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10-letter words that end in am

  • rocker cam — a cam with a rocking or reciprocating motion.
  • rockinghamSecond Marquis of, Charles Watson-Wentworth.
  • round clam — quahog.
  • scintigram — a paper printout or photographic record indicating the intensity and distribution of radioactivity in tissues after administration of a radioactive tracer.
  • seismogram — a record made by a seismograph.
  • shoe cream — cream for polishing shoes
  • short ream — 480 sheets of paper
  • sidestream — (of cigarette smoke) inhaled by passive smokers
  • siphonogam — a plant that is pollinated by siphonogamy
  • slipstream — Aeronautics. the airstream pushed back by a revolving aircraft propeller. Compare backwash (def 2), wash (def 31).
  • small slam — little slam.
  • sour cream — cream soured by the lactic acid produced by a ferment.
  • sphenogram — a cuneiform character.
  • splash dam — a flood dam built to contain water that is released for driving logs.
  • stereogram — a diagram or picture representing objects in a way to give the impression of solidity.
  • subprogram — procedure (def 4b).
  • swammerdamJan [yahn] /yɑn/ (Show IPA), 1637–80, Dutch anatomist and entomologist.
  • tarmacadam — a paving material consisting of coarse crushed stone covered with a mixture of tar and bitumen.
  • the-scream — a painting (1937) by Edvard Munch.
  • thermogram — a graphic or visual record produced by thermography.
  • tiger team — a group of highly skilled workers assigned to tasks of special importance and urgency
  • twickenham — a former borough, now part of Richmond upon Thames, in SE England.
  • walsinghamSir Francis, c1530–90, English statesman: secretary of state 1573–90.
  • willinghamCalder, 1922–95, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • wilson dam — a dam on the Tennessee River, in NW Alabama, at Muscle Shoals: a part of the Tennessee Valley Authority. 4862 feet (1482 meters) long; 137 feet (42 meters) high.
  • window ram — Window Random Access Memory
  • workstream — The organised output of several distinct, and often unrelated, work groups.
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