elected to the British parliament (1918), she refused to take her seat
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?