Words With Friends Words Starting With M

9,313 words found — all lengths, starting with M

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Starting With M Ending With M Containing M
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3-Letter Words (47)

MAC (7) [noun] A waterproof long coat made of rubberized cloth. | [noun] By extension, any waterproof coat or raincoat. | [noun] Waterproof rubberized cloth. | [noun] A type of pasta in the form of short tubes; sometimes loosely, pasta in general. MAD (6) [verb] To be or become mad. | [verb] To madden, to anger, to frustrate. | [adjective] Insane; crazy, mentally deranged. MAE (5) MAG (6) [noun] (abbreviation) magazine (publication or ammunition) | [noun] (abbreviation) magnet | [noun] (abbreviation) mag wheel | [verb] To steal. MAN (5) [noun] An adult male human. | [noun] (collective) All human males collectively: mankind. | [noun] A human, a person of either gender, usually an adult. (See usage notes.) | [verb] To supply (something) with staff or crew (of either sex). MAP (7) [noun] A visual representation of an area, whether real or imaginary. | [noun] A graphical representation of the relationships between objects, components or themes. | [noun] A function. MAR (5) [noun] A blemish. | [verb] To spoil; to ruin; to scathe; to damage. | [noun] A small lake. MAS (5) [noun] A country cottage or farmstead in southern France. | [noun] A type of traveling dramatic performance conducted as part of a parade celebrating Carnival, originating in Trinidad and Tobago and performed throughout the Caribbean. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Abbreviation of milli-arcsecond. | [noun] A country cottage or farmstead in southern France. MAT (5) [noun] A flat piece of coarse material used for wiping one’s feet, or as a decorative or protective floor covering. | [noun] A small flat piece of material used to protect a surface from anything hot or rough; a coaster. | [noun] A floor pad to protect athletes. | [noun] (coppersmithing) An alloy of copper, tin, iron, etc.; white metal. | [noun] A showing of a movie, sporting event, or theatrical performance in the morning or afternoon. | [noun] A material or component needed for a crafting recipe. | [noun] A decorative border around a picture used to inset and center the contents of a frame. MAW (8) [noun] The stomach, especially of an animal. | [noun] The upper digestive tract (where food enters the body), especially the mouth and jaws of a fearsome and ravenous creature. | [noun] Any large, insatiable or perilous opening. | [noun] Mother. | [noun] A gull. MAX (12) [noun] An extreme, a great extent. | [noun] A kind of gin. | [verb] (usually with out) to reach the limit, to reach the maximum. MAY (8) [verb] To be strong; to have power (over). | [verb] (auxiliary) To be able; can. | [verb] To be able to go. | [noun] The hawthorn bush or its blossoms. | [noun] A maiden. MED (6) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Medications, especially prescribed psychoactive medications. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the practice of medicine. | [adjective] Intended to have a therapeutic effect; medicinal. | [verb] May; might MEL (5) MEM (7) MEN (5) [noun] An adult male human. | [noun] (collective) All human males collectively: mankind. | [noun] A human, a person of either gender, usually an adult. (See usage notes.) MET (5) [verb] To make contact (with) while in proximity. | [verb] (Of groups) To come together. | [verb] To make physical or perceptual contact. | [verb] To measure. | [verb] To dream. MEW (8) [noun] A gull, seagull. | [noun] A prison, or other place of confinement. | [noun] A hiding place; a secret store or den. | [noun] The crying sound of a cat; a meow, especially of a kitten. | [verb] To flatten the tongue against the roof of the mouth for supposed health benefits. MHO (8) [noun] A former unit of electric conductance, equivalent to and superseded by the siemens. MIB (7) MID (6) [adjective] Denoting the middle part. | [adjective] Occupying a middle position; middle. | [adjective] Made with a somewhat elevated position of some certain part of the tongue, in relation to the palate; midway between the high and the low; said of certain vowel sounds, such as, /e o ɛ ɔ/. | [noun] Middle | [noun] A mid-range. | [preposition] (in representations of German-accented English) With. MIG (6) MIL (5) [noun] An angular mil, a unit of angular measurement equal to 1⁄6400 of a complete circle. At 1000 metres one mil subtends about one metre (0.98 m). Also 1⁄6000 and 1⁄6300 are used in other countries. | [noun] A unit of measurement equal to 1⁄1000 of an inch, usually used for thin objects, such as sheets of plastic. | [noun] A former subdivision (1/1000) of the Maltese lira MIM (7) [adjective] Demure, shy. | [noun] The letter م in the Arabic script. MIR (5) MIS (5) MIX (12) [verb] To stir together. | [verb] To combine (items from two or more sources normally kept separate). | [verb] To form by mingling; to produce by the stirring together of ingredients; to concoct from different parts. | [noun] The result of mixing two or more substances; a mixture. MOA (5) [noun] Any of several species of large, extinct, flightless birds of the family Dinornithidae that were native to New Zealand; until its extinction, one species was the largest bird in the world. MOB (7) [noun] A large or disorderly group of people; especially one bent on riotous or destructive action. | [noun] A group of animals such as horses or cattle. | [noun] A flock of emus. | [noun] A promiscuous woman; a harlot or wench; a prostitute. | [noun] Mobile phone MOC (7) [noun] Moccasin (type of shoe) MOD (6) [noun] An unconventionally modern style of fashionable dress originating in England in the 1960s, characterized by ankle-length black trenchcoats and sunglasses. | [noun] A 1960s British person who dressed in such a style and was interested in modernism and the modern music of the time; the opposite of a rocker. | [noun] A modification. | [noun] A festival of Scottish Gaelic song, arts and culture, akin to the Welsh eisteddfod. MOG (6) [noun] A young cow or bull. | [noun] Leather made of the skin of the calf; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding. | [noun] A young deer, elephant, seal, whale or giraffe (also used of some other animals). | [verb] To move away; to go off. | [verb] (pickup community) To assert one's dominance over. MOL (5) [noun] In the International System of Units, the base unit of amount of substance; the amount of substance of a system which contains as many elementary entities (atoms, ions, molecules, etc.) as there are atoms in 0.012 kg of carbon-12. Symbol: mol. The number of atoms is known as Avogadro’s number. MOM (7) [noun] (familiar) mother. | [noun] An adult female owner of a pet. | [verb] To care in a motherly way. MON (5) [noun] The former currency of Japan until 1870, before the yen. | [noun] The badge or emblem a Japanese family, especially a family of the ancient feudal nobility; typically circular and consists of conventionalized forms from nature. | [noun] (used in the vocative) A colloquial means of address of man in places such as Jamaica and Shropshire in England. | [noun] A creature in a video game, usually one which is captured, trained up and used in battles. MOO (5) [noun] The characteristic lowing sound made by cattle. | [noun] A foolish woman. | [verb] Of a cow or bull, to make its characteristic lowing sound. MOP (7) [noun] An implement for washing floors, or the like, made of a piece of cloth, or a collection of thrums, or coarse yarn, fastened to a handle. | [noun] A wash with a mop; the act of mopping | [noun] A dense head of hair. MOR (5) MOS (5) [noun] Singular of mores | [noun] (abbreviation) month | [noun] A homosexual MOT (5) [noun] A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot. | [noun] A word or a motto; a device. | [noun] A note or brief strain on a bugle. | [noun] A woman; a wife. MOW (8) [noun] The act of mowing (a garden, grass etc.) | [noun] A shot played with a sweeping or scythe-like motion. | [verb] To cut down grass or crops. | [noun] A scornful grimace; a wry face. | [noun] A stack of hay, corn, beans or a barn for the storage of hay, corn, beans. | [noun] A gull, seagull. MUD (6) [noun] A mixture of water and soil or fine grained sediment. | [noun] A plaster-like mixture used to texture or smooth drywall. | [noun] (construction industry slang) Wet concrete as it is being mixed, delivered and poured. | [verb] To participate in a MUD or multi-user dungeon. MUG (6) [noun] A large cup for hot liquids, usually having a handle and used without a saucer. | [noun] The face, often used deprecatingly. | [noun] A gullible or easily-cheated person. | [noun] Motherfucker (usually in similes, e.g. "like a mug" or "as a mug") MUM (7) [noun] Mother. | [noun] Ma'am; a term of respect for an older woman. | [noun] A chrysanthemum. | [noun] Silence | [noun] A sort of strong beer, originally made in Brunswick, Germany. MUN (5) [verb] (Northern English, modal auxiliary, defective) Must. | [noun] The mouth, jaw. | [noun] Man | [noun] The person who roleplays a character in a role-playing game, especially an online play-by-post one. MUS (5) [noun] The 12th letter of the Modern Greek alphabet. MUT (5)

4-Letter Words (209)

MAAR (6) [noun] A broad volcanic crater, usually filled with water to form a lake. MABE (8) MACE (8) [noun] A heavy fighting club. | [noun] A ceremonial form of this weapon. | [noun] A long baton used by some drum majors to keep time and lead a marching band. If this baton is referred to as a mace, by convention it has a ceremonial often decorative head, which, if of metal, usually is hollow and sometimes intricately worked. | [noun] An old money of account in China equal to one tenth of a tael. | [noun] A spice obtained from the outer layer of the kernel of the fruit of the nutmeg. | [noun] Tear gas or pepper spray, especially for personal use. MACH (11) MACK (12) [noun] An individual skilled in the art of seduction using verbal skills. | [verb] To act as pimp; to pander. | [verb] To seduce or flirt with. | [noun] A raincoat or mackintosh. | [noun] An element of a ship's superstructure which places the function of a ship's mast on its exhaust stack, adding the skeletal supporting structure to the smokestack to support the mast's complement of functions. MACS (8) [noun] A waterproof long coat made of rubberized cloth. | [noun] By extension, any waterproof coat or raincoat. | [noun] Waterproof rubberized cloth. MADE (7) [noun] A grub or maggot. | [verb] To create. | [verb] To behave, to act. MADS (7) [verb] To be or become mad. | [verb] To madden, to anger, to frustrate. MAES (6) MAGE (7) [noun] A magician, wizard or sorcerer. MAGI (7) [noun] A magician, wizard or sorcerer. | [noun] (common usage) magician, and derogatorily sorcerer, trickster, conjurer, charlatan | [noun] (special usage) a Zoroastrian priest MAGS (7) [noun] (abbreviation) magazine (publication or ammunition) | [noun] (abbreviation) magnet | [noun] (abbreviation) mag wheel MAID (7) [noun] A girl or an unmarried young woman; maiden. | [noun] A female servant or cleaner (short for maidservant). | [noun] A virgin, now female but originally one of either gender. MAIL (6) [noun] A bag or wallet. | [noun] A bag containing letters to be delivered by post. | [noun] The material conveyed by the postal service. | [noun] Armour consisting of metal rings or plates linked together. | [noun] An old French coin worth half a denier. MAIM (8) [noun] A serious wound | [verb] To wound seriously; to cause permanent loss of function of a limb or part of the body. MAIN (6) [verb] Short for mainline. | [verb] To mainly play a specific character, or side, during a game. | [verb] Of a road: to convert into a main or primary road. | [noun] That which is chief or principal; the chief or main portion; the bulk, the greater part, gross. | [noun] A hand or match in a game of dice. | [noun] A basket for gathering grapes. MAIR (6) MAKE (10) [noun] Brand or kind; model. | [noun] Manner or style of construction (style of how a thing is made); form. | [noun] Origin (of a manufactured article); manufacture; production. | [noun] Mate; a spouse or companion; a match. | [noun] A halfpenny. | [noun] An agricultural tool resembling a scythe, used to cut (harvest) certain plants such as peas, reeds, or tares. MAKO (10) [noun] Mako shark MALE (6) [noun] One of the male (masculine) sex or gender. | [adjective] Belonging to the sex which typically produces sperm, or to the gender which is typically associated with it. | [adjective] Characteristic of this sex/gender. (Compare masculine, manly.) MALL (6) [noun] A pedestrianised street, especially a shopping precinct. | [noun] An enclosed shopping centre. | [noun] An alley where the game of pall mall was played. MALM (8) [noun] A soft, crumbly, chalky, grayish limestone. | [noun] An artificial mixture or chalk, clay, and sand, from which bricks are made. The resulting bricks have a light brown or yellowish color. MALT (6) [noun] Malted grain (sprouted grain) (usually barley), used in brewing and otherwise. | [noun] Malt liquor, especially malt whisky. | [noun] A milkshake with malted milk powder added for flavor. MAMA (8) [noun] (hypocoristic, usually childish) Mother, female parent. MANA (6) [noun] Power, prestige; specifically, a form of supernatural energy in Polynesian religion that inheres in things or people. | [noun] Magical power. | [noun] A monetary unit of ancient Greece and the Middle East, originally equivalent to the weight of a mina of silver. | [noun] Food miraculously produced for the Israelites in the desert in the book of Exodus. MANE (6) [noun] Longer hair growth on back of neck of an animal, especially a horse or lion | [noun] Long or thick hair of a person's head. MANO (6) MANS (6) [noun] An adult male human. | [noun] (collective) All human males collectively: mankind. | [noun] A human, a person of either gender, usually an adult. (See usage notes.) MANY (9) [noun] A multitude; a great aggregate; a mass of people; the generality; the common herd. | [noun] A considerable number. | [adjective] A large number of; numerous. MAPS (8) [noun] A visual representation of an area, whether real or imaginary. | [noun] A graphical representation of the relationships between objects, components or themes. | [noun] A function. MARC (8) [noun] The refuse matter that remains after fruit, particularly grapes, has been pressed. | [noun] An alcoholic spirit distilled from the marc of grapes. | [noun] A weight of various commodities, especially of gold and silver, used in different European countries. In France and Holland it was equal to eight ounces. MARE (6) [noun] An adult female horse. | [noun] A foolish woman. | [noun] A type of evil spirit formerly thought to sit on the chest of a sleeping person; also, the feeling of suffocation felt during sleep, attributed to such a spirit. | [noun] A large, dark plain, which may have the appearance of a sea. MARK (10) [noun] (heading) Boundary, land within a boundary. | [noun] (heading) Characteristic, sign, visible impression. | [noun] (heading) Indicator of position, objective etc. | [noun] A measure of weight (especially for gold and silver), once used throughout Europe, equivalent to 8 oz. | [verb] To walk with long, regular strides, as a soldier does. MARL (6) [noun] A mixed earthy substance, consisting of carbonate of lime, clay, and possibly sand, in very variable proportions, and accordingly designated as calcareous, clayey, or sandy. | [verb] To cover with the earthy substance called marl. | [verb] To cover, as part of a rope, with marline, marking a peculiar hitch at each turn to prevent unwinding. MARS (6) [noun] A blemish. | [verb] To spoil; to ruin; to scathe; to damage. | [noun] A small lake. MART (6) [noun] A market. | [noun] A bargain. | [verb] To buy or sell in, or as in a mart. | [noun] A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals; a letter of marque. MASH (9) [noun] A mass of mixed ingredients reduced to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure; a mass of anything in a soft pulpy state. | [noun] Ground or bruised malt, or meal of rye, wheat, corn, or other grain (or a mixture of malt and meal) steeped and stirred in hot water for making the wort. | [noun] Mashed potatoes. | [verb] To convert into a mash; to reduce to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure | [noun] A mesh. | [noun] An infatuation, a crush, a fancy MASK (10) [noun] A cover, or partial cover, for the face, used for disguise or protection. | [noun] That which disguises; a pretext or subterfuge. | [noun] A festive entertainment of dancing or other diversions, where all wear masks; a masquerade | [noun] A mesh. | [noun] Mash. | [verb] To bewilder; confuse. MASS (6) [noun] (physical) Matter, material. | [noun] A large quantity; a sum. | [verb] To form or collect into a mass; to form into a collective body; to bring together into masses; to assemble. | [noun] The Eucharist, now especially in Roman Catholicism. MAST (6) [noun] A tall, slim post or tower, usually tapering upward, used to support, for example, the sails on a ship, flags, floodlights, meteorological instruments ,or communications equipment such as an aerial, usually supported by guy-wires. | [noun] A non-judicial punishment ("NJP") disciplinary hearing under which a commanding officer studies and disposes of cases involving those under his command. | [verb] To supply and fit a mast to (a ship). | [noun] The fruit of forest-trees (beech, oak, chestnut, pecan, etc.), especially if having fallen from the tree, used as fodder for pigs and other animals. | [noun] A type of heavy cue, with the broad end of which one strikes the ball. MATE (6) [noun] A fellow, comrade, colleague, partner or someone with whom something is shared, e.g. shipmate, classmate. | [noun] (especially of a non-human animal) A breeding partner. | [noun] A friend, usually of the same sex. | [noun] The conclusive victory in a game of chess that occurs when an opponent's king is threatened with unavoidable capture. | [noun] The abovementioned plant; the leaves and shoots used for the tea MATH (9) [noun] A mowing; what is gathered from mowing. | [noun] Arithmetic calculations; (see do the math). | [noun] A math course. | [noun] A monastic or similar religious establishment in Hinduism and Jainism, usually more formal and hierarchical than an ashram. MATS (6) [noun] A flat piece of coarse material used for wiping one’s feet, or as a decorative or protective floor covering. | [noun] A small flat piece of material used to protect a surface from anything hot or rough; a coaster. | [noun] A floor pad to protect athletes. MATT (6) [noun] (coppersmithing) An alloy of copper, tin, iron, etc.; white metal. | [adjective] Dull; not reflective of light. MAUD (7) [noun] A grey plaid once worn by shepherds in Scotland and Northumbria. MAUL (6) [noun] A heavy long-handled hammer, used for splitting logs by driving a wedge into them, or in combat. | [noun] A situation where the player carrying the ball, who must be on his feet, is held by one or more opponents, and one or more of the ball carrier's team mates bind onto the ball carrier. | [verb] To handle someone or something in a rough way. MAUN (6) [verb] To have to; must. MAUT (6) MAWN (9) MAWS (9) [noun] The stomach, especially of an animal. | [noun] The upper digestive tract (where food enters the body), especially the mouth and jaws of a fearsome and ravenous creature. | [noun] Any large, insatiable or perilous opening. MAXI (13) [noun] A coat or skirt having such a hemline | [adjective] Having a hemline at ankle length | [noun] A class of racing sailing yacht that pushes at the upper limits of the International Offshore Rule of regulated sail yacht racing, having a waterline length in excess of 70-feet. MAYA (9) [noun] Magic; supernatural power as held by the gods. | [noun] The power by which the universe is made to appear; the illusion of the phenomenal world, as opposed to its true or spiritual reality. MAYO (9) [noun] A white person. | [noun] A dressing made from vegetable oil, raw egg yolks and seasoning, used on salads, with french fries, in sandwiches etc. | [noun] Any cold dish with that dressing as an ingredient. MAYS (9) [verb] To gather may, or flowers in general. | [verb] To celebrate May Day. | [noun] A maiden. MAZE (15) [noun] A labyrinth; a puzzle consisting of a complicated network of paths or passages, the aim of which is to find one's way. | [noun] Something made up of many confused or conflicting elements; a tangle. | [noun] Confusion of thought; state of bewilderment. MAZY (18) [adjective] Mazelike; like a maze. | [adjective] Not straight; zigzagging. MEAD (7) [noun] An alcoholic drink fermented from honey and water. | [noun] A drink composed of syrup of sarsaparilla or other flavouring extract, and water, and sometimes charged with carbon dioxide. | [noun] A meadow. MEAL (6) [noun] Food that is prepared and eaten, usually at a specific time, and usually in a comparatively large quantity (as opposed to a snack). | [noun] Food served or eaten as a repast. | [noun] A time or an occasion. | [noun] The coarse-ground edible part of various grains often used to feed animals; flour or a coarser blend than flour. | [noun] A speck or spot. MEAN (6) [verb] To lament. | [verb] To intend. | [verb] To convey (a meaning). | [adjective] Common; general. | [noun] (now chiefly in the plural) A method or course of action used to achieve some result. MEAT (6) [noun] The flesh (muscle tissue) of an animal used as food. | [noun] A type of meat, by anatomic position and provenance. | [noun] Food, for animals or humans, especially solid food. See also meat and drink. MEED (7) [noun] A payment or recompense made for services rendered or in recognition of some achievement; reward, deserts; award. | [noun] A gift; bribe. | [noun] Merit or desert; worth. | [verb] To reward; bribe. MEEK (10) [verb] (of horses) To tame; to break. | [adjective] Humble, non-boastful, modest, meager, or self-effacing. | [adjective] Submissive, dispirited. MEET (6) [noun] A sports competition, especially for track and field (a track meet) or swimming (a swim meet). | [noun] A gathering of riders, horses and hounds for foxhunting; a field meet for hunting. | [noun] A meeting of two trains in opposite directions on a single track, when one is put into a siding to let the other cross. | [adjective] Suitable; right; proper. MELD (7) [verb] To combine multiple similar objects into one | [noun] A combination of cards which is melded. | [verb] In card games, especially of the rummy family, to announce or display a combination of cards. MELL (6) MELS (6) MELT (6) [noun] Molten material, the product of melting. | [noun] The transition of matter from a solid state to a liquid state. | [noun] The springtime snow runoff in mountain regions. MEMO (8) [noun] A short note; a memorandum. | [noun] A record of partial results that can be reused later without recomputation. | [verb] To record something; to make a note of something. MEMS (8) [noun] The thirteenth letter of many Semitic alphabets/abjads (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others). | [noun] A memory access as part of processing. MEND (7) [noun] A place, as in clothing, which has been repaired by mending. | [noun] The act of repairing. | [verb] To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement. MENO (6) MENU (6) [noun] The details of the food to be served at a banquet; a bill of fare. | [noun] A list of dishes offered in a restaurant. | [noun] A list from which the user may select an operation to be performed, often done with a keyboard, mouse, or controller under a graphical user interface MEOU (6) MEOW (9) [noun] The cry of a cat. | [noun] The drug mephedrone. | [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MERE (6) [noun] A body of standing water, such as a lake or a pond. More specifically, it can refer to a lake that is broad in relation to its depth. Also included in place names such as Windermere. | [noun] Boundary, limit; a boundary-marker; boundary-line. | [verb] To limit; bound; divide or cause division in. | [adjective] Famous. | [adjective] Pure, unalloyed . | [noun] A Maori war-club. MERK (10) MERL (6) [noun] The Eurasian blackbird, Turdus merula. | [noun] Any blackbird. | [noun] A type of mottled colouration on dogs. MESA (6) [noun] Flat area of land or plateau higher than other land, with one or more clifflike edges. MESH (9) [noun] A structure made of connected strands of metal, fiber, or other flexible/ductile material, with evenly spaced openings between them. | [noun] The opening or space enclosed by the threads of a net between knot and knot, or the threads enclosing such a space. | [noun] The engagement of the teeth of wheels, or of a wheel and rack. MESS (6) [noun] A disagreeable mixture or confusion of things; hence, a situation resulting from blundering or from misunderstanding; disorder. | [noun] A large quantity or number. | [noun] Excrement. | [noun] Mass; a church service. META (6) [adjective] Self-referential; structured analogously, but at a higher level. | [noun] Boundary marker. | [noun] Either of the conical columns at each end of an Ancient Roman circus. | [noun] Metagame; the most effective tactics and strategies used in a competitive video game. | [noun] Metoidioplasty. METE (6) [verb] To measure. | [verb] (usually with “out”) To dispense, measure (out), allot (especially punishment, reward etc.). | [noun] A boundary or other limit; a boundary-marker; mere. | [adjective] Suitable; right; proper. METH (9) [noun] Methamphetamine, especially in the form of the crystalline hydrochloride. | [noun] Methadone. | [noun] (Mancunian) A tramp. | [noun] A spiced mead, originally from Wales. MEWL (9) [noun] A soft cry or whimper; an act of mewling. | [verb] To cry weakly with a soft, high-pitched sound; to whimper; to whine. MEWS (9) [noun] An alley where there are stables; a narrow passage; a confined place. | [noun] A place where birds of prey are housed. | [noun] A gull, seagull. | [verb] To shut away, confine, lock up. MEZE (15) [noun] Small portions of starters typical of Turkish and Greek cuisine (equivalent to Spanish tapas or Hawaiian pu pu) often served as a light meal with pita. MHOS (9) [noun] A former unit of electric conductance, equivalent to and superseded by the siemens. MIBS (8) MICA (8) [noun] Any of a group of hydrous aluminosilicate minerals characterized by highly perfect cleavage, so that they readily separate into very thin leaves, more or less elastic. MICE (8) [noun] Any small rodent of the genus Mus. | [noun] A member of the many small rodent and marsupial species resembling such a rodent. | [noun] A quiet or shy person. MICK (12) [noun] An Irishman | [noun] A Catholic, particularly of Irish descent. | [adjective] Easy. MIDI (7) [noun] A native or inhabitant of Berlin. | [noun] A doughnut with a sweet filling. | [noun] A newspaper format with pages normally measuring about 315 by 470 millimetres (12.4 in × 18.5 inches), slightly taller and wider than a tabloid but narrower and shorter than a broadsheet. MIDS (7) MIEN (6) [noun] Demeanor; facial expression or attitude, especially one which is intended by its bearer. | [noun] A specific facial expression. MIFF (12) [noun] A small argument; a quarrel. | [noun] A state of being offended. | [verb] (usually used in the passive) To offend slightly. MIGG (8) MIGS (7) MIKE (10) [noun] A microphone. | [verb] To microphone; to place one or more microphones (mikes) on. | [verb] To measure using a micrometer. | [noun] A minute. MILD (7) [noun] A relatively low-gravity beer, often with a dark colour; mild ale | [adjective] Gentle and not easily angered. | [adjective] (of a rule or punishment) Of only moderate severity; not strict. MILE (6) [noun] The international mile: a unit of length precisely equal to 1.609344 kilometers established by treaty among Anglophone nations in 1959, divided into 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards. | [noun] Any of several customary units of length derived from the 1593 English statute mile of 8 furlongs, equivalent to 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards of various precise values. | [noun] Any of many customary units of length derived from the Roman mile (mille passus) of 8 stades or 5,000 Roman feet. MILK (10) [noun] A white liquid produced by the mammary glands of female mammals to nourish their young. From certain animals, especially cows, it is also called dairy milk and is a common food for humans as a beverage or used to produce various dairy products such as butter, cheese, and yogurt. | [noun] A white (or whitish) liquid obtained from a vegetable source such as almonds, coconuts, oats, rice, and/or soy beans. Also called non-dairy milk. | [noun] An individual serving of milk. | [verb] To express milk from (a mammal, especially a cow). MILL (6) [noun] A grinding apparatus for substances such as grains, seeds, etc. | [noun] The building housing such a grinding apparatus. | [noun] A machine used for expelling the juice, sap, etc., from vegetable tissues by pressure, or by pressure in combination with a grinding, or cutting process. | [noun] An obsolete coin worth one thousandth of a US dollar, or one tenth of a cent. | [noun] An angular mil, a unit of angular measurement equal to 1⁄6400 of a complete circle. At 1000 metres one mil subtends about one metre (0.98 m). Also 1⁄6000 and 1⁄6300 are used in other countries. | [noun] A line of three matching pieces in nine men's morris and related games. | [noun] (trading card games) Discarding a card from one's deck. MILO (6) [noun] Sorghum MILS (6) [noun] An angular mil, a unit of angular measurement equal to 1⁄6400 of a complete circle. At 1000 metres one mil subtends about one metre (0.98 m). Also 1⁄6000 and 1⁄6300 are used in other countries. | [noun] A unit of measurement equal to 1⁄1000 of an inch, usually used for thin objects, such as sheets of plastic. | [noun] A former subdivision (1/1000) of the Maltese lira MILT (6) [noun] The spleen, especially of an animal bred for food. | [noun] The semen of a male fish. | [verb] To impregnate (the roe of a fish) with milt. MIME (8) [noun] A form of acting without words; pantomime. | [noun] A pantomime actor. | [noun] A classical theatrical entertainment in the form of farce. MINA (6) MIND (7) [noun] The ability for rational thought. | [noun] The ability to be aware of things. | [noun] The ability to remember things. MINE (6) [pronoun] My; belonging to me; that which belongs to me. | [noun] An excavation from which ore or solid minerals are taken, especially one consisting of underground tunnels. | [noun] Any source of wealth or resources. | [noun] Demeanor; facial expression or attitude, especially one which is intended by its bearer. MINI (6) [adjective] Miniature, tiny, small. | [noun] A miniskirt. | [noun] A minicomputer. MINK (10) [noun] (plural mink or minks) Any of various semi-aquatic, carnivorous mammals in the Mustelinae subfamily, similar to weasels, with dark fur, native to Europe and America, of which two species in different genera are extant: the American mink (Neovison vison) and the European mink (Mustela lutreola). | [noun] (plural mink) The fur or pelt of a mink, used to make apparel. | [noun] (plural minks) An article of clothing made of mink. MINT (6) [noun] A building or institution where money (originally, only coins) is produced under government licence. | [noun] A large amount of money. A vast sum or amount, etc. | [noun] Any place regarded as a source of unlimited supply; the supply itself. | [noun] Any plant in the genus Mentha in the family Lamiaceae, typically aromatic with square stems. | [noun] (provincial) Intent, purpose; an attempt, try; effort, endeavor. MINX (13) [noun] A mink. MIRE (6) [noun] Deep mud; moist, spongy earth. | [noun] An undesirable situation, a predicament. | [verb] To cause or permit to become stuck in mud; to plunge or fix in mud. | [noun] An ant. MIRI (6) MIRK (10) [noun] Archaic spelling of murk. | [verb] Archaic spelling of murk. | [adjective] Dark, murky MIRS (6) MIRY (9) [adjective] Relating to a mire; swampy, boggy. MISE (6) MISO (6) [noun] A thick paste made by fermentation of soybeans with the mold Aspergillus oryzae, used in making soups and sauces. MISS (6) [noun] A failure to hit. | [noun] A failure to obtain or accomplish. | [noun] An act of avoidance (used with the verb give). | [noun] A title of respect for a young woman (usually unmarried) with or without a name used. MIST (6) [noun] Water or other liquid finely suspended in air. | [noun] A layer of fine droplets or particles. | [noun] Anything that dims, darkens, or hinders vision. MITE (6) [noun] Any of many minute arachnids which, along with the ticks, comprise subclass Acarina (aka Acari). | [noun] A small coin formerly circulated in England, rated at about a third of a farthing. | [noun] A lepton, a small coin used in Palestine in the time of Christ. MITT (6) [noun] A mitten | [noun] An oversized, protective glove such as an oven mitt or a baseball mitt. | [noun] (especially in plural) A hand. MITY (9) MIXT (13) MOAN (6) [noun] A low, mournful cry of pain, sorrow or pleasure | [verb] To complain about; to bemoan, to bewail; to mourn. | [verb] To grieve. MOAS (6) [noun] Any of several species of large, extinct, flightless birds of the family Dinornithidae that were native to New Zealand; until its extinction, one species was the largest bird in the world. MOAT (6) [noun] A deep, wide defensive ditch, normally filled with water, surrounding a fortified habitation. | [noun] An aspect of a business which makes it more "defensible" from competitors, either because of the nature of its products, services, franchise or other reason. | [noun] A circular lowland between a resurgent dome and the walls of the caldera surrounding it. MOBS (8) [noun] A large or disorderly group of people; especially one bent on riotous or destructive action. | [noun] A group of animals such as horses or cattle. | [noun] A flock of emus. MOCK (12) [noun] An imitation, usually of lesser quality. | [noun] Mockery, the act of mocking. | [noun] A practice exam set by an educating institution to prepare students for an important exam. MOCS (8) [noun] Moccasin (type of shoe) MODE (7) [noun] One of several ancient Greek scales. | [noun] One of several common scales in modern Western music, one of which corresponds to the modern major scale and one to the natural minor scale. | [noun] A particular means of accomplishing something. | [noun] Style or fashion; popular trend. MODI (7) MODS (7) [noun] An unconventionally modern style of fashionable dress originating in England in the 1960s, characterized by ankle-length black trenchcoats and sunglasses. | [noun] A 1960s British person who dressed in such a style and was interested in modernism and the modern music of the time; the opposite of a rocker. | [noun] A modification. MOGS (7) [noun] A young cow or bull. | [noun] Leather made of the skin of the calf; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding. | [noun] A young deer, elephant, seal, whale or giraffe (also used of some other animals). MOIL (6) [noun] Hard work. | [noun] Confusion, turmoil. | [noun] A spot; a defilement. | [noun] The glass circling the tip of a blowpipe or punty, such as the residual glass after detaching a blown vessel, or the lower part of a gather. MOJO (13) [noun] A magic charm or spell. | [noun] Supernatural skill or luck. | [noun] Personal magnetism; charm. MOKE (10) [noun] A donkey. | [noun] A mesh of a net, or of anything resembling a net. | [noun] A black person. MOLA (6) [noun] A traditional textile art form of the Kuna people of Panama and Colombia, consisting of cloth panels to be worn on clothing, featuring complex designs made with multiple layers of cloth in a reverse appliqué technique. | [noun] A sunfish, Mola mola. MOLD (7) [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. | [noun] A frame or model around or on which something is formed or shaped. | [noun] Something that is made in or shaped on a mold. | [noun] A natural substance in the form of a woolly or furry growth of tiny fungi that appears when organic material lies for a long time exposed to (usually warm and moist) air. | [noun] Loose friable soil, rich in humus and fit for planting. MOLE (6) [noun] A pigmented spot on the skin, a naevus, slightly raised, and sometimes hairy. | [noun] Any of several small, burrowing insectivores of the family Talpidae. | [noun] Any of the burrowing rodents also called mole rats. | [noun] A moll, a bitch, a slut. | [noun] A massive structure, usually of stone, used as a pier, breakwater or junction between places separated by water. | [noun] In the International System of Units, the base unit of amount of substance; the amount of substance of a system which contains as many elementary entities (atoms, ions, molecules, etc.) as there are atoms in 0.012 kg of carbon-12. Symbol: mol. The number of atoms is known as Avogadro’s number. | [noun] A hemorrhagic mass of tissue in the uterus caused by a dead ovum. | [noun] One of several spicy sauces typical of the cuisine of Mexico and neighboring Central America, especially the sauce which contains chocolate and which is used in cooking main dishes, not desserts. MOLL (6) [noun] A female companion of a gangster, especially a former or current prostitute. | [noun] A prostitute or woman with loose sexual morals. | [noun] Bitch, slut; an insulting epithet applied to a female. | [adjective] Minor; in the minor mode MOLS (6) [noun] In the International System of Units, the base unit of amount of substance; the amount of substance of a system which contains as many elementary entities (atoms, ions, molecules, etc.) as there are atoms in 0.012 kg of carbon-12. Symbol: mol. The number of atoms is known as Avogadro’s number. MOLT (6) [noun] The process of shedding or losing a covering of fur, feathers or skin etc. | [noun] The skin or feathers cast off during the process of moulting. | [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To change (or to be changed) from a solid state to a liquid state, usually by a gradual heat. MOLY (9) [noun] A magic herb or plant used by Odysseus to overcome Circe. | [noun] Any plant associated with the mythological moly, especially the European allium, Allium moly. | [noun] Molybdenum MOME (8) MOMI (8) MOMS (8) [noun] (familiar) mother. | [noun] An adult female owner of a pet. | [noun] Affectionate term of address for one's mother. MONK (10) [noun] A male member of a monastic order who has devoted his life for religious service. | [noun] In earlier usage, an eremite or hermit devoted to solitude, as opposed to a cenobite, who lived communally. | [noun] A male who leads an isolated life; a loner, a hermit. | [noun] A monkey. MONO (6) [noun] A viral infection marked by extreme fatigue, high fever, and swollen lymph nodes. | [noun] A bicycle or motorcycle trick where the front wheel is lifted off the ground while riding | [adjective] Monaural or monophonic; having only a single audio channel. | [adjective] Monochrome. | [noun] An injective homomorphism | [noun] A monogamous person. | [adjective] Monosexual. MONS (6) [noun] One of the fleshy areas at the base of the fingers; a mount. | [noun] The pubic mound or mons pubis. In human anatomy or in mammals in general, the mons pubis (Latin for "pubic mound"), also known as the mons veneris (Latin, mound of Venus) or simply the mons, is the adipose tissue lying above the pubic bone of adult females, anterior to the pubic symphysis. The mons pubis forms the anterior portion of the vulva. | [noun] A mountain or extinct volcano on a planet or a moon. MONY (9) [noun] A legally or socially binding conceptual contract of entitlement to wealth, void of intrinsic value, payable for all debts and taxes, and regulated in supply. | [noun] A generally accepted means of exchange and measure of value. | [noun] A currency maintained by a state or other entity which can guarantee its value (such as a monetary union). MOOD (7) [noun] A mental or emotional state, composure. | [noun] Emotional character (of a work of music, literature, or other art). | [noun] A sullen, gloomy or angry mental state; a bad mood. | [noun] (grammar) A verb form that depends on how its containing clause relates to the speaker’s or writer’s wish, intent, or assertion about reality. MOOL (6) MOON (6) [proper noun] The Earth's moon Luna; the sole natural satellite of the Earth, represented in astronomy and astrology by ☾. | [proper noun] The god of the Moon in Heathenry. | [proper noun] A surname. MOOR (6) [noun] An extensive waste covered with patches of heath, and having a poor, light soil, but sometimes marshy, and abounding in peat; a heath | [noun] A game preserve consisting of moorland. | [verb] To cast anchor or become fastened. MOOS (6) [noun] The characteristic lowing sound made by cattle. | [noun] A foolish woman. | [verb] Of a cow or bull, to make its characteristic lowing sound. MOOT (6) [noun] A moot court. | [noun] A system of arbitration in many areas of Africa in which the primary goal is to settle a dispute and reintegrate adversaries into society rather than assess penalties. | [noun] A gathering of Rovers, usually in the form of a camp lasting 2 weeks. | [noun] A whisper, or an insinuation, also gossip or rumors. | [noun] Vagina. | [noun] The stump of a tree; the roots and bottom end of a felled tree. MOPE (8) [noun] A dull, spiritless person. | [noun] (pornography industry) A bottom feeder who "mopes" around a pornography studio hoping for his big break and often does bit parts in exchange for room and board and meager pay. | [verb] To carry oneself in a depressed, lackadaisical manner; to give oneself up to low spirits; to pout, sulk. MOPS (8) [noun] An implement for washing floors, or the like, made of a piece of cloth, or a collection of thrums, or coarse yarn, fastened to a handle. | [noun] A wash with a mop; the act of mopping | [noun] A dense head of hair. | [noun] A pug dog. MOPY (11) MORA (6) MORE (6) [adverb] To a greater degree or extent. | [adverb] Used to form the comparative form of adjectives and adverbs. | [adverb] In negative constructions: any further, any longer; any more. | [noun] A carrot; a parsnip. | [verb] To root up. MORN (6) [noun] Morning. MORS (6) MORT (6) [noun] Death; especially, the death of game in hunting. | [noun] A note sounded on a horn at the death of a deer. | [noun] The skin of a sheep or lamb that has died of disease. | [noun] A great quantity or number. | [noun] A player in a multi-user dungeon who does not have special administrator privileges and whose character can be killed. | [noun] A three-year-old salmon. | [noun] A woman; a female. MOSK (10) MOSS (6) [noun] Any of various small, green, seedless plants growing on the ground or on the surfaces of trees, stones, etc.; now specifically, a plant of the phylum Bryophyta (formerly division Musci). | [noun] A kind or species of such plants. | [noun] Any alga, lichen, bryophyte, or other plant of seemingly simple structure. MOST (6) [noun] The greatest amount. | [noun] The greater part. | [noun] A record-setting amount. | [adverb] Almost. MOTE (6) [noun] A small particle; a speck. | [verb] May or might. | [verb] Must. | [noun] A meeting for discussion. | [noun] A tiny computer for remote sensing; a component element of smartdust. MOTH (9) [noun] A usually nocturnal insect of the order Lepidoptera, distinguished from butterflies by feather-like antennae. | [noun] Anything that gradually and silently eats, consumes, or wastes any other thing. | [verb] To hunt for moths. | [noun] The plant Vigna aconitifolia, moth bean. | [noun] A small particle; a speck. MOTS (6) [noun] A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot. | [noun] A word or a motto; a device. | [noun] A note or brief strain on a bugle. MOTT (6) [noun] (chiefly Texas) A copse or small grove of trees, especially live oak or elm. | [noun] A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot. | [noun] A word or a motto; a device. MOUE (6) [noun] A pout, especially as expressing mock-annoyance or flirtatiousness. MOVE (9) [noun] The act of moving; a movement. | [noun] An act for the attainment of an object; a step in the execution of a plan or purpose. | [noun] A formalized or practiced action used in athletics, dance, physical exercise, self-defense, hand-to-hand combat, etc. MOWN (9) [verb] To cut down grass or crops. | [verb] To cut down or slaughter in great numbers. MOWS (9) [noun] A gull, seagull. | [noun] A prison, or other place of confinement. | [noun] A hiding place; a secret store or den. MOXA (13) [noun] Dried leaves of an Asian species of mugwort, Artemisia argyi as used in moxibustion. | [noun] Any other plant used in moxibustion. MOZO (15) [noun] A male servant, especially an attendant to a bullfighter. | [noun] A title of respect for a young man (usually unmarried) with or without a name used. | [noun] An unmarried man, a boy. MUCH (11) [adjective] Large, great. | [adjective] Long in duration. | [adverb] To a great extent. MUCK (12) [noun] (slimy) mud, sludge. | [noun] Soft (or slimy) manure. | [noun] Anything filthy or vile. Dirt; something that makes another thing dirty. MUDS (7) [noun] A mixture of water and soil or fine grained sediment. | [noun] A plaster-like mixture used to texture or smooth drywall. | [noun] (construction industry slang) Wet concrete as it is being mixed, delivered and poured. MUFF (12) [noun] A piece of fur or cloth, usually with open ends, used for keeping the hands warm. | [noun] Female pubic hair; female genitals. | [noun] A blown cylinder of glass which is afterward flattened out to make a sheet. | [noun] A fool, a stupid or poor-spirited person. | [noun] A muffin. MUGG (8) MUGS (7) [noun] A large cup for hot liquids, usually having a handle and used without a saucer. | [noun] The face, often used deprecatingly. | [noun] A gullible or easily-cheated person. MULE (6) [noun] The generally sterile male or female hybrid offspring of a male donkey and a female horse. | [noun] The generally sterile hybrid offspring of any two species of animals. | [noun] A hybrid plant. | [noun] A shoe that has no fitting or strap around the heel, but which covers the foot. MULL (6) [noun] A thin, soft muslin. | [noun] Marijuana that has been chopped to prepare it for smoking. | [noun] A stew of meat, broth, milk, butter, vegetables, and seasonings, thickened with soda crackers. | [noun] A promontory. | [noun] Dirt; rubbish MUMM (10) MUMP (10) MUMS (8) [noun] Mother. | [noun] Ma'am; a term of respect for an older woman. | [noun] A chrysanthemum. MUMU (8) MUNI (6) [noun] A municipal bond. | [noun] A facility operated by a municipal government, such as a golf course or train line. | [noun] The municipal government / municipality | [noun] (often italicized) A Jain or Buddhist ascetic who has taken a vow of silence MUNS (6) MUON (6) [noun] An unstable elementary particle in the lepton family, having similar properties to the electron but with a mass 207 times greater. MURA (6) MURE (6) [noun] Wall | [noun] Husks of fruit from which the juice has been squeezed. Perhaps an old spelling of myrrh | [verb] To wall in or fortify MURK (10) [adjective] Dark, murky | [noun] Darkness, or a dark or gloomy environment. | [verb] To make murky or be murky; to cloud or obscure, or to be clouded or obscured. | [verb] To murder or seriously injure. MURR (6) MUSE (6) [noun] A source of inspiration. | [noun] A poet; a bard. | [noun] An act of musing; a period of thoughtfulness. | [noun] A gap or hole in a hedge, fence, etc. through which a wild animal is accustomed to pass; a muset. MUSH (9) [noun] A somewhat liquid mess, often of food; a soft or semisolid substance. | [noun] A mixture of noise produced by the harmonics of continuous-wave stations. | [noun] The foam of a breaker. | [noun] A food comprising cracked or rolled grains cooked in water or milk; porridge. | [noun] A walk, especially across the snow with dogs. | [noun] A magic mushroom. | [noun] (chiefly Southern England) A form of address to a man. | [verb] To notch, cut, or indent (cloth, etc.) with a stamp. MUSK (10) [noun] A greasy secretion with a powerful odour, produced in a glandular sac of the male musk deer and used in the manufacture of perfumes. | [noun] A similar secretion produced by the otter and the civet. | [noun] A synthetic organic compound used as a substitute for the above. MUSS (6) [noun] A mess (disagreeable mixture or confusion of things; disorder) | [noun] A scramble, as when small objects are thrown down, to be taken by those who can seize them; a confused struggle. | [verb] To rumple, tousle or make (something) untidy. | [noun] A term of endearment. MUST (6) [noun] Something that is mandatory or required. | [verb] (modal auxiliary, defective) To do with certainty; indicates that the speaker is certain that the subject will have executed the predicate. | [verb] (modal auxiliary, defective) To do as a requirement; indicates that the sentence subject is required as an imperative or directive to execute the sentence predicate, with failure to do so resulting in a negative consequence. | [noun] The property of being stale or musty. | [noun] A time during which male elephants exhibit increased levels of sexual activity and aggressiveness (also spelled musth). MUTE (6) [noun] A stopped consonant; a stop. | [noun] An actor who does not speak; a mime performer. | [noun] A person who does not have the power of speech. | [noun] The faeces of a hawk or falcon. | [verb] To cast off; to moult. MUTS (6) MUTT (6) [noun] A mongrel dog (or sometimes cat); an animal of mixed breed or uncertain origin. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A person of diverse ancestry. | [noun] An idiot, a stupid person. | [noun] A monastic or similar religious establishment in Hinduism and Jainism, usually more formal and hierarchical than an ashram. MYNA (9) [noun] One of the South and East Asian birds of the starling family Sturnidae. MYTH (12) [noun] A traditional story which embodies a belief regarding some fact or phenomenon of experience, and in which often the forces of nature and of the soul are personified; a sacred narrative regarding a god, a hero, the origin of the world or of a people, etc. | [noun] Such stories as a genre. | [noun] A commonly-held but false belief, a common misconception; a fictitious or imaginary person or thing; a popular conception about a real person or event which exaggerates or idealizes reality.

5-Letter Words (444)

MAARS (7) [noun] A broad volcanic crater, usually filled with water to form a lake. MABES (9) MACAW (12) [noun] Any of various parrots of the genera Ara, Anodorhynchus, Cyanopsitta, Orthopsittaca, Primolius and Diopsittaca of Central and South America, including the largest parrots and characterized by long sabre-shaped tails, curved powerful bills, and usually brilliant plumage. MACED (10) [verb] To hit someone or something with a mace. | [verb] To spray in defense or attack with mace (pepper spray or tear gas) using a hand-held device. | [verb] To spray a similar noxious chemical in defense or attack using an available hand-held device such as an aerosol spray can. MACER (9) [noun] A mace bearer; specifically, an officer of a court in Scotland. MACES (9) [noun] A heavy fighting club. | [noun] A ceremonial form of this weapon. | [noun] A long baton used by some drum majors to keep time and lead a marching band. If this baton is referred to as a mace, by convention it has a ceremonial often decorative head, which, if of metal, usually is hollow and sometimes intricately worked. MACHE (12) [noun] Valerianella locusta, a small dicot annual plant of the family Caprifoliaceae often cultivated as a salad green or herb. | [noun] A former unit of volumic radioactivity: the quantity of radon (ignoring its daughters) per litre of air which ionizes a sustained current of 0.001 esu. | [noun] Glutinous rice balls flavoured with coconut and pandan. MACHO (12) [noun] A macho person; a person who tends to display masculine characteristics, such as domineering, fierceness, and bravado. | [noun] The striped mullet of California (Mugil cephalus, syn. Mugil mexicanus). | [noun] A male llama. MACHS (12) MACKS (13) [noun] An individual skilled in the art of seduction using verbal skills. | [noun] A raincoat or mackintosh. | [noun] An element of a ship's superstructure which places the function of a ship's mast on its exhaust stack, adding the skeletal supporting structure to the smokestack to support the mast's complement of functions. MACLE (9) [noun] Chiastolite; so called from the tessellated appearance of a cross-section. | [noun] A crystal having a similar tessellated appearance. | [noun] A twin crystal. MACON (9) MACRO (9) [adjective] Very large in scope or scale. | [adjective] Of a lifestyle incorporating a dietary regimen including locally grown, seasonal, natural foods, or of the diet itself. | [adjective] Long-lived. | [noun] A comparatively human-friendly abbreviation of complex input to a computer program. | [noun] Macro lens MADAM (10) [noun] A polite form of address for a woman or lady. | [noun] The mistress of a household. | [noun] A conceited or quarrelsome girl. MADLY (11) [adverb] In a mad manner; without reason or understanding; wildly. MADRE (8) MAFIA (10) [noun] A hierarchically structured secret organisation engaged in illegal activities like distribution of narcotics, gambling and extortion. | [noun] A crime syndicate. | [noun] A trusted group of associates, as of a political leader. MAFIC (12) [noun] A rock with such properties. | [adjective] Describing rocks, such as silicate minerals, magmas, and volcanic and intrusive igneous rocks, which contain relatively high concentrations of magnesium and iron. MAGES (8) [noun] A magician, wizard or sorcerer. MAGIC (10) [noun] The application of rituals or actions, especially those based on occult knowledge, to subdue or manipulate natural or supernatural beings and forces in order to have some benefit from them | [noun] A specific ritual or procedure associated with such magic; a spell. | [noun] The supernatural forces which are drawn on in such a ritual MAGMA (10) [noun] The molten matter within the earth, the source of the material of lava flows, dikes of eruptive rocks, etc. | [noun] A basic algebraic structure consisting of a set equipped with a single binary operation. | [noun] Any soft doughy mass. MAGOT (8) MAGUS (8) [noun] (common usage) magician, and derogatorily sorcerer, trickster, conjurer, charlatan | [noun] (special usage) a Zoroastrian priest MAHOE (10) [noun] Any of certain trees in the mallow family, native to the Caribbean. | [noun] Either of two different trees, usually found around the tropics. MAIDS (8) [noun] A girl or an unmarried young woman; maiden. | [noun] A female servant or cleaner (short for maidservant). | [noun] A virgin, now female but originally one of either gender. MAILE (7) MAILL (7) MAILS (7) [noun] A bag or wallet. | [noun] A bag containing letters to be delivered by post. | [noun] The material conveyed by the postal service. MAIMS (9) [verb] To wound seriously; to cause permanent loss of function of a limb or part of the body. MAINS (7) [verb] Short for mainline. | [verb] To mainly play a specific character, or side, during a game. | [verb] Of a road: to convert into a main or primary road. | [noun] The farm attached to a mansion house. MAIRS (7) MAIST (7) MAIZE (16) [noun] Corn; a type of grain of the species Zea mays. MAJOR (14) [noun] A military rank between captain and lieutenant colonel. | [noun] The main area of study of a student working toward a degree at a college or university. | [noun] A student at a college or university concentrating on a given area of study. MAKAR (11) [noun] A poet writing in Scots. MAKER (11) [noun] Someone who makes; a person or thing that makes or produces something. | [noun] (usually capitalized and preceded by the) God. | [noun] A poet. MAKES (11) [noun] Brand or kind; model. | [noun] Manner or style of construction (style of how a thing is made); form. | [noun] Origin (of a manufactured article); manufacture; production. MAKOS (11) [noun] Mako shark MALAR (7) [noun] The cheekbone, which forms a part of the lower edge of the orbit. | [adjective] Pertaining to the cheek. MALES (7) [noun] One of the male (masculine) sex or gender. MALIC (9) MALLS (7) [noun] A pedestrianised street, especially a shopping precinct. | [noun] An enclosed shopping centre. | [noun] An alley where the game of pall mall was played. MALMS (9) [noun] A soft, crumbly, chalky, grayish limestone. | [noun] An artificial mixture or chalk, clay, and sand, from which bricks are made. The resulting bricks have a light brown or yellowish color. MALMY (12) MALTS (7) [noun] Malted grain (sprouted grain) (usually barley), used in brewing and otherwise. | [noun] Malt liquor, especially malt whisky. | [noun] A milkshake with malted milk powder added for flavor. MALTY (10) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or characteristic of malt MAMAS (9) [noun] (hypocoristic, usually childish) Mother, female parent. MAMBA (11) [noun] Any of various venomous snakes of the genus Dendroaspis, native to Africa, that live in trees. MAMBO (11) [noun] A voodoo priestess (in Haiti) | [noun] A Latin-American musical genre, adapted from rumba, originating from Cuba in the 1940s, or a dance or rhythm of this genre. | [verb] To perform this dance. MAMEY (12) [noun] The evergreen tree Mammea americana, or its edible fruit | [noun] The flowering plant Magnolia guatemalensis | [noun] The tree Pouteria sapota, or its fruit. MAMIE (9) MAMMA (11) [noun] The milk-secreting organ of female humans and other mammals which includes the mammary gland and the nipple or teat; a breast; an udder. (plural: mammae) | [noun] An accessory cloud like a mammary in appearance, which can form on the underside of most cloud genera | [noun] (hypocoristic, usually childish) Mother, female parent. MAMMY (14) [noun] Mamma; mother | [noun] (historical, often pejorative) In the southern United States, a black nanny employed to look after white children; or in the antebellum South, a female slave who was close to the household and looked after the children. MANAS (7) MANED (8) MANES (7) [noun] The souls or spirits of dead ancestors, conceived as deities or the subjects of reverence, or of other deceased relatives. | [noun] Longer hair growth on back of neck of an animal, especially a horse or lion | [noun] Long or thick hair of a person's head. MANGE (8) [noun] A skin disease of mammals caused by parasitic mites (Sarcoptes spp., Demodecidae spp.). MANGO (8) [noun] A tropical Asian fruit tree, Mangifera indica. | [noun] The fruit of the mango tree. | [noun] A pickled vegetable or fruit with a spicy stuffing; a vegetable or fruit which has been mangoed. MANGY (11) [adjective] Afflicted with mange. | [adjective] (by extension) Worn and squalid-looking; bedraggled or decrepit. MANIA (7) [noun] Violent derangement of mind; madness; insanity. | [noun] Excessive or unreasonable desire; insane passion affecting one or many people; fanaticism. | [noun] The state of abnormally elevated or irritable mood, arousal, and/or energy levels. MANIC (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to someone who exhibits mania or craziness; wicked. | [adjective] Suffering from mania, the state of an abnormally elevated or irritable mood, arousal, and/or energy levels. MANLY (10) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a man. | [adjective] Having qualities befitting a man; courageous, resolute, noble. MANNA (7) [noun] Food miraculously produced for the Israelites in the desert in the book of Exodus. | [noun] (by extension) Any boon which comes into one's hands by good luck. | [noun] The sugary sap of the manna gum tree which oozes out from holes drilled by insects and falls to the ground around the tree.http//www.museum.vic.gov.au/forest/plants/gum.html MANOR (7) [noun] A landed estate. | [noun] The main house of such an estate or a similar residence; a mansion. | [noun] A district over which a feudal lord could exercise certain rights and privileges in medieval western Europe. MANOS (7) MANSE (7) [verb] To excommunicate; curse. | [noun] A house inhabited by the minister of a parish. | [noun] A family dwelling, an owner-occupied house. MANTA (7) [noun] A kind of fabric or blanket used in Latin America and southwestern United States. | [noun] Any of several very large pelagic rays of the genus Manta, with winglike pectoral fins, a long tail, and two fins resembling horns that project from the head. MANUS (7) [noun] A hand, as the part of the fore limb below the forearm in a human, or the corresponding part in other vertebrates. | [noun] (Roman law) The power over other people, especially that of a man over his wife. MAPLE (9) [noun] A tree of the Acer genus, characterised by its usually palmate leaves and winged seeds. | [noun] The wood of such a tree, prized for its hardness and attractive appearance MAQUI (16) MARCH (12) [noun] A formal, rhythmic way of walking, used especially by soldiers, bands and in ceremonies. | [noun] A political rally or parade | [noun] Any song in the genre of music written for marching (see Wikipedia's article on this type of music) | [noun] A border region, especially one originally set up to defend a boundary. | [noun] Smallage. MARCS (9) [noun] The refuse matter that remains after fruit, particularly grapes, has been pressed. | [noun] An alcoholic spirit distilled from the marc of grapes. | [noun] A weight of various commodities, especially of gold and silver, used in different European countries. In France and Holland it was equal to eight ounces. MARES (7) [noun] An adult female horse. | [noun] A foolish woman. | [noun] A type of evil spirit formerly thought to sit on the chest of a sleeping person; also, the feeling of suffocation felt during sleep, attributed to such a spirit. MARGE (8) [noun] Margin; edge; verge. | [noun] Margarine. MARIA (7) [noun] A large, dark plain, which may have the appearance of a sea. | [noun] On Saturn's moon Titan, a large expanse of what is thought to be liquid hydrocarbons. MARKS (11) [noun] (heading) Boundary, land within a boundary. | [noun] (heading) Characteristic, sign, visible impression. | [noun] (heading) Indicator of position, objective etc. MARLS (7) [verb] To cover with the earthy substance called marl. | [verb] To cover, as part of a rope, with marline, marking a peculiar hitch at each turn to prevent unwinding. MARLY (10) MARRY (10) [verb] To enter into the conjugal or connubial state; to take a husband or a wife. | [verb] (in passive) To be joined to (someone) as spouse according to law or custom. | [verb] To arrange for the marriage of; to give away as wife or husband. | [interjection] Indeed!, in truth!; a term of asseveration. MARSE (7) MARSH (10) [noun] An area of low, wet land, often with tall grass. MARTS (7) [noun] A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals; a letter of marque. | [noun] A brand or make of a manufactured product, especially of a motor car (in contradistinction to a model). | [noun] A ship commissioned for making captures. MARVY (13) [adjective] Great, awesome, brilliant MASER (7) [noun] A device for the coherent amplification or generation of electromagnetic radiation (especially of microwave frequency) by the use of excitation energy in resonant atomic or molecular systems | [noun] Any celestial object that generates microwaves using the same method | [noun] The maple tree, or maple wood. MASHY (13) MASKS (11) [noun] A cover, or partial cover, for the face, used for disguise or protection. | [noun] That which disguises; a pretext or subterfuge. | [noun] A festive entertainment of dancing or other diversions, where all wear masks; a masquerade MASON (7) [noun] A bricklayer, one whose occupation is to build with stone or brick | [noun] One who prepares stone for building purposes. | [noun] A member of the fraternity of Freemasons. See Freemason. MASSA (7) [noun] Someone who has control over something or someone. | [noun] The owner of an animal or slave. | [noun] The captain of a merchant ship; a master mariner. MASSE (7) MASSY (10) [adjective] Heavy; massive. | [noun] Someone who has control over something or someone. | [noun] The owner of an animal or slave. MASTS (7) [noun] A tall, slim post or tower, usually tapering upward, used to support, for example, the sails on a ship, flags, floodlights, meteorological instruments ,or communications equipment such as an aerial, usually supported by guy-wires. | [noun] A non-judicial punishment ("NJP") disciplinary hearing under which a commanding officer studies and disposes of cases involving those under his command. | [verb] To supply and fit a mast to (a ship). MATCH (12) [noun] A competitive sporting event such as a boxing meet, a baseball game, or a cricket match. | [noun] Any contest or trial of strength or skill, or to determine superiority. | [noun] Someone with a measure of an attribute equaling or exceeding the object of comparison. | [noun] A device made of wood or paper, at the tip coated with chemicals that ignite with the friction of being dragged (struck) against a rough dry surface. MATED (8) [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. | [verb] (by extension) To place in a losing situation that has no escape. | [verb] To match, fit together without space between. MATER (7) [noun] Mother. | [noun] A meninx; the dura mater, arachnoid mater, or pia mater of the brain. | [noun] Someone or something that mates. | [noun] Tomato. MATES (7) [noun] The conclusive victory in a game of chess that occurs when an opponent's king is threatened with unavoidable capture. | [noun] (by extension) Any losing situation with no escape; utter defeat. | [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. MATEY (10) [noun] The conclusive victory in a game of chess that occurs when an opponent's king is threatened with unavoidable capture. | [noun] (by extension) Any losing situation with no escape; utter defeat. | [noun] A fellow, comrade, colleague, partner or someone with whom something is shared, e.g. shipmate, classmate. MATHS (10) [noun] An abstract representational system used in the study of numbers, shapes, structure, change and the relationships between these concepts. | [noun] A person's ability to count, calculate, and use different systems of mathematics at differing levels. MATIN (7) [noun] Morning | [adjective] Of or relating to matins MATTE (7) [noun] A decorative border around a picture used to inset and center the contents of a frame. | [noun] A background, often painted or created with computers | [noun] (pyrometallurgy) The molten metal sulfide phases typically formed during smelting of copper, nickel, and other base metals. MATTS (7) MATZA (16) MATZO (16) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MAUDS (8) [noun] A grey plaid once worn by shepherds in Scotland and Northumbria. MAULS (7) [noun] A heavy long-handled hammer, used for splitting logs by driving a wedge into them, or in combat. | [noun] A situation where the player carrying the ball, who must be on his feet, is held by one or more opponents, and one or more of the ball carrier's team mates bind onto the ball carrier. | [verb] To handle someone or something in a rough way. MAUND (8) [noun] A wicker basket. | [noun] A unit of capacity with various specific local values. | [noun] A handbasket with two lids. | [noun] A unit of weight in southern and western Asia, whose value varied widely by location. Two maunds made one chest of opium in East India. One maund equalled 136 pounds of opium in Turkey. | [noun] Begging MAUTS (7) MAUVE (10) [noun] A bright purple synthetic dye. | [noun] The colour of this dye; a pale purple or violet colour. | [adjective] Having a pale purple colour. MAVEN (10) [noun] An expert in a given field. MAVIE (10) MAVIN (10) MAVIS (10) [noun] Song thrush. MAWED (11) MAXES (14) [verb] (usually with out) to reach the limit, to reach the maximum. MAXIM (16) [noun] A self-evident axiom or premise; a pithy expression of a general principle or rule. | [noun] A precept; a succinct statement or observation of a rule of conduct or moral teaching. MAXIS (14) [noun] A coat or skirt having such a hemline | [noun] A class of racing sailing yacht that pushes at the upper limits of the International Offshore Rule of regulated sail yacht racing, having a waterline length in excess of 70-feet. | [noun] A music single with more than two tracks, i.e. not just an A-side and a B-side. MAYAN (10) MAYAS (10) MAYBE (12) [noun] Something that is possibly true. | [noun] An answer that shows neither agreement nor disagreement. | [noun] A future event that may or may not happen. MAYED (11) MAYOR (10) [noun] The chief executive of the municipal government of a city, borough, &c., formerly usually appointed as a caretaker by European royal courts but now usually appointed or elected locally. | [noun] Short for mayor of the palace, the royal stewards of the Frankish Empire. | [noun] Synonym of mair, various former officials in the Kingdom of Scotland. MAYOS (10) [noun] A white person. | [noun] A dressing made from vegetable oil, raw egg yolks and seasoning, used on salads, with french fries, in sandwiches etc. | [noun] Any cold dish with that dressing as an ingredient. MAYST (10) [verb] To be strong; to have power (over). | [verb] (auxiliary) To be able; can. | [verb] To be able to go. MAZED (17) [verb] To amaze, astonish, bewilder | [verb] To daze, stupefy, or confuse MAZER (16) [noun] The maple tree, or maple wood. | [noun] A large drinking bowl made from such wood; a mazer bowl. MAZES (16) [noun] A labyrinth; a puzzle consisting of a complicated network of paths or passages, the aim of which is to find one's way. | [noun] Something made up of many confused or conflicting elements; a tangle. | [noun] Confusion of thought; state of bewilderment. MBIRA (9) [noun] A thumb piano, a musical instrument having a small sound box fitted with a row of tuned tabs that are plucked with the thumbs, originating among the Shona of southern Africa; any type of plucked lamellophone of the same type as the Shona instrument. MEADS (8) [noun] An alcoholic drink fermented from honey and water. | [noun] A drink composed of syrup of sarsaparilla or other flavouring extract, and water, and sometimes charged with carbon dioxide. | [noun] A meadow. MEALS (7) [noun] Food that is prepared and eaten, usually at a specific time, and usually in a comparatively large quantity (as opposed to a snack). | [noun] Food served or eaten as a repast. | [noun] A time or an occasion. MEALY (10) [adjective] Resembling meal (the foodstuff). MEANS (7) [verb] To lament. | [verb] To intend. | [verb] To convey (a meaning). MEANT (7) [verb] To intend. | [verb] To convey (a meaning). | [verb] To have conviction in (something said or expressed); to be sincere in (what one says). MEANY (10) [noun] A mean (unkind or miserly) person; a killjoy. | [noun] A villain. MEATS (7) [noun] The flesh (muscle tissue) of an animal used as food. | [noun] A type of meat, by anatomic position and provenance. | [noun] Food, for animals or humans, especially solid food. See also meat and drink. MEATY (10) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing meat. | [adjective] Resembling meat in flavour, etc. | [adjective] Of a person or a body part, large and solid. MECCA (11) MEDAL (8) [noun] A stamped metal disc used as a personal ornament, a charm, or a religious object. | [noun] A stamped or cast metal object (usually a disc), particularly one awarded as a prize or reward. | [verb] To win a medal. MEDIA (8) [noun] The middle layer of the wall of a blood vessel or lymph vessel which is composed of connective and muscular tissue. | [noun] A voiced stop consonant. | [noun] One of the major veins of the insect wing, between the radius and the cubitus | [noun] Means and institutions for publishing and broadcasting information. MEDIC (10) [noun] A doctor. | [noun] A paramedic, someone with special training in first aid, especially in the military. | [noun] A medical student. | [noun] Any of various European and North African herbs, of the genus Medicago, several of which are grown for fodder etc. MEDII (8) MEEDS (8) [noun] A payment or recompense made for services rendered or in recognition of some achievement; reward, deserts; award. | [noun] A gift; bribe. | [noun] Merit or desert; worth. MEETS (7) [noun] A sports competition, especially for track and field (a track meet) or swimming (a swim meet). | [noun] A gathering of riders, horses and hounds for foxhunting; a field meet for hunting. | [noun] A meeting of two trains in opposite directions on a single track, when one is put into a siding to let the other cross. MEINY (10) MELDS (8) [verb] To combine multiple similar objects into one | [verb] In card games, especially of the rummy family, to announce or display a combination of cards. MELEE (7) [noun] A battle fought at close range; hand-to-hand combat; brawling. | [noun] A noisy, confused or tumultuous fight, argument or scrap. | [noun] Any any confused, disorganised, disordered or chaotic situation. MELIC (9) [noun] Any of various grasses, of the genus Melica, from north temperate regions | [adjective] Of or pertaining to Greek lyric verse. MELLS (7) MELON (7) [noun] Any of various plants of the family Cucurbitaceae grown for food, generally not including the cucumber. | [noun] The fruit of such plants. | [noun] A light pinkish orange colour, like that of some melon flesh. | [noun] The result of heptazine being polymerized with the tri-s-triazine units linked through an amine (NH) link. MELTS (7) [noun] Molten material, the product of melting. | [noun] The transition of matter from a solid state to a liquid state. | [noun] The springtime snow runoff in mountain regions. MEMOS (9) [noun] A short note; a memorandum. | [noun] A record of partial results that can be reused later without recomputation. | [verb] To record something; to make a note of something. MENAD (8) MENDS (8) [noun] A place, as in clothing, which has been repaired by mending. | [noun] The act of repairing. | [verb] To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement. MENSA (7) MENSE (7) MENTA (7) MENUS (7) [noun] The details of the food to be served at a banquet; a bill of fare. | [noun] A list of dishes offered in a restaurant. | [noun] A list from which the user may select an operation to be performed, often done with a keyboard, mouse, or controller under a graphical user interface MEOUS (7) MEOWS (10) [noun] The cry of a cat. | [noun] The drug mephedrone. | [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MERCY (12) [noun] Relenting; forbearance to cause or allow harm to another. | [noun] Forgiveness or compassion, especially toward those less fortunate. | [noun] A tendency toward forgiveness, pity, or compassion. MERDE (8) [noun] (quaint) shit MERER (7) MERES (7) [noun] A body of standing water, such as a lake or a pond. More specifically, it can refer to a lake that is broad in relation to its depth. Also included in place names such as Windermere. | [noun] Boundary, limit; a boundary-marker; boundary-line. | [noun] A Maori war-club. MERGE (8) [noun] The joining together of multiple sources. | [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To combine into a whole. MERIT (7) [noun] A claim to commendation or a reward. | [noun] A mark or token of approbation or to recognize excellence. | [noun] Something deserving or worthy of positive recognition or reward. MERKS (11) MERLE (7) [noun] The Eurasian blackbird, Turdus merula. | [noun] Any blackbird. | [noun] A type of mottled colouration on dogs. MERLS (7) [noun] The Eurasian blackbird, Turdus merula. | [noun] Any blackbird. | [noun] A type of mottled colouration on dogs. MERRY (10) [adjective] Jolly and full of high spirits. | [adjective] Festive and full of fun and laughter. | [adjective] Brisk | [noun] An English wild cherry. MESAS (7) [noun] Flat area of land or plateau higher than other land, with one or more clifflike edges. MESHY (13) MESIC (9) [adjective] (of a habitat) Moist. | [adjective] (of an organism) Adapted to a moist habitat. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to mesons; mesonic. MESNE (7) [noun] A mesne lord. | [adjective] Intermediate. MESON (7) [noun] (rare outside entomology) The mesial plane dividing the body into similar right and left halves. | [noun] A member of a group of subatomic particles having a mass intermediate between electrons and protons. (The most easily detected mesons fit this definition.) | [noun] (now specifically) An elementary particle that is composed of a quark and an antiquark, such as a kaon or pion. (Mesons composed of rarer quarks are much heavier.) MESSY (10) [adjective] (of a place, situation, person, etc) In a disorderly state; chaotic; disorderly. | [adjective] (of a person) Prone to causing mess. | [adjective] (of a situation) Difficult or unpleasant to deal with. METAL (7) [noun] (heading) Chemical elements or alloys, and the mines where their ores come from. | [noun] A light tincture used in a coat of arms, specifically argent and or. | [noun] Molten glass that is to be blown or moulded to form objects. METED (8) [verb] To measure. | [verb] (usually with “out”) To dispense, measure (out), allot (especially punishment, reward etc.). METER (7) [noun] (always meter) A device that measures things. | [noun] (always meter) A parking meter or similar device for collecting payment. | [noun] (always meter) One who metes or measures. METES (7) [verb] To measure. | [verb] (usually with “out”) To dispense, measure (out), allot (especially punishment, reward etc.). | [noun] A boundary or other limit; a boundary-marker; mere. METHS (10) [noun] Methylated spirits. | [noun] Methamphetamine, especially in the form of the crystalline hydrochloride. | [noun] Methadone. METIS (7) [noun] A person of mixed-race ancestry. | [noun] A person of mixed European and Indigenous descent. | [noun] A person who self-identifies as Métis. | [noun] (knowledge management) Practical intelligence; street smarts. METRE (7) [verb] To measure with a metering device. | [verb] To imprint a postage mark with a postage meter. | [verb] To regulate the flow of or to deliver in regulated amounts (usually of fluids but sometimes of other things such as anticipation or breath). | [noun] The rhythm or measure in verse and musical composition. METRO (7) [noun] An underground railway. | [noun] A train that runs on such an underground railway. | [noun] An urban rapid transit light railway | [noun] A metropolitan area MEWED (11) [verb] To shut away, confine, lock up. | [verb] (of a bird) To moult. | [verb] (of a bird) To cause to moult. MEWLS (10) [noun] A soft cry or whimper; an act of mewling. | [verb] To cry weakly with a soft, high-pitched sound; to whimper; to whine. MEZES (16) [noun] Small portions of starters typical of Turkish and Greek cuisine (equivalent to Spanish tapas or Hawaiian pu pu) often served as a light meal with pita. MEZZO (25) [noun] Mezzo-soprano MIAOU (7) MIAOW (10) [noun] The cry of a cat. | [noun] The drug mephedrone. | [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MIASM (9) [noun] An unhealthy vapor or atmosphere; a miasma. | [noun] A predisposition to a particular disease, which interferes with subsequent treatment of it. MIAUL (7) [noun] The cry of a cat. | [verb] To give the cry of a cat. MICAS (9) MICHE (12) MICKS (13) [noun] An Irishman | [noun] A Catholic, particularly of Irish descent. MICRA (9) MICRO (9) [noun] (gaming slang) micromanagement | [verb] (gaming slang) to micromanage | [adjective] Small, relatively small; used to contrast levels of the noun modified. MIDDY (12) [noun] A midshipman | [noun] A measure of 285 ml (10 fl oz) of beer; a pot. MIDGE (9) [noun] Any of various small two-winged flies, for example, from the family Chironomidae or non-biting midges, the family Chaoboridae or phantom midges, and the family Ceratopogonidae or biting midges, all belonging to the order Diptera | [noun] Any bait or lure designed to resemble a midge MIDIS (8) [noun] A native or inhabitant of Berlin. | [noun] A doughnut with a sweet filling. | [noun] A newspaper format with pages normally measuring about 315 by 470 millimetres (12.4 in × 18.5 inches), slightly taller and wider than a tabloid but narrower and shorter than a broadsheet. MIDST (8) [noun] A place in the middle of something; may be used of a literal or metaphorical location. | [preposition] Among, in the middle of; amid. MIENS (7) [noun] Demeanor; facial expression or attitude, especially one which is intended by its bearer. | [noun] A specific facial expression. MIFFS (13) [noun] A small argument; a quarrel. | [noun] A state of being offended. | [verb] (usually used in the passive) To offend slightly. MIFFY (16) [adjective] Easily irritated or offended. | [adjective] Particular; fussy. MIGGS (9) MIGHT (11) [noun] Power, strength, force or influence held by a person or group. | [noun] Physical strength or force. | [noun] The ability to do something. | [verb] To be strong; to have power (over). MIKED (12) [verb] To microphone; to place one or more microphones (mikes) on. | [verb] To measure using a micrometer. MIKES (11) [noun] A microphone. | [verb] To microphone; to place one or more microphones (mikes) on. | [verb] To measure using a micrometer. MIKRA (11) MILCH (12) [adjective] (of a cow, animal, etc.) Giving milk; in note | [adjective] Tender; pitiful; weeping. MILER (7) [noun] (often in combination) An athlete or a horse who specializes in running races of one mile, or a specified number of miles. | [noun] (in combination) A race whose length is the specified number of miles. MILES (7) [noun] The international mile: a unit of length precisely equal to 1.609344 kilometers established by treaty among Anglophone nations in 1959, divided into 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards. | [noun] Any of several customary units of length derived from the 1593 English statute mile of 8 furlongs, equivalent to 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards of various precise values. | [noun] Any of many customary units of length derived from the Roman mile (mille passus) of 8 stades or 5,000 Roman feet. MILIA (7) [noun] A keratin-filled cyst that can appear just under the epidermis or on the roof of the mouth. MILKS (11) [noun] A white liquid produced by the mammary glands of female mammals to nourish their young. From certain animals, especially cows, it is also called dairy milk and is a common food for humans as a beverage or used to produce various dairy products such as butter, cheese, and yogurt. | [noun] A white (or whitish) liquid obtained from a vegetable source such as almonds, coconuts, oats, rice, and/or soy beans. Also called non-dairy milk. | [noun] An individual serving of milk. MILKY (14) [adjective] Resembling milk in color, consistency, smell, etc.; consisting of milk. | [adjective] (color science) Of the black in an image, appearing as dark gray rather than black. | [adjective] (of a drink) Containing (an especially large amount of) milk. MILLE (7) MILLS (7) [noun] A grinding apparatus for substances such as grains, seeds, etc. | [noun] The building housing such a grinding apparatus. | [noun] A machine used for expelling the juice, sap, etc., from vegetable tissues by pressure, or by pressure in combination with a grinding, or cutting process. MILOS (7) MILPA (9) MILTS (7) [noun] The spleen, especially of an animal bred for food. | [noun] The semen of a male fish. MILTY (10) MIMED (10) [verb] To mimic. | [verb] To act without words. | [verb] To represent an action or object through gesture, without the use of sound. MIMEO (9) [noun] A mimeograph. | [noun] An unpublished academic paper. | [verb] To mimeograph. MIMER (9) MIMES (9) [noun] A form of acting without words; pantomime. | [noun] A pantomime actor. | [noun] A classical theatrical entertainment in the form of farce. MIMIC (11) [noun] A person who practices mimicry, or mime. | [noun] An imitation. | [verb] To imitate, especially in order to ridicule. MINAE (7) MINAS (7) MINCE (9) [noun] Finely chopped meat. | [noun] Finely chopped mixed fruit used in Christmas pies; mincemeat. | [noun] An affected (often dainty or short and precise) gait. MINCY (12) MINDS (8) [noun] The ability for rational thought. | [noun] The ability to be aware of things. | [noun] The ability to remember things. MINED (8) [verb] To remove (ore) from the ground. | [verb] To dig into, for ore or metal. | [verb] To sow mines (the explosive devices) in (an area). MINER (7) [noun] A person who works in a mine. | [noun] An operator of ordnance mines and similar explosives. | [noun] Any bird of one of four species of Australian endemic honeyeaters in the genus Manorina. MINES (7) [noun] Demeanor; facial expression or attitude, especially one which is intended by its bearer. | [noun] A specific facial expression. | [noun] An excavation from which ore or solid minerals are taken, especially one consisting of underground tunnels. MINGY (11) [adjective] Mean, miserly, stingy. MINIM (9) [noun] A half note, drawn as a semibreve with a stem. | [noun] A unit of volume, in the Imperial and U.S. customary systems, 1/60 fluid drachm. Approximately equal to 1 drop, 62 μL or 0.9 grain (weight) of water. | [noun] A short vertical stroke used in handwriting. MINIS (7) [noun] A miniskirt. | [noun] A minicomputer. MINKE (11) [noun] A minke whale, one of two species of baleen whales within Balaenoptera, the northern-dwelling species of which is often seen in coastal waters. MINKS (11) [noun] (plural mink or minks) Any of various semi-aquatic, carnivorous mammals in the Mustelinae subfamily, similar to weasels, with dark fur, native to Europe and America, of which two species in different genera are extant: the American mink (Neovison vison) and the European mink (Mustela lutreola). | [noun] (plural mink) The fur or pelt of a mink, used to make apparel. | [noun] (plural minks) An article of clothing made of mink. MINNY (10) MINOR (7) [noun] A person who is below the age of majority, consent, criminal responsibility or other adult responsibilities and accountabilities. | [noun] A subject area of secondary concentration of a student at a college or university, or the student who has chosen such a secondary concentration. | [noun] Determinant of a square submatrix MINTS (7) [noun] A building or institution where money (originally, only coins) is produced under government licence. | [noun] A large amount of money. A vast sum or amount, etc. | [noun] Any place regarded as a source of unlimited supply; the supply itself. MINTY (10) MINUS (7) [noun] The minus sign (−). | [noun] A negative quantity. | [noun] A downside or disadvantage. MIRED (8) [verb] To cause or permit to become stuck in mud; to plunge or fix in mud. | [verb] To sink into mud. | [verb] To weigh down. | [noun] A unit of measurement for color temperature. MIRES (7) [noun] Deep mud; moist, spongy earth. | [noun] An undesirable situation, a predicament. | [verb] To cause or permit to become stuck in mud; to plunge or fix in mud. MIREX (14) [noun] The pesticide and fire retardant perchloropentacyclodecane, which is a persistent organic pollutant. MIRKS (11) MIRKY (14) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MIRTH (10) [noun] The emotion usually following humour and accompanied by laughter; merriment; jollity; gaiety. | [noun] That which causes merriment. MIRZA (16) MISDO (8) MISER (7) [noun] A person who hoards money rather than spending it; one who is cheap or extremely parsimonious. | [noun] A kind of earth auger, typically large-bored and often hand-operated. MISES (7) MISOS (7) MISSY (10) [noun] A young female, or miss; as a term of mild disparagement, typically used jokingly or rebukingly. | [adjective] Girlish; effeminate; sentimental. | [adjective] Of, or pertaining to, female clothing or clothing sizes. | [noun] An impure yellow sulphate of iron; yellow copperas or copiapite. MISTS (7) [noun] Water or other liquid finely suspended in air. | [noun] A layer of fine droplets or particles. | [noun] Anything that dims, darkens, or hinders vision. MISTY (10) [adjective] Covered in mist; foggy. | [adjective] Dim; vague; obscure. | [adjective] With tears in the eyes; dewy-eyed. MITER (7) [noun] A covering for the head, worn on solemn occasions by church dignitaries, which has been made in many forms, mostly recently a tall cap with two points or peaks. | [noun] The surface forming the bevelled end or edge of a piece where a miter joint is made; also, a joint formed or a junction effected by two beveled ends or edges; a miter joint. | [noun] A 13th-century coin minted in Europe which circulated in Ireland as a debased counterfeit sterling penny, outlawed under Edward I. MITES (7) [noun] Any of many minute arachnids which, along with the ticks, comprise subclass Acarina (aka Acari). | [noun] A small coin formerly circulated in England, rated at about a third of a farthing. | [noun] A lepton, a small coin used in Palestine in the time of Christ. MITIS (7) MITRE (7) [noun] A covering for the head, worn on solemn occasions by church dignitaries, which has been made in many forms, mostly recently a tall cap with two points or peaks. | [noun] The surface forming the bevelled end or edge of a piece where a miter joint is made; also, a joint formed or a junction effected by two beveled ends or edges; a miter joint. | [noun] A 13th-century coin minted in Europe which circulated in Ireland as a debased counterfeit sterling penny, outlawed under Edward I. MITTS (7) [noun] A mitten | [noun] An oversized, protective glove such as an oven mitt or a baseball mitt. | [noun] (especially in plural) A hand. MIXED (15) [verb] To stir together. | [verb] To combine (items from two or more sources normally kept separate). | [verb] To form by mingling; to produce by the stirring together of ingredients; to concoct from different parts. MIXER (14) [noun] One who, or a device that, mixes or merges things together. | [noun] One who mixes or socializes. | [noun] A machine outfitted with (typically blunt) blades with which it mixes or beats ingredients in a bowl below. MIXES (14) [verb] To stir together. | [verb] To combine (items from two or more sources normally kept separate). | [verb] To form by mingling; to produce by the stirring together of ingredients; to concoct from different parts. MIXUP (16) [noun] A case of confusion. MIZEN (16) [noun] Mizzenmast. | [noun] A fore-and-aft sail set on a mizzenmast. MOANS (7) [noun] A low, mournful cry of pain, sorrow or pleasure | [verb] To complain about; to bemoan, to bewail; to mourn. | [verb] To grieve. MOATS (7) [noun] A deep, wide defensive ditch, normally filled with water, surrounding a fortified habitation. | [noun] An aspect of a business which makes it more "defensible" from competitors, either because of the nature of its products, services, franchise or other reason. | [noun] A circular lowland between a resurgent dome and the walls of the caldera surrounding it. MOCHA (12) [noun] A coffee drink with chocolate syrup added, or a serving thereof; a caffè mocha. | [noun] A coffee and chocolate mixed flavour. | [noun] A dark brown colour, like that of mocha coffee. MOCKS (13) [noun] An imitation, usually of lesser quality. | [noun] Mockery, the act of mocking. | [noun] A practice exam set by an educating institution to prepare students for an important exam. MODAL (8) [noun] A modal proposition. | [noun] A modal form, notably a modal auxiliary. | [noun] (grammar) A modal verb. MODEL (8) [noun] A person who serves as a subject for artwork or fashion, usually in the medium of photography but also for painting or drawing. | [noun] A person, usually an attractive female, hired to show items or goods to the public, such as items given away as prizes on a TV game show. | [noun] A representation of a physical object, usually in miniature. MODEM (10) [noun] A device that encodes digital computer signals into analog/analogue telephone signals and vice versa and allows computers to communicate over a phone line. | [verb] To transmit by modem. MODES (8) [noun] One of several ancient Greek scales. | [noun] One of several common scales in modern Western music, one of which corresponds to the modern major scale and one to the natural minor scale. | [noun] A particular means of accomplishing something. MODUS (8) MOGGY (12) [noun] A young cow or bull. | [noun] Leather made of the skin of the calf; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding. | [noun] A young deer, elephant, seal, whale or giraffe (also used of some other animals). MOGUL (8) [noun] A rich or powerful person; a magnate. | [noun] A hump or bump on a skiing piste. | [noun] A larger-sized (39 mm diameter) screw base used for large, high-power light bulbs, known as mogul (screw) base light bulbs. MOHEL (10) [noun] The person who performs the circumcision in a Jewish bris. MOHUR (10) MOILS (7) [noun] Hard work. | [noun] Confusion, turmoil. | [noun] A spot; a defilement. MOIRA (7) MOIRE (7) [noun] Originally, a fine textile fabric made of the hair of an Asiatic goat. | [noun] Any textile fabric to which a watered appearance is given. MOIST (7) [verb] To moisten. | [adjective] Slightly wet; characterised by the presence of moisture, not dry; damp. | [adjective] Of eyes: tearful, wet with tears. MOJOS (14) [noun] A magic charm or spell. | [noun] Supernatural skill or luck. | [noun] Personal magnetism; charm. MOKES (11) [noun] A donkey. | [noun] A mesh of a net, or of anything resembling a net. | [noun] A black person. MOLAL (7) [adjective] Of or designating a solution that contains one mole of solute per 1000g of solvent MOLAR (7) [noun] A back tooth having a broad surface used for grinding one's food. | [adjective] Of or relating to the molar teeth, or to grinding. | [noun] A unit of concentration equal to one mole per litre. MOLAS (7) [noun] A traditional textile art form of the Kuna people of Panama and Colombia, consisting of cloth panels to be worn on clothing, featuring complex designs made with multiple layers of cloth in a reverse appliqué technique. | [noun] A sunfish, Mola mola. MOLDS (8) [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. | [noun] A frame or model around or on which something is formed or shaped. | [noun] Something that is made in or shaped on a mold. MOLDY (11) [adjective] Covered with mold. | [adjective] Stale or musty. MOLES (7) [noun] A pigmented spot on the skin, a naevus, slightly raised, and sometimes hairy. | [noun] Any of several small, burrowing insectivores of the family Talpidae. | [noun] Any of the burrowing rodents also called mole rats. MOLLS (7) [noun] A female companion of a gangster, especially a former or current prostitute. | [noun] A prostitute or woman with loose sexual morals. | [noun] Bitch, slut; an insulting epithet applied to a female. MOLLY (10) [noun] A woman or girl, especially of low status. | [noun] An effeminate male, a male homosexual. | [noun] Pure MDMA powder. | [noun] A fish of the genus Poecilia, except for those known as guppies. MOLTO (7) MOLTS (7) [noun] The process of shedding or losing a covering of fur, feathers or skin etc. | [noun] The skin or feathers cast off during the process of moulting. | [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. MOMES (9) MOMMA (11) [noun] Mother | [noun] A voluptuous woman. | [noun] One's wife or girlfriend. MOMMY (14) [noun] (usually childish) Mother. | [verb] To treat someone like a mother would; to mother someone. | [adjective] (chiefly in the superlative) Characteristic of a mother; motherly. MOMUS (9) MONAD (8) [noun] An ultimate atom, or simple, unextended point; something ultimate and indivisible. | [noun] A single individual (such as a pollen grain) that is free from others, not united in a group. | [noun] A monoid object in the category of endofunctors of a fixed category. MONAS (7) MONDE (8) MONDO (8) [noun] A dialogue between master and student designed to obtain an intuitive truth. | [adjective] Big, large; major, significant. | [adverb] Very, extremely, really. MONEY (10) [noun] A legally or socially binding conceptual contract of entitlement to wealth, void of intrinsic value, payable for all debts and taxes, and regulated in supply. | [noun] A generally accepted means of exchange and measure of value. | [noun] A currency maintained by a state or other entity which can guarantee its value (such as a monetary union). MONGO (8) [noun] Still-usable things salvaged (by sanmen) from garbage. MONIE (7) MONKS (11) [noun] A male member of a monastic order who has devoted his life for religious service. | [noun] In earlier usage, an eremite or hermit devoted to solitude, as opposed to a cenobite, who lived communally. | [noun] A male who leads an isolated life; a loner, a hermit. MONOS (7) [noun] A bicycle or motorcycle trick where the front wheel is lifted off the ground while riding | [noun] A monogamous person. | [noun] An injective homomorphism MONTE (7) [noun] A game in which three or four cards are dealt face-up and players bet on which of them will first be matched in suit by others dealt. | [noun] (Latin America) A wood or forest; timberland. MONTH (10) [noun] A period into which a year is divided, historically based on the phases of the moon. | [noun] A period of 30 days, 31 days, or some alternation thereof. | [noun] (in the plural) A woman's period; menstrual discharge. MOOCH (12) [noun] An aimless stroll. | [noun] One who mooches; a moocher. | [noun] A unit of time comprising ten days, used to measure how long someone holds a job. MOODS (8) [noun] A mental or emotional state, composure. | [noun] Emotional character (of a work of music, literature, or other art). | [noun] A sullen, gloomy or angry mental state; a bad mood. MOODY (11) [adjective] Given to sudden or frequent changes of mind; temperamental. | [adjective] Sulky or depressed. | [adjective] Dour, gloomy or brooding. MOOED (8) [verb] Of a cow or bull, to make its characteristic lowing sound. MOOLA (7) [noun] Money, cash. MOOLS (7) MOONS (7) [noun] (by extension of Moon) Any natural satellite of a planet. | [noun] A month, particularly a lunar month. | [noun] A crescent-like outwork in a fortification. MOONY (10) [noun] The act of mooning, flashing the buttocks. | [noun] A silly person. | [adjective] Resembling the moon. MOORS (7) [noun] An extensive waste covered with patches of heath, and having a poor, light soil, but sometimes marshy, and abounding in peat; a heath | [noun] A game preserve consisting of moorland. | [verb] To cast anchor or become fastened. MOORY (10) MOOSE (7) [noun] The largest member of the deer family (Alces americanus, sometimes included in Alces alces), of which the male has very large, palmate antlers. | [noun] An ugly person. | [noun] An Asian girl taken as a lover. MOOTS (7) [noun] A moot court. | [noun] A system of arbitration in many areas of Africa in which the primary goal is to settle a dispute and reintegrate adversaries into society rather than assess penalties. | [noun] A gathering of Rovers, usually in the form of a camp lasting 2 weeks. MOPED (10) [verb] To carry oneself in a depressed, lackadaisical manner; to give oneself up to low spirits; to pout, sulk. | [verb] To make spiritless and stupid. | [adjective] Melancholic, dejected. | [noun] A lightweight, two-wheeled vehicle equipped with a small motor and pedals, designed to go no faster than some specified speed limit. MOPER (9) MOPES (9) [verb] To carry oneself in a depressed, lackadaisical manner; to give oneself up to low spirits; to pout, sulk. | [verb] To make spiritless and stupid. MOPEY (12) MORAE (7) MORAL (7) [noun] (of a narrative) The ethical significance or practical lesson. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Moral practices or teachings: modes of conduct. | [noun] A morality play. MORAS (7) MORAY (10) [noun] Any of the large cosmopolitan carnivorous eels of the family Muraenidae. MOREL (7) [noun] Any of several edible mushrooms, especially the common morel or yellow morel. | [noun] Any of several fungi in the genus Morchella, the upper part of which is covered with a reticulated and pitted hymenium. | [noun] A variety of cultivated cherry, Prunus cerasus 'austera', having a dark skin MORES (7) [noun] A set of moral norms or customs derived from generally accepted practices rather than written laws. | [noun] A carrot; a parsnip. | [noun] A root; stock. | [verb] To root up. MORNS (7) [noun] Morning. MORON (7) [noun] A stupid person; an idiot; a fool. | [noun] A person of mild mental subnormality in the former classification of mental retardation, having an intelligence quotient of 50–70. MORPH (12) [noun] (grammar) A physical form representing some morpheme in language. It is a recurrent distinctive sound or sequence of sounds. | [noun] An allomorph: one of a set of realizations that a morpheme can have in different contexts. | [noun] Local variety of a species, distinguishable from other populations of the species by morphology or behaviour. | [noun] A computer-generated gradual change from one image to another. MORRO (7) MORSE (7) [noun] A clasp or fastening used to fasten a cope in the front, usually decorative. | [noun] A walrus. MORTS (7) [noun] Death; especially, the death of game in hunting. | [noun] A note sounded on a horn at the death of a deer. | [noun] The skin of a sheep or lamb that has died of disease. MOSEY (10) [verb] To set off, get going; to start a journey. | [verb] To go off quickly: to hurry up. | [verb] To amble; to walk or proceed in a leisurely manner. MOSKS (11) MOSSO (7) MOSSY (10) [noun] Mosquito | [adjective] Covered in or overgrown with moss. MOSTE (7) MOSTS (7) MOTEL (7) [noun] A type of hotel or lodging establishment, often located near a major highway, which typically features a series of rooms the entrances of which are immediately adjacent to a parking lot to facilitate convenient access to automobiles parked there. | [noun] A low-cost short-stay hotel, often with hourly rates rather than daily rates, and notorious for permitting illicit sexual activities; love hotel. | [verb] To stay in a motel or motels. MOTES (7) [noun] A small particle; a speck. | [noun] A meeting for discussion. | [noun] A body of persons who meet for discussion, especially about the management of affairs. MOTET (7) [noun] A composition adapted to sacred words in the elaborate polyphonic church style; an anthem. MOTEY (10) MOTHS (10) [noun] A small particle; a speck. | [noun] A meeting for discussion. | [noun] A body of persons who meet for discussion, especially about the management of affairs. MOTHY (13) [adjective] Infested with moths | [adjective] Moth-eaten MOTIF (10) [noun] A recurring or dominant element; a theme. | [noun] A short melodic passage that is repeated in several parts of a work. | [noun] A decorative figure that is repeated in a design or pattern. MOTOR (7) [noun] A machine or device that converts other energy forms into mechanical energy, or imparts motion. | [noun] A motor car, or automobile. | [noun] A source of power for something; an inspiration; a driving force. MOTTE (7) [noun] A raised earth mound, often topped with a wooden or stone structure and surrounded with a ditch. | [noun] A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot. | [noun] A word or a motto; a device. MOTTO (7) [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, forming part of an heraldic achievement. | [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, prefixed to an essay, discourse, chapter, canto, or the like, suggestive of its subject matter; a short, suggestive expression of a guiding principle; a maxim. | [noun] A paper packet containing a sweetmeat, cracker, etc., together with a scrap of paper bearing a motto. MOTTS (7) MOUCH (12) MOUES (7) [noun] A pout, especially as expressing mock-annoyance or flirtatiousness. MOULD (8) [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. | [noun] A frame or model around or on which something is formed or shaped. | [noun] Something that is made in or shaped on a mold. | [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. MOULT (7) [noun] The process of shedding or losing a covering of fur, feathers or skin etc. | [noun] The skin or feathers cast off during the process of moulting. | [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. MOUND (8) [noun] An artificial hill or elevation of earth; a raised bank; an embankment thrown up for defense | [noun] A natural elevation appearing as if thrown up artificially; a regular and isolated hill, hillock, or knoll. | [noun] Elevated area of dirt upon which the pitcher stands to pitch. MOUNT (7) [noun] A hill or mountain. | [noun] Any of seven fleshy prominences in the palm of the hand, taken to represent the influences of various heavenly bodies. | [noun] A bulwark for offence or defence; a mound. | [noun] An animal, usually a horse, used to ride on, unlike a draught horse MOURN (7) [noun] Sorrow, grief. | [noun] A ring fitted upon the head of a lance to prevent wounding an adversary in tilting. | [verb] To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death). MOUSE (7) [noun] Any small rodent of the genus Mus. | [noun] A member of the many small rodent and marsupial species resembling such a rodent. | [noun] A quiet or shy person. MOUSY (10) [noun] A mouse. | [adjective] Resembling a mouse. | [adjective] Abounding or infested with mice. MOUTH (10) [noun] The opening of a creature through which food is ingested. | [noun] The end of a river out of which water flows into a sea or other large body of water. | [noun] An outlet, aperture or orifice. MOVED (11) [verb] To change place or posture; to go, in any manner, from one place or position to another. | [verb] To act; to take action; to begin to act | [verb] To change residence, for example from one house, town, or state, to another; to go and live at another place. See also move out and move in. MOVER (10) [noun] Someone who or something that moves. | [noun] A dancer. | [noun] A person employed to help people move their possessions from one residence to another. MOVES (10) [noun] The act of moving; a movement. | [noun] An act for the attainment of an object; a step in the execution of a plan or purpose. | [noun] A formalized or practiced action used in athletics, dance, physical exercise, self-defense, hand-to-hand combat, etc. MOVIE (10) [noun] A recorded sequence of images displayed on a screen at a rate sufficiently fast to create the appearance of motion. | [noun] (usually plural) A cinema. MOWED (11) [verb] To cut down grass or crops. | [verb] To cut down or slaughter in great numbers. | [verb] To make grimaces, mock. MOWER (10) [noun] A lawnmower, a machine used to cut grass. | [noun] A person who cuts grass. MOXAS (14) MOXIE (14) [noun] Nerve, spunk, strength of character. | [noun] Verve. | [noun] Wit, smarts, skill. MOZOS (16) [noun] A male servant, especially an attendant to a bullfighter. | [noun] A title of respect for a young man (usually unmarried) with or without a name used. | [noun] An unmarried man, a boy. MUCID (10) [adjective] Musty; mouldy; slimy; mucous MUCIN (9) [noun] Any of several glycoproteins found in mucus MUCKS (13) [noun] (slimy) mud, sludge. | [noun] Soft (or slimy) manure. | [noun] Anything filthy or vile. Dirt; something that makes another thing dirty. MUCKY (16) [adjective] Covered in muck. | [adjective] Obscene, pornographic. MUCOR (9) MUCRO (9) [noun] A pointed end, often sharp, abruptly terminating an organ, such as a projection at the tip of a leaf; the posterior tip of a cuttlebone; or the distal part of the furcula in Collembola. MUCUS (9) [noun] A slippery secretion from the lining of the mucous membranes. MUDDY (12) [verb] To get mud on (something). | [verb] To make a mess of, or create confusion with regard to; to muddle. | [adjective] Covered with or full of mud or wet soil. MUDRA (8) [noun] Any of several formal symbolic hand postures used in classical dance of India and in Hindu and Buddhist iconography. | [noun] Any of the formal body positions and postures used in yoga and meditation. MUFFS (13) [noun] A piece of fur or cloth, usually with open ends, used for keeping the hands warm. | [noun] Female pubic hair; female genitals. | [noun] A blown cylinder of glass which is afterward flattened out to make a sheet. MUFTI (10) [noun] A Muslim scholar and interpreter of shari’a law, who can deliver a fatwa. | [noun] A civilian dress when worn by a member of the military, or casual dress when worn by a pupil of a school who normally would wear uniform. MUGGS (9) MUGGY (12) [adjective] (Of the weather, air, etc) humid, or hot and humid. | [adjective] Wet or mouldy MUHLY (13) MUJIK (18) MULCH (12) [noun] Any material used to cover the top layer of soil to protect, insulate, or decorate it, or to discourage weeds or retain moisture. | [noun] A material used as mulch, as a decorative redwood bark mulch. | [verb] To apply mulch. MULCT (9) [noun] A fine or penalty, especially a pecuniary one. | [verb] To impose such a fine or penalty. | [verb] To swindle (someone) out of money. MULED (8) MULES (7) [noun] The generally sterile male or female hybrid offspring of a male donkey and a female horse. | [noun] The generally sterile hybrid offspring of any two species of animals. | [noun] A hybrid plant. | [verb] To remove skin from (an animal) to prevent myiasis. MULEY (10) [adjective] (of cattle or deer) Without horns. | [noun] Mule deer MULLA (7) [noun] A religious scholar and teacher of sharia law. MULLS (7) [noun] A thin, soft muslin. | [noun] Marijuana that has been chopped to prepare it for smoking. | [noun] A stew of meat, broth, milk, butter, vegetables, and seasonings, thickened with soda crackers. MUMMS (11) MUMMY (14) [noun] An embalmed human or animal corpse wrapped in linen bandages for burial, especially as practised by the ancient Egyptians and some Native American tribes. | [noun] (by extension) A reanimated embalmed human corpse, as a typical character in horror films. | [noun] (by extension) Any naturally preserved human or animal body. | [noun] (usually childish) mother. MUMPS (11) [noun] A grimace. | [verb] To mumble, speak unclearly. | [verb] To move the lips with the mouth closed; to mumble, as in sulkiness. MUMUS (9) MUNCH (12) [noun] A location or restaurant where good eating can be expected. | [noun] An act of eating. | [noun] Food. MUNGO (8) [noun] A material of short fiber and inferior quality obtained by deviling woollen rags or the remnants of woollen goods, specifically those of felted, milled, or hard-spun woollen cloth, as distinguished from shoddy, or the deviled product of loose-textured woollen goods or worsted. MUNIS (7) [noun] A municipal bond. | [noun] A facility operated by a municipal government, such as a golf course or train line. | [noun] The municipal government / municipality MUONS (7) [noun] An unstable elementary particle in the lepton family, having similar properties to the electron but with a mass 207 times greater. MURAL (7) [noun] A large painting, usually drawn on a wall. | [verb] To create a mural. | [adjective] Of or relating to a wall; on, or in, or against a wall. MURAS (7) MURED (8) [verb] To wall in or fortify | [verb] To enclose or imprison within walls. MURES (7) [noun] Wall | [noun] Husks of fruit from which the juice has been squeezed. Perhaps an old spelling of myrrh MUREX (14) [noun] Any of the genus Murex of marine gastropods. MURID (8) [noun] Any rodent in the family Muridae. MURKS (11) MURKY (14) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MURRA (7) MURRE (7) [noun] Any seabird of the genus Uria in the family Alcidae (the auks). MURRS (7) MURRY (10) MUSCA (9) MUSED (8) [verb] To become lost in thought, to ponder. | [verb] To say (something) with due consideration or thought. | [verb] To think on; to meditate on. MUSER (7) MUSES (7) [noun] A source of inspiration. | [noun] A poet; a bard. | [noun] An act of musing; a period of thoughtfulness. MUSHY (13) [adjective] Resembling or having the consistency of mush; semiliquid, pasty, or granular. | [adjective] Soft; squishy. | [adjective] Overly sappy, corny, or cheesy; maudlin. MUSIC (9) [noun] A series of sounds organized in time, employing melody, harmony, tempo etc. usually to convey a mood. | [noun] Any pleasing or interesting sounds. | [noun] An art form, created by organizing of pitch, rhythm, and sounds made using musical instruments and sometimes singing. MUSKS (11) [noun] A greasy secretion with a powerful odour, produced in a glandular sac of the male musk deer and used in the manufacture of perfumes. | [noun] A similar secretion produced by the otter and the civet. | [noun] A synthetic organic compound used as a substitute for the above. MUSKY (14) [adjective] Having the scent of musk | [noun] Muskellunge MUSSY (10) MUSTH (10) [noun] A time during which male elephants exhibit increased levels of sexual activity and aggressiveness and often secrete leaking temporin from the sides of their heads. MUSTS (7) [noun] Something that is mandatory or required. | [noun] The property of being stale or musty. | [noun] Something that exhibits the property of being stale or musty. MUSTY (10) [adjective] Having a stale odor. MUTCH (12) [noun] A nightcap (hat worn to bed). | [noun] A linen or muslin hat, especially one of a type once commonly worn by elderly women and young children. MUTED (8) [verb] To silence, to make quiet. | [verb] To turn off the sound of. | [verb] Of a bird: to defecate. MUTER (7) MUTES (7) [noun] A stopped consonant; a stop. | [noun] An actor who does not speak; a mime performer. | [noun] A person who does not have the power of speech. MUTON (7) [noun] A unit of mutation forming part of a recon. MUTTS (7) [noun] A monastic or similar religious establishment in Hinduism and Jainism, usually more formal and hierarchical than an ashram. | [noun] A mongrel dog (or sometimes cat); an animal of mixed breed or uncertain origin. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A person of diverse ancestry. MUZZY (28) [adjective] Hazy, indistinct, blurred, unfocussed. | [adjective] Dazed; bewildered; tipsy. | [noun] A Muslim. MYNAH (13) [noun] One of the South and East Asian birds of the starling family Sturnidae. MYNAS (10) [noun] One of the South and East Asian birds of the starling family Sturnidae. MYOID (11) MYOMA (12) MYOPE (12) [noun] One who has myopia. MYOPY (15) MYRRH (13) [noun] A red-brown resinous material, the dried sap of a tree of the species Commiphora myrrha. | [noun] The herb chervil. MYSID (11) [noun] Any crustacean of the family Mysidae. MYTHS (13) [noun] A traditional story which embodies a belief regarding some fact or phenomenon of experience, and in which often the forces of nature and of the soul are personified; a sacred narrative regarding a god, a hero, the origin of the world or of a people, etc. | [noun] Such stories as a genre. | [noun] A commonly-held but false belief, a common misconception; a fictitious or imaginary person or thing; a popular conception about a real person or event which exaggerates or idealizes reality. MYTHY (16)

