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9-letter words containing t, h, e, s, m, a

  • malthouse — A building in which malt is prepared and stored.
  • mantyhose — a one-piece clinging garment covering the body from the waist to the feet, worn by men
  • mash note — an effusive note or letter expressing affection or passion for the recipient, usually a stranger or someone known only casually
  • mash team — the staff of a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital
  • mastheads — Plural form of masthead.
  • masthouse — a place, usually in a dockyard, in which masts are stored
  • matchless — having no equal; peerless; unequaled; incomparable: matchless courage.
  • mathewsonChristopher ("Christy") 1880–1925, U.S. baseball player.
  • meatheads — Plural form of meathead.
  • meathooks — Usually, meat hooks. Slang. a hand or fist: Get your meat hooks away from that cake! It's for dessert.
  • mechanist — a person who believes in the theory of mechanism.
  • megahurts — Plural form of megahurt.
  • megaliths — Plural form of megalith.
  • merchants — a person who buys and sells commodities for profit; dealer; trader.
  • metaphase — the stage in mitosis or meiosis in which the duplicated chromosomes line up along the equatorial plate of the spindle.
  • metaphors — a figure of speech in which a term or phrase is applied to something to which it is not literally applicable in order to suggest a resemblance, as in “A mighty fortress is our God.”. Compare mixed metaphor, simile (def 1).
  • methylase — any of a class of enzymes that catalyse methylation
  • mineshaft — A vertical hole, sunk down through the strata to reach the mineral which was to be mined.
  • mishanter — a misfortune; mishap.
  • moschatel — a small plant, Adoxa moschatellina, having greenish or yellowish flowers with a musky odor.
  • moustache — the hair growing on the upper lip.
  • must-have — A must-have is something modern that many people want to have.
  • mustached — Having a mustache.
  • mustaches — Plural form of mustache.
  • new maths — a unified, sequential system of teaching arithmetic and mathematics in accord with set theory so as to reveal basic concepts: used in some U.S. schools, especially in the 1960s and 1970s.
  • pantheism — the doctrine that God is the transcendent reality of which the material universe and human beings are only manifestations: it involves a denial of God's personality and expresses a tendency to identify God and nature.
  • petersham — a heavy woolen cloth for men's overcoats and other bulky outerwear.
  • schematic — pertaining to or of the nature of a schema, diagram, or scheme; diagrammatic.
  • schematik — A NeXT front-end to MIT Scheme for the NeXT by Chris Kane and Max Hailperin <[email protected]>. Schematik provides syntax-knowledgeable text editing, graphics windows and a user-interface to an underlying MIT Scheme process. It comes with MIT Scheme 7.1.3 ready to install on the NeXT and requires NEXTSTEP. Version: 1.1.5.2.
  • shamateur — a sportsperson who is officially an amateur but accepts payment
  • shamefast — shamefaced.
  • shotmaker — a sports player delivering good shots
  • shulamite — an epithet meaning “princess,” applied to the bride in the Song of Solomon 6:13.
  • steamship — a large commercial vessel, especially one driven by steam.
  • stomacher — a richly ornamented garment covering the stomach and chest, worn by both sexes in the 15th and 16th centuries, and later worn under a bodice by women.
  • the amish — the Amish people
  • the mains — the main distribution network for water, gas, or electricity
  • the small — an object, person, or group considered to be small
  • transhume — to move cattle to suitable grazing grounds according to the season
  • westmeath — a county in Leinster in the N central Republic of Ireland. 681 sq. mi. (1765 sq. km). County seat: Mullingar.
  • yachtsmen — Irregular plural form of yachtsman.
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