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10-letter words containing t, a, g

  • magnetized — Simple past tense and past participle of magnetize.
  • magnetizer — One who, or that which, imparts magnetism.
  • magnetrons — Plural form of magnetron.
  • magnificat — (italics) the hymn of the Virgin Mary in Luke, 1:46–55, beginning “My soul doth magnify the Lord,” used as a canticle at evensong or vespers.
  • magnitudes — Plural form of magnitude.
  • magstripes — Plural form of magstripe.
  • makeweight — something put in a scale to complete a required weight.
  • making out — to bring into existence by shaping or changing material, combining parts, etc.: to make a dress; to make a channel; to make a work of art.
  • malaguetta — an aromatic African herb of the ginger family
  • malignants — Plural form of malignant.
  • malignment — a slanderous disparagement or vilification
  • malt sugar — maltose
  • malt-sugar — a white, crystalline, water-soluble sugar, C 1 2 H 2 2 O 1 1 ⋅H 2 O, formed by the action of diastase, especially from malt, on starch: used chiefly as a nutrient, as a sweetener, and in culture media.
  • man-eating — feeding on or having an appetite for human flesh: a man-eating tiger.
  • management — the act or manner of managing; handling, direction, or control.
  • manganates — Plural form of manganate.
  • mangetouts — Plural form of mangetout.
  • mangosteen — the juicy, edible fruit of an East Indian tree, Garcinia mangostana.
  • manhunting — Organized searching for a criminal or enemy.
  • māoritanga — the Māori culture; Māori way of life
  • margaritas — Plural form of margarita.
  • margherita — a female given name, Italian form of Margaret.
  • marginated — Having a distinct margin.
  • margravate — the province or territory of a margrave.
  • marguerite — a female given name, French form of Margaret.
  • marinating — Present participle of marinate.
  • marketings — Plural form of marketing.
  • martingale — Also called standing martingale. part of the tack or harness of a horse, consisting of a strap that fastens to the girth, passes between the forelegs and through a loop in the neckstrap or hame, and fastens to the noseband: used to steady or hold down the horse's head.
  • mastigures — Plural form of mastigure.
  • matchgirls — Plural form of matchgirl.
  • mcnaughton — Andrew George Latta [lat-uh] /ˈlæt ə/ (Show IPA), 1887–1966, Canadian army officer, statesman, diplomat, and scientist.
  • meat wagon — an ambulance.
  • medicating — Present participle of medicate.
  • meditating — Present participle of meditate.
  • megacities — Plural form of megacity.
  • megadeaths — Plural form of megadeath.
  • megadontia — macrodontia.
  • megagamete — macrogamete.
  • megalithic — a stone of great size, especially in ancient construction work, as the Cyclopean masonry, or in prehistoric Neolithic remains, as dolmens or menhirs.
  • megalocyte — (physiology) A large, flattened corpuscle, twice the diameter of the ordinary red corpuscle, found in considerable numbers in the blood in profound anemia.
  • meganewton — a unit of force equal to one million newtons
  • megastores — Plural form of megastore.
  • megatheres — Plural form of megathere.
  • megathrust — (geology) A sudden slip along a fault between a subducting and an overriding plate; results in a major earthquake.
  • mental age — the level of native mental ability or capacity of an individual, usually as determined by an intelligence test, in relation to the chronological age of the average individual at this level: a ten-year-old child with the mental age of a twelve-year-old; a mental age of twelve.
  • metagalaxy — the complete system of galaxies; the Milky Way and all the surrounding galaxies.
  • metagenome — (genetics) all the genetic material present in an environmental sample, consisting of the genomes of many individual organisms.
  • metallings — road metals
  • metallurgy — the technique or science of working or heating metals so as to give them certain desired shapes or properties.
  • methanogen — any of a diverse group of widely distributed archaebacteria that occur in anaerobic environments, as the intestinal tracts of animals, freshwater and marine sediments, and sewage, and are capable of producing methane from a limited number of substrates, including carbon dioxide and hydrogen, acetate, and methylamines: an important source of natural gas.
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