6-Letter Words (789)

MACACO (12) MACAWS (13) [noun] Any of various parrots of the genera Ara, Anodorhynchus, Cyanopsitta, Orthopsittaca, Primolius and Diopsittaca of Central and South America, including the largest parrots and characterized by long sabre-shaped tails, curved powerful bills, and usually brilliant plumage. MACERS (10) [noun] A mace bearer; specifically, an officer of a court in Scotland. MACHES (13) MACHOS (13) [noun] Exaggerated masculinity MACING (11) [verb] To hit someone or something with a mace. | [verb] To spray in defense or attack with mace (pepper spray or tear gas) using a hand-held device. | [verb] To spray a similar noxious chemical in defense or attack using an available hand-held device such as an aerosol spray can. MACKLE (14) [noun] A spot. | [noun] A blur or an appearance of a double impression, as when the paper slips a little during printing. | [verb] To blur or be blurred; especially to blur or double an impression from type. MACLED (11) MACLES (10) [noun] Chiastolite; so called from the tessellated appearance of a cross-section. | [noun] A crystal having a similar tessellated appearance. | [noun] A twin crystal. MACONS (10) MACRON (10) [noun] A short, straight, horizontal diacritical mark (¯) placed over any of various letters, usually to indicate that the pronunciation of a vowel is long. MACROS (10) [noun] A comparatively human-friendly abbreviation of complex input to a computer program. | [noun] Macro lens | [noun] The study of the entire economy in terms of the total amount of goods and services produced, total income earned, the level of employment of productive resources, and the general behavior of prices. MACULA (10) [noun] An oval yellow spot near the center of the retina of the human eye, histologically defined as having two or more layers of ganglion cells, responsible for detailed central vision. | [noun] A small chamber of the inner ear of certain vertebrates filled with endolymph and containing an otolith. | [noun] A spot, as on the skin, or on the surface of the sun or of some other luminous orb. MACULE (10) [noun] A spot. | [noun] A blur or an appearance of a double impression, as when the paper slips a little during printing. | [verb] To blur or be blurred; especially to blur or double an impression from type. MADAME (11) [noun] A polite form of address for a woman or lady. | [noun] The mistress of a household. | [noun] A conceited or quarrelsome girl. MADAMS (11) [noun] A polite form of address for a woman or lady. | [noun] The mistress of a household. | [noun] A conceited or quarrelsome girl. MADCAP (13) [noun] An impulsive, hasty, capricious person. | [noun] An insane person, a lunatic. | [adjective] Impulsive, hasty or reckless; capricious. MADDED (11) [verb] To be or become mad. | [verb] To madden, to anger, to frustrate. MADDEN (10) [verb] To make angry. | [verb] To make insane; to inflame with passion. | [verb] To become furious. MADDER (10) [noun] A herbaceous plant, Rubia tinctorum, native to Asia, cultivated for a red-purple dye (alizarin) obtained from the root. | [noun] The root of the plant, used as a medicine or a dye. | [noun] A dye made from the plant. | [adjective] Insane; crazy, mentally deranged. | [noun] A communal drinking vessel used in Gaelic times for drinking mead. It had squared sides and one drank from a corner. Also, a trophy in this shape. MADMAN (11) [noun] A male who is insane or mentally disturbed. MADMEN (11) [noun] A male who is insane or mentally disturbed. MADRAS (9) [noun] A brightly colored cotton fabric with a checked or striped pattern. | [noun] A large handkerchief of this fabric, worn on the head in the West Indies. MADRES (9) MADURO (9) MAENAD (9) [noun] A female follower of Dionysus, associated with intense reveling. | [noun] An excessively wild or emotional woman. MAFFIA (14) MAFIAS (11) [noun] A hierarchically structured secret organisation engaged in illegal activities like distribution of narcotics, gambling and extortion. | [noun] A crime syndicate. | [noun] A trusted group of associates, as of a political leader. MAFTIR (11) MAGGOT (10) [noun] A soft, legless larva of a fly or other dipterous insect, that often eats decomposing organic matter. | [noun] A worthless person. | [noun] A whimsy or fancy. MAGIAN (9) MAGICS (11) [noun] The application of rituals or actions, especially those based on occult knowledge, to subdue or manipulate natural or supernatural beings and forces in order to have some benefit from them | [noun] A specific ritual or procedure associated with such magic; a spell. | [noun] The supernatural forces which are drawn on in such a ritual MAGILP (11) [noun] A mixture of linseed oil with turpentine or mastic varnish, used as a thickener for oil paints but later discredited as a source of cracking and yellowing. MAGLEV (12) [noun] A train propelled by magnetic levitation. | [adjective] Describing a train, system, etc, that operates by magnetic levitation. MAGMAS (11) [noun] The molten matter within the earth, the source of the material of lava flows, dikes of eruptive rocks, etc. | [noun] A basic algebraic structure consisting of a set equipped with a single binary operation. | [noun] Any soft doughy mass. MAGNET (9) [noun] A piece of material that attracts some metals by magnetism. | [noun] (preceded by a noun) A person or thing that attracts what is denoted by the preceding noun. MAGNUM (11) [noun] A bottle of wine containing 1.5 liters of fluid, double the volume of a standard bottle. | [noun] A powerful firearm cartridge, often derived from a shorter, less powerful cartridge calibre that uses the same bullet. | [noun] A handgun that fires a cartridge of this calibre; chiefly a revolver, but rarely an autoloader firing an unusually powerful calibre. MAGOTS (9) MAGPIE (11) [noun] One of several kinds of bird in the family Corvidae | [noun] A superficially similar Australian bird, Gymnorhina tibicen or Cracticus tibicen. | [noun] Someone who displays a magpie-like quality such as hoarding or stealing objects. MAGUEY (12) [noun] Any of various large agaves of Mexico and the southern US, especially the American aloe, Agave americana. MAHOES (11) [noun] Any of certain trees in the mallow family, native to the Caribbean. | [noun] Either of two different trees, usually found around the tropics. MAHOUT (11) [noun] An elephant driver and keeper. | [verb] To drive elephants. MAHZOR (20) MAIDEN (9) [noun] One of the triune goddesses of the Lady in Wicca alongside the Crone and Mother representing a girl or a young woman | [noun] A girl or an unmarried young woman. | [noun] A female virgin. MAIGRE (9) [noun] A kind of fish; the meagre. | [adjective] Made without meat (and thus permitted to be eaten on a fast day). | [adjective] Belonging to a fast day or fast. MAIHEM (13) MAILED (9) [verb] (ditransitive) To send (a letter, parcel, etc.) through the mail. | [verb] (ditransitive) To send by electronic mail. | [verb] To contact (a person) by electronic mail. | [verb] (ditransitive) To send (a letter, parcel, etc.) through the mail. MAILER (8) [noun] One who sends mail. | [noun] A computer program that sends electronic mail. | [noun] A packet or container designed for postal use. MAILES (8) MAILLS (8) MAIMED (11) [verb] To wound seriously; to cause permanent loss of function of a limb or part of the body. MAIMER (10) MAINLY (11) [adverb] Forcefully, vigorously. | [adverb] Of the production of a sound: loudly, powerfully. | [adverb] To a great degree; very much. MAISTS (8) MAIZES (17) MAJORS (15) [noun] A military rank between captain and lieutenant colonel. | [noun] The main area of study of a student working toward a degree at a college or university. | [noun] A student at a college or university concentrating on a given area of study. MAKARS (12) [noun] A poet writing in Scots. MAKERS (12) [noun] Someone who makes; a person or thing that makes or produces something. | [noun] (usually capitalized and preceded by the) God. | [noun] A poet. MAKEUP (14) [noun] An item's composition. | [noun] Cosmetics; colorants and other substances applied to the skin to alter its appearance. | [noun] Replacement; material used to make up for the amount that has been used up. MAKING (13) [noun] The act of forming, causing, or constituting; workmanship; construction. | [noun] Process of growth or development. | [verb] To create. MAKUTA (12) [noun] A former unit of currency, one hundredth of a zaïre. MALADY (12) [noun] Any ailment or disease of the body; especially, a lingering or deep-seated disorder. | [noun] A moral or mental defect or disorder. MALARS (8) [noun] The cheekbone, which forms a part of the lower edge of the orbit. MALATE (8) [noun] A salt or ester of malic acid. MALFED (12) MALGRE (9) MALICE (10) [noun] Intention to harm or deprive in an illegal or immoral way. Desire to take pleasure in another's misfortune. | [noun] An intention to do injury to another party, which in many jurisdictions is a distinguishing factor between the crimes of murder and manslaughter. | [verb] To intend to cause harm; to bear malice. MALIGN (9) [verb] To make defamatory statements about; to slander or traduce. | [verb] To treat with malice; to show hatred toward; to abuse; to wrong. | [adjective] Evil or malignant in disposition, nature, intent or influence. MALINE (8) MALKIN (12) MALLED (9) MALLEE (8) [noun] A type of scrubland with low-growing thick eucalypts, characteristic of certain parts of Australia. | [noun] Any semi-desert region of Australia where such scrub is the predominant vegetation. | [noun] Any of several low-growing eucalypts characteristic of such scrubland, especially Eucalyptus dumosa, Eucalyptus oleosa, and Eucalyptus socialis. | [noun] A member of a caste in South Asia whose traditional occupation is gardening; hence, any native gardener. MALLEI (8) [noun] The small hammer-shaped bone of the middle ear. | [noun] The tripus (ossicle in cypriniform fishes). | [noun] One of the paired calcareous structures within the mastax of rotifers. MALLET (8) [noun] A type of hammer with a larger-than-usual head made of wood, rubber or similar non-iron material, used by woodworkers for driving a tool, such as a chisel. A kind of maul. | [noun] A weapon resembling the tool, but typically much larger. | [noun] A small hammer-like tool used for playing certain musical instruments. MALLOW (11) [noun] Any of a group of flowering plants in several genera of the taxonomic family Malvaceae, especially of the genus Malva. Several species are edible by humans. MALOTI (8) [noun] The basic monetary unit of the currency of the Kingdom of Lesotho, introduced in 1980 to replace the South African rand as legal tender. | [noun] A coin or banknote betokening a value in (ma)loti. MALTED (9) [verb] To convert a cereal grain into malt by causing it to sprout (by soaking in water) and then halting germination (by drying with hot air) in order to develop enzymes that can break down starches and proteins in the grain. | [verb] To become malt. | [verb] To drink malt liquor. MALTHA (11) MALTOL (8) MAMBAS (12) [noun] Any of various venomous snakes of the genus Dendroaspis, native to Africa, that live in trees. MAMBOS (12) [noun] A voodoo priestess (in Haiti) | [noun] A Latin-American musical genre, adapted from rumba, originating from Cuba in the 1940s, or a dance or rhythm of this genre. | [verb] To perform this dance. MAMEYS (13) [noun] The evergreen tree Mammea americana, or its edible fruit | [noun] The flowering plant Magnolia guatemalensis | [noun] The tree Pouteria sapota, or its fruit. MAMIES (10) MAMLUK (14) MAMMAE (12) [noun] The milk-secreting organ of female humans and other mammals which includes the mammary gland and the nipple or teat; a breast; an udder. (plural: mammae) | [noun] An accessory cloud like a mammary in appearance, which can form on the underside of most cloud genera MAMMAL (12) [noun] An animal of the class Mammalia, characterized by being warm-blooded, having hair and feeding milk to its young. | [noun] A vertebrate with three bones in the inner ear and one in the jaw. MAMMAS (12) [noun] (hypocoristic, usually childish) Mother, female parent. | [noun] The milk-secreting organ of female humans and other mammals which includes the mammary gland and the nipple or teat; a breast; an udder. (plural: mammae) | [noun] An accessory cloud like a mammary in appearance, which can form on the underside of most cloud genera MAMMEE (12) [noun] An American fruit tree, Mammea americana. | [noun] Its large fragrant fruit, with a thick tough ring surrounding bright yellow pulp. MAMMER (12) MAMMET (12) MAMMEY (15) MAMMIE (12) MAMMON (12) [noun] The desire for wealth personified as an evil spirit or a malign influence. | [noun] Often mammon: wealth, material avarice, profit. MANAGE (9) [noun] The act of managing or controlling something. | [noun] (horseriding) Manège. | [verb] To direct or be in charge of. MANANA (8) [adverb] Tomorrow. | [adverb] Sometime in the future. Usually to say in a satirical sense 'sometime in the unspecified future, despite the fact that we were told tomorrow without fail'. MANCHE (13) MANEGE (9) [noun] The art of training and riding horses; dressage. | [noun] A riding school. | [noun] A riding arena (enclosed, but usually unroofed area, in contradistinction to a riding hall). MANFUL (11) [adjective] Showing the characteristics considered typical of a man; macho or manly | [adjective] (by extension) Courageous; noble; high-minded. MANGEL (9) [noun] The sugar beet, which can be refined to equal cane sugar in all manners save for botanical origin. | [noun] A mangelwurzel, a plant of the beet family raised as cattle feed. MANGER (9) [noun] A trough for animals to eat from. MANGES (9) MANGEY (12) [adjective] Afflicted with mange. | [adjective] (by extension) Worn and squalid-looking; bedraggled or decrepit. MANGLE (9) [verb] To change, mutilate or disfigure by cutting, tearing, rearranging etc. | [verb] To modify (an identifier from source code) so as to produce a unique identifier for internal use by the compiler, etc. | [noun] A hand-operated device with rollers, for wringing laundry. | [noun] Mangrove (tree) MANGOS (9) [noun] A tropical Asian fruit tree, Mangifera indica. | [noun] The fruit of the mango tree. | [noun] A pickled vegetable or fruit with a spicy stuffing; a vegetable or fruit which has been mangoed. MANIAC (10) [noun] An insane person, especially one who suffers from a mania. | [noun] A fanatic, a person with an obsession. MANIAS (8) [noun] Violent derangement of mind; madness; insanity. | [noun] Excessive or unreasonable desire; insane passion affecting one or many people; fanaticism. | [noun] The state of abnormally elevated or irritable mood, arousal, and/or energy levels. MANICS (10) MANILA (8) [noun] Fiber made from abaca (Manila hemp), used to make ropes and manila paper. | [noun] The yellow-brown colour of manila. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to Manila, the capital of the Philippines; made in, or exported from, that city. MANIOC (10) [noun] The tropical plant Manihot esculenta, from which cassava and tapioca are prepared. | [noun] Cassava root, eaten as a food. | [noun] A food starch prepared from the root. MANITO (8) MANITU (8) MANNAN (8) MANNAS (8) MANNED (9) [verb] To supply (something) with staff or crew (of either sex). | [verb] To take up position in order to operate (something). | [verb] (possibly obsolete) To brace (oneself), to fortify or steel (oneself) in a manly way. (Compare man up.) MANNER (8) [noun] Mode of action; way of performing or doing anything | [noun] Characteristic mode of acting or behaving; bearing | [noun] One's customary method of acting; habit. MANORS (8) [noun] A landed estate. | [noun] The main house of such an estate or a similar residence; a mansion. | [noun] A district over which a feudal lord could exercise certain rights and privileges in medieval western Europe. MANQUE (17) [adjective] Unable to fully realise one's ambitions; would-be MANSES (8) [noun] A house inhabited by the minister of a parish. | [noun] A family dwelling, an owner-occupied house. | [noun] A large house, a mansion. MANTAS (8) [noun] A kind of fabric or blanket used in Latin America and southwestern United States. | [noun] Any of several very large pelagic rays of the genus Manta, with winglike pectoral fins, a long tail, and two fins resembling horns that project from the head. MANTEL (8) [noun] The shelf above a fireplace which may be also a structural support for the masonry of the chimney. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. Also called a mantelshelf. | [verb] To surmount a ledge by pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. MANTES (8) MANTIC (10) [noun] A soothsayer, a seer. | [adjective] Relating to divination; prophetic. MANTID (9) [noun] Mantis (insect) MANTIS (8) [noun] Any of various large insects of the order Mantodea that catch insects or other small animals with their powerful forelegs. | [noun] A green colour, like that of many mantises. MANTLE (8) [noun] The shelf above a fireplace which may be also a structural support for the masonry of the chimney. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. Also called a mantelshelf. | [noun] A piece of clothing somewhat like an open robe or cloak, especially that worn by Orthodox bishops. (Compare mantum.) MANTRA (8) [noun] The hymn portions of the Vedas; any passage of these used as a prayer. | [noun] (originally Hinduism) A phrase repeated to assist concentration during meditation. | [noun] (by extension) A slogan or phrase often repeated. MANTUA (8) [noun] An article of loose clothing popular in 17th- and 18th century France. | [noun] A superior kind of rich silk formerly exported from Mantua in Italy. | [noun] A woman's cloak or mantle. MANUAL (8) [noun] A handbook. | [noun] A booklet that instructs on the usage of a particular machine or product. | [noun] A drill in the use of weapons, etc. | [adjective] Performed with the hands (of an activity). | [noun] Mechanical transmission which shifts gears by the action of the driver's hand on the gearstick or gear lever, rather than automatically; a manual gearbox. MANURE (8) [noun] Animal excrement, especially that of common domestic farm animals and when used as fertilizer. Generally speaking, from cows, horses, sheep, pigs and chickens. | [noun] Any fertilizing substance, whether of animal origin or not; fertiliser. | [noun] Rubbish; nonsense; bullshit. MAPLES (10) [noun] A tree of the Acer genus, characterised by its usually palmate leaves and winged seeds. | [noun] The wood of such a tree, prized for its hardness and attractive appearance MAPPED (13) [verb] To create a visual representation of a territory, etc. via cartography. | [verb] (followed by a "to" phrase) To act as a function on something, taking it to something else. | [verb] (followed by a "to" phrase) To have a direct relationship; to correspond. MAPPER (12) MAQUIS (17) [noun] Dense Mediterranean coastal scrub. | [noun] The French resistance movement during World War II, or other similar movements elsewhere. MARACA (10) [noun] A Latin American percussion instrument consisting of a hollow-gourd rattle containing pebbles or beans and often played in pairs, as a rhythm instrument. | [noun] (in the plural) breasts MARAUD (9) [verb] To move about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [verb] To go about aggressively or in a predatory manner. | [verb] To raid and pillage. MARBLE (10) [noun] A rock of crystalline limestone. | [noun] (games) A small ball, usually of glass or ceramic. | [noun] An artwork made from marble. MARBLY (13) MARCEL (10) [noun] A hairstyle characterized by deep waves made by a curling iron. | [noun] A marcel wave. | [verb] To wave (hair) by the marcel method. MARGAY (12) [noun] Leopardus wiedii, a spotted cat native to Central and South America. MARGES (9) [noun] Margin; edge; verge. | [noun] Margarine. MARGIN (9) [noun] The edge of the paper, typically left blank when printing but sometimes used for annotations etc. | [noun] The edge or border of any flat surface. | [noun] The edge defining inclusion in or exclusion from a set or group. MARINA (8) [noun] A harbour for small boats. MARINE (8) [noun] A soldier, normally a member of a marine corps, trained to serve on board or from a ship | [noun] Capitalised in the plural A marine corps. | [noun] A painting representing some marine subject. MARISH (11) MARKED (13) [adjective] Having a visible or identifying mark. | [adjective] Clearly evident; noticeable; conspicuous. | [adjective] (of a word, form, or phoneme) Distinguished by a positive feature. | [verb] To put a mark on (something); to make (something) recognizable by a mark; to label or write on (something). MARKER (12) [noun] An object used to mark a location. | [noun] Someone or something that marks. | [noun] A real or virtual objective, something to be aimed for. MARKET (12) [noun] A gathering of people for the purchase and sale of merchandise at a set time, often periodic. | [noun] City square or other fairly spacious site where traders set up stalls and buyers browse the merchandise. | [noun] A grocery store MARKKA (16) [noun] A (Finnish) mark, the currency used in Finland before the introduction of the euro, consisting of 100 penni. Abbreviation FIM. MARKUP (14) [noun] The notation that is used to indicate the meaning of the elements in an electronic document, or to dictate how text should be displayed. | [noun] The percentage or amount by which a seller hikes up his buy-in price when determining his selling price. | [noun] An increase in price. MARLED (9) [adjective] Mottled, streaked, multicoloured. | [verb] To cover with the earthy substance called marl. | [verb] To cover, as part of a rope, with marline, marking a peculiar hitch at each turn to prevent unwinding. MARLIN (8) [noun] Any species of game fish belonging to either of the genera Tetrapturus or Makaira. Every such species has a pointed, spear-like projection of the upper jaw. MARMOT (10) [noun] Any of several large ground-dwelling rodents of the genera Marmota and Cynomys in the squirrel family. MAROON (8) [noun] An escaped negro slave of the Caribbean and the Americas or a descendant of escaped slaves. | [noun] A castaway; a person who has been marooned. | [verb] To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a desert island. | [noun] A rich dark red, somewhat brownish, color. | [noun] A rocket-propelled firework or skyrocket, often one used as a signal (e.g. to summon the crew of a lifeboat or warn of an air raid). | [noun] An idiot; a fool. MARQUE (17) [noun] A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals; a letter of marque. | [noun] A brand or make of a manufactured product, especially of a motor car (in contradistinction to a model). | [noun] A ship commissioned for making captures. MARRAM (10) [noun] Ammophila arenaria, a coarse grass found on sandy beaches. MARRED (9) [verb] To spoil; to ruin; to scathe; to damage. | [adjective] Of a person, perplexed or troubled | [adjective] Of a child, spoilt, cosseted, overly indulged MARRER (8) [noun] One who mars or injures. MARRON (8) [noun] A sweet chestnut. | [noun] Cherax tenuimanus, a type of freshwater crayfish from Western Australia. MARROW (11) [noun] The substance inside bones which produces blood cells. | [noun] A kind of vegetable like a large courgette/zucchini or squash. | [noun] The pith of certain plants. | [noun] A friend, pal, buddy, mate. MARSES (8) MARSHY (14) [adjective] Of, or resembling a marsh; boggy. | [adjective] Growing in marshy ground. MARTED (9) MARTEN (8) [noun] Any carnivorous mammal of the genus Martes in the family Mustelidae. | [noun] Any of various passerine birds of the family Hirundinidae, which also includes swallows, that catch insects whilst flying. | [noun] A perforated stone-faced runner for grinding. MARTIN (8) [noun] Any of various passerine birds of the family Hirundinidae, which also includes swallows, that catch insects whilst flying. | [noun] A perforated stone-faced runner for grinding. MARTYR (11) [noun] One who willingly accepts being put to death for adhering openly to one's religious beliefs; notably, saints canonized after martyrdom. | [noun] (by extension) One who sacrifices his or her life, station, or something of great personal value, for the sake of principle or to sustain a cause. | [noun] (with a prepositional phrase of cause) One who suffers greatly and/or constantly, even involuntarily. MARVEL (11) [noun] That which causes wonder; a prodigy; a miracle. | [noun] Wonder, astonishment. | [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. MASCON (10) [noun] A region within a solid astronomical body that is of higher density than the surrounding material. | [noun] A lunar mare that has a greater density of rock than the surrounding area. | [noun] Mass concentration MASCOT (10) [noun] Something thought to bring good luck | [noun] Something, especially a person or animal, used to symbolize a sports team, company, organization or other group MASERS (8) [noun] A device for the coherent amplification or generation of electromagnetic radiation (especially of microwave frequency) by the use of excitation energy in resonant atomic or molecular systems | [noun] Any celestial object that generates microwaves using the same method | [noun] The maple tree, or maple wood. MASHED (12) [verb] To convert into a mash; to reduce to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure | [verb] In brewing, to convert (for example malt, or malt and meal) into the mash which makes wort. | [verb] To press down hard (on). MASHER (11) [noun] One who, or that which, mashes. | [noun] A machine for making mash. | [noun] A fashionable man in the late Victorian era. MASHES (11) [verb] To convert into a mash; to reduce to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure | [verb] In brewing, to convert (for example malt, or malt and meal) into the mash which makes wort. | [verb] To press down hard (on). MASHIE (11) [noun] A metal-headed golf club with a moderate loft, the equivalent of a five iron in a modern set of clubs. MASJID (16) [noun] A mosque. MASKED (13) [verb] To cover (the face or something else), in order to conceal the identity or protect against injury; to cover with a mask or visor. | [verb] To disguise; to cover; to hide. | [verb] To conceal; also, to intervene in the line of. MASKEG (13) MASKER (12) [verb] To render giddy or senseless | [verb] To be bewildered. | [verb] To choke; stifle. | [noun] One who wears a mask; one who appears in disguise at a masquerade or wears a mask in a ritual. MASONS (8) [noun] A bricklayer, one whose occupation is to build with stone or brick | [noun] One who prepares stone for building purposes. | [noun] A member of the fraternity of Freemasons. See Freemason. MASQUE (17) MASSAS (8) MASSED (9) [verb] To form or collect into a mass; to form into a collective body; to bring together into masses; to assemble. | [verb] To have a certain mass. | [verb] To celebrate mass. MASSES (8) [noun] (physical) Matter, material. | [noun] A large quantity; a sum. | [verb] To form or collect into a mass; to form into a collective body; to bring together into masses; to assemble. MASSIF (11) [noun] A principal mountain mass. | [noun] A block of the earth's crust bounded by faults or flexures and displaced as a unit without internal change; normally consists of gneisses and schists MASTED (9) [verb] To supply and fit a mast to (a ship). | [verb] (of swine and other animals) To feed on forest seed or fruit. | [verb] (of a population of plants) To vary fruit and seed production in multi-year cycles. MASTER (8) [noun] Someone who has control over something or someone. | [noun] The owner of an animal or slave. | [noun] The captain of a merchant ship; a master mariner. | [noun] (in combination) A vessel having a specified number of masts. MASTIC (10) [noun] An evergreen shrub or small tree, Pistacia lentiscus (mastic tree), native to the Mediterranean. | [noun] A hard, brittle, aromatic and transparent resin produced by this tree and used to make varnishes and chewing gum, and as a flavouring. | [noun] An alcoholic liquor flavoured with this resin. MASTIX (15) MATERS (8) [noun] Tomato. | [noun] Mother. | [noun] A meninx; the dura mater, arachnoid mater, or pia mater of the brain. MATEYS (11) MATING (9) [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. | [verb] (by extension) To place in a losing situation that has no escape. | [verb] To match, fit together without space between. MATINS (8) [noun] Together with lauds, the earliest of the canonical hours; normally at sunrise, but often earlier | [noun] Morning prayers MATRES (8) MATRIX (15) [noun] The womb. | [noun] The material or tissue in which more specialized structures are embedded. | [noun] An extracellular matrix, the material or tissue between the cells of animals or plants. MATRON (8) [noun] A mature or elderly woman. | [noun] A wife or a widow, especially, one who has borne children. | [noun] A woman of staid or motherly manners. MATSAH (11) MATTED (9) [verb] To cover, protect or decorate with mats. | [verb] To form a thick, tangled mess; to interweave into, or like, a mat; to entangle. | [adjective] Forming a thick tangled mess MATTER (8) [noun] Substance, material. | [noun] A condition, subject or affair, especially one of concern. | [noun] An approximate amount or extent. MATTES (8) [noun] A decorative border around a picture used to inset and center the contents of a frame. | [noun] A background, often painted or created with computers | [noun] (pyrometallurgy) The molten metal sulfide phases typically formed during smelting of copper, nickel, and other base metals. MATTIN (8) MATURE (8) [adjective] Fully developed; grown up in terms of physical appearance, behaviour or thinking; ripe. | [adjective] Brought to a state of complete readiness. | [adjective] Profound; careful. | [verb] To proceed toward maturity: full development or completion (either of concrete or of abstract things, e.g. plans, judgments, qualities). MATZAH (20) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MATZAS (17) MATZOH (20) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MATZOS (17) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MATZOT (17) MAUGER (9) MAUGRE (9) MAULED (9) [verb] To handle someone or something in a rough way. | [verb] To savage; to cause serious physical wounds (usually used of an animal). | [verb] To criticise harshly. MAULER (8) [noun] One who mauls. MAUMET (10) MAUNDS (9) [noun] A wicker basket. | [noun] A unit of capacity with various specific local values. | [noun] A handbasket with two lids. MAUNDY (12) [noun] A commandment. | [noun] The sacrament of the Lord's supper. | [noun] The ceremony of washing the feet of poor persons or inferiors, performed as a religious rite on Maundy Thursday in commemoration of Christ's washing the disciples' feet at the Last Supper. MAUVES (11) [noun] A bright purple synthetic dye. | [noun] The colour of this dye; a pale purple or violet colour. MAVENS (11) [noun] An expert in a given field. MAVIES (11) MAVINS (11) MAWING (12) MAXIMA (17) [noun] A music note equal to two (or sometimes three) longæ; in modern notation, this is typically equivalent to eight semibreves. | [noun] The highest limit | [noun] The greatest value of a set or other mathematical structure, especially the global maximum or a local maximum of a function MAXIMS (17) [noun] A self-evident axiom or premise; a pithy expression of a general principle or rule. | [noun] A precept; a succinct statement or observation of a rule of conduct or moral teaching. MAXIXE (22) [noun] A Brazilian dance in a rapid 2/4 time, influenced by the tango and polka. | [noun] A deep blue variety of beryl. MAYBES (13) [noun] Something that is possibly true. | [noun] An answer that shows neither agreement nor disagreement. | [noun] A future event that may or may not happen. MAYDAY (15) [noun] An international distress signal used by shipping and aircraft MAYEST (11) [verb] To be strong; to have power (over). | [verb] (auxiliary) To be able; can. | [verb] To be able to go. MAYFLY (17) [noun] Any of the many fragile insects of the order Ephemeroptera that develop in fresh water and live very briefly as winged adults. MAYHAP (16) [adverb] Maybe, perhaps, possibly, perchance: MAYHEM (16) [noun] A state or situation of great confusion, disorder, trouble or destruction; chaos. | [noun] Infliction of violent injury on a person or thing. | [noun] The maiming of a person by depriving him of the use of any of his limbs which are necessary for defense or protection. MAYING (12) [verb] To gather may, or flowers in general. | [verb] To celebrate May Day. | [noun] The celebrations traditionally held to celebrate May Day. MAYORS (11) [noun] The chief executive of the municipal government of a city, borough, &c., formerly usually appointed as a caretaker by European royal courts but now usually appointed or elected locally. | [noun] Short for mayor of the palace, the royal stewards of the Frankish Empire. | [noun] Synonym of mair, various former officials in the Kingdom of Scotland. MAYPOP (15) [noun] A type of passionflower, purple in color (Passiflora incarnata). MAYVIN (14) MAZARD (18) MAZERS (17) [noun] The maple tree, or maple wood. | [noun] A large drinking bowl made from such wood; a mazer bowl. MAZIER (17) [adjective] Mazelike; like a maze. | [adjective] Not straight; zigzagging. MAZILY (20) MAZING (18) [verb] To amaze, astonish, bewilder | [verb] To daze, stupefy, or confuse MAZUMA (19) [noun] Cash, money. MBIRAS (10) [noun] A thumb piano, a musical instrument having a small sound box fitted with a row of tuned tabs that are plucked with the thumbs, originating among the Shona of southern Africa; any type of plucked lamellophone of the same type as the Shona instrument. MEADOW (12) [noun] A field or pasture; a piece of land covered or cultivated with grass, usually intended to be mown for hay. | [noun] Low land covered with coarse grass or rank herbage near rivers and in marshy places by the sea. MEAGER (9) [verb] To make lean. | [adjective] Having little flesh; lean; thin. | [adjective] Poor, deficient or inferior in amount, quality or extent MEAGRE (9) [noun] Argyrosomus regius, an edible fish of the family Sciaenidae. | [verb] To make lean. | [adjective] Having little flesh; lean; thin. MEALIE (8) [noun] An ear or kernel of maize; in plural as mass noun: maize, corn. MEANER (8) [adjective] Common; general. | [adjective] Of a common or low origin, grade, or quality; common; humble. | [adjective] Low in quality or degree; inferior; poor; shabby. MEANIE (8) [noun] A mean (unkind or miserly) person; a killjoy. | [noun] A villain. MEANLY (11) MEASLE (8) [noun] A leper. | [noun] A tapeworm larva. MEASLY (11) [adjective] Particularly of pigs or pork: infected with larval tapeworms or trichinae (parasitic roundworms). | [adjective] Of a person: infected with measles. | [adjective] Small (especially contemptibly small) in amount. MEATAL (8) MEATED (9) MEATUS (8) [noun] A tubular opening or passage in the body. MECCAS (12) MEDAKA (13) [noun] Oryzias latipes, a small Japanese ricefish, popular for use in aquariums. MEDALS (9) [noun] A stamped metal disc used as a personal ornament, a charm, or a religious object. | [noun] A stamped or cast metal object (usually a disc), particularly one awarded as a prize or reward. | [verb] To win a medal. MEDDLE (10) [verb] To interfere in or with; to concern oneself with unduly. | [verb] To interest or engage oneself; to have to do (with), in a good sense. | [verb] To mix (something) with some other substance; to commingle, combine, blend. MEDFLY (15) [noun] A small fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata, native to the Mediterranean. MEDIAD (10) MEDIAE (9) [noun] The middle layer of the wall of a blood vessel or lymph vessel which is composed of connective and muscular tissue. | [noun] A voiced stop consonant. | [noun] One of the major veins of the insect wing, between the radius and the cubitus MEDIAL (9) [noun] Any of various things that occur in the middle. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a mean or average. | [adjective] In or near the middle; not at either end. MEDIAN (9) [noun] A central vein or nerve, especially the median vein or median nerve running through the forearm and arm. | [noun] A line segment joining the vertex of triangle to the midpoint of the opposing side. | [noun] The number separating the higher half of a data sample, a population, or a probability distribution, from the lower half. The median of a finite list of numbers can be found by arranging all the observations from lowest value to highest value and picking the middle one (e.g., the median of {3, 3, 5, 9, 11} is 5). If there is an even number of observations, then there is no single middle value; the median is then usually defined to be the mean of the two middle values. MEDIAS (9) MEDICK (15) [noun] Any of various European and North African herbs, of the genus Medicago, several of which are grown for fodder etc. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to medicines; medical. MEDICO (11) [noun] A physician or medical doctor; sometimes also a medical student. MEDICS (11) [noun] A doctor. | [noun] A paramedic, someone with special training in first aid, especially in the military. | [noun] A medical student. MEDINA (9) [noun] The traditional, older or non-European area of a North African town. MEDIUM (11) [noun] (plural media or mediums) The chemistry of the surrounding environment, e.g. solid, liquid, gas, vacuum, or a specific substance such as a solvent. | [noun] (plural media or mediums) The materials or empty space through which signals, waves or forces pass. | [noun] (plural media or mediums) A format for communicating or presenting information. MEDIUS (9) MEDLAR (9) [noun] Mespilus germanica, common medlar (now often Crataegus germanica) | [noun] Any tree of the genus Mespilus, now often Crataegus sect. Mespilus, including many species now in other genera. | [noun] Any of several similar trees that bear similar fruit MEDLEY (12) [noun] Combat, fighting; a battle. | [noun] A collection or mixture of miscellaneous things. | [noun] A collection of related songs played or mixed together as a single piece. MEDUSA (9) [noun] A jellyfish; specifically , a non-polyp form of individual cnidarians, consisting of a gelatinous umbrella-shaped bell and trailing tentacles. MEEKER (12) [adjective] Humble, non-boastful, modest, meager, or self-effacing. | [adjective] Submissive, dispirited. | [verb] To break up and smooth soil with a harrow. MEEKLY (15) [adverb] In a meek manner; quietly and humbly. MEETER (8) MEETLY (11) MEGASS (9) MEGILP (11) [noun] A mixture of linseed oil with turpentine or mastic varnish, used as a thickener for oil paints but later discredited as a source of cracking and yellowing. MEGOHM (14) [noun] One million (106) ohms, abbreviated as MΩ. MEGRIM (11) [noun] A headache; a migraine. | [noun] A fancy, a whim, a caprice. | [noun] (in the plural) See megrims. | [noun] A type of European deep water flatfish, Lepidorhombus whiffiagonis; the whiff or sail-fluke. MEIKLE (12) MEINIE (8) MELDED (10) [verb] To combine multiple similar objects into one | [verb] In card games, especially of the rummy family, to announce or display a combination of cards. MELDER (9) MELEES (8) [noun] A battle fought at close range; hand-to-hand combat; brawling. | [noun] A noisy, confused or tumultuous fight, argument or scrap. | [noun] Any any confused, disorganised, disordered or chaotic situation. MELLED (9) MELLOW (11) [noun] A relaxed mood. | [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. MELODY (12) [noun] Tune; sequence of notes that makes up a musical phrase MELOID (9) MELONS (8) [noun] Any of various plants of the family Cucurbitaceae grown for food, generally not including the cucumber. | [noun] The fruit of such plants. | [noun] A light pinkish orange colour, like that of some melon flesh. MELTED (9) [verb] To change (or to be changed) from a solid state to a liquid state, usually by a gradual heat. | [verb] To dissolve, disperse, vanish. | [verb] To soften, as by a warming or kindly influence; to relax; to render gentle or susceptible to mild influences; sometimes, in a bad sense, to take away the firmness of; to weaken. MELTER (8) MELTON (8) [noun] A tough, short-napped material used for making overcoats. MEMBER (12) [noun] One who officially belongs to a group. | [noun] A part of a whole. | [noun] Part of an animal capable of performing a distinct office; an organ; a limb. | [verb] (obsolete outside dialectal) To remember. MEMOIR (10) [noun] An autobiography; a book describing the personal experiences of an author. | [noun] A biography; a book describing the experiences of a subject from personal knowledge of the subject or from sources with personal knowledge of the subject. | [noun] Any form of narrative describing the personal experiences of a writer. MEMORY (13) [noun] The ability of the brain to record information or impressions with the facility of recalling them later at will. | [noun] A record of a thing or an event stored and available for later use by the organism. | [noun] The part of a computer that stores variable executable code or data (RAM) or unalterable executable code or default data (ROM). MENACE (10) [noun] A perceived threat or danger. | [noun] The act of threatening. | [noun] An annoying and bothersome person or thing. | [verb] To make threats against (someone); to intimidate. MENADS (9) MENAGE (9) [noun] A household; a domestic situation. | [noun] A type of cooperative society whereby all members pay a regular sum of savings, or through which goods can be paid for in installments. | [noun] A group of people living together in a sexual relationship. MENDED (10) [verb] To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement. | [verb] To alter for the better; to set right; to reform; hence, to quicken; as, to mend one's manners or pace. | [verb] To help, to advance, to further; to add to. MENDER (9) MENHIR (11) [noun] A single tall standing stone as a monument, especially of prehistoric times. MENIAL (8) [noun] A servant, especially a domestic servant. | [noun] A person who has a subservient nature. | [adjective] Of or relating to work normally performed by a servant. MENINX (15) [noun] A membrane, especially one of the three membranes enclosing the brain and spinal cord in vertebrates MENSAE (8) MENSAL (8) MENSAS (8) MENSCH (13) [noun] A person (chiefly male) of strength, integrity and honor or compassion. | [noun] A gentleman. MENSED (9) MENSES (8) [noun] The discharge of blood mixed with pieces of cellular tissue from the uterus out through the vagina, which occurs roughly every month in uninseminated women; menstrual flow. MENTAL (8) [adjective] Of or relating to the mind or an intellectual process. | [adjective] Insane, mad, crazy. | [adjective] Enjoyable or fun, especially in a frenetic way. | [noun] A plate or scale covering the mentum or chin of a fish or reptile. MENTOR (8) [noun] A wise and trusted counselor or teacher | [verb] To act as someone's mentor MENTUM (10) [noun] The chin. | [noun] A chin-like projection below the mouth of certain mollusks. | [noun] The central part of the labium in insects. MEOUED (9) MEOWED (12) [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MERCER (10) [noun] A merchant dealing in fabrics and textiles, especially silks and other fine cloths. MERDES (9) MERELY (11) [adverb] Wholly, entirely. | [adverb] (focus) Without any other reason etc.; only, just, and nothing more. MEREST (8) [adjective] Pure, unalloyed . | [adjective] Nothing less than; complete, downright . | [adjective] Just, only; no more than , pure and simple, neither more nor better than might be expected. MERGED (10) [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To blend gradually into something else. MERGER (9) [noun] One that merges. | [noun] The act or process of merging two or more parts into a single unit. | [noun] The legal union of two or more corporations into a single entity, typically assets and liabilities being assumed by the buying party. MERGES (9) [noun] The joining together of multiple sources. | [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To combine into a whole. MERINO (8) [noun] A sheep of a Spanish breed with long, fine hair. | [noun] The wool of this sheep. | [noun] The fabric made from this wool (or from any similar yarn). MERITS (8) [noun] A claim to commendation or a reward. | [noun] A mark or token of approbation or to recognize excellence. | [noun] Something deserving or worthy of positive recognition or reward. MERLES (8) [noun] The Eurasian blackbird, Turdus merula. | [noun] Any blackbird. MERLIN (8) [noun] A small falcon, Falco columbarius, that breeds in northern North America, Europe, and Asia. | [noun] A cytoskeletal protein active in the suppression of tumors. MERLON (8) [noun] Any of the upright projections between the embrasures of a battlement, originally for archers to shield behind while shooting arrows over the embrasures, or through loopholes in the merlons. | [noun] A small falcon, Falco columbarius, that breeds in northern North America, Europe, and Asia. MERLOT (8) [noun] A dark-blue variety of wine grape. | [noun] A dry red wine of a certain French type, made from Merlot grapes. MERMAN (10) [noun] A legendary creature, human male from the waist up, fishlike from the waist down. MERMEN (10) [noun] A legendary creature, human male from the waist up, fishlike from the waist down. MESCAL (10) [noun] A Mexican alcoholic drink distilled from the fermented juice of the agave. | [noun] The peyote cactus. MESHED (12) [verb] To connect together by interlocking, as gears do. | [verb] (by extension) To fit in; to come together harmoniously. | [verb] To catch in a mesh. MESHES (11) [noun] A structure made of connected strands of metal, fiber, or other flexible/ductile material, with evenly spaced openings between them. | [noun] The opening or space enclosed by the threads of a net between knot and knot, or the threads enclosing such a space. | [noun] The engagement of the teeth of wheels, or of a wheel and rack. MESIAL (8) [adjective] Pertaining to the midline of the body. | [adjective] Facing the side of a tooth which faces the middle of the jaw. MESIAN (8) MESNES (8) MESONS (8) [noun] (rare outside entomology) The mesial plane dividing the body into similar right and left halves. | [noun] A member of a group of subatomic particles having a mass intermediate between electrons and protons. (The most easily detected mesons fit this definition.) | [noun] (now specifically) An elementary particle that is composed of a quark and an antiquark, such as a kaon or pion. (Mesons composed of rarer quarks are much heavier.) MESSAN (8) MESSED (9) [verb] (transitive, often used with "up") To make untidy or dirty. | [verb] (transitive, often used with "up") To throw into disorder or to ruin. | [verb] To interfere. MESSES (8) [noun] A disagreeable mixture or confusion of things; hence, a situation resulting from blundering or from misunderstanding; disorder. | [noun] A large quantity or number. | [noun] Excrement. MESTEE (8) METAGE (9) [noun] Measurement, especially of coal. | [noun] A fee paid for a measurement. METALS (8) [noun] (heading) Chemical elements or alloys, and the mines where their ores come from. | [noun] A light tincture used in a coat of arms, specifically argent and or. | [noun] Molten glass that is to be blown or moulded to form objects. METATE (8) [noun] A flat stone with a slightly concave surface, used with another stone (a mano) for grinding maize or other grains. METEOR (8) [noun] A fast-moving streak of light in the night sky caused by the entry of extraterrestrial matter into the earth's atmosphere: A shooting star or falling star. | [noun] Any atmospheric phenomenon. (Thus the derivation of meteorology.) These were sometimes classified as aerial or airy meteors (winds), aqueous or watery meteors (hydrometeors: clouds, rain, snow, hail, dew, frost), luminous meteors (rainbows and aurora), and igneous or fiery meteors (lightning and shooting stars). | [noun] A prop similar to poi balls, in that it is twirled at the end of a cord or cable. METEPA (10) METERS (8) [noun] (always meter) A device that measures things. | [noun] (always meter) A parking meter or similar device for collecting payment. | [noun] (always meter) One who metes or measures. METHOD (12) [noun] A process by which a task is completed; a way of doing something (followed by the adposition of, to or for before the purpose of the process): | [noun] (often "the method") A technique for acting based on the ideas articulated by Constantin Stanislavski and focusing on authentically experiencing the inner life of the character being portrayed. | [noun] A subroutine or function belonging to a class or object, synonym of member function | [noun] A trick where the boarder grabs the heel edge of the board with their back hand, between their feet, and then pulls the board towards their back, while arching their back and bending knees. METHYL (14) [noun] The univalent hydrocarbon radical, CH3-, formally derived from methane by the loss of a hydrogen atom; a compound or part of a compound formed by the attachment of such a radical. METIER (8) [noun] Any activity that is pursued as a trade or profession; a calling. | [noun] An activity to which a person is particularly suited; a forte. | [noun] An outstanding or beneficial feature. METING (9) [verb] To measure. | [verb] (usually with “out”) To dispense, measure (out), allot (especially punishment, reward etc.). | [noun] The act of one who metes; a distribution or handing out. METOPE (10) [noun] The architectural element between two triglyphs in a Doric frieze. METRED (9) METRES (8) [verb] To measure with a metering device. | [verb] To imprint a postage mark with a postage meter. | [verb] To regulate the flow of or to deliver in regulated amounts (usually of fluids but sometimes of other things such as anticipation or breath). METRIC (10) [noun] A measure for something; a means of deriving a quantitative measurement or approximation for otherwise qualitative phenomena (especially used in engineering). | [noun] A function for the measurement of the "distance" between two points in some metric space: it is a real-valued function d(x,y) between points x and y satisfying the following properties: (1) "non-negativity": d(x,y) \ge 0 , (2) "identity of indiscernibles": d(x,y) = 0 \mbox{ iff } x=y , (2) "symmetry": d(x,y) = d(y,x) , and (3) "triangle inequality": d(x,y) \le d(x,z) + d(z,y) . | [noun] A metric tensor. METROS (8) [noun] An underground railway. | [noun] A train that runs on such an underground railway. | [noun] An urban rapid transit light railway METTLE (8) [noun] A quality of endurance and courage. | [noun] Good temperament and character. | [noun] Metal; a metallic substance. METUMP (12) MEWING (12) [verb] To shut away, confine, lock up. | [verb] (of a bird) To moult. | [verb] (of a bird) To cause to moult. MEWLED (12) [verb] To cry weakly with a soft, high-pitched sound; to whimper; to whine. MEWLER (11) MEZCAL (19) [noun] A Mexican alcoholic drink distilled from the fermented juice of the agave. | [noun] The peyote cactus. MEZUZA (26) [noun] A piece of parchment inscribed with specific Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21) and attached in a case to the doorpost of a house, in accordance with the mitzvah (Biblical commandment as interpreted in Jewish law) to "write the words of God on the gates and doorposts of your house" (Deuteronomy 6:9). MEZZOS (26) [noun] Mezzo-soprano MIAOUS (8) MIAOWS (11) [noun] The cry of a cat. | [noun] The drug mephedrone. | [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MIASMA (10) [noun] A noxious atmosphere or influence. | [noun] A noxious atmosphere or emanation once thought to originate from swamps and waste, and to cause disease. MIASMS (10) [noun] An unhealthy vapor or atmosphere; a miasma. | [noun] A predisposition to a particular disease, which interferes with subsequent treatment of it. MIAULS (8) [noun] The cry of a cat. MICELL (10) MICHED (14) MICHES (13) MICKEY (17) [noun] A small bottle of liquor, holding 375 ml or 13 oz., typically shaped to fit in one's pocket. | [noun] A Mickey Finn; a beverage, usually alcoholic, that has been drugged. | [noun] American depression era term for a potato as in a "roasted mickey". MICKLE (14) [noun] A great amount. | [noun] (originally erroneous) A small amount. | [noun] Great or important people as a class. MICRON (10) [noun] The thousandth part of one millimeter; the millionth part of a meter. | [noun] A very tiny amount. | [noun] A semicircular diacritical mark (˘) placed above a vowel, commonly used to mark its quantity as short. MICROS (10) [noun] (gaming slang) micromanagement | [noun] A computer designed around a microprocessor, smaller than a minicomputer or a mainframe. | [noun] The field of economics that deals with small-scale economic activities such as those of an individual or company. MIDAIR (9) [noun] A collision between two or more aerospace vehicles in flight. | [adjective] In the act of flight; airborne. MIDDAY (13) [noun] Noon; twelve o'clock during the day MIDDEN (10) [noun] A dungheap. | [noun] A refuse heap usually near a dwelling. | [noun] A prehistoric pile of bones and shells. MIDDLE (10) [noun] A centre, midpoint. | [noun] The part between the beginning and the end. | [noun] The middle stump. MIDGES (10) [noun] Any of various small two-winged flies, for example, from the family Chironomidae or non-biting midges, the family Chaoboridae or phantom midges, and the family Ceratopogonidae or biting midges, all belonging to the order Diptera | [noun] Any bait or lure designed to resemble a midge MIDGET (10) [noun] A little sandfly. | [noun] Any small swarming insect similar to the mosquito; a midge. | [noun] (sometimes offensive) A normally proportioned person with small stature, usually defined as reaching an adult height less than 4'10". MIDGUT (10) [noun] The central loop of the alimentary canal of an embryo between the foregut and the hindgut. MIDLEG (10) MIDRIB (11) [noun] The strengthened vein down the middle of a flower petal or simple leaf or leaflet. | [noun] The continuation of the petiole of a pinnately compound leaf around which the leaflets attach. MIDSTS (9) [noun] A place in the middle of something; may be used of a literal or metaphorical location. MIDWAY (15) [noun] The middle; the midst. | [noun] A middle way or manner; a mean or middle course between extremes. | [noun] The part of a fair or circus where rides, entertainments, and booths are concentrated. MIFFED (15) [verb] (usually used in the passive) To offend slightly. | [verb] To become slightly offended. | [adjective] Somewhat indignant, irritated, angry, put out or annoyed. MIGGLE (10) MIGHTS (12) MIGHTY (15) [noun] A warrior of great strength and courage. | [adjective] Very strong; possessing might. | [adjective] Very heavy and powerful. MIGNON (9) MIHRAB (13) [noun] A niche in a mosque that indicates the qibla (direction of Mecca), and into which the imam prays | [noun] A design in a Muslim prayer mat with the same function MIKADO (13) [noun] (history) A former title of the emperors of Japan during a certain period. | [noun] Any emperor of Japan | [noun] A game of skill, in which identically shaped (but differently colored and valued) wooden sticks must be removed from a pile without disturbing the remaining stack MIKING (13) [verb] To microphone; to place one or more microphones (mikes) on. | [verb] To measure using a micrometer. MIKRON (12) MIKVAH (18) [noun] A ritual bath in which various Jewish purifications are performed. MIKVEH (18) [noun] A ritual bath in which various Jewish purifications are performed. MILADI (9) MILADY (12) [noun] An English noblewoman or gentlewoman; the form of address to such a person; a lady. MILAGE (9) [noun] The total distance travelled in miles or in air miles. | [noun] The number of miles travelled by a vehicle on a certain volume of fuel. | [noun] An allowance for travel expenses at a specified rate per mile. MILDEN (9) MILDER (9) [adjective] Gentle and not easily angered. | [adjective] (of a rule or punishment) Of only moderate severity; not strict. | [adjective] Not overly felt or seriously intended. MILDEW (12) [noun] A growth of minute powdery or webby fungi, whitish or of different colors, found on various diseased or decaying substances. | [verb] To taint with mildew. | [verb] To become tainted with mildew. MILDLY (12) [adverb] In a mild manner. | [adverb] To a mild degree; slightly. MILERS (8) [noun] (often in combination) An athlete or a horse who specializes in running races of one mile, or a specified number of miles. | [noun] (in combination) A race whose length is the specified number of miles. MILIEU (8) [noun] Medium. | [noun] Social setting or environment. MILIUM (10) [noun] A keratin-filled cyst that can appear just under the epidermis or on the roof of the mouth. MILKED (13) [verb] To express milk from (a mammal, especially a cow). | [verb] To draw (milk) from the breasts or udder. | [verb] To express any liquid (from any creature). MILKER (12) [noun] An animal, such as a dairy cow, kept for the milk it produces. | [noun] A person who milks. | [noun] A milking machine. MILLED (9) [verb] To grind or otherwise process in a mill or other machine. | [verb] To shape, polish, dress or finish using a machine. | [verb] To engrave one or more grooves or a pattern around the edge of (a cylindrical object such as a coin). MILLER (8) [noun] A person who owns or operates a mill, especially a flour mill. | [noun] A milling machine. | [noun] Any of several moths that have powdery wings, especially Acronicta leporina and moths of the genus Agrotis. MILLES (8) MILLET (8) [noun] Any of a group of various types of grass or its grains used as food, widely cultivated in the developing world. | [noun] A semi-autonomous confessional community under the Ottoman Empire, especially a non-Muslim one. MILNEB (10) MILORD (9) [noun] An English nobleman, especially one traveling Europe in grand style; a wealthy British gentleman. | [noun] My Lord (used to address peers temporal, judges, etc). MILPAS (10) MILTED (9) MILTER (8) [noun] A male fish during breeding season. MIMBAR (12) [noun] A pulpit in a mosque from which the leader of prayers delivers the khutbah. MIMEOS (10) [noun] A mimeograph. | [noun] An unpublished academic paper. MIMERS (10) MIMICS (12) [noun] A person who practices mimicry, or mime. | [noun] An imitation. | [verb] To imitate, especially in order to ridicule. MIMING (11) [verb] To mimic. | [verb] To act without words. | [verb] To represent an action or object through gesture, without the use of sound. MIMOSA (10) [noun] A plant belonging to the genus Mimosa usually found in tropical climates, their leaves are usually prickly and sensitive to touch or light, and have small white or pink flowers. | [noun] Albizia species (silk tree, pink siris). | [noun] Acacia species. MINCED (11) [adjective] Finely chopped. | [adjective] Minutely subdivided. | [adjective] Weakened, extenuated. | [verb] To make less; make small. MINCER (10) MINCES (10) [noun] Finely chopped meat. | [noun] Finely chopped mixed fruit used in Christmas pies; mincemeat. | [noun] An affected (often dainty or short and precise) gait. MINDED (10) [verb] (originally and chiefly in negative or interrogative constructions) To dislike, to object to; to be bothered by. | [verb] To look after, to take care of, especially for a short period of time. | [verb] (chiefly in the imperative) To make sure, to take care (that). MINDER (9) [noun] One who minds, tends, or watches something such as a child, a machine, or cattle; a keeper | [noun] A personal bodyguard. | [noun] A guide assigned by the authorities to foreign visitors so as to exercise control over their contacts with the populace. MINERS (8) [noun] A person who works in a mine. | [noun] An operator of ordnance mines and similar explosives. | [noun] Any bird of one of four species of Australian endemic honeyeaters in the genus Manorina. MINGLE (9) [noun] A mixture. | [noun] The act of informally meeting numerous people in a group | [verb] To intermix; to combine or join, as an individual or part, with other parts, but commonly so as to be distinguishable in the product MINIFY (14) MINIMA (10) [noun] The lowest limit. | [noun] The smallest amount. | [noun] A period of minimum brightness or energy intensity (of a star). MINIMS (10) [noun] A half note, drawn as a semibreve with a stem. | [noun] A unit of volume, in the Imperial and U.S. customary systems, 1/60 fluid drachm. Approximately equal to 1 drop, 62 μL or 0.9 grain (weight) of water. | [noun] A short vertical stroke used in handwriting. MINING (9) [verb] To remove (ore) from the ground. | [verb] To dig into, for ore or metal. | [verb] To sow mines (the explosive devices) in (an area). MINION (8) [noun] The lowest limit. | [noun] The smallest amount. | [noun] A period of minimum brightness or energy intensity (of a star). MINISH (11) MINIUM (10) MINKES (12) [noun] A minke whale, one of two species of baleen whales within Balaenoptera, the northern-dwelling species of which is often seen in coastal waters. MINNOW (11) [noun] A small freshwater fish of the carp family, Phoxinus phoxinus. | [noun] Any small fish. | [noun] A relatively small and insignificant person or organization. MINORS (8) [noun] A person who is below the age of majority, consent, criminal responsibility or other adult responsibilities and accountabilities. | [noun] A subject area of secondary concentration of a student at a college or university, or the student who has chosen such a secondary concentration. | [noun] Determinant of a square submatrix MINTED (9) [verb] To reproduce (coins), usually en masse, under licence. | [verb] To invent; to forge; to fabricate; to fashion. | [verb] (provincial) To try, attempt; take aim. MINTER (8) [noun] One who mints | [noun] An item in mint condition (especially a motor car) MINUET (8) [noun] A slow graceful dance consisting of a coupé, a high step, and a balance. | [noun] A tune or air to regulate the movements of the minuet dance: it has the dance form, and is commonly in 3/4, sometimes 3/8, measure. | [noun] A complete short musical composition inspired by and conforming to many formal characteristics of the traditional musical accompaniment to the dance of same name. MINUTE (8) [noun] A unit of time equal to sixty seconds (one-sixtieth of an hour). | [noun] A short but unspecified time period. | [noun] A unit of angle equal to one-sixtieth of a degree. | [adjective] Very small. MINXES (15) [noun] A mink. MINYAN (11) [noun] The minimum number of ten (male) adult Jews required for a communal religious service. | [noun] (by extension) A Jewish prayer service. | [noun] A member of the Minyan race of Greek mythology MIOSES (8) MIOSIS (8) [noun] Contraction of the pupil of the eye. MIOTIC (10) MIRAGE (9) [noun] An optical phenomenon in which light is refracted through a layer of hot air close to the ground, giving the appearance of there being refuge in the distance. | [noun] An illusion. | [verb] To cause to appear as or like a mirage. MIRIER (8) MIRING (9) [verb] To cause or permit to become stuck in mud; to plunge or fix in mud. | [verb] To sink into mud. | [verb] To weigh down. MIRKER (12) MIRROR (8) [noun] A smooth surface, usually made of glass with reflective material painted on the underside, that reflects light so as to give an image of what is in front of it. | [noun] An object, person, or event that reflects or gives a picture of another. | [noun] A disk, website or other resource that contains replicated data. MIRTHS (11) MIRZAS (17) MISACT (10) MISADD (10) MISAIM (10) MISATE (8) MISCUE (10) [noun] In a cue sport, an error in hitting the ball with the cue. | [noun] The act of missing one's cue or of responding to a cue intended for another actor. | [noun] A miss of the object one intended to hit. MISCUT (10) MISDID (10) MISEAT (8) MISERS (8) [noun] A person who hoards money rather than spending it; one who is cheap or extremely parsimonious. | [noun] A kind of earth auger, typically large-bored and often hand-operated. MISERY (11) [noun] Great unhappiness; extreme pain of body or mind; wretchedness; distress; woe. | [noun] A bodily ache or pain. | [noun] Cause of misery; calamity; misfortune. MISFIT (11) [noun] An ill-fitting garment. | [noun] A failure to fit well; unsuitability, disparity. | [noun] A badly adjusted person; someone unsuitable or set apart because of their habits, behaviour etc. MISHAP (13) [noun] An accident, mistake, or problem. | [noun] Evil accident; ill luck; misfortune; mischance. | [verb] To happen through misfortune; to mishappen. MISHIT (11) [noun] An incorrect or bad hit. | [verb] To incorrectly or badly hit. MISKAL (12) MISLAY (11) [verb] To leave or lay something in the wrong place and then forget where one put it. MISLED (9) [verb] To lead astray, in a false direction. | [verb] To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. | [verb] To deceptively trick into something wrong. | [verb] To rain in fine drops; to mizzle. MISLIE (8) MISLIT (8) MISMET (10) MISPEN (10) MISSAL (8) [noun] A prayer book | [noun] A book containing the prayers and responses needed when celebrating the Roman Catholic Mass throughout the year MISSAY (11) MISSED (9) [verb] To fail to hit. | [verb] To fail to achieve or attain. | [verb] To avoid; to escape. MISSEL (8) MISSES (8) [noun] A failure to hit. | [noun] A failure to obtain or accomplish. | [noun] An act of avoidance (used with the verb give). MISSET (8) MISSIS (8) [noun] Wife or girlfriend. | [noun] Term of address for a woman. MISSUS (8) [noun] Wife or girlfriend. | [noun] Term of address for a woman. MISTED (9) [verb] To form mist. | [verb] To spray fine droplets on, particularly of water. | [verb] To cover with a mist. MISTER (8) [noun] A title conferred on an adult male, usually when the name is unknown. Also used as a term of address, often by a parent to a young child. | [verb] To address by the title of "mister". | [noun] Someone's business or function; an occupation, employment, trade. | [noun] A device that makes or sprays mist. MISUSE (8) [noun] An incorrect, improper or unlawful use of something. | [verb] To use (something) incorrectly. | [verb] To abuse or mistreat (something or someone). MITERS (8) [verb] To adorn with a mitre. | [verb] To unite at an angle of 45°. MITHER (11) [verb] To make an unnecessary fuss, moan, bother. | [verb] To pester or irritate someone. Usually directed at children. | [noun] Mother MITIER (8) MITRAL (8) [adjective] Pertaining to a mitre; resembling a mitre. | [adjective] Pertaining to the mitral valve. MITRED (9) [adjective] Relating to an abbot's or bishop's mitre; wearing a mitre. | [adjective] Having a mitre joint. MITRES (8) [noun] A covering for the head, worn on solemn occasions by church dignitaries, which has been made in many forms, mostly recently a tall cap with two points or peaks. | [noun] The surface forming the bevelled end or edge of a piece where a miter joint is made; also, a joint formed or a junction effected by two beveled ends or edges; a miter joint. | [noun] A 13th-century coin minted in Europe which circulated in Ireland as a debased counterfeit sterling penny, outlawed under Edward I. MITTEN (8) [noun] A type of glove or garment that covers a hand with a separate sheath for the thumb, but not for other fingers, which are either enclosed in a single section or left uncovered. | [noun] A cat's or dog's paw that is a different colour from the main body. | [noun] (as "the mitten") A romantic rejection; dismissal of a lover. MIXERS (15) [noun] One who, or a device that, mixes or merges things together. | [noun] One who mixes or socializes. | [noun] A machine outfitted with (typically blunt) blades with which it mixes or beats ingredients in a bowl below. MIXING (16) [verb] To stir together. | [verb] To combine (items from two or more sources normally kept separate). | [verb] To form by mingling; to produce by the stirring together of ingredients; to concoct from different parts. MIXUPS (17) [noun] A case of confusion. MIZENS (17) [noun] Mizzenmast. | [noun] A fore-and-aft sail set on a mizzenmast. MIZZEN (26) [noun] Mizzenmast. | [noun] A fore-and-aft sail set on a mizzenmast. | [adjective] Hindmost; nearest the stern. MIZZLE (26) [noun] Misty rain or drizzle. | [verb] To rain in very fine drops. | [verb] To abscond, scram, flee. MIZZLY (29) MOANED (9) [verb] To complain about; to bemoan, to bewail; to mourn. | [verb] To grieve. | [verb] To distress (someone); to sadden. MOANER (8) MOATED (9) [adjective] Surrounded with a moat MOBBED (13) [verb] To crowd around (someone), sometimes with hostility. | [verb] To crowd into or around a place. | [verb] To wrap up in, or cover with, a cowl. MOBBER (12) MOBCAP (14) [noun] A plain cap or headdress for women or girls, especially one tied under the chin by a very broad band. | [noun] (modern-day use) A disposable head covering with an elasticated band, worn for cleanliness in industrial settings. MOBILE (10) [noun] A kinetic sculpture or decorative arrangement made of items hanging so that they can move independently from each other. | [noun] The internet accessed via mobile devices. | [noun] Something that can move. MOBLED (11) MOCHAS (13) [noun] A coffee drink with chocolate syrup added, or a serving thereof; a caffè mocha. | [noun] A coffee and chocolate mixed flavour. | [noun] A dark brown colour, like that of mocha coffee. MOCKED (15) [verb] To mimic, to simulate. | [verb] To create an artistic representation of. | [verb] To make fun of by mimicking, to taunt. MOCKER (14) [noun] A person who mocks. | [noun] A mockingbird. | [noun] A deceiver; an impostor. MOCKUP (16) [noun] A prototype, usually low-fidelity, such as paper illustrations, screenshots, or simple configurations of screens with limited interaction. MODELS (9) [noun] A person who serves as a subject for artwork or fashion, usually in the medium of photography but also for painting or drawing. | [noun] A person, usually an attractive female, hired to show items or goods to the public, such as items given away as prizes on a TV game show. | [noun] A representation of a physical object, usually in miniature. MODEMS (11) [noun] A device that encodes digital computer signals into analog/analogue telephone signals and vice versa and allows computers to communicate over a phone line. | [verb] To transmit by modem. MODERN (9) [noun] Someone who lives in modern times. | [adjective] Pertaining to a current or recent time and style; not ancient. | [adjective] (history) Pertaining to the modern period (c.1800 to contemporary times), particularly in academic historiography. MODEST (9) [adjective] Not bragging or boasting about oneself or one's achievements; unpretentious, humble. | [adjective] Small, moderate in size. | [adjective] Pure and delicate from a sense of propriety. MODICA (11) MODIFY (15) [verb] To change part of. | [verb] To be or become modified. | [verb] To set bounds to; to moderate. MODISH (12) [adjective] Conforming with fashion or style. | [adjective] In the current mode. MODULE (9) [noun] A self-contained component of a system, often interchangeable, which has a well-defined interface to the other components. | [noun] A standard unit of measure used for determining the proportions of a building. | [noun] A section of a program; a subroutine or group of subroutines. MODULI (9) [noun] The base with respect to which a congruence is computed. | [noun] The absolute value of a complex number. | [noun] A coefficient that expresses how much of a certain property is possessed by a certain substance. MODULO (9) [noun] The operation or function that returns the remainder of one number divided by another. | [preposition] Given a specified modulus of. | [preposition] Except for differences accounted for by. MOGGED (11) MOGGIE (10) [noun] A young cow or bull. | [noun] Leather made of the skin of the calf; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding. | [noun] A young deer, elephant, seal, whale or giraffe (also used of some other animals). MOGULS (9) [noun] A rich or powerful person; a magnate. | [noun] A hump or bump on a skiing piste. | [noun] A larger-sized (39 mm diameter) screw base used for large, high-power light bulbs, known as mogul (screw) base light bulbs. MOHAIR (11) [noun] Yarn or fabric made from the hair of the angora goat, often as mixed with cotton or other materials. | [noun] The long, fine hair of the Angora goat. | [noun] An Angora goat. MOHELS (11) [noun] The person who performs the circumcision in a Jewish bris. MOHURS (11) MOIETY (11) [noun] A half. | [noun] A share or portion, especially a smaller share. | [noun] Each descent group in a culture which is divided exactly into two descent groups. MOILED (9) [verb] To toil, to work hard. | [verb] To churn continually; to swirl. | [verb] To defile or dirty. MOILER (8) MOIRAI (8) MOIRES (8) [noun] Originally, a fine textile fabric made of the hair of an Asiatic goat. | [noun] Any textile fabric to which a watered appearance is given. MOJOES (15) MOLARS (8) [noun] A back tooth having a broad surface used for grinding one's food. | [noun] A unit of concentration equal to one mole per litre. MOLDED (10) [verb] To shape in or on a mold; to form into a particular shape; to give shape to. | [verb] To guide or determine the growth or development of; influence | [verb] To fit closely by following the contours of. MOLDER (9) [noun] One who molds something into shape. | [noun] A person who makes molds. | [noun] A tool for making molds. MOLEST (8) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLIES (8) [noun] A magic herb or plant used by Odysseus to overcome Circe. | [noun] Any plant associated with the mythological moly, especially the European allium, Allium moly. MOLINE (8) [noun] The crossed iron that supports the upper millstone by resting on the spindle; a millrind. MOLLAH (11) MOLLIE (8) [noun] Any of many New World fish of the genus Poecilia, formerly called Mollienesia. | [noun] A Molotov cocktail. MOLOCH (13) [noun] Moloch horridus, an Australian lizard thought to be the sole member of the genus Moloch. MOLTED (9) [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. MOLTEN (8) [verb] To change (or to be changed) from a solid state to a liquid state, usually by a gradual heat. | [verb] To dissolve, disperse, vanish. | [verb] To soften, as by a warming or kindly influence; to relax; to render gentle or susceptible to mild influences; sometimes, in a bad sense, to take away the firmness of; to weaken. MOLTER (8) MOMENT (10) [noun] A brief, unspecified amount of time. | [noun] The smallest portion of time; an instant. | [noun] Weight or importance. MOMISM (12) [noun] Finding fault; carping. | [noun] Excessive attachment to one’s mother. | [noun] An utterance, piece of advice, etc. from one's mother. MOMMAS (12) [noun] Mother | [noun] A voluptuous woman. | [noun] One's wife or girlfriend. MOMSER (10) MOMZER (19) MONADS (9) [noun] An ultimate atom, or simple, unextended point; something ultimate and indivisible. | [noun] A single individual (such as a pollen grain) that is free from others, not united in a group. | [noun] A monoid object in the category of endofunctors of a fixed category. MONDES (9) MONDOS (9) MONEYS (11) [noun] A legally or socially binding conceptual contract of entitlement to wealth, void of intrinsic value, payable for all debts and taxes, and regulated in supply. | [noun] A generally accepted means of exchange and measure of value. | [noun] A currency maintained by a state or other entity which can guarantee its value (such as a monetary union). MONGER (9) [noun] (chiefly in combination) A dealer in a specific commodity. | [noun] (in combination) A person promoting something undesirable. | [noun] A small sea vessel. MONGOE (9) MONGOL (9) [noun] A person from Mongolia; a Mongolian. | [noun] A member of any of the various Mongol ethnic groups living in The Mongolian People's Republic, the (former) USSR, Tibet and Nepal. | [noun] (usually mongol) A person with Down's syndrome. MONGOS (9) MONGST (9) MONIED (9) [adjective] Affluent; rich | [adjective] Paid for; funded MONIES (8) [noun] A legally or socially binding conceptual contract of entitlement to wealth, void of intrinsic value, payable for all debts and taxes, and regulated in supply. | [noun] A generally accepted means of exchange and measure of value. | [noun] A currency maintained by a state or other entity which can guarantee its value (such as a monetary union). MONISH (11) MONISM (10) [noun] The doctrine of the oneness and unity of reality, despite the appearance of diversity in the world. MONIST (8) MONKEY (15) [noun] Any member of the clade Simiiformes not also of the clade Hominoidea containing humans and apes, from which they are usually, but not universally, distinguished by smaller size, a tail, and cheek pouches. | [noun] Any nonhuman simian primate, including apes. | [noun] A mischievous child. MONODY (12) [noun] An ode, as in Greek drama, for a single voice, often specifically a mournful song or dirge. | [noun] Any poem mourning the death of someone; an elegy. | [noun] A monotonous or mournful noise. MONTES (8) [noun] One of the fleshy areas at the base of the fingers; a mount. | [noun] The pubic mound or mons pubis. In human anatomy or in mammals in general, the mons pubis (Latin for "pubic mound"), also known as the mons veneris (Latin, mound of Venus) or simply the mons, is the adipose tissue lying above the pubic bone of adult females, anterior to the pubic symphysis. The mons pubis forms the anterior portion of the vulva. | [noun] A mountain or extinct volcano on a planet or a moon. MONTHS (11) [noun] A period into which a year is divided, historically based on the phases of the moon. | [noun] A period of 30 days, 31 days, or some alternation thereof. | [noun] (in the plural) A woman's period; menstrual discharge. MOOING (9) [verb] Of a cow or bull, to make its characteristic lowing sound. | [noun] The action of the verb moo; a mooing sound. | [adjective] (of a steak) very rare MOOLAH (11) [noun] A religious scholar and teacher of sharia law. | [noun] Money, cash. MOOLAS (8) MOOLEY (11) MOONED (9) [verb] To display one's buttocks to, typically as a jest, insult, or protest. | [verb] (usually followed by over or after) To fuss over something adoringly; to be infatuated with someone. | [verb] To spend time idly, absent-mindedly. MOORED (9) [verb] To cast anchor or become fastened. | [verb] To fix or secure (e.g. a vessel) in a particular place by casting anchor, or by fastening with ropes, cables or chains or the like | [verb] To secure or fix firmly. MOOTED (9) [verb] To bring up as a subject for debate, to propose. | [verb] To discuss or debate. | [verb] To make or declare irrelevant. MOOTER (8) MOPEDS (11) [noun] A lightweight, two-wheeled vehicle equipped with a small motor and pedals, designed to go no faster than some specified speed limit. MOPERS (10) MOPERY (13) [noun] Violation of an imaginary or trivial law MOPIER (10) MOPING (11) [verb] To carry oneself in a depressed, lackadaisical manner; to give oneself up to low spirits; to pout, sulk. | [verb] To make spiritless and stupid. | [noun] The act of one who mopes. MOPISH (13) MOPOKE (14) [noun] A morepork. MOPPED (13) [verb] To rub, scrub, clean or wipe with a mop, or as if with a mop. | [verb] To make a wry expression with the mouth. MOPPER (12) MOPPET (12) [noun] A child. Often used lovingly or in an affectionate way. | [noun] A rag baby; a puppet made of cloth. | [noun] A long-haired pet dog. MORALE (8) [noun] The capacity of people to maintain belief in an institution or a goal, or even in oneself and others. MORALS (8) [noun] (of a narrative) The ethical significance or practical lesson. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Moral practices or teachings: modes of conduct. | [noun] A morality play. MORASS (8) [noun] A tract of soft, wet ground; a marsh; a fen. | [noun] Anything that entraps or makes progress difficult. MORAYS (11) [noun] Any of the large cosmopolitan carnivorous eels of the family Muraenidae. MORBID (11) [adjective] Of, or relating to disease. | [adjective] (by extension) Taking an interest in unhealthy or unwholesome subjects such as death, decay, disease. | [adjective] Suggesting the horror of death; macabre or ghoulish MOREEN (8) [noun] A thick woollen fabric, watered or with embossed figures, used in upholstery, for curtains, etc. MORELS (8) [noun] Any of several edible mushrooms, especially the common morel or yellow morel. | [noun] Any of several fungi in the genus Morchella, the upper part of which is covered with a reticulated and pitted hymenium. | [noun] A variety of cultivated cherry, Prunus cerasus 'austera', having a dark skin MORGAN (9) [noun] A unit for expressing the relative distance between genes on a chromosome. MORGEN (9) [noun] A unit of measurement of land in the Netherlands and the Dutch colonies and parts of the United States, where it was equivalent to about two acres; and in Denmark, Norway, and Germany, where it was equivalent to about two-thirds of an acre. Now used informally in Germany to mean one quarter of a hectare. MORGUE (9) [noun] A supercilious or haughty attitude; arrogance. | [noun] A building or room where dead bodies are kept before their proper burial or cremation, particularly in legal and law enforcement contexts. | [noun] The archive and background information division of a newspaper. MORION (8) [noun] A kind of open brimmed helmet used by footsoldiers in the 16th and 17th centuries, having no visor or bever. | [noun] A brown or black variety of quartz. MORONS (8) [noun] A stupid person; an idiot; a fool. | [noun] A person of mild mental subnormality in the former classification of mental retardation, having an intelligence quotient of 50–70. MOROSE (8) [adjective] Sullen, gloomy; showing a brooding ill humour. MORPHO (13) [noun] Any of the genus Morpho of large tropical American butterflies. MORPHS (13) [noun] (grammar) A physical form representing some morpheme in language. It is a recurrent distinctive sound or sequence of sounds. | [noun] An allomorph: one of a set of realizations that a morpheme can have in different contexts. | [noun] Local variety of a species, distinguishable from other populations of the species by morphology or behaviour. MORRIS (8) MORROS (8) MORROW (11) [noun] The next or following day. | [noun] Morning. | [verb] To dawn MORSEL (8) [noun] A small fragment or share of something, commonly applied to food. | [noun] A mouthful of food. | [noun] A very small amount. MORTAL (8) [noun] A human; someone susceptible to death. | [adjective] Susceptible to death by aging, sickness, injury, or wound; not immortal. | [adjective] Causing death; deadly, fatal, killing, lethal (now only of wounds, injuries etc.). MORTAR (8) [noun] A mixture of lime or cement, sand and water used for bonding building blocks. | [noun] A muzzle-loading, indirect fire weapon with a tube length of 10 to 20 calibers and designed to lob shells at very steep trajectories. | [noun] A hollow vessel used to pound, crush, rub, grind or mix ingredients with a pestle. MORULA (8) [noun] A spherical mass of blastomeres that forms following the splitting of a zygote; it becomes the blastula MOSAIC (10) [noun] A piece of artwork created by placing colored squares (usually tiles) in a pattern so as to create a picture. | [noun] An individual composed of two or more cell lines of different genetic or chromosomal constitution, but from the same zygote. | [noun] Any of several viral diseases that cause mosaic-like patterns to appear on leaves. MOSEYS (11) [verb] To set off, get going; to start a journey. | [verb] To go off quickly: to hurry up. | [verb] To amble; to walk or proceed in a leisurely manner. MOSHAV (14) [noun] An Israeli town or settlement: in particular, a type of cooperative agricultural community of individual farms pioneered by the Labour Zionists during the second aliyah. MOSQUE (17) [noun] A place of worship for Muslims, often having at least one minaret; a masjid. MOSSED (9) [verb] To become covered with moss. | [verb] To cover (something) with moss. MOSSER (8) MOSSES (8) [noun] Any of various small, green, seedless plants growing on the ground or on the surfaces of trees, stones, etc.; now specifically, a plant of the phylum Bryophyta (formerly division Musci). | [noun] A kind or species of such plants. | [noun] Any alga, lichen, bryophyte, or other plant of seemingly simple structure. MOSTLY (11) [adverb] Mainly or chiefly; for the most part; usually, generally, on the whole. | [adverb] To the greatest extent; most. MOTELS (8) [noun] A type of hotel or lodging establishment, often located near a major highway, which typically features a series of rooms the entrances of which are immediately adjacent to a parking lot to facilitate convenient access to automobiles parked there. | [noun] A low-cost short-stay hotel, often with hourly rates rather than daily rates, and notorious for permitting illicit sexual activities; love hotel. MOTETS (8) [noun] A composition adapted to sacred words in the elaborate polyphonic church style; an anthem. MOTHER (11) [noun] A (human) female who has given birth to a baby | [noun] A human female who parents an adopted or fostered child | [noun] A human female who donates a fertilized egg or donates a body cell which has resulted in a clone. | [verb] To give birth to or produce (as its female parent) a child. (Compare father.) | [noun] A stringy, mucilaginous or film- or membrane-like substance (consisting of acetobacters) which develops in fermenting alcoholic liquids (such as wine, or cider), and turns the alcohol into acetic acid with the help of oxygen from the air. | [noun] Motherfucker. | [noun] A person (especially an entomologist) or animal that catches moths. MOTIFS (11) [noun] A recurring or dominant element; a theme. | [noun] A short melodic passage that is repeated in several parts of a work. | [noun] A decorative figure that is repeated in a design or pattern. MOTILE (8) [noun] A person whose prevailing mental imagery takes the form of inner feelings of action, such as incipient pronunciation of words, muscular innervations, etc. | [adjective] Having the power to move spontaneously. | [adjective] Producing motion. MOTION (8) [noun] A state of progression from one place to another. | [noun] A change of position with respect to time. | [noun] A change from one place to another. MOTIVE (11) [noun] An idea or communication that makes one want to act, especially from spiritual sources; a divine prompting. | [noun] An incentive to act in a particular way; a reason or emotion that makes one want to do something; anything that prompts a choice of action. | [noun] A limb or other bodily organ that can move. MOTLEY (11) [noun] An incongruous mixture. | [noun] A jester's multicoloured clothes. | [noun] (by extension) A jester; a fool. MOTMOT (10) [noun] Any bird in the taxonomic family Momotidae, endemic to the neotropics. MOTORS (8) [noun] A machine or device that converts other energy forms into mechanical energy, or imparts motion. | [noun] A motor car, or automobile. | [noun] A source of power for something; an inspiration; a driving force. MOTTES (8) [noun] A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot. | [noun] A word or a motto; a device. | [noun] A note or brief strain on a bugle. MOTTLE (8) [noun] A distinguishing blotch of color. | [noun] A mottled coloration or pattern. | [verb] To mark with blotches of different color, or shades of color, as if stained; to spot; to maculate. MOTTOS (8) [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, forming part of an heraldic achievement. | [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, prefixed to an essay, discourse, chapter, canto, or the like, suggestive of its subject matter; a short, suggestive expression of a guiding principle; a maxim. | [noun] A paper packet containing a sweetmeat, cracker, etc., together with a scrap of paper bearing a motto. MOUJIK (19) [noun] A (male) peasant, especially in pre-revolutionary (imperial) Russia. MOULDS (9) [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. | [noun] A frame or model around or on which something is formed or shaped. | [noun] Something that is made in or shaped on a mold. MOULDY (12) [adjective] Covered with mould. | [adjective] Neglected. | [adjective] Worthless; lousy; rotten MOULIN (8) [noun] A cylindrical, vertical shaft that extends through a glacier and is carved by meltwater from the glacier’s surface. MOULTS (8) [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. MOUNDS (9) [noun] An artificial hill or elevation of earth; a raised bank; an embankment thrown up for defense | [noun] A natural elevation appearing as if thrown up artificially; a regular and isolated hill, hillock, or knoll. | [noun] Elevated area of dirt upon which the pitcher stands to pitch. MOUNTS (8) [noun] A hill or mountain. | [noun] Any of seven fleshy prominences in the palm of the hand, taken to represent the influences of various heavenly bodies. | [noun] A bulwark for offence or defence; a mound. MOURNS (8) [verb] To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death). | [verb] To utter in a sorrowful manner. | [verb] To wear mourning. MOUSED (9) [verb] To move cautiously or furtively, in the manner of a mouse (the rodent) (frequently used in the phrasal verb to mouse around). | [verb] To hunt or catch mice (the rodents), usually of cats. | [verb] To close the mouth of a hook by a careful binding of marline or wire. MOUSER (8) [noun] A cat that catches mice, kept specifically for the purpose. | [noun] A moustache. MOUSES (8) [verb] To move cautiously or furtively, in the manner of a mouse (the rodent) (frequently used in the phrasal verb to mouse around). | [verb] To hunt or catch mice (the rodents), usually of cats. | [verb] To close the mouth of a hook by a careful binding of marline or wire. MOUSEY (11) [adjective] Resembling a mouse. | [adjective] Abounding or infested with mice. MOUSSE (8) [noun] An airy pudding served chilled, particularly chocolate mousse. | [noun] A savory dish, of meat or seafood, containing gelatin. | [noun] A styling cream used for hair. MOUTHS (11) [noun] The opening of a creature through which food is ingested. | [noun] The end of a river out of which water flows into a sea or other large body of water. | [noun] An outlet, aperture or orifice. MOUTHY (14) [adjective] Overly talkative, insolent, and loud. MOUTON (8) [noun] A 14th-century French gold coin, weighing about 70 grains. MOVERS (11) [noun] Someone who or something that moves. | [noun] A dancer. | [noun] A person employed to help people move their possessions from one residence to another. MOVIES (11) [noun] A recorded sequence of images displayed on a screen at a rate sufficiently fast to create the appearance of motion. | [noun] (usually plural) A cinema. | [noun] (by extension) The cinema MOVING (12) [verb] To change place or posture; to go, in any manner, from one place or position to another. | [verb] To act; to take action; to begin to act | [verb] To change residence, for example from one house, town, or state, to another; to go and live at another place. See also move out and move in. MOWERS (11) [noun] A lawnmower, a machine used to cut grass. | [noun] A person who cuts grass. MOWING (12) [verb] To cut down grass or crops. | [verb] To cut down or slaughter in great numbers. | [verb] To make grimaces, mock. MOXIES (15) MUCHES (13) MUCHLY (16) [adverb] Very much, very MUCINS (10) [noun] Any of several glycoproteins found in mucus MUCKED (15) [verb] To shovel muck. | [verb] To manure with muck. | [verb] To do a dirty job. MUCKER (14) [noun] (Southern England) friend, acquaintance | [noun] (British army) A comrade; a friendly, low-ranking soldier in the same situation. | [noun] A person who removes muck (waste, debris, broken rock, etc.), especially from a mine, construction site, or stable. MUCKLE (14) [noun] A great amount. | [verb] To latch onto something with the mouth. | [verb] To talk big; to exaggerate. MUCLUC (12) MUCOID (11) [adjective] Pertaining to or resembling mucus; mucous. | [noun] Any of a class of mucin-like substances yielding on decomposition a reducing carbohydrate together with some form of proteinaceous matter. MUCORS (10) MUCOSA (10) [noun] Mucous membrane MUCOSE (10) MUCOUS (10) [adjective] Pertaining to mucus | [adjective] Having the qualities of mucus MUDCAP (13) MUDCAT (11) MUDDED (11) MUDDER (10) [noun] A racehorse that performs well on muddy or wet tracks. | [noun] A participant in a multi-user dungeon. | [noun] A person (especially an entomologist) or animal that catches moths. MUDDLE (10) [noun] A mixture; a confusion; a garble. | [noun] A mixture of crushed ingredients, as prepared with a muddler. | [verb] To mix together, to mix up; to confuse. MUDDLY (13) MUDRAS (9) [noun] Any of several formal symbolic hand postures used in classical dance of India and in Hindu and Buddhist iconography. | [noun] Any of the formal body positions and postures used in yoga and meditation. MUESLI (8) [noun] A breakfast dish based on uncooked rolled oats and fruit. MUFFED (15) [verb] To drop or mishandle (the ball, a catch etc.); to play badly. | [verb] To mishandle; to bungle. | [adjective] Wearing a muff. MUFFIN (14) [noun] A type of flattish bun, usually cut in two horizontally, toasted and spread with butter, etc, before being eaten. | [noun] A type of individual bread such as corn, bran, banana or zucchini bread often sliced and spread with butter, etc before being eaten. | [noun] (especially US) (informally) A cupcake without frosting, but sometimes glazed. MUFFLE (14) [noun] Anything that mutes or deadens sound. | [noun] A warm piece of clothing for the hands. | [noun] A boxing glove. MUFTIS (11) [noun] A Muslim scholar and interpreter of shari’a law, who can deliver a fatwa. | [noun] A civilian dress when worn by a member of the military, or casual dress when worn by a pupil of a school who normally would wear uniform. MUGFUL (12) MUGGAR (10) MUGGED (11) [verb] To strike in the face. | [verb] To assault for the purpose of robbery. | [verb] To exaggerate a facial expression for communicative emphasis; to make a face, to pose, as for photographs or in a performance, in an exaggerated or affected manner. MUGGEE (10) MUGGER (10) [noun] A street robber. | [noun] A person who makes exaggerated faces, as a performance; a gurner. | [noun] A large crocodile, Crocodilus palustris, of southwest Asia, having a very broad wrinkled snout. MUGGUR (10) MUJIKS (19) MUKLUK (16) [noun] A soft knee-high boot of sealskin or reindeer skin, originally worn by Inuit and Yupik. | [noun] A laced winter boot resembling a traditional mukluk, with thick rubber sole and cloth upper. MUKTUK (16) [noun] The skin and blubber of a whale, traditionally used as food by the Inuit. MULCTS (10) [noun] A fine or penalty, especially a pecuniary one. | [verb] To impose such a fine or penalty. | [verb] To swindle (someone) out of money. MULETA (8) [noun] A red flag used by bullfighters. MULEYS (11) [noun] Mule deer MULING (9) MULISH (11) [adjective] Characteristic of a mule; stubborn, obstinate, or intractable MULLAH (11) [noun] A religious scholar and teacher of sharia law. | [verb] To grind up into, or as if into, powder. | [verb] To beat; to thrash (a person). MULLAS (8) [noun] A religious scholar and teacher of sharia law. MULLED (9) [verb] (usually with over) To work (over) mentally; to cogitate; to ruminate. | [verb] To powder; to pulverize. | [verb] To chop marijuana so that it becomes a smokable form. MULLEN (8) MULLER (8) [noun] One who, or that which, mulls. | [noun] A grinding stone, held in the hand, used especially for preparing paints and powders. | [noun] A vessel in which wine, etc., is mulled over a fire. | [noun] A machine that mixes sand and clay for use in metal castings. | [verb] To beat; to thrash (a person). MULLET (8) [noun] A fish of the family Mullidae (order Syngnathiformes), especially the genus Mullus (the red mullets or goatfish). | [noun] A fish of the family Mugilidae (order Mugiliformes) (the grey mullets). | [noun] Any of several species of freshwater fish in the sucker family (especially in the genus Moxostoma, the redhorses) | [noun] A fool | [noun] A hairstyle where the hair is kept short on the top and sides and long at the back. | [noun] A star with straight edges and usually with five or six points. MULLEY (11) MUMBLE (12) [noun] A quiet or unintelligible vocalization; a low tone of voice. | [verb] To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. | [verb] To chew something gently with closed lips. MUMBLY (15) MUMMED (13) [verb] To act in a pantomime or dumb show. MUMMER (12) [noun] A person who dons a disguising costume, as for a parade or a festival. | [noun] An actor in a pantomime; one who communicates entirely through gesture and facial expression. MUMPED (13) MUMPER (12) MUNGOS (9) MUNTIN (8) [noun] One of the separators between panes of glass in a composite window. MUONIC (10) MURALS (8) [noun] A large painting, usually drawn on a wall. MURDER (9) [noun] The crime of deliberately killing another person without justification. | [noun] The act of deliberate killing of another person or other being without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [noun] (in jurisdictions which use the felony murder rule) The commission of an act which abets the commission of a crime the commission of which causes the death of a human. MUREIN (8) MURIDS (9) [noun] Any rodent in the family Muridae. MURINE (8) [noun] Any murine mammal. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of, the mouse, rat or (more generally) any mammal of the family Muridae. MURING (9) [verb] To wall in or fortify | [verb] To enclose or imprison within walls. MURKER (12) MURKLY (15) MURMUR (10) [noun] Any low, indistinct sound, like that of running water. | [noun] Soft indistinct speech. | [noun] The sound made by any condition which produces noisy, or turbulent, flow of blood through the heart. MURPHY (16) [noun] An Irish or white potato. MURRAS (8) MURRES (8) [noun] Any seabird of the genus Uria in the family Alcidae (the auks). MURREY (11) [noun] The mulberry fruit. | [noun] A tincture, the colour of mulberries, between gules and purpure. | [adjective] Of a mulberry colour. MURRHA (11) MUSCAE (10) MUSCAT (10) [noun] A white grape variety; used as table grapes and for making raisins and sweet wine. | [noun] The muscatel wine made from these grapes. | [noun] The vine bearing this fruit. MUSCID (11) [noun] Any fly of the family Muscidae of insects. | [adjective] Pertaining to or related to the Muscidae family of insects. MUSCLE (10) [noun] A contractile form of tissue which animals use to effect movement. | [noun] An organ composed of muscle tissue. | [noun] (usually in the plural) A well-developed physique, in which the muscles are enlarged from exercise. MUSCLY (13) [adjective] Thewy, muscled | [adjective] Strong, powerful MUSERS (8) MUSEUM (10) [noun] A building or institution dedicated to the acquisition, conservation, study, exhibition, and educational interpretation of objects having scientific, historical, cultural or artistic value. MUSHED (12) [verb] To squish so as to break into smaller pieces or to combine with something else. | [verb] To walk, especially across the snow with dogs. | [verb] To drive dogs, usually pulling a sled, across the snow. MUSHER (11) [noun] One who operates a dogsled, traditionally using the verbal command “mush”. | [noun] One who travels by dogsled. | [noun] One who races in a dogsled in a race. MUSHES (11) [noun] A somewhat liquid mess, often of food; a soft or semisolid substance. | [noun] A mixture of noise produced by the harmonics of continuous-wave stations. | [noun] The foam of a breaker. MUSICS (10) MUSING (9) [verb] To become lost in thought, to ponder. | [verb] To say (something) with due consideration or thought. | [verb] To think on; to meditate on. MUSJID (16) MUSKEG (13) [noun] A terrain composed of peat bog with tussocky meadow and woody vegetation including spruce. MUSKET (12) [noun] A kind of firearm formerly carried by the infantry of an army, originally fired by means of a match, or matchlock, for which several mechanical appliances (including the flintlock, and finally the percussion lock) were successively substituted; ultimately superseded by the rifle. | [noun] A male Eurasian sparrowhawk. MUSKIE (12) MUSKIT (12) MUSLIN (8) [noun] Any of several varieties of thin cotton cloth. | [noun] Fabric made of cotton, flax (linen), hemp, or silk, finely or coarsely woven. | [noun] Any of a wide variety of tightly-woven thin fabrics, especially those used for bedlinen. MUSSED (9) [verb] To rumple, tousle or make (something) untidy. MUSSEL (8) [noun] Any of several groups of bivalve shellfish with elongated, asymmetrical shells MUSSES (8) [verb] To rumple, tousle or make (something) untidy. MUSTED (9) MUSTEE (8) MUSTER (8) [noun] Gathering. | [noun] Showing. | [verb] To show, exhibit. | [noun] A person of one-eighth African ancestry. MUSTHS (11) MUTANT (8) [noun] Something which has mutated, which has one or more new characteristics from a mutation. | [noun] Someone or something that seems strange, abnormal, or bizarre. | [adjective] Of, relating to, undergoing (i.e. mutating), or resulting from change or mutation; that has undergone mutation. MUTASE (8) MUTATE (8) [verb] To undergo mutation. | [verb] To cause mutation. MUTELY (11) MUTEST (8) MUTINE (8) MUTING (9) [verb] To silence, to make quiet. | [verb] To turn off the sound of. | [verb] Of a bird: to defecate. MUTINY (11) [noun] An organized rebellion against a legally constituted authority, especially by seamen against their officers. | [noun] Violent commotion; tumult; strife. | [verb] To commit mutiny. MUTISM (10) [noun] A psychological disorder in which the sufferer cannot speak in certain situations. MUTONS (8) [noun] A unit of mutation forming part of a recon. MUTTER (8) [noun] A repressed or obscure utterance; an instance of muttering. | [verb] To utter words, especially complaints or angry expressions, indistinctly or with a low voice and lips partly closed; to say under one's breath. | [verb] To speak softly and incoherently, or with imperfect articulations. | [noun] (Indian cuisine) Peas. MUTTON (8) [noun] The flesh of sheep used as food. | [noun] The flesh of goat used as food. | [noun] A sheep. MUTUAL (8) [noun] A mutual fund. | [noun] A mutual organization. | [noun] Either of a pair of people who follow each other's social media accounts. MUTUEL (8) MUTULE (8) [noun] Any of the rectangular blocks under the soffit of the cornice of the Greek Doric temple, which are studded with guttae. MUUMUU (10) [noun] A long loose-fitting dress made of lightweight fabric printed with bright, stylized Hawaiian themes (such as flowers and palm branches). MUZHIK (24) [noun] A (male) peasant, especially in pre-revolutionary (imperial) Russia. MUZJIK (28) MUZZLE (26) [noun] The protruding part of an animal's head which includes the nose, mouth and jaws; the snout | [noun] The mouth or the end for entrance or discharge of a gun, pistol etc., that the bullet emerges from as opposed to the breech. | [noun] A device used to prevent animal from biting or eating, which is worn on its snout. MYASES (11) MYASIS (11) MYCELE (13) MYELIN (11) [noun] A white, fatty material, composed of lipids and lipoproteins, that surrounds the axons of nerves. MYNAHS (14) [noun] One of the South and East Asian birds of the starling family Sturnidae. MYOMAS (13) MYOPES (13) [noun] One who has myopia. MYOPIA (13) [noun] A disorder of the vision where distant objects appear blurred because the eye focuses their images in front of the retina instead of on it. | [noun] A lack of imagination, discernment or long-range perspective in thinking or planning. MYOPIC (15) [noun] A short-sighted individual. | [adjective] Near-sighted; unable to see distant objects unaided | [adjective] Shortsighted; improvident MYOSES (11) MYOSIN (11) [noun] Any of a large family of motor proteins found in eukaryotic tissues, allowing mobility in muscles. | [noun] An albuminous body present in dead muscle formed in the process of coagulation which takes place in rigor mortis. MYOSIS (11) [noun] Contraction of the pupil of the eye. MYOTIC (13) MYRIAD (12) [noun] Ten thousand; 10,000 | [noun] A countless number or multitude (of specified things) | [adjective] (modifying a singular noun) Multifaceted, having innumerable elements MYRICA (13) MYRRHS (14) [noun] A red-brown resinous material, the dried sap of a tree of the species Commiphora myrrha. | [noun] The herb chervil. MYRTLE (11) [noun] An evergreen shrub or small tree of the genus Myrtus, native to southern Europe and north Africa. MYSELF (14) [pronoun] (reflexive pronoun) Me, as direct or indirect object the speaker as the object of a verb or preposition, when the speaker is also the subject. | [pronoun] Personally, for my part; used in apposition to I, sometimes for simple emphasis and sometimes with implicit exclusion of any others performing the activity described. | [pronoun] In my normal state of body or mind. MYSIDS (12) [noun] Any crustacean of the family Mysidae. MYSOST (11) MYSTIC (13) [noun] Someone who practices mysticism. | [adjective] Of, or relating to mystics, mysticism or occult mysteries; mystical. | [adjective] Mysterious and strange; arcane, obscure or enigmatic. MYTHIC (16) [adjective] Mythical; existing in myth. | [adjective] Larger-than-life. MYTHOI (14) [noun] Anything transmitted by word of mouth, such as a fable, legend, narrative, story, or tale (especially a poetic tale). | [noun] A story or set of stories relevant to or having a significant truth or meaning for a particular culture, religion, society, or other group; a myth, a mythology. | [noun] (by extension) A set of assumptions or beliefs about something. MYTHOS (14) [noun] Anything transmitted by word of mouth, such as a fable, legend, narrative, story, or tale (especially a poetic tale). | [noun] A story or set of stories relevant to or having a significant truth or meaning for a particular culture, religion, society, or other group; a myth, a mythology. | [noun] (by extension) A set of assumptions or beliefs about something. MYXOID (19) MYXOMA (20) [noun] A tumor of primitive connective tissue.

7-Letter Words (1228)

