10-letter words containing r, e, a, m, n
- mallenders — a dry, scabby or scurfy eruption or scratch behind the knee in a horse's foreleg.
- mamaroneck — a city in SE New York.
- man crèche — an area of a department store set aside to provide entertainment for men while their partners shop
- manageress — a woman who is a manager.
- managerial — pertaining to management or a manager: managerial functions; the managerial class of society.
- manchester — a city in NW England: connected with the Mersey estuary by a ship canal (35½ mi. [57 km] long).
- mandelbrot — designating or of any of various sets of points used in the study of chaos to generate fractals
- maneuvered — a planned and regulated movement or evolution of troops, warships, etc.
- maneuverer — One who maneuvers.
- manfredini — Francesco [frahn-ches-kaw] /frɑnˈtʃɛs kɔ/ (Show IPA), 1684–1748, Italian composer.
- mangabeira — a South American rubber tree
- manifester — readily perceived by the eye or the understanding; evident; obvious; apparent; plain: a manifest error.
- manifolder — a machine for making manifolds or copies, as of writing.
- mannerable — Well-mannered.
- mannerheim — Baron Carl Gustaf Emil von [kahrl goo s-tahf ey-meel fuh n] /kɑrl ˈgʊs tɑf ˈeɪ mil fən/ (Show IPA), 1867–1951, Finnish soldier and statesman.
- mannerisms — a habitual or characteristic manner, mode, or way of doing something; distinctive quality or style, as in behavior or speech: He has an annoying mannerism of tapping his fingers while he talks. They copied his literary mannerisms but always lacked his ebullience.
- mannerless — without good manners; ill-mannered; discourteous; impolite.
- mano-neras — Black Hand (def 1).
- manoeuvred — Simple past tense and past participle of manoeuvre.
- manoeuvrer — Alternative spelling of maneuverer.
- manoeuvres — A movement or series of moves requiring skill and care.
- manometers — Plural form of manometer.
- manometric — Of or pertaining to manometry, or measured using a manometer.
- manservant — a male servant, especially a valet.
- manstealer — A slave-dealer; someone who seizes another person to hold that person as a slave or sell that person into slavery; more loosely: a slaveholder.
- manteltree — a wooden or stone lintel over the opening of a fireplace.
- mantletree — a wooden or stone lintel over the opening of a fireplace.
- manumitter — An emancipator from slavery, someone who manumits.
- manuscribe — (archaic) To write by hand.
- marathoner — a runner who competes in a marathon.
- marcescent — withering but not falling off, as a part of a plant.
- marcionite — a member of a Gnostic ascetic sect that flourished from the 2nd to 7th century a.d. and that rejected the Old Testament and denied the incarnation of God in Christ.
- margarines — Plural form of margarine.
- marginated — Having a distinct margin.
- margravine — the wife of a margrave.
- marheshvan — Heshvan.
- marinduque — an island of the Philippines, between Luzon and Mindora islands. 347 sq. mi. (899 sq. km).
- marine ivy — a vine, Cissus incisa, of the grape family, native to the southern U.S., having three leaflets or three-lobed leaves and black fruit, grown as a houseplant.
- marionette — a puppet manipulated from above by strings attached to its jointed limbs.
- marjolaine — (italics) French. marjoram.
- markedness — strikingly noticeable; conspicuous: with marked success.
- marker pen — a pen with a thick tip made of felt
- marketings — Plural form of marketing.
- markswomen — Plural form of markswoman.
- marmennill — A fabled marine male creature usually represented as having the head, trunk, and arms of a man and a lower part like the tail of a fish.
- marmes man — the skeletal remains of Homo sapiens found in Washington State in 1965 and dating from about 9000 b.c.
- marrowbone — A bone containing edible marrow.
- marsh fern — a fern, Thelypteris palustris, having pinnatifid fronds and growing in wet places.
- marsh wren — Also called long-billed marsh wren. a North American wren, Cistothorus palustris, that inhabits tall reed beds.
- marshiness — The quality or state of being marshy.