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9-letter words containing s, e, r, n

  • mastersonWilliam Barclay ("Bat") 1853–1921, U.S. frontier law officer.
  • mcpherson — Aimee Semple [sem-puh l] /ˈsɛm pəl/ (Show IPA), 1890–1944, U.S. evangelist, born in Canada.
  • meandrous — meandering; winding; rambling.
  • measuring — Ascertain the size, amount, or degree of (something) by using an instrument or device marked in standard units or by comparing it with an object of known size.
  • membranes — Plural form of membrane.
  • menstrate — Misspelling of menstruate.
  • menstrual — of or relating to menstruation or to the menses.
  • menstruum — a solvent.
  • mensurate — (obsolete) To measure absolutely the height, lattitude and longitude of a point on the earth.
  • menuisier — a French joiner
  • merchants — a person who buys and sells commodities for profit; dealer; trader.
  • merengues — Plural form of merengue.
  • merestone — A stone designating a limit or boundary; a landmark.
  • merganser — any of several fish-eating diving ducks of the subfamily Merginae, having a narrow bill hooked at the tip and serrated at the edges.
  • meridians — Plural form of meridian.
  • meringues — Plural form of meringue.
  • merperson — A mythological creature with a human upper half (head, arms, and torso) and a piscine lower half.
  • merriness — The property of being merry.
  • mertensia — any of various plants belonging to the genus Mertensia, of the borage family, including the lungworts and the Virginia cowslip.
  • mesentery — the membrane, consisting of a double layer of peritoneum, that invests the intestines, attaching them to the posterior wall of the abdomen, maintaining them in position in the abdominal cavity, and supplying them with blood vessels, nerves, and lymphatics, especially the part of this membrane investing the jejunum and ileum.
  • mesocrany — the state of having a medium breadth of skull
  • messenger — a person who carries a message or goes on an errand for another, especially as a matter of duty or business.
  • mestranol — an estrogen, C 2 1 H 2 6 O 2 , used in oral contraceptives in combination with a progestin.
  • mezereons — Plural form of mezereon.
  • micronise — (British) To reduce in size often to micrometer scale.
  • migraines — Plural form of migraine.
  • milliners — Plural form of milliner.
  • mindshare — Relative public awareness of a phenomenon.
  • minidress — A very short dress.
  • ministers — Plural form of minister.
  • minstrels — Plural form of minstrel.
  • miscreant — depraved, villainous, or base.
  • misgender — to refer to or address (a person, especially one who is transgender) with a pronoun, noun, or adjective that inaccurately represents the person's gender or gender identity: At first my teacher misgendered me.
  • misgovern — to govern or manage badly.
  • mishanter — a misfortune; mishap.
  • mislearns — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mislearn.
  • misnomers — Plural form of misnomer.
  • misnumber — a numeral or group of numerals.
  • misorient — to orient wrongly or improperly.
  • misreckon — (transitive) To add (something) up incorrectly, make a wrong calculation of (an amount etc.).
  • misrender — to render imperfectly or wrongly
  • missioner — a person sent by a church into an area to carry on evangelism or other activities, as educational or hospital work.
  • mistering — (initial capital letter) a conventional title of respect for a man, prefixed to the name and to certain official designations (usually written as the abbreviation Mr.).
  • modernise — to make modern; give a new or modern character or appearance to: to modernize one's ideas; to modernize a kitchen.
  • modernism — modern character, tendencies, or values; adherence to or sympathy with what is modern.
  • modernist — a person who follows or favors modern ways, tendencies, etc.
  • moistener — Something used to moisten, especially a cosmetic.
  • monastery — a house or place of residence occupied by a community of persons, especially monks, living in seclusion under religious vows.
  • monergism — the doctrine that the Holy Ghost acts independently of the human will in the work of regeneration. Compare synergism (def 3).
  • monitress — a female student who helps keep order or assists a teacher in school.
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