MACABER (13) MACABRE (13) [adjective] Representing or personifying death. | [adjective] Obsessed with death or the gruesome. | [adjective] Ghastly, shocking, terrifying. MACACOS (13) MACADAM (14) [noun] The surface of a road consisting of layers of crushed stone (usually tar-coated for modern traffic). | [noun] Any road or street. | [verb] To cover or surface with macadam. MACAQUE (20) [noun] Any of a group of Old World monkeys of the subfamily Cercopithecinae, especially genus Macaca. MACCHIA (16) MACCHIE (16) MACHETE (14) [noun] A sword-like tool used for cutting large plants with a chopping motion, or as a weapon. The blade is usually 50 to 65 centimeters long, and up to three millimeters thick. | [verb] To cut or chop with a machete. | [verb] To hack or chop crudely with a blade other than a machete. MACHINE (14) [noun] A device that directs and controls energy, often in the form of movement or electricity, to produce a certain effect. | [noun] A vehicle operated mechanically, such as an automobile or an airplane. | [noun] (abbreviation) An answering machine or, by extension, voice mail. MACHREE (14) MACHZOR (23) [noun] A prayerbook for a Jewish holiday. MACKLED (16) MACKLES (15) [noun] A spot. | [noun] A blur or an appearance of a double impression, as when the paper slips a little during printing. | [verb] To blur or be blurred; especially to blur or double an impression from type. MACRAME (13) [noun] A form of decorative textile made by knotting and weaving. | [verb] To create textiles using the macramé technique. MACRONS (11) [noun] A short, straight, horizontal diacritical mark (¯) placed over any of various letters, usually to indicate that the pronunciation of a vowel is long. MACULAE (11) [noun] An oval yellow spot near the center of the retina of the human eye, histologically defined as having two or more layers of ganglion cells, responsible for detailed central vision. | [noun] A small chamber of the inner ear of certain vertebrates filled with endolymph and containing an otolith. | [noun] A spot, as on the skin, or on the surface of the sun or of some other luminous orb. MACULAR (11) [adjective] Relating to the macula, the area of the retina responsible for detailed central vision. MACULAS (11) MACULED (12) MACULES (11) [noun] A spot. | [noun] A blur or an appearance of a double impression, as when the paper slips a little during printing. MACUMBA (15) [noun] A religious cult, having elements of sorcery, ritual dance and fetishes, from Brazil MADAMES (12) MADCAPS (14) [noun] An impulsive, hasty, capricious person. | [noun] An insane person, a lunatic. MADDENS (11) [verb] To make angry. | [verb] To make insane; to inflame with passion. | [verb] To become furious. MADDERS (11) [noun] A herbaceous plant, Rubia tinctorum, native to Asia, cultivated for a red-purple dye (alizarin) obtained from the root. | [noun] The root of the plant, used as a medicine or a dye. | [noun] A dye made from the plant. MADDEST (11) [adjective] Insane; crazy, mentally deranged. | [adjective] (chiefly US; informal in UK) Angry, annoyed. | [adjective] Bizarre; incredible. MADDING (12) [verb] To be or become mad. | [verb] To madden, to anger, to frustrate. | [adjective] Affected with madness; raging; furious. MADDISH (14) MADEIRA (10) [noun] Madeira (wine) MADNESS (10) [noun] The state of being mad; insanity; mental disease. | [noun] Rash folly MADONNA (10) [noun] A one-footed lien-to-tail trick, where the front foot is taken off and kicked out straight down behind the board. MADRONA (10) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADRONE (10) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADRONO (10) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADUROS (10) MADWORT (13) MADZOON (19) MAENADS (10) [noun] A female follower of Dionysus, associated with intense reveling. | [noun] An excessively wild or emotional woman. MAESTRI (9) MAESTRO (9) [noun] A master in some art, especially a composer or conductor. | [noun] A gang elder in prison. MAFFIAS (15) MAFFICK (21) MAFIOSI (12) [noun] A member of the Mafia. MAFIOSO (12) [noun] A member of the Mafia. MAFTIRS (12) MAGENTA (10) [noun] A vibrant light purple, purplish-red, reddish-purple, or pinkish purple colour obtained by mixing red and blue light (thus a secondary colour), but primary in the CMYK colour system used in printing. | [adjective] Having the colour of fuchsia, fuchsine, light purple. MAGGOTS (11) [noun] A soft, legless larva of a fly or other dipterous insect, that often eats decomposing organic matter. | [noun] A worthless person. | [noun] A whimsy or fancy. MAGGOTY (14) [adjective] Infested with and/or partially eaten by maggots; flyblown. | [adjective] Full of whims; capricious. MAGIANS (10) MAGICAL (12) [adjective] Of or relating to magic. | [adjective] Enchanting. MAGILPS (12) MAGLEVS (13) [noun] A train propelled by magnetic levitation. MAGMATA (12) [noun] The molten matter within the earth, the source of the material of lava flows, dikes of eruptive rocks, etc. | [noun] A basic algebraic structure consisting of a set equipped with a single binary operation. | [noun] Any soft doughy mass. MAGNATE (10) [noun] Powerful industrialist; captain of industry. | [noun] A person of rank, influence or distinction in any sphere. MAGNETO (10) [noun] A small magnetic dynamo, especially one that provides power to the spark plugs of a small internal combustion engine. MAGNETS (10) [noun] A piece of material that attracts some metals by magnetism. | [noun] (preceded by a noun) A person or thing that attracts what is denoted by the preceding noun. MAGNIFY (16) [verb] To praise, glorify (someone or something, especially God). | [verb] To make (something) larger or more important. | [verb] To make (someone or something) appear greater or more important than it is; to intensify, exaggerate. MAGNUMS (12) [noun] A bottle of wine containing 1.5 liters of fluid, double the volume of a standard bottle. | [noun] A powerful firearm cartridge, often derived from a shorter, less powerful cartridge calibre that uses the same bullet. | [noun] A handgun that fires a cartridge of this calibre; chiefly a revolver, but rarely an autoloader firing an unusually powerful calibre. MAGPIES (12) [noun] One of several kinds of bird in the family Corvidae | [noun] A superficially similar Australian bird, Gymnorhina tibicen or Cracticus tibicen. | [noun] Someone who displays a magpie-like quality such as hoarding or stealing objects. MAGUEYS (13) [noun] Any of various large agaves of Mexico and the southern US, especially the American aloe, Agave americana. MAHATMA (14) [noun] An epithet granted in India and Tibet to people thought to have great knowledge and love of humanity | [noun] Such a person. MAHJONG (20) [noun] A game (originally Chinese) for four players, using a collection of tiles divided into five or six suits. | [noun] A solitaire game using the same tiles, where the player wins by removing pairs of matching exposed tiles until none remain. MAHONIA (12) [noun] Any of the genus Mahonia (now often included in Berberis) of evergreen shrubs. MAHOUTS (12) [noun] An elephant driver and keeper. MAHUANG (13) MAHZORS (21) MAIDENS (10) [noun] One of the triune goddesses of the Lady in Wicca alongside the Crone and Mother representing a girl or a young woman | [noun] A girl or an unmarried young woman. | [noun] A female virgin. MAIDISH (13) MAIHEMS (14) MAILBAG (12) [noun] A strong canvas bag used for the transportation of mail | [noun] A smaller bag, slung from the shoulders, used for the delivery of mail MAILBOX (18) [noun] A box into which mail is put | [noun] A folder or account for the storage of e-mail; an electronic in-box or mailstore. MAILERS (9) [noun] One who sends mail. | [noun] A computer program that sends electronic mail. | [noun] A packet or container designed for postal use. MAILING (10) [verb] (ditransitive) To send (a letter, parcel, etc.) through the mail. | [verb] (ditransitive) To send by electronic mail. | [verb] To contact (a person) by electronic mail. | [noun] A farm. MAILLOT (9) [noun] A one-piece swimsuit (for women) | [noun] A leotard or tights of stretchable jersey fabric, generally worn by dancers and gymnasts. MAILMAN (11) [noun] Someone (implied male) who delivers mail to, and/or collects mail from, residential or commercial addresses, or from public mailboxes MAILMEN (11) [noun] Someone (implied male) who delivers mail to, and/or collects mail from, residential or commercial addresses, or from public mailboxes MAIMERS (11) MAIMING (12) [verb] To wound seriously; to cause permanent loss of function of a limb or part of the body. | [noun] The act by which somebody is maimed. MAINTOP (11) [noun] A platform at the top of a square-rigged vessel's mainmast; used for observation and for the attachment of rigging. MAJAGUA (17) MAJESTY (19) [noun] The quality of being impressive and great. MAJORED (17) [verb] To concentrate on a particular area of study as a student in a college or university MAJORLY (19) [adverb] Significantly; very, very much | [adverb] Mostly, primarily MAKABLE (15) MAKEUPS (15) [noun] An item's composition. | [noun] Cosmetics; colorants and other substances applied to the skin to alter its appearance. | [noun] Replacement; material used to make up for the amount that has been used up. MAKINGS (14) [noun] The act of forming, causing, or constituting; workmanship; construction. | [noun] Process of growth or development. | [noun] That which is needed for something: necessary ingredients. MALACCA (13) MALAISE (9) [noun] A feeling of general bodily discomfort, fatigue or unpleasantness, often at the onset of illness. | [noun] An ambiguous feeling of mental or moral depression. | [noun] Ill will or hurtful feelings for others or someone. MALANGA (10) [noun] Any of several Central and South American plants, of the genus Xanthosoma; yautia. | [noun] Taro (Colocasia esculenta) | [noun] The edible tuber of these plants, some of which have medicinal value. MALARIA (9) [noun] A disease spread by mosquito, in which a protozoan, Plasmodium, multiplies in blood every few days. | [noun] Supposed poisonous air arising from marshy districts, once thought to cause fever. MALARKY (16) MALATES (9) [noun] A salt or ester of malic acid. MALEATE (9) [noun] Any salt or ester of maleic acid MALEFIC (14) [noun] A malefic planet | [adjective] Having an evil or harmful influence; baleful. MALICES (11) MALIGNS (10) [verb] To make defamatory statements about; to slander or traduce. | [verb] To treat with malice; to show hatred toward; to abuse; to wrong. MALINES (9) MALISON (9) [noun] A curse, a malediction. MALKINS (13) MALLARD (10) [noun] A common and widespread dabbling duck, Anas platyrhynchos, whose male has a distinctive dark green head. MALLEES (9) [noun] A member of a caste in South Asia whose traditional occupation is gardening; hence, any native gardener. | [noun] Money, cash. | [noun] A type of scrubland with low-growing thick eucalypts, characteristic of certain parts of Australia. MALLETS (9) [noun] A type of hammer with a larger-than-usual head made of wood, rubber or similar non-iron material, used by woodworkers for driving a tool, such as a chisel. A kind of maul. | [noun] A weapon resembling the tool, but typically much larger. | [noun] A small hammer-like tool used for playing certain musical instruments. MALLEUS (9) [noun] The small hammer-shaped bone of the middle ear. | [noun] The tripus (ossicle in cypriniform fishes). | [noun] One of the paired calcareous structures within the mastax of rotifers. MALLING (10) [noun] The transformation of a district by building shopping malls. MALLOWS (12) [noun] Any of a group of flowering plants in several genera of the taxonomic family Malvaceae, especially of the genus Malva. Several species are edible by humans. MALMIER (11) MALMSEY (14) [noun] A sweet fortified wine made in Madeira, originally from the malvasia grape. MALODOR (10) [noun] An offensive odor. MALTASE (9) [noun] An enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of maltose to glucose; often associated with amylase. MALTEDS (10) MALTHAS (12) MALTIER (9) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or characteristic of malt MALTING (10) [verb] To convert a cereal grain into malt by causing it to sprout (by soaking in water) and then halting germination (by drying with hot air) in order to develop enzymes that can break down starches and proteins in the grain. | [verb] To become malt. | [verb] To drink malt liquor. MALTOLS (9) MALTOSE (9) [noun] A disaccharide, C12H22O11 formed from the digestion of starch by amylase; is converted to glucose by maltase; it is an isomer of trehalose MAMBOED (14) [verb] To perform this dance. MAMBOES (13) [noun] A voodoo priestess (in Haiti) | [noun] A Latin-American musical genre, adapted from rumba, originating from Cuba in the 1940s, or a dance or rhythm of this genre. MAMEYES (14) MAMLUKS (15) MAMMALS (13) [noun] An animal of the class Mammalia, characterized by being warm-blooded, having hair and feeding milk to its young. | [noun] A vertebrate with three bones in the inner ear and one in the jaw. MAMMARY (16) [noun] A mamma (milk-secreting organ of a woman or a female animal). | [adjective] Of or relating to mamma or breast (of a woman or a female animal). MAMMATE (13) MAMMATI (13) MAMMEES (13) [noun] An American fruit tree, Mammea americana. | [noun] Its large fragrant fruit, with a thick tough ring surrounding bright yellow pulp. MAMMERS (13) MAMMETS (13) MAMMEYS (16) MAMMIES (13) [noun] Mamma; mother | [noun] (historical, often pejorative) In the southern United States, a black nanny employed to look after white children; or in the antebellum South, a female slave who was close to the household and looked after the children. MAMMOCK (19) MAMMONS (13) MAMMOTH (16) [noun] Any species of the extinct genus Mammuthus, of large, usually hairy, elephant-like mammals with long curved tusks and an inclined back, which became extinct with the last retreat of ice age glaciers during the late Pleistocene period, and are known from fossils, frozen carcasses, and Paleolithic cave paintings found in North America and Eurasia. | [noun] A mastodon. | [noun] Something very large of its kind. MANACLE (11) [noun] A shackle for the wrist, usually consisting of a pair of joined rings; a handcuff; (by extension) a similar device put around an ankle to restrict free movement. | [noun] A fetter, a restriction. | [verb] To confine with manacles. MANAGED (11) [verb] To direct or be in charge of. | [verb] To handle or control (a situation, job). | [verb] To handle with skill, wield (a tool, weapon etc.). MANAGER (10) [noun] A person whose job is to manage something, such as a business, a restaurant, or a sports team. | [noun] The head coach. | [noun] An administrator, for a singer or group. MANAGES (10) [verb] To direct or be in charge of. | [verb] To handle or control (a situation, job). | [verb] To handle with skill, wield (a tool, weapon etc.). MANAKIN (13) [noun] Any of several small South American passerine birds of the family Pipridae. | [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. MANANAS (9) MANATEE (9) [noun] Any of several plant-eating marine mammals, of family Trichechidae, found in tropical regions. MANCHES (14) MANCHET (14) [noun] A type of high-quality bread made from flour. MANDALA (10) [noun] A graphic depiction of the spiritual universe and its myriad realms and deities. | [noun] Any ritualistic geometric design, symbolic of the Universe, used as an aid to meditation. | [noun] A division or book of the Rigveda (of which there are 10). MANDATE (10) [noun] An official or authoritative command; an order or injunction; a commission; a judicial precept. | [noun] The authority to do something, as granted to a politician by the electorate. | [noun] A papal rescript. MANDOLA (10) [noun] A stringed musical instrument resembling the mandolin, but of larger size and tuned lower. MANDREL (10) [noun] A round object used as an aid for shaping a material, e.g. shaping or enlarging a ring, or bending or enlarging a pipe without creasing or kinking it. | [noun] A tool or component of a tool that guides, grips or clamps something, such as a workpiece to be machined, a machining tool or a part while it is moved. MANDRIL (10) MANEGES (10) MANGABY (15) MANGELS (10) [noun] The sugar beet, which can be refined to equal cane sugar in all manners save for botanical origin. | [noun] A mangelwurzel, a plant of the beet family raised as cattle feed. MANGERS (10) [noun] A trough for animals to eat from. MANGIER (10) [adjective] Afflicted with mange. | [adjective] (by extension) Worn and squalid-looking; bedraggled or decrepit. MANGILY (13) MANGLED (11) [verb] To change, mutilate or disfigure by cutting, tearing, rearranging etc. | [verb] To modify (an identifier from source code) so as to produce a unique identifier for internal use by the compiler, etc. | [verb] To wring laundry. MANGLER (10) MANGLES (10) [noun] A hand-operated device with rollers, for wringing laundry. | [noun] The mangle attached to wringer washing machines, often called the wringer. | [noun] Mangrove (tree) MANGOES (10) [noun] A tropical Asian fruit tree, Mangifera indica. | [noun] The fruit of the mango tree. | [noun] A pickled vegetable or fruit with a spicy stuffing; a vegetable or fruit which has been mangoed. MANGOLD (11) [noun] Mangelwurzel MANHOLE (12) [noun] A hole in the ground used to access the sewers or other underground vaults and installations. | [noun] A hole providing access to the inside of a boiler, tank etc. | [noun] A man's anus, in a sexual context. MANHOOD (13) [noun] The state or condition of being a human being | [noun] The state or condition of being an adult male human being, as distinguished from a child or a woman. Compare adulthood. Contrast womanhood and childhood. | [noun] All of the adult male human beingss of a given locality, region, district, country, nation or state, or all of the adult male humans pertaining to a given human subgroup (culture, race, ethnicity, lineage, family, etc.), regarded collectively MANHUNT (12) [noun] An organized search for a criminal or enemy. MANIACS (11) [noun] An insane person, especially one who suffers from a mania. | [noun] A fanatic, a person with an obsession. MANIHOT (12) MANIKIN (13) [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. | [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes MANILAS (9) MANILLA (9) [noun] A penannular armlet, mostly in bronze, copper or gold, which served as a form of money or barter coinage amongst certain West African peoples. MANILLE (9) [noun] The second-highest trump in certain card games. | [noun] A card game played with a deck of 32, in which the ten (or ‘manille’) is the highest in each suit. MANIOCA (11) MANIOCS (11) [noun] The tropical plant Manihot esculenta, from which cassava and tapioca are prepared. | [noun] Cassava root, eaten as a food. | [noun] A food starch prepared from the root. MANIPLE (11) [noun] A division of the Roman army numbering 120 (or sometimes 60) soldiers exclusive of officers; (generally) any small body of soldiers. | [noun] In Western Christianity, an ornamental band or scarf worn upon the left arm as a part of the vestments of a priest in the Roman Catholic Church, and sometimes the Church of England. | [noun] A hand; a fist. | [noun] A handful. MANITOS (9) MANITOU (9) [noun] A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians. MANITUS (9) MANKIND (14) [noun] The human race in its entirety. | [noun] Men collectively, as opposed to all women. | [noun] Human feelings; humanity. MANLESS (9) MANLIER (9) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a man. | [adjective] Having qualities befitting a man; courageous, resolute, noble. MANLIKE (13) [adjective] Of or characteristic of grown men, as opposed to women or children; macho, mannish, virile. | [adjective] Of or relating to a human being; anthropoid, anthropomorphous. MANLILY (12) MANMADE (12) [adjective] Created by people, as opposed to occurring in nature; artificial or synthetic. MANNANS (9) MANNERS (9) [noun] Mode of action; way of performing or doing anything | [noun] Characteristic mode of acting or behaving; bearing | [noun] One's customary method of acting; habit. MANNING (10) [verb] To supply (something) with staff or crew (of either sex). | [verb] To take up position in order to operate (something). | [verb] (possibly obsolete) To brace (oneself), to fortify or steel (oneself) in a manly way. (Compare man up.) MANNISH (12) [adjective] (of a woman) Resembling or characteristic of a man, masculine. | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a grown man (as opposed to a boy); mature, adult. | [adjective] Impertinent; assertive. MANNITE (9) MANNOSE (9) [noun] A monosaccharide aldohexose found in manna and other legumes. MANPACK (17) [noun] (usually attributive) An object meant to be carried by a single person. MANROPE (11) [noun] Each of the side ropes to a gangway or ladder of a ship. MANSARD (10) [noun] A mansard roof | [noun] The upper storey of a building, surrounded by such a roof | [adjective] (of a roof) having two slopes on each side, the lower being steeper than the upper MANSION (9) [noun] A large house or building, usually built for the wealthy. | [noun] A luxurious flat (apartment). | [noun] A house provided for a clergyman; a manse. MANTEAU (9) [noun] A cloak or gown, especially of a kind popular with women in the 17th and 18th centuries. MANTELS (9) [noun] The shelf above a fireplace which may be also a structural support for the masonry of the chimney. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. Also called a mantelshelf. MANTIDS (10) [noun] Mantis (insect) MANTLED (10) [verb] To cover or conceal (something); to cloak; to disguise. | [verb] To become covered or concealed. | [verb] To spread like a mantle (especially of blood in the face and cheeks when a person flushes). MANTLES (9) [noun] The shelf above a fireplace which may be also a structural support for the masonry of the chimney. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. Also called a mantelshelf. | [noun] A piece of clothing somewhat like an open robe or cloak, especially that worn by Orthodox bishops. (Compare mantum.) MANTLET (9) [noun] A short sleeveless cloak or cape. | [noun] A portable screen or other covering, especially as used to protect the approach of soldiers engaged in a siege. | [noun] A mantelletta. MANTRAP (11) [noun] A mechanical device for catching trespassers. | [noun] A small space with two sets of interlocking doors, such that the first set of doors must close before the second set opens, used to restrict access. | [noun] A woman who is dangerously seductive to men. MANTRAS (9) [noun] The hymn portions of the Vedas; any passage of these used as a prayer. | [noun] (originally Hinduism) A phrase repeated to assist concentration during meditation. | [noun] (by extension) A slogan or phrase often repeated. MANTRIC (11) MANTUAS (9) [noun] An article of loose clothing popular in 17th- and 18th century France. | [noun] A superior kind of rich silk formerly exported from Mantua in Italy. | [noun] A woman's cloak or mantle. MANUALS (9) [noun] A handbook. | [noun] A booklet that instructs on the usage of a particular machine or product. | [noun] A drill in the use of weapons, etc. MANUARY (12) MANUMIT (11) [verb] To release from slavery, to free. MANURED (10) [verb] To cultivate by manual labor; to till; hence, to develop by culture. | [verb] To apply manure (as fertilizer or soil improver). MANURER (9) MANURES (9) [verb] To cultivate by manual labor; to till; hence, to develop by culture. | [verb] To apply manure (as fertilizer or soil improver). MANWARD (13) MANWISE (12) MAPLIKE (15) MAPPERS (13) MAPPING (14) [verb] To create a visual representation of a territory, etc. via cartography. | [verb] (followed by a "to" phrase) To act as a function on something, taking it to something else. | [verb] (followed by a "to" phrase) To have a direct relationship; to correspond. MARABOU (11) [noun] Leptoptilos crumeniferus, a large wading bird native to Africa, with a naked head and neck adapted for scavenging. | [noun] A person, five-eighths of whose ancestry is black; the offspring of a mulatto and a griffe. | [noun] A kind of thrown raw silk, naturally nearly white, but capable of being dyed without scouring. MARACAS (11) [noun] A Latin American percussion instrument consisting of a hollow-gourd rattle containing pebbles or beans and often played in pairs, as a rhythm instrument. | [noun] (in the plural) breasts MARANTA (9) MARASCA (11) MARAUDS (10) [verb] To move about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [verb] To go about aggressively or in a predatory manner. | [verb] To raid and pillage. MARBLED (12) [verb] To cause (something to have) the streaked or swirled appearance of certain types of marble, for example by mixing viscous ingredients incompletely, or by applying paint or other colorants unevenly. | [verb] To get or have the streaked or swirled appearance of certain types of marble, for example due to the incomplete mixing of viscous ingredients, or the uneven application of paint or other colorants. | [verb] To cause meat, usually beef, pork, or lamb, to be interlaced with fat so that its appearance resembles that of marble. MARBLER (11) MARBLES (11) [noun] A rock of crystalline limestone. | [noun] (games) A small ball, usually of glass or ceramic. | [noun] An artwork made from marble. MARCATO (11) [adverb] Stressed; pronounced. MARCELS (11) [noun] A hairstyle characterized by deep waves made by a curling iron. | [noun] A marcel wave. MARCHED (15) [verb] To walk with long, regular strides, as a soldier does. | [verb] To cause someone to walk somewhere. | [verb] To go to war; to make military advances. MARCHEN (14) MARCHER (14) [noun] An inhabitant of a march (border country); specifically, a marcher lord. | [noun] A border territory, a march (now only in (attributive) use). | [noun] One who marches; one who participates in a march. MARCHES (14) [noun] A formal, rhythmic way of walking, used especially by soldiers, bands and in ceremonies. | [noun] A political rally or parade | [noun] Any song in the genre of music written for marching (see Wikipedia's article on this type of music) MAREMMA (13) MAREMME (13) MARENGO (10) MARGAYS (13) [noun] Leopardus wiedii, a spotted cat native to Central and South America. MARGENT (10) MARGINS (10) [noun] The edge of the paper, typically left blank when printing but sometimes used for annotations etc. | [noun] The edge or border of any flat surface. | [noun] The edge defining inclusion in or exclusion from a set or group. MARIMBA (13) [noun] A musical instrument similar to a xylophone but clearer in pitch. MARINAS (9) [noun] A harbour for small boats. MARINER (9) [noun] A sailor. MARINES (9) [noun] A soldier, normally a member of a marine corps, trained to serve on board or from a ship | [noun] Capitalised in the plural A marine corps. | [noun] A painting representing some marine subject. MARITAL (9) [adjective] Pertaining to marriage. | [adjective] Pertaining to a husband. MARKERS (13) [noun] An object used to mark a location. | [noun] Someone or something that marks. | [noun] A real or virtual objective, something to be aimed for. MARKETS (13) [noun] A gathering of people for the purchase and sale of merchandise at a set time, often periodic. | [noun] City square or other fairly spacious site where traders set up stalls and buyers browse the merchandise. | [noun] A grocery store MARKHOR (16) [noun] A large wild goat, Capra falconeri, especially (Capra falconeri megaceros, syn. Capra megaceros), having huge flattened spiral horns., found in the western Himalayas. MARKING (14) [verb] To put a mark on (something); to make (something) recognizable by a mark; to label or write on (something). | [verb] To leave a mark (often an undesirable or unwanted one) on (something). | [verb] To have a long-lasting negative impact on (someone or something). MARKKAA (17) MARKKAS (17) [noun] A (Finnish) mark, the currency used in Finland before the introduction of the euro, consisting of 100 penni. Abbreviation FIM. MARKUPS (15) [noun] The notation that is used to indicate the meaning of the elements in an electronic document, or to dictate how text should be displayed. | [noun] The percentage or amount by which a seller hikes up his buy-in price when determining his selling price. | [noun] An increase in price. MARLIER (9) MARLINE (9) [noun] A light cord or rope used to bind the end of a larger rope, to prevent fraying. | [noun] Twine used similarly. | [verb] To wind marline around. MARLING (10) [verb] To cover with the earthy substance called marl. | [verb] To cover, as part of a rope, with marline, marking a peculiar hitch at each turn to prevent unwinding. | [noun] An application of marl to the soil, to aid agriculture. MARLINS (9) [noun] Any species of game fish belonging to either of the genera Tetrapturus or Makaira. Every such species has a pointed, spear-like projection of the upper jaw. MARLITE (9) MARMITE (11) [noun] A rounded earthenware cooking pot. MARMOTS (11) [noun] Any of several large ground-dwelling rodents of the genera Marmota and Cynomys in the squirrel family. MAROONS (9) [noun] An escaped negro slave of the Caribbean and the Americas or a descendant of escaped slaves. | [noun] A castaway; a person who has been marooned. | [verb] To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a desert island. MARPLOT (11) MARQUEE (18) [noun] A large tent with open sides, used for outdoors entertainment. | [noun] A projecting canopy over an entrance, especially one with a sign that displays the name of the establishment or other information of it. | [noun] (by generalization) Lights that turn on and off in sequence, or scrolling text, as these are common elements on a marquee. MARQUES (18) [noun] A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals; a letter of marque. | [noun] A brand or make of a manufactured product, especially of a motor car (in contradistinction to a model). | [noun] A ship commissioned for making captures. MARQUIS (18) [noun] A nobleman in England, France, and Germany, of a rank next below that of duke, but above a count. Originally, the marquis was an officer whose duty was to guard the marches or frontiers of the kingdom. The office has ceased, and the name is now a mere title conferred by letters patent or letters close. | [noun] Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the Asian genus Bassarona. MARRAMS (11) [noun] Ammophila arenaria, a coarse grass found on sandy beaches. MARRANO (9) [noun] A Jew who converted to Catholicism under threat or force. MARRERS (9) [noun] One who mars or injures. MARRIED (10) [noun] A married person. | [adjective] In a state of marriage; having a wife or a husband. | [adjective] Showing commitment or devotion normally reserved for a spouse MARRIER (9) MARRIES (9) [verb] To enter into the conjugal or connubial state; to take a husband or a wife. | [verb] (in passive) To be joined to (someone) as spouse according to law or custom. | [verb] To arrange for the marriage of; to give away as wife or husband. MARRING (10) [verb] To spoil; to ruin; to scathe; to damage. | [noun] Something that mars or spoils; a blemish. MARRONS (9) [noun] A sweet chestnut. | [noun] Cherax tenuimanus, a type of freshwater crayfish from Western Australia. MARROWS (12) [noun] The substance inside bones which produces blood cells. | [noun] A kind of vegetable like a large courgette/zucchini or squash. | [noun] The pith of certain plants. MARROWY (15) MARSALA (9) [noun] A fortified wine from Sicily. | [noun] A sauce made from Marsala wine. MARSHAL (12) [noun] A high-ranking officer in the household of a medieval prince or lord, who was originally in charge of the cavalry and later the military forces in general. | [noun] A military officer of the highest rank in several countries, including France and the former Soviet Union; equivalent to a general of the army in the United States. See also field marshal. | [noun] A person in charge of the ceremonial arrangement and management of a gathering. MARSHES (12) [noun] An area of low, wet land, often with tall grass. MARTENS (9) [noun] Any carnivorous mammal of the genus Martes in the family Mustelidae. | [noun] Any of various passerine birds of the family Hirundinidae, which also includes swallows, that catch insects whilst flying. | [noun] A perforated stone-faced runner for grinding. MARTIAL (9) [noun] A person under the astrological influence of the planet Mars. | [noun] An inhabitant of the planet Mars. | [noun] A soldier, a warrior. MARTIAN (9) [adjective] Of or relating to the planet Mars, or its imagined inhabitants. | [adjective] Pertaining to the astrological influence of the planet Mars; aggressive, bellicose. | [adjective] Pertaining to battle or war; martial, military. MARTING (10) MARTINI (9) [noun] A cocktail made with gin or vodka and vermouth. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) Any cocktail served in a cocktail glass, often sweet or fruity and aimed at women. MARTINS (9) [noun] Any of various passerine birds of the family Hirundinidae, which also includes swallows, that catch insects whilst flying. | [noun] A perforated stone-faced runner for grinding. MARTLET (9) [noun] A bird, the martin. | [noun] A depiction of a bird similar to a house martin or swallow with stylized feet. MARTYRS (12) [noun] One who willingly accepts being put to death for adhering openly to one's religious beliefs; notably, saints canonized after martyrdom. | [noun] (by extension) One who sacrifices his or her life, station, or something of great personal value, for the sake of principle or to sustain a cause. | [noun] (with a prepositional phrase of cause) One who suffers greatly and/or constantly, even involuntarily. MARTYRY (15) [noun] A shrine in honor of a (usually religious, notably Christian) martyr, possibly at his grave. I | [noun] A shrine at a site which "bears witness" to a crucial religious event not related to a tomb. MARVELS (12) [noun] That which causes wonder; a prodigy; a miracle. | [noun] Wonder, astonishment. | [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. MASCARA (11) [noun] A cosmetic used to darken and thicken the eyelashes. | [verb] To apply mascara to the eyelashes MASCONS (11) [noun] A region within a solid astronomical body that is of higher density than the surrounding material. | [noun] A lunar mare that has a greater density of rock than the surrounding area. | [noun] Mass concentration MASCOTS (11) [noun] Something thought to bring good luck | [noun] Something, especially a person or animal, used to symbolize a sports team, company, organization or other group MASHERS (12) [noun] One who, or that which, mashes. | [noun] A machine for making mash. | [noun] A fashionable man in the late Victorian era. MASHIES (12) [noun] A metal-headed golf club with a moderate loft, the equivalent of a five iron in a modern set of clubs. MASHING (13) [verb] To convert into a mash; to reduce to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure | [verb] In brewing, to convert (for example malt, or malt and meal) into the mash which makes wort. | [verb] To press down hard (on). MASJIDS (17) [noun] A mosque. MASKEGS (14) MASKERS (13) [noun] One who wears a mask; one who appears in disguise at a masquerade or wears a mask in a ritual. | [noun] That which masks (noise in a signal, etc.). MASKING (14) [verb] To cover (the face or something else), in order to conceal the identity or protect against injury; to cover with a mask or visor. | [verb] To disguise; to cover; to hide. | [verb] To conceal; also, to intervene in the line of. MASONED (10) [verb] (normally with a preposition) To build stonework or brickwork about, under, in, over, etc.; to construct by masons | [adjective] (of a building) Having the mortar and bricks of different tinctures. MASONIC (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to stonemasons or masonry. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to freemasonry. MASONRY (12) [noun] The art or occupation of a mason. | [noun] The work or performance of a mason | [noun] That which is built by a mason; anything constructed of the materials used by masons, such as stone, brick, tiles, or the like. Dry masonry is applied to structures made without mortar. MASQUER (18) [noun] One who appears in disguise at a masquerade. MASQUES (18) MASSAGE (10) [noun] The action of rubbing, kneading or hitting someone's body, to help the person relax, prepare for muscular action (as in contact sports) or to relieve aches. | [verb] To rub and knead (someone's body or a part of a body), to perform a massage on (somebody). | [verb] To manipulate (data, a document etc.) to make it more presentable or more convenient to work with. MASSEUR (9) [noun] (massage) A person (especially male) who performs massage. | [noun] An instrument used in the performance of massage. MASSIER (9) MASSIFS (12) [noun] A principal mountain mass. | [noun] A block of the earth's crust bounded by faults or flexures and displaced as a unit without internal change; normally consists of gneisses and schists MASSING (10) [verb] To form or collect into a mass; to form into a collective body; to bring together into masses; to assemble. | [verb] To have a certain mass. | [verb] To celebrate mass. MASSIVE (12) [noun] A homogeneous mass of rock, not layered and without an obvious crystal structure. | [noun] A group of people from a locality, or sharing a collective aim, interest, etc. | [adjective] Very large in size or extent MASTABA (11) [noun] A wide stone bench built into the wall of a house, shop etc. in the Middle East. | [noun] A rectangular structure with a flat top and slightly sloping sides, built during Ancient Egyptian times above tombs that were situated on flat land. Mastabas were made of wood, mud bricks, stone, or a combination of these materials. Some are solid structures, while others can contain one or more rooms, sometimes decorated with paintings or inscriptions. MASTERS (9) [noun] Someone who has control over something or someone. | [noun] The owner of an animal or slave. | [noun] The captain of a merchant ship; a master mariner. MASTERY (12) [noun] The position or authority of a master; dominion; command; supremacy; superiority. | [noun] Superiority in war or competition; victory; triumph; preeminence. | [noun] Contest for superiority. MASTICS (11) [noun] An evergreen shrub or small tree, Pistacia lentiscus (mastic tree), native to the Mediterranean. | [noun] A hard, brittle, aromatic and transparent resin produced by this tree and used to make varnishes and chewing gum, and as a flavouring. | [noun] An alcoholic liquor flavoured with this resin. MASTIFF (15) [noun] One of an old breed of powerful, deep-chested, and smooth-coated dogs, used chiefly as watchdogs and guard dogs. MASTING (10) [verb] To supply and fit a mast to (a ship). | [verb] (of swine and other animals) To feed on forest seed or fruit. | [verb] (of a population of plants) To vary fruit and seed production in multi-year cycles. MASTOID (10) [noun] The mastoid process. | [adjective] Of or relating to the mastoid process of the temporal bone. | [adjective] Shaped like a breast or nipple. MATADOR (10) [noun] The person whose aim is to kill the bull in a bullfight. | [noun] A certain game of dominoes in which four dominoes (the 4-3, 5-2, 6-1, and double blank), called matadors, may be played at any time in any way. | [noun] The jack of clubs, or any other trump held in sequence with it, in the game of skat. MATCHED (15) [verb] To agree; to be equal; to correspond. | [verb] To agree with; to be equal to; to correspond to. | [verb] To make a successful match or pairing. MATCHER (14) MATCHES (14) [noun] A competitive sporting event such as a boxing meet, a baseball game, or a cricket match. | [noun] Any contest or trial of strength or skill, or to determine superiority. | [noun] Someone with a measure of an attribute equaling or exceeding the object of comparison. MATCHUP (16) [noun] A pairing of two things, people or teams, especially for a competition MATELOT (9) [noun] Sailor; also "mate;" boon companion MATILDA (10) [noun] A bundle of possessions, often tied up in a sack; a swag. MATINAL (9) [adjective] In the morning, relating to the morning. MATINEE (9) [noun] A showing of a movie, sporting event, or theatrical performance in the morning or afternoon. | [noun] A woman's dress to be worn in the morning or before dinner. | [verb] To put on a matinee performance (of). MATINGS (10) [noun] Pairing of organisms for copulation. | [noun] Sexual union; copulation. MATLESS (9) MATRASS (9) MATRONS (9) [noun] A mature or elderly woman. | [noun] A wife or a widow, especially, one who has borne children. | [noun] A woman of staid or motherly manners. MATSAHS (12) MATTERS (9) [noun] Substance, material. | [noun] A condition, subject or affair, especially one of concern. | [noun] An approximate amount or extent. MATTERY (12) MATTING (10) [verb] To cover, protect or decorate with mats. | [verb] To form a thick, tangled mess; to interweave into, or like, a mat; to entangle. | [noun] Mats, a collection of ground coverings. MATTINS (9) [noun] Together with lauds, the earliest of the canonical hours; normally at sunrise, but often earlier | [noun] Morning prayers MATTOCK (15) [noun] An agricultural tool whose blades are at right angles to the body, similar to a pickaxe. | [verb] To cut or dig with a mattock. MATTOID (10) MATURED (10) [verb] To proceed toward maturity: full development or completion (either of concrete or of abstract things, e.g. plans, judgments, qualities). | [verb] (of food, especially fruit) To attain maturity, to become mature or ripe. | [verb] To bring (something) to maturity, full development or completion. MATURER (9) [adjective] Fully developed; grown up in terms of physical appearance, behaviour or thinking; ripe. | [adjective] Brought to a state of complete readiness. | [adjective] Profound; careful. MATURES (9) [verb] To proceed toward maturity: full development or completion (either of concrete or of abstract things, e.g. plans, judgments, qualities). | [verb] (of food, especially fruit) To attain maturity, to become mature or ripe. | [verb] To bring (something) to maturity, full development or completion. MATZAHS (21) MATZOHS (21) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MATZOON (18) MATZOTH (21) [noun] Thin, unleavened bread in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A piece of the above bread. MAUDLIN (10) [noun] The Magdalene; Mary Magdalene. | [noun] Either of two aromatic plants, costmary or sweet yarrow. | [noun] A Magdalene house; a brothel. MAULERS (9) [noun] One who mauls. MAULING (10) [verb] To handle someone or something in a rough way. | [verb] To savage; to cause serious physical wounds (usually used of an animal). | [verb] To criticise harshly. MAUMETS (11) MAUNDER (10) [noun] A beggar. | [verb] To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle. | [verb] To wander or walk aimlessly. MAVISES (12) [noun] Song thrush. MAWKISH (19) [adjective] Feeling sick, queasy. | [adjective] Sickening or insipid in taste or smell. | [adjective] Excessively or falsely sentimental; showing a sickly excess of sentiment; maudlin. MAXILLA (16) [noun] Either of the two bones that together form the upper jaw. | [noun] (arthropodology) One of a set of paired mouthparts found in many arthropods and used for tasting and manipulating food. MAXIMAL (18) [noun] The element of a set with the greatest magnitude. | [noun] Said of an ideal of a ring or a filter of a lattice: that it is as large as it can be without being trivial (improper). | [noun] Said of a set of well-formed formulas: that it is as large as it can be without being inconsistent; i.e. that for any well-formed formula φ, the set contains either φ or ~φ. MAXIMIN (18) [noun] In decision theory and game theory etc, a rule to identify the worst outcome of each possible option to find one's best (maximum payoff) play. | [verb] To employ a maximin algorithm. MAXIMUM (20) [noun] The highest limit | [noun] The greatest value of a set or other mathematical structure, especially the global maximum or a local maximum of a function | [noun] An upper bound of a set which is also an element of that set MAXIXES (23) [noun] A Brazilian dance in a rapid 2/4 time, influenced by the tango and polka. | [noun] A deep blue variety of beryl. MAXWELL (19) [noun] A unit of magnetic flux that produces one abvolt per turn per second. MAYBUSH (17) MAYDAYS (16) MAYHEMS (17) MAYINGS (13) MAYORAL (12) [adjective] Relating to a mayor (or the office of the mayor). MAYPOLE (14) [noun] A pole, garlanded with streamers held by people who dance around it to celebrate May Day. | [noun] A maypole-like structure of sticks placed about a sapling in the bowers of certain species of bowerbird. | [noun] A penis, especially a large one. MAYPOPS (16) [noun] A type of passionflower, purple in color (Passiflora incarnata). MAYVINS (15) MAYWEED (16) [noun] Stinking chamomile, Anthemis cotula. | [noun] Corn chamomile, field chamomile, Anthemis arvensis. | [noun] Plants of the genera Matricaria and Tripleurospermum. MAZARDS (19) MAZEDLY (22) MAZIEST (18) [adjective] Mazelike; like a maze. | [adjective] Not straight; zigzagging. MAZUMAS (20) MAZURKA (22) [noun] A Polish folk dance in triple time, usually moderately fast, containing a heavy accent on the third beat and occasionally the second beat. | [noun] A classical musical composition inspired by the folk dance and conforming in some respects to its form, particularly as popularized by Chopin. | [noun] A figure skating move that combines elements of the toe loop and bunny-hop. MAZZARD (28) [noun] A sweet cherry, Prunus avium MEADOWS (13) [noun] A field or pasture; a piece of land covered or cultivated with grass, usually intended to be mown for hay. | [noun] Low land covered with coarse grass or rank herbage near rivers and in marshy places by the sea. MEADOWY (16) MEALIER (9) [adjective] Resembling meal (the foodstuff). MEALIES (9) [noun] An ear or kernel of maize; in plural as mass noun: maize, corn. MEANDER (10) [noun] A decorative border constructed from a continuous line, shaped into a repeated motif, that is commonly found in Greek art. | [noun] A structural motif in proteins consisting of four adjacent antiparallel strands and their linking loops. | [noun] One of the turns of a winding, crooked, or involved course. MEANERS (9) MEANEST (9) [verb] To lament. | [verb] To intend. | [verb] To convey (a meaning). MEANIES (9) [noun] A mean (unkind or miserly) person; a killjoy. | [noun] A villain. MEANING (10) [noun] (of words or symbols) The entity, perception, feeling or concept thereby represented or evoked. | [noun] The value, purpose, importance, point or significance (of something beyond the fact of that thing's existence). | [noun] The object or concept that a word or phrase denotes, or that which a sentence says. | [verb] To lament. MEASLED (10) MEASLES (9) [noun] Rubeola, an acute highly contagious disease, often of childhood, caused by Measles virus, of genus Morbillivirus, featuring a spreading red skin rash, fever, runny nose, cough and red eyes | [noun] Any of several other similar diseases, such as German measles. | [noun] A disease of pigs and cattle, caused by larval tapeworms. | [noun] A leper. MEASURE (9) [noun] A prescribed quantity or extent. | [noun] The act or result of measuring. | [noun] Metrical rhythm. MEATIER (9) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing meat. | [adjective] Resembling meat in flavour, etc. | [adjective] Of a person or a body part, large and solid. MEATILY (12) MEATMAN (11) MEATMEN (11) MEDAKAS (14) [noun] Oryzias latipes, a small Japanese ricefish, popular for use in aquariums. MEDALED (11) [verb] To win a medal. | [verb] To award a medal to. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to one who has received a medal. MEDDLED (12) [verb] To interfere in or with; to concern oneself with unduly. | [verb] To interest or engage oneself; to have to do (with), in a good sense. | [verb] To mix (something) with some other substance; to commingle, combine, blend. MEDDLER (11) MEDDLES (11) [verb] To interfere in or with; to concern oneself with unduly. | [verb] To interest or engage oneself; to have to do (with), in a good sense. | [verb] To mix (something) with some other substance; to commingle, combine, blend. MEDEVAC (15) [noun] The emergency transportation, usually by air, of patients to a medical facility. | [noun] A vehicle, typically aircraft, used for emergency transportation of patients to a medical facility. | [noun] Trained personnel who care for patients during emergency transportation to a medical facility. MEDIACY (15) [noun] Mediation; presence of an intermediary. | [noun] The facility to work with words and numbers. | [noun] The facility to work with media. MEDIALS (10) MEDIANS (10) [noun] A central vein or nerve, especially the median vein or median nerve running through the forearm and arm. | [noun] A line segment joining the vertex of triangle to the midpoint of the opposing side. | [noun] The number separating the higher half of a data sample, a population, or a probability distribution, from the lower half. The median of a finite list of numbers can be found by arranging all the observations from lowest value to highest value and picking the middle one (e.g., the median of {3, 3, 5, 9, 11} is 5). If there is an even number of observations, then there is no single middle value; the median is then usually defined to be the mean of the two middle values. MEDIANT (10) [noun] The third degree of the diatonic scale. | [noun] A rational number whose numerator is the sum of the numerators of two other given rational numbers and whose denominator is the sum of the denominators of those same two other rational numbers. MEDIATE (10) [verb] To resolve differences, or to bring about a settlement, between conflicting parties. | [verb] To intervene between conflicting parties in order to resolve differences or bring about a settlement. | [verb] To divide into two equal parts. MEDICAL (12) [noun] A medical examination. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the practice of medicine. | [adjective] Intended to have a therapeutic effect; medicinal. MEDICKS (16) [noun] Any of various European and North African herbs, of the genus Medicago, several of which are grown for fodder etc. | [noun] The science of medicine. MEDICOS (12) [noun] A physician or medical doctor; sometimes also a medical student. MEDINAS (10) [noun] The traditional, older or non-European area of a North African town. MEDIUMS (12) [noun] (plural media or mediums) The chemistry of the surrounding environment, e.g. solid, liquid, gas, vacuum, or a specific substance such as a solvent. | [noun] (plural media or mediums) The materials or empty space through which signals, waves or forces pass. | [noun] (plural media or mediums) A format for communicating or presenting information. MEDLARS (10) [noun] Mespilus germanica, common medlar (now often Crataegus germanica) | [noun] Any tree of the genus Mespilus, now often Crataegus sect. Mespilus, including many species now in other genera. | [noun] Any of several similar trees that bear similar fruit MEDLEYS (13) [noun] Combat, fighting; a battle. | [noun] A collection or mixture of miscellaneous things. | [noun] A collection of related songs played or mixed together as a single piece. MEDULLA (10) [noun] The soft inner part of something, especially the pith of a fruit. | [noun] The inner substance of various organs and structures, especially the marrow of bones. | [noun] The medulla oblongata. MEDUSAE (10) [noun] A jellyfish; specifically , a non-polyp form of individual cnidarians, consisting of a gelatinous umbrella-shaped bell and trailing tentacles. MEDUSAL (10) MEDUSAN (10) MEDUSAS (10) [noun] A jellyfish; specifically , a non-polyp form of individual cnidarians, consisting of a gelatinous umbrella-shaped bell and trailing tentacles. MEEKEST (13) [adjective] Humble, non-boastful, modest, meager, or self-effacing. | [adjective] Submissive, dispirited. MEERKAT (13) [noun] Suricata suricatta, a small carnivorous mammal of the mongoose family, from the Kalahari Desert, known for its habit of standing on its hind legs. MEETERS (9) MEETING (10) [noun] (gerund) The act of persons or things that meet. | [noun] A gathering of persons for a purpose; an assembly. | [noun] (collective) The people at such a gathering. | [verb] To make contact (with) while in proximity. MEGABAR (12) MEGABIT (12) [noun] 106 = 1,000,000 bits or 125,000 bytes (125 kilobytes) | [noun] 220 = 1,048,576 bits; a mebibit | [noun] One megabit per second MEGAHIT (13) MEGAPOD (13) MEGASSE (10) MEGATON (10) [noun] A measure of the strength of an explosion or a bomb based on how many million tons of TNT would be needed to produce the same energy. MEGILPH (15) MEGILPS (12) MEGOHMS (15) [noun] One million (106) ohms, abbreviated as MΩ. MEGRIMS (12) [noun] A headache; a migraine. | [noun] A fancy, a whim, a caprice. | [noun] (in the plural) See megrims. MEINIES (9) MEIOSES (9) [noun] A figure of speech whereby something is made to seem smaller or less important than it actually is; understatement. | [noun] Cell division of a diploid cell into four haploid cells, which develop to produce gametes. MEIOSIS (9) [noun] A figure of speech whereby something is made to seem smaller or less important than it actually is; understatement. | [noun] Cell division of a diploid cell into four haploid cells, which develop to produce gametes. MEIOTIC (11) MELAMED (12) MELANGE (10) [noun] A mixture of different things; a disordered mixture. | [noun] A Viennese coffee speciality, half steamed milk and half coffee. | [noun] A large-scale breccia formed in the accretionary wedge over a subductional environment. MELANIC (11) MELANIN (9) [noun] Any of a group of naturally occurring dark pigments, especially the pigment found in skin, hair, fur, and feathers. MELDERS (10) MELDING (11) [verb] To combine multiple similar objects into one | [verb] In card games, especially of the rummy family, to announce or display a combination of cards. | [noun] A composite or hybrid, the result of being melded. MELILOT (9) [noun] A fragrant plant of the genus Melilotus, often having small yellow or white flowers. MELISMA (11) [noun] A passage of several notes sung to one syllable of text, as in Gregorian chant. MELLING (10) MELLOWS (12) [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. MELODIA (10) MELODIC (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, or having melody. | [adjective] Melodious, tuneful. MELOIDS (10) MELTAGE (10) MELTERS (9) MELTING (10) [verb] To change (or to be changed) from a solid state to a liquid state, usually by a gradual heat. | [verb] To dissolve, disperse, vanish. | [verb] To soften, as by a warming or kindly influence; to relax; to render gentle or susceptible to mild influences; sometimes, in a bad sense, to take away the firmness of; to weaken. MELTONS (9) MEMBERS (13) [noun] One who officially belongs to a group. | [noun] A part of a whole. | [noun] Part of an animal capable of performing a distinct office; an organ; a limb. MEMENTO (11) [noun] A keepsake; an object kept as a reminder of a place or event. MEMOIRS (11) [noun] An autobiography; a book describing the personal experiences of an author. | [noun] A biography; a book describing the experiences of a subject from personal knowledge of the subject or from sources with personal knowledge of the subject. | [noun] Any form of narrative describing the personal experiences of a writer. MENACED (12) [verb] To make threats against (someone); to intimidate. | [verb] To threaten (an evil to be inflicted). | [verb] To endanger (someone or something); to imperil or jeopardize. MENACER (11) MENACES (11) [noun] A perceived threat or danger. | [noun] The act of threatening. | [noun] An annoying and bothersome person or thing. MENAGES (10) [noun] A household; a domestic situation. | [noun] A type of cooperative society whereby all members pay a regular sum of savings, or through which goods can be paid for in installments. | [noun] A group of people living together in a sexual relationship. MENAZON (18) MENDERS (10) MENDIGO (11) MENDING (11) [verb] To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement. | [verb] To alter for the better; to set right; to reform; hence, to quicken; as, to mend one's manners or pace. | [verb] To help, to advance, to further; to add to. MENFOLK (16) [noun] The male members of a group. | [noun] Male people in general. MENHIRS (12) [noun] A single tall standing stone as a monument, especially of prehistoric times. MENIALS (9) [noun] A servant, especially a domestic servant. | [noun] A person who has a subservient nature. MENISCI (11) [noun] A crescent moon, or an object shaped like it. | [noun] A lens which is convex on one side and concave on the other, being crescent-shaped in cross-section. | [noun] The curved surface of liquids in tubes, whether concave or convex, caused by the surface tension of the liquid. MENORAH (12) [noun] A holy candelabrum with seven branches used in the Temple of Jerusalem. | [noun] A candelabrum (hanukkiah) with nine branches used in Jewish worship on Hanukkah. MENSING (10) MENTHOL (12) [noun] A cyclic monoterpene alcohol; the major component of the essential oil of peppermint; used in pharmaceutical preparations as an antitussive and antipruritic agent, as a nasal decongestant, and in menthol cigarettes | [noun] A menthol cigarette. MENTION (9) [noun] A speaking or notice of anything, usually in a brief or cursory manner. Used especially in the phrase make mention of. | [noun] A social media feed, a list of replies or posts mentioning a person. | [verb] To make a short reference to something. MENTORS (9) [noun] A wise and trusted counselor or teacher | [verb] To act as someone's mentor MEOUING (10) MEOWING (13) [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. | [noun] The act of uttering a meow. MERCERS (11) [noun] A merchant dealing in fabrics and textiles, especially silks and other fine cloths. MERCERY (14) MERCIES (11) [noun] Relenting; forbearance to cause or allow harm to another. | [noun] Forgiveness or compassion, especially toward those less fortunate. | [noun] A tendency toward forgiveness, pity, or compassion. MERCURY (14) [noun] A metal. | [noun] Any of several types of plant. MERGERS (10) [noun] One that merges. | [noun] The act or process of merging two or more parts into a single unit. | [noun] The legal union of two or more corporations into a single entity, typically assets and liabilities being assumed by the buying party. MERGING (11) [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To blend gradually into something else. MERINOS (9) [noun] A sheep of a Spanish breed with long, fine hair. | [noun] The wool of this sheep. | [noun] The fabric made from this wool (or from any similar yarn). MERISES (9) MERISIS (9) MERITED (10) [verb] To deserve, to earn. | [verb] To be deserving or worthy. | [verb] To reward. MERLINS (9) [noun] A small falcon, Falco columbarius, that breeds in northern North America, Europe, and Asia. MERLONS (9) [noun] A small falcon, Falco columbarius, that breeds in northern North America, Europe, and Asia. | [noun] Any of the upright projections between the embrasures of a battlement, originally for archers to shield behind while shooting arrows over the embrasures, or through loopholes in the merlons. MERLOTS (9) [noun] A dark-blue variety of wine grape. | [noun] A dry red wine of a certain French type, made from Merlot grapes. MERMAID (12) [noun] A mythological creature with a woman's head and upper body, and a tail of a fish. | [noun] (as a modifier) Coloured a brilliant turquoise. | [noun] A prostitute. MEROPIA (11) MEROPIC (13) MERRIER (9) [adjective] Jolly and full of high spirits. | [adjective] Festive and full of fun and laughter. | [adjective] Brisk MERRILY (12) [adverb] In a cheerful or merry way. MESALLY (12) MESARCH (14) MESCALS (11) [noun] A Mexican alcoholic drink distilled from the fermented juice of the agave. | [noun] The peyote cactus. MESEEMS (11) MESHIER (12) MESHING (13) [verb] To connect together by interlocking, as gears do. | [verb] (by extension) To fit in; to come together harmoniously. | [verb] To catch in a mesh. MESHUGA (13) [adjective] Crazy, mad, senseless, insane MESONIC (11) MESQUIT (18) MESSAGE (10) [noun] A communication, or what is communicated; any concept or information conveyed. | [noun] An underlying theme or conclusion to be drawn from something. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) An errand. MESSANS (9) MESSIAH (12) [noun] (Abrahamic tradition) The one who is ordained by God to lead the people of Israel, believed by Christians and Muslims to be Jesus Christ. | [noun] A similar religious figure or awaited divine ruler, such as the Islamic Mahdi. | [noun] An extremely powerful figure. MESSIER (9) [adjective] (of a place, situation, person, etc) In a disorderly state; chaotic; disorderly. | [adjective] (of a person) Prone to causing mess. | [adjective] (of a situation) Difficult or unpleasant to deal with. MESSILY (12) MESSING (10) [verb] (transitive, often used with "up") To make untidy or dirty. | [verb] (transitive, often used with "up") To throw into disorder or to ruin. | [verb] To interfere. MESSMAN (11) MESSMEN (11) MESTEES (9) MESTESO (9) MESTINO (9) MESTIZA (18) [noun] A female mestizo. MESTIZO (18) [noun] A person of mixed ancestry, especially one of Spanish and Native American heritage. METAGES (10) METALED (10) [adjective] (of a road) Surfaced, tarred, covered in stone or crushed rock (usually tar-coated). | [adjective] (of any object) Made of metal or having metal fittings or plating. METAMER (11) METATES (9) [noun] A flat stone with a slightly concave surface, used with another stone (a mano) for grinding maize or other grains. METAZOA (18) [noun] The multicellular animals of the subkingdom Metazoa considered collectively. METEORS (9) [noun] A fast-moving streak of light in the night sky caused by the entry of extraterrestrial matter into the earth's atmosphere: A shooting star or falling star. | [noun] Any atmospheric phenomenon. (Thus the derivation of meteorology.) These were sometimes classified as aerial or airy meteors (winds), aqueous or watery meteors (hydrometeors: clouds, rain, snow, hail, dew, frost), luminous meteors (rainbows and aurora), and igneous or fiery meteors (lightning and shooting stars). | [noun] A prop similar to poi balls, in that it is twirled at the end of a cord or cable. METEPAS (11) METERED (10) [verb] To measure with a metering device. | [verb] To imprint a postage mark with a postage meter. | [verb] To regulate the flow of or to deliver in regulated amounts (usually of fluids but sometimes of other things such as anticipation or breath). METHANE (12) [noun] The simplest aliphatic hydrocarbon, CH₄, being a constituent of natural gas, and one of the most abundant greenhouse gases. | [noun] Any of very many derivatives of methane. METHODS (13) [noun] A process by which a task is completed; a way of doing something (followed by the adposition of, to or for before the purpose of the process): | [noun] (often "the method") A technique for acting based on the ideas articulated by Constantin Stanislavski and focusing on authentically experiencing the inner life of the character being portrayed. | [noun] A subroutine or function belonging to a class or object, synonym of member function METHOXY (22) METHYLS (15) METICAL (11) [noun] The currency of Mozambique, divided into 100 centavos METIERS (9) [noun] Any activity that is pursued as a trade or profession; a calling. | [noun] An activity to which a person is particularly suited; a forte. | [noun] An outstanding or beneficial feature. METISSE (9) METONYM (14) [noun] (grammar) A word that names an object from a single characteristic of it or of a closely related object; a word used in metonymy. | [noun] (by extension) A concept, idea, or word used to represent, typify, or stand in for a broader set of ideas. METOPAE (11) METOPES (11) [noun] The architectural element between two triglyphs in a Doric frieze. METOPIC (13) METOPON (11) METRICS (11) [noun] A measure for something; a means of deriving a quantitative measurement or approximation for otherwise qualitative phenomena (especially used in engineering). | [noun] A function for the measurement of the "distance" between two points in some metric space: it is a real-valued function d(x,y) between points x and y satisfying the following properties: (1) "non-negativity": d(x,y) \ge 0 , (2) "identity of indiscernibles": d(x,y) = 0 \mbox{ iff } x=y , (2) "symmetry": d(x,y) = d(y,x) , and (3) "triangle inequality": d(x,y) \le d(x,z) + d(z,y) . | [noun] A metric tensor. METRIFY (15) METRING (10) METRIST (9) METTLED (10) METTLES (9) [noun] A quality of endurance and courage. | [noun] Good temperament and character. | [noun] Metal; a metallic substance. METUMPS (13) MEWLERS (12) MEWLING (13) [noun] A sound that mewls. | [verb] To cry weakly with a soft, high-pitched sound; to whimper; to whine. MEZCALS (20) [noun] A Mexican alcoholic drink distilled from the fermented juice of the agave. | [noun] The peyote cactus. MEZQUIT (27) MEZUZAH (30) [noun] A piece of parchment inscribed with specific Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21) and attached in a case to the doorpost of a house, in accordance with the mitzvah (Biblical commandment as interpreted in Jewish law) to "write the words of God on the gates and doorposts of your house" (Deuteronomy 6:9). MEZUZAS (27) [noun] A piece of parchment inscribed with specific Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21) and attached in a case to the doorpost of a house, in accordance with the mitzvah (Biblical commandment as interpreted in Jewish law) to "write the words of God on the gates and doorposts of your house" (Deuteronomy 6:9). MEZUZOT (27) MIAOUED (10) MIAOWED (13) [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MIASMAL (11) MIASMAS (11) [noun] A noxious atmosphere or influence. | [noun] A noxious atmosphere or emanation once thought to originate from swamps and waste, and to cause disease. MIASMIC (13) [adjective] Filled with miasma; containing noxious vapors. | [adjective] Composed of or resembling vapors. MIAULED (10) [verb] To give the cry of a cat. MICELLA (11) MICELLE (11) [noun] A colloidal aggregate, in a simple geometric form, of a specific number of amphipathic molecules which forms at a well-defined concentration, called the critical micelle concentration MICELLS (11) MICHING (15) MICKEYS (18) [noun] A small bottle of liquor, holding 375 ml or 13 oz., typically shaped to fit in one's pocket. | [noun] A Mickey Finn; a beverage, usually alcoholic, that has been drugged. | [noun] American depression era term for a potato as in a "roasted mickey". MICKLER (15) MICKLES (15) [noun] A great amount. | [noun] (originally erroneous) A small amount. | [noun] Great or important people as a class. MICRIFY (17) MICROBE (13) [noun] Any microorganism, but especially a harmful bacterium. MICROHM (16) MICRONS (11) [noun] A semicircular diacritical mark (˘) placed above a vowel, commonly used to mark its quantity as short. | [noun] A double whole note. | [noun] Any writ or precept under seal, issued out of any court. MIDAIRS (10) [noun] A collision between two or more aerospace vehicles in flight. MIDCULT (12) MIDDAYS (14) [noun] Noon; twelve o'clock during the day MIDDENS (11) [noun] A dungheap. | [noun] A refuse heap usually near a dwelling. | [noun] A prehistoric pile of bones and shells. MIDDIES (11) [noun] A midshipman | [noun] A measure of 285 ml (10 fl oz) of beer; a pot. | [noun] Middle-grade marijuana. MIDDLED (12) [verb] To take a middle view of. | [verb] To double (a rope) into two equal portions; to fold in the middle. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified kind of middle. MIDDLER (11) MIDDLES (11) [noun] A centre, midpoint. | [noun] The part between the beginning and the end. | [noun] The middle stump. MIDGETS (11) [noun] A little sandfly. | [noun] Any small swarming insect similar to the mosquito; a midge. | [noun] (sometimes offensive) A normally proportioned person with small stature, usually defined as reaching an adult height less than 4'10". MIDGUTS (11) [noun] The central loop of the alimentary canal of an embryo between the foregut and the hindgut. MIDIRON (10) [noun] An iron golf club with more lift than a driver. MIDLAND (11) [noun] The region of a country not near the borders; the interior. | [adjective] Resembling or relating to the interior region of a country. MIDLEGS (11) MIDLIFE (13) [noun] The middle period of one's life. | [adjective] Occurring in the middle point of one's life, usually considered about 45. MIDLINE (10) [noun] The medial line (or plane) of the body, which divides the body into halves that are mirror-images of each other. | [noun] The level of the top of the x-height of a typeface. MIDMOST (12) [adjective] In the exact middle, or nearest to the exact middle; middlemost MIDNOON (10) MIDRASH (13) MIDRIBS (12) [noun] The strengthened vein down the middle of a flower petal or simple leaf or leaflet. | [noun] The continuation of the petiole of a pinnately compound leaf around which the leaflets attach. MIDRIFF (16) [noun] The middle section of the human torso, from below the chest to above the waist MIDSHIP (15) [noun] The middle of a ship or a boat. | [adjective] Pertaining to the middle of a ship or a boat. MIDSIZE (19) [noun] A car of intermediate size. | [adjective] Of intermediate size. MIDSOLE (10) [noun] The layer of a shoe in between the outsole and insole, typically there for shock absorption. MIDTERM (12) [noun] A midterm school exam (i.e., halfway through the term). | [noun] A midterm election | [adjective] Halfway through a term, or roughly so. MIDTOWN (13) [noun] The part of a city between uptown and downtown MIDWAYS (16) [noun] The middle; the midst. | [noun] A middle way or manner; a mean or middle course between extremes. | [noun] The part of a fair or circus where rides, entertainments, and booths are concentrated. MIDWEEK (17) [noun] The middle of the week. | [adjective] That happens in the middle of the week | [adverb] In the middle of the week. MIDWIFE (16) [noun] A person, usually a woman, who is trained to assist women in childbirth, but who is not a physician. | [noun] Someone who assists in bringing about some result or project. | [verb] To act as a midwife MIDYEAR (13) [noun] The middle part of a year. | [noun] An examination taken in the middle part of an academic year. MIFFIER (15) MIFFING (16) [verb] (usually used in the passive) To offend slightly. | [verb] To become slightly offended. MIGGLES (11) MIGNONS (10) MIGRANT (10) [noun] A migratory bird or other animal. | [noun] Traveller or worker who moves from one region or country to another. | [noun] An immigrant or refugee. MIGRATE (10) [verb] To relocate periodically from one region to another, usually according to the seasons. | [verb] To change one's geographic pattern of habitation. | [verb] To change habitations across a border; to move from one country or political region to another. MIHRABS (14) [noun] A niche in a mosque that indicates the qibla (direction of Mecca), and into which the imam prays | [noun] A design in a Muslim prayer mat with the same function MIKADOS (14) [noun] (history) A former title of the emperors of Japan during a certain period. | [noun] Any emperor of Japan | [noun] A game of skill, in which identically shaped (but differently colored and valued) wooden sticks must be removed from a pile without disturbing the remaining stack MIKRONS (13) MIKVAHS (19) [noun] A ritual bath in which various Jewish purifications are performed. MIKVEHS (19) [noun] A ritual bath in which various Jewish purifications are performed. MIKVOTH (19) MILADIS (10) MILAGES (10) [noun] The total distance travelled in miles or in air miles. | [noun] The number of miles travelled by a vehicle on a certain volume of fuel. | [noun] An allowance for travel expenses at a specified rate per mile. MILCHIG (15) MILDENS (10) MILDEST (10) [adjective] Gentle and not easily angered. | [adjective] (of a rule or punishment) Of only moderate severity; not strict. | [adjective] Not overly felt or seriously intended. MILDEWS (13) [verb] To taint with mildew. | [verb] To become tainted with mildew. MILDEWY (16) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or affected with mildew MILEAGE (10) [noun] The total distance travelled in miles or in air miles. | [noun] The number of miles travelled by a vehicle on a certain volume of fuel. | [noun] An allowance for travel expenses at a specified rate per mile. MILFOIL (12) [noun] Common yarrow, Achillea millefolium. | [noun] Any of several similar pungent Eurasian herbs, of the genus Achillea | [noun] Any plants of the genus Myriophyllum; water milfoil. MILIARY (12) [noun] One of the small tubercles of Echinus sea urchins. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to millet seeds. | [adjective] Having small lesions that are the shape and size of millet seeds. MILIEUS (9) [noun] Medium. | [noun] Social setting or environment. MILIEUX (16) [noun] Medium. | [noun] Social setting or environment. MILITIA (9) [noun] An army of trained civilians, which may be an official reserve army, called upon in time of need, the entire able-bodied population of a state which may also be called upon, or a private force not under government control. | [noun] The police in the Soviet Union and some related or successor states (e.g. modern Belarus). MILKERS (13) [noun] An animal, such as a dairy cow, kept for the milk it produces. | [noun] A person who milks. | [noun] A milking machine. MILKIER (13) [adjective] Resembling milk in color, consistency, smell, etc.; consisting of milk. | [adjective] (color science) Of the black in an image, appearing as dark gray rather than black. | [adjective] (of a drink) Containing (an especially large amount of) milk. MILKILY (16) MILKING (14) [verb] To express milk from (a mammal, especially a cow). | [verb] To draw (milk) from the breasts or udder. | [verb] To express any liquid (from any creature). | [noun] The act by which a cow, etc. is milked MILKMAN (15) [noun] A man who delivers milk to households and sometimes businesses early in the morning. MILKMEN (15) [noun] A man who delivers milk to households and sometimes businesses early in the morning. MILKSOP (15) [noun] A piece of bread sopped in milk. | [noun] Bread pieces in a bowl, sprinkled with sugar, & covered in hot milk. | [noun] (by extension) A weak, easily frightened or ineffectual person. MILLAGE (10) MILLDAM (12) [noun] A dam constructed across a river or stream to raise the water level so that it can turn a millwheel; also, the millpond so created. MILLERS (9) [noun] A person who owns or operates a mill, especially a flour mill. | [noun] A milling machine. | [noun] Any of several moths that have powdery wings, especially Acronicta leporina and moths of the genus Agrotis. MILLETS (9) MILLIER (9) MILLIME (11) MILLINE (9) MILLING (10) [verb] To grind or otherwise process in a mill or other machine. | [verb] To shape, polish, dress or finish using a machine. | [verb] To engrave one or more grooves or a pattern around the edge of (a cylindrical object such as a coin). MILLION (9) [numeral] (long and short scales) The cardinal number 1,000,000: 106; a thousand thousand. | [numeral] An unspecified very large number. MILLRUN (9) MILNEBS (11) MILORDS (10) [noun] My Lord (used to address peers temporal, judges, etc). | [noun] An English nobleman, especially one traveling Europe in grand style; a wealthy British gentleman. MILREIS (9) [noun] A former currency of Portugal. | [noun] A former currency of Brazil. MILTERS (9) [noun] A male fish during breeding season. MILTIER (9) MILTING (10) MIMBARS (13) [noun] A pulpit in a mosque from which the leader of prayers delivers the khutbah. MIMEOED (12) MIMESIS (11) [noun] The representation of aspects of the real world, especially human actions, in literature and art. | [noun] Mimicry. | [noun] The appearance of symptoms of a disease not actually present. MIMETIC (13) [noun] Something mimetic or imitative. | [noun] A type of mnemonic in the form of a picture. | [noun] (pharmaceutical effect) A substance with similar pharmacological effects to another substance. MIMICAL (13) MIMICRY (16) [noun] The act or ability to simulate the appearance of someone or something else. MIMOSAS (11) [noun] A plant belonging to the genus Mimosa usually found in tropical climates, their leaves are usually prickly and sensitive to touch or light, and have small white or pink flowers. | [noun] Albizia species (silk tree, pink siris). | [noun] Acacia species. MINABLE (11) MINARET (9) [noun] The tall slender tower of an Islamic mosque, from which the muezzin recites the adhan (call to prayer). MINCERS (11) MINCIER (11) MINCING (12) [verb] To make less; make small. | [verb] To lessen; diminish; to diminish in speaking; speak of lightly or slightingly; minimise. | [verb] To effect mincingly. MINDERS (10) [noun] One who minds, tends, or watches something such as a child, a machine, or cattle; a keeper | [noun] A personal bodyguard. | [noun] A guide assigned by the authorities to foreign visitors so as to exercise control over their contacts with the populace. MINDFUL (13) [adjective] Being aware (of something); attentive, heedful. | [adjective] Inclined (to do something). | [noun] As much as can be held in one's mind at a time. MINDING (11) [noun] The act of taking heed of something. | [verb] (originally and chiefly in negative or interrogative constructions) To dislike, to object to; to be bothered by. | [verb] To look after, to take care of, especially for a short period of time. MINDSET (10) [noun] A way of thinking; an attitude or opinion, especially a habitual one. MINERAL (9) [noun] Any naturally occurring inorganic material that has a (more or less) definite chemical composition and characteristic physical properties. | [noun] Any inorganic material (as distinguished from animal or vegetable). | [noun] (nutrition) Any inorganic element that is essential to nutrition; a dietary mineral. MINGIER (10) [adjective] Mean, miserly, stingy. MINGLED (11) [verb] To intermix; to combine or join, as an individual or part, with other parts, but commonly so as to be distinguishable in the product | [verb] To associate or unite in a figurative way, or by ties of relationship | [verb] To cause or allow to intermarry MINGLER (10) [noun] One who, or that which, mingles. MINGLES (10) [verb] To intermix; to combine or join, as an individual or part, with other parts, but commonly so as to be distinguishable in the product | [verb] To associate or unite in a figurative way, or by ties of relationship | [verb] To cause or allow to intermarry MINIBUS (11) [noun] A small bus, especially one used as transport for small groups. | [noun] A-sixteen seater vehicle used as a taxi. A kombi. | [noun] A small four-wheeled carriage. MINICAB (13) [noun] A small car used as a taxi (rather than a traditional black cab). | [noun] An unlicensed taxi. | [verb] To drive a minicab. MINICAR (11) MINIKIN (13) [noun] A young person, especially a young woman. | [noun] A small or insignificant person, thing or amount. | [noun] A little pin. MINILAB (11) MINIMAL (11) [adjective] The smallest possible amount, quantity, or degree. | [adjective] Characterised by the use of simple form or structures. | [adjective] Characterised by the repetition and gradual alteration of short phrases. MINIMAX (18) [noun] In decision theory, game theory, etc. a decision rule used for minimizing the maximum possible loss, or maximizing the minimum gain. | [verb] To find the optimum play, or decision, to achieve minimizing the maximum loss. MINIMUM (13) [noun] The lowest limit. | [noun] The smallest amount. | [noun] A period of minimum brightness or energy intensity (of a star). MININGS (10) MINIONS (9) [noun] The lowest limit. | [noun] The smallest amount. | [noun] A period of minimum brightness or energy intensity (of a star). MINISKI (13) MINIUMS (11) MINIVAN (12) [noun] A small van. MINIVER (12) [noun] A light gray or white fur used to trim the robes of judges or state executives, also used in medieval times. MINNIES (9) MINNOWS (12) [noun] A small freshwater fish of the carp family, Phoxinus phoxinus. | [noun] Any small fish. | [noun] A relatively small and insignificant person or organization. MINORCA (11) MINORED (10) [verb] To choose or have an area of secondary concentration as a student in a college or university. MINSTER (9) [noun] A monastic church. | [noun] A cathedral church without any monastic connection. MINTAGE (10) [noun] The process of minting coins | [noun] The batch of coins minted at one time | [noun] Coins collectively; specie MINTERS (9) [noun] One who mints | [noun] An item in mint condition (especially a motor car) MINTIER (9) MINTING (10) [verb] To reproduce (coins), usually en masse, under licence. | [verb] To invent; to forge; to fabricate; to fashion. | [verb] (provincial) To try, attempt; take aim. MINUEND (10) [noun] A number or quantity from which another is to be subtracted. MINUETS (9) [noun] A slow graceful dance consisting of a coupé, a high step, and a balance. | [noun] A tune or air to regulate the movements of the minuet dance: it has the dance form, and is commonly in 3/4, sometimes 3/8, measure. | [noun] A complete short musical composition inspired by and conforming to many formal characteristics of the traditional musical accompaniment to the dance of same name. MINUSES (9) [noun] The minus sign (−). | [noun] A negative quantity. | [noun] A downside or disadvantage. MINUTED (10) [verb] Of an event, to write in a memo or the minutes of a meeting. | [verb] To set down a short sketch or note of; to jot down; to make a minute or a brief summary of. MINUTER (9) MINUTES (9) [noun] A unit of time equal to sixty seconds (one-sixtieth of an hour). | [noun] A short but unspecified time period. | [noun] A unit of angle equal to one-sixtieth of a degree. MINUTIA (9) [noun] A minor detail, often of negligible importance. | [noun] (biometrics, forensics) Any of the point features on fingerprints used for matching, usually endings and bifurcations of ridges. MINXISH (19) MINYANS (12) MIOTICS (11) MIRACLE (11) [noun] An event that appears inexplicable by the laws of nature and so is held to be supernatural in origin. | [noun] A fortunate outcome that prevails despite overwhelming odds against it. | [noun] An awesome and exceptional example of something MIRADOR (10) [noun] A tower that offers a panoramic view MIRAGES (10) [noun] An optical phenomenon in which light is refracted through a layer of hot air close to the ground, giving the appearance of there being refuge in the distance. | [noun] An illusion. | [verb] To cause to appear as or like a mirage. MIREXES (16) MIRIEST (9) MIRKEST (13) MIRKIER (13) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MIRKILY (16) MIRRORS (9) [noun] A smooth surface, usually made of glass with reflective material painted on the underside, that reflects light so as to give an image of what is in front of it. | [noun] An object, person, or event that reflects or gives a picture of another. | [noun] A disk, website or other resource that contains replicated data. MISACTS (11) MISADDS (11) MISAIMS (11) MISALLY (12) MISAVER (12) MISBIAS (11) MISBILL (11) MISBIND (12) MISCALL (11) [verb] To call (someone) bad names; to insult, abuse. | [verb] To call (something) by the wrong name. | [verb] To make a wrong call; to announce (one's hand of cards) incorrectly. MISCAST (11) [noun] An erroneous cast or reckoning. | [verb] To cast or reckon incorrectly. | [verb] To cast or direct erroneously or improperly. MISCITE (11) MISCODE (12) MISCOIN (11) MISCOOK (15) MISCOPY (16) [noun] An imperfect copy. | [verb] To copy incorrectly; to copy with mistakes. MISCUED (12) [verb] To give an incorrect cue. | [verb] To mishit, strike incorrectly. MISCUES (11) [noun] In a cue sport, an error in hitting the ball with the cue. | [noun] The act of missing one's cue or of responding to a cue intended for another actor. | [noun] A miss of the object one intended to hit. MISCUTS (11) MISDATE (10) [noun] A wrong date. | [verb] To date incorrectly; to mark with the wrong date. MISDEAL (10) [noun] Incorrect dealing or distribution. | [verb] To deal or distribute wrongly. MISDEED (11) [noun] That which was done that should not have been, ranging from any sin or moral offense to various degrees of crime. MISDEEM (12) MISDIAL (10) [noun] An instance of misdialling. | [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDOER (10) MISDOES (10) MISDONE (10) MISDRAW (13) MISDREW (13) MISEASE (9) MISEATS (9) MISEDIT (10) MISERLY (12) [adjective] Like a miser; very covetous; cautious with money MISFILE (12) [verb] To file incorrectly; to file in the wrong place or the wrong way. MISFIRE (12) [noun] An act of misfiring. | [verb] To fail to discharge properly. | [verb] (of an engine) To fail to ignite in the proper sequence. MISFITS (12) [noun] An ill-fitting garment. | [noun] A failure to fit well; unsuitability, disparity. | [noun] A badly adjusted person; someone unsuitable or set apart because of their habits, behaviour etc. MISFORM (14) MISGAVE (13) [verb] (of the mind, heart, etc.) To give fear or doubt to; to make irresolute. | [verb] To suspect; to dread. | [verb] To give wrongly; to give or grant amiss. MISGIVE (13) [verb] (of the mind, heart, etc.) To give fear or doubt to; to make irresolute. | [verb] To suspect; to dread. | [verb] To give wrongly; to give or grant amiss. MISGREW (13) MISGROW (13) MISHAPS (14) [noun] An accident, mistake, or problem. | [noun] Evil accident; ill luck; misfortune; mischance. MISHEAR (12) [verb] To hear wrongly. | [verb] To misunderstand. MISHITS (12) [noun] An incorrect or bad hit. | [verb] To incorrectly or badly hit. MISJOIN (16) MISKALS (13) MISKEEP (15) MISKEPT (15) MISKICK (19) [noun] A bad kick. | [verb] To kick incorrectly or badly. MISKNEW (16) MISKNOW (16) MISLAID (10) [adjective] Cannot be currently found, put in an obscure place, lost - often temporarily. | [verb] To leave or lay something in the wrong place and then forget where one put it. MISLAIN (9) MISLAYS (12) [verb] To leave or lay something in the wrong place and then forget where one put it. MISLEAD (10) [verb] To lead astray, in a false direction. | [verb] To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. | [verb] To deceptively trick into something wrong. MISLIES (9) MISLIKE (13) [verb] To displease. | [verb] To dislike; to disapprove of; to have aversion to. MISLIVE (12) MISMADE (12) MISMAKE (15) MISMARK (15) MISMATE (11) [verb] To mate or match wrongly or unsuitably; mismatch. MISMEET (11) MISMOVE (14) MISNAME (11) [noun] A wrong, unsuitable, misleading, or injurious name or designation; misnomer. | [verb] To call by a wrong name. | [verb] To give an unsuitable or injurious name to; name incorrectly. MISPAGE (12) MISPART (11) MISPENS (11) MISPLAN (11) MISPLAY (14) [noun] A wrong play. | [verb] To play incorrectly or poorly. MISPLED (12) MISRATE (9) MISREAD (10) [noun] An instance of reading wrongly. | [verb] To read wrongly, normally by accident; misconstrue; misinterpret; mistake the sense or significance of. MISRELY (12) MISRULE (9) [noun] The state of being ruled badly; disorder, lawlessness, anarchy. | [noun] Misgovernment; bad or unjust government. | [verb] Of a trial judge, to make a bad decision in court. MISSAID (10) MISSALS (9) [noun] A prayer book | [noun] A book containing the prayers and responses needed when celebrating the Roman Catholic Mass throughout the year MISSAYS (12) MISSEAT (9) MISSELS (9) MISSEND (10) MISSENT (9) MISSETS (9) MISSHOD (13) MISSIES (9) [noun] A young woman; miss. | [noun] A young female, or miss; as a term of mild disparagement, typically used jokingly or rebukingly. MISSILE (9) [noun] Any object used as a weapon by being thrown or fired through the air, such as stone, arrow or bullet. | [noun] A self-propelled projectile whose trajectory can be adjusted after it is launched. MISSING (10) [verb] To fail to hit. | [verb] To fail to achieve or attain. | [verb] To avoid; to escape. MISSION (9) [noun] A set of tasks that fulfills a purpose or duty; an assignment set by an employer, or by oneself. | [noun] Religious evangelism. | [noun] (in the plural, "the missions") third world charities, particularly those which preach as well as provide aid. MISSIVE (12) [noun] A written message; a letter, note or memo. | [noun] (in the plural) Letters sent between two parties in which one makes an offer and the other accepts it. | [noun] One who is sent; a messenger. MISSORT (9) MISSOUT (9) MISSTEP (11) [noun] A step that is wrong, a false step. | [noun] An error or mistake. | [verb] To step badly or incorrectly. MISSTOP (11) MISSUIT (9) MISTAKE (13) [noun] An error; a blunder. | [noun] A pitch which was intended to be pitched in a hard-to-hit location, but instead ends up in an easy-to-hit place. | [verb] To understand wrongly, taking one thing or person for another. MISTBOW (14) MISTEND (10) MISTERM (11) MISTERS (9) [noun] A title conferred on an adult male, usually when the name is unknown. Also used as a term of address, often by a parent to a young child. | [noun] Someone's business or function; an occupation, employment, trade. | [noun] A kind, type of. MISTEUK (13) MISTIER (9) [adjective] Covered in mist; foggy. | [adjective] Dim; vague; obscure. | [adjective] With tears in the eyes; dewy-eyed. MISTILY (12) MISTIME (11) [verb] To do at the wrong time; especially to misjudge the timing of coordinated events. MISTING (10) [verb] To form mist. | [verb] To spray fine droplets on, particularly of water. | [verb] To cover with a mist. MISTOOK (13) [verb] To understand wrongly, taking one thing or person for another. | [verb] To misunderstand (someone). | [verb] To commit an unintentional error; to do or think something wrong. MISTRAL (9) [noun] A strong cold north-west wind in southern France and the Mediterranean. MISTUNE (9) MISTYPE (14) [verb] To type incorrectly, introducing spelling mistakes or other errors. | [verb] To categorize incorrectly. MISUSED (10) [verb] To use (something) incorrectly. | [verb] To abuse or mistreat (something or someone). | [verb] To rape (a woman); later more generally, to sexually abuse (someone). MISUSER (9) MISUSES (9) [noun] An incorrect, improper or unlawful use of something. | [verb] To use (something) incorrectly. | [verb] To abuse or mistreat (something or someone). MISWORD (13) MISWRIT (12) MISYOKE (16) MITERED (10) [verb] To adorn with a mitre. | [verb] To unite at an angle of 45°. MITERER (9) MITHERS (12) [verb] To make an unnecessary fuss, moan, bother. | [verb] To pester or irritate someone. Usually directed at children. | [noun] Mother MITIEST (9) MITISES (9) MITOGEN (10) [noun] Any substance that stimulates mitosis MITOSES (9) [noun] The division of a cell nucleus in which the genome is copied and separated into two identical halves. It is normally followed by cell division. MITOSIS (9) [noun] The division of a cell nucleus in which the genome is copied and separated into two identical halves. It is normally followed by cell division. MITOTIC (11) MITRING (10) [verb] To adorn with a mitre. | [verb] To unite at an angle of 45°. MITSVAH (15) MITTENS (9) [noun] A type of glove or garment that covers a hand with a separate sheath for the thumb, but not for other fingers, which are either enclosed in a single section or left uncovered. | [noun] A cat's or dog's paw that is a different colour from the main body. | [noun] (as "the mitten") A romantic rejection; dismissal of a lover. MITZVAH (24) [noun] Any of the 613 commandments of Jewish law | [noun] An act of kindness, a good deed. MIXABLE (18) MIXIBLE (18) MIXTURE (16) [noun] The act of mixing. | [noun] Something produced by mixing. | [noun] Something that consists of diverse elements. MIZZENS (27) [noun] Mizzenmast. | [noun] A fore-and-aft sail set on a mizzenmast. MIZZLED (28) [verb] To rain in very fine drops. | [verb] To abscond, scram, flee. | [verb] To yield. MIZZLES (27) [verb] To rain in very fine drops. | [verb] To abscond, scram, flee. | [verb] To yield. MOANERS (9) MOANFUL (12) MOANING (10) [verb] To complain about; to bemoan, to bewail; to mourn. | [verb] To grieve. | [verb] To distress (someone); to sadden. MOATING (10) [verb] To surround with a moat. MOBBERS (13) MOBBING (14) [verb] To crowd around (someone), sometimes with hostility. | [verb] To crowd into or around a place. | [verb] To wrap up in, or cover with, a cowl. MOBBISH (16) MOBCAPS (15) [noun] A plain cap or headdress for women or girls, especially one tied under the chin by a very broad band. | [noun] (modern-day use) A disposable head covering with an elasticated band, worn for cleanliness in industrial settings. MOBILES (11) [noun] A kinetic sculpture or decorative arrangement made of items hanging so that they can move independently from each other. | [noun] The internet accessed via mobile devices. | [noun] Something that can move. MOBSTER (11) [noun] A member of a mob or Mafia MOCHILA (14) MOCKERS (15) [noun] A person who mocks. | [noun] A mockingbird. | [noun] A deceiver; an impostor. MOCKERY (18) [noun] The action of mocking; ridicule, derision. | [noun] Something so lacking in necessary qualities as to inspire ridicule; a laughing-stock. | [noun] Something insultingly imitative; an offensively futile action, gesture etc. MOCKING (16) [verb] To mimic, to simulate. | [verb] To create an artistic representation of. | [verb] To make fun of by mimicking, to taunt. MOCKUPS (17) [noun] A prototype, usually low-fidelity, such as paper illustrations, screenshots, or simple configurations of screens with limited interaction. MODALLY (13) MODELED (11) [verb] To display for others to see, especially in regard to wearing clothing while performing the role of a fashion model | [verb] To use as an object in the creation of a forecast or model | [verb] To make a miniature model of MODELER (10) MODERNE (10) MODERNS (10) [noun] Someone who lives in modern times. MODESTY (13) [noun] The quality of being modest; having a limited and not overly high opinion of oneself and one's abilities. | [noun] Moderate behaviour; reserve. | [noun] (specifically) Pudency, avoidance of sexual explicitness. MODICUM (14) [noun] A modest, small, or trifling amount. MODIOLI (10) [noun] The central core of the cochlea | [noun] A chiasma of facial muscles held together by fibrous tissue MODISTE (10) [noun] A person who makes or sells fashionable women's clothing, especially dresses or hats. MODULAR (10) [adjective] Consisting of separate modules; especially where each module performs or fulfills some specified function and could be replaced by a similar module for the same function, independently of the other modules. | [adjective] Of or relating to a module or modules. | [adjective] Relating to mode or modulation. MODULES (10) [noun] A self-contained component of a system, often interchangeable, which has a well-defined interface to the other components. | [noun] A standard unit of measure used for determining the proportions of a building. | [noun] A section of a program; a subroutine or group of subroutines. MODULUS (10) [noun] The base with respect to which a congruence is computed. | [noun] The absolute value of a complex number. | [noun] A coefficient that expresses how much of a certain property is possessed by a certain substance. MOFETTE (12) [noun] A volcanic discharge of carbon dioxide together with other, mostly smelly, gases MOGGIES (11) [noun] A young cow or bull. | [noun] Leather made of the skin of the calf; especially, a fine, light-coloured leather used in bookbinding. | [noun] A young deer, elephant, seal, whale or giraffe (also used of some other animals). MOGGING (12) MOHAIRS (12) MOHALIM (14) [noun] The person who performs the circumcision in a Jewish bris. MOHELIM (14) [noun] The person who performs the circumcision in a Jewish bris. MOIDORE (10) [noun] An old Portuguese gold coin, minted from 1640 to 1732. MOILERS (9) MOILING (10) [verb] To toil, to work hard. | [verb] To churn continually; to swirl. | [verb] To defile or dirty. MOISTEN (9) [verb] To make moist or moister. | [verb] To become moist or moister. MOISTER (9) [adjective] Slightly wet; characterised by the presence of moisture, not dry; damp. | [adjective] Of eyes: tearful, wet with tears. | [adjective] Of weather, climate etc.: rainy, damp. MOISTLY (12) MOJARRA (16) [noun] A perciform fish in the family Gerreidae, often used as bait. MOLDERS (10) [noun] One who molds something into shape. | [noun] A person who makes molds. | [noun] A tool for making molds. MOLDIER (10) [adjective] Covered with mold. | [adjective] Stale or musty. MOLDING (11) [verb] To shape in or on a mold; to form into a particular shape; to give shape to. | [verb] To guide or determine the growth or development of; influence | [verb] To fit closely by following the contours of. MOLESTS (9) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLLAHS (12) MOLLIES (9) [noun] Any of many New World fish of the genus Poecilia, formerly called Mollienesia. | [noun] A Molotov cocktail. | [noun] A woman or girl, especially of low status. MOLLIFY (15) [verb] To ease a burden, particularly worry; make less painful; to comfort. | [verb] To appease (anger), pacify, gain the good will of. | [verb] To soften; to make tender MOLLUSC (11) [noun] A soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically with a hard shell of one or more pieces. | [noun] A weak-willed person. MOLLUSK (13) [noun] A soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically with a hard shell of one or more pieces. | [noun] A weak-willed person. MOLOCHS (14) [noun] Moloch horridus, an Australian lizard thought to be the sole member of the genus Moloch. MOLTERS (9) MOLTING (10) [noun] A molt; the shedding of skin, feathers, etc. | [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. MOMENTA (11) [noun] Of a body in motion: the tendency of a body to maintain its inertial motion; the product of its mass and velocity. | [noun] The impetus, either of a body in motion, or of an idea or course of events; a moment. MOMENTO (11) MOMENTS (11) [noun] A brief, unspecified amount of time. | [noun] The smallest portion of time; an instant. | [noun] Weight or importance. MOMISMS (13) MOMMIES (13) [noun] (usually childish) Mother. | [verb] To treat someone like a mother would; to mother someone. MOMSERS (11) MOMUSES (11) MOMZERS (20) MONACID (12) MONADAL (10) MONADES (10) MONADIC (12) MONARCH (14) [noun] The ruler of an absolute monarchy or the head of state of a constitutional monarchy. | [noun] The monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus, and others of genus Danaus, found primarily in North America, so called because of the designs on its wings. | [noun] (Aboriginal English) A police officer. MONARDA (10) MONAXON (16) MONERAN (9) MONEYED (13) [adjective] Affluent; rich | [adjective] Paid for; funded MONEYER (12) [noun] A moneylender. | [noun] Someone who makes coins; an official minter. MONGERS (10) MONGOES (10) MONGOLS (10) [noun] A person from Mongolia; a Mongolian. | [noun] A member of any of the various Mongol ethnic groups living in The Mongolian People's Republic, the (former) USSR, Tibet and Nepal. | [noun] (usually mongol) A person with Down's syndrome. MONGREL (10) [noun] Someone or something of mixed kind or uncertain origin, especially a dog. | [noun] A thuggish, obnoxious, or contemptible person; (often preceded by "poor") a pitiable person. MONIKER (13) [noun] A personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute. | [noun] A signature. | [noun] An object (structured item of data) used to associate the name of an object with its location. MONISMS (11) [noun] The doctrine of the oneness and unity of reality, despite the appearance of diversity in the world. MONISTS (9) MONITOR (9) [noun] Someone who watches over something; a person in charge of something or someone. | [noun] A device that detects and informs on the presence, quantity, etc., of something. | [noun] A device similar to a television set used as to give a graphical display of the output from a computer. MONKERY (16) [noun] The practices of monks; the way of life, behavior, etc. characteristic of monks; monastic life. | [noun] Monasticism. | [noun] A monastery. MONKEYS (16) [noun] Any member of the clade Simiiformes not also of the clade Hominoidea containing humans and apes, from which they are usually, but not universally, distinguished by smaller size, a tail, and cheek pouches. | [noun] Any nonhuman simian primate, including apes. | [noun] A mischievous child. MONKISH (16) [adjective] Pertaining to, or resembling, a monk or monasticism. | [adjective] Tending to self-denial; ascetic. MONOCLE (11) [noun] A single lens, usually in a wire frame, and used to correct vision for only one eye. | [noun] A one-eyed animal. MONOCOT (11) [noun] Any plant whose seedlings typically have one cotyledon (seed leaf) (in contrast to the two cotyledons typical of dicots), thereby belonging to the taxonomic monocots, formerly variously known as Monocotyledones, Monocotyledonae, or Liliopsida, a class in the angiosperms (Angiospermae), the flowering plants. MONODIC (12) MONOECY (14) MONOFIL (12) [noun] A monofilament yarn. MONOLOG (10) [noun] (authorship) A long speech by one person in a play; sometimes a soliloquy; other times spoken to other characters. | [noun] A long series of comic stories and jokes as an entertainment. | [noun] A long, uninterrupted utterance that monopolizes a conversation. MONOMER (11) [noun] A relatively small molecule which can be covalently bonded to other monomers to form a polymer. MONSOON (9) [noun] Any of a number of winds associated with regions where most rain falls during a particular season. | [noun] Tropical rainy season when the rain lasts for several months with few interruptions. | [noun] The rains themselves. MONSTER (9) [noun] A terrifying and dangerous creature. | [noun] A bizarre or whimsical creature. | [noun] A cruel or antisocial person, especially a criminal. MONTAGE (10) [noun] A composite work, particularly an artwork, created by assembling or putting together other elements such as pieces of music, pictures, texts, videos, etc. | [noun] The art or process of doing this. | [verb] To combine into, or depict as, a montage. MONTANE (9) [noun] Flora and fauna of a montane habitat. | [adjective] Of, inhabiting, or growing in mountain areas; specifically, the cool, moist upland slopes below the timberline. MONTERO (9) MONTHLY (15) [noun] A publication that is published once a month. | [noun] The menstrual period. | [adjective] Occurring every month. MONURON (9) MOOCHED (15) [verb] To wander around aimlessly, often causing irritation to others. | [verb] To beg, cadge, or sponge; to exploit or take advantage of others for personal gain. | [verb] To steal or filch. MOOCHER (14) [noun] A person having a tendency to take advantage of the help of others, especially if making little effort to help themselves. MOOCHES (14) [noun] An aimless stroll. | [noun] One who mooches; a moocher. | [noun] A unit of time comprising ten days, used to measure how long someone holds a job. MOODIER (10) [adjective] Given to sudden or frequent changes of mind; temperamental. | [adjective] Sulky or depressed. | [adjective] Dour, gloomy or brooding. MOODILY (13) MOOLAHS (12) MOOLEYS (12) MOONBOW (14) MOONEYE (12) [noun] A primitive ray-finned fish of the family Hiodontidae. MOONIER (9) [adjective] Resembling the moon. | [adjective] Moonlit. | [adjective] Absent-minded. MOONILY (12) MOONING (10) [verb] To display one's buttocks to, typically as a jest, insult, or protest. | [verb] (usually followed by over or after) To fuss over something adoringly; to be infatuated with someone. | [verb] To spend time idly, absent-mindedly. MOONISH (12) MOONLET (9) [noun] A very small body orbiting a planet, often as part of a ring. MOONLIT (9) [adjective] Lit by moonlight. MOONSET (9) [noun] The setting of the moon below the horizon MOORAGE (10) [noun] The act of mooring. | [noun] A place where a ship or an aircraft may be moored. | [noun] The fee for mooring. MOORHEN (12) [noun] Any of various medium-sized water birds of the genus Gallinula, of the rail family, that feed in open water margins. | [noun] A female red grouse, Lagopus lagopus scotica. MOORIER (9) MOORING (10) [verb] To cast anchor or become fastened. | [verb] To fix or secure (e.g. a vessel) in a particular place by casting anchor, or by fastening with ropes, cables or chains or the like | [verb] To secure or fix firmly. MOORISH (12) [adjective] Boggy, marshy; like a moor. MOOTERS (9) MOOTING (10) [noun] The activity of taking part in a moot court. | [verb] To bring up as a subject for debate, to propose. | [verb] To discuss or debate. MOPIEST (11) MOPOKES (15) [noun] A morepork. MOPPERS (13) MOPPETS (13) [noun] A child. Often used lovingly or in an affectionate way. | [noun] A rag baby; a puppet made of cloth. | [noun] A long-haired pet dog. MOPPING (14) [verb] To rub, scrub, clean or wipe with a mop, or as if with a mop. | [verb] To make a wry expression with the mouth. | [noun] The process of cleaning with a mop. MORAINE (9) [noun] An accumulation of rocks and debris carried and deposited by a glacier. MORALES (9) MORALLY (12) [adverb] In terms of morals or ethics. | [adverb] In keeping of requirements of morality. | [adverb] To all intents and purposes; practically. MORASSY (12) MORCEAU (11) [noun] A bit; a morsel. MORDANT (10) [noun] Any substance used to facilitate the fixing of a dye to a fibre; usually a metallic compound which reacts with the dye using chelation. | [noun] Any corrosive substance used in etching. | [noun] A glutinous size used as a ground for gilding, to make the gold leaf adhere. MORDENT (10) [noun] An ornament consisting of a single alternation between a given pitch and the one immediately below it. MOREENS (9) MORELLE (9) MORELLO (9) [noun] A variety of cultivated cherry, Prunus cerasus 'austera', having a dark skin MORGANS (10) [noun] A unit for expressing the relative distance between genes on a chromosome. MORGENS (10) [noun] A unit of measurement of land in the Netherlands and the Dutch colonies and parts of the United States, where it was equivalent to about two acres; and in Denmark, Norway, and Germany, where it was equivalent to about two-thirds of an acre. Now used informally in Germany to mean one quarter of a hectare. MORGUES (10) [noun] A supercilious or haughty attitude; arrogance. | [noun] A building or room where dead bodies are kept before their proper burial or cremation, particularly in legal and law enforcement contexts. | [noun] The archive and background information division of a newspaper. MORIONS (9) [noun] A kind of open brimmed helmet used by footsoldiers in the 16th and 17th centuries, having no visor or bever. | [noun] A brown or black variety of quartz. MORNING (10) [noun] The part of the day from dawn to noon. | [noun] The part of the day between midnight and noon. | [noun] The early part of anything. MOROCCO (13) [noun] A soft leather, made from goatskin, used especially in bookbinding. | [noun] A sheepskin leather in imitation of this. | [noun] A very strong ale, anciently brewed in Cumberland. MORONIC (11) [adjective] Having a mental age of between seven and twelve years | [adjective] Behaving in the manner of a moron; idiotic; stupid MORPHIA (14) [noun] Morphine MORPHIC (16) MORPHIN (14) MORPHOS (14) [noun] Any of the genus Morpho of large tropical American butterflies. MORRION (9) MORROWS (12) MORSELS (9) [noun] A small fragment or share of something, commonly applied to food. | [noun] A mouthful of food. | [noun] A very small amount. MORTALS (9) [noun] A human; someone susceptible to death. MORTARS (9) [noun] A mixture of lime or cement, sand and water used for bonding building blocks. | [noun] A muzzle-loading, indirect fire weapon with a tube length of 10 to 20 calibers and designed to lob shells at very steep trajectories. | [noun] A hollow vessel used to pound, crush, rub, grind or mix ingredients with a pestle. MORTARY (12) MORTICE (11) [noun] A hole that is made to receive a tenon so as to form a joint. | [noun] Stability; power of adhesion. | [verb] To cut a mortise in. MORTIFY (15) [verb] To discipline (one's body, appetites etc.) by suppressing desires; to practise abstinence on. | [verb] (usually used passively) To embarrass, to humiliate. To injure one's dignity. | [verb] To kill. MORTISE (9) [noun] A hole that is made to receive a tenon so as to form a joint. | [noun] Stability; power of adhesion. | [verb] To cut a mortise in. MORULAE (9) [noun] A spherical mass of blastomeres that forms following the splitting of a zygote; it becomes the blastula MORULAR (9) MORULAS (9) MOSAICS (11) [noun] A piece of artwork created by placing colored squares (usually tiles) in a pattern so as to create a picture. | [noun] An individual composed of two or more cell lines of different genetic or chromosomal constitution, but from the same zygote. | [noun] Any of several viral diseases that cause mosaic-like patterns to appear on leaves. MOSEYED (13) [verb] To set off, get going; to start a journey. | [verb] To go off quickly: to hurry up. | [verb] To amble; to walk or proceed in a leisurely manner. MOSQUES (18) [noun] A place of worship for Muslims, often having at least one minaret; a masjid. MOSSERS (9) MOSSIER (9) [adjective] Covered in or overgrown with moss. MOSSING (10) [verb] To become covered with moss. | [verb] To cover (something) with moss. MOSTEST (9) MOTHERS (12) [noun] A person (especially an entomologist) or animal that catches moths. | [noun] A (human) female who has given birth to a baby | [noun] A human female who parents an adopted or fostered child MOTHERY (15) MOTHIER (12) [adjective] Infested with moths | [adjective] Moth-eaten MOTIFIC (14) MOTILES (9) MOTIONS (9) [noun] A state of progression from one place to another. | [noun] A change of position with respect to time. | [noun] A change from one place to another. MOTIVED (13) MOTIVES (12) [noun] An idea or communication that makes one want to act, especially from spiritual sources; a divine prompting. | [noun] An incentive to act in a particular way; a reason or emotion that makes one want to do something; anything that prompts a choice of action. | [noun] A limb or other bodily organ that can move. MOTIVIC (14) [adjective] Used as, or relating to, a motif. MOTLEYS (12) MOTLIER (9) MOTMOTS (11) [noun] Any bird in the taxonomic family Momotidae, endemic to the neotropics. MOTORED (10) [verb] To make a journey by motor vehicle; to drive. | [verb] To move at a brisk pace. | [verb] To leave. MOTORIC (11) [adjective] Relating to the motor faculties. | [adjective] (of a rhythm) Based on repetition of a single note length. MOTTLED (10) [verb] To mark with blotches of different color, or shades of color, as if stained; to spot; to maculate. | [adjective] Colored in patches; spotted MOTTLER (9) MOTTLES (9) [verb] To mark with blotches of different color, or shades of color, as if stained; to spot; to maculate. MOTTOES (9) [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, forming part of an heraldic achievement. | [noun] A sentence, phrase, or word, prefixed to an essay, discourse, chapter, canto, or the like, suggestive of its subject matter; a short, suggestive expression of a guiding principle; a maxim. | [noun] A paper packet containing a sweetmeat, cracker, etc., together with a scrap of paper bearing a motto. MOUCHED (15) MOUCHES (14) MOUFLON (12) [noun] A species of wild sheep, Ovis orientalis musimon, syn. Ovis aries musimon, endemic to Sardinia and Corsica. MOUILLE (9) MOUJIKS (20) [noun] A (male) peasant, especially in pre-revolutionary (imperial) Russia. MOULAGE (10) MOULDED (11) [verb] To shape in or on a mold; to form into a particular shape; to give shape to. | [verb] To guide or determine the growth or development of; influence | [verb] To fit closely by following the contours of. MOULDER (10) [noun] A person who moulds dough into loaves. | [noun] Anyone who moulds or shapes things. | [noun] A machine used for moulding. MOULINS (9) [noun] A cylindrical, vertical shaft that extends through a glacier and is carved by meltwater from the glacier’s surface. MOULTED (10) [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. MOULTER (9) MOUNDED (11) [verb] To fortify with a mound; add a barrier, rampart, etc. to. | [verb] To force or pile into a mound or mounds. MOUNTED (10) [verb] To get upon; to ascend; to climb. | [verb] To place oneself on (a horse, a bicycle, etc.); to bestride. | [verb] To cause to mount; to put on horseback; to furnish with animals for riding. MOUNTER (9) MOURNED (10) [verb] To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death). | [verb] To utter in a sorrowful manner. | [verb] To wear mourning. MOURNER (9) [noun] Someone filled with or expressing grief or sadness, especially over a death; someone who mourns. MOUSERS (9) [noun] A cat that catches mice, kept specifically for the purpose. | [noun] A moustache. MOUSIER (9) [adjective] Resembling a mouse. | [adjective] Abounding or infested with mice. MOUSILY (12) MOUSING (10) [verb] To move cautiously or furtively, in the manner of a mouse (the rodent) (frequently used in the phrasal verb to mouse around). | [verb] To hunt or catch mice (the rodents), usually of cats. | [verb] To close the mouth of a hook by a careful binding of marline or wire. MOUSSED (10) [verb] To apply mousse (styling cream). MOUSSES (9) [noun] An airy pudding served chilled, particularly chocolate mousse. | [noun] A savory dish, of meat or seafood, containing gelatin. | [noun] A styling cream used for hair. MOUTHED (13) [verb] To speak; to utter. | [verb] To make the actions of speech, without producing sound. | [verb] To utter with a voice that is overly loud or swelling. MOUTHER (12) MOUTONS (9) MOVABLE (14) [noun] Something which is movable; an article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of property not fixed, or not a part of real estate; generally, in the plural, goods; wares; furniture. | [adjective] Capable of being moved, lifted, carried, drawn, turned, or conveyed, or in any way made to change place or posture; not fixed or stationary | [adjective] Changing from one time to another MOVABLY (17) MOVIOLA (12) MOWINGS (13) [noun] The activity by which something is mown. | [noun] Land from which grass is cut. MOZETTA (18) [noun] A short cape worn by some Catholic clergy. MOZETTE (18) [noun] A short cape worn by some Catholic clergy. MUCKERS (15) [noun] (Southern England) friend, acquaintance | [noun] (British army) A comrade; a friendly, low-ranking soldier in the same situation. | [noun] A person who removes muck (waste, debris, broken rock, etc.), especially from a mine, construction site, or stable. MUCKIER (15) [adjective] Covered in muck. | [adjective] Obscene, pornographic. MUCKILY (18) MUCKING (16) [verb] To shovel muck. | [verb] To manure with muck. | [verb] To do a dirty job. MUCKLES (15) [verb] To latch onto something with the mouth. | [verb] To talk big; to exaggerate. MUCLUCS (13) MUCOIDS (12) MUCOSAE (11) [noun] Mucous membrane MUCOSAL (11) MUCOSAS (11) MUCUSES (11) MUDCAPS (14) MUDCATS (12) MUDDERS (11) [noun] A person (especially an entomologist) or animal that catches moths. | [noun] A (human) female who has given birth to a baby | [noun] A human female who parents an adopted or fostered child MUDDIED (12) [adjective] Made dirty with mud. | [adjective] Made unclear, obfuscated (generally as part of the phrase muddied the water) | [adjective] Made muted of color. MUDDIER (11) [adjective] Covered with or full of mud or wet soil. | [adjective] With mud or other sediment brought into suspension, turbid. | [adjective] Not clear; mixed up or blurry. | [noun] One who muddies or obscures something. MUDDIES (11) [verb] To get mud on (something). | [verb] To make a mess of, or create confusion with regard to; to muddle. MUDDILY (14) MUDDING (12) MUDDLED (12) [verb] To mix together, to mix up; to confuse. | [verb] To mash slightly for use in a cocktail. | [verb] To dabble in mud. MUDDLER (11) [noun] A person or thing that muddles. | [noun] A tool used in muddling, used to mash and mix. MUDDLES (11) [noun] A mixture; a confusion; a garble. | [noun] A mixture of crushed ingredients, as prepared with a muddler. | [verb] To mix together, to mix up; to confuse. MUDFISH (16) [noun] Any of many fish that frequent muddy water or burrow in mud, including: MUDFLAT (13) [noun] A muddy expanse of flat land, especially such land as a river bed exposed at low tide. MUDFLOW (16) [noun] A type of landslide characterized by large flows of mud and water. | [noun] The dried-out product of such a flow. MUDHOLE (13) MUDLARK (14) [noun] A pig; pork. | [noun] One who scavenges in river or harbor mud for items of value, especially in London. | [noun] A child who plays in the mud; a child that spends most of its time in the streets, a street urchin. MUDPACK (18) [noun] A paste of earth or clay, applied to the face for therapeutic or cosmetic purposes. MUDROCK (16) MUDROOM (12) [noun] A room used as a barrier between outdoors and indoors. MUDSILL (10) MUEDDIN (11) MUESLIS (9) [noun] A breakfast dish based on uncooked rolled oats and fruit. MUEZZIN (27) [noun] The person who issues the call to prayer from one of the minarets of a mosque. MUFFING (16) [verb] To drop or mishandle (the ball, a catch etc.); to play badly. | [verb] To mishandle; to bungle. | [noun] Penetration of the inguinal canal (e.g. with a finger, or by pushing the testicle back inside it) as a form of sexual activity among trans women. MUFFINS (15) [noun] A type of flattish bun, usually cut in two horizontally, toasted and spread with butter, etc, before being eaten. | [noun] A type of individual bread such as corn, bran, banana or zucchini bread often sliced and spread with butter, etc before being eaten. | [noun] (especially US) (informally) A cupcake without frosting, but sometimes glazed. MUFFLED (16) [verb] To wrap (a person, face etc.) in fabric or another covering, for warmth or protection; often with up. | [verb] To wrap up or cover (a source of noise) in order to deaden the sound. | [verb] To mute or deaden (a sound etc.). MUFFLER (15) [noun] Part of the exhaust pipe of a car that dampens the noise the engine produces. | [noun] A silencer or suppressor fitted to a gun. | [noun] A type of scarf. MUFFLES (15) [noun] Anything that mutes or deadens sound. | [noun] A warm piece of clothing for the hands. | [noun] A boxing glove. MUGFULS (13) MUGGARS (11) MUGGEES (11) MUGGERS (11) [noun] A street robber. | [noun] A person who makes exaggerated faces, as a performance; a gurner. | [noun] A large crocodile, Crocodilus palustris, of southwest Asia, having a very broad wrinkled snout. MUGGIER (11) [adjective] (Of the weather, air, etc) humid, or hot and humid. | [adjective] Wet or mouldy MUGGILY (14) MUGGING (12) [verb] To strike in the face. | [verb] To assault for the purpose of robbery. | [verb] To exaggerate a facial expression for communicative emphasis; to make a face, to pose, as for photographs or in a performance, in an exaggerated or affected manner. MUGGINS (11) [noun] A fool or idiot (especially as an ironic way of referring to oneself). | [noun] The act of stealing another player's points because they either mis-pegged or counted up incorrectly. | [noun] A game of dominoes in which the object is to make the sum of the two ends of the line some multiple of five. MUGGURS (11) MUGWORT (13) [noun] Any of several aromatic plants of the genus Artemisia native to Europe and Asia. | [noun] Artemisia vulgaris, traditionally used medicinally. MUGWUMP (17) [noun] An independent neutral politician, especially in reference to the 1884 U.S. presidential election. | [noun] An aloof or self-important but inconsequential person. MUHLIES (12) MUKLUKS (17) [noun] A soft knee-high boot of sealskin or reindeer skin, originally worn by Inuit and Yupik. | [noun] A laced winter boot resembling a traditional mukluk, with thick rubber sole and cloth upper. MUKTUKS (17) MULATTO (9) [noun] A person of mixed black and white descent, especially a person with one black and one white parent. MULCHED (15) [verb] To apply mulch. | [verb] To turn into mulch. MULCHES (14) [noun] Any material used to cover the top layer of soil to protect, insulate, or decorate it, or to discourage weeds or retain moisture. | [noun] A material used as mulch, as a decorative redwood bark mulch. | [verb] To apply mulch. MULCTED (12) [verb] To impose such a fine or penalty. | [verb] To swindle (someone) out of money. MULETAS (9) [noun] A red flag used by bullfighters. MULLAHS (12) [noun] A religious scholar and teacher of sharia law. MULLEIN (9) [noun] Any of several European and Asian plants, of the genus Verbascum, that have yellow flowers and downy leaves; the velvet plant. MULLENS (9) MULLERS (9) [noun] One who, or that which, mulls. | [noun] A grinding stone, held in the hand, used especially for preparing paints and powders. | [noun] A vessel in which wine, etc., is mulled over a fire. MULLETS (9) [noun] A fish of the family Mullidae (order Syngnathiformes), especially the genus Mullus (the red mullets or goatfish). | [noun] A fish of the family Mugilidae (order Mugiliformes) (the grey mullets). | [noun] Any of several species of freshwater fish in the sucker family (especially in the genus Moxostoma, the redhorses) MULLEYS (12) MULLING (10) [verb] (usually with over) To work (over) mentally; to cogitate; to ruminate. | [verb] To powder; to pulverize. | [verb] To chop marijuana so that it becomes a smokable form. MULLION (9) [noun] A vertical bar between the panes of glass or casements of a window or the panels of a screen. | [verb] To shape into divisions by means of mullions. MULLITE (9) MULLOCK (15) [noun] Rubbish, waste matter. | [noun] Waste rock from which the wanted gold, minerals, opal, etc., has been extracted; waste material generated while searching for minerals or while mining, such as when sinking a shaft. | [noun] Nonsense, rubbish. MULTURE (9) [noun] A grinding of grain, or the grain that is ground. | [noun] A toll paid to a miller, mill-owner etc., generally in kind, for grinding corn or pulverizing ore. MUMBLED (14) [verb] To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. | [verb] To chew something gently with closed lips. MUMBLER (13) MUMBLES (13) [noun] A quiet or unintelligible vocalization; a low tone of voice. MUMMERS (13) [noun] A person who dons a disguising costume, as for a parade or a festival. | [noun] An actor in a pantomime; one who communicates entirely through gesture and facial expression. MUMMERY (16) [noun] Mumming; disguising oneself to perform as a mummer, or to take part in some other festivities or performance. | [noun] A ridiculous or ostentatious ceremony, formerly especially of a religious nature; extravagant or hypocritical performance. MUMMIED (14) MUMMIES (13) [noun] An embalmed human or animal corpse wrapped in linen bandages for burial, especially as practised by the ancient Egyptians and some Native American tribes. | [noun] (by extension) A reanimated embalmed human corpse, as a typical character in horror films. | [noun] (by extension) Any naturally preserved human or animal body. MUMMIFY (19) [verb] To make into a mummy, by preserving a dead body. | [verb] To become a mummy. MUMMING (14) [verb] To act in a pantomime or dumb show. | [noun] A pantomime or dumb show. MUMPERS (13) MUMPING (14) MUNCHED (15) [verb] To chew with a grinding, crunching sound, and with the mouth closed — often used with on. | [verb] To eat vigorously or with excitement. MUNCHER (14) MUNCHES (14) [noun] A location or restaurant where good eating can be expected. | [noun] An act of eating. | [noun] Food. MUNDANE (10) [noun] An unremarkable, ordinary human being. | [noun] (in various subcultures) A person considered to be "normal", part of the mainstream culture, outside the subculture, not part of the elite group. | [noun] The world outside fandom; the normal, mainstream world. MUNNION (9) MUNSTER (9) MUNTING (10) MUNTINS (9) [noun] One of the separators between panes of glass in a composite window. MUNTJAC (18) [noun] Any of various species of east Asian deer of the genus Muntiacus, having short antlers and a barking call. MUNTJAK (20) MUONIUM (11) MURDERS (10) [noun] The crime of deliberately killing another person without justification. | [noun] The act of deliberate killing of another person or other being without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [noun] (in jurisdictions which use the felony murder rule) The commission of an act which abets the commission of a crime the commission of which causes the death of a human. MUREINS (9) MUREXES (16) [noun] Any of the genus Murex of marine gastropods. MURIATE (9) [noun] Chloride MURICES (11) [noun] Any of the genus Murex of marine gastropods. MURINES (9) MURKEST (13) MURKIER (13) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MURKILY (16) MURMURS (11) [noun] Any low, indistinct sound, like that of running water. | [noun] Soft indistinct speech. | [noun] The sound made by any condition which produces noisy, or turbulent, flow of blood through the heart. MURRAIN (9) [noun] Plague, infectious disease, pestilence. | [noun] Any of several highly infectious diseases of cattle such as anthrax. MURREYS (12) MURRHAS (12) MURRIES (9) MURRINE (9) MURTHER (12) [noun] The crime of deliberately killing another person without justification. | [noun] The act of deliberate killing of another person or other being without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [noun] (in jurisdictions which use the felony murder rule) The commission of an act which abets the commission of a crime the commission of which causes the death of a human. MUSCATS (11) [noun] A white grape variety; used as table grapes and for making raisins and sweet wine. | [noun] The muscatel wine made from these grapes. | [noun] The vine bearing this fruit. MUSCIDS (12) [noun] Any fly of the family Muscidae of insects. MUSCLED (12) [verb] To use force to make progress, especially physical force. | [adjective] Bearing muscles or muscle tissue. | [adjective] Having large muscles. MUSCLES (11) [noun] A contractile form of tissue which animals use to effect movement. | [noun] An organ composed of muscle tissue. | [noun] (usually in the plural) A well-developed physique, in which the muscles are enlarged from exercise. MUSEFUL (12) MUSETTE (9) [noun] Any of various form of small bagpipe, especially with a bellows, having a soft sound, and once popular in France. | [noun] A dance tune or pastoral air that imitates this instrument. | [noun] A small instrument similar to an oboe or shawm. MUSEUMS (11) [noun] A building or institution dedicated to the acquisition, conservation, study, exhibition, and educational interpretation of objects having scientific, historical, cultural or artistic value. MUSHERS (12) [noun] One who operates a dogsled, traditionally using the verbal command “mush”. | [noun] One who travels by dogsled. | [noun] One who races in a dogsled in a race. MUSHIER (12) [adjective] Resembling or having the consistency of mush; semiliquid, pasty, or granular. | [adjective] Soft; squishy. | [adjective] Overly sappy, corny, or cheesy; maudlin. MUSHILY (15) MUSHING (13) [verb] To squish so as to break into smaller pieces or to combine with something else. | [verb] To walk, especially across the snow with dogs. | [verb] To drive dogs, usually pulling a sled, across the snow. MUSICAL (11) [noun] A stage performance, show or film that involves singing, dancing and musical numbers performed by the cast as well as acting. | [noun] A meeting or a party for a musical entertainment; a musicale. | [adjective] Of, belonging or relating to music, or to its performance or notation. MUSINGS (10) [noun] Thought, meditation, contemplation MUSJIDS (17) MUSKEGS (14) [noun] A terrain composed of peat bog with tussocky meadow and woody vegetation including spruce. MUSKETS (13) [noun] A kind of firearm formerly carried by the infantry of an army, originally fired by means of a match, or matchlock, for which several mechanical appliances (including the flintlock, and finally the percussion lock) were successively substituted; ultimately superseded by the rifle. | [noun] A male Eurasian sparrowhawk. MUSKIER (13) [adjective] Having the scent of musk MUSKIES (13) MUSKILY (16) MUSKITS (13) MUSKRAT (13) [noun] A large aquatic rodent (Ondatra zibethicus). | [noun] Any of several species of shrews in the family Soricidae, especially the Asian house shrew, Suncus murinus MUSLINS (9) [noun] Any of several varieties of thin cotton cloth. | [noun] Fabric made of cotton, flax (linen), hemp, or silk, finely or coarsely woven. | [noun] Any of a wide variety of tightly-woven thin fabrics, especially those used for bedlinen. MUSPIKE (15) MUSSELS (9) [noun] Any of several groups of bivalve shellfish with elongated, asymmetrical shells MUSSIER (9) MUSSILY (12) MUSSING (10) [verb] To rumple, tousle or make (something) untidy. MUSTANG (10) [noun] A small, hardy, naturalized (feral) horse of the North American west. | [noun] A merchant marine who joined the U.S. Navy as a commissioned officer during the American Civil War. | [noun] (generalized) A commissioned officer who started military service as an enlisted person. MUSTARD (10) [noun] A plant of certain species of the genus Brassica, or of related genera (especially Sinapis alba, in the family Brassicaceae, with yellow flowers, and linear seed pods). | [noun] Powder or paste made from seeds of the mustard plant, and used as a condiment or a spice. | [noun] The leaves of the mustard plant, used as a salad. MUSTEES (9) MUSTERS (9) [noun] A person of one-eighth African ancestry. | [noun] Gathering. | [noun] Showing. MUSTIER (9) [adjective] Having a stale odor. MUSTILY (12) MUSTING (10) MUTABLE (11) [noun] Something mutable; a variable or value that can change. | [adjective] Changeable, dynamic, evolutive; inclined to change, evolve, mutate. | [adjective] (of a variable) Having a value that is changeable during program execution. MUTABLY (14) MUTAGEN (10) [noun] Any agent or substance that can cause genetic mutation. MUTANTS (9) [noun] Something which has mutated, which has one or more new characteristics from a mutation. | [noun] Someone or something that seems strange, abnormal, or bizarre. | [noun] An object in a program that serves as a lock, used to negotiate mutual exclusion among threads. MUTASES (9) MUTATED (10) [verb] To undergo mutation. | [verb] To cause mutation. | [adjective] Possessing a mutation. MUTATES (9) [verb] To undergo mutation. | [verb] To cause mutation. MUTCHES (14) [noun] A nightcap (hat worn to bed). | [noun] A linen or muslin hat, especially one of a type once commonly worn by elderly women and young children. MUTEDLY (13) MUTINED (10) MUTINES (9) MUTISMS (11) MUTTERS (9) [noun] A repressed or obscure utterance; an instance of muttering. | [verb] To utter words, especially complaints or angry expressions, indistinctly or with a low voice and lips partly closed; to say under one's breath. | [verb] To speak softly and incoherently, or with imperfect articulations. MUTTONS (9) MUTTONY (12) MUTUELS (9) MUTULAR (9) MUTULES (9) [noun] Any of the rectangular blocks under the soffit of the cornice of the Greek Doric temple, which are studded with guttae. MUUMUUS (11) [noun] A long loose-fitting dress made of lightweight fabric printed with bright, stylized Hawaiian themes (such as flowers and palm branches). MUZHIKS (25) [noun] A (male) peasant, especially in pre-revolutionary (imperial) Russia. MUZJIKS (29) MUZZIER (27) [adjective] Hazy, indistinct, blurred, unfocussed. | [adjective] Dazed; bewildered; tipsy. MUZZILY (30) MUZZLED (28) [verb] To bind or confine an animal's mouth by putting a muzzle, as to prevent it from eating or biting. | [verb] To restrain (from speaking, expressing opinion or acting); gag, silence, censor. | [verb] To veil, mask, muffle. MUZZLER (27) MUZZLES (27) [noun] The protruding part of an animal's head which includes the nose, mouth and jaws; the snout | [noun] The mouth or the end for entrance or discharge of a gun, pistol etc., that the bullet emerges from as opposed to the breech. | [noun] A device used to prevent animal from biting or eating, which is worn on its snout. MYALGIA (13) [noun] Muscular pain or tenderness. MYALGIC (15) MYCELES (14) MYCELIA (14) [noun] The vegetative part of any fungus, consisting of a mass of branching, threadlike hyphae, often underground. MYCOSES (14) [noun] An infection caused by a fungus. MYCOSIS (14) [noun] An infection caused by a fungus. MYCOTIC (16) MYELINE (12) MYELINS (12) MYELOID (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to bone marrow. | [adjective] (less commonly used) Of or pertaining to the spinal cord. MYELOMA (14) [noun] A malignant tumour arising from cells of the bone marrow, specifically plasma cells. MYIASES (12) MYIASIS (12) MYNHEER (15) MYOLOGY (16) [noun] The physiological study of muscles. MYOMATA (14) MYOPIAS (14) MYOPIES (14) MYOSINS (12) MYOSOTE (12) [noun] (botany) Myosotis. MYOTICS (14) MYOTOME (14) [noun] In vertebrate embryonic development, a group of tissues formed from somites that develop into the body wall muscle. MYRIADS (13) [noun] Ten thousand; 10,000 | [noun] A countless number or multitude (of specified things) MYRICAS (14) MYRRHIC (17) MYRTLES (12) [noun] An evergreen shrub or small tree of the genus Myrtus, native to southern Europe and north Africa. MYSOSTS (12) MYSTERY (15) [noun] Something secret or unexplainable; an unknown. | [noun] Someone or something with an obscure or puzzling nature. | [noun] A secret or mystical meaning. MYSTICS (14) [noun] Someone who practices mysticism. MYSTIFY (18) [verb] To thoroughly confuse, befuddle, or bewilder. MYTHIER (15) MYXOMAS (21) [noun] A tumor of primitive connective tissue.

8-Letter Words (1472)

MACADAMS (15) MACAQUES (21) [noun] Any of a group of Old World monkeys of the subfamily Cercopithecinae, especially genus Macaca. MACARONI (12) [noun] A type of pasta in the form of short tubes; sometimes loosely, pasta in general. | [noun] A fop, a dandy; especially a young man in the 18th century who had travelled in Europe and who dressed and often spoke in an ostentatiously affected Continental manner. MACAROON (12) [noun] Any of various pastries based on almond and egg white, traditionally made in France. | [noun] A soft biscuit or cookie prepared with almond or coconut dough. | [noun] A coarse, rude, low fellow. MACCABAW (19) MACCABOY (19) MACCOBOY (19) MACERATE (12) [noun] A macerated substance. | [verb] To soften (something) or separate it into pieces by soaking it in a heated or unheated liquid. | [verb] To make lean; to cause to waste away. MACHETES (15) [noun] A sword-like tool used for cutting large plants with a chopping motion, or as a weapon. The blade is usually 50 to 65 centimeters long, and up to three millimeters thick. | [verb] To cut or chop with a machete. | [verb] To hack or chop crudely with a blade other than a machete. MACHINED (16) [verb] To make by machinery. | [verb] To shape or finish by machinery. | [adjective] Created by machine, or as though created by machine. MACHINES (15) [noun] A device that directs and controls energy, often in the form of movement or electricity, to produce a certain effect. | [noun] A vehicle operated mechanically, such as an automobile or an airplane. | [noun] (abbreviation) An answering machine or, by extension, voice mail. MACHISMO (17) [noun] Exaggerated masculinity MACHREES (15) MACHZORS (24) [noun] A prayerbook for a Jewish holiday. MACKEREL (16) [noun] An edible fish of the family Scombridae, often speckled. | [noun] A pimp; also, a bawd. MACKINAW (19) [noun] A heavy woolen cloth. | [noun] A blanket made of wool, formerly distributed to the Amerindians by the U.S. government. | [noun] A flat-bottomed cargo boat; mackinaw boat. MACKLING (17) MACRAMES (14) MACRURAL (12) MACRURAN (12) [noun] Any of many decapod crustaceans, such as the lobster and shrimp, that were once included in the subdivision Macrura MACULATE (12) [verb] To spot; to stain; to blur. | [adjective] Marked with spots or maculae; blotched. | [adjective] Defiled; impure. MACULING (13) MACUMBAS (16) MADDENED (13) [verb] To make angry. | [verb] To make insane; to inflame with passion. | [verb] To become furious. MADEIRAS (11) [noun] Madeira (wine) MADHOUSE (14) [noun] A house where insane persons are confined; an insane asylum. | [noun] (by extension) A chaotic place. MADONNAS (11) [noun] A one-footed lien-to-tail trick, where the front foot is taken off and kicked out straight down behind the board. MADRASES (11) MADRIGAL (12) [noun] A song for a small number of unaccompanied voices; from 13th century Italy. | [noun] A polyphonic song for about six voices, from 16th century Italy. | [noun] A short poem, often pastoral, and suitable to be set to music. MADRONAS (11) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADRONES (11) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADRONOS (11) [noun] The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo). | [noun] Any of three local relatives: MADWOMAN (16) [noun] A woman who is insane. MADWOMEN (16) [noun] A woman who is insane. MADWORTS (14) MADZOONS (20) MAENADES (11) MAENADIC (13) MAESTOSO (10) [adverb] Majestically MAESTROS (10) [noun] A master in some art, especially a composer or conductor. | [noun] A gang elder in prison. MAFFICKS (22) MAGAZINE (20) [noun] A non-academic periodical publication, generally consisting of sheets of paper folded in half and stapled at the fold. | [noun] An ammunition storehouse. | [noun] A chamber in a firearm enabling multiple rounds of ammunition to be fed into the firearm. MAGDALEN (12) MAGENTAS (11) MAGICIAN (13) [noun] A person who plays with or practices allegedly supernatural magic. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A spiritualist or practitioner of mystic arts. | [noun] A performer of tricks or an escapologist or an illusionist. MAGICKED (18) [verb] To produce, transform (something), (as if) by magic. MAGISTER (11) [noun] Master; sir: a title used in the Middle Ages, given to a person in authority, or to one having a license from a university to teach philosophy and the liberal arts. | [noun] The possessor of a master's degree. MAGMATIC (15) MAGNATES (11) [noun] Powerful industrialist; captain of industry. | [noun] A person of rank, influence or distinction in any sphere. MAGNESIA (11) [noun] Magnesium oxide MAGNESIC (13) MAGNETIC (13) [adjective] Of, relating to, operating by, or caused by magnetism. | [adjective] Having the properties of a magnet, especially the ability to draw or pull. | [adjective] Determined by earth's magnetic fields. MAGNETON (11) [noun] Any of several units of magnetic moment of an atom, molecule or subatomic particle MAGNETOS (11) [noun] A small magnetic dynamo, especially one that provides power to the spark plugs of a small internal combustion engine. MAGNIFIC (16) MAGNOLIA (11) [noun] A tree or shrub in any species of the genus Magnolia, many with large flowers and simple leaves. | [noun] The flower of a magnolia tree. | [noun] A native or resident of the American state of Mississippi. MAHARAJA (20) [noun] A Hindu monarch ranking above a raja, an emperor. MAHARANI (13) [noun] The wife of a maharajah; approximately, a queen consort. MAHATMAS (15) [noun] An epithet granted in India and Tibet to people thought to have great knowledge and love of humanity | [noun] Such a person. MAHIMAHI (18) [noun] A large food and game fish of the family Coryphaenidae which is commonly found in tropical and subtropical waters. MAHJONGG (22) [noun] A game (originally Chinese) for four players, using a collection of tiles divided into five or six suits. | [noun] A solitaire game using the same tiles, where the player wins by removing pairs of matching exposed tiles until none remain. MAHJONGS (21) MAHOGANY (17) [noun] Any of various tropical American evergreen trees, of the genus Swietenia, having a valuable hard red-brown wood. | [noun] The wood of these trees, mostly used to make furniture. | [noun] A reddish-brown color, like that of mahogany wood. MAHONIAS (13) [noun] Any of the genus Mahonia (now often included in Berberis) of evergreen shrubs. MAHUANGS (14) MAHZORIM (24) MAIDENLY (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a maiden. | [adjective] Suitable for, or befitting a maiden; gentle; modest; pure. MAIDHOOD (15) MAIEUTIC (12) [noun] Midwifery. | [adjective] Of or related to the Socratic method. | [adjective] Obstetric: of or related to childbirth. MAILABLE (12) MAILBAGS (13) [noun] A strong canvas bag used for the transportation of mail | [noun] A smaller bag, slung from the shoulders, used for the delivery of mail MAILINGS (11) [noun] An act of sending mail. | [noun] A farm. MAILLESS (10) MAILLOTS (10) [noun] A one-piece swimsuit (for women) | [noun] A leotard or tights of stretchable jersey fabric, generally worn by dancers and gymnasts. MAINLAND (11) [noun] The continent; the principal land, as distinguished from islands or a peninsula. | [noun] The principal island of a group. MAINLINE (10) [noun] An airline's main operating unit, as opposed to codeshares or regional subsidiaries. | [noun] The main repository for a software project, from which different versions (forks) may be split off. | [verb] To inject (a drug) directly into a vein. MAINMAST (12) [noun] The chief, and tallest mast of a sailing ship that has more than one mast. MAINSAIL (10) [noun] The largest (or only) sail on a sailing vessel. MAINSTAY (13) [noun] A chief support. | [noun] Someone or something that can be depended on to make a regular contribution. | [noun] A stabilising rope from the top of the mainmast to the bottom of the foremast. MAINTAIN (10) [verb] To support (someone), to back up or assist (someone) in an action. | [verb] To keep up; to preserve; to uphold (a state, condition etc.). | [verb] To declare or affirm (a clause) to be true; to assert. MAINTOPS (12) [noun] A platform at the top of a square-rigged vessel's mainmast; used for observation and for the attachment of rigging. MAIOLICA (12) [noun] Alternative form of majolica 2. MAJAGUAS (18) MAJESTIC (19) [adjective] Having qualities of splendor or royalty. MAJOLICA (19) [noun] Earthenware decorated with coloured lead glazes applied directly to an unglazed body. | [noun] Earthenware coated with opaque white tin glaze ornamented with metal oxide colour(s). MAJORING (18) [verb] To concentrate on a particular area of study as a student in a college or university MAJORITY (20) [noun] More than half (50%) of some group. | [noun] The difference between the winning vote and the rest of the votes. | [noun] Legal adulthood. MAKEABLE (16) MAKEBATE (16) MAKEFAST (17) MAKEOVER (17) [noun] A major change in the use of something, or in the appearance of something or someone; a radical transformation. MAKIMONO (16) MALACCAS (14) MALADIES (11) [noun] Any ailment or disease of the body; especially, a lingering or deep-seated disorder. | [noun] A moral or mental defect or disorder. MALAISES (10) [noun] A feeling of general bodily discomfort, fatigue or unpleasantness, often at the onset of illness. | [noun] An ambiguous feeling of mental or moral depression. | [noun] Ill will or hurtful feelings for others or someone. MALAMUTE (12) [noun] A ancient northern breed of dog of the husky type, particularly used as a sled dog. MALANGAS (11) [noun] Any of several Central and South American plants, of the genus Xanthosoma; yautia. | [noun] Taro (Colocasia esculenta) | [noun] The edible tuber of these plants, some of which have medicinal value. MALAPERT (12) [noun] A cheeky, impudent, or saucy person. | [adjective] Cheeky, impudent, saucy. MALAPROP (14) [noun] A malapropism. | [verb] To use a malapropism. | [adjective] Characterized by the use of malapropisms. MALARIAL (10) MALARIAN (10) MALARIAS (10) MALARKEY (17) [noun] (originally United States) Nonsense; rubbish. MALAROMA (12) MALEATES (10) [noun] Any salt or ester of maleic acid MALEDICT (13) MALEMIUT (12) MALEMUTE (12) [noun] A ancient northern breed of dog of the husky type, particularly used as a sled dog. MALENESS (10) MALIGNED (12) [verb] To make defamatory statements about; to slander or traduce. | [verb] To treat with malice; to show hatred toward; to abuse; to wrong. | [adjective] Assailed with contemptuous language MALIGNER (11) MALIGNLY (14) MALIHINI (13) MALINGER (11) [verb] To feign illness, injury, or incapacitation in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. | [verb] To self-inflict real injury or infection (to inflict self-harm) in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. MALISONS (10) [noun] A curse, a malediction. MALLARDS (11) [noun] A common and widespread dabbling duck, Anas platyrhynchos, whose male has a distinctive dark green head. MALLEOLI (10) [noun] The bony prominence on each side of the ankle joint. MALMIEST (12) MALMSEYS (15) [noun] A sweet fortified wine made in Madeira, originally from the malvasia grape. MALODORS (11) [noun] An offensive odor. MALPOSED (13) MALTASES (10) MALTIEST (10) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or characteristic of malt MALTOSES (10) MALTREAT (10) [verb] To treat badly, to abuse. MALTSTER (10) [noun] A person who makes malt; a malter. MALVASIA (13) [noun] A variety of grape, originally from the region of the Aegean, now used to make malmsey wine. MAMALIGA (13) MAMBOING (15) [verb] To perform this dance. MAMELUKE (16) [noun] A member of a military regime created and run originally by freed white European slaves, which formed a ruling caste in Egypt from 1250 until 1812 and in Syria until 1516. | [noun] A slave (especially European and white) in a Middle Eastern Muslim country. MAMMATUS (14) MAMMERED (15) MAMMILLA (14) [noun] The nipple. MAMMITIS (14) MAMMOCKS (20) MAMMOTHS (17) [noun] Any species of the extinct genus Mammuthus, of large, usually hairy, elephant-like mammals with long curved tusks and an inclined back, which became extinct with the last retreat of ice age glaciers during the late Pleistocene period, and are known from fossils, frozen carcasses, and Paleolithic cave paintings found in North America and Eurasia. | [noun] A mastodon. | [noun] Something very large of its kind. MANACLED (13) [verb] To confine with manacles. MANACLES (12) [noun] A shackle for the wrist, usually consisting of a pair of joined rings; a handcuff; (by extension) a similar device put around an ankle to restrict free movement. | [noun] A fetter, a restriction. | [noun] A plurale tantum with same meanings as manacle. MANAGERS (11) [noun] A person whose job is to manage something, such as a business, a restaurant, or a sports team. | [noun] The head coach. | [noun] An administrator, for a singer or group. MANAGING (12) [verb] To direct or be in charge of. | [verb] To handle or control (a situation, job). | [verb] To handle with skill, wield (a tool, weapon etc.). MANAKINS (14) [noun] Any of several small South American passerine birds of the family Pipridae. | [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. MANATEES (10) [noun] Any of several plant-eating marine mammals, of family Trichechidae, found in tropical regions. MANATOID (11) MANCHETS (15) [noun] A type of high-quality bread made from flour. MANCIPLE (14) [noun] A person in charge of purchasing and storing food and other provisions in a monastery, college, or court of law. MANDALAS (11) [noun] A graphic depiction of the spiritual universe and its myriad realms and deities. | [noun] Any ritualistic geometric design, symbolic of the Universe, used as an aid to meditation. | [noun] A division or book of the Rigveda (of which there are 10). MANDALIC (13) MANDAMUS (13) [noun] A common law prerogative writ that compels a court or government officer to perform mandatory or purely ministerial duties correctly. | [verb] To serve a writ of this kind upon. MANDARIN (11) [noun] A high government bureaucrat of the Chinese Empire | [noun] A pedantic or elitist bureaucrat | [noun] A pedantic senior person of influence in academia or literary circles | [noun] (color) an orange colour MANDATED (12) [verb] To authorize | [verb] To make mandatory | [adjective] Required, mandatory MANDATES (11) [noun] An official or authoritative command; an order or injunction; a commission; a judicial precept. | [noun] The authority to do something, as granted to a politician by the electorate. | [noun] A papal rescript. MANDATOR (11) MANDIBLE (13) [noun] The lower jaw, especially the lower jawbone. | [noun] One of a pair of mouthparts of an arthropod, designed for holding and cutting food. MANDIOCA (13) MANDOLAS (11) [noun] A stringed musical instrument resembling the mandolin, but of larger size and tuned lower. MANDOLIN (11) [noun] A stringed instrument and a member of the lute family, having eight strings in four courses, frequently tuned as a violin, and with either a bowl-shaped back or a flat back | [noun] A kitchen tool used for slicing vegetables (usually spelled mandoline) | [noun] An RAF World War II code name for patrols to attack enemy railway transport and other ground targets MANDRAKE (15) [noun] A mandragora, a kind of tiny demon immune to fire. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Mandragora, certain of which are said to have medicinal properties; the root of these plants often resembles the shape of a small person, hence occasioning various mythic, magical, or occult uses. | [noun] A root of a mandrake plant that resembled human form, especially one kept or used for magic or occult purposes. MANDRELS (11) [noun] A round object used as an aid for shaping a material, e.g. shaping or enlarging a ring, or bending or enlarging a pipe without creasing or kinking it. | [noun] A tool or component of a tool that guides, grips or clamps something, such as a workpiece to be machined, a machining tool or a part while it is moved. MANDRILL (11) [noun] A primate, Mandrillus sphinx, with colorful face and rump. MANDRILS (11) MANELESS (10) MANEUVER (13) [noun] The planned movement of troops, vehicles etc.; a strategic repositioning; (later also) a large training field-exercise of fighting units. | [noun] Any strategic or cunning action; a stratagem. | [noun] A movement of the body, or with an implement, instrument etc., especially one performed with skill or dexterity. MANFULLY (16) [adverb] In a manful manner; with the characteristics considered typical of a man, such as strength, courage, and determination. MANGABEY (16) [noun] Any of several large, arboreal monkeys of the family Cercopithecidae. MANGANIC (13) [adjective] Containing manganese in its higher oxidation states. MANGIEST (11) [adjective] Afflicted with mange. | [adjective] (by extension) Worn and squalid-looking; bedraggled or decrepit. MANGLERS (11) MANGLING (12) [verb] To change, mutilate or disfigure by cutting, tearing, rearranging etc. | [verb] To modify (an identifier from source code) so as to produce a unique identifier for internal use by the compiler, etc. | [verb] To wring laundry. MANGOLDS (12) [noun] Mangelwurzel MANGONEL (11) [noun] A military engine formerly used for throwing stones and burning objects. MANGROVE (14) [noun] Any of various tropical evergreen trees or shrubs that grow in shallow coastal water. | [noun] A habitat with such plants; mangrove forest; mangrove swamp. | [noun] Plants of the Rhizophoraceae family. MANHOLES (13) [noun] A hole in the ground used to access the sewers or other underground vaults and installations. | [noun] A hole providing access to the inside of a boiler, tank etc. | [noun] A man's anus, in a sexual context. MANHOODS (14) MANHUNTS (13) [noun] An organized search for a criminal or enemy. MANIACAL (12) [adjective] Like a maniac; insane; frenzied. MANICURE (12) [noun] A cosmetic treatment for the fingernails. | [noun] A manicurist. | [verb] To trim the fingernails MANIFEST (13) [noun] A list or invoice of the passengers or goods being carried by a commercial vehicle or ship. | [noun] A file containing metadata describing other files. | [noun] A public declaration; an open statement; a manifesto. MANIFOLD (14) [noun] A copy made by the manifold writing process. | [noun] A pipe fitting or similar device that connects multiple inputs or outputs. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The third stomach of a ruminant animal, an omasum. | [verb] To make manifold; multiply. MANIHOTS (13) MANIKINS (14) [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. | [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes MANILLAS (10) [noun] A penannular armlet, mostly in bronze, copper or gold, which served as a form of money or barter coinage amongst certain West African peoples. MANILLES (10) [noun] The second-highest trump in certain card games. | [noun] A card game played with a deck of 32, in which the ten (or ‘manille’) is the highest in each suit. MANIOCAS (12) MANIPLES (12) [noun] A division of the Roman army numbering 120 (or sometimes 60) soldiers exclusive of officers; (generally) any small body of soldiers. | [noun] In Western Christianity, an ornamental band or scarf worn upon the left arm as a part of the vestments of a priest in the Roman Catholic Church, and sometimes the Church of England. | [noun] A hand; a fist. MANITOUS (10) [noun] A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians. MANLIEST (10) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a man. | [adjective] Having qualities befitting a man; courageous, resolute, noble. MANNERED (11) [adjective] (often in combination) Having manners or (often excessive) mannerisms. MANNERLY (13) [adjective] Polite, having good manners. | [adverb] Politely; with good manners. MANNIKIN (14) [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. | [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes MANNITES (10) MANNITIC (12) MANNITOL (10) [noun] A polyhydroxy alcohol, an isomer of sorbitol, used as an artificial sweetener MANNOSES (10) MANORIAL (10) MANPOWER (15) [noun] The total number of all available workers; the workforce. | [noun] The power exerted by a single person (analogous to horsepower.) MANROPES (12) [noun] Each of the side ropes to a gangway or ladder of a ship. MANSARDS (11) [noun] A mansard roof | [noun] The upper storey of a building, surrounded by such a roof MANSIONS (10) [noun] A large house or building, usually built for the wealthy. | [noun] A luxurious flat (apartment). | [noun] A house provided for a clergyman; a manse. MANTEAUS (10) [noun] A cloak or gown, especially of a kind popular with women in the 17th and 18th centuries. MANTEAUX (17) MANTELET (10) [noun] A short sleeveless cloak or cape. | [noun] A portable screen or other covering, especially as used to protect the approach of soldiers engaged in a siege. | [noun] A mantelletta. MANTILLA (10) [noun] A lace veil of Spanish origin worn over a woman's hair and shoulders. | [noun] A woman's light cloak or cape made of silk, velvet, lace, or other material. MANTISES (10) [noun] Any of various large insects of the order Mantodea that catch insects or other small animals with their powerful forelegs. | [noun] A green colour, like that of many mantises. MANTISSA (10) [noun] A minor addition to a text. | [noun] The part of a common logarithm after the decimal point, the fractional part of a logarithm. | [noun] The significand; that part of a floating-point number or number in scientific notation that contains its significant digits. MANTLETS (10) [noun] A short sleeveless cloak or cape. | [noun] A portable screen or other covering, especially as used to protect the approach of soldiers engaged in a siege. | [noun] A mantelletta. MANTLING (11) [verb] To cover or conceal (something); to cloak; to disguise. | [verb] To become covered or concealed. | [verb] To spread like a mantle (especially of blood in the face and cheeks when a person flushes). MANTRAPS (12) [noun] A mechanical device for catching trespassers. | [noun] A small space with two sets of interlocking doors, such that the first set of doors must close before the second set opens, used to restrict access. | [noun] A woman who is dangerously seductive to men. MANUALLY (13) [adverb] By hand MANUBRIA (12) [noun] The broad, upper part of the sternum. | [noun] The tube extending from the central underside of a jellyfish and ending in a mouth. | [noun] A knob or handle that controls the stops of an organ. MANUMITS (12) [verb] To release from slavery, to free. MANURERS (10) MANURIAL (10) MANURING (11) [verb] To cultivate by manual labor; to till; hence, to develop by culture. | [verb] To apply manure (as fertilizer or soil improver). | [noun] An application of manure. MANWARDS (14) MANYFOLD (17) [adjective] Many | [adverb] By many times. MAPMAKER (18) [noun] A person who makes maps. MAPPABLE (16) MAPPINGS (15) [noun] The process of making maps. | [noun] The process of locating genes on a chromosome. | [noun] Assigning a PC to a shared drive or printer port on a network. MAQUETTE (19) [noun] A preliminary model or sketch used in preparation for making a sculpture. | [verb] To prepare a maquette (of). MARABOUS (12) [noun] Leptoptilos crumeniferus, a large wading bird native to Africa, with a naked head and neck adapted for scavenging. | [noun] A person, five-eighths of whose ancestry is black; the offspring of a mulatto and a griffe. | [noun] A kind of thrown raw silk, naturally nearly white, but capable of being dyed without scouring. MARABOUT (12) [noun] A Muslim holy man or mystic, especially in parts of North Africa. | [noun] The tomb or shrine of such a person. MARANTAS (10) MARASCAS (12) MARASMIC (14) MARASMUS (12) [noun] Any wasting disease, especially a severe loss of body weight, in children, caused by malnutrition or the inability to digest protein MARATHON (13) [noun] A 42.195 kilometre (26 mile 385 yard) road race. | [noun] (by extension) Any extended or sustained activity. | [verb] To run a marathon. MARAUDED (12) [verb] To move about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [verb] To go about aggressively or in a predatory manner. | [verb] To raid and pillage. MARAUDER (11) [noun] Someone who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [noun] By extension anything which marauds. MARAVEDI (14) [noun] A former Spanish coin and unit of currency, originally issued in gold but later in silver and copper, discontinued in 1848. MARBLERS (12) MARBLIER (12) MARBLING (13) [verb] To cause (something to have) the streaked or swirled appearance of certain types of marble, for example by mixing viscous ingredients incompletely, or by applying paint or other colorants unevenly. | [verb] To get or have the streaked or swirled appearance of certain types of marble, for example due to the incomplete mixing of viscous ingredients, or the uneven application of paint or other colorants. | [verb] To cause meat, usually beef, pork, or lamb, to be interlaced with fat so that its appearance resembles that of marble. MARCHERS (15) [noun] An inhabitant of a march (border country); specifically, a marcher lord. | [noun] A border territory, a march (now only in (attributive) use). | [noun] One who marches; one who participates in a march. MARCHESA (15) [noun] An Italian marchioness. MARCHESE (15) [noun] An Italian marquis. MARCHESI (15) [noun] An Italian marquis. MARCHING (16) [verb] To walk with long, regular strides, as a soldier does. | [verb] To cause someone to walk somewhere. | [verb] To go to war; to make military advances. MARGARIC (13) MARGARIN (11) MARGENTS (11) MARGINAL (11) [noun] Something that is marginal. | [noun] A constituency won with a small margin. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or located at or near a margin or edge; also figurative usages of location and margin (edge). MARGINED (12) [verb] To add a margin to. | [verb] To enter (notes etc.) into the margin. | [adjective] Having a margin. MARGRAVE (14) [noun] A feudal era military-administrative officer of comital rank in the Carolingian empire and some successor states, originally in charge of a border area. | [noun] A hereditary ruling prince in certain feudal states of the Holy Roman Empire and elsewhere; the titular equivalent became known as marquis or marquess. MARIACHI (15) [noun] A traditional form of Mexican music, either sung or purely instrumental. | [noun] A group that plays mariachi music. | [noun] A member of such a group. MARIGOLD (12) [noun] (genericised brand name, usually plural, sometimes with capital) A rubber glove, especially one for use in household cleaning. | [noun] Any of the Old World plants, of the genus Calendula, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers. | [noun] Any of the New World plants, of the genus Tagetes, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers. MARIMBAS (14) [noun] A musical instrument similar to a xylophone but clearer in pitch. MARINADE (11) [noun] A seasoned, often acidic liquid mixture in which food is marinated, or soaked, usually to flavor and prepare it for cooking. | [verb] To marinate. MARINARA (10) [noun] A marinara sauce. | [adjective] Prepared with tomatoes, or in a tomato sauce. | [adjective] Of pasta: In a seafood sauce. Of pizza: With seafood topping. MARINATE (10) [verb] To allow a sauce or flavoring mixture to absorb into something; to steep or soak something in a marinade to flavor or prepare it for cooking. MARINERS (10) [noun] A sailor. MARIPOSA (12) MARISHES (13) MARITIME (12) [adjective] Relating to or connected with the sea or its uses (as navigation, commerce, etc.). | [adjective] Bordering on the sea; living near the seacoast; coastal. | [adjective] Inhabiting the seashore; living coastwise; littoral. (distinguished from marine) MARJORAM (19) [noun] A herb of the mint family, Origanum majorana, having aromatic leaves. | [noun] The leaves of this plant used in flavouring food. MARKDOWN (18) [noun] A reduction in price in order to stimulate sales. MARKEDLY (18) [adverb] In a marked manner; distinctly, noticeably, conspicuously. MARKETED (15) [verb] To make (products or services) available for sale and promote them. | [verb] To sell | [verb] To deal in a market; to buy or sell; to make bargains for provisions or goods. MARKETER (14) [noun] One who designs and executes marketing campaigns. | [noun] One who sells goods at a market. MARKHOOR (17) MARKHORS (17) [noun] A large wild goat, Capra falconeri, especially (Capra falconeri megaceros, syn. Capra megaceros), having huge flattened spiral horns., found in the western Himalayas. MARKINGS (15) [noun] The action of the verb to mark. | [noun] A mark. | [noun] The characteristic colouration and patterning of an animal. MARKSMAN (16) [noun] A man or person skilled at hitting targets, as with a firearm, bow, or thrown object. | [noun] Goalscorer. MARKSMEN (16) [noun] A man or person skilled at hitting targets, as with a firearm, bow, or thrown object. | [noun] Goalscorer. MARLIEST (10) MARLINES (10) MARLINGS (11) MARLITES (10) MARLITIC (12) MARMITES (12) [noun] A rounded earthenware cooking pot. MARMOSET (12) [noun] A small monkey, now specifically a Central and South American monkey of the genera Callithrix, Mico, Cebuella, or Callibella, with claws instead of nails, and a rather primitive layout. | [noun] A hideous figure; a grotesque. | [noun] An unappealing or foolish man. MAROCAIN (12) [noun] A heavy crepe fabric of silk, wool, or both, having a cross-ribbed texture, used for apparel. MAROONED (11) [verb] To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a desert island. MARPLOTS (12) MARQUEES (19) [noun] A large tent with open sides, used for outdoors entertainment. | [noun] A projecting canopy over an entrance, especially one with a sign that displays the name of the establishment or other information of it. | [noun] (by generalization) Lights that turn on and off in sequence, or scrolling text, as these are common elements on a marquee. MARQUESS (19) [noun] A title of nobility for a man ranking beneath a duke and above an earl. MARQUISE (19) [noun] A marchioness, especially one who is French. | [noun] A marquee. | [noun] (jewelry) An oval cut diamond with pointed ends. MARRANOS (10) [noun] A Jew who converted to Catholicism under threat or force. MARRIAGE (11) [noun] The state of being married. | [noun] A union of two or more people that creates a family tie and carries legal, social, and/or religious rights and responsibilities. | [noun] A homosexual relationship between male prisoners. MARRIEDS (11) [noun] A married person. MARRIERS (10) MARROWED (14) MARRYING (14) [verb] To enter into the conjugal or connubial state; to take a husband or a wife. | [verb] (in passive) To be joined to (someone) as spouse according to law or custom. | [verb] To arrange for the marriage of; to give away as wife or husband. MARSALAS (10) MARSHALL (13) MARSHALS (13) [noun] A high-ranking officer in the household of a medieval prince or lord, who was originally in charge of the cavalry and later the military forces in general. | [noun] A military officer of the highest rank in several countries, including France and the former Soviet Union; equivalent to a general of the army in the United States. See also field marshal. | [noun] A person in charge of the ceremonial arrangement and management of a gathering. MARSHIER (13) [adjective] Of, or resembling a marsh; boggy. | [adjective] Growing in marshy ground. MARSUPIA (12) [noun] The external pouch in which female marsupials rear and feed the young. | [noun] A brood pouch in some fishes, crustaceans and insects in the family Monophlebidae. MARTAGON (11) MARTELLO (10) [noun] Martello tower MARTIANS (10) MARTINET (10) [noun] A strict disciplinarian. | [noun] Anyone who lays stress on a rigid adherence to the details of discipline, or to forms and fixed methods or rules. | [noun] A martin; a swift. MARTINIS (10) [noun] A cocktail made with gin or vodka and vermouth. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) Any cocktail served in a cocktail glass, often sweet or fruity and aimed at women. MARTLETS (10) [noun] A bird, the martin. | [noun] A depiction of a bird similar to a house martin or swallow with stylized feet. MARTYRED (14) [verb] To make someone into a martyr by putting him or her to death for adhering to, or acting in accordance with, some belief, especially religious; to sacrifice on account of faith or profession. | [verb] To persecute. | [verb] To torment; to torture. MARTYRLY (16) MARVELED (14) [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. | [verb] To marvel at. | [verb] (used impersonally) To cause to marvel or be surprised. MARYJANE (20) MARZIPAN (21) [noun] A confection made from a paste of almonds, sugar and egg white as a binder. | [verb] To cover with marzipan. MASCARAS (12) [noun] A cosmetic used to darken and thicken the eyelashes. MASKABLE (16) MASKINGS (15) MASKLIKE (18) MASONING (11) [verb] (normally with a preposition) To build stonework or brickwork about, under, in, over, etc.; to construct by masons MASQUERS (19) [noun] One who appears in disguise at a masquerade. MASSACRE (12) [noun] The killing of a considerable number (usually limited to people) where little or no resistance can be made, with indiscriminate violence, without necessity, and contrary to civilized norms. | [noun] Murder. | [noun] Any overwhelming defeat, as in a game or sport. MASSAGED (12) [verb] To rub and knead (someone's body or a part of a body), to perform a massage on (somebody). | [verb] To manipulate (data, a document etc.) to make it more presentable or more convenient to work with. | [verb] To falsify (data or accounts). MASSAGER (11) MASSAGES (11) [noun] The action of rubbing, kneading or hitting someone's body, to help the person relax, prepare for muscular action (as in contact sports) or to relieve aches. | [verb] To rub and knead (someone's body or a part of a body), to perform a massage on (somebody). | [verb] To manipulate (data, a document etc.) to make it more presentable or more convenient to work with. MASSCULT (12) MASSEDLY (14) MASSETER (10) [noun] The large muscle which raises the under jaw, and assists in mastication. MASSEURS (10) [noun] (massage) A person (especially male) who performs massage. | [noun] An instrument used in the performance of massage. MASSEUSE (10) [noun] A woman who performs massage; a female masseur. | [noun] A masseur; a man who performs massage. MASSICOT (12) [noun] Lead monoxide, PbO, obtained as a yellow amorphous powder, the fused and crystalline form of which is called litharge; lead ocher. It is used as a pigment; also, lead oxide yellow, as opposed to red lead, which is lead tetroxide Pb3O4. MASSIEST (10) MASSLESS (10) MASTABAH (15) [noun] A wide stone bench built into the wall of a house, shop etc. in the Middle East. | [noun] A rectangular structure with a flat top and slightly sloping sides, built during Ancient Egyptian times above tombs that were situated on flat land. Mastabas were made of wood, mud bricks, stone, or a combination of these materials. Some are solid structures, while others can contain one or more rooms, sometimes decorated with paintings or inscriptions. MASTABAS (12) [noun] A wide stone bench built into the wall of a house, shop etc. in the Middle East. | [noun] A rectangular structure with a flat top and slightly sloping sides, built during Ancient Egyptian times above tombs that were situated on flat land. Mastabas were made of wood, mud bricks, stone, or a combination of these materials. Some are solid structures, while others can contain one or more rooms, sometimes decorated with paintings or inscriptions. MASTERED (11) [verb] To be a master. | [verb] To become the master of; to subject to one's will, control, or authority; to conquer; to overpower; to subdue. | [verb] To learn to a high degree of proficiency. MASTERLY (13) [adjective] Executed in the manner of a master; showing competence and skill; masterful. | [adjective] (usually derogatory) Like a master; arbitrary; domineering, imperious. | [adverb] In a masterful manner; competently, masterfully. MASTHEAD (14) [noun] The top of a mast. | [noun] A list of a newspaper or other periodical's main staff, contributing writers, publisher, circulation, advertising rates etc. | [noun] The title (normally in a large and distinctive font) of a newspaper at the top of the front page MASTICHE (15) MASTIFFS (16) [noun] One of an old breed of powerful, deep-chested, and smooth-coated dogs, used chiefly as watchdogs and guard dogs. MASTITIC (12) MASTITIS (10) [noun] Inflammation of a breast. MASTIXES (17) MASTLESS (10) MASTLIKE (14) MASTODON (11) [noun] Extinct elephant-like mammal of the genus Mammut that flourished worldwide from Miocene through Pleistocene times; differs from elephants and mammoths in the form of the molar teeth. MASTOIDS (11) [noun] The mastoid process. MASURIUM (12) MATADORS (11) [noun] The person whose aim is to kill the bull in a bullfight. | [noun] A certain game of dominoes in which four dominoes (the 4-3, 5-2, 6-1, and double blank), called matadors, may be played at any time in any way. | [noun] The jack of clubs, or any other trump held in sequence with it, in the game of skat. MATCHBOX (24) [noun] A small cardboard box in which matches are kept. | [noun] Any small die-cast toy car, usually collectible. MATCHERS (15) MATCHING (16) [verb] To agree; to be equal; to correspond. | [verb] To agree with; to be equal to; to correspond to. | [verb] To make a successful match or pairing. MATCHUPS (17) [noun] A pairing of two things, people or teams, especially for a competition MATELESS (10) MATELOTE (10) [noun] A stew made primarily with fish and wine. | [noun] An old sailors' dance in double time, somewhat like a hornpipe. MATELOTS (10) [noun] Sailor; also "mate;" boon companion MATERIAL (10) [noun] Matter which may be shaped or manipulated, particularly in making something. | [noun] Text written for a specific purpose. | [noun] A sample or specimens for study. MATERIEL (10) [noun] Military equipment, apparatus, and supplies. MATERNAL (10) [noun] A mother. | [noun] A person related through the mother, or her side of the family; a maternal relative. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a mother; having the characteristics of a mother; motherly. MATESHIP (15) [noun] The post of mate on a ship; a posting as mate. | [noun] (whaling) A type of contract between ships to cooperate and share the proceeds of an expedition. | [noun] Fellowship; companionship. MATILDAS (11) [noun] A bundle of possessions, often tied up in a sack; a swag. MATINEES (10) [noun] A showing of a movie, sporting event, or theatrical performance in the morning or afternoon. | [noun] A woman's dress to be worn in the morning or before dinner. | [verb] To put on a matinee performance (of). MATINESS (10) MATRICES (12) [noun] The womb. | [noun] The material or tissue in which more specialized structures are embedded. | [noun] An extracellular matrix, the material or tissue between the cells of animals or plants. MATRIXES (17) [noun] The womb. | [noun] The material or tissue in which more specialized structures are embedded. | [noun] An extracellular matrix, the material or tissue between the cells of animals or plants. MATRONAL (10) MATRONLY (13) [adjective] In the capacity of a matron; serving as a housekeeper or head nurse. | [adjective] Exuding the authority, wisdom, power, and intelligence of an experienced woman. | [adjective] Having the appearance of a mature woman, often of larger physical stature and somewhat unkempt or dowdy. MATTEDLY (14) MATTERED (11) [verb] To be important. | [verb] (in negative constructions) To care about, to mind; to find important. | [verb] To form pus or matter, as an abscess; to maturate. MATTINGS (11) MATTOCKS (16) [noun] An agricultural tool whose blades are at right angles to the body, similar to a pickaxe. MATTOIDS (11) MATTRASS (10) MATTRESS (10) [noun] A pad on which a person can recline and sleep, usually having an inner section of coiled springs covered with foam or other cushioning material then enclosed with cloth fabric. | [noun] A form of retaining wall used to support foundations or an embankment | [verb] To cover with a thick layer, like a mattress; to blanket. MATURATE (10) [verb] To bring to ripeness or maturity; to ripen. | [verb] To promote the perfect suppuration of (an abscess). | [verb] To undergo perfect suppuration. MATURELY (13) MATUREST (10) [adjective] Fully developed; grown up in terms of physical appearance, behaviour or thinking; ripe. | [adjective] Brought to a state of complete readiness. | [adjective] Profound; careful. MATURING (11) [verb] To proceed toward maturity: full development or completion (either of concrete or of abstract things, e.g. plans, judgments, qualities). | [verb] (of food, especially fruit) To attain maturity, to become mature or ripe. | [verb] To bring (something) to maturity, full development or completion. MATURITY (13) [noun] The state of being mature, ready or ripe. | [noun] When bodily growth has completed and/or reproduction can begin. | [noun] The state of a debt obligation at the end of the term of maturation thereof, once all interest and any applicable fees have accrued to the principal. MATZOONS (19) MAUMETRY (15) MAUNDERS (11) [verb] To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle. | [verb] To wander or walk aimlessly. | [verb] To beg; to whine like a beggar. MAUNDIES (11) MAUSOLEA (10) [noun] A large stately tomb or a building housing such a tomb or several tombs. | [noun] (by extension) A gloomy, usually large room or building. MAVERICK (19) [noun] An unbranded range animal. | [noun] (by extension) Anything dishonestly obtained. | [noun] (by extension) One who is unconventional or does not abide by rules. MAXICOAT (19) MAXILLAE (17) [noun] Either of the two bones that together form the upper jaw. | [noun] (arthropodology) One of a set of paired mouthparts found in many arthropods and used for tasting and manipulating food. MAXILLAS (17) MAXIMALS (19) MAXIMINS (19) [noun] In decision theory and game theory etc, a rule to identify the worst outcome of each possible option to find one's best (maximum payoff) play. MAXIMISE (19) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMITE (19) MAXIMIZE (28) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMUMS (21) [noun] The highest limit | [noun] The greatest value of a set or other mathematical structure, especially the global maximum or a local maximum of a function | [noun] An upper bound of a set which is also an element of that set MAXWELLS (20) [noun] A unit of magnetic flux that produces one abvolt per turn per second. MAYAPPLE (17) [noun] A fruit-bearing flowering plant with poisonous roots, native to eastern North America, taxonomic name Podophyllum peltatum. | [noun] The fruit of the plant Podophyllum peltatum MAYFLIES (16) [noun] Any of the many fragile insects of the order Ephemeroptera that develop in fresh water and live very briefly as winged adults. MAYORESS (13) [noun] A female mayor. | [noun] The wife of a (male) mayor. | [noun] A daughter or female friend of a male mayor chosen by him to hold the title mayoress. MAYPOLES (15) [noun] A pole, garlanded with streamers held by people who dance around it to celebrate May Day. | [noun] A maypole-like structure of sticks placed about a sapling in the bowers of certain species of bowerbird. | [noun] A penis, especially a large one. MAYWEEDS (17) [noun] Stinking chamomile, Anthemis cotula. | [noun] Corn chamomile, field chamomile, Anthemis arvensis. | [noun] Plants of the genera Matricaria and Tripleurospermum. MAZAEDIA (20) MAZELIKE (23) [adjective] Like a maze; labyrinthine. MAZINESS (19) MAZOURKA (23) MAZURKAS (23) [noun] A Polish folk dance in triple time, usually moderately fast, containing a heavy accent on the third beat and occasionally the second beat. | [noun] A classical musical composition inspired by the folk dance and conforming in some respects to its form, particularly as popularized by Chopin. | [noun] A figure skating move that combines elements of the toe loop and bunny-hop. MAZZARDS (29) [noun] A sweet cherry, Prunus avium MEAGERLY (14) MEAGRELY (14) MEALIEST (10) [adjective] Resembling meal (the foodstuff). MEALLESS (10) MEALTIME (12) [noun] The appointed time at which a meal is served or eaten. MEALWORM (15) [noun] The larval stage of the mealworm beetle (Tenebrio molitor), a species of darkling beetle.. MEALYBUG (16) [noun] Any of various insects of the family Pseudococcidae, which secrete a powdery wax and are pests of fruit trees. MEANDERS (11) [noun] A decorative border constructed from a continuous line, shaped into a repeated motif, that is commonly found in Greek art. | [noun] A structural motif in proteins consisting of four adjacent antiparallel strands and their linking loops. | [noun] One of the turns of a winding, crooked, or involved course. MEANINGS (11) [noun] (of words or symbols) The entity, perception, feeling or concept thereby represented or evoked. | [noun] The value, purpose, importance, point or significance (of something beyond the fact of that thing's existence). | [noun] The object or concept that a word or phrase denotes, or that which a sentence says. MEANNESS (10) [noun] The condition, or quality, of being mean (any of its definitions) | [noun] A mean act. MEANTIME (12) [noun] The time spent waiting for another event; time in between. | [adverb] During the interval; meanwhile MEASLIER (10) [adjective] Particularly of pigs or pork: infected with larval tapeworms or trichinae (parasitic roundworms). | [adjective] Of a person: infected with measles. | [adjective] Small (especially contemptibly small) in amount. MEASURED (11) [verb] To ascertain the quantity of a unit of material via calculated comparison with respect to a standard. | [verb] To be of (a certain size), to have (a certain measurement) | [verb] To estimate the unit size of something. MEASURER (10) MEASURES (10) [noun] A prescribed quantity or extent. | [noun] The act or result of measuring. | [noun] Metrical rhythm. MEATBALL (12) [noun] A ball of minced or ground meat, seasoned and cooked. | [noun] A stupid person. | [noun] An easy pitch to hit, especially thrown right down the middle of the plate. MEATHEAD (14) [noun] An ungainly, dull or stupid person; someone who is lazy, disrespectful and/or whose beliefs and philosophies clash with another. | [noun] A large, muscular, stupid male, especially an athlete. | [noun] A member of the Canadian Forces Military Police. MEATIEST (10) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing meat. | [adjective] Resembling meat in flavour, etc. | [adjective] Of a person or a body part, large and solid. MEATLESS (10) MEATLOAF (13) [noun] A dish of ground meat (usually made from ground beef, although lamb, pork, veal, venison, poultry and seafood are also used) formed into a loaf shape, mixed with egg and breadcrumbs, then baked or smoked, and usually served in slices. MEATUSES (10) [noun] A tubular opening or passage in the body. MECHANIC (17) [noun] A manual worker; a labourer or artisan. | [noun] Someone who builds or repairs machinery, a technician; now specifically, someone who works with and repairs the mechanical parts of a motor vehicle, aircraft or similar. | [noun] A device, command, or feature which allows someone to achieve a specific task. MECONIUM (14) [noun] A dark green mass, the contents of the fetal intestines during the later stages of mammalian gestation, that forms the first faeces of the newborn | [noun] Opium MEDALING (12) [verb] To win a medal. | [verb] To award a medal to. MEDALIST (11) [noun] One who has received a medal; one who has medalled. | [noun] An engraver, designer or collector of medals. MEDALLED (12) [verb] To win a medal. | [verb] To award a medal to. MEDALLIC (13) MEDDLERS (12) MEDDLING (13) [verb] To interfere in or with; to concern oneself with unduly. | [verb] To interest or engage oneself; to have to do (with), in a good sense. | [verb] To mix (something) with some other substance; to commingle, combine, blend. MEDEVACS (16) [noun] The emergency transportation, usually by air, of patients to a medical facility. | [noun] A vehicle, typically aircraft, used for emergency transportation of patients to a medical facility. | [noun] Trained personnel who care for patients during emergency transportation to a medical facility. MEDFLIES (14) [noun] A small fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata, native to the Mediterranean. MEDIALLY (14) MEDIANLY (14) MEDIANTS (11) [noun] The third degree of the diatonic scale. | [noun] A rational number whose numerator is the sum of the numerators of two other given rational numbers and whose denominator is the sum of the denominators of those same two other rational numbers. MEDIATED (12) [verb] To resolve differences, or to bring about a settlement, between conflicting parties. | [verb] To intervene between conflicting parties in order to resolve differences or bring about a settlement. | [verb] To divide into two equal parts. MEDIATES (11) [verb] To resolve differences, or to bring about a settlement, between conflicting parties. | [verb] To intervene between conflicting parties in order to resolve differences or bring about a settlement. | [verb] To divide into two equal parts. MEDIATOR (11) [noun] One who negotiates between parties seeking mutual agreement. | [noun] A chemical substance transmitting information to a targeted cell. MEDICAID (14) MEDICALS (13) [noun] A medical examination. MEDICARE (13) MEDICATE (13) [verb] To prescribe or administer medication to. MEDICINE (13) [noun] A substance which specifically promotes healing when ingested or consumed in some way. | [noun] A treatment or cure. | [noun] The study of the cause, diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of disease or illness. MEDIEVAL (14) [noun] Someone living in the Middle Ages. | [noun] A medieval example (of something aforementioned or understood from context). | [adjective] Of or relating to the Middle Ages, the period from approximately 500 to 1500 AD. MEDIOCRE (13) [noun] A person of minor significance, accomplishment or acclaim; a common and undistinguished person. | [noun] A member of a socioeconomic class between the upper ranks of society and the agricultural workers. | [adjective] Having no peculiar or outstanding features; not extraordinary, special, exceptional, or great; of medium quality, almost always with a negative connotation. MEDITATE (11) [verb] To contemplate; to keep the mind fixed upon something; to study. | [verb] To sit or lie down and come to a deep rest while still remaining conscious. | [verb] To consider; to reflect on. MEDULLAE (11) MEDULLAR (11) MEDULLAS (11) [noun] The soft inner part of something, especially the pith of a fruit. | [noun] The inner substance of various organs and structures, especially the marrow of bones. | [noun] The medulla oblongata. MEDUSANS (11) MEDUSOID (12) [noun] Jellyfish | [adjective] Having the shape of a jellyfish MEEKNESS (14) [noun] The state or quality of being meek. MEERKATS (14) [noun] Suricata suricatta, a small carnivorous mammal of the mongoose family, from the Kalahari Desert, known for its habit of standing on its hind legs. MEETINGS (11) [noun] (gerund) The act of persons or things that meet. | [noun] A gathering of persons for a purpose; an assembly. | [noun] (collective) The people at such a gathering. MEETNESS (10) MEGABARS (13) MEGABITS (13) [noun] 106 = 1,000,000 bits or 125,000 bytes (125 kilobytes) | [noun] 220 = 1,048,576 bits; a mebibit | [noun] One megabit per second MEGABUCK (19) [noun] A million dollars. MEGABYTE (16) [noun] One million (106) bytes. | [noun] 1,048,576 bytes; a mebibyte. MEGACITY (16) [noun] A very large city; a megalopolis. MEGADEAL (12) MEGADOSE (12) [noun] A dose of drug or vitamin far exceeding the normal or recommended amount, and usually given intentionally. Compare overdose. | [verb] To dose (a patient) with a very large amount of a drug. | [verb] To dose with a very large amount of (a drug). MEGADYNE (15) MEGAHITS (14) MEGALITH (14) [noun] A construction involving one or several roughly hewn stone slabs of great size. | [noun] A large stone used in such a construction. MEGALOPS (13) MEGAPODE (14) [noun] Any of several chicken- or turkey-like birds in the family Megapodiidae, which incubate their eggs by burying them where they receive warmth from decaying vegetation, solar radiation or geothermal heat. | [adjective] Characteristic of the Megapodiidae. MEGAPODS (14) MEGASSES (11) MEGASTAR (11) [noun] A very famous or successful celebrity. MEGATONS (11) [noun] A measure of the strength of an explosion or a bomb based on how many million tons of TNT would be needed to produce the same energy. MEGAVOLT (14) [noun] One million (106) volts, abbreviated as MV. MEGAWATT (14) [noun] One million (1 000 000) watts, abbreviated as MW. MEGILLAH (14) MEGILPHS (16) MELAMDIM (15) MELAMINE (12) [noun] A strong aromatic heterocyclic base, triaminotriazine, used in combination with formaldehyde to manufacture melamine resins; any such resin, such as Formica MELANGES (11) [noun] A mixture of different things; a disordered mixture. | [noun] A Viennese coffee speciality, half steamed milk and half coffee. | [noun] A large-scale breccia formed in the accretionary wedge over a subductional environment. MELANIAN (10) MELANICS (12) MELANINS (10) MELANISM (12) [noun] Congenital excess of melanin pigmentation in the skin, hair, feathers and/or eyes. MELANIST (10) MELANITE (10) [noun] A black variety of andradite. MELANIZE (19) MELANOID (11) [adjective] Relating to, or resembling, melanin. | [adjective] Relating to, or afflicted with, melanosis. MELANOMA (12) [noun] A dark-pigmented, usually malignant tumor arising from a melanocyte and occurring most commonly in the skin. MELANOUS (10) MELILITE (10) MELILOTS (10) [noun] A fragrant plant of the genus Melilotus, often having small yellow or white flowers. MELINITE (10) MELISMAS (12) [noun] A passage of several notes sung to one syllable of text, as in Gregorian chant. MELLIFIC (15) MELLOWED (14) [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. MELLOWER (13) [adjective] Soft or tender by reason of ripeness; having a tender pulp. | [adjective] Easily worked or penetrated; not hard or rigid. | [adjective] Not coarse, rough, or harsh; subdued, soft, rich, delicate; said of sound, color, flavor, style, etc. MELLOWLY (16) MELODEON (11) [noun] A music hall. | [noun] A type of reed organ with a single keyboard. | [noun] An accordion where the melody-side keyboard is limited to the notes of diatonic scales in a small number of keys. MELODIAS (11) MELODICA (13) [noun] A free-reed keyboard wind instrument. MELODIES (11) [noun] Tune; sequence of notes that makes up a musical phrase MELODISE (11) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODIST (11) [noun] A performer or composer of melodies. MELODIZE (20) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELTABLE (12) MELTAGES (11) MELTDOWN (14) [noun] Severe overheating of the core of a nuclear reactor resulting in the core melting and radiation escaping. | [noun] A situation being likened to a nuclear meltdown; a crisis. | [noun] A tantrum. MEMBERED (15) [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified number of members. | [adjective] (in combination) Having limbs. | [adjective] (of a bird) Having legs of a different tincture from that of the body. MEMBRANE (14) [noun] A flexible enclosing or separating tissue forming a plane or film and separating two environments (usually in a plant or animal). | [noun] A mechanical, thin, flat flexible part that can deform or vibrate when excited by an external force. | [noun] A flexible or semi-flexible covering or waterproofing whose primary function is to exclude water. MEMENTOS (12) [noun] A keepsake; an object kept as a reminder of a place or event. MEMORIAL (12) [noun] Memory; recollection. | [noun] Something, such as a monument, by which someone or something is remembered. | [noun] A chronicle or memoir. MEMORIES (12) [noun] The ability of the brain to record information or impressions with the facility of recalling them later at will. | [noun] A record of a thing or an event stored and available for later use by the organism. | [noun] The part of a computer that stores variable executable code or data (RAM) or unalterable executable code or default data (ROM). MEMORISE (12) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORIZE (21) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMSAHIB (17) [noun] (as a respectful term of address) A white European woman in colonial India. MENACERS (12) MENACING (13) [verb] To make threats against (someone); to intimidate. | [verb] To threaten (an evil to be inflicted). | [verb] To endanger (someone or something); to imperil or jeopardize. MENARCHE (15) [noun] The onset of menstruation; a girl's first period. MENAZONS (19) MENDABLE (13) MENDIGOS (12) MENDINGS (12) MENFOLKS (17) [noun] Menfolk; male members of a group MENHADEN (14) [noun] Any of several species of fish in the genera Brevoortia and Ethmidium, used for fish meal, fish oil, fertilizer, and bait. MENIALLY (13) MENINGES (11) [noun] (chiefly plural) The three membranes that envelop the brain and spinal cord. MENISCAL (12) MENISCUS (12) [noun] A crescent moon, or an object shaped like it. | [noun] A lens which is convex on one side and concave on the other, being crescent-shaped in cross-section. | [noun] The curved surface of liquids in tubes, whether concave or convex, caused by the surface tension of the liquid. MENOLOGY (14) [noun] (often capitalized) A service book of the Eastern Orthodox Church that corresponds, though very roughly, to the proprium sanctorum of the Latin breviary. They include all the movable parts of the services connected with the commemoration of saints and in particular the canons sung in the Orthros, the office which corresponds with Catholic lauds, including the synaxaries, i. e. the historical notices regarding the saints of the day. | [noun] The tables of scriptural lessons, arranged according to months and saints' days, which are often found at the beginning of manuscripts of the gospels or other lectionaries. The saints' days are briefly named and the readings indicated beside each. | [noun] A collection of long lives of the saints of the Eastern Orthodox Church, whenever these lives, are arranged according to months and days of the year. MENORAHS (13) [noun] A holy candelabrum with seven branches used in the Temple of Jerusalem. | [noun] A candelabrum (hanukkiah) with nine branches used in Jewish worship on Hanukkah. MENSCHEN (15) MENSCHES (15) [noun] A person (chiefly male) of strength, integrity and honor or compassion. | [noun] A gentleman. MENSEFUL (13) [adjective] Decorous; mannerly; respectful and worth of respect MENSTRUA (10) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The menses; menstrual discharge. | [noun] A solvent. | [noun] Any liquid medium. MENSURAL (10) [adjective] Of or pertaining to measure or measurement. | [adjective] Having a fixed rhythm. MENSWEAR (13) [noun] Men's clothing, particularly in a retail context. MENTALLY (13) [adverb] In a mental manner; an idea thought out in one's mind, as opposed to an idea spoken orally. MENTHENE (13) MENTHOLS (13) MENTIONS (10) [noun] A speaking or notice of anything, usually in a brief or cursory manner. Used especially in the phrase make mention of. | [noun] A social media feed, a list of replies or posts mentioning a person. | [verb] To make a short reference to something. MENTORED (11) [verb] To act as someone's mentor | [adjective] Under the control of a mentor MEPHITIC (17) [adjective] Foul-smelling or noxious, particularly of a gas or atmosphere. MEPHITIS (15) [noun] A poisonous or foul-smelling gas, especially as emitted from the earth; an unpleasant smell. | [noun] A dilution of fluids derived from skunks or polecats. MERCAPTO (14) MERCHANT (15) [noun] A person who traffics in commodities for profit. | [noun] The owner or operator of a retail business. | [noun] A trading vessel; a merchantman. MERCIFUL (15) [adjective] Showing mercy MERCURIC (14) [adjective] Pertaining to or derived from mercury. | [adjective] Specifically (of a compound), containing mercury with an oxidation number of 2. | [adjective] Mercurial (of people). MERENGUE (11) [noun] A type of music common in the Caribbean, originally associated with the Dominican Republic. | [noun] A song performed in this style. | [noun] A dance to this style of music. MERGENCE (13) MERIDIAN (11) [noun] The south. | [noun] Midday, noon. | [noun] A great circle passing through the poles of the celestial sphere and the zenith for a particular point on the earth's surface. MERINGUE (11) [noun] A mixture consisting of beaten egg whites and sugar which is added to the tops of pies then browned. | [noun] A shell made of this mixture which serves as the receptacle for fruit, ice cream or sherbet. MERISTEM (12) [noun] The plant tissue composed of totipotent cells that allows plant growth. MERISTIC (12) MERITING (11) [verb] To deserve, to earn. | [verb] To be deserving or worthy. | [verb] To reward. MERMAIDS (13) [noun] A mythological creature with a woman's head and upper body, and a tail of a fish. | [noun] (as a modifier) Coloured a brilliant turquoise. | [noun] A prostitute. MEROPIAS (12) MERRIEST (10) [adjective] Jolly and full of high spirits. | [adjective] Festive and full of fun and laughter. | [adjective] Brisk MESDAMES (13) [noun] A polite form of address for a woman or lady. | [noun] The mistress of a household. | [noun] A conceited or quarrelsome girl. MESEEMED (13) MESHIEST (13) MESHUGAH (17) [adjective] Crazy, mad, senseless, insane MESHUGGA (15) [adjective] Crazy, mad, senseless, insane MESHUGGE (15) MESHWORK (20) [noun] A net; an assembly of meshes. MESIALLY (13) MESMERIC (14) [adjective] Of or relating to mesmerism or mesmerization MESNALTY (13) MESOCARP (14) [noun] The middle layer of the pericarp of a fruit. In many fruits such as drupes and tomatoes, the mesocarp is fleshy MESODERM (13) [noun] One of the three tissue layers in the embryo of a metazoan animal. Through embryonic development, it will produce many internal organs of the adult, e.g. muscles, spine and circulatory system. MESOGLEA (11) MESOMERE (12) MESOPHYL (18) MESOSOME (12) MESOTRON (10) MESQUITE (19) [noun] Any of several deciduous trees of the genus Prosopis found in North America, and used as forage, which have long, beige seed/bean pods which may be dried and ground into a sweet, nutty flour. | [noun] The wood of these trees, used for smoking food, or charcoal made from this wood. | [noun] Country or land dominated by mesquite trees. MESQUITS (19) MESSAGED (12) [verb] To send a message to; to transmit a message to, e.g. as text via a cell phone. | [verb] To send (something) as a message; usually refers to electronic messaging. | [verb] To send a message or messages; to be capable of sending messages. MESSAGES (11) [noun] A communication, or what is communicated; any concept or information conveyed. | [noun] An underlying theme or conclusion to be drawn from something. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) An errand. MESSIAHS (13) [noun] (Abrahamic tradition) The one who is ordained by God to lead the people of Israel, believed by Christians and Muslims to be Jesus Christ. | [noun] A similar religious figure or awaited divine ruler, such as the Islamic Mahdi. | [noun] An extremely powerful figure. MESSIEST (10) [adjective] (of a place, situation, person, etc) In a disorderly state; chaotic; disorderly. | [adjective] (of a person) Prone to causing mess. | [adjective] (of a situation) Difficult or unpleasant to deal with. MESSMATE (12) [noun] An associate with whom one shares a mess (eating place) on a ship | [noun] Any of various eucalypts with rough bark, specifically Eucalyptus obliqua. MESSUAGE (11) [noun] A plot of land as the site for a house; later, a residential building taken together with its outbuildings and assigned land. MESTESOS (10) MESTINOS (10) MESTIZAS (19) [noun] A female mestizo. MESTIZOS (19) [noun] A person of mixed ancestry, especially one of Spanish and Native American heritage. METALING (11) METALISE (10) METALIST (10) METALIZE (19) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLED (11) [verb] To make a road using crushed rock, stones etc. | [adjective] (of a road) Surfaced, tarred, covered in stone or crushed rock (usually tar-coated). | [adjective] (of any object) Made of metal or having metal fittings or plating. METALLIC (12) [noun] A metallic color. | [adjective] Of, relating to or characteristic of metal. | [adjective] Made of or containing metal. METAMERE (12) [noun] One of successive or homodynamous parts in animals and plants; one of a series of similar parts that follow one another in a vertebrate or articulate animal, as in an earthworm; a segment or somite. METAMERS (12) METAPHOR (15) [noun] The use of a word or phrase to refer to something that it is not, invoking a direct similarity between the word or phrase used and the thing described (but in the case of English without the words like or as, since use of those words would imply a simile); the word or phrase used in this way; an implied comparison. | [noun] The use of an everyday object or concept to represent an underlying facet of the computer and thus aid users in performing tasks. | [verb] To use a metaphor. METAZOAL (19) METAZOAN (19) [noun] Any animal that undergoes development from an embryo stage with three tissue layers, namely the ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. | [noun] Any animal that is multicellular. | [adjective] Having to do with animals that develop from an embryo with three tissue layers. METAZOIC (21) METAZOON (19) [noun] One of the Metazoa. METEORIC (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or originating from a meteor. | [adjective] Like a meteor in speed, brilliance, or ephemeralness. | [adjective] Of water: originating in the atmosphere. METERAGE (11) METERING (11) [verb] To measure with a metering device. | [verb] To imprint a postage mark with a postage meter. | [verb] To regulate the flow of or to deliver in regulated amounts (usually of fluids but sometimes of other things such as anticipation or breath). METHADON (14) METHANES (13) METHANOL (13) [noun] The simplest aliphatic alcohol, CH3OH; a colourless, toxic, inflammable liquid, used as a solvent, antifreeze, in the chemical industry, and in the preparation of methylated spirit. METHINKS (17) METHODIC (16) METHOXYL (23) METHYLAL (16) METHYLIC (18) METICAIS (12) [noun] The currency of Mozambique, divided into 100 centavos METICALS (12) METISSES (10) METONYMS (15) [noun] (grammar) A word that names an object from a single characteristic of it or of a closely related object; a word used in metonymy. | [noun] (by extension) A concept, idea, or word used to represent, typify, or stand in for a broader set of ideas. METONYMY (18) [noun] The use of a single characteristic or part of an object, concept or phenomenon to identify the entire object, concept, phenomenon or a related object. | [noun] A metonym. METOPONS (12) METRICAL (12) [adjective] Relating to poetic meter | [adjective] Having a regular rhythm | [adjective] Of or pertaining to measurement METRISTS (10) METRITIS (10) [noun] Inflammation of the uterus. MEUNIERE (10) MEZEREON (19) [noun] An ornamental shrub, Daphne mezereum, having purple flowers and bright red fruit. | [noun] The dried bark of this plant, once used as a vesicant. MEZEREUM (21) [noun] An ornamental shrub, Daphne mezereum, having purple flowers and bright red fruit. | [noun] The dried bark of this plant, once used as a vesicant. MEZQUITE (28) MEZQUITS (28) MEZUZAHS (31) [noun] A piece of parchment inscribed with specific Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21) and attached in a case to the doorpost of a house, in accordance with the mitzvah (Biblical commandment as interpreted in Jewish law) to "write the words of God on the gates and doorposts of your house" (Deuteronomy 6:9). MEZUZOTH (31) [noun] A piece of parchment inscribed with specific Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21) and attached in a case to the doorpost of a house, in accordance with the mitzvah (Biblical commandment as interpreted in Jewish law) to "write the words of God on the gates and doorposts of your house" (Deuteronomy 6:9). MIAOUING (11) MIAOWING (14) [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. | [noun] The act of uttering a meow. MIASMATA (12) MIAULING (11) [verb] To give the cry of a cat. | [noun] The cry of a cat. MICAWBER (17) MICELLAE (12) MICELLAR (12) MICELLES (12) [noun] A colloidal aggregate, in a simple geometric form, of a specific number of amphipathic molecules which forms at a well-defined concentration, called the critical micelle concentration MICKLEST (16) MICROBAR (14) MICROBES (14) [noun] Any microorganism, but especially a harmful bacterium. MICROBIC (16) MICROBUS (14) MICRODOT (13) [noun] A text or photographic image that has been reduced in size to that of a typographical dot in order to escape detection by unintended recipients. | [noun] A small-sized tablet containing lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD). | [verb] To make a microdot of. MICROHMS (17) MICROLUX (19) MICROMHO (17) MICRURGY (16) [noun] The manipulation of individual cells, using very small instruments and a microscope MIDBRAIN (13) [noun] A part of the brain located rostral to the pons and caudal to the thalamus and the basal ganglia, composed of the tectum (dorsal portion) and the tegmentum (ventral portion). MIDCULTS (13) MIDDLERS (12) MIDDLING (13) [noun] Something of intermediate or average size, position, or quality. | [adjective] Of intermediate or average size, position, or quality; mediocre. | [adjective] In fairly good health. MIDFIELD (15) [noun] The middle of the field of play MIDIRONS (11) [noun] An iron golf club with more lift than a driver. MIDLANDS (12) [noun] The region of a country not near the borders; the interior. MIDLINES (11) [noun] The medial line (or plane) of the body, which divides the body into halves that are mirror-images of each other. | [noun] The level of the top of the x-height of a typeface. MIDLIVES (14) MIDMONTH (16) MIDMOSTS (13) MIDNIGHT (15) [noun] The middle of the night: the sixth temporal hour, equidistant between sunset and sunrise. | [noun] 12 o'clock at night exactly. | [adjective] Utterly dark or black. MIDNOONS (11) MIDPOINT (13) [noun] A point equidistant between two extremes. | [noun] A point which divides a line segment into two lines of equal length. MIDRANGE (12) [noun] The middle portion of a particular range. MIDRIFFS (17) [noun] The middle section of the human torso, from below the chest to above the waist MIDSHIPS (16) [adverb] In the middle of a ship, either longitudinally or laterally. | [adverb] Usually in the line of the keel, but sometimes halfway between bow and stern; often contracted to “midships.” (FM 55-501). | [adverb] On the flank, at a vulnerable place. MIDSIZED (21) [adjective] Of medium size, not particularly large or small MIDSOLES (11) [noun] The layer of a shoe in between the outsole and insole, typically there for shock absorption. MIDSPACE (15) MIDSTORY (14) MIDTERMS (13) [noun] A midterm school exam (i.e., halfway through the term). | [noun] A midterm election MIDTOWNS (14) MIDWATCH (19) MIDWEEKS (18) [noun] The middle of the week. MIDWIFED (18) [verb] To act as a midwife | [verb] To facilitate the emergence of MIDWIFES (17) [verb] To act as a midwife | [verb] To facilitate the emergence of MIDWIVED (18) MIDWIVES (17) [noun] A person, usually a woman, who is trained to assist women in childbirth, but who is not a physician. | [noun] Someone who assists in bringing about some result or project. | [verb] To act as a midwife MIDYEARS (14) MIFFIEST (16) MIGHTIER (14) [adjective] Very strong; possessing might. | [adjective] Very heavy and powerful. | [adjective] Very large; hefty. MIGHTILY (17) [adverb] In a mighty manner; with strength or force. | [adverb] Thoroughly; entirely. MIGNONNE (11) MIGRAINE (11) [noun] A severe, disabling headache, usually affecting only one side of the head, and often accompanied by nausea, vomiting, photophobia and visual disturbances. | [noun] A neurological condition characterised by such headaches. MIGRANTS (11) [noun] A migratory bird or other animal. | [noun] Traveller or worker who moves from one region or country to another. | [noun] An immigrant or refugee. MIGRATED (12) [verb] To relocate periodically from one region to another, usually according to the seasons. | [verb] To change one's geographic pattern of habitation. | [verb] To change habitations across a border; to move from one country or political region to another. MIGRATES (11) [verb] To relocate periodically from one region to another, usually according to the seasons. | [verb] To change one's geographic pattern of habitation. | [verb] To change habitations across a border; to move from one country or political region to another. MIGRATOR (11) MIJNHEER (20) MILADIES (11) [noun] An English noblewoman or gentlewoman; the form of address to such a person; a lady. MILDENED (12) MILDEWED (15) [verb] To taint with mildew. | [verb] To become tainted with mildew. MILDNESS (11) [noun] The quality of being mild; gentleness. MILEAGES (11) [noun] The total distance travelled in miles or in air miles. | [noun] The number of miles travelled by a vehicle on a certain volume of fuel. | [noun] An allowance for travel expenses at a specified rate per mile. MILEPOST (12) [noun] A post on a highway, often with one or more fingerposts, showing the distance in miles to nearby places | [noun] A sign or post beside a railway marking the distance from the (actual or nominal) start of a line (usually the principal terminus or junction with a more major line) | [verb] To place mileposts along (a road, etc.). MILESIMO (12) MILFOILS (13) [noun] Common yarrow, Achillea millefolium. | [noun] Any of several similar pungent Eurasian herbs, of the genus Achillea | [noun] Any plants of the genus Myriophyllum; water milfoil. MILIARIA (10) [noun] A rash caused by blocked, malfunctioning, or underdeveloped sweat glands. MILITANT (10) [noun] A soldier, a combatant. | [noun] An entrenched or aggressive adherent to a particular cause, now especially a member of a particular ideological faction. | [noun] Specifically, someone who supports the Trotskyist political view expressed in the newspaper Militant, or who engages in aggressive left-wing politics. MILITARY (13) [noun] Armed forces. | [adjective] Characteristic of members of the armed forces. | [adjective] Relating to armed forces such as the army, marines, navy and air force (often as distinguished from civilians or police forces). MILITATE (10) [verb] To give force or effect toward; to influence. | [verb] To fight. MILITIAS (10) [noun] An army of trained civilians, which may be an official reserve army, called upon in time of need, the entire able-bodied population of a state which may also be called upon, or a private force not under government control. | [noun] The police in the Soviet Union and some related or successor states (e.g. modern Belarus). MILKFISH (20) [noun] Chanos chanos, an important food fish in southeast Asia. MILKIEST (14) [adjective] Resembling milk in color, consistency, smell, etc.; consisting of milk. | [adjective] (color science) Of the black in an image, appearing as dark gray rather than black. | [adjective] (of a drink) Containing (an especially large amount of) milk. MILKMAID (17) [noun] A girl or young woman who milks the cows on a farm MILKSHED (18) MILKSOPS (16) [noun] A piece of bread sopped in milk. | [noun] Bread pieces in a bowl, sprinkled with sugar, & covered in hot milk. | [noun] (by extension) A weak, easily frightened or ineffectual person. MILKWEED (18) [noun] Any of several plants that have a milky sap and have pods that split to release seeds with silky tufts. | [noun] A monarch butterfly (Danaus spp). MILKWOOD (18) MILKWORT (17) [noun] Any of more than 500 species of flowering plants of the genus Polygala that are used as a food source by the larvae of some members of the Lepidoptera order. MILLABLE (12) MILLAGES (11) MILLCAKE (16) MILLDAMS (13) [noun] A dam constructed across a river or stream to raise the water level so that it can turn a millwheel; also, the millpond so created. MILLEPED (13) MILLIARD (11) [numeral] 109, a thousand (times a) million. (Now generally replaced by the short scale billion.) MILLIARE (10) MILLIARY (13) MILLIBAR (12) [noun] A non-SI unit of pressure equal to 100 pascals, used primarily to report atmospheric pressure. MILLIEME (12) MILLIERS (10) MILLIGAL (11) MILLILUX (17) MILLIMES (12) MILLIMHO (15) MILLINER (10) [noun] A person who is involved in the manufacture, design, or sale of hats for women. MILLINES (10) MILLINGS (11) MILLIOHM (15) MILLIONS (10) [noun] (long and short scales) The cardinal number 1,000,000: 106; a thousand thousand. | [noun] An unspecified very large number. MILLIPED (13) MILLIREM (12) MILLPOND (13) [noun] A pond or reservoir produced by damming a river or stream in order to provide a steady source of water for a millrace. MILLRACE (12) [noun] A fast-running water-filled channel diverted from a river or stream used to drive a mill wheel. MILLRUNS (10) MILLWORK (17) MILTIEST (10) MIMEOING (13) MIMETITE (12) [noun] An arsenate mineral which forms in lead deposits, usually by the oxidation of galena and arsenopyrite. MIMICKED (19) [verb] To imitate, especially in order to ridicule. | [verb] To take on the appearance of another, for protection or camouflage. MIMICKER (18) [noun] One who mimics. MINACITY (15) MINARETS (10) [noun] The tall slender tower of an Islamic mosque, from which the muezzin recites the adhan (call to prayer). MINATORY (13) [adjective] Threatening, menacing. MINCIEST (12) MINDLESS (11) [adjective] Showing a lack of forethought or sense. | [adjective] Having no sensible meaning or purpose. | [adjective] Heedless. MINDSETS (11) [noun] A way of thinking; an attitude or opinion, especially a habitual one. MINEABLE (12) MINERALS (10) [noun] Any naturally occurring inorganic material that has a (more or less) definite chemical composition and characteristic physical properties. | [noun] Any inorganic material (as distinguished from animal or vegetable). | [noun] (nutrition) Any inorganic element that is essential to nutrition; a dietary mineral. MINGIEST (11) [adjective] Mean, miserly, stingy. MINGLERS (11) [noun] One who, or that which, mingles. MINGLING (12) [verb] To intermix; to combine or join, as an individual or part, with other parts, but commonly so as to be distinguishable in the product | [verb] To associate or unite in a figurative way, or by ties of relationship | [verb] To cause or allow to intermarry MINIBIKE (16) MINICABS (14) [noun] A small car used as a taxi (rather than a traditional black cab). | [noun] An unlicensed taxi. MINICAMP (16) [noun] A short training session for members of a professional sports team, held before the main preseason training MINICARS (12) MINIFIED (14) MINIFIES (13) MINIKINS (14) [noun] A young person, especially a young woman. | [noun] A small or insignificant person, thing or amount. | [noun] A little pin. MINILABS (12) MINIMALS (12) MINIMILL (12) MINIMISE (12) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMIZE (21) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMUMS (14) [noun] The lowest limit. | [noun] The smallest amount. | [noun] A period of minimum brightness or energy intensity (of a star). MINIPARK (16) MINISHED (14) MINISHES (13) MINISKIS (14) MINISTER (10) [noun] A person who is trained to preach, to perform religious ceremonies, and to afford pastoral care at a Protestant church. | [noun] A politician who heads a ministry (national or regional government department for public service). | [noun] At a diplomacy, the rank of diplomat directly below ambassador. MINISTRY (13) [noun] Government department, at the administrative level normally headed by a minister (or equivalent rank, e.g. secretary of state), who holds it as portfolio, especially in a constitutional monarchy, but also as a polity | [noun] The complete body of government ministers (whether or not they are in cabinet) under the leadership of a head of government (such as a prime minister) | [noun] A ministration MINIVANS (13) [noun] A small van. MINIVERS (13) MINORCAS (12) MINORING (11) [verb] To choose or have an area of secondary concentration as a student in a college or university. MINORITY (13) [noun] The state of being a minor; youth, the period of a person's life prior to reaching adulthood. | [noun] Any subgroup that does not form a numerical majority. | [noun] (used attributively of a party, government, etc.) Empowered by or representing a minority (usually a plurality) of votes cast, legislative seats, etc., rather than an outright majority thereof. MINSTERS (10) [noun] A monastic church. | [noun] A cathedral church without any monastic connection. MINSTREL (10) [noun] A medieval traveling entertainer who would sing and recite poetry, often to his own musical accompaniment. | [noun] One of a troupe of entertainers who wore black makeup (blackface) to present a so-called minstrel show, being a variety show of song, dance and banjo music. MINTAGES (11) MINTIEST (10) MINUENDS (11) [noun] A number or quantity from which another is to be subtracted. MINUTELY (13) [adjective] Happening every minute; continuing; unceasing. | [adverb] With attention to tiny details. | [adverb] On a minute scale. MINUTEST (10) [adjective] Very small. | [adjective] Very careful and exact, giving small details. MINUTIAE (10) [noun] A minor detail, often of negligible importance. | [noun] (biometrics, forensics) Any of the point features on fingerprints used for matching, usually endings and bifurcations of ridges. MINUTIAL (10) MINUTING (11) [verb] Of an event, to write in a memo or the minutes of a meeting. | [verb] To set down a short sketch or note of; to jot down; to make a minute or a brief summary of. MINYANIM (15) [noun] The minimum number of ten (male) adult Jews required for a communal religious service. | [noun] (by extension) A Jewish prayer service. | [noun] A member of the Minyan race of Greek mythology MIQUELET (19) MIRACLES (12) [noun] An event that appears inexplicable by the laws of nature and so is held to be supernatural in origin. | [noun] A fortunate outcome that prevails despite overwhelming odds against it. | [noun] An awesome and exceptional example of something MIRADORS (11) [noun] A tower that offers a panoramic view MIRINESS (10) MIRKIEST (14) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MIRLITON (10) [noun] A pear-shaped vegetable or its vine; the chayote. | [noun] The eunuch flute, a kind of kazoo or membranophone. | [noun] An 18th-century hussar hat resembling a slightly conical shako or tall fez. MIRRORED (11) [verb] Of an event, activity, behaviour, etc, to be identical to, to be a copy of. | [verb] To create something identical to (a web site, etc.). | [verb] To reflect, as in a mirror. MIRTHFUL (16) [adjective] Filled with mirth. MISACTED (13) MISADAPT (13) MISADDED (13) MISAGENT (11) MISAIMED (13) MISALIGN (11) MISALTER (10) MISANDRY (14) [noun] Hatred of, contempt for, or prejudice against men. MISAPPLY (17) [verb] To apply incorrectly; to misuse. MISASSAY (13) MISATONE (10) MISAVERS (13) MISAWARD (14) MISBEGAN (13) MISBEGIN (13) MISBEGOT (13) MISBEGUN (13) MISBILLS (12) MISBINDS (13) MISBOUND (13) MISBRAND (13) MISBUILD (13) MISBUILT (12) MISCALLS (12) [verb] To call (someone) bad names; to insult, abuse. | [verb] To call (something) by the wrong name. | [verb] To make a wrong call; to announce (one's hand of cards) incorrectly. MISCARRY (15) [verb] To have an unfortunate accident of some kind; to be killed, or come to harm. | [verb] To go astray; to do something wrong. | [verb] To have a miscarriage; to abort a foetus, usually without intent to do so. MISCASTS (12) [verb] To cast or reckon incorrectly. | [verb] To cast or direct erroneously or improperly. | [verb] To cast an actor in an inappropriate role. MISCHIEF (18) [noun] Conduct that playfully causes petty annoyance. | [noun] A playfully annoying action. | [noun] (collective) A group or a pack of rats. MISCIBLE (14) [adjective] (of liquids) that can be mixed together in all proportions MISCITED (13) MISCITES (12) MISCLAIM (14) MISCLASS (12) MISCODED (14) MISCODES (13) MISCOINS (12) MISCOLOR (12) MISCOOKS (16) MISCOUNT (12) [noun] An incorrect counting. | [verb] To incorrectly count or add up. MISCUING (13) [verb] To give an incorrect cue. | [verb] To mishit, strike incorrectly. | [noun] An instance of something being miscued; a miscue. MISDATED (12) [verb] To date incorrectly; to mark with the wrong date. MISDATES (11) [verb] To date incorrectly; to mark with the wrong date. MISDEALS (11) [noun] Incorrect dealing or distribution. | [verb] To deal or distribute wrongly. MISDEALT (11) [verb] To deal or distribute wrongly. MISDEEDS (12) [noun] That which was done that should not have been, ranging from any sin or moral offense to various degrees of crime. MISDEEMS (13) MISDIALS (11) [noun] An instance of misdialling. | [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDOERS (11) MISDOING (12) [verb] To do evil. | [verb] To do (something) incorrectly or improperly. | [verb] To do harm to; to injure, mistreat. MISDOUBT (13) [noun] Suspicion; hesitation | [verb] To doubt the existence or reality of. | [verb] To have suspicions about. MISDRAWN (14) MISDRAWS (14) MISDRIVE (14) MISDROVE (14) MISEASES (10) MISEATEN (10) MISEDITS (11) MISENROL (10) MISENTER (10) MISENTRY (13) MISERERE (10) [noun] A prayer for mercy. | [noun] An expression of lamentation or complaint. | [noun] A medieval dagger, used for the mercy stroke to a wounded foe; misericord. MISERIES (10) [noun] Great unhappiness; extreme pain of body or mind; wretchedness; distress; woe. | [noun] A bodily ache or pain. | [noun] Cause of misery; calamity; misfortune. MISEVENT (13) MISFAITH (16) MISFIELD (14) [noun] A failure to field the ball properly. | [verb] To field the ball clumsily or ineptly; in cricket this can result in the batsman scoring another run. MISFILED (14) [verb] To file incorrectly; to file in the wrong place or the wrong way. MISFILES (13) [verb] To file incorrectly; to file in the wrong place or the wrong way. MISFIRED (14) [verb] To fail to discharge properly. | [verb] (of an engine) To fail to ignite in the proper sequence. | [verb] (by extension) To fail to achieve the anticipated result. MISFIRES (13) [noun] An act of misfiring. | [verb] To fail to discharge properly. | [verb] (of an engine) To fail to ignite in the proper sequence. MISFOCUS (15) MISFORMS (15) MISFRAME (15) MISGAUGE (12) MISGIVEN (14) [verb] (of the mind, heart, etc.) To give fear or doubt to; to make irresolute. | [verb] To suspect; to dread. | [verb] To give wrongly; to give or grant amiss. MISGIVES (14) [verb] (of the mind, heart, etc.) To give fear or doubt to; to make irresolute. | [verb] To suspect; to dread. | [verb] To give wrongly; to give or grant amiss. MISGRADE (12) MISGRAFT (14) MISGROWN (14) MISGROWS (14) MISGUESS (11) MISGUIDE (12) [verb] To guide poorly or incorrectly. | [verb] To lead astray; to lead into error. MISHEARD (14) [verb] To hear wrongly. | [verb] To misunderstand. MISHEARS (13) [verb] To hear wrongly. | [verb] To misunderstand. MISHMASH (18) [noun] A collection containing a variety of miscellaneous things. | [verb] To mix together, especially in a confused way. | [verb] To become mixed together. MISHMOSH (18) MISINFER (13) MISINTER (10) MISJOINS (17) MISJUDGE (19) [verb] To make an error in judging, to incorrectly assess. MISKEEPS (16) MISKICKS (20) [noun] A bad kick. | [verb] To kick incorrectly or badly. MISKNOWN (17) MISKNOWS (17) MISLABEL (12) [verb] To label incorrectly. MISLABOR (12) MISLAYER (13) MISLEADS (11) [verb] To lead astray, in a false direction. | [verb] To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. | [verb] To deceptively trick into something wrong. MISLEARN (10) MISLIGHT (14) MISLIKED (15) [verb] To displease. | [verb] To dislike; to disapprove of; to have aversion to. MISLIKER (14) MISLIKES (14) [verb] To displease. | [verb] To dislike; to disapprove of; to have aversion to. MISLIVED (14) MISLIVES (13) MISLODGE (12) MISLYING (14) MISMAKES (16) MISMARKS (16) MISMATCH (17) [verb] To match unsuitably; to fail to match | [noun] Something that does not match; something dissimilar, inappropriate or unsuitable. MISMATED (13) [verb] To mate or match wrongly or unsuitably; mismatch. | [adjective] Provided with an unsuitable mate MISMATES (12) [verb] To mate or match wrongly or unsuitably; mismatch. MISMEETS (12) MISMOVED (16) MISMOVES (15) MISNAMED (13) [verb] To call by a wrong name. | [verb] To give an unsuitable or injurious name to; name incorrectly. MISNAMES (12) [verb] To call by a wrong name. | [verb] To give an unsuitable or injurious name to; name incorrectly. MISNOMER (12) [noun] A use of a term that is misleading; a misname. | [noun] A term that is misleading. | [noun] A term whose sense in common usage conflicts with a technical sense. MISOGAMY (16) [noun] Hatred of or opposition to marriage MISOGYNY (17) [noun] Hatred of, contempt for, or prejudice against women. MISOLOGY (14) MISORDER (11) MISPAGED (14) MISPAGES (13) MISPAINT (12) MISPARSE (12) MISPARTS (12) MISPATCH (17) MISPLACE (14) [verb] To put something somewhere and then forget its location; to mislay | [verb] To apply one's talents inappropriately. | [verb] To put something in the wrong location. MISPLANS (12) MISPLANT (12) MISPLAYS (15) [verb] To play incorrectly or poorly. MISPLEAD (13) MISPOINT (12) MISPOISE (12) MISPRICE (14) MISPRINT (12) [noun] An accidental mistake in print. | [verb] To make a misprint. MISPRIZE (21) [noun] Contempt. | [verb] To despise or hold in contempt; to undervalue. MISQUOTE (19) [noun] An incorrect recitation of a quote. | [noun] An incorrect recording of a quote. | [verb] To incorrectly recite a quote. MISRAISE (10) MISRATED (11) MISRATES (10) MISREADS (11) [noun] An instance of reading wrongly. | [verb] To read wrongly, normally by accident; misconstrue; misinterpret; mistake the sense or significance of. MISREFER (13) MISROUTE (10) [verb] To route incorrectly; to send the wrong way. MISRULED (11) [verb] Of a trial judge, to make a bad decision in court. | [verb] To rule badly; to misgovern. MISRULES (10) [noun] The state of being ruled badly; disorder, lawlessness, anarchy. | [noun] Misgovernment; bad or unjust government. MISSABLE (12) MISSEATS (10) MISSENDS (11) MISSENSE (10) MISSHAPE (15) [noun] A misshapen person; a misshapen body. | [noun] A misshapen object; now especially, a broken item (especially food) sold individually at a cheaper price. | [verb] To shape badly or incorrectly. MISSILES (10) [noun] Any object used as a weapon by being thrown or fired through the air, such as stone, arrow or bullet. | [noun] A self-propelled projectile whose trajectory can be adjusted after it is launched. MISSILRY (13) MISSIONS (10) [noun] A set of tasks that fulfills a purpose or duty; an assignment set by an employer, or by oneself. | [noun] Religious evangelism. | [noun] (in the plural, "the missions") third world charities, particularly those which preach as well as provide aid. MISSISES (10) MISSIVES (13) [noun] A written message; a letter, note or memo. | [noun] (in the plural) Letters sent between two parties in which one makes an offer and the other accepts it. | [noun] One who is sent; a messenger. MISSORTS (10) MISSOUND (11) MISSOUTS (10) MISSPACE (14) MISSPEAK (16) [verb] To fail to pronounce, utter, or speak correctly. | [verb] To speak insultingly or disrespectfully. MISSPELL (12) [verb] To spell incorrectly. MISSPELT (12) [verb] To spell incorrectly. MISSPEND (13) [verb] To spend poorly, incorrectly or unwisely. MISSPENT (12) [verb] To spend poorly, incorrectly or unwisely. | [adjective] Spent in a bad way, squandered MISSPOKE (16) [verb] To fail to pronounce, utter, or speak correctly. | [verb] To speak insultingly or disrespectfully. MISSTART (10) MISSTATE (10) [verb] To make a statement that is in error, inadvertently; to say incorrectly, through a slip of the tongue. MISSTEER (10) MISSTEPS (12) [verb] To step badly or incorrectly. | [verb] To make an error or mistake. MISSTOPS (12) MISSTYLE (13) MISSUITS (10) MISSUSES (10) MISTAKEN (14) [verb] To understand wrongly, taking one thing or person for another. | [verb] To misunderstand (someone). | [verb] To commit an unintentional error; to do or think something wrong. MISTAKER (14) MISTAKES (14) [noun] An error; a blunder. | [noun] A pitch which was intended to be pitched in a hard-to-hit location, but instead ends up in an easy-to-hit place. | [verb] To understand wrongly, taking one thing or person for another. MISTBOWS (15) MISTEACH (15) [verb] To teach incorrectly. MISTENDS (11) MISTERMS (12) MISTHINK (17) MISTHREW (16) MISTHROW (16) MISTIEST (10) [adjective] Covered in mist; foggy. | [adjective] Dim; vague; obscure. | [adjective] With tears in the eyes; dewy-eyed. MISTIMED (13) [verb] To do at the wrong time; especially to misjudge the timing of coordinated events. | [adjective] Done at the wrong time. MISTIMES (12) [verb] To do at the wrong time; especially to misjudge the timing of coordinated events. MISTITLE (10) [verb] To title incorrectly; to give the wrong name to. MISTOUCH (15) MISTRACE (12) MISTRAIN (10) MISTRALS (10) [noun] A strong cold north-west wind in southern France and the Mediterranean. MISTREAT (10) [verb] To treat someone, or something roughly or badly. MISTRESS (10) [noun] A woman, specifically one with great control, authority or ownership | [noun] A female teacher | [noun] The other woman in an extramarital relationship, generally including sexual relations MISTRIAL (10) [noun] A trial that has been declared invalid because of an error in procedure, or because of hung jury. MISTRUST (10) [noun] Lack of trust or confidence; distrust, untrust. | [verb] To have no confidence in (something or someone). | [verb] To be wary, suspicious or doubtful of (something or someone). MISTRUTH (13) MISTRYST (13) MISTUNED (11) MISTUNES (10) MISTUTOR (10) MISTYPED (16) [verb] To type incorrectly, introducing spelling mistakes or other errors. | [verb] To categorize incorrectly. MISTYPES (15) [verb] To type incorrectly, introducing spelling mistakes or other errors. | [verb] To categorize incorrectly. MISUNION (10) MISUSAGE (11) [noun] Improper usage (especially of words). | [noun] Abuse; improper handling or treatment. MISUSERS (10) MISUSING (11) [verb] To use (something) incorrectly. | [verb] To abuse or mistreat (something or someone). | [verb] To rape (a woman); later more generally, to sexually abuse (someone). MISVALUE (13) MISWORDS (14) MISWRITE (13) MISWROTE (13) MISYOKED (18) MISYOKES (17) MITERERS (10) MITERING (11) [verb] To adorn with a mitre. | [verb] To unite at an angle of 45°. MITICIDE (13) MITIGATE (11) [verb] To reduce, lessen, or decrease; to make less severe or easier to bear. | [verb] To downplay. MITOGENS (11) [noun] Any substance that stimulates mitosis MITSVAHS (16) MITSVOTH (16) MITTIMUS (12) [noun] (obsolete outside the United States) A warrant issued for someone to be taken into custody. | [noun] A writ for moving records from one court to another. | [noun] A formal dismissal from a situation. MITZVAHS (25) MITZVOTH (25) [noun] Any of the 613 commandments of Jewish law | [noun] An act of kindness, a good deed. MIXOLOGY (21) [noun] The art of combining various ingredients to make cocktails. | [noun] The work of a disc jockey. MIXTURES (17) [noun] The act of mixing. | [noun] Something produced by mixing. | [noun] Something that consists of diverse elements. MIZZLING (29) [verb] To rain in very fine drops. | [verb] To abscond, scram, flee. | [verb] To yield. MNEMONIC (14) [noun] Anything (especially something in verbal form) used to help remember something. | [noun] The textual, human-readable form of an assembly language instruction, not including operands. | [adjective] Of or relating to mnemonics: the study of techniques for remembering anything more easily. MOATLIKE (14) MOBILISE (12) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILITY (15) [noun] The ability to move; capacity for movement. | [noun] A tendency to sudden change; mutability, changeableness. | [noun] The ability of a military unit to move or be transported to a new position. MOBILIZE (21) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBOCRAT (14) MOBSTERS (12) [noun] A member of a mob or Mafia MOCCASIN (14) [noun] A traditional Native North American shoe, usually without a heel or sole, made of a piece of deerskin or other soft leather turned up at the edges which are either stitched together at the top of the shoe, or sewn to a vamp (a piece covering the top of the foot). | [noun] A modern shoe with either a low or no heel resembling a traditional Native American moccasin in that the leather forming the sides of the shoe is stitched at the top. | [noun] A light beige colour, like that of a moccasin. MOCHILAS (15) MOCKABLE (18) MODALITY (14) [noun] The fact of being modal. | [noun] The classification of propositions on the basis on whether they claim possibility, impossibility, contingency or necessity; mode. | [noun] The inflection of a verb that shows how its action is conceived by the speaker; mood MODELERS (11) MODELING (12) [verb] To display for others to see, especially in regard to wearing clothing while performing the role of a fashion model | [verb] To use as an object in the creation of a forecast or model | [verb] To make a miniature model of MODELIST (11) MODELLED (12) [verb] To display for others to see, especially in regard to wearing clothing while performing the role of a fashion model | [verb] To use as an object in the creation of a forecast or model | [verb] To make a miniature model of MODELLER (11) MODERATE (11) [noun] One who holds an intermediate position between extremes, as in politics. | [noun] One of a party in Scottish Church history dominant in the 18th century, lax in doctrine and discipline, but intolerant of evangelicalism and popular rights. It caused the secessions of 1733 and 1761, and its final resultant was the Disruption of 1843. | [verb] To reduce the excessiveness of (something) MODERATO (11) [noun] A tempo mark directing that a passage is to be played at a moderate tempo. | [noun] A passage having this mark | [adjective] (to be) played in this style MODERNER (11) MODERNLY (14) MODESTER (11) MODESTLY (14) [adverb] In a modest manner. MODICUMS (15) [noun] A modest, small, or trifling amount. MODIFIED (15) [noun] Any vehicle used in modified racing. | [adjective] Changed; altered | [verb] To change part of. MODIFIER (14) [noun] One who, or that which, modifies. | [noun] (grammar) A word, phrase, or clause that limits or qualifies the sense of another word or phrase. | [noun] A keyword that qualifies the meaning of other code. MODIFIES (14) [verb] To change part of. | [verb] To be or become modified. | [verb] To set bounds to; to moderate. MODIOLUS (11) [noun] The central core of the cochlea | [noun] A chiasma of facial muscles held together by fibrous tissue MODISHLY (17) MODISTES (11) [noun] A person who makes or sells fashionable women's clothing, especially dresses or hats. MODULATE (11) [verb] To regulate, adjust or adapt | [verb] To change the pitch, intensity or tone of one's voice or of a musical instrument | [verb] To vary the amplitude, frequency or phase of a carrier wave in proportion to the amplitude etc of a source wave (such as speech or music) MOFETTES (13) [noun] A volcanic discharge of carbon dioxide together with other, mostly smelly, gases MOFFETTE (16) MOIDORES (11) [noun] An old Portuguese gold coin, minted from 1640 to 1732. MOIETIES (10) [noun] A half. | [noun] A share or portion, especially a smaller share. | [noun] Each descent group in a culture which is divided exactly into two descent groups. MOISTENS (10) [verb] To make moist or moister. | [verb] To become moist or moister. MOISTEST (10) [verb] To moisten. | [adjective] Slightly wet; characterised by the presence of moisture, not dry; damp. | [adjective] Of eyes: tearful, wet with tears. MOISTFUL (13) MOISTURE (10) [noun] That which moistens or makes damp or wet; exuding fluid; liquid in small quantity. | [noun] The state of being moist. | [noun] Skin moisture noted as dry, moist, clammy, or diaphoretic as part of the skin signs assessment. MOJARRAS (17) [noun] A perciform fish in the family Gerreidae, often used as bait. MOLALITY (13) MOLARITY (13) MOLASSES (10) [noun] A thick brownish syrup produced in the refining of raw sugar. | [noun] A shallow deposit of sandstone, shale and conglomerate in front of a rising mountain chain. MOLDABLE (13) MOLDERED (12) [verb] To decay or rot. MOLDIEST (11) [adjective] Covered with mold. | [adjective] Stale or musty. MOLDINGS (12) [noun] The act or process of shaping in or on a mold, or of making molds; the art or occupation of a molder. | [noun] Anything cast in a mold, or which appears to be so, as grooved or ornamental bars of wood or metal. | [noun] A plane, or curved, narrow surface, either sunk or projecting, used for decoration by means of the lights and shades upon its surface and to conceal joints, especially between unlike materials. MOLDWARP (16) MOLECULE (12) [noun] The smallest particle of a specific element or compound that retains the chemical properties of that element or compound; two or more atoms held together by chemical bonds. | [noun] A tiny amount. MOLEHILL (13) [noun] A small mound of earth created by a mole's burrowing underneath the surface of the ground. MOLESKIN (14) [noun] The fur of a mole. | [noun] A cotton twill fabric with a heavy velvety nap. | [noun] (by extension, in the plural) Clothing made of this fabric. MOLESTED (11) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLESTER (10) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLLUSCS (12) [noun] A soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically with a hard shell of one or more pieces. | [noun] A weak-willed person. MOLLUSKS (14) [noun] A soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically with a hard shell of one or more pieces. | [noun] A weak-willed person. MOLTENLY (13) MOLYBDIC (18) MOMENTLY (15) [adverb] From moment to moment; continually. | [adverb] Momentarily; for a moment. MOMENTOS (12) MOMENTUM (14) [noun] Of a body in motion: the tendency of a body to maintain its inertial motion; the product of its mass and velocity. | [noun] The impetus, either of a body in motion, or of an idea or course of events; a moment. MONACHAL (15) [adjective] Of or pertaining to monks or their lifestyle; monastic. MONACIDS (13) MONADISM (13) [noun] A metaphysical theory, introduced by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, based on elementary particles with blurred perceptions of one another. MONANDRY (14) [noun] The possession by a woman of only one husband at one time. MONARCHS (15) [noun] The ruler of an absolute monarchy or the head of state of a constitutional monarchy. | [noun] The monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus, and others of genus Danaus, found primarily in North America, so called because of the designs on its wings. | [noun] (Aboriginal English) A police officer. MONARCHY (18) [noun] A government in which sovereignty is embodied within a single, today usually hereditary head of state (whether as a figurehead or as a powerful ruler). | [noun] The territory ruled over by a monarch; a kingdom. | [noun] A form of government where sovereignty is embodied by a single ruler in a state and his high aristocracy representing their separate divided lands within the state and their low aristocracy representing their separate divided fiefs. MONARDAS (11) MONASTIC (12) [noun] A person with monastic ways; a monk. | [adjective] Of or relating to monasteries or monks. MONAURAL (10) [adjective] Of, relating to, affecting, or designed for use with one ear. | [adjective] Monophonic MONAXIAL (17) MONAXONS (17) MONAZITE (19) [noun] Any of a range of reddish-brown minerals that are mixed phosphates of the lighter rare earth elements lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, promethium, samarium, europium, gadolinium and yttrium MONECIAN (12) MONELLIN (10) MONERANS (10) MONETARY (13) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or consisting of money. MONETISE (10) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETIZE (19) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONEYBAG (16) MONEYERS (13) [noun] A moneylender. | [noun] Someone who makes coins; an official minter. MONEYMAN (15) [noun] Someone tasked with handling money, often specifically a financier MONEYMEN (15) [noun] Someone tasked with handling money, often specifically a financier MONGEESE (11) MONGERED (12) MONGOOSE (11) [noun] Any of several species of generalist predatory Carnivores in the family Herpestidae; the various species range in size from rats to large cats. The Indian mongoose is noted as a predator of venomous snakes, though other mongoose species have similar habits. | [noun] Any species of Malagasy mongoose; only distantly related to the Herpestidae, these are members of the family Eupleridae; they resemble mongooses in appearance and habits, but have larger ears and ringed tails. MONGRELS (11) [noun] Someone or something of mixed kind or uncertain origin, especially a dog. | [noun] A thuggish, obnoxious, or contemptible person; (often preceded by "poor") a pitiable person. MONICKER (16) [noun] A personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute. | [noun] A signature. | [noun] An object (structured item of data) used to associate the name of an object with its location. MONIKERS (14) [noun] A personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute. | [noun] A signature. | [noun] An object (structured item of data) used to associate the name of an object with its location. MONISHED (14) MONISHES (13) MONISTIC (12) MONITION (10) [noun] A caution or warning. | [noun] A legal notification of something. | [noun] A sign of impending danger; an omen. MONITIVE (13) MONITORS (10) [noun] Someone who watches over something; a person in charge of something or someone. | [noun] A device that detects and informs on the presence, quantity, etc., of something. | [noun] A device similar to a television set used as to give a graphical display of the output from a computer. MONITORY (13) [noun] A written letter giving admonition | [adjective] Giving admonition and warning MONKEYED (18) [verb] To meddle; to mess (with). | [verb] To mimic; to ape. MONKFISH (20) [noun] Any large bottom-dwelling anglerfish of the genus Lophius, such as Lophius piscatorius, of the Atlantic, having a large head and mouth. | [noun] Angel sharks of the genus Squatina. MONKHOOD (18) MONOACID (13) [noun] Any acid that has only one replaceable hydrogen ion. MONOCARP (14) MONOCLED (13) MONOCLES (12) [noun] A single lens, usually in a wire frame, and used to correct vision for only one eye. | [noun] A one-eyed animal. MONOCOTS (12) [noun] Any plant whose seedlings typically have one cotyledon (seed leaf) (in contrast to the two cotyledons typical of dicots), thereby belonging to the taxonomic monocots, formerly variously known as Monocotyledones, Monocotyledonae, or Liliopsida, a class in the angiosperms (Angiospermae), the flowering plants. MONOCRAT (12) MONOCYTE (15) [noun] A type of blood leukocyte that differentiates into a macrophage. MONODIES (11) [noun] An ode, as in Greek drama, for a single voice, often specifically a mournful song or dirge. | [noun] Any poem mourning the death of someone; an elegy. | [noun] A monotonous or mournful noise. MONODIST (11) MONOFILS (13) [noun] A monofilament yarn. MONOFUEL (13) MONOGAMY (16) [noun] A form of sexual bonding involving a permanent pair bond between two beings. | [noun] The practice of being married to one person as opposed to multiple. MONOGENY (14) [noun] Monogenesis | [noun] The doctrine that all of the members of the human race have a common origin. MONOGERM (13) MONOGLOT (11) [noun] A person capable of speaking only a single language. | [adjective] Capable of speaking only a single language; monolingual. MONOGRAM (13) [noun] A picture drawn in line only, before the colour and/or shading is applied; an outline sketch. | [noun] A sentence consisting of only one line, or an epigram consisting of only one verse, of poetry. | [noun] A design composed of one or more letters, often intertwined, used as an identifying mark of an individual or institution. MONOGYNY (17) [noun] The practice of having one wife at a time. | [noun] The condition in ants of having only one queen at a time. MONOHULL (13) [noun] A boat that has a single hull. MONOLITH (13) [noun] A large, single block of stone which is a natural feature; or a block of stone or other similar material used in architecture and sculpture, especially one carved into a monument in ancient times. | [noun] Anything massive, uniform, and unmovable, especially a towering and impersonal cultural, political, or social organization or structure. | [noun] A substrate having many tiny channels that is cast as a single piece, which is used as a stationary phase for chromatography, as a catalytic surface, etc. MONOLOGS (11) [noun] (authorship) A long speech by one person in a play; sometimes a soliloquy; other times spoken to other characters. | [noun] A long series of comic stories and jokes as an entertainment. | [noun] A long, uninterrupted utterance that monopolizes a conversation. MONOLOGY (14) MONOMERS (12) [noun] A relatively small molecule which can be covalently bonded to other monomers to form a polymer. MONOMIAL (12) [noun] A single term consisting of a product of numbers and variables with positive integer exponents. | [adjective] Relative to a polynomial consisting of one term. MONOPODE (13) MONOPODY (16) MONOPOLE (12) [noun] An appellation owned by a single winery. | [noun] A magnetic monopole. | [noun] A monopole antenna. MONOPOLY (15) [noun] A situation, by legal privilege or other agreement, in which solely one party (company, cartel etc.) exclusively provides a particular product or service, dominating that market and generally exerting powerful control over it. | [noun] An exclusive control over the trade or production of a commodity or service through exclusive possession. | [noun] The privilege granting the exclusive right to exert such control. MONORAIL (10) [noun] A railroad system where the trains run on one rail | [noun] A train running on a single rail MONOSOME (12) [noun] The chromosome whose homologous counterpart is missing in monosomy. MONOSOMY (15) [noun] A genetic disorder with the presence of only one chromosome (instead of the typical two in humans) from a pair. MONOTINT (10) [noun] A monochrome print. MONOTONE (10) [noun] A single unvaried tone of speech or a sound. | [noun] A piece of writing in one strain throughout. | [verb] To speak in a monotone. MONOTONY (13) [noun] Tedium as a result of repetition or a lack of variety. | [noun] The property of a monotonic function. | [noun] The quality of having an unvarying tone or pitch. MONOTYPE (15) [noun] A print made by creating the design using oil paint or printer's ink on metal or glass, then transferring the image directly to paper. | [noun] The technique of making such prints. | [noun] A monotypic taxon. MONOXIDE (18) [noun] Any oxide containing a single oxygen atom in each molecule or formula unit MONSIEUR (10) [noun] A man, especially a French gentleman. MONSOONS (10) [noun] Any of a number of winds associated with regions where most rain falls during a particular season. | [noun] Tropical rainy season when the rain lasts for several months with few interruptions. | [noun] The rains themselves. MONSTERA (10) [noun] Any of the plants of the genus Monstera. MONSTERS (10) [noun] A terrifying and dangerous creature. | [noun] A bizarre or whimsical creature. | [noun] A cruel or antisocial person, especially a criminal. MONTAGED (12) MONTAGES (11) [noun] A composite work, particularly an artwork, created by assembling or putting together other elements such as pieces of music, pictures, texts, videos, etc. | [noun] The art or process of doing this. MONTANES (10) MONTEITH (13) [noun] A bowl used for the cooling or washing of wine glasses. | [noun] A large 18th-century punchbowl, usually of silver, fluted and scalloped. | [noun] A cotton handkerchief with white spots on a coloured background. MONTEROS (10) MONUMENT (12) [noun] A structure built for commemorative or symbolic reasons, or as a memorial; a commemoration. | [noun] An important site owned by the community as a whole. | [noun] An exceptional or proud achievement. MONURONS (10) MOOCHERS (15) [noun] A person having a tendency to take advantage of the help of others, especially if making little effort to help themselves. MOOCHING (16) [verb] To wander around aimlessly, often causing irritation to others. | [verb] To beg, cadge, or sponge; to exploit or take advantage of others for personal gain. | [verb] To steal or filch. MOODIEST (11) [adjective] Given to sudden or frequent changes of mind; temperamental. | [adjective] Sulky or depressed. | [adjective] Dour, gloomy or brooding. MOONBEAM (14) [noun] A shaft of moonlight. | [noun] Moonlight generally. | [noun] Any of various Australasian lycaenid butterflies of the genus Philiris. MOONBOWS (15) MOONCALF (15) [noun] An abnormal mass within the uterus; a false conception. | [noun] A poorly-conceived idea or plan. | [noun] A dreamer, someone absent-minded or distracted; a fool, simpleton. MOONDUST (11) MOONEYES (13) [noun] A primitive ray-finned fish of the family Hiodontidae. MOONFISH (16) [noun] Any of various flat, oval marine fish species. MOONIEST (10) [adjective] Resembling the moon. | [adjective] Moonlit. | [adjective] Absent-minded. MOONLESS (10) MOONLETS (10) [noun] A very small body orbiting a planet, often as part of a ring. MOONLIKE (14) MOONPORT (12) MOONRISE (10) [noun] The time of day or night when the moon begins to rise over the horizon. MOONSAIL (10) MOONSEED (11) [noun] A twining plant of the genera Menispermum or Cocculus, in the family Menispermaceae. MOONSETS (10) [noun] The setting of the moon below the horizon MOONSHOT (13) [noun] The launching of a spacecraft or an object to orbit or land on the Moon. | [noun] An act of throwing or hitting a ball with a high trajectory. | [noun] An expensive, hard, or unlikely task of great potential impact. MOONWALK (17) [noun] An exploration of the Moon's surface on foot (by an astronaut). | [noun] A dance move in which the dancer slides backwards though the feet move as if walking forwards; the backslide. | [noun] A dance style in which the dancer appears to be moving in a low gravity environment. MOONWARD (14) MOONWORT (13) [noun] A small fern, Botrychium lunaria (lesser moonwort); later, any member of the genus. | [noun] Lunaria annua (greater moonwort); also known as Honesty and Actual Honesty. MOORAGES (11) [noun] The act of mooring. | [noun] A place where a ship or an aircraft may be moored. | [noun] The fee for mooring. MOORCOCK (18) [noun] The red grouse. MOORFOWL (16) [noun] The red grouse. MOORHENS (13) [noun] Any of various medium-sized water birds of the genus Gallinula, of the rail family, that feed in open water margins. | [noun] A female red grouse, Lagopus lagopus scotica. MOORIEST (10) MOORINGS (11) [noun] A place to moor a vessel. | [noun] The act of securing a vessel with a cable or anchor etc. | [noun] Something to which one adheres, or the means that helps one to maintain a stable position and keep one's identity - moral, intellectual, political, etc. MOORLAND (11) [noun] Open land that has an acidic peaty soil and is mostly covered with heather or bracken. MOORWORT (13) MOPBOARD (15) [noun] A skirting board (to protect a wall from wet mops) MOPERIES (12) MOPINGLY (16) MOPISHLY (18) MOQUETTE (19) [noun] A kind of fabric with a thick pile used for carpeting or to upholster seating etc. | [noun] An article covered in such material. MORAINAL (10) MORAINES (10) [noun] An accumulation of rocks and debris carried and deposited by a glacier. MORAINIC (12) MORALISE (10) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALISM (12) [noun] The act or practice of moralizing (making moral reflections or judging the morality of others). | [noun] A maxim or saying believed by the speaker to embody a moral truth; an instance of moralizing. | [noun] Religious practice that focuses on morality while placing little emphasis on doctrine or the metaphysical; adherence to a system of morality with little or no reference to religion. MORALIST (10) [noun] One who bases all decisions on perceived morals, especially one who enforces them with censorship. | [noun] A teacher of morals. MORALITY (13) [noun] Recognition of the distinction between good and evil or between right and wrong; respect for and obedience to the rules of right conduct; the mental disposition or characteristic of behaving in a manner intended to produce morally good results. | [noun] A set of social rules, customs, traditions, beliefs, or practices which specify proper, acceptable forms of conduct. | [noun] A set of personal guiding principles for conduct or a general notion of how to behave, whether respectable or not. MORALIZE (19) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORASSES (10) [noun] A tract of soft, wet ground; a marsh; a fen. | [noun] Anything that entraps or makes progress difficult. MORATORY (13) MORBIDLY (16) [adverb] In a morbid manner, or to a morbid degree. MORBIFIC (17) [adjective] That causes disease; sickening, pathogenic. | [adjective] Pertaining to or caused by disease; diseased. MORBILLI (12) [noun] Measles, rubeola MORCEAUX (19) [noun] A bit; a morsel. MORDANCY (16) MORDANTS (11) [noun] Any substance used to facilitate the fixing of a dye to a fibre; usually a metallic compound which reacts with the dye using chelation. | [noun] Any corrosive substance used in etching. | [noun] A glutinous size used as a ground for gilding, to make the gold leaf adhere. MORDENTS (11) [noun] An ornament consisting of a single alternation between a given pitch and the one immediately below it. MORELLES (10) MORELLOS (10) [noun] A variety of cultivated cherry, Prunus cerasus 'austera', having a dark skin MOREOVER (13) [adverb] In addition to what has been said; furthermore; additionally. MORESQUE (19) MORIBUND (13) [noun] A person who is near to dying. | [adjective] Approaching death; about to die; dying; expiring. | [adjective] Almost obsolete, nearing an end. MORNINGS (11) [noun] The part of the day from dawn to noon. | [noun] The part of the day between midnight and noon. | [noun] The early part of anything. MOROCCOS (14) [noun] A soft leather, made from goatskin, used especially in bookbinding. | [noun] A sheepskin leather in imitation of this. | [noun] A very strong ale, anciently brewed in Cumberland. MORONISM (12) MORONITY (13) MOROSELY (13) MOROSITY (13) MORPHEME (17) [noun] The smallest linguistic unit within a word that can carry a meaning. MORPHIAS (15) MORPHINE (15) [noun] A crystalline alkaloid (7,8-didehydro-4,5-epoxy-17-methyl-morphinan-3,6-diol), extracted from opium, the salts of which are soluble in water and are used as analgesics, anaesthetics and sedatives; it is one of a group of morphine alkaloids. MORPHINS (15) MORRIONS (10) MORRISES (10) MORSELED (11) MORTALLY (13) [adverb] Fatally; in such a way as to cause death. | [adverb] As a mortal. MORTARED (11) [verb] To use mortar or plaster to join two things together. | [verb] To pound in a mortar. | [verb] To fire a mortar (weapon). MORTGAGE (12) [noun] A special form of secured loan where the purpose of the loan must be specified to the lender, to purchase assets that must be fixed (not movable) property, such as a house or piece of farm land. The assets are registered as the legal property of the borrower but the lender can seize them and dispose of them if they are not satisfied with the manner in which the repayment of the loan is conducted by the borrower. Once the loan is fully repaid, the lender loses this right of seizure and the assets are then deemed to be unencumbered. | [noun] State of being pledged. | [verb] To borrow against a property, to obtain a loan for another purpose by giving away the right of seizure to the lender over a fixed property such as a house or piece of land; to pledge a property in order to get a loan. MORTICED (13) [verb] To cut a mortise in. | [verb] To join by a mortise and tenon. | [verb] To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters; to kern. MORTICES (12) [noun] A hole that is made to receive a tenon so as to form a joint. | [noun] Stability; power of adhesion. | [verb] To cut a mortise in. MORTISED (11) [verb] To cut a mortise in. | [verb] To join by a mortise and tenon. | [verb] To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters; to kern. MORTISER (10) MORTISES (10) [noun] A hole that is made to receive a tenon so as to form a joint. | [noun] Stability; power of adhesion. | [verb] To cut a mortise in. MORTMAIN (12) [noun] The perpetual, inalienable possession of lands by a corporation or non-personal entity such as a church. | [noun] A strong and inalienable possession. MORTUARY (13) [noun] A place where dead bodies are stored prior to burial or cremation. | [noun] A sort of ecclesiastical heriot, a customary gift claimed by, and due to, the minister of a parish on the death of a parishioner. | [adjective] Of, or relating to death or a funeral; funereal MOSASAUR (10) [noun] A large extinct marine reptile in the family Mosasauridae, dominant marine predator of the Cretaceous. Mosasaurs are considred to be in squmata, the same group that includes lizards and snakes. MOSCHATE (15) MOSEYING (14) [verb] To set off, get going; to start a journey. | [verb] To go off quickly: to hurry up. | [verb] To amble; to walk or proceed in a leisurely manner. MOSHAVIM (18) [noun] An Israeli town or settlement: in particular, a type of cooperative agricultural community of individual farms pioneered by the Labour Zionists during the second aliyah. MOSQUITO (19) [noun] A small flying insect of the family Culicidae, the females of which bite humans and animals and suck blood, leaving an itching bump on the skin, and sometimes carrying diseases like malaria and yellow fever. | [verb] To fly close to the ground, seemingly without a course. MOSSBACK (18) [noun] A turtle that, because of its age, has a growth of algae on its back. | [noun] An old fish. | [noun] (by extension) A very conservative or reactionary person, especially one with old-fashioned views. MOSSIEST (10) [adjective] Covered in or overgrown with moss. MOSSLIKE (14) MOSTESTS (10) MOTHBALL (15) [noun] (usually in plural) A small ball of chemical pesticide (typically naphthalene) and deodorant placed in or around clothing and other articles susceptible to damage from mold or moth larvae in order to protect them from this damage. | [verb] To store or shelve something no longer used. | [verb] To stop using (something), but keep it in good condition. MOTHERED (14) [verb] To give birth to or produce (as its female parent) a child. (Compare father.) | [verb] To treat as a mother would be expected to treat her child; to nurture. | [verb] To cause to contain mother. | [adjective] Thick, like mother (film or membrane on fermented liquids); viscid. MOTHERLY (16) [adjective] Befitting a mother; warm, caring, nurturing, protective, loving. MOTHIEST (13) [adjective] Infested with moths | [adjective] Moth-eaten MOTHLIKE (17) MOTILITY (13) MOTIONAL (10) MOTIONED (11) [verb] To gesture indicating a desired movement. | [verb] To introduce a motion in parliamentary procedure. | [verb] To make a proposal; to offer plans. MOTIONER (10) MOTIVATE (13) [verb] To provide someone with an incentive to do something; to encourage. | [verb] To animate; to propel; to cause to take action MOTIVING (14) MOTIVITY (16) MOTLEYER (13) MOTLIEST (10) MOTORBUS (12) [noun] A motorised bus, or coach. MOTORCAR (12) [noun] An enclosed passenger vehicle powered by an engine. MOTORDOM (13) MOTORING (11) [verb] To make a journey by motor vehicle; to drive. | [verb] To move at a brisk pace. | [verb] To leave. MOTORISE (10) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORIST (10) [noun] One who drives a motor vehicle. MOTORIZE (19) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORMAN (12) [noun] A man who controls a motor. | [noun] A person who operates a motor vehicle. | [noun] A train driver. MOTORMEN (12) [noun] A man who controls a motor. | [noun] A person who operates a motor vehicle. | [noun] A train driver. MOTORWAY (16) [noun] (parts of Australia) A broad highway designed for high speed traffic, having restrictions on the vehicle types permitted and merging lanes instead of cross traffic; in parts of the United States and other places called freeway. MOTTLERS (10) MOTTLING (11) [verb] To mark with blotches of different color, or shades of color, as if stained; to spot; to maculate. | [noun] Spots or blotches of different shades or colours MOUCHING (16) MOUCHOIR (15) [noun] A handkerchief. MOUFFLON (16) [noun] A species of wild sheep, Ovis orientalis musimon, syn. Ovis aries musimon, endemic to Sardinia and Corsica. MOUFLONS (13) [noun] A species of wild sheep, Ovis orientalis musimon, syn. Ovis aries musimon, endemic to Sardinia and Corsica. MOULAGES (11) MOULDERS (11) [verb] To decay or rot. MOULDIER (11) [adjective] Covered with mould. | [adjective] Neglected. | [adjective] Worthless; lousy; rotten MOULDING (12) [verb] To shape in or on a mold; to form into a particular shape; to give shape to. | [verb] To guide or determine the growth or development of; influence | [verb] To fit closely by following the contours of. MOULTERS (10) MOULTING (11) [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. | [noun] A moult; the shedding of skin, feathers, etc. MOUNDING (12) [verb] To fortify with a mound; add a barrier, rampart, etc. to. | [verb] To force or pile into a mound or mounds. | [noun] A mound of material. MOUNTAIN (10) [noun] An elevation of land of considerable dimensions rising more or less abruptly, forming a conspicuous figure in the landscape, usually having a small extent of surface at its summit. | [noun] Something very large in size or quantity; a huge amount; a great heap. | [noun] Of, belonging to, relating to, or found on a mountain; like a mountain in size; (of living things) growing or living on a mountain. MOUNTERS (10) MOUNTING (11) [verb] To get upon; to ascend; to climb. | [verb] To place oneself on (a horse, a bicycle, etc.); to bestride. | [verb] To cause to mount; to put on horseback; to furnish with animals for riding. MOURNERS (10) [noun] Someone filled with or expressing grief or sadness, especially over a death; someone who mourns. MOURNFUL (13) [adjective] Filled with grief or sadness; being in a state in which one mourns. | [adjective] Fit to inspire mourning; tragic. MOURNING (11) [verb] To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death). | [verb] To utter in a sorrowful manner. | [verb] To wear mourning. MOUSIEST (10) [adjective] Resembling a mouse. | [adjective] Abounding or infested with mice. MOUSINGS (11) MOUSSAKA (14) [noun] A dish consisting of layers of minced lamb or beef, sliced aubergine (eggplant) or potatoes, tomatoes and béchamel sauce, baked in the oven. MOUSSING (11) [verb] To apply mousse (styling cream). MOUTHERS (13) MOUTHFUL (16) [noun] The amount that will fit in a mouth. | [noun] Quite a bit. | [noun] Something difficult to pronounce or say. | [adjective] Bombastic or awkward. MOUTHIER (13) [adjective] Overly talkative, insolent, and loud. MOUTHILY (16) MOUTHING (14) [verb] To speak; to utter. | [verb] To make the actions of speech, without producing sound. | [verb] To utter with a voice that is overly loud or swelling. MOVABLES (15) [noun] Something which is movable; an article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of property not fixed, or not a part of real estate; generally, in the plural, goods; wares; furniture. MOVEABLE (15) [noun] Something which is movable; an article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of property not fixed, or not a part of real estate; generally, in the plural, goods; wares; furniture. | [adjective] Capable of being moved, lifted, carried, drawn, turned, or conveyed, or in any way made to change place or posture; not fixed or stationary | [adjective] Changing from one time to another MOVEABLY (18) MOVELESS (13) [adjective] Motionless. | [adjective] Immovable. MOVEMENT (15) [noun] Physical motion between points in space. | [noun] A system or mechanism for transmitting motion of a definite character, or for transforming motion, such as the wheelwork of a watch. | [noun] The impression of motion in an artwork, painting, novel etc. MOVIEDOM (16) MOVIEOLA (13) MOVINGLY (17) [adverb] In a moving manner. MOVIOLAS (13) MOZETTAS (19) MOZZETTA (28) [noun] A short cape worn by some Catholic clergy. MOZZETTE (28) [noun] A short cape worn by some Catholic clergy. MRIDANGA (12) MUCHACHO (20) [noun] An informal term of address, especially to a young man; similar to man, chap, dude, etc. MUCHNESS (15) [noun] Large size or bulk; bigness; size; magnitude (large or small). | [noun] Greatness in quantity, number, amount, or degree. MUCIDITY (16) MUCILAGE (13) [noun] A thick gluey substance (gum) produced by many plants and some microorganisms. MUCINOID (13) MUCINOUS (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or producing (one or more) mucins. MUCKIEST (16) [adjective] Covered in muck. | [adjective] Obscene, pornographic. MUCKLUCK (22) MUCKRAKE (20) [noun] A rake for scraping up dung. | [verb] To search for and expose corruption or scandal, especially as a form of investigative journalism. MUCKWORM (21) MUCOIDAL (13) MUCOSITY (15) MUCRONES (12) [noun] A pointed end, often sharp, abruptly terminating an organ, such as a projection at the tip of a leaf; the posterior tip of a cuttlebone; or the distal part of the furcula in Collembola. MUDDIEST (12) [adjective] Covered with or full of mud or wet soil. | [adjective] With mud or other sediment brought into suspension, turbid. | [adjective] Not clear; mixed up or blurry. MUDDLERS (12) [noun] A person or thing that muddles. | [noun] A tool used in muddling, used to mash and mix. MUDDLING (13) [verb] To mix together, to mix up; to confuse. | [verb] To mash slightly for use in a cocktail. | [verb] To dabble in mud. MUDDYING (16) [verb] To get mud on (something). | [verb] To make a mess of, or create confusion with regard to; to muddle. | [noun] The process of making something muddy or obscure. MUDFLATS (14) [noun] Flat land along a river, lying few feet above normal high water, often consisting of alluvial deposits and naturally fertile. | [noun] A muddy expanse of flat land, especially such land as a river bed exposed at low tide. MUDFLOWS (17) [noun] A type of landslide characterized by large flows of mud and water. | [noun] The dried-out product of such a flow. MUDGUARD (13) [noun] A cover over the wheels of a vehicle, or a flap behind that wheel, to prevent water and mud being projected. MUDHOLES (14) MUDLARKS (15) [noun] A pig; pork. | [noun] One who scavenges in river or harbor mud for items of value, especially in London. | [noun] A child who plays in the mud; a child that spends most of its time in the streets, a street urchin. MUDPACKS (19) [noun] A paste of earth or clay, applied to the face for therapeutic or cosmetic purposes. MUDPUPPY (20) [noun] An aquatic salamander of the family Proteidae. MUDROCKS (17) MUDROOMS (13) [noun] A room used as a barrier between outdoors and indoors. MUDSILLS (11) MUDSLIDE (12) [noun] A geological event in which viscous mud flows down an incline. | [noun] A mixed drink consisting of vodka, Kahlua and Bailey's. MUDSTONE (11) [noun] A fine-grained sedimentary rock whose original constituents were clays or muds. MUEDDINS (12) MUENSTER (10) MUEZZINS (28) [noun] The person who issues the call to prayer from one of the minarets of a mosque. MUFFLERS (16) [noun] Part of the exhaust pipe of a car that dampens the noise the engine produces. | [noun] A silencer or suppressor fitted to a gun. | [noun] A type of scarf. MUFFLING (17) [verb] To wrap (a person, face etc.) in fabric or another covering, for warmth or protection; often with up. | [verb] To wrap up or cover (a source of noise) in order to deaden the sound. | [verb] To mute or deaden (a sound etc.). MUGGIEST (12) [adjective] (Of the weather, air, etc) humid, or hot and humid. | [adjective] Wet or mouldy MUGGINGS (13) [noun] A quick violent robbery of a person, usually in a public place. MUGWORTS (14) [noun] Any of several aromatic plants of the genus Artemisia native to Europe and Asia. | [noun] Artemisia vulgaris, traditionally used medicinally. MUGWUMPS (18) [noun] An independent neutral politician, especially in reference to the 1884 U.S. presidential election. | [noun] An aloof or self-important but inconsequential person. MULATTOS (10) [noun] A person of mixed black and white descent, especially a person with one black and one white parent. MULBERRY (15) [noun] Any of several trees, of the genus Morus, having edible fruits. | [noun] The fruit of this tree. | [noun] A dark purple colour tinted with red. MULCHING (16) [verb] To apply mulch. | [verb] To turn into mulch. | [noun] The act of preparing/applying a mulch. MULCTING (13) [verb] To impose such a fine or penalty. | [verb] To swindle (someone) out of money. | [noun] The imposition of a fine or penalty. MULETEER (10) [noun] A mule driver. MULISHLY (16) MULLEINS (10) [noun] Any of several European and Asian plants, of the genus Verbascum, that have yellow flowers and downy leaves; the velvet plant. MULLIGAN (11) [noun] Mulligan stew. | [noun] An unpenalized chance to re-take a stroke that went awry. | [noun] An opportunity (sometimes penalized) for a player to reshuffle their cards and draw a new initial hand at the beginning of a game. MULLIONS (10) [noun] A vertical bar between the panes of glass or casements of a window or the panels of a screen. MULLITES (10) MULLOCKS (16) MULLOCKY (19) MULTIAGE (11) MULTICAR (12) [adjective] Using or involving multiple cars MULTIFID (14) [adjective] Cleft into many parts or lobes. MULTIJET (17) MULTIPED (13) MULTIPLE (12) [noun] A whole number that can be divided by another number with no remainder. | [noun] Price-earnings ratio. | [noun] One of a set of the same thing; a duplicate. MULTIPLY (15) [noun] An act or instance of multiplying. | [verb] To increase the amount, degree or number of (something). | [verb] (with by) To perform multiplication on (a number). | [adverb] In many or multiple ways. MULTITON (10) MULTIUSE (10) MULTURES (10) MUMBLERS (14) MUMBLING (15) [verb] To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. | [verb] To chew something gently with closed lips. | [noun] An act in which someone mumbles something MUMMYING (18) MUNCHERS (15) MUNCHIES (15) [noun] Food, especially convenience snack foods. | [noun] (with the definite article) Hunger, especially a craving for food as a result of cannabis or alcohol consumption. MUNCHING (16) [verb] To chew with a grinding, crunching sound, and with the mouth closed — often used with on. | [verb] To eat vigorously or with excitement. | [noun] The sound or action of one who munches. MUNCHKIN (19) [noun] A domestic cat breed with short legs. | [noun] The empty space in the center of a donut. | [noun] A small ball-shaped pastry, made in the same manner as a donut, roughly the size of the hole in a donut. MUNDUNGO (12) MUNGOOSE (11) MUNIMENT (12) [noun] A deed, or other official document kept as proof of ownership or rights or privileges; an archived document. | [noun] (in the plural) Things which a person or place is equipped with; effects, furnishings, accoutrements. | [noun] Something used as a defence. MUNITION (10) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Materials of war: armaments, weapons and ammunition. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural, NATO) Bombs, rockets, missiles (complete explosive devices, in contrast to e.g. guns). | [noun] A tower or fortification. MUNNIONS (10) MUNSTERS (10) MUNTINGS (11) MUNTJACS (19) [noun] Any of various species of east Asian deer of the genus Muntiacus, having short antlers and a barking call. MUNTJAKS (21) MUONIUMS (12) MURAENID (11) MURALIST (10) MURDERED (12) [verb] To deliberately kill (a person or persons) without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To kick someone's ass or chew someone out (used to express one’s anger at somebody). MURDEREE (11) MURDERER (11) [noun] A person who commits murder. MURIATED (11) MURIATES (10) [noun] Chloride MURICATE (12) [adjective] Covered with short rough points or studs | [adjective] Covered with crystals MURKIEST (14) [adjective] Hard to see through, as a fog or mist. | [adjective] Dark, dim, gloomy. | [adjective] Cloudy, indistinct, obscure. MURMURED (13) [verb] To grumble; to complain in a low, muttering voice, or express discontent at or against someone or something. | [verb] To speak or make low, indistinguishable noise; to mumble, mutter. | [verb] To say (something) indistinctly, to mutter. MURMURER (12) MURPHIES (15) [noun] An Irish or white potato. MURRAINS (10) [noun] Plague, infectious disease, pestilence. | [noun] Any of several highly infectious diseases of cattle such as anthrax. MURRELET (10) [noun] Any of several species of small seabirds, in the genera Brachyramphus and Synthliboramphus of the auk family, found in the North Pacific. MURRHINE (13) MURTHERS (13) [noun] The crime of deliberately killing another person without justification. | [noun] The act of deliberate killing of another person or other being without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [noun] (in jurisdictions which use the felony murder rule) The commission of an act which abets the commission of a crime the commission of which causes the death of a human. MUSCADEL (13) [noun] Muscatel (wine or grape) MUSCADET (13) [noun] A white grape grown chiefly in the Loire valley of France, or a dry white wine made from this grape MUSCATEL (12) [noun] A muscat grape or raisin, especially one from southern Spain. | [noun] A sweet wine made from these grapes. MUSCLING (13) [verb] To use force to make progress, especially physical force. | [noun] Muscles in the body, meant collectively | [noun] The process of muscle formation or growth MUSCULAR (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, or connected with muscles. | [adjective] Brawny, thewy, having strength. | [adjective] Having large, well-developed muscles. MUSETTES (10) [noun] Any of various form of small bagpipe, especially with a bellows, having a soft sound, and once popular in France. | [noun] A dance tune or pastoral air that imitates this instrument. | [noun] A small instrument similar to an oboe or shawm. MUSHIEST (13) [adjective] Resembling or having the consistency of mush; semiliquid, pasty, or granular. | [adjective] Soft; squishy. | [adjective] Overly sappy, corny, or cheesy; maudlin. MUSHROOM (15) [noun] Any of the fleshy fruiting bodies of fungi typically produced above ground on soil or on their food sources (such as decaying wood). | [noun] A fungus producing such fruiting bodies. | [noun] Champignon or Agaricus bisporus, the mushroom species most commonly used in cooking. MUSICALE (12) [noun] A musical entertainment, usually private and typically involving classical music MUSICALS (12) [noun] A stage performance, show or film that involves singing, dancing and musical numbers performed by the cast as well as acting. | [noun] A meeting or a party for a musical entertainment; a musicale. MUSICIAN (12) [noun] A composer, conductor, or performer of music; specifically, a person who sings and/or plays a musical instrument as a hobby, an occupation, or a profession. MUSINGLY (14) MUSKETRY (17) [noun] The technique of using small arms such as muskets. | [noun] A collection of muskets or musketeers. | [noun] Musket fire. MUSKIEST (14) [adjective] Having the scent of musk MUSKRATS (14) [noun] A large aquatic rodent (Ondatra zibethicus). | [noun] Any of several species of shrews in the family Soricidae, especially the Asian house shrew, Suncus murinus MUSPIKES (16) MUSQUASH (22) [noun] The muskrat, Ondatra zibethicus. MUSSIEST (10) MUSTACHE (15) [noun] A growth of facial hair between the nose and the upper lip. MUSTANGS (11) [noun] A small, hardy, naturalized (feral) horse of the North American west. | [noun] A merchant marine who joined the U.S. Navy as a commissioned officer during the American Civil War. | [noun] (generalized) A commissioned officer who started military service as an enlisted person. MUSTARDS (11) [noun] A plant of certain species of the genus Brassica, or of related genera (especially Sinapis alba, in the family Brassicaceae, with yellow flowers, and linear seed pods). | [noun] Powder or paste made from seeds of the mustard plant, and used as a condiment or a spice. | [noun] The leaves of the mustard plant, used as a salad. MUSTARDY (14) MUSTERED (11) [verb] To show, exhibit. | [verb] To be gathered together for parade, inspection, exercise, or the like (especially of a military force); to come together as parts of a force or body. | [verb] To collect, call or assemble together, such as troops or a group for inspection, orders, display etc. MUSTIEST (10) [adjective] Having a stale odor. MUTAGENS (11) [noun] Any agent or substance that can cause genetic mutation. MUTATING (11) [verb] To undergo mutation. | [verb] To cause mutation. | [adjective] Causing or tending to cause mutation. MUTATION (10) [noun] Any alteration or change. | [noun] Any heritable change of the base-pair sequence of genetic material. | [noun] A mutant. MUTATIVE (13) MUTCHKIN (19) [noun] A unit of fluid capacity approximately equal to three-quarters of an imperial pint (0.43 litres) MUTENESS (10) MUTICOUS (12) MUTILATE (10) [verb] To physically harm as to impair use, notably by cutting off or otherwise disabling a vital part, such as a limb. | [verb] To destroy beyond recognition. | [verb] To render imperfect or defective. MUTINEER (10) [noun] Someone who participates in mutiny. | [verb] To mutiny. MUTINIED (11) [verb] To commit mutiny. MUTINIES (10) [noun] An organized rebellion against a legally constituted authority, especially by seamen against their officers. | [noun] Violent commotion; tumult; strife. | [verb] To commit mutiny. MUTINING (11) MUTINOUS (10) [adjective] Likely to commit mutiny. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or constituting mutiny. MUTTERED (11) [verb] To utter words, especially complaints or angry expressions, indistinctly or with a low voice and lips partly closed; to say under one's breath. | [verb] To speak softly and incoherently, or with imperfect articulations. | [verb] To make a sound with a low, rumbling noise. MUTTERER (10) MUTUALLY (13) [adverb] In the same way, each to the other; reciprocally | [adverb] In a shared manner; equally; affecting all parties the same way MUZZIEST (28) [adjective] Hazy, indistinct, blurred, unfocussed. | [adjective] Dazed; bewildered; tipsy. MUZZLERS (28) MUZZLING (29) [verb] To bind or confine an animal's mouth by putting a muzzle, as to prevent it from eating or biting. | [verb] To restrain (from speaking, expressing opinion or acting); gag, silence, censor. | [verb] To veil, mask, muffle. MYALGIAS (14) MYCELIAL (15) MYCELIAN (15) MYCELIUM (17) [noun] The vegetative part of any fungus, consisting of a mass of branching, threadlike hyphae, often underground. MYCELOID (16) MYCETOMA (17) [noun] Chronic subcutaneous inflammation caused by infection with certain bacteria or fungi. MYCOLOGY (19) [noun] The study of fungi, in the wide sense. MYELINES (13) MYELINIC (15) MYELITIS (13) [noun] Inflammation of the spinal cord or of bone marrow. MYELOMAS (15) [noun] A malignant tumour arising from cells of the bone marrow, specifically plasma cells. MYLONITE (13) [noun] Any rock that has undergone modifications due to dynamic recrystallization following plastic flow; a schist created by crushed or ground rock. MYNHEERS (16) MYOBLAST (15) MYOGENIC (16) [adjective] Forming muscle fibres; pertaining to myogenesis. | [adjective] Originating in muscle tissue; specifically, pertaining to contractile activity that is produced by the muscles independent of any neural mechanism. MYOGRAPH (19) MYOLOGIC (16) MYOPATHY (21) [noun] Any of several diseases of muscle that are not caused by nerve disorders MYOSCOPE (17) MYOSITIS (13) [noun] Inflammation of the muscles. MYOSOTES (13) [noun] (botany) Myosotis. MYOSOTIS (13) [noun] Any plant of the genus Myosotis, the forget-me-nots. MYOTOMES (15) [noun] In vertebrate embryonic development, a group of tissues formed from somites that develop into the body wall muscle. MYOTONIA (13) [noun] A symptom of several muscular disorders characterized by the slow relaxation of the muscles after voluntary contraction or electrical stimulation. MYOTONIC (15) MYRIAPOD (16) [noun] Any arthropod (such as centipedes and millipedes) of the subphylum Myriapoda MYRIOPOD (16) MYRMIDON (16) [noun] A soldier or a subordinate civil officer who executes orders of a superior without protest or pity (sometimes applied to bailiffs, constables, etc). MYSTAGOG (15) MYSTICAL (15) [adjective] Relating to mystics or mysticism. | [adjective] Having a spiritual or magical significance that transcends human understanding. | [adjective] Inspiring a sense of spiritual mystery, awe, and fascination. MYSTICLY (18) MYSTIQUE (22) [noun] An aura of heightened interest, meaning or mystery surrounding a person or thing. MYTHICAL (18) [adjective] Existing in myth. | [adjective] (by extension) Not real; false or fabricated. MYTHIEST (16) MYXEDEMA (23) [noun] A form of cutaneous and dermal edema that is secondary to increased deposition of connective tissue components in subcutaneous tissue. MYXOCYTE (25) MYXOMATA (22) [noun] A tumor of primitive connective tissue.

9-Letter Words (1359)

MACADAMIA (16) [noun] An evergreen tree, of the genus Macadamia, native to Australia and cultivated in Hawaii. | [noun] The fruit of this tree; the macadamia nut. MACARONIC (15) [noun] A work of macaronic character. | [noun] A word consisting of a mix of words of two or more languages, one of which is Latin, or a non-Latin stem with a Latin ending. | [adjective] Jumbled, mixed MACARONIS (13) MACAROONS (13) [noun] Any of various pastries based on almond and egg white, traditionally made in France. | [noun] A soft biscuit or cookie prepared with almond or coconut dough. | [noun] A coarse, rude, low fellow. MACCABAWS (20) MACCABOYS (20) MACCOBOYS (20) MACEDOINE (14) [noun] A mixture of diced vegetables or fruit served as a salad. | [noun] A medley or mixture. MACERATED (14) [verb] To soften (something) or separate it into pieces by soaking it in a heated or unheated liquid. | [verb] To make lean; to cause to waste away. | [verb] To subdue the appetite by poor or scanty diet; to mortify. MACERATES (13) [noun] A macerated substance. | [verb] To soften (something) or separate it into pieces by soaking it in a heated or unheated liquid. | [verb] To make lean; to cause to waste away. MACERATOR (13) MACHINATE (16) [verb] To devise a plot or secret plan; to conspire. MACHINERY (19) [noun] The machines constituting a production apparatus, in a plant etc., collectively. | [noun] The working parts of a machine as a group. | [noun] The collective parts of something which allow it to function. MACHINING (17) [verb] To make by machinery. | [verb] To shape or finish by machinery. | [noun] The act or process of machining, of manufacturing or finishing by machine. MACHINIST (16) [noun] A constructor of machines and engines; one versed in the principles of machines. | [noun] One skilled in the use of machine tools for fashioning metal parts or tools out of metal. | [noun] A person who operates machinery. MACHISMOS (18) MACHZORIM (27) [noun] A prayerbook for a Jewish holiday. MACINTOSH (16) [noun] A raincoat. MACKERELS (17) [noun] An edible fish of the family Scombridae, often speckled. | [noun] A pimp; also, a bawd. MACKINAWS (20) [noun] A heavy woolen cloth. | [noun] A blanket made of wool, formerly distributed to the Amerindians by the U.S. government. | [noun] A flat-bottomed cargo boat; mackinaw boat. MACROCOSM (17) [noun] A complex structure, such as a society, considered as a single entity that contains numerous similar, smaller-scale structures. | [noun] (used absolutely) The universe. MACROCYTE (18) MACROMERE (15) MACRURANS (13) MACULATED (14) [verb] To spot; to stain; to blur. | [adjective] Having spots or blotches; maculate. MACULATES (13) [verb] To spot; to stain; to blur. MADDENING (14) [verb] To make angry. | [verb] To make insane; to inflame with passion. | [verb] To become furious. MADELEINE (12) [noun] A French type of small gateau or sponge cake, often shaped like an elongated scallop shell. | [noun] Something which brings back a memory; a source of nostalgia or evocative memories. MADHOUSES (15) [noun] A house where insane persons are confined; an insane asylum. | [noun] (by extension) A chaotic place. MADNESSES (12) [noun] The state of being mad; insanity; mental disease. | [noun] Rash folly MADREPORE (14) [noun] A coral of the genus Madrepora or of the larger group Madreporaria. | [noun] Any stony coral. MADRIGALS (13) [noun] A song for a small number of unaccompanied voices; from 13th century Italy. | [noun] A polyphonic song for about six voices, from 16th century Italy. | [noun] A short poem, often pastoral, and suitable to be set to music. MADRILENE (12) MAELSTROM (13) [noun] A large and violent whirlpool. | [noun] Any violent or turbulent situation. MAESTOSOS (11) MAFFICKED (24) MAGAZINES (21) [noun] A non-academic periodical publication, generally consisting of sheets of paper folded in half and stapled at the fold. | [noun] An ammunition storehouse. | [noun] A chamber in a firearm enabling multiple rounds of ammunition to be fed into the firearm. MAGDALENE (13) MAGDALENS (13) MAGICALLY (17) [adverb] In a magical manner; by magic, or as if by magic. MAGICIANS (14) [noun] A person who plays with or practices allegedly supernatural magic. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A spiritualist or practitioner of mystic arts. | [noun] A performer of tricks or an escapologist or an illusionist. MAGICKING (19) [verb] To produce, transform (something), (as if) by magic. MAGISTERS (12) MAGISTRAL (12) [noun] A sovereign medicine or remedy. | [noun] A magistral line. | [noun] Powdered copper pyrites used in the amalgamation of ores of silver, as at the Spanish mines of Mexico and South America. MAGNESIAN (12) [adjective] Containing magnesia | [adjective] Describing minerals containing magnesium MAGNESIAS (12) MAGNESITE (12) [noun] A form of magnesium carbonate, MgCO3, occurring as dolomite (with calcite) but rarely found in the pure state. MAGNESIUM (14) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Mg) with an atomic number of 12. It is a light, easily flammable, silvery-white alkaline earth metal. MAGNETICS (14) MAGNETISE (12) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETISM (14) [noun] The property of being magnetic. | [noun] The science which treats of magnetic phenomena. | [noun] Power of attraction; power to excite the feelings and to gain the affections. MAGNETITE (12) [noun] A magnetic mineral, Fe3O4, one of the primary ores of iron. It has also been called lodestone. MAGNETIZE (21) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETONS (12) [noun] Any of several units of magnetic moment of an atom, molecule or subatomic particle MAGNETRON (12) [noun] A device in which electrons are made to resonate in a specially shaped chamber and thus produce microwave radiation; used in radar, and in microwave ovens MAGNIFICO (17) [noun] A grandee or nobleman of Venice. | [noun] A rector of a German university. MAGNIFIED (16) [adjective] Having been visually enlarged by the process of magnification. | [verb] To praise, glorify (someone or something, especially God). | [verb] To make (something) larger or more important. MAGNIFIER (15) MAGNIFIES (15) [verb] To praise, glorify (someone or something, especially God). | [verb] To make (something) larger or more important. | [verb] To make (someone or something) appear greater or more important than it is; to intensify, exaggerate. MAGNITUDE (13) [noun] The absolute or relative size, extent or importance of something. | [noun] An order of magnitude. | [noun] A number, assigned to something, such that it may be compared to others numerically MAGNOLIAS (12) [noun] A tree or shrub in any species of the genus Magnolia, many with large flowers and simple leaves. | [noun] The flower of a magnolia tree. | [noun] A native or resident of the American state of Mississippi. MAHARAJAH (24) [noun] A Hindu monarch ranking above a raja, an emperor. MAHARAJAS (21) [noun] A Hindu monarch ranking above a raja, an emperor. MAHARANEE (14) [noun] The wife of a maharajah; approximately, a queen consort. MAHARANIS (14) [noun] The wife of a maharajah; approximately, a queen consort. MAHARISHI (17) [noun] A teacher of Hindu mysticism MAHJONGGS (23) MAHLSTICK (20) [noun] A short stick with a pad on one end, used by a painter to steady their hand, and to prevent it from accidentally touching the painting. MAIDHOODS (16) MAILBOXES (20) [noun] A box into which mail is put | [noun] A folder or account for the storage of e-mail; an electronic in-box or mailstore. MAINFRAME (16) [noun] A large, powerful computer able to manage very many simultaneous tasks and communicate with very many connected terminals; used by large, complex organizations (such as banks and supermarkets) where continuously sustained operation is vital MAINLANDS (12) [noun] The continent; the principal land, as distinguished from islands or a peninsula. | [noun] The principal island of a group. MAINLINED (12) [verb] To inject (a drug) directly into a vein. | [verb] To integrate (code, etc.) into the main repository for a software project, rather than separate forks. MAINLINES (11) [verb] To inject (a drug) directly into a vein. | [verb] To integrate (code, etc.) into the main repository for a software project, rather than separate forks. MAINMASTS (13) [noun] The chief, and tallest mast of a sailing ship that has more than one mast. MAINSAILS (11) [noun] The largest (or only) sail on a sailing vessel. MAINSHEET (14) [noun] The rope connected to and controlling the mainsail. MAINSTAYS (14) [noun] A chief support. | [noun] Someone or something that can be depended on to make a regular contribution. | [noun] A stabilising rope from the top of the mainmast to the bottom of the foremast. MAINTAINS (11) [verb] To support (someone), to back up or assist (someone) in an action. | [verb] To keep up; to preserve; to uphold (a state, condition etc.). | [verb] To declare or affirm (a clause) to be true; to assert. MAIOLICAS (13) MAJESTIES (18) [noun] The quality of being impressive and great. MAJOLICAS (20) MAJORDOMO (21) [noun] The head servant or official in a royal Spanish or Italian household; later, any head servant in a wealthy household in a foreign country; a leading servant or butler. | [noun] (Southwest) A manager of a hacienda, ranch or estate. | [noun] Any overseer, organizer, person in command. MAJORETTE (18) [noun] A dancer who twirls and performs stunts with a lightweight baton, whether as a solo, in a group of majorettes, or in the company of a marching band. MAJUSCULE (20) [noun] A capital letter, especially one used in ancient manuscripts. MAKEBATES (17) MAKEFASTS (18) MAKEOVERS (18) [noun] A major change in the use of something, or in the appearance of something or someone; a radical transformation. MAKEREADY (19) [noun] A sheet of paper on which overlays are pasted for printing. | [noun] The process of preparing such sheets | [noun] The process of preparing something for use. MAKESHIFT (21) [noun] A temporary (usually insubstantial) substitution. | [adjective] Made to work or suffice; improvised; substituted. | [noun] A rogue; a shifty person. MAKIMONOS (17) MALACHITE (16) [noun] A bright green mineral, a basic copper carbonate, Cu2CO3(OH)2; one of the principal ores of copper. | [noun] A mild green colour, like that of the mineral. | [adjective] Of a colour ranging from olive-taupe to a mild to deeply-rich (at times seemingly translucent) green, like that of the mineral which is present on oxidized copper. MALADROIT (12) [noun] Somebody who is inept, or lacking in skill, or talent. | [adjective] Not adroit; awkward, clumsy, inept. MALAGUENA (12) [noun] A Spanish dance, typical of Malaga, similar to a fandango MALAMUTES (13) [noun] A ancient northern breed of dog of the husky type, particularly used as a sled dog. MALAPERTS (13) [noun] A cheeky, impudent, or saucy person. MALAPROPS (15) [noun] A malapropism. | [verb] To use a malapropism. MALARIOUS (11) MALARKEYS (18) MALARKIES (15) MALAROMAS (13) MALATHION (14) [noun] A pesticide, Diethyl [(dimethoxyphosphinothioyl)-thio]butanedioate. MALEDICTS (14) MALEMIUTS (13) MALEMUTES (13) [noun] A ancient northern breed of dog of the husky type, particularly used as a sled dog. MALFORMED (17) [adjective] Not formed correctly; misshapen; deformed. MALICIOUS (13) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or as a result of malice or spite | [adjective] Spiteful and deliberately harmful MALIGNANT (12) [noun] A deviant; a person who is hostile or destructive to society. | [noun] A person who fought for Charles I in the English Civil War. | [adjective] Harmful, malevolent, injurious. MALIGNERS (12) MALIGNING (13) [verb] To make defamatory statements about; to slander or traduce. | [verb] To treat with malice; to show hatred toward; to abuse; to wrong. MALIGNITY (15) MALIHINIS (14) MALINGERS (12) [verb] To feign illness, injury, or incapacitation in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. | [verb] To self-inflict real injury or infection (to inflict self-harm) in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. MALLEABLE (13) [adjective] Able to be hammered into thin sheets; capable of being extended or shaped by beating with a hammer, or by the pressure of rollers. | [adjective] Flexible, liable to change. | [adjective] (of an algorithm) in which an adversary can alter a ciphertext such that it decrypts to a related plaintext MALLEOLUS (11) [noun] The bony prominence on each side of the ankle joint. MALTREATS (11) [verb] To treat badly, to abuse. MALTSTERS (11) [noun] A person who makes malt; a malter. MALVASIAS (14) MAMALIGAS (14) MAMELUKES (17) [noun] A member of a military regime created and run originally by freed white European slaves, which formed a ruling caste in Egypt from 1250 until 1812 and in Syria until 1516. | [noun] A slave (especially European and white) in a Middle Eastern Muslim country. MAMMALIAN (15) [noun] Any mammal. | [adjective] Of, or pertaining to, mammals | [adjective] Like a mammal MAMMALOGY (19) [noun] The study of mammals. MAMMERING (16) MAMMILLAE (15) [noun] The nipple. MAMMOCKED (22) MAMMOGRAM (18) [noun] An X-ray picture of the breasts (mammaries), used to screen for breast cancer. MAMMONISM (17) MAMMONIST (15) MANACLING (14) [verb] To confine with manacles. MANCIPLES (15) [noun] A person in charge of purchasing and storing food and other provisions in a monastery, college, or court of law. MANDARINS (12) [noun] A high government bureaucrat of the Chinese Empire | [noun] A pedantic or elitist bureaucrat | [noun] A pedantic senior person of influence in academia or literary circles MANDATARY (15) [noun] One who receives a mandate. MANDATING (13) [verb] To authorize | [verb] To make mandatory MANDATORS (12) MANDATORY (15) [noun] A sign or line that require the path of the disc to be above, below or to one side of it. | [noun] A person, organisation or state who receives a mandate; a mandatary. | [adjective] Obligatory; required or commanded by authority. MANDIBLES (14) [noun] The lower jaw, especially the lower jawbone. | [noun] One of a pair of mouthparts of an arthropod, designed for holding and cutting food. MANDIOCAS (14) MANDOLINE (12) MANDOLINS (12) [noun] A stringed instrument and a member of the lute family, having eight strings in four courses, frequently tuned as a violin, and with either a bowl-shaped back or a flat back | [noun] A kitchen tool used for slicing vegetables (usually spelled mandoline) | [noun] An RAF World War II code name for patrols to attack enemy railway transport and other ground targets MANDRAKES (16) [noun] A mandragora, a kind of tiny demon immune to fire. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Mandragora, certain of which are said to have medicinal properties; the root of these plants often resembles the shape of a small person, hence occasioning various mythic, magical, or occult uses. | [noun] A root of a mandrake plant that resembled human form, especially one kept or used for magic or occult purposes. MANDRILLS (12) [noun] A primate, Mandrillus sphinx, with colorful face and rump. MANEUVERS (14) [noun] The planned movement of troops, vehicles etc.; a strategic repositioning; (later also) a large training field-exercise of fighting units. | [noun] Any strategic or cunning action; a stratagem. | [noun] A movement of the body, or with an implement, instrument etc., especially one performed with skill or dexterity. MANGABEYS (17) [noun] Any of several large, arboreal monkeys of the family Cercopithecidae. MANGABIES (14) MANGANATE (12) [noun] Any compound containing the ion MnO42-. MANGANESE (12) [noun] A metallic chemical element (symbol Mn) with an atomic number of 25, not a free element in nature but often found in minerals in combination with iron, and useful in industrial alloy production. | [noun] A single atom of this element. MANGANITE (12) [noun] A dark gray mineral of manganese, MnO(OH), found throughout North America and Europe MANGANOUS (12) [adjective] Containing manganese in its +2 oxidation state. MANGINESS (12) MANGONELS (12) [noun] A military engine formerly used for throwing stones and burning objects. MANGROVES (15) [noun] Any of various tropical evergreen trees or shrubs that grow in shallow coastal water. | [noun] A habitat with such plants; mangrove forest; mangrove swamp. | [noun] Plants of the Rhizophoraceae family. MANHANDLE (15) [verb] To move something heavy by force of men, without aid of levers, pulleys, machine, or tackles. | [verb] To assault or beat up a person. | [verb] To mishandle; to handle roughly; to mangle. MANHATTAN (14) [noun] A cocktail made from whiskey, sweet vermouth and bitters. | [noun] A bar chart representing the number of runs scored each over (supposed to resemble a skyline of skyscrapers). MANICALLY (16) MANICOTTI (13) [noun] Wide tubes of pasta filled with a savoury stuffing and baked in the oven. MANICURED (14) [verb] To trim the fingernails MANICURES (13) [noun] A cosmetic treatment for the fingernails. | [noun] A manicurist. | [verb] To trim the fingernails MANIFESTO (14) [noun] A public declaration of principles, policies, or intentions, especially that of a political party. | [verb] To issue a manifesto MANIFESTS (14) [noun] A list or invoice of the passengers or goods being carried by a commercial vehicle or ship. | [noun] A file containing metadata describing other files. | [noun] A public declaration; an open statement; a manifesto. MANIFOLDS (15) [noun] A copy made by the manifold writing process. | [noun] A pipe fitting or similar device that connects multiple inputs or outputs. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The third stomach of a ruminant animal, an omasum. MANIPULAR (13) MANLINESS (11) [noun] The quality of being manly; the set of qualities, traits and abilities considered appropriate to men (as opposed to women or children); similarity to a man. | [noun] Male genitals. MANNEQUIN (20) [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes | [noun] A jointed model of the human body used by artists, especially to demonstrate the arrangement of drapery | [noun] An anatomical model of the human body for use in teaching of e.g. CPR MANNERISM (13) [noun] A noticeable personal habit, a verbal or other (often, but not necessarily unconscious) habitual behavior peculiar to an individual. | [noun] Exaggerated or affected style in art, speech, or other behavior. | [noun] In literature, an ostentatious and unnatural style of the second half of the sixteenth century. In the contemporary criticism, described as a negation of the classicist equilibrium, pre-Baroque, and deforming expressiveness. MANNERIST (11) MANNIKINS (15) [noun] A little man (sometimes as a term of endearment). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure, dummy or effigy representing a man or person. | [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes MANNISHLY (17) MANNITOLS (11) MANOEUVRE (14) [noun] The planned movement of troops, vehicles etc.; a strategic repositioning; (later also) a large training field-exercise of fighting units. | [noun] Any strategic or cunning action; a stratagem. | [noun] A movement of the body, or with an implement, instrument etc., especially one performed with skill or dexterity. MANOMETER (13) [noun] An instrument to measure pressure in a fluid, especially a double-legged liquid column gauge used to measure the difference in the pressures of two fluids. MANOMETRY (16) MANPOWERS (16) MANSARDED (13) MANSLAYER (14) MANTELETS (11) [noun] A short sleeveless cloak or cape. | [noun] A portable screen or other covering, especially as used to protect the approach of soldiers engaged in a siege. | [noun] A mantelletta. MANTICORE (13) [noun] A beast with the body of a lion (usually red), the tail of a scorpion, and the head/face of a man with a mouth filled with multiple rows of sharp teeth (like a shark), said to be able to shoot spikes from its tail or mane to paralyse prey. It may be horned, winged, or both; its voice is described as a mixture of pipes and trumpets. MANTILLAS (11) [noun] A lace veil of Spanish origin worn over a woman's hair and shoulders. | [noun] A woman's light cloak or cape made of silk, velvet, lace, or other material. MANTISSAS (11) [noun] A minor addition to a text. | [noun] The part of a common logarithm after the decimal point, the fractional part of a logarithm. | [noun] The significand; that part of a floating-point number or number in scientific notation that contains its significant digits. MANTLINGS (12) [noun] The representation of a mantle, or the drapery behind and around a coat of arms. | [noun] Cloth suitable for making mantles. MANUBRIUM (15) [noun] The broad, upper part of the sternum. | [noun] The tube extending from the central underside of a jellyfish and ending in a mouth. | [noun] A knob or handle that controls the stops of an organ. MANZANITA (20) [noun] Any evergreen shrub or tree of the genus Arctostaphylos, especially Arctostaphylos manzanita, having smooth red or orange bark and stiff, twisting branches. MAPMAKERS (19) [noun] A person who makes maps. MAPMAKING (20) MAQUETTES (20) [noun] A preliminary model or sketch used in preparation for making a sculpture. MARABOUTS (13) [noun] A Muslim holy man or mystic, especially in parts of North Africa. | [noun] The tomb or shrine of such a person. MARATHONS (14) [noun] A 42.195 kilometre (26 mile 385 yard) road race. | [noun] (by extension) Any extended or sustained activity. MARAUDERS (12) [noun] Someone who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [noun] By extension anything which marauds. MARAUDING (13) [verb] To move about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [verb] To go about aggressively or in a predatory manner. | [verb] To raid and pillage. MARAVEDIS (15) [noun] A former Spanish coin and unit of currency, originally issued in gold but later in silver and copper, discontinued in 1848. MARBLEISE (13) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEIZE (22) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLIEST (13) MARBLINGS (14) [noun] A mottled or streaky appearance | [noun] The process of adding such an appearance, especially as a decoration MARCASITE (13) [noun] The orthorhombic form of iron disulfide, FeS2, occurring as yellow crystals. | [noun] (jewellery) Pyrite. | [noun] Any of various metal sulfides, usually iron sulfide minerals. MARCELLED (14) [verb] To wave (hair) by the marcel method. | [verb] To wave. MARCHLIKE (20) MARCHPANE (18) [noun] A confection made from a paste of almonds, sugar and egg white as a binder. MARGARINE (12) [noun] A spread, manufactured from a blend of vegetable oils (some of which are hydrogenated), emulsifiers etc, mostly used as a substitute for butter. | [noun] The solid ingredient of human fat, olive oil, etc. MARGARINS (12) MARGARITA (12) [noun] A cocktail made with tequila, an orange-flavoured liqueur, and lemon or lime juice, often served with salt encrusted on the rim of the glass. MARGARITE (12) MARGENTED (13) MARGINATE (12) [verb] To provide with margins. | [adjective] With a well marked edge or margin. MARGINING (13) [verb] To add a margin to. | [verb] To enter (notes etc.) into the margin. MARGRAVES (15) [noun] A feudal era military-administrative officer of comital rank in the Carolingian empire and some successor states, originally in charge of a border area. | [noun] A hereditary ruling prince in certain feudal states of the Holy Roman Empire and elsewhere; the titular equivalent became known as marquis or marquess. MARIACHIS (16) [noun] A traditional form of Mexican music, either sung or purely instrumental. | [noun] A group that plays mariachi music. | [noun] A member of such a group. MARIGOLDS (13) [noun] (genericised brand name, usually plural, sometimes with capital) A rubber glove, especially one for use in household cleaning. | [noun] Any of the Old World plants, of the genus Calendula, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers. | [noun] Any of the New World plants, of the genus Tagetes, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers. MARIHUANA (14) [noun] A drug smoked or ingested for euphoric effect, cannabis. | [noun] The hemp plant itself, Cannabis sativa. MARIJUANA (18) [noun] A drug smoked or ingested for euphoric effect, cannabis. | [noun] The hemp plant itself, Cannabis sativa. MARIMBIST (15) MARINADED (13) [verb] To marinate. MARINADES (12) [noun] A seasoned, often acidic liquid mixture in which food is marinated, or soaked, usually to flavor and prepare it for cooking. | [verb] To marinate. MARINARAS (11) [noun] A marinara sauce. MARINATED (12) [verb] To allow a sauce or flavoring mixture to absorb into something; to steep or soak something in a marinade to flavor or prepare it for cooking. MARINATES (11) [verb] To allow a sauce or flavoring mixture to absorb into something; to steep or soak something in a marinade to flavor or prepare it for cooking. MARIPOSAS (13) MARITALLY (14) MARJORAMS (20) MARKDOWNS (19) [noun] A reduction in price in order to stimulate sales. MARKETEER (15) [noun] A specialist in marketing. MARKETERS (15) [noun] One who designs and executes marketing campaigns. | [noun] One who sells goods at a market. MARKETING (16) [verb] To make (products or services) available for sale and promote them. | [verb] To sell | [verb] To deal in a market; to buy or sell; to make bargains for provisions or goods. MARKHOORS (18) MARLSTONE (11) MARMALADE (14) [noun] Citrus fruit variant of jam but distinguished by being made slightly bitter by the addition of the peel and by partial caramelisation during manufacture. Most commonly made with Seville oranges, and usually qualified by the name of the fruit when made with other types of fruit. | [verb] To spread marmalade on. MARMOREAL (13) [adjective] Resembling marble or a marble statue. MARMOREAN (13) MARMOSETS (13) [noun] A small monkey, now specifically a Central and South American monkey of the genera Callithrix, Mico, Cebuella, or Callibella, with claws instead of nails, and a rather primitive layout. | [noun] A hideous figure; a grotesque. | [noun] An unappealing or foolish man. MAROCAINS (13) MAROONING (12) [verb] To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a desert island. | [noun] An act of abandoning a person in a remote, deserted place. MARQUETRY (23) [noun] A decorative technique in which veneers of wood, ivory, metal etc. are inlaid into a wood surface to form intricate designs. | [noun] An example of this work MARQUISES (20) [noun] A nobleman in England, France, and Germany, of a rank next below that of duke, but above a count. Originally, the marquis was an officer whose duty was to guard the marches or frontiers of the kingdom. The office has ceased, and the name is now a mere title conferred by letters patent or letters close. | [noun] Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the Asian genus Bassarona. | [noun] A marchioness, especially one who is French. MARRIAGES (12) [noun] The state of being married. | [noun] A union of two or more people that creates a family tie and carries legal, social, and/or religious rights and responsibilities. | [noun] A homosexual relationship between male prisoners. MARROWFAT (17) MARROWING (15) MARSHALCY (19) MARSHALED (15) [verb] To arrange (troops, etc.) in line for inspection or a parade. | [verb] (by extension) To arrange (facts, etc.) in some methodical order. | [verb] To ceremoniously guide, conduct or usher. MARSHALLS (14) MARSHIEST (14) [adjective] Of, or resembling a marsh; boggy. | [adjective] Growing in marshy ground. MARSHLAND (15) [noun] Marshy land; bog or fen MARSUPIAL (13) [noun] A mammal of which the female has a pouch in which it rears its young, which are born immature, through early infancy, such as the kangaroo or koala, or else pouchless members of the Marsupialia like the shrew opossum. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a marsupial. | [adjective] Of or relating to a marsupium. MARSUPIUM (15) [noun] The external pouch in which female marsupials rear and feed the young. | [noun] A brood pouch in some fishes, crustaceans and insects in the family Monophlebidae. MARTAGONS (12) MARTELLOS (11) [noun] Martello tower MARTIALLY (14) MARTINETS (11) [noun] A strict disciplinarian. | [noun] Anyone who lays stress on a rigid adherence to the details of discipline, or to forms and fixed methods or rules. | [noun] A martin; a swift. MARTYRDOM (17) [noun] The condition of a martyr; the death of a martyr; the suffering of death on account of adherence to the Christian faith, or to any cause. | [noun] Extreme suffering, affliction; torment; torture, especially without reason. MARTYRIES (14) [noun] A shrine in honor of a (usually religious, notably Christian) martyr, possibly at his grave. I | [noun] A shrine at a site which "bears witness" to a crucial religious event not related to a tomb. MARTYRING (15) [verb] To make someone into a martyr by putting him or her to death for adhering to, or acting in accordance with, some belief, especially religious; to sacrifice on account of faith or profession. | [verb] To persecute. | [verb] To torment; to torture. MARTYRIZE (23) [verb] To make a martyr of (someone). MARVELING (15) [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. | [verb] To marvel at. | [verb] (used impersonally) To cause to marvel or be surprised. MARVELLED (15) [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. | [verb] To marvel at. | [verb] (used impersonally) To cause to marvel or be surprised. MARVELOUS (14) [adjective] Exciting wonder or surprise; astonishing; wonderful; delightful. MARYJANES (21) MARZIPANS (22) [noun] A confection made from a paste of almonds, sugar and egg white as a binder. MASCARAED (14) MASCULINE (13) [noun] (grammar) The masculine gender. | [noun] (grammar) A word of the masculine gender. | [noun] That which is masculine. MASOCHISM (18) [noun] The enjoyment of receiving pain or humiliation. MASOCHIST (16) [noun] Someone who enjoys pain or humiliation, or who derives pleasure from harming oneself or being harmed by others. MASONRIES (11) MASSACRED (14) [verb] To kill in considerable numbers where little or no resistance can be made, with indiscriminate violence, without necessity, and contrary to civilized norms. (Often limited to the killing of human beings.) | [verb] To win so decisively it is in the manner of so slaughtering one's opponent. | [verb] To give a performance so poorly it is in the manner of so slaughtering the musical piece, play etc being performed. MASSACRER (13) MASSACRES (13) [noun] The killing of a considerable number (usually limited to people) where little or no resistance can be made, with indiscriminate violence, without necessity, and contrary to civilized norms. | [noun] Murder. | [noun] Any overwhelming defeat, as in a game or sport. MASSAGERS (12) MASSAGING (13) [verb] To rub and knead (someone's body or a part of a body), to perform a massage on (somebody). | [verb] To manipulate (data, a document etc.) to make it more presentable or more convenient to work with. | [verb] To falsify (data or accounts). MASSCULTS (13) MASSETERS (11) [noun] The large muscle which raises the under jaw, and assists in mastication. MASSEUSES (11) [noun] A woman who performs massage; a female masseur. | [noun] A masseur; a man who performs massage. MASSICOTS (13) MASSIVELY (17) [adverb] In a massive manner, in a way that appears large, heavy or imposing. | [adverb] Greatly. MASTABAHS (16) [noun] A wide stone bench built into the wall of a house, shop etc. in the Middle East. | [noun] A rectangular structure with a flat top and slightly sloping sides, built during Ancient Egyptian times above tombs that were situated on flat land. Mastabas were made of wood, mud bricks, stone, or a combination of these materials. Some are solid structures, while others can contain one or more rooms, sometimes decorated with paintings or inscriptions. MASTERFUL (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the manner of a master of an art, technique, profession, or craft; masterly. | [adjective] In the manner of a master; very skillful. | [adjective] Having or showing the qualities of a master vis-a-vis a dependent or subordinate; authoritative; domineering. MASTERIES (11) MASTERING (12) [verb] To be a master. | [verb] To become the master of; to subject to one's will, control, or authority; to conquer; to overpower; to subdue. | [verb] To learn to a high degree of proficiency. MASTHEADS (15) [noun] The top of a mast. | [noun] A list of a newspaper or other periodical's main staff, contributing writers, publisher, circulation, advertising rates etc. | [noun] The title (normally in a large and distinctive font) of a newspaper at the top of the front page MASTICATE (13) [verb] To chew (food). | [verb] To grind or knead something into a pulp. MASTICHES (16) MASTODONS (12) [noun] Extinct elephant-like mammal of the genus Mammut that flourished worldwide from Miocene through Pleistocene times; differs from elephants and mammoths in the form of the molar teeth. MASTODONT (12) MASURIUMS (13) MATAMBALA (15) MATCHABLE (18) MATCHBOOK (22) [noun] A small folded sheet of cardboard containing rows of cardboard matches, generally with a striker on the outside. MATCHLESS (16) [adjective] Having no match; without equal. | [adjective] Having no mate. | [adjective] Without the use of matches for ignition. MATCHLOCK (22) [noun] Early type of firearm, using a smoldering piece of cord to fire the powder in the firing pan. | [noun] The gunlock used in such a weapon, having a slow smouldering match, see: slow match. MATCHWOOD (20) [noun] Wood, often in the form of splinters, suitable for making matches MATELOTES (11) MATERIALS (11) [noun] Matter which may be shaped or manipulated, particularly in making something. | [noun] Text written for a specific purpose. | [noun] A sample or specimens for study. MATERIELS (11) MATERNITY (14) [noun] The state of being a mother; motherhood. | [noun] The state of being pregnant; pregnancy. | [noun] A ward or department in a hospital in which babies are born. MATESHIPS (16) MATEYNESS (14) MATRASSES (11) MATRIARCH (16) [noun] A female leader of a family, a tribe or an ethnic or religious group. | [noun] A female founder of a political or religious movement, an organization or an enterprise. MATRICIDE (14) [noun] The killing of one's mother. | [noun] A person who kills his or her mother. MATRIMONY (16) [noun] Marriage; the state of being married. | [noun] The ceremony of marriage. | [noun] A particular solitaire card game using two decks of cards. MATTERING (12) [verb] To be important. | [verb] (in negative constructions) To care about, to mind; to find important. | [verb] To form pus or matter, as an abscess; to maturate. MATURATED (12) [verb] To bring to ripeness or maturity; to ripen. | [verb] To promote the perfect suppuration of (an abscess). | [verb] To undergo perfect suppuration. MATURATES (11) [verb] To bring to ripeness or maturity; to ripen. | [verb] To promote the perfect suppuration of (an abscess). | [verb] To undergo perfect suppuration. MATUTINAL (11) [adjective] Of, occurring in, or relating to the early morning. MAULSTICK (17) [noun] A short stick with a pad on one end, used by a painter to steady their hand, and to prevent it from accidentally touching the painting. MAUNDERED (13) [verb] To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle. | [verb] To wander or walk aimlessly. | [verb] To beg; to whine like a beggar. MAUNDERER (12) MAUSOLEUM (13) [noun] A large stately tomb or a building housing such a tomb or several tombs. | [noun] (by extension) A gloomy, usually large room or building. MAVERICKS (20) [noun] An unbranded range animal. | [noun] (by extension) Anything dishonestly obtained. | [noun] (by extension) One who is unconventional or does not abide by rules. MAWKISHLY (24) MAXICOATS (20) MAXILLARY (21) [noun] The upper jawbone, or a tooth growing from the upper jawbone. | [adjective] Of or relating to the jaw or jawbone. MAXIMALLY (23) MAXIMISED (21) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMISES (20) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMITES (20) MAXIMIZED (30) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMIZER (29) MAXIMIZES (29) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAYAPPLES (18) [noun] A fruit-bearing flowering plant with poisonous roots, native to eastern North America, taxonomic name Podophyllum peltatum. | [noun] The fruit of the plant Podophyllum peltatum MAYBUSHES (19) MAYFLOWER (20) [noun] Any of several plants that flower in May - especially the hawthorn (in Britain) and the trailing arbutus (in the US). MAYORALTY (17) [noun] The office (or term of office) of a mayor. MAZAEDIUM (23) MAZOURKAS (24) MEALTIMES (13) [noun] The appointed time at which a meal is served or eaten. MEALWORMS (16) [noun] The larval stage of the mealworm beetle (Tenebrio molitor), a species of darkling beetle.. MEALYBUGS (17) [noun] Any of various insects of the family Pseudococcidae, which secrete a powdery wax and are pests of fruit trees. MEANDERED (13) [verb] To wind or turn in a course or passage; to be intricate. | [verb] To wind, turn, or twist; to make flexuous. MEANDROUS (12) MEANINGLY (15) MEANTIMES (13) MEANWHILE (17) [noun] The time between two events. | [adverb] During the time that something is happening. | [adverb] At the same time, but elsewhere. MEASLIEST (11) [adjective] Particularly of pigs or pork: infected with larval tapeworms or trichinae (parasitic roundworms). | [adjective] Of a person: infected with measles. | [adjective] Small (especially contemptibly small) in amount. MEASURERS (11) MEASURING (12) [verb] To ascertain the quantity of a unit of material via calculated comparison with respect to a standard. | [verb] To be of (a certain size), to have (a certain measurement) | [verb] To estimate the unit size of something. MEATBALLS (13) [noun] A ball of minced or ground meat, seasoned and cooked. | [noun] A stupid person. | [noun] An easy pitch to hit, especially thrown right down the middle of the plate. MEATHEADS (15) [noun] An ungainly, dull or stupid person; someone who is lazy, disrespectful and/or whose beliefs and philosophies clash with another. | [noun] A large, muscular, stupid male, especially an athlete. | [noun] A member of the Canadian Forces Military Police. MEATINESS (11) MECHANICS (18) [noun] The branch of physics that deals with the action of forces on material objects with mass | [noun] The design and construction of machines. | [noun] (writing) Spelling and punctuation. | [noun] A manual worker; a labourer or artisan. MECHANISM (18) [noun] (within a machine or machinery) Any mechanical means for the conversion or control of motion, or the transmission or control of power. | [noun] Any combination of cams, gears, links, belts, chains and logical mechanical elements. | [noun] A group of entities, such as objects, that interact together. MECHANIST (16) [noun] A person who takes a mechanical view | [noun] A maker of machines; one skilled in mechanics. MECHANIZE (25) [verb] To equip something with machinery. | [verb] To equip a military unit with tanks and other armed vehicles. | [verb] To make something routine, automatic or monotonous. MECLIZINE (22) MECONIUMS (15) MEDAILLON (12) MEDALISTS (12) [noun] One who has received a medal; one who has medalled. | [noun] An engraver, designer or collector of medals. MEDALLING (13) [verb] To win a medal. | [verb] To award a medal to. MEDALLION (12) [noun] A large medal, usually decorative. | [noun] A cut of meat resembling a medallion. | [noun] A usually round or oval frame (often made of stucco) containing a decoration. MEDALLIST (12) [noun] One who has received a medal; one who has medalled. | [noun] An engraver, designer or collector of medals. MEDIACIES (14) MEDIAEVAL (15) [noun] Someone living in the Middle Ages. | [noun] A medieval example (of something aforementioned or understood from context). | [adjective] Of or relating to the Middle Ages, the period from approximately 500 to 1500 AD. MEDIATELY (15) MEDIATING (13) [verb] To resolve differences, or to bring about a settlement, between conflicting parties. | [verb] To intervene between conflicting parties in order to resolve differences or bring about a settlement. | [verb] To divide into two equal parts. MEDIATION (12) [noun] Negotiation to resolve differences conducted by some impartial party. | [noun] The act of intervening for the purpose of bringing about a settlement. MEDIATIVE (15) MEDIATORS (12) [noun] One who negotiates between parties seeking mutual agreement. | [noun] A chemical substance transmitting information to a targeted cell. MEDIATORY (15) MEDIATRIX (19) MEDICABLE (16) [adjective] Capable of being medicated; admitting of being cured or healed. MEDICAIDS (15) MEDICALLY (17) [adverb] For medical purposes. | [adverb] In a medical manner or context. MEDICARES (14) MEDICATED (15) [verb] To prescribe or administer medication to. MEDICATES (14) [verb] To prescribe or administer medication to. MEDICINAL (14) [noun] Any plant that can be used for medicinal purposes. | [adjective] Having the properties of medicine, or pertaining to medicine; medical. | [adjective] Tending or used to cure disease or relieve pain. MEDICINED (15) MEDICINES (14) [noun] A substance which specifically promotes healing when ingested or consumed in some way. | [noun] A treatment or cure. | [noun] The study of the cause, diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of disease or illness. MEDIEVALS (15) MEDITATED (13) [verb] To contemplate; to keep the mind fixed upon something; to study. | [verb] To sit or lie down and come to a deep rest while still remaining conscious. | [verb] To consider; to reflect on. MEDITATES (12) [verb] To contemplate; to keep the mind fixed upon something; to study. | [verb] To sit or lie down and come to a deep rest while still remaining conscious. | [verb] To consider; to reflect on. MEDITATOR (12) MEDULLARY (15) [adjective] Pertaining to, consisting of, or resembling, marrow or medulla | [adjective] Relating to the medulla oblongata | [adjective] Filled with spongy pith; pithy MEDUSOIDS (13) [noun] Jellyfish MEGABUCKS (20) [noun] A million dollars. MEGABYTES (17) [noun] One million (106) bytes. | [noun] 1,048,576 bytes; a mebibyte. MEGACYCLE (19) MEGADEALS (13) MEGADEATH (16) [noun] One million deaths, especially as a unit of measure in reference to nuclear warfare. MEGADOSES (13) [noun] A dose of drug or vitamin far exceeding the normal or recommended amount, and usually given intentionally. Compare overdose. MEGADYNES (16) MEGAFAUNA (15) [noun] The large animals of a given region or time, considered as a group. | [noun] A treatise on such a group of large animals. MEGAHERTZ (24) [noun] A unit equal to one million cycles per second. MEGALITHS (15) [noun] A construction involving one or several roughly hewn stone slabs of great size. | [noun] A large stone used in such a construction. MEGAPHONE (17) [noun] A portable, usually hand-held, funnel-shaped device that is used to amplify a person’s natural voice toward a targeted direction. | [noun] Mouthpiece or promoter; one who speaks for or publicizes on behalf of another. | [verb] To use a megaphone; to speak through a megaphone. | [noun] A cytotoxic neolignan obtained from the laurel Aniba megaphylla. MEGAPODES (15) [noun] Any of several chicken- or turkey-like birds in the family Megapodiidae, which incubate their eggs by burying them where they receive warmth from decaying vegetation, solar radiation or geothermal heat. MEGASPORE (14) [noun] The larger spore of a heterosporous plant, typically producing a female gametophyte MEGASTARS (12) [noun] A very famous or successful celebrity. MEGAVOLTS (15) [noun] One million (106) volts, abbreviated as MV. MEGAWATTS (15) [noun] One million (1 000 000) watts, abbreviated as MW. MEGILLAHS (15) MELAMINES (13) MELANISMS (13) MELANISTS (11) MELANITES (11) MELANITIC (13) MELANIZED (21) MELANIZES (20) MELANOIDS (12) MELANOMAS (13) [noun] A dark-pigmented, usually malignant tumor arising from a melanocyte and occurring most commonly in the skin. MELANOTIC (13) MELATONIN (11) [noun] A hormone, related to serotonin, that is secreted by the pineal gland, and stimulates colour change in the skin of reptiles, and is involved in the sleep/wake and reproductive cycles in mammals | [noun] Any material similar in its chemistry and effect to the natural hormone. MELILITES (11) MELINITES (11) MELIORATE (11) [verb] To make better; to improve; to solve a problem. | [verb] To become better. MELIORISM (13) [noun] The view or doctrine that the world can be improved through human effort (often understood as an intermediate outlook between optimism and pessimism). MELIORIST (11) MELISMATA (13) [noun] A passage of several notes sung to one syllable of text, as in Gregorian chant. MELLOTRON (11) [noun] An early electronic keyboard instrument that played back prerecorded sounds. MELLOWEST (14) [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. | [adjective] Soft or tender by reason of ripeness; having a tender pulp. MELLOWING (15) [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. | [noun] The process of making or becoming mellow. MELODEONS (12) [noun] A music hall. | [noun] A type of reed organ with a single keyboard. | [noun] An accordion where the melody-side keyboard is limited to the notes of diatonic scales in a small number of keys. MELODICAS (14) [noun] A free-reed keyboard wind instrument. MELODIOUS (12) [adjective] Having a pleasant melody or sound; tuneful. MELODISED (13) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODISES (12) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODISTS (12) [noun] A performer or composer of melodies. MELODIZED (22) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODIZER (21) MELODIZES (21) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODRAMA (14) [noun] A kind of drama having a musical accompaniment to intensify the effect of certain scenes. | [noun] A drama abounding in romantic sentiment and agonizing situations, with a musical accompaniment only in parts which are especially thrilling or pathetic. In opera, a passage in which the orchestra plays a somewhat descriptive accompaniment, while the actor speaks | [noun] Any situation or action which is blown out of proportion. MELPHALAN (16) MELTDOWNS (15) [noun] Severe overheating of the core of a nuclear reactor resulting in the core melting and radiation escaping. | [noun] A situation being likened to a nuclear meltdown; a crisis. | [noun] A tantrum. MELTINGLY (15) MELTWATER (14) [noun] Water from melting ice or snow. MEMBRANED (16) MEMBRANES (15) [noun] A flexible enclosing or separating tissue forming a plane or film and separating two environments (usually in a plant or animal). | [noun] A mechanical, thin, flat flexible part that can deform or vibrate when excited by an external force. | [noun] A flexible or semi-flexible covering or waterproofing whose primary function is to exclude water. MEMENTOES (13) [noun] A keepsake; an object kept as a reminder of a place or event. MEMOIRIST (13) MEMORABLE (15) [adjective] Worthy to be remembered; very important or remarkable. MEMORABLY (18) [adverb] In a memorable manner. MEMORANDA (14) [noun] A short note serving as a reminder. | [noun] A written business communication. | [noun] A brief diplomatic communication. MEMORIALS (13) [noun] Memory; recollection. | [noun] Something, such as a monument, by which someone or something is remembered. | [noun] A chronicle or memoir. MEMORISED (14) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORISES (13) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORITER (13) MEMORIZED (23) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORIZER (22) MEMORIZES (22) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMSAHIBS (18) [noun] (as a respectful term of address) A white European woman in colonial India. MENADIONE (12) [noun] A derivative of naphthoquinone that is a constituent of vitamin K MENAGERIE (12) [noun] A collection of live wild animals on exhibition; the enclosure where they are kept. | [noun] A diverse or miscellaneous group. MENARCHES (16) [noun] The onset of menstruation; a girl's first period. MENDACITY (17) [noun] The fact or condition of being untruthful; dishonesty. | [noun] A deceit, falsehood, or lie. MENDICANT (14) [noun] A pauper who lives by begging. | [noun] A religious friar, forbidden to own personal property, who begs for a living. | [adjective] Depending on alms for a living. MENDICITY (17) [noun] The state of being a beggar; mendicancy or beggary MENHADENS (15) [noun] Any of several species of fish in the genera Brevoortia and Ethmidium, used for fish meal, fish oil, fertilizer, and bait. MENINGEAL (12) MENOPAUSE (13) [noun] The period in a woman's life when menstruation becomes irregular and less frequent before eventually stopping altogether, usually accompanied by a range of unpleasant symptoms; the period spanning perimenopause up to postmenopause. | [noun] The final menstrual period of a woman after which ovulation no longer occurs. MENSELESS (11) MENSTRUAL (11) [adjective] Of or relating to the menses. | [adjective] Occurring once a month; monthly. | [adjective] Lasting for a month. MENSTRUUM (13) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The menses; menstrual discharge. | [noun] A solvent. | [noun] Any liquid medium. MENTALISM (13) [noun] The doctrine that physical reality exists only because of the mind's awareness. | [noun] Activities such as mind-reading, especially by performers. | [noun] Oppression on the basis of neurological type or perceived intelligence. MENTALIST (11) [noun] A practitioner of mentalism. | [noun] An insane person. | [adjective] Of or relating to mentalism MENTALITY (14) [noun] A mindset; a way of thinking; a set of beliefs. | [noun] The characteristics of a mind described as a system of distinctive structures and processes based in biology, language, or culture, etc.; a mental system. MENTATION (11) [noun] Mental activity; the process of thinking. MENTHENES (14) MENTIONED (12) [verb] To make a short reference to something. | [verb] To utter a word or expression in order to refer to the expression itself, as opposed to its usual referent. MENTIONER (11) MENTORING (12) [verb] To act as someone's mentor | [noun] An arrangement by which one person mentors another. MERBROMIN (15) [noun] A topical antiseptic that is an organomercury derivative of fluorescein MERCAPTAN (15) [noun] Any of a class of organic compounds of sulphur, ( R1.S.R2 ); they tend to be foul-smelling. When R2 is a hydrogen atom, they are termed thiols or thioalcohols. MERCENARY (16) [noun] One motivated by gain, especially monetary. | [noun] A person employed to fight in an armed conflict who is not a member of the state or military group for which they are fighting and whose primary motivation is private gain. | [noun] One hired to engage in a figurative battle, as a corporate takeover, a lawsuit, or a political campaign. MERCERIES (13) MERCERISE (13) MERCERIZE (22) MERCHANTS (16) [noun] A person who traffics in commodities for profit. | [noun] The owner or operator of a retail business. | [noun] A trading vessel; a merchantman. MERCILESS (13) [adjective] Showing no mercy; cruel and pitiless. MERCURATE (13) MERCURIAL (13) [noun] Any of the plants known as mercury, especially the annual mercury or French mercury (Mercurialis annua). | [noun] A person born under the influence of the planet Mercury; hence, a person having an animated, lively, quick-witted or volatile character. | [noun] A chemical compound containing mercury. MERCURIES (13) [noun] A metal. | [noun] Any of several types of plant. MERCUROUS (13) [adjective] Pertaining to or derived from mercury. | [adjective] Of a compound, containing mercury with an oxidation number of 1. MERENGUES (12) MERGANSER (12) [noun] Any of various diving ducks of the genera Mergus or Lophodytes, which feed on fish and have a sharply serrated bill. MERGENCES (14) MERIDIANS (12) [noun] The south. | [noun] Midday, noon. | [noun] A great circle passing through the poles of the celestial sphere and the zenith for a particular point on the earth's surface. MERINGUES (12) [noun] A mixture consisting of beaten egg whites and sugar which is added to the tops of pies then browned. | [noun] A shell made of this mixture which serves as the receptacle for fruit, ice cream or sherbet. MERISTEMS (13) [noun] The plant tissue composed of totipotent cells that allows plant growth. MEROCRINE (13) MEROZOITE (20) MERRIMENT (13) [noun] A state of enjoyable exuberance | [noun] Playful fun MERRINESS (11) MESCALINE (13) [noun] A hallucinogenic and intoxicating compound present in the peyote cactus (Lophophora williamsii), the San Pedro cactus (Echinopsis pachanoi), and the Peruvian torch (Echinopsis peruviana). MESEEMETH (16) MESENTERA (11) MESENTERY (14) [noun] The membrane that attaches the intestines to the wall of the abdomen, maintaining their position in the abdominal cavity, and supplying them with blood vessels, nerves, and lymphatics. MESHUGGAH (19) MESHWORKS (21) [noun] A net; an assembly of meshes. MESMERISE (13) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESMERISM (15) [noun] The method or power of gaining control over someone's personality or actions, as in hypnosis or suggestion. | [noun] The state induced by hypnotic methods (especially that of Mesmer himself). MESMERIST (13) MESMERIZE (22) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESOCARPS (15) [noun] The middle layer of the pericarp of a fruit. In many fruits such as drupes and tomatoes, the mesocarp is fleshy MESODERMS (14) MESOGLEAS (12) MESOGLOEA (12) MESOMERES (13) MESOMORPH (18) [noun] A person with pronounced muscular development and low body fat. | [noun] : Theoretical body type in which a person naturally has lower body fat and greater ability to achieve muscular development than average. MESOPAUSE (13) [noun] In the atmosphere, the boundary between the mesosphere and the ionosphere. It is the atmospheric boundary where the temperature reaches its minimum value. MESOPHYLL (19) [noun] The soft internal parenchyma of a leaf MESOPHYLS (19) MESOPHYTE (19) [noun] Any normal terrestrial plant that grows in environments that have an average supply of water. MESOSCALE (13) [noun] A scale of intermediate size. | [adjective] Of medium size or extent; between microscale and macroscale. | [adjective] (of a weather phenomenon) Roughly 2-200 kilometers in extent; between microscale and synoptic. MESOSOMES (13) MESOTRONS (11) MESQUITES (20) [noun] Any of several deciduous trees of the genus Prosopis found in North America, and used as forage, which have long, beige seed/bean pods which may be dried and ground into a sweet, nutty flour. | [noun] The wood of these trees, used for smoking food, or charcoal made from this wood. | [noun] Country or land dominated by mesquite trees. MESSAGING (13) [verb] To send a message to; to transmit a message to, e.g. as text via a cell phone. | [verb] To send (something) as a message; usually refers to electronic messaging. | [verb] To send a message or messages; to be capable of sending messages. MESSALINE (11) MESSENGER (12) [noun] One who brings messages. | [noun] A light line with which a heavier line may be hauled e.g. from the deck of a ship to the pier. | [noun] The supporting member of an aerial cable (electric power or telephone or data). MESSIANIC (13) [adjective] Of, relating to, or resembling a messiah or the Messiah. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or resembling messianism. MESSIEURS (11) [noun] A man, especially a French gentleman. MESSINESS (11) MESSMATES (13) [noun] An associate with whom one shares a mess (eating place) on a ship | [noun] Any of various eucalypts with rough bark, specifically Eucalyptus obliqua. MESSUAGES (12) [noun] A plot of land as the site for a house; later, a residential building taken together with its outbuildings and assigned land. MESTESOES (11) MESTINOES (11) MESTIZOES (20) MESTRANOL (11) METABOLIC (15) [noun] A nutritional supplement | [adjective] Of or pertaining to metamorphosis; pertaining to, or involving, change. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to metabolism METACARPI (15) [noun] The five bones that form intermediate part of the hand between the fingers and the wrist. METALISED (12) METALISES (11) METALISTS (11) METALIZED (21) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALIZES (20) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLICS (13) [noun] A metallic color. METALLING (12) [verb] To make a road using crushed rock, stones etc. | [noun] A road surface. METALLIZE (20) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLOID (12) [noun] An element, such as silicon or germanium, intermediate in properties between that of a metal and a nonmetal; especially one that exhibits the external characteristics of a metal, but behaves chemically more as a nonmetal. | [noun] The metallic base of a fixed alkali, or alkaline earth; applied to sodium, potassium, and some other metallic substances whose metallic character was supposed to be not well defined. | [adjective] Of or relating to the metalloids. METALMARK (17) [noun] Any butterfly of the family Riodinidae. METALWARE (14) [noun] Any wares made out of metal, such as pots and pans. METALWORK (18) [noun] Objects made of metal. | [noun] The act of shaping metal, metalworking. METAMERES (13) [noun] One of successive or homodynamous parts in animals and plants; one of a series of similar parts that follow one another in a vertebrate or articulate animal, as in an earthworm; a segment or somite. METAMERIC (15) [adjective] Exhibiting metamerism | [adjective] Exhibiting structural isomerism METAPHASE (16) [noun] The stage of mitosis and meiosis, that follows prophase and comes before anaphase, during which condensed chromosomes become aligned before being separated. METAPHORS (16) [noun] The use of a word or phrase to refer to something that it is not, invoking a direct similarity between the word or phrase used and the thing described (but in the case of English without the words like or as, since use of those words would imply a simile); the word or phrase used in this way; an implied comparison. | [noun] The use of an everyday object or concept to represent an underlying facet of the computer and thus aid users in performing tasks. | [verb] To use a metaphor. METATARSI (11) [noun] The part of the foot between the toes and the ankle, especially its five bones. METAXYLEM (23) METAZOANS (20) [noun] Any animal that undergoes development from an embryo stage with three tissue layers, namely the ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. | [noun] Any animal that is multicellular. METEORITE (11) [noun] A metallic or stony object or body that is the remains of a meteoroid. METEOROID (12) [noun] A relatively small (sand- to boulder-sized) fragment of debris in a star system that produces a meteor when it hits the atmosphere METERAGES (12) METESTRUS (11) METHADONE (15) [noun] A synthetic opioid analgesic, used to wean addicts off heroin or other opiate based narcotics, and in chronic pain management. METHADONS (15) METHANOLS (14) METHEGLIN (15) [noun] A spiced mead, originally from Wales. METHODISE (15) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODISM (17) METHODIST (15) [noun] One who follows a method. METHODIZE (24) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHOUGHT (18) METHYLALS (17) METHYLASE (17) METHYLATE (17) [noun] The anion -O-CH3- derived from methanol by loss of a proton; any salt containing this anion | [verb] To add, or treat with methyl alcohol (see methylated spirits) | [verb] To add a methyl group to a compound METHYLENE (17) [noun] The divalent radical CH2< in which the free valencies are part of single bonds. | [noun] The same group, present as a repeating unit, in aliphatic compounds with names such as hexamethylenediamine. | [noun] The unstable carbene CH2: METONYMIC (18) METRICIZE (22) METRIFIED (15) METRIFIES (14) METROLOGY (15) [noun] The science of weights and measures or of measurement. | [noun] A system of weights and measures. METRONOME (13) [noun] A device, containing an inverted pendulum, used to mark time by means of regular ticks at adjustable intervals; an electronic equivalent that emits flashes. MEZEREONS (20) [noun] An ornamental shrub, Daphne mezereum, having purple flowers and bright red fruit. | [noun] The dried bark of this plant, once used as a vesicant. MEZEREUMS (22) MEZQUITES (29) MEZZANINE (29) [noun] A secondary floor, in between the main floors of a building; entresol. | [noun] A small window used to light such a secondary floor. | [noun] The lowest balcony in an auditorium. MEZZOTINT (29) [noun] A form of intaglio etching in which a metal plate is roughened evenly and then smoothed to bring out an image. | [noun] An etching or print made using this method. | [verb] To make such etchings MIASMATIC (15) MICACEOUS (15) MICAWBERS (18) MICRIFIED (17) MICRIFIES (16) MICROBARS (15) MICROBEAM (17) MICROBIAL (15) [noun] A microbe or bacterium. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or caused by microbes or microorganisms. MICROBREW (18) [noun] A beer produced by a small local brewery, or microbrewery. | [verb] To produce beer on a small scale, as a microbrewer. MICROCHIP (20) [noun] Integrated circuit; microprocessor. | [verb] To fit (an animal) with a microchip. MICROCODE (16) [noun] The collective microprograms in a CPU, used to run machine instructions. | [verb] To write or rewrite (program instructions) in microcode, typically to optimize performance. MICROCOPY (20) [noun] A photocopy that is greatly reduced in size. | [noun] Very short copy. | [verb] To copy (a document) at a greatly reduced size. MICROCOSM (17) [noun] Human nature or the human body as representative of the wider universe; man considered as a miniature counterpart of divine or universal nature. | [noun] The human body; a person. | [noun] A smaller system which is seen as representative of a larger one. MICROCYTE (18) [noun] An unusually small red blood cell found in some forms of anemia MICRODOTS (14) [noun] A text or photographic image that has been reduced in size to that of a typographical dot in order to escape detection by unintended recipients. | [noun] A small-sized tablet containing lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD). MICROFILM (18) [noun] A continuous roll of film containing photographs of documents at a greatly reduced size | [verb] To reproduce documents on such film MICROFORM (18) [noun] Microfilm, microfiche or similar materials. | [noun] A microscopic form of life; an animal or vegetable organism of microscopic size. MICROGRAM (16) [noun] A unit of mass equal to one millionth of a gram, or 0.000 001 grams (symbol: μg or mcg). MICROINCH (18) MICROLITH (16) [noun] A small stone tool. | [noun] The microscopic acicular components of rocks. MICROMERE (15) MICROMHOS (18) MICROMINI (15) MICROMOLE (15) MICRONIZE (22) [verb] To reduce in size, often to micrometer scale. MICROPORE (15) [noun] A microscopic pore MICROPYLE (18) [noun] In seed-bearing plants, a small opening in the integuments of the ovule through which sperm are able to access the ovum. | [noun] The hilum of an ovum at the point of attachment to the ovary; any opening in the coverings of an ovum by which spermatozoa may find entrance. MICROSOME (15) [noun] A vesicle formed as an artifact of cell disruption MICROTOME (15) [noun] A special instrument that produces very thin slices of plant and animal tissues, for later examination by light microscope or electron microscope. | [verb] To cut into sections using a microtome MICROTONE (13) [noun] Any interval smaller than a semitone MICROVOLT (16) MICROWATT (16) MICROWAVE (19) [noun] An electromagnetic wave with wavelength between that of infrared light and radio waves. | [verb] To cook (something) in a microwave oven. | [noun] An oven that uses microwave energy to heat food or other items placed within it. MICTURATE (13) [verb] To urinate. MIDBRAINS (14) [noun] A part of the brain located rostral to the pons and caudal to the thalamus and the basal ganglia, composed of the tectum (dorsal portion) and the tegmentum (ventral portion). MIDCOURSE (14) MIDDLEMAN (15) [noun] An intermediary, agent between two (or more) parties. | [noun] An intermediate dealer between the manufacturer and the retailer or customer. | [noun] One who rents land in large tracts, and lets it in small portions to the peasantry. MIDDLEMEN (15) [noun] An intermediary, agent between two (or more) parties. | [noun] An intermediate dealer between the manufacturer and the retailer or customer. | [noun] One who rents land in large tracts, and lets it in small portions to the peasantry. MIDDLINGS (14) [noun] Something of intermediate or average size, position, or quality. | [noun] Commodities that are of intermediate price, quality, or size. | [noun] Partially refined ore or petroleum. MIDDORSAL (13) MIDFIELDS (16) [noun] The middle of the field of play MIDMONTHS (17) MIDNIGHTS (16) [noun] The middle of the night: the sixth temporal hour, equidistant between sunset and sunrise. | [noun] 12 o'clock at night exactly. MIDPOINTS (14) [noun] A point equidistant between two extremes. | [noun] A point which divides a line segment into two lines of equal length. MIDRANGES (13) [noun] The middle portion of a particular range. MIDRASHIC (17) MIDRASHIM (17) MIDSPACES (16) MIDSTREAM (14) [noun] The middle of a stream or river. MIDSUMMER (16) [noun] The period around the summer solstice; about 21st June in the northern hemisphere. | [noun] The first day of summer | [noun] The middle of summer. MIDWEEKLY (22) MIDWIFERY (21) [noun] The practice and science of being a midwife. MIDWIFING (19) [verb] To act as a midwife | [verb] To facilitate the emergence of MIDWINTER (15) [noun] The middle of winter. | [noun] The winter solstice; about December 21st or 22nd. MIDWIVING (19) MIGHTIEST (15) [adjective] Very strong; possessing might. | [adjective] Very heavy and powerful. | [adjective] Very large; hefty. MIGRAINES (12) [noun] A severe, disabling headache, usually affecting only one side of the head, and often accompanied by nausea, vomiting, photophobia and visual disturbances. | [noun] A neurological condition characterised by such headaches. MIGRATING (13) [verb] To relocate periodically from one region to another, usually according to the seasons. | [verb] To change one's geographic pattern of habitation. | [verb] To change habitations across a border; to move from one country or political region to another. MIGRATION (12) [noun] An instance of moving to live in another place for a while. | [noun] Seasonal moving of animals, as mammals, birds or fish, especially between breeding and non-breeding areas. | [noun] Movement in general. MIGRATORS (12) MIGRATORY (15) [adjective] (of birds, etc) Migrating. | [adjective] Roving; wandering; nomadic. MIJNHEERS (21) MILDENING (13) MILDEWING (16) [verb] To taint with mildew. | [verb] To become tainted with mildew. MILEPOSTS (13) [noun] A post on a highway, often with one or more fingerposts, showing the distance in miles to nearby places | [noun] A sign or post beside a railway marking the distance from the (actual or nominal) start of a line (usually the principal terminus or junction with a more major line) MILESIMOS (13) MILESTONE (11) [noun] A stone milepost (or by extension in other materials), one of a series of numbered markers placed along a road at regular intervals, typically at the side of the road or in a median. | [noun] An important event in a person's life or career, in the history of a nation, in the life of some project, etc. | [verb] To place milestones along (a road, etc.). MILIARIAL (11) MILIARIAS (11) MILITANCE (13) MILITANCY (16) [noun] The quality of being militant. MILITANTS (11) [noun] A soldier, a combatant. | [noun] An entrenched or aggressive adherent to a particular cause, now especially a member of a particular ideological faction. | [noun] Specifically, someone who supports the Trotskyist political view expressed in the newspaper Militant, or who engages in aggressive left-wing politics. MILITARIA (11) [noun] Military or police artifacts. MILITATED (12) [verb] To give force or effect toward; to influence. | [verb] To fight. MILITATES (11) [verb] To give force or effect toward; to influence. | [verb] To fight. MILKINESS (15) MILKMAIDS (18) [noun] A girl or young woman who milks the cows on a farm MILKSHEDS (19) MILKWEEDS (19) [noun] Any of several plants that have a milky sap and have pods that split to release seeds with silky tufts. | [noun] A monarch butterfly (Danaus spp). MILKWOODS (19) MILKWORTS (18) [noun] Any of more than 500 species of flowering plants of the genus Polygala that are used as a food source by the larvae of some members of the Lepidoptera order. MILLCAKES (17) MILLENARY (14) [noun] A period of one thousand years; a millennium. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a thousand, especially to a thousand years. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a millennium; millenarian. MILLENNIA (11) [noun] A period of time consisting of one thousand years. | [noun] The period of one thousand years during which Christ will reign on earth (according to Millenarianist interpretations). | [noun] A period of universal happiness, peace or prosperity; a utopia. MILLEPEDS (14) MILLERITE (11) [noun] A nickel sulfide mineral, NiS, that occurs as hairlike tufts MILLIARDS (12) MILLIARES (11) MILLIBARS (13) [noun] A non-SI unit of pressure equal to 100 pascals, used primarily to report atmospheric pressure. MILLIEMES (13) MILLIGALS (12) MILLIGRAM (14) [noun] An SI unit of mass, equivalent to one thousandth of a gram. Symbol: mg MILLIMHOS (16) MILLIMOLE (13) MILLINERS (11) [noun] A person who is involved in the manufacture, design, or sale of hats for women. MILLINERY (14) [noun] Women's hats. | [noun] A shop selling women's hats. | [noun] The business and work that a milliner engages in. MILLIOHMS (16) MILLIONTH (14) [noun] The person or thing in the millionth position. | [noun] One of a million equal parts of a whole. Term ppm (parts per million) is also used. | [adjective] The ordinal form of the number one million. MILLIPEDE (14) [noun] Any of many elongated arthropods, of the class Diplopoda, with cylindrical bodies that have two pairs of legs for each one of their 20 to 100 or more body segments. MILLIPEDS (14) MILLIREMS (13) MILLIVOLT (14) [noun] One thousandth (10-3) of a volt, abbreviated as mV. MILLIWATT (14) [noun] One thousandth ( 10-3 ) of a watt, abbreviated as mW. MILLPONDS (14) [noun] A pond or reservoir produced by damming a river or stream in order to provide a steady source of water for a millrace. MILLRACES (13) [noun] A fast-running water-filled channel diverted from a river or stream used to drive a mill wheel. MILLSTONE (11) [noun] A large round stone used for grinding grain. | [noun] A coarse-grained sandstone used for making such stones; millstone grit. | [noun] Often in a millstone round one's neck (referring to Matthew 18:6 in the Bible): a heavy responsibility that is difficult to bear. MILLWORKS (18) MIMESISES (13) MIMETITES (13) MIMICKERS (19) [noun] One who mimics. MIMICKING (20) [verb] To imitate, especially in order to ridicule. | [verb] To take on the appearance of another, for protection or camouflage. | [noun] Mimicry MIMICRIES (15) [noun] The act or ability to simulate the appearance of someone or something else. MINCEMEAT (15) [noun] A mixture of fruit, spices and sugar used as a filling for mince pies. | [noun] Minced meat, mince. | [noun] (by analogy) A badly cut-up body or parts of a body. MINCINGLY (17) MINDFULLY (18) MINEFIELD (15) [noun] An area in which land mines have been laid. | [noun] (by extension) A dangerous situation. | [noun] A pitch that has dried out and crumbled and on which the ball is bouncing and spinning unpredictably. MINELAYER (14) [noun] A ship capable of laying mines. MINIATURE (11) [noun] Greatly diminished size or form; reduced scale. | [noun] A small version of something; a model of reduced scale. | [noun] A small, highly detailed painting, a portrait miniature. MINIBIKER (17) MINIBIKES (17) MINIBUSES (13) [noun] A small bus, especially one used as transport for small groups. | [noun] A-sixteen seater vehicle used as a taxi. A kombi. | [noun] A small four-wheeled carriage. MINICAMPS (17) [noun] A short training session for members of a professional sports team, held before the main preseason training MINIFYING (18) MINIMALLY (16) [adverb] In a minimal way; to the least extent. MINIMAXES (20) [noun] In decision theory, game theory, etc. a decision rule used for minimizing the maximum possible loss, or maximizing the minimum gain. | [verb] To find the optimum play, or decision, to achieve minimizing the maximum loss. MINIMILLS (13) MINIMISED (14) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMISES (13) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMIZED (23) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMIZER (22) MINIMIZES (22) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIPARKS (17) MINISCULE (13) [adjective] Written in minuscules, lowercase. | [adjective] Written in minuscule handwriting style. | [adjective] Very small, tiny. MINISHING (15) MINISKIRT (15) [noun] A short skirt with its hemline well above the knees, generally at mid-thigh level. MINISTATE (11) MINISTERS (11) [noun] A person who is trained to preach, to perform religious ceremonies, and to afford pastoral care at a Protestant church. | [noun] A politician who heads a ministry (national or regional government department for public service). | [noun] At a diplomacy, the rank of diplomat directly below ambassador. MINOXIDIL (19) [noun] A compound used orally as a vasodilator to treat hypertension and topically to reverse baldness. MINSTRELS (11) [noun] A medieval traveling entertainer who would sing and recite poetry, often to his own musical accompaniment. | [noun] One of a troupe of entertainers who wore black makeup (blackface) to present a so-called minstrel show, being a variety show of song, dance and banjo music. MINUSCULE (13) [noun] A lowercase letter. | [noun] Either of the two medieval handwriting styles minuscule cursive and Caroline minuscule. | [noun] A letter in these styles. MINUTEMAN (13) [noun] During the American War for Independence, a citizen-soldier who would fight for the Patriots at a minute's notice. | [noun] A man who reaches orgasm undesirably quickly during sexual intercourse. | [noun] The cyclist starting one minute ahead of, or behind, another rider in a time trial. MINUTEMEN (13) [noun] During the American War for Independence, a citizen-soldier who would fight for the Patriots at a minute's notice. | [noun] A man who reaches orgasm undesirably quickly during sexual intercourse. | [noun] The cyclist starting one minute ahead of, or behind, another rider in a time trial. MIQUELETS (20) MIRACIDIA (14) [noun] A free-living motile form of a trematode, covered with cilia, which settles in a mollusc intermediate host to become a sporocyst MIRLITONS (11) [noun] A pear-shaped vegetable or its vine; the chayote. | [noun] The eunuch flute, a kind of kazoo or membranophone. | [noun] An 18th-century hussar hat resembling a slightly conical shako or tall fez. MIRRORING (12) [verb] Of an event, activity, behaviour, etc, to be identical to, to be a copy of. | [verb] To create something identical to (a web site, etc.). | [verb] To reflect, as in a mirror. MIRTHLESS (14) [adjective] Lacking mirth; devoid of joy. MISACTING (14) MISADAPTS (14) MISADDING (14) MISADJUST (19) MISADVISE (15) MISAGENTS (12) MISAIMING (14) MISALIGNS (12) MISALLIED (12) MISALLIES (11) MISALTERS (11) MISASSAYS (14) MISATONED (12) MISATONES (11) MISAWARDS (15) MISBECAME (17) MISBECOME (17) MISBEGINS (14) MISBEHAVE (19) [verb] To act or behave in an inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected manner. MISBELIEF (16) [noun] An erroneous belief | [noun] A heresy; an unorthodox belief MISBIASED (14) MISBIASES (13) MISBILLED (14) MISBRANDS (14) MISBUILDS (14) MISBUTTON (13) MISCALLED (14) [verb] To call (someone) bad names; to insult, abuse. | [verb] To call (something) by the wrong name. | [verb] To make a wrong call; to announce (one's hand of cards) incorrectly. MISCHANCE (18) [noun] Bad luck, misfortune. | [noun] A mishap, an unlucky circumstance. | [verb] To undergo (a misfortune); to suffer (something unfortunate). MISCHARGE (17) MISCHIEFS (19) [noun] Conduct that playfully causes petty annoyance. | [noun] A playfully annoying action. | [noun] (collective) A group or a pack of rats. MISCHOICE (18) MISCITING (14) MISCLAIMS (15) MISCODING (15) MISCOINED (14) MISCOLORS (13) MISCOOKED (18) MISCOPIED (16) [verb] To copy incorrectly; to copy with mistakes. MISCOPIES (15) [noun] An imperfect copy. | [verb] To copy incorrectly; to copy with mistakes. MISCOUNTS (13) [verb] To incorrectly count or add up. MISCREANT (13) [noun] One who has behaved badly, or illegally. | [noun] One not restrained by moral principles; an unscrupulous villain. | [noun] One who holds a false religious belief; a misbeliever. MISCREATE (13) MISDATING (13) [verb] To date incorrectly; to mark with the wrong date. MISDEEMED (15) MISDEFINE (15) MISDIALED (13) [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDIRECT (14) [verb] To direct something wrongly | [verb] To direct attention away from covert actions or intended targets. | [verb] To put the incorrect address on a mail item MISDOINGS (13) [noun] An act of misdoing; a misdeed. MISDOUBTS (14) [verb] To doubt the existence or reality of. | [verb] To have suspicions about. MISDRIVEN (15) MISDRIVES (15) MISEATING (12) MISEDITED (13) MISEMPLOY (18) [verb] To employ incorrectly; to misuse. MISENROLL (11) MISENROLS (11) MISENTERS (11) MISERABLE (13) [noun] A miserable person; a wretch. | [adjective] In a state of misery: very sad, ill, or poor. | [adjective] Very bad (at something); unskilled, incompetent. MISERABLY (16) [adverb] In a miserable manner MISERERES (11) [noun] A prayer for mercy. | [noun] An expression of lamentation or complaint. | [noun] A medieval dagger, used for the mercy stroke to a wounded foe; misericord. MISESTEEM (13) MISEVENTS (14) MISFAITHS (17) MISFEASOR (14) MISFIELDS (15) [noun] A failure to field the ball properly. | [verb] To field the ball clumsily or ineptly; in cricket this can result in the batsman scoring another run. MISFILING (15) [verb] To file incorrectly; to file in the wrong place or the wrong way. | [noun] An incorrect filing. MISFIRING (15) [verb] To fail to discharge properly. | [verb] (of an engine) To fail to ignite in the proper sequence. | [verb] (by extension) To fail to achieve the anticipated result. MISFITTED (15) MISFORMED (17) MISFRAMED (17) MISFRAMES (16) MISGAUGED (14) MISGAUGES (13) MISGIVING (16) [noun] Doubt, apprehension, a feeling of dread MISGOVERN (15) [verb] To govern badly or wrongly. MISGRADED (14) MISGRADES (13) MISGRAFTS (15) MISGUIDED (14) [verb] To guide poorly or incorrectly. | [verb] To lead astray; to lead into error. | [adjective] Ill-conceived or not thought through MISGUIDER (13) MISGUIDES (13) [verb] To guide poorly or incorrectly. | [verb] To lead astray; to lead into error. MISHANDLE (15) [noun] Rough manipulation which causes physical damage. | [noun] Ineffective or incorrect deal. | [noun] Improper, wrong, or bad usage or treatment; abuse. MISHANTER (14) MISINFERS (14) MISINFORM (16) [verb] To give or deliver false, fake, or misleading information. MISINTERS (11) MISJOINED (19) MISJUDGED (21) [verb] To make an error in judging, to incorrectly assess. MISJUDGES (20) [verb] To make an error in judging, to incorrectly assess. MISKICKED (22) [verb] To kick incorrectly or badly. MISLABELS (13) [verb] To label incorrectly. MISLABORS (13) MISLAYERS (14) MISLAYING (15) [verb] To leave or lay something in the wrong place and then forget where one put it. MISLEADER (12) MISLEARED (12) MISLEARNS (11) MISLEARNT (11) MISLIGHTS (15) MISLIKERS (15) MISLIKING (16) [verb] To displease. | [verb] To dislike; to disapprove of; to have aversion to. | [noun] Dislike; disapproval MISLIVING (15) MISLOCATE (13) MISLODGED (14) MISLODGES (13) MISMAKING (18) MISMANAGE (14) [verb] To manage an area of responsibility in a way which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. | [verb] To behave, in a management capacity, in a manner which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. MISMARKED (18) MISMATING (14) [verb] To mate or match wrongly or unsuitably; mismatch. | [noun] An unsuitable or incorrect mating between organisms. MISMOVING (17) MISNAMING (14) [verb] To call by a wrong name. | [verb] To give an unsuitable or injurious name to; name incorrectly. | [noun] The act of calling something by its wrong name MISNOMERS (13) [noun] A use of a term that is misleading; a misname. | [noun] A term that is misleading. | [noun] A term whose sense in common usage conflicts with a technical sense. MISOGYNIC (17) MISONEISM (13) MISORDERS (12) MISORIENT (11) MISPAGING (15) MISPAINTS (13) MISPARSED (14) MISPARSES (13) MISPARTED (14) MISPENNED (14) MISPLACED (16) [verb] To put something somewhere and then forget its location; to mislay | [verb] To apply one's talents inappropriately. | [verb] To put something in the wrong location. MISPLACES (15) [verb] To put something somewhere and then forget its location; to mislay | [verb] To apply one's talents inappropriately. | [verb] To put something in the wrong location. MISPLANTS (13) MISPLAYED (17) [verb] To play incorrectly or poorly. MISPLEADS (14) MISPOINTS (13) MISPOISED (14) MISPOISES (13) MISPRICED (16) MISPRICES (15) MISPRINTS (13) [noun] An accidental mistake in print. | [verb] To make a misprint. MISPRIZED (23) [verb] To despise or hold in contempt; to undervalue. MISPRIZES (22) [verb] To despise or hold in contempt; to undervalue. MISQUOTED (21) [verb] To incorrectly recite a quote. | [verb] To incorrectly record a quote. MISQUOTES (20) [noun] An incorrect recitation of a quote. | [noun] An incorrect recording of a quote. | [verb] To incorrectly recite a quote. MISRAISED (12) MISRAISES (11) MISRATING (12) MISRECKON (17) MISRECORD (14) MISREFERS (14) MISRELATE (11) MISRELIED (12) MISRELIES (11) MISRENDER (12) [verb] To render incorrectly. MISREPORT (13) [verb] To report erroneously; to give an incorrect account of. | [noun] A false report. MISROUTED (12) [verb] To route incorrectly; to send the wrong way. MISROUTES (11) [verb] To route incorrectly; to send the wrong way. MISRULING (12) [verb] Of a trial judge, to make a bad decision in court. | [verb] To rule badly; to misgovern. | [noun] A bad or wrong ruling. MISSAYING (15) MISSEATED (12) MISSENSES (11) MISSHAPED (17) [verb] To shape badly or incorrectly. MISSHAPEN (16) [adjective] Having a bad, ugly or awkward shape; deformed; malformed. | [adjective] Morally or intellectually warped. MISSHAPES (16) [verb] To shape badly or incorrectly. MISSILEER (11) MISSILERY (14) [noun] The science of missiles. MISSIONED (12) MISSIONER (11) [noun] A missionary. MISSORTED (12) MISSOUNDS (12) MISSPACED (16) MISSPACES (15) MISSPEAKS (17) [verb] To fail to pronounce, utter, or speak correctly. | [verb] To speak insultingly or disrespectfully. MISSPELLS (13) [verb] To spell incorrectly. MISSPENDS (14) [verb] To spend poorly, incorrectly or unwisely. MISSPOKEN (17) [verb] To fail to pronounce, utter, or speak correctly. | [verb] To speak insultingly or disrespectfully. MISSTARTS (11) MISSTATED (12) [verb] To make a statement that is in error, inadvertently; to say incorrectly, through a slip of the tongue. MISSTATES (11) [verb] To make a statement that is in error, inadvertently; to say incorrectly, through a slip of the tongue. MISSTEERS (11) MISSTRIKE (15) MISSTRUCK (17) MISSTYLED (15) MISSTYLES (14) MISSUITED (12) MISTAKERS (15) MISTAKING (16) [verb] To understand wrongly, taking one thing or person for another. | [verb] To misunderstand (someone). | [verb] To commit an unintentional error; to do or think something wrong. MISTAUGHT (15) [verb] To teach incorrectly. MISTENDED (13) MISTERMED (14) MISTHINKS (18) MISTHROWN (17) MISTHROWS (17) MISTIMING (14) [verb] To do at the wrong time; especially to misjudge the timing of coordinated events. | [noun] Incorrect timing. MISTINESS (11) MISTITLED (12) [verb] To title incorrectly; to give the wrong name to. MISTITLES (11) [verb] To title incorrectly; to give the wrong name to. MISTLETOE (11) [noun] Any of several hemiparasitic evergreen plants of the order Santalales with white berries that grow in the crowns of apple trees, oaks, and other trees, such as the European mistletoe (Viscum album) and American mistletoe or eastern mistletoe (Phoradendron leucarpum). | [noun] A sprig of one such plant used as a Christmas decoration, associated with the custom that a man may kiss any woman standing beneath it. MISTRACED (14) MISTRACES (13) MISTRAINS (11) MISTREATS (11) [verb] To treat someone, or something roughly or badly. MISTRIALS (11) [noun] A trial that has been declared invalid because of an error in procedure, or because of hung jury. MISTRUSTS (11) [verb] To have no confidence in (something or someone). | [verb] To be wary, suspicious or doubtful of (something or someone). | [verb] To suspect, to imagine or suppose (something) to be the case. MISTRUTHS (14) MISTRYSTS (14) MISTUNING (12) MISTUTORS (11) MISTYPING (17) [verb] To type incorrectly, introducing spelling mistakes or other errors. | [verb] To categorize incorrectly. | [noun] A mistyped word. MISUNIONS (11) MISUSAGES (12) MISVALUED (15) MISVALUES (14) MISWORDED (16) MISWRITES (14) MISYOKING (19) MITERWORT (14) MITICIDAL (14) MITICIDES (14) MITIGATED (13) [verb] To reduce, lessen, or decrease; to make less severe or easier to bear. | [verb] To downplay. | [adjective] Lessened, reduced, diminished MITIGATES (12) [verb] To reduce, lessen, or decrease; to make less severe or easier to bear. | [verb] To downplay. MITIGATOR (12) [noun] Someone or something that mitigates. MITOGENIC (14) MITOMYCIN (18) MITREWORT (14) MNEMONICS (15) [noun] Anything (especially something in verbal form) used to help remember something. | [noun] The textual, human-readable form of an assembly language instruction, not including operands. | [noun] The study of techniques for remembering anything more easily. MOBILISED (14) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILISES (13) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILIZED (23) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILIZES (22) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBOCRACY (20) [noun] Rule or control by the mob (or by the mass of ordinary people); a mob as a politically powerful force. MOBOCRATS (15) MOCCASINS (15) [noun] A traditional Native North American shoe, usually without a heel or sole, made of a piece of deerskin or other soft leather turned up at the edges which are either stitched together at the top of the shoe, or sewn to a vamp (a piece covering the top of the foot). | [noun] A modern shoe with either a low or no heel resembling a traditional Native American moccasin in that the leather forming the sides of the shoe is stitched at the top. | [noun] A light beige colour, like that of a moccasin. MOCKERIES (17) [noun] The action of mocking; ridicule, derision. | [noun] Something so lacking in necessary qualities as to inspire ridicule; a laughing-stock. | [noun] Something insultingly imitative; an offensively futile action, gesture etc. MOCKINGLY (21) [adverb] Said, written, or done with the intent to mock, or ridicule; with mocking effect. MODELINGS (13) MODELISTS (12) MODELLERS (12) MODELLING (13) [verb] To display for others to see, especially in regard to wearing clothing while performing the role of a fashion model | [verb] To use as an object in the creation of a forecast or model | [verb] To make a miniature model of MODERATED (13) [verb] To reduce the excessiveness of (something) | [verb] To become less excessive | [verb] To preside over (something) as a moderator MODERATES (12) [noun] One who holds an intermediate position between extremes, as in politics. | [noun] One of a party in Scottish Church history dominant in the 18th century, lax in doctrine and discipline, but intolerant of evangelicalism and popular rights. It caused the secessions of 1733 and 1761, and its final resultant was the Disruption of 1843. MODERATOR (12) [noun] Someone who moderates | [noun] The person who presides over a synod of a Presbyterian Church | [noun] A substance (often water or graphite) used to decrease the speed of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor and hence increase likelihood of fission MODERATOS (12) [noun] A tempo mark directing that a passage is to be played at a moderate tempo. | [noun] A passage having this mark MODERNEST (12) MODERNISE (12) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNISM (14) [noun] Modern or contemporary ideas, thought, practices, etc. | [noun] Anything that is characteristic of modernity. | [noun] Any of several styles of art, architecture, literature, philosophy, etc., that flourished in the 20th century. MODERNIST (12) [noun] A follower or proponent of modernism. | [adjective] Of, or relating to modernism. | [adjective] Pertaining to the culinary arts of molecular gastronomy MODERNITY (15) [noun] The quality of being modern or contemporary. | [noun] Modern times. | [noun] (history) Quality of being of the modern period of contemporary historiography. MODERNIZE (21) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODESTEST (12) MODESTIES (12) [noun] The quality of being modest; having a limited and not overly high opinion of oneself and one's abilities. | [noun] Moderate behaviour; reserve. | [noun] (specifically) Pudency, avoidance of sexual explicitness. MODIFIERS (15) [noun] One who, or that which, modifies. | [noun] (grammar) A word, phrase, or clause that limits or qualifies the sense of another word or phrase. | [noun] A keyword that qualifies the meaning of other code. MODIFYING (19) [verb] To change part of. | [verb] To be or become modified. | [verb] To set bounds to; to moderate. MODILLION (12) [noun] A decoratively carved supporting block atop a column. MODULARLY (15) MODULATED (13) [verb] To regulate, adjust or adapt | [verb] To change the pitch, intensity or tone of one's voice or of a musical instrument | [verb] To vary the amplitude, frequency or phase of a carrier wave in proportion to the amplitude etc of a source wave (such as speech or music) MODULATES (12) [verb] To regulate, adjust or adapt | [verb] To change the pitch, intensity or tone of one's voice or of a musical instrument | [verb] To vary the amplitude, frequency or phase of a carrier wave in proportion to the amplitude etc of a source wave (such as speech or music) MODULATOR (12) MOFFETTES (17) MOILINGLY (15) MOISTENED (12) [verb] To make moist or moister. | [verb] To become moist or moister. MOISTENER (11) MOISTNESS (11) MOISTURES (11) MOLDBOARD (15) [noun] A curved piece of metal on a plow or bulldozer that clears the free dirt from the blade. | [noun] (founding) A follow board. MOLDERING (13) [verb] To decay or rot. MOLDINESS (12) MOLDWARPS (17) MOLECULAR (13) [noun] Any compound having a specified (range of) molecular weight(s) | [adjective] Relating to, or consisting of, or produced by molecules. | [adjective] (of an element) Combined with itself and with no other element; elemental. MOLECULES (13) [noun] The smallest particle of a specific element or compound that retains the chemical properties of that element or compound; two or more atoms held together by chemical bonds. | [noun] A tiny amount. MOLEHILLS (14) [noun] A small mound of earth created by a mole's burrowing underneath the surface of the ground. MOLESKINS (15) [noun] The fur of a mole. | [noun] A cotton twill fabric with a heavy velvety nap. | [noun] (by extension, in the plural) Clothing made of this fabric. MOLESTERS (11) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLESTING (12) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MOLLIFIED (15) [verb] To ease a burden, particularly worry; make less painful; to comfort. | [verb] To appease (anger), pacify, gain the good will of. | [verb] To soften; to make tender MOLLIFIES (14) [verb] To ease a burden, particularly worry; make less painful; to comfort. | [verb] To appease (anger), pacify, gain the good will of. | [verb] To soften; to make tender MOLLUSCAN (13) MOLLUSKAN (15) MOLYBDATE (17) [noun] The anion MoO42−. | [noun] Any salt of molybdic acid. MOMENTARY (16) [adjective] Lasting for only a moment. | [adjective] Happening at every moment; perpetual. | [adjective] Ephemeral or relatively short-lived. MOMENTOES (13) MOMENTOUS (13) [adjective] Outstanding in importance, of great consequence. MOMENTUMS (15) MONACHISM (18) MONADISMS (14) MONADNOCK (18) [noun] A hill or mountain standing isolated above a predominantly flat plain. MONARCHAL (16) MONARCHIC (18) MONASTERY (14) [noun] Building for housing monks or others who have taken religious vows MONASTICS (13) [noun] A person with monastic ways; a monk. MONATOMIC (15) [adjective] Of an element, consisting of a single atom in the molecule, for example, the noble gases. Note: Strictly speaking, a molecule has at least two atoms. MONAZITES (20) [noun] Any of a range of reddish-brown minerals that are mixed phosphates of the lighter rare earth elements lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, promethium, samarium, europium, gadolinium and yttrium MONECIOUS (13) MONELLINS (11) MONETISED (12) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETISES (11) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETIZED (21) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETIZES (20) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONEYBAGS (17) [noun] A bag, normally with a drawstring, used for holding money. | [noun] (in the plural) A wealthy person. | [noun] A wealthy person. MONEYWORT (17) [noun] A European vine, Lysimachia nummularia, having yellow flowers; creeping Jenny, creeping Charlie. MONGERING (13) MONGOLISM (14) [noun] Down syndrome MONGOLOID (13) [noun] A member of the racial classification of humanity composed of peoples native to North Asia, East Asia, Pacific Oceania, and the Americas, as well as their diaspora in other parts of the world. | [noun] A person with Down syndrome. | [noun] Idiot, retard; a general term of abuse, due to association with Down syndrome. MONGOOSES (12) [noun] Any of several species of generalist predatory Carnivores in the family Herpestidae; the various species range in size from rats to large cats. The Indian mongoose is noted as a predator of venomous snakes, though other mongoose species have similar habits. | [noun] Any species of Malagasy mongoose; only distantly related to the Herpestidae, these are members of the family Eupleridae; they resemble mongooses in appearance and habits, but have larger ears and ringed tails. MONICKERS (17) [noun] A personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute. | [noun] A signature. | [noun] An object (structured item of data) used to associate the name of an object with its location. MONISHING (15) MONITIONS (11) [noun] A caution or warning. | [noun] A legal notification of something. | [noun] A sign of impending danger; an omen. MONITORED (12) [verb] To watch over; to guard. MONKERIES (15) MONKEYING (19) [verb] To meddle; to mess (with). | [verb] To mimic; to ape. MONKEYPOD (21) MONKHOODS (19) MONKSHOOD (19) [noun] Any of various poisonous plants, of the genus Aconitum, with blue or white flowers in the shape of a hood | [noun] The dried leaves or flowers of these plants formerly used as a source of medicinal alkaloids MONOACIDS (14) MONOAMINE (13) [noun] Any compound having a single amino functional group, especially a neurotransmitter. MONOBASIC (15) [adjective] (of an acid) Containing one replaceable hydrogen atom. | [adjective] (of a salt) Having one atom of a univalent metal. | [adjective] Having only one subordinate taxon; monotypic. MONOCARPS (15) MONOCHORD (17) [noun] A musical instrument for experimenting with the mathematical relations of musical sounds, consisting of a single string stretched between two bridges, one or both of which can be moved, and which stand upon a graduated rule for the purpose of changing and measuring the length of the part of the string between them. | [noun] A stringed instrument with only one string. MONOCLINE (13) [noun] A unidirectional dip in strata that is not a part of an anticline or syncline | [noun] A single flexure in otherwise flat-lying strata MONOCOQUE (22) [noun] A structure design in which the frame and body are built as a single integrated structure. MONOCRACY (18) [noun] A form of government in which unlimited power is held by a single individual. | [noun] An instance of this government. MONOCRATS (13) MONOCULAR (13) [noun] A monocle. | [noun] (retronym) A monocular telescope, as opposed to binoculars. | [adjective] Having one eye. MONOCYTES (16) [noun] A type of blood leukocyte that differentiates into a macrophage. MONOCYTIC (18) MONODICAL (14) MONODISTS (12) MONODRAMA (14) [noun] A play in the form of a monologue MONOECIES (13) MONOECISM (15) MONOESTER (11) MONOFUELS (14) MONOGAMIC (16) MONOGENIC (14) [noun] A derivative of a monogenic function | [adjective] Of or relating to monogenesis or to monogenism | [adjective] Regulated by a single gene MONOGLOTS (12) [noun] A person capable of speaking only a single language. MONOGRAMS (14) [noun] A picture drawn in line only, before the colour and/or shading is applied; an outline sketch. | [noun] A sentence consisting of only one line, or an epigram consisting of only one verse, of poetry. | [noun] A design composed of one or more letters, often intertwined, used as an identifying mark of an individual or institution. MONOGRAPH (17) [noun] A scholarly book or a treatise on a single subject or a group of related subjects, usually written by one person. | [verb] To write a monograph on (a subject). | [verb] Of the FDA: to publish a standard that authorizes the use of (a substance). MONOHULLS (14) [noun] A boat that has a single hull. MONOLAYER (14) [noun] A layer of material that is one molecule thick | [noun] A layer of tissue that is one cell thick MONOLITHS (14) [noun] A large, single block of stone which is a natural feature; or a block of stone or other similar material used in architecture and sculpture, especially one carved into a monument in ancient times. | [noun] Anything massive, uniform, and unmovable, especially a towering and impersonal cultural, political, or social organization or structure. | [noun] A substrate having many tiny channels that is cast as a single piece, which is used as a stationary phase for chromatography, as a catalytic surface, etc. MONOLOGUE (12) [noun] (authorship) A long speech by one person in a play; sometimes a soliloquy; other times spoken to other characters. | [noun] A long series of comic stories and jokes as an entertainment. | [noun] A long, uninterrupted utterance that monopolizes a conversation. MONOMANIA (13) [noun] Excessive interest or concentration on a singular object or subject. | [noun] A pathological obsession with one person, thing or idea. MONOMERIC (15) MONOMETER (13) [noun] A line of verse containing a single metrical foot. MONOMIALS (13) [noun] A single term consisting of a product of numbers and variables with positive integer exponents. MONOPHAGY (20) MONOPHONY (19) MONOPHYLY (22) MONOPLANE (13) [noun] An airplane that has a single pair of wings | [verb] To fly in a monoplane. MONOPLOID (14) [noun] An organism having a single set of chromosomes. | [adjective] Having a single set of chromosomes. MONOPODES (14) MONOPOLES (13) [noun] An appellation owned by a single winery. | [noun] A magnetic monopole. | [noun] A monopole antenna. MONOPSONY (16) [noun] A market situation in which there is only one buyer for a product. | [noun] A buyer with disproportionate power. MONORAILS (11) [noun] A railroad system where the trains run on one rail | [noun] A train running on a single rail MONORCHID (17) [noun] An individual having only one testicle within the scrotum. | [adjective] Having only one testicle within the scrotum. MONORHYME (19) MONOSOMES (13) [noun] The chromosome whose homologous counterpart is missing in monosomy. MONOSOMIC (15) MONOSTELE (11) MONOSTELY (14) MONOTINTS (11) [noun] A monochrome print. MONOTONES (11) [noun] A single unvaried tone of speech or a sound. | [noun] A piece of writing in one strain throughout. MONOTONIC (13) [adjective] Of or using the Greek system of diacritics which discards the breathings and employs a single accent to indicate stress. It replaced polytonic system in 1982. | [adjective] Said of a function that either never decreases or never increases as its independent variable increases. | [adjective] Uttered in a monotone; monotonous. MONOTREME (13) [noun] A mammal that lays eggs and has a single urogenital and digestive orifice. Only the echidnas and platypuses are included in this group | [adjective] (of a pollen grain) Having a single trema, or aperture. MONOTYPES (16) [noun] A print made by creating the design using oil paint or printer's ink on metal or glass, then transferring the image directly to paper. | [noun] The technique of making such prints. | [noun] A monotypic taxon. MONOTYPIC (18) [adjective] Relating to or exhibiting monotypy. MONOVULAR (14) MONOXIDES (19) [noun] Any oxide containing a single oxygen atom in each molecule or formula unit MONSIGNOR (12) [noun] An ecclesiastic title bestowed on some Roman Catholic clerics by the Pope MONSOONAL (11) MONSTERAS (11) [noun] Any of the plants of the genus Monstera. MONSTROUS (11) [adjective] Hideous or frightful. | [adjective] Enormously large. | [adjective] Freakish or grotesque. MONTADALE (12) MONTAGING (13) MONTEITHS (14) [noun] A bowl used for the cooling or washing of wine glasses. | [noun] A large 18th-century punchbowl, usually of silver, fluted and scalloped. | [noun] A cotton handkerchief with white spots on a coloured background. MONTHLIES (14) [noun] A publication that is published once a month. | [noun] The menstrual period. MONTHLONG (15) [adjective] Which lasts a month, or approximately so MONUMENTS (13) [noun] A structure built for commemorative or symbolic reasons, or as a memorial; a commemoration. | [noun] An important site owned by the community as a whole. | [noun] An exceptional or proud achievement. MONZONITE (20) [noun] An intrusive igneous rock composed mostly of plagioclase and orthoclase MOODINESS (12) MOONBEAMS (15) [noun] A shaft of moonlight. | [noun] Moonlight generally. | [noun] Any of various Australasian lycaenid butterflies of the genus Philiris. MOONDUSTS (12) MOONFACED (17) MOONISHLY (17) MOONLIGHT (15) [noun] (sometimes attributive) The light reflected from the Moon. | [verb] To work on the side (at a secondary job), often in the evening or during the night. | [verb] (by extension) To engage in an activity other than what one is known for. MOONPORTS (13) MOONQUAKE (24) [noun] A seismic event occurring on the moon; the lunar equivalent of an earthquake. MOONRISES (11) [noun] The time of day or night when the moon begins to rise over the horizon. MOONSAILS (11) MOONSCAPE (15) [noun] A view of an area of the Moon | [noun] (by extension) A desolate or devastated landscape. MOONSEEDS (12) [noun] A twining plant of the genera Menispermum or Cocculus, in the family Menispermaceae. MOONSHINE (14) [noun] The light of the moon; moonlight. | [noun] High-proof alcohol (especially whiskey) that is often, but not always, produced illegally. | [noun] Nonsense. MOONSHOTS (14) [noun] The launching of a spacecraft or an object to orbit or land on the Moon. | [noun] An act of throwing or hitting a ball with a high trajectory. | [noun] An expensive, hard, or unlikely task of great potential impact. MOONSTONE (11) [noun] A translucent gemstone, an orthoclase feldspar, that has a pearly lustre. MOONWALKS (18) [noun] An exploration of the Moon's surface on foot (by an astronaut). | [noun] A dance move in which the dancer slides backwards though the feet move as if walking forwards; the backslide. | [noun] A dance style in which the dancer appears to be moving in a low gravity environment. MOONWORTS (14) [noun] A small fern, Botrychium lunaria (lesser moonwort); later, any member of the genus. | [noun] Lunaria annua (greater moonwort); also known as Honesty and Actual Honesty. MOORCOCKS (19) [noun] The red grouse. MOORFOWLS (17) MOORLANDS (12) [noun] Open land that has an acidic peaty soil and is mostly covered with heather or bracken. MOORWORTS (14) MOPBOARDS (16) [noun] A skirting board (to protect a wall from wet mops) MOQUETTES (20) MORALISED (12) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALISES (11) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALISMS (13) MORALISTS (11) [noun] One who bases all decisions on perceived morals, especially one who enforces them with censorship. | [noun] A teacher of morals. MORALIZED (21) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALIZER (20) MORALIZES (20) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORATORIA (11) [noun] An authorization to a debtor, permitting temporary suspension of payments. | [noun] A suspension of an ongoing activity. MORBIDITY (17) [noun] The quality of being unhealthful or diseased, sometimes including the cause. | [noun] The quality of being morbid; an attitude or state of mind marked by gloom. | [noun] The incidence of a disease, as a rate of a population which is affected. MORDANTED (13) [verb] To subject to the action of, or imbue with, a mordant. MORDANTLY (15) MORESQUES (20) MORGANITE (12) [noun] A gemstone of pegmatite deposits. Morganite is a transparent pink variety of beryl. MORONISMS (13) MORPHEMES (18) [noun] The smallest linguistic unit within a word that can carry a meaning. MORPHEMIC (20) MORPHINES (16) MORPHOGEN (17) [noun] Any substance that governs the movement and development of cells during morphogenesis by forming a concentration gradient in the developing tissue. MORSELING (12) MORSELLED (12) MORTALITY (14) [noun] The state or quality of being mortal. | [noun] The number of deaths. | [noun] Death. MORTARING (12) [verb] To use mortar or plaster to join two things together. | [verb] To pound in a mortar. | [verb] To fire a mortar (weapon). MORTGAGED (14) [verb] To borrow against a property, to obtain a loan for another purpose by giving away the right of seizure to the lender over a fixed property such as a house or piece of land; to pledge a property in order to get a loan. | [verb] To pledge and make liable; to make subject to obligation; to achieve an immediate result by paying for it in the long term. MORTGAGEE (13) [noun] One who provides a loan secured upon the borrowers' property, the lender in a mortgage agreement. MORTGAGER (13) [noun] One who uses property they own as security for a loan; the borrower in a mortgage agreement. MORTGAGES (13) [noun] A special form of secured loan where the purpose of the loan must be specified to the lender, to purchase assets that must be fixed (not movable) property, such as a house or piece of farm land. The assets are registered as the legal property of the borrower but the lender can seize them and dispose of them if they are not satisfied with the manner in which the repayment of the loan is conducted by the borrower. Once the loan is fully repaid, the lender loses this right of seizure and the assets are then deemed to be unencumbered. | [noun] State of being pledged. | [verb] To borrow against a property, to obtain a loan for another purpose by giving away the right of seizure to the lender over a fixed property such as a house or piece of land; to pledge a property in order to get a loan. MORTGAGOR (13) [noun] One who uses property they own as security for a loan; the borrower in a mortgage agreement. MORTICIAN (13) [noun] An undertaker or funeral director. MORTICING (14) [verb] To cut a mortise in. | [verb] To join by a mortise and tenon. | [verb] To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters; to kern. MORTIFIED (15) [adjective] Acutely embarrassed. | [verb] To discipline (one's body, appetites etc.) by suppressing desires; to practise abstinence on. | [verb] (usually used passively) To embarrass, to humiliate. To injure one's dignity. MORTIFIES (14) [verb] To discipline (one's body, appetites etc.) by suppressing desires; to practise abstinence on. | [verb] (usually used passively) To embarrass, to humiliate. To injure one's dignity. | [verb] To kill. MORTISERS (11) MORTISING (12) [verb] To cut a mortise in. | [verb] To join by a mortise and tenon. | [verb] To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters; to kern. MORTMAINS (13) MOSAICISM (15) [noun] The condition in which more than one genetically distinct population of cells coexist within one individual. MOSAICIST (13) MOSAICKED (18) [adjective] Composed of a mosaic | [adjective] Formed from a "mosaic" of images MOSASAURS (11) [noun] A large extinct marine reptile in the family Mosasauridae, dominant marine predator of the Cretaceous. Mosasaurs are considred to be in squmata, the same group that includes lizards and snakes. MOSQUITOS (20) [noun] A small flying insect of the family Culicidae, the females of which bite humans and animals and suck blood, leaving an itching bump on the skin, and sometimes carrying diseases like malaria and yellow fever. | [verb] To fly close to the ground, seemingly without a course. MOSSBACKS (19) [noun] A turtle that, because of its age, has a growth of algae on its back. | [noun] An old fish. | [noun] (by extension) A very conservative or reactionary person, especially one with old-fashioned views. MOTHBALLS (16) [noun] (usually in plural) A small ball of chemical pesticide (typically naphthalene) and deodorant placed in or around clothing and other articles susceptible to damage from mold or moth larvae in order to protect them from this damage. MOTHERING (15) [verb] To give birth to or produce (as its female parent) a child. (Compare father.) | [verb] To treat as a mother would be expected to treat her child; to nurture. | [verb] To cause to contain mother. MOTHPROOF (19) [verb] To apply odoriferous materials intended to repel moths from clothing. | [adjective] Resistant to being eaten by moths. MOTIONERS (11) MOTIONING (12) [verb] To gesture indicating a desired movement. | [verb] To introduce a motion in parliamentary procedure. | [verb] To make a proposal; to offer plans. MOTIVATED (15) [verb] To provide someone with an incentive to do something; to encourage. | [verb] To animate; to propel; to cause to take action | [adjective] Enthusiastic, especially about striving toward a goal. MOTIVATES (14) [verb] To provide someone with an incentive to do something; to encourage. | [verb] To animate; to propel; to cause to take action MOTIVATOR (14) [noun] Agent noun of motivate; one who motivates. MOTLEYEST (14) MOTOCROSS (13) [noun] A form of off-road motorbike racing. | [noun] An event where such racing takes place. MOTORBIKE (17) [noun] A motorcycle. | [noun] A small and light motorcycle. | [verb] To ride a motorbike; to travel by motorbike. MOTORBOAT (13) [noun] Any vessel driven by an engine (either inboard or outboard), but especially a small one. | [verb] To press one's face between a woman's breasts. MOTORCADE (14) [noun] A procession of cars carrying VIPs, especially political figures. | [verb] To travel in a motorcade. MOTORCARS (13) [noun] An enclosed passenger vehicle powered by an engine. MOTORDOMS (14) MOTORINGS (12) MOTORISED (12) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORISES (11) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORISTS (11) [noun] One who drives a motor vehicle. MOTORIZED (21) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORIZES (20) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORLESS (11) MOTORWAYS (17) [noun] (parts of Australia) A broad highway designed for high speed traffic, having restrictions on the vehicle types permitted and merging lanes instead of cross traffic; in parts of the United States and other places called freeway. MOUCHOIRS (16) [noun] A handkerchief. MOUFFLONS (17) [noun] A species of wild sheep, Ovis orientalis musimon, syn. Ovis aries musimon, endemic to Sardinia and Corsica. MOULDERED (13) [verb] To decay or rot. MOULDIEST (12) [adjective] Covered with mould. | [adjective] Neglected. | [adjective] Worthless; lousy; rotten MOULDINGS (13) [noun] The act or process of shaping in or on a mold, or of making molds; the art or occupation of a molder. | [noun] Anything cast in a mold, or which appears to be so, as grooved or ornamental bars of wood or metal. | [noun] A plane, or curved, narrow surface, either sunk or projecting, used for decoration by means of the lights and shades upon its surface and to conceal joints, especially between unlike materials. MOUNTABLE (13) MOUNTAINS (11) [noun] An elevation of land of considerable dimensions rising more or less abruptly, forming a conspicuous figure in the landscape, usually having a small extent of surface at its summit. | [noun] Something very large in size or quantity; a huge amount; a great heap. | [noun] Of, belonging to, relating to, or found on a mountain; like a mountain in size; (of living things) growing or living on a mountain. MOUNTAINY (14) MOUNTINGS (12) [noun] Something mounted; an attachment. | [noun] The act of one who mounts. MOURNINGS (12) MOUSETRAP (13) [noun] A device for capturing or killing mice and other rodents. | [noun] A website designed to open another copy of itself when the user tries to close the webpage. Frequently used by advertisers and pornographers. | [noun] Ordinary, everyday cheese. MOUSINESS (11) MOUSSAKAS (15) [noun] A dish consisting of layers of minced lamb or beef, sliced aubergine (eggplant) or potatoes, tomatoes and béchamel sauce, baked in the oven. MOUSTACHE (16) [noun] A growth of facial hair between the nose and the upper lip. MOUTHFULS (17) [noun] The amount that will fit in a mouth. | [noun] Quite a bit. | [noun] Something difficult to pronounce or say. MOUTHIEST (14) [adjective] Overly talkative, insolent, and loud. MOUTHLIKE (18) MOUTHPART (16) [noun] (usually in plural) An appendage-like structure on the outside of an insect's or other arthropod's mouth, serving to manipulate and masticate food. MOUTHWASH (20) [noun] A liquid used to clean one's mouth. MOVEABLES (16) [noun] Something which is movable; an article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of property not fixed, or not a part of real estate; generally, in the plural, goods; wares; furniture. MOVEMENTS (16) [noun] Physical motion between points in space. | [noun] A system or mechanism for transmitting motion of a definite character, or for transforming motion, such as the wheelwork of a watch. | [noun] The impression of motion in an artwork, painting, novel etc. MOVIEDOMS (17) MOVIEGOER (15) [noun] Person who regularly frequents movie theaters. MOVIEOLAS (14) MOZZETTAS (29) MRIDANGAM (15) [noun] A percussion instrument used in southern Indian music, consisting of a two-sided drum whose body is usually made from a hollowed piece of jackfruit wood. MRIDANGAS (13) MUCHACHOS (21) [noun] An informal term of address, especially to a young man; similar to man, chap, dude, etc. MUCILAGES (14) MUCKLUCKS (23) MUCKRAKED (22) [verb] To search for and expose corruption or scandal, especially as a form of investigative journalism. MUCKRAKER (21) MUCKRAKES (21) [verb] To search for and expose corruption or scandal, especially as a form of investigative journalism. MUCKWORMS (22) MUCOLYTIC (18) MUCRONATE (13) [adjective] Terminating in a mucro (an abruptly tapering point or a sharp spine) such as at the end of a leaf. MUDCAPPED (19) MUDDINESS (13) MUDFISHES (18) [noun] Any of many fish that frequent muddy water or burrow in mud, including: MUDGUARDS (14) [noun] A cover over the wheels of a vehicle, or a flap behind that wheel, to prevent water and mud being projected. MUDSLIDES (13) [noun] A geological event in which viscous mud flows down an incline. | [noun] A mixed drink consisting of vodka, Kahlua and Bailey's. MUDSTONES (12) [noun] A fine-grained sedimentary rock whose original constituents were clays or muds. MUENSTERS (11) MUFFLERED (18) MUGGINESS (13) MUJAHEDIN (22) MULATTOES (11) [noun] A person of mixed black and white descent, especially a person with one black and one white parent. MULETEERS (11) [noun] A mule driver. MULLAHISM (16) MULLIGANS (12) [noun] Mulligan stew. | [noun] An unpenalized chance to re-take a stroke that went awry. | [noun] An opportunity (sometimes penalized) for a player to reshuffle their cards and draw a new initial hand at the beginning of a game. MULLIONED (12) MULTIATOM (13) MULTIBAND (14) MULTIBANK (17) MULTICELL (13) MULTICITY (16) MULTICOPY (18) MULTIDRUG (13) MULTIFOLD (15) [adjective] Many; very diverse; manifold. MULTIFORM (16) [noun] An organism, folktale, etc. that appears in more than one form. | [adjective] Having more than one shape or appearance. MULTIGERM (14) MULTIGRID (13) MULTIHUED (15) MULTIHULL (14) [noun] A boat with two or more hulls. MULTILANE (11) [adjective] (of a road or of vehicular traffic) Having more than one lane of traffic traveling in at least one direction. MULTILINE (11) MULTIMODE (14) [adjective] Having, or employing multiple modes. MULTIPAGE (14) MULTIPART (13) MULTIPATH (16) MULTIPEDS (14) MULTIPION (13) MULTIPLES (13) [noun] A whole number that can be divided by another number with no remainder. | [noun] Price-earnings ratio. | [noun] One of a set of the same thing; a duplicate. MULTIPLET (13) [noun] A spectral line that has multiple components. | [noun] A compound peak produced in several forms of spectroscopy. | [noun] Any of several groupings of subatomic particles that share most properties, but have different charges. MULTIPLEX (20) [noun] A building or a place where several activities occur in multiple units concurrently or different times. | [noun] (by extension) A large cinema complex comprising many (typically more than five, and often over ten) movie theatres or houses. | [noun] Throwing motion where more than one ball is thrown with one hand at the same time. MULTIPOLE (13) [noun] Any of a several forms of static or oscillating distributions of charge or magnetization MULTIROOM (13) MULTISITE (11) [adjective] Occupying, or occurring at, multiple physical sites. | [adjective] Of or relating to more than one web site. MULTISIZE (20) MULTISTEP (13) MULTITONE (11) MULTITUDE (12) [noun] A great amount or number, often of people; abundance, myriad, profusion. | [noun] The mass of ordinary people; the masses, the populace. MULTIUNIT (11) MULTIUSER (11) [adjective] Of a operating system, etc., having capabilities for serving many users simultaneously. MULTIWALL (14) MULTIYEAR (14) MUMMERIES (15) [noun] Mumming; disguising oneself to perform as a mummer, or to take part in some other festivities or performance. | [noun] A ridiculous or ostentatious ceremony, formerly especially of a religious nature; extravagant or hypocritical performance. MUMMICHOG (21) [noun] A hardy killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus, found in brackish and coastal waters of the United States and Canada. MUMMIFIED (19) [adjective] Preserved, for a dead body, by mummification. | [verb] To make into a mummy, by preserving a dead body. | [verb] To become a mummy. MUMMIFIES (18) [verb] To make into a mummy, by preserving a dead body. | [verb] To become a mummy. MUNCHKINS (20) [noun] A domestic cat breed with short legs. | [noun] The empty space in the center of a donut. | [noun] A small ball-shaped pastry, made in the same manner as a donut, roughly the size of the hole in a donut. MUNDANELY (15) MUNDANITY (15) MUNDUNGOS (13) MUNDUNGUS (13) MUNGOOSES (12) MUNICIPAL (15) [noun] A financial instrument issued by a municipality. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a municipality (a city or a corporation having the right of administering local government). | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the internal affairs of a nation. MUNIMENTS (13) [noun] A deed, or other official document kept as proof of ownership or rights or privileges; an archived document. | [noun] (in the plural) Things which a person or place is equipped with; effects, furnishings, accoutrements. | [noun] Something used as a defence. MUNITIONS (11) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Materials of war: armaments, weapons and ammunition. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural, NATO) Bombs, rockets, missiles (complete explosive devices, in contrast to e.g. guns). | [noun] A tower or fortification. MURAENIDS (12) MURALISTS (11) MURDEREES (12) MURDERERS (12) [noun] A person who commits murder. MURDERESS (12) MURDERING (13) [verb] To deliberately kill (a person or persons) without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To kick someone's ass or chew someone out (used to express one’s anger at somebody). MURDEROUS (12) [adjective] Of, characterized by, or pertaining to murder or murderers. | [adjective] Of a person: intending or likely to commit murder; bloodthirsty, homicidal. | [adjective] Of an object: used to commit murder; capable of causing death; deadly, fatal. MURKINESS (15) MURMURERS (13) MURMURING (14) [verb] To grumble; to complain in a low, muttering voice, or express discontent at or against someone or something. | [verb] To speak or make low, indistinguishable noise; to mumble, mutter. | [verb] To say (something) indistinctly, to mutter. MURMUROUS (13) MURRELETS (11) [noun] Any of several species of small seabirds, in the genera Brachyramphus and Synthliboramphus of the auk family, found in the North Pacific. MURTHERED (15) [verb] To deliberately kill (a person or persons) without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To kick someone's ass or chew someone out (used to express one’s anger at somebody). MUSCADELS (14) [noun] Muscatel (wine or grape) MUSCADETS (14) [noun] A white grape grown chiefly in the Loire valley of France, or a dry white wine made from this grape MUSCADINE (14) [noun] An American vine of the subgenus Vitis subg. Muscadinia, Vitis rotundifolia | [noun] A grape variety from this vine. | [noun] A wine produced from these grapes. MUSCARINE (13) [noun] An extremely poisonous alkaloid, obtained from fly agaric, that disrupts the action of acetylcholine neurotransmitter. MUSCATELS (13) [noun] A muscat grape or raisin, especially one from southern Spain. | [noun] A sweet wine made from these grapes. MUSCOVITE (16) [noun] A pale brown mineral of the mica group, being a basic potassium aluminosilicate with the chemical formula KAl2(Si3Al)O10(OH,F)2; used as an electrical insulator etc. MUSEOLOGY (15) [noun] The design, organization, and management of museums. MUSHINESS (14) MUSHROOMS (16) [noun] Any of the fleshy fruiting bodies of fungi typically produced above ground on soil or on their food sources (such as decaying wood). | [noun] A fungus producing such fruiting bodies. | [noun] Champignon or Agaricus bisporus, the mushroom species most commonly used in cooking. MUSICALES (13) [noun] A musical entertainment, usually private and typically involving classical music MUSICALLY (16) [adverb] In a musical manner. | [adverb] In terms of music. MUSICIANS (13) [noun] A composer, conductor, or performer of music; specifically, a person who sings and/or plays a musical instrument as a hobby, an occupation, or a profession. MUSKETEER (15) [noun] A foot soldier armed with a musket. | [noun] In 17th- and 18th-century France, a member of the royal household bodyguard. | [noun] A comrade or fellow. MUSKINESS (15) MUSKMELON (17) [noun] A type of melon, Cucumis melo subsp. melo, with sweet orange flesh and a rough skin resembling netting. MUSSINESS (11) MUSTACHED (17) MUSTACHES (16) [noun] A growth of facial hair between the nose and the upper lip. MUSTACHIO (16) [noun] A mustache, especially a large or lush one. | [verb] To adorn with a mustachio, or something that resembles a mustachio. MUSTERING (12) [verb] To show, exhibit. | [verb] To be gathered together for parade, inspection, exercise, or the like (especially of a military force); to come together as parts of a force or body. | [verb] To collect, call or assemble together, such as troops or a group for inspection, orders, display etc. MUSTINESS (11) MUTAGENIC (14) MUTATIONS (11) [noun] Any alteration or change. | [noun] Any heritable change of the base-pair sequence of genetic material. | [noun] A mutant. MUTCHKINS (20) [noun] A unit of fluid capacity approximately equal to three-quarters of an imperial pint (0.43 litres) MUTILATED (12) [verb] To physically harm as to impair use, notably by cutting off or otherwise disabling a vital part, such as a limb. | [verb] To destroy beyond recognition. | [verb] To render imperfect or defective. MUTILATES (11) [verb] To physically harm as to impair use, notably by cutting off or otherwise disabling a vital part, such as a limb. | [verb] To destroy beyond recognition. | [verb] To render imperfect or defective. MUTILATOR (11) MUTINEERS (11) [noun] Someone who participates in mutiny. MUTINYING (15) [verb] To commit mutiny. | [noun] An act of mutiny or rebellion. MUTTERERS (11) MUTTERING (12) [verb] To utter words, especially complaints or angry expressions, indistinctly or with a low voice and lips partly closed; to say under one's breath. | [verb] To speak softly and incoherently, or with imperfect articulations. | [verb] To make a sound with a low, rumbling noise. MUTUALISM (13) [noun] Any interaction between two species that benefits both; typically involves the exchange of substances or services. | [noun] An economic theory and anarchist school of thought that advocates a society where each person might possess a means of production, either individually or collectively, with trade representing equivalent amounts of labor in the free market. MUTUALIST (11) MUTUALITY (14) [noun] The property of being mutual. MUTUALIZE (20) [verb] To make, or to become mutual | [verb] To organize a business (especially a financial business) so that it is owned by its customers (or its employees) MUZZINESS (29) MYCETOMAS (18) MYCOFLORA (19) MYCOPHAGY (25) MYCOPHILE (21) MYCOTOXIN (23) [noun] Any substance, produced by a mold or fungus, that is injurious to vertebrates upon ingestion, inhalation or skin contact MYDRIASES (15) MYDRIASIS (15) [noun] The condition of having abnormally large and dilated pupils due to disease or drugs, particularly stimulants such as (meth)amphetamines, cocaine, etc. MYDRIATIC (17) MYELOCYTE (19) MYELOMATA (16) [noun] A malignant tumour arising from cells of the bone marrow, specifically plasma cells. MYLONITES (14) [noun] Any rock that has undergone modifications due to dynamic recrystallization following plastic flow; a schist created by crushed or ground rock. MYOBLASTS (16) MYOCARDIA (17) MYOCLONIC (18) MYOCLONUS (16) [noun] The brief, involuntary twitching of a muscle or group of muscles. MYOFIBRIL (19) [noun] Any of the cylindrical organelles, found within muscle cells, that are the contractile unit of muscles. MYOGLOBIN (17) [noun] A small globular protein, containing a heme group, that carries oxygen to muscles. MYOGRAPHS (20) MYOLOGIES (15) MYOMATOUS (16) MYONEURAL (14) MYOPATHIC (21) MYOSCOPES (18) MYOTONIAS (14) MYRIAPODS (17) [noun] Any arthropod (such as centipedes and millipedes) of the subphylum Myriapoda MYRIOPODS (17) MYRMIDONS (17) [noun] A soldier or a subordinate civil officer who executes orders of a superior without protest or pity (sometimes applied to bailiffs, constables, etc). MYROBALAN (16) [noun] A plum-like fruit from various trees of the genus Terminalia, formerly used in medicine and now in the dyeing industry; also, the tree itself. MYSTAGOGS (16) MYSTAGOGY (19) MYSTERIES (14) [noun] A number of secret societies or cults | [noun] Something secret or unexplainable; an unknown. | [noun] Someone or something with an obscure or puzzling nature. MYSTICISM (18) [noun] The beliefs, ideas, or thoughts of mystics. | [noun] A doctrine of direct communication or spiritual intuition of divine truth. | [noun] A transcendental union of soul or mind with the divine reality or divinity. MYSTIFIED (18) [adjective] Puzzled or confused | [adjective] State of enchantment as concerns person or event | [verb] To thoroughly confuse, befuddle, or bewilder. MYSTIFIER (17) MYSTIFIES (17) [verb] To thoroughly confuse, befuddle, or bewilder. MYSTIQUES (23) MYTHICIZE (28) [verb] To make into a myth. | [verb] To interpret in terms of mythology. MYTHMAKER (23) MYTHOLOGY (21) [noun] The collection of myths of a people, concerning the origin of the people, history, deities, ancestors and heroes. | [noun] A similar body of myths concerning an event, person or institution. | [noun] Pervasive elements of a fictional universe that resemble a mythological universe. MYXEDEMAS (24) MYXOCYTES (26) MYXOVIRAL (24) MYXOVIRUS (24) [noun] Any of a group of RNA viruses of the Orthomyxoviridae and Paramyxoviridae families.

10-Letter Words (1229)

MACADAMIAS (17) [noun] An evergreen tree, of the genus Macadamia, native to Australia and cultivated in Hawaii. | [noun] The fruit of this tree; the macadamia nut. MACADAMIZE (26) MACARONICS (16) [noun] A work of macaronic character. | [noun] A word consisting of a mix of words of two or more languages, one of which is Latin, or a non-Latin stem with a Latin ending. MACARONIES (14) [noun] A type of pasta in the form of short tubes; sometimes loosely, pasta in general. | [noun] A fop, a dandy; especially a young man in the 18th century who had travelled in Europe and who dressed and often spoke in an ostentatiously affected Continental manner. MACEDOINES (15) [noun] A mixture of diced vegetables or fruit served as a salad. | [noun] A medley or mixture. MACERATING (15) [verb] To soften (something) or separate it into pieces by soaking it in a heated or unheated liquid. | [verb] To make lean; to cause to waste away. | [verb] To subdue the appetite by poor or scanty diet; to mortify. MACERATION (14) MACERATORS (14) MACHINABLE (19) [adjective] Able to be made or modified by machine. MACHINATED (18) [verb] To devise a plot or secret plan; to conspire. MACHINATES (17) [verb] To devise a plot or secret plan; to conspire. MACHINATOR (17) MACHINISTS (17) [noun] A constructor of machines and engines; one versed in the principles of machines. | [noun] One skilled in the use of machine tools for fashioning metal parts or tools out of metal. | [noun] A person who operates machinery. MACKINTOSH (21) [noun] A waterproof long coat made of rubberized cloth. | [noun] By extension, any waterproof coat or raincoat. | [noun] Waterproof rubberized cloth. MACROCOSMS (18) [noun] A complex structure, such as a society, considered as a single entity that contains numerous similar, smaller-scale structures. | [noun] (used absolutely) The universe. MACROCYTES (19) MACROCYTIC (21) MACROMERES (16) MACROPHAGE (20) [noun] A white blood cell that phagocytizes necrotic cell debris and foreign material, including viruses, bacteria, and tattoo ink. It presents foreign antigens on MHC II to lymphocytes. Part of the innate immune system. MACROPHYTE (22) [noun] Any normal macroscopic plant, especially an aquatic one. MACROSCALE (16) [noun] A relatively large scale MACULATING (15) [verb] To spot; to stain; to blur. MACULATION (14) MADELEINES (13) [noun] A French type of small gateau or sponge cake, often shaped like an elongated scallop shell. | [noun] Something which brings back a memory; a source of nostalgia or evocative memories. MADREPORES (15) [noun] A coral of the genus Madrepora or of the larger group Madreporaria. | [noun] Any stony coral. MADREPORIC (17) MADRILENES (13) MAELSTROMS (14) [noun] A large and violent whirlpool. | [noun] Any violent or turbulent situation. MAFFICKING (25) MAGAZINIST (22) MAGDALENES (14) MAGISTRACY (18) [noun] The office or dignity of a magistrate. | [noun] The collective body of magistrates. MAGISTRATE (13) [noun] A judicial officer with limited authority to administer and enforce the law. A magistrate's court may have jurisdiction in civil or criminal cases, or both. | [noun] A high official of the state or a municipality in ancient Greece or Rome. | [noun] (by extension) A comparable official in medieval or modern institutions. MAGNESITES (13) MAGNESIUMS (15) MAGNETISED (14) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETISES (13) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETISMS (15) MAGNETITES (13) MAGNETIZED (23) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETIZER (22) MAGNETIZES (22) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETRONS (13) [noun] A device in which electrons are made to resonate in a specially shaped chamber and thus produce microwave radiation; used in radar, and in microwave ovens MAGNIFICAL (18) MAGNIFICAT (18) MAGNIFICOS (18) MAGNIFIERS (16) MAGNIFYING (20) [verb] To praise, glorify (someone or something, especially God). | [verb] To make (something) larger or more important. | [verb] To make (someone or something) appear greater or more important than it is; to intensify, exaggerate. MAGNITUDES (14) [noun] The absolute or relative size, extent or importance of something. | [noun] An order of magnitude. | [noun] A number, assigned to something, such that it may be compared to others numerically MAHARAJAHS (25) [noun] A Hindu monarch ranking above a raja, an emperor. MAHARANEES (15) [noun] The wife of a maharajah; approximately, a queen consort. MAHARISHIS (18) [noun] A teacher of Hindu mysticism MAHLSTICKS (21) [noun] A short stick with a pad on one end, used by a painter to steady their hand, and to prevent it from accidentally touching the painting. MAHOGANIES (16) [noun] Any of various tropical American evergreen trees, of the genus Swietenia, having a valuable hard red-brown wood. | [noun] The wood of these trees, mostly used to make furniture. | [noun] A reddish-brown color, like that of mahogany wood. MAIDENHAIR (16) [noun] A woman's pubic hair | [noun] Either of two species of genus Adiantum of fern with delicate, hair-like stalks, especially Adiantum capillus-veneris | [noun] Designating various types of moss or flowering plants. MAIDENHEAD (17) [noun] Virginity. | [noun] The hymen. MAIDENHOOD (17) [noun] The condition of being a maiden; the time when one is a maiden or young girl. | [noun] A woman's virginity or maidenhead. | [noun] Freshness; newness. MAINFRAMES (17) [noun] A large, powerful computer able to manage very many simultaneous tasks and communicate with very many connected terminals; used by large, complex organizations (such as banks and supermarkets) where continuously sustained operation is vital MAINLANDER (13) MAINLINING (13) [verb] To inject (a drug) directly into a vein. | [verb] To integrate (code, etc.) into the main repository for a software project, rather than separate forks. MAINSHEETS (15) [noun] The rope connected to and controlling the mainsail. MAINSPRING (15) [noun] The principal spring of a clockwork mechanism, which drives it by uncoiling. | [noun] The most important reason for something (Cf. spring "origin of something" (literary) (often in the plural) the springs of her ambition). MAINSTREAM (14) [noun] The principal current in a flow, such as a river or flow of air | [noun] (usually with the) That which is common; the norm. | [verb] To popularize, to normalize, to render mainstream. MAINTAINED (13) [verb] To support (someone), to back up or assist (someone) in an action. | [verb] To keep up; to preserve; to uphold (a state, condition etc.). | [verb] To declare or affirm (a clause) to be true; to assert. MAINTAINER (12) [noun] Someone who keeps or upholds something; a steward. | [noun] A person who does maintenance work. | [noun] A device used to keep teeth in a given position. MAISONETTE (12) [noun] A small house | [noun] An apartment often on two floors MAJORDOMOS (22) [noun] The head servant or official in a royal Spanish or Italian household; later, any head servant in a wealthy household in a foreign country; a leading servant or butler. | [noun] (Southwest) A manager of a hacienda, ranch or estate. | [noun] Any overseer, organizer, person in command. MAJORETTES (19) [noun] A dancer who twirls and performs stunts with a lightweight baton, whether as a solo, in a group of majorettes, or in the company of a marching band. MAJORITIES (19) [noun] More than half (50%) of some group. | [noun] The difference between the winning vote and the rest of the votes. | [noun] Legal adulthood. MAJUSCULAR (21) MAJUSCULES (21) [noun] A capital letter, especially one used in ancient manuscripts. MAKESHIFTS (22) [noun] A temporary (usually insubstantial) substitution. | [noun] A rogue; a shifty person. MAKEWEIGHT (23) [noun] Something of inferior quality which is included in a shipment to make up the weight. | [noun] Something included to add to the apparent weight or force of an argument. MALACHITES (17) MALACOLOGY (18) [noun] The study of molluscs. MALADAPTED (16) [adjective] Of any evolving or learning entity, not well adapted for its environment. MALAGUENAS (13) [noun] A Spanish dance, typical of Malaga, similar to a fandango MALAPERTLY (17) MALAPROPOS (16) [adjective] Out of place; inappropriate | [adverb] Out of place; inappropriately MALATHIONS (15) MALCONTENT (14) [noun] A person who is not satisfied with current conditions; a discontented person, a rebel. | [noun] A state of discontentment or dissatisfaction; something that causes discontent. | [verb] To cause discontent or dissatisfaction. MALEDICTED (16) MALEFACTOR (17) [noun] A criminal or felon. | [noun] An evildoer. MALEFICENT (17) [adjective] Harmful or evil in intent or effect. MALENESSES (12) MALEVOLENT (15) [adjective] Having or displaying ill will; wishing harm on others | [adjective] Having an evil or harmful influence MALIGNANCE (15) [noun] Malignancy MALIGNANCY (18) [noun] The state of being malignant or diseased. | [noun] A malignant cancer; specifically, any neoplasm that is invasive or otherwise not benign. | [noun] That which is malign; evil, depravity, malevolence. MALINGERED (14) [verb] To feign illness, injury, or incapacitation in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. | [verb] To self-inflict real injury or infection (to inflict self-harm) in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. MALINGERER (13) [noun] A person who malingers. MALODOROUS (13) [adjective] Having a bad odor. | [adjective] Highly improper. MALOLACTIC (16) [adjective] Describing a type of fermentation in which malic acid is converted into lactic acid MALTREATED (13) [verb] To treat badly, to abuse. MALTREATER (12) MAMMALIANS (16) MAMMILLARY (19) [noun] (speleology) A carbonate coating formed through the precipitation of calcium carbonate onto existing rock below the water surface in cave pools. | [noun] A mammillary body, one of a pair of small round bodies, located on the undersurface of the brain, that form part of the limbic system. | [adjective] Resembling a breast or nipple in shape or form. MAMMITIDES (17) MAMMOCKING (23) MAMMOGRAMS (19) [noun] An X-ray picture of the breasts (mammaries), used to screen for breast cancer. MAMMONISMS (18) MAMMONISTS (16) MANAGEABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being managed or controlled. | [adjective] Capable of being done or fulfilled; achievable. MANAGEABLY (18) MANAGEMENT (15) [noun] Administration; the use of limited resources combined with forecasting, planning, leadership and execution skills to achieve predetermined specific goals. | [noun] The executives of an organisation, especially senior executives. | [noun] Judicious use of means to accomplish an end. MANAGERESS (13) [noun] A female manager. MANAGERIAL (13) [adjective] Of or relating to a manager or management; involving management-like duties. MANCHINEEL (17) [noun] A tropical American tree, Hippomane mancinella, having apple-like, poisonous fruit, and a sap that causes blisters on contact with the skin MANDAMUSED (16) MANDAMUSES (15) [noun] A common law prerogative writ that compels a court or government officer to perform mandatory or purely ministerial duties correctly. MANDARINIC (15) MANDIBULAR (15) MANDOLINES (13) MANDRAGORA (14) [noun] Mandrake (genus Mandragora); often specifically mandrake root, traditionally used as a narcotic. | [noun] A kind of tiny dragon immune to fire. MANEUVERED (16) [verb] To move (something, or oneself) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position. | [verb] To guide, steer, manage purposefully | [verb] To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme MANEUVERER (15) MANFULNESS (15) MANGANATES (13) [noun] Any compound containing the ion MnO42-. MANGANESES (13) MANGANITES (13) [noun] A dark gray mineral of manganese, MnO(OH), found throughout North America and Europe MANGOSTEEN (13) [noun] A tropical fruit of the tree genus Garcinia. | [noun] The tree on which the fruit grows. MANHANDLED (17) [verb] To move something heavy by force of men, without aid of levers, pulleys, machine, or tackles. | [verb] To assault or beat up a person. | [verb] To mishandle; to handle roughly; to mangle. MANHANDLES (16) [verb] To move something heavy by force of men, without aid of levers, pulleys, machine, or tackles. | [verb] To assault or beat up a person. | [verb] To mishandle; to handle roughly; to mangle. MANHATTANS (15) [noun] A cocktail made from whiskey, sweet vermouth and bitters. | [noun] A bar chart representing the number of runs scored each over (supposed to resemble a skyline of skyscrapers). MANIACALLY (17) MANICURING (15) [verb] To trim the fingernails MANICURIST (14) [noun] A person who performs manicures. MANIFESTED (16) [verb] To show plainly; to make to appear distinctly, usually to the mind; to put beyond question or doubt; to display; to exhibit. | [verb] To exhibit the manifests or prepared invoices of; to declare at the customhouse. MANIFESTER (15) MANIFESTLY (18) [adverb] In a manifest manner; obviously. MANIFESTOS (15) [noun] A public declaration of principles, policies, or intentions, especially that of a political party. | [verb] To issue a manifesto MANIFOLDED (17) MANIFOLDLY (19) MANIPULATE (14) [verb] To move, arrange or operate something using the hands | [verb] To influence, manage, direct, control or tamper with something | [verb] To handle and move a body part, either as an examination or for a therapeutic purpose MANNEQUINS (21) [noun] A dummy, or life-size model of the human body, used for the fitting or displaying of clothes | [noun] A jointed model of the human body used by artists, especially to demonstrate the arrangement of drapery | [noun] An anatomical model of the human body for use in teaching of e.g. CPR MANNERISMS (14) [noun] A noticeable personal habit, a verbal or other (often, but not necessarily unconscious) habitual behavior peculiar to an individual. | [noun] Exaggerated or affected style in art, speech, or other behavior. | [noun] In literature, an ostentatious and unnatural style of the second half of the sixteenth century. In the contemporary criticism, described as a negation of the classicist equilibrium, pre-Baroque, and deforming expressiveness. MANNERISTS (12) MANNERLESS (12) MANOEUVRED (16) [verb] To move (something, or oneself) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position. | [verb] To guide, steer, manage purposefully | [verb] To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme MANOEUVRES (15) [noun] The planned movement of troops, vehicles etc.; a strategic repositioning; (later also) a large training field-exercise of fighting units. | [noun] Any strategic or cunning action; a stratagem. | [noun] A movement of the body, or with an implement, instrument etc., especially one performed with skill or dexterity. MANOMETERS (14) [noun] An instrument to measure pressure in a fluid, especially a double-legged liquid column gauge used to measure the difference in the pressures of two fluids. MANOMETRIC (16) MANSERVANT (15) [noun] A male servant. MANSLAYERS (15) MANSUETUDE (13) [noun] Gentleness, tameness. MANTICORES (14) [noun] A beast with the body of a lion (usually red), the tail of a scorpion, and the head/face of a man with a mouth filled with multiple rows of sharp teeth (like a shark), said to be able to shoot spikes from its tail or mane to paralyse prey. It may be horned, winged, or both; its voice is described as a mixture of pipes and trumpets. MANUBRIUMS (16) [noun] The broad, upper part of the sternum. | [noun] The tube extending from the central underside of a jellyfish and ending in a mouth. | [noun] A knob or handle that controls the stops of an organ. MANUMITTED (15) [verb] To release from slavery, to free. MANUSCRIPT (16) [noun] A book, composition or any other document, written by hand (or manually typewritten), not mechanically reproduced. | [noun] A single, original copy of a book, article, composition etc, written by hand or even printed, submitted as original for (copy-editing and) reproductive publication. | [adjective] Handwritten, or by extension manually typewritten, as opposed to being mechanically reproduced. MANZANITAS (21) [noun] Any evergreen shrub or tree of the genus Arctostaphylos, especially Arctostaphylos manzanita, having smooth red or orange bark and stiff, twisting branches. MAPMAKINGS (21) MAQUILLAGE (22) [noun] Makeup, cosmetics, or its application, especially in theatrical or excessive use. MARASCHINO (17) [noun] A sweet liqueur made from marasca cherries MARASMUSES (14) MARATHONER (15) MARBLEISED (15) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEISES (14) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEIZED (24) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEIZES (23) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARCASITES (14) [noun] The orthorhombic form of iron disulfide, FeS2, occurring as yellow crystals. | [noun] (jewellery) Pyrite. | [noun] Any of various metal sulfides, usually iron sulfide minerals. MARCELLING (15) [verb] To wave (hair) by the marcel method. | [verb] To wave. MARCHPANES (19) MARGARINES (13) [noun] A spread, manufactured from a blend of vegetable oils (some of which are hydrogenated), emulsifiers etc, mostly used as a substitute for butter. | [noun] The solid ingredient of human fat, olive oil, etc. MARGARITAS (13) [noun] A cocktail made with tequila, an orange-flavoured liqueur, and lemon or lime juice, often served with salt encrusted on the rim of the glass. MARGARITES (13) MARGENTING (14) MARGINALIA (13) [noun] Notes in the margin of a document. MARGINALLY (16) [adverb] In a marginal manner, or to a marginal extent; barely sufficiently; slightly. | [adverb] In the margin of a book. MARGINATED (14) [adjective] Having a distinct margin MARGINATES (13) [verb] To provide with margins. MARGRAVATE (16) [noun] The status or rank of margrave. | [noun] A territory governed by a margrave or margravine. MARGRAVIAL (16) MARGRAVINE (16) [noun] The wife of a margrave. | [noun] A woman with the rank and responsibilities of a margrave. MARGUERITE (13) [noun] An oxeye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare). | [noun] A shrub with daisy-like flowers, Argyranthemum frutescens | [noun] The China aster. MARIHUANAS (15) MARIJUANAS (19) MARIMBISTS (16) MARINADING (14) [verb] To marinate. MARINATING (13) [verb] To allow a sauce or flavoring mixture to absorb into something; to steep or soak something in a marinade to flavor or prepare it for cooking. MARINATION (12) MARIONETTE (12) [noun] A puppet, usually made of wood, which is animated by the pulling of strings. | [noun] The buffel duck. | [verb] To control (somebody) as if they were a puppet; to manipulate. MARKEDNESS (17) MARKETABLE (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to marketability; capable of being marketed. | [adjective] Saleable (of goods) or employable (of people) MARKETEERS (16) [noun] A specialist in marketing. MARKETINGS (17) MARKSWOMAN (21) [noun] A woman skilled at hitting targets, as with a firearm, bow, or thrown object. MARKSWOMEN (21) [noun] A woman skilled at hitting targets, as with a firearm, bow, or thrown object. MARLSTONES (12) MARMALADES (15) MARQUESSES (21) [noun] A title of nobility for a man ranking beneath a duke and above an earl. MARQUISATE (21) [noun] The territory held by a marquis, margrave or marchioness. | [noun] The state or rank of a marquis. MARROWBONE (17) [noun] A bone containing edible marrow. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The shins or knees, chiefly in references to kneeling. MARROWFATS (18) MARSHALING (16) [verb] To arrange (troops, etc.) in line for inspection or a parade. | [verb] (by extension) To arrange (facts, etc.) in some methodical order. | [verb] To ceremoniously guide, conduct or usher. MARSHALLED (16) [verb] To arrange (troops, etc.) in line for inspection or a parade. | [verb] (by extension) To arrange (facts, etc.) in some methodical order. | [verb] To ceremoniously guide, conduct or usher. MARSHINESS (15) MARSHLANDS (16) [noun] Marshy land; bog or fen MARSUPIALS (14) [noun] A mammal of which the female has a pouch in which it rears its young, which are born immature, through early infancy, such as the kangaroo or koala, or else pouchless members of the Marsupialia like the shrew opossum. MARTENSITE (12) [noun] A solid solution of carbon in iron; the chief constituent of steel | [noun] Any crystal structure formed by a martensitic transition MARTINGALE (13) [noun] A piece of harness used on a horse to keep it from raising its head above a desired point. | [noun] A spar, or piece of rigging that strengthens the bowsprit. | [noun] A stochastic process for which the conditional expectation of future values given the sequence of all prior values is equal to the current value. MARTYRDOMS (18) [noun] The condition of a martyr; the death of a martyr; the suffering of death on account of adherence to the Christian faith, or to any cause. | [noun] Extreme suffering, affliction; torment; torture, especially without reason. MARTYRIZED (25) [verb] To make a martyr of (someone). MARTYRIZES (24) [verb] To make a martyr of (someone). MARVELLING (16) [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. | [verb] To marvel at. | [verb] (used impersonally) To cause to marvel or be surprised. MARVELLOUS (15) [adjective] Exciting wonder or surprise; astonishing; wonderful. MASCARAING (15) MASCARPONE (16) [noun] A soft, creamy Italian cheese that is not pressed or aged; often used in desserts. MASCULINES (14) [noun] (grammar) The masculine gender. | [noun] (grammar) A word of the masculine gender. | [noun] That which is masculine. MASOCHISMS (19) MASOCHISTS (17) [noun] Someone who enjoys pain or humiliation, or who derives pleasure from harming oneself or being harmed by others. MASQUERADE (22) [noun] An assembly or party of people wearing (usually elaborate or fanciful) masks and costumes, and amusing themselves with dancing, conversation, or other diversions. | [noun] The act of wearing a mask or dressing up in a costume for, or as if for, a masquerade ball. | [noun] An act of living under false pretenses; a concealment of something by a false or unreal show; a disguise, a pretence; also, a pretentious display. MASSACRERS (14) MASSACRING (15) [verb] To kill in considerable numbers where little or no resistance can be made, with indiscriminate violence, without necessity, and contrary to civilized norms. (Often limited to the killing of human beings.) | [verb] To win so decisively it is in the manner of so slaughtering one's opponent. | [verb] To give a performance so poorly it is in the manner of so slaughtering the musical piece, play etc being performed. MASSASAUGA (13) [noun] The rattlesnake Sistrurus catenatus (formerly Crotalinus catenatus) in the family Viperidae, found in three subspecies. MASSETERIC (14) MASTECTOMY (19) [noun] The surgical procedure to remove of all or part of a breast; mammectomy. MASTERMIND (15) [noun] A person with an extraordinary intellect or skill that is markedly superior to his or her peers. | [noun] A person responsible for the highest level of planning and execution of a major operation. | [verb] To act in the role of mastermind. MASTERSHIP (17) MASTERWORK (19) [noun] A piece done to prove possession of skill sufficient to be ranked a master. | [noun] A piece of quality, indicative of having been made by a master; a masterpiece. | [noun] An act of primary importance. MASTHEADED (17) [verb] To send to the masthead as a punishment. MASTICATED (15) [verb] To chew (food). | [verb] To grind or knead something into a pulp. MASTICATES (14) [verb] To chew (food). | [verb] To grind or knead something into a pulp. MASTICATOR (14) [noun] Someone who masticates. | [noun] A machine for cutting meat into fine pieces for toothless people. | [noun] A machine for cutting leather, India rubber, or similar tough substances, into fine pieces, in some processes of manufacture. MASTITIDES (13) MASTODONIC (15) MASTODONTS (13) MASTURBATE (14) [verb] To stimulate oneself sexually, especially by use of one’s hand or a sex toy made for this purpose, often to the point of ejaculation. | [verb] To stimulate someone else sexually without penetration of the penis. | [verb] To stimulate or please oneself by means of anything, not necessarily sexual, that does not get them anywhere; something that wastes their time; something that does not help others or achieve any important goal. MATCHBOARD (20) [noun] A type of wooden board that connects with others using a tongue and groove system | [noun] (sand casting) A thin piece of material (such as wood, plaster, or metal) that forms and aligns the matched parting surfaces for the two parts (the cope and the drag) of a molding box or flask, to which board patterns are attached in some casting methods. MATCHBOOKS (23) [noun] A small folded sheet of cardboard containing rows of cardboard matches, generally with a striker on the outside. MATCHBOXES (26) [noun] A small cardboard box in which matches are kept. | [noun] Any small die-cast toy car, usually collectible. MATCHLOCKS (23) [noun] Early type of firearm, using a smoldering piece of cord to fire the powder in the firing pan. | [noun] The gunlock used in such a weapon, having a slow smouldering match, see: slow match. MATCHMAKER (23) [noun] Someone who finds suitable dates or marriage partners for other people. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who arranges professional boxing matches. | [noun] Someone who makes matchsticks. MATCHSTICK (23) [noun] A small, slender piece of wood or cardboard serving as a component of a match. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Any similarly small and thin piece. MATCHWOODS (21) MATERIALLY (15) [adverb] In a material manner; with regard to physical things or characteristics. | [adverb] To a significant degree. MATERNALLY (15) MATHEMATIC (19) [adjective] Mathematical MATINESSES (12) MATRIARCHS (17) [noun] A female leader of a family, a tribe or an ethnic or religious group. | [noun] A female founder of a political or religious movement, an organization or an enterprise. MATRIARCHY (20) [noun] A social system in which the mother is head of household, having authority over men and children. | [noun] A system of government by females (particularly as a kind of polity). | [noun] The dominance of women in social or cultural systems. MATRICIDAL (15) MATRICIDES (15) [noun] The killing of one's mother. | [noun] A person who kills his or her mother. MATRONYMIC (19) [noun] A surname or byname acquired from the given name of one's mother. | [noun] By extension, a surname or byname acquired from the given name from a female ancestor. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or derived from the given name of one's mother. MATTRASSES (12) MATTRESSES (12) [noun] A pad on which a person can recline and sleep, usually having an inner section of coiled springs covered with foam or other cushioning material then enclosed with cloth fabric. | [noun] A form of retaining wall used to support foundations or an embankment MATURATING (13) [verb] To bring to ripeness or maturity; to ripen. | [verb] To promote the perfect suppuration of (an abscess). | [verb] To undergo perfect suppuration. MATURATION (12) [noun] The process of becoming mature. | [noun] The process of differentiation that produces the adult form of an organism. | [noun] The process of maturating, or suppurating fully. MATURITIES (12) [noun] The state of being mature, ready or ripe. | [noun] When bodily growth has completed and/or reproduction can begin. | [noun] The state of a debt obligation at the end of the term of maturation thereof, once all interest and any applicable fees have accrued to the principal. MAULSTICKS (18) [noun] A short stick with a pad on one end, used by a painter to steady their hand, and to prevent it from accidentally touching the painting. MAUMETRIES (14) MAUNDERERS (13) MAUNDERING (14) [verb] To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle. | [verb] To wander or walk aimlessly. | [verb] To beg; to whine like a beggar. MAUSOLEUMS (14) [noun] A large stately tomb or a building housing such a tomb or several tombs. | [noun] (by extension) A gloomy, usually large room or building. MAVOURNEEN (15) MAXILLIPED (22) [noun] One of the appendages on the heads of centipedes and some crustaceans behind the maxillae, used for feeding. The maxillipeds, known as forcipules, give centipedes their scientific name, Chilopoda (lip-foot). MAXIMALIST (21) [noun] A person with maximalist beliefs or tendencies; someone who prefers redundancy or excess | [adjective] Preferring redundancy; tending to do or provide more rather than less MAXIMISING (22) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMIZERS (30) MAXIMIZING (31) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAYFLOWERS (21) [noun] Any of several plants that flower in May - especially the hawthorn (in Britain) and the trailing arbutus (in the US). MAYONNAISE (15) [noun] A dressing made from vegetable oil, raw egg yolks and seasoning, used on salads, with french fries, in sandwiches etc. | [noun] Any cold dish with that dressing as an ingredient. | [noun] Any cream, for example for moisturizing the face or conditioning the hair, for which the base is egg yolks and oil. MAYORESSES (15) [noun] A female mayor. | [noun] The wife of a (male) mayor. | [noun] A daughter or female friend of a male mayor chosen by him to hold the title mayoress. MAZINESSES (21) MEADOWLAND (17) [noun] A tract of land cultivated as a meadow. MEADOWLARK (20) [noun] The meadow pipit (Anthus pratensis). | [noun] Any of several songbirds of the genera Sturnella and Leistes, native to the Americas. MEAGERNESS (13) [noun] The state of being meager. MEANDERING (14) [verb] To wind or turn in a course or passage; to be intricate. | [verb] To wind, turn, or twist; to make flexuous. | [noun] An instance or period of roaming. MEANINGFUL (16) [adjective] Having meaning, significant. MEANNESSES (12) [noun] The condition, or quality, of being mean (any of its definitions) | [noun] A mean act. MEANWHILES (18) MEASURABLE (14) [noun] That which can be measured; a metric. | [adjective] Able to be measured. | [adjective] Of significant importance. MEASURABLY (17) MEASUREDLY (16) MEATLOAVES (15) MECHANICAL (19) [noun] Manually created layout of artwork that is camera ready for photographic reproduction. | [noun] One who does manual labor, especially one who is similar to Shakespeare's rude mechanicals | [noun] A robot or mechanical creature. MECHANISMS (19) [noun] (within a machine or machinery) Any mechanical means for the conversion or control of motion, or the transmission or control of power. | [noun] Any combination of cams, gears, links, belts, chains and logical mechanical elements. | [noun] A group of entities, such as objects, that interact together. MECHANISTS (17) [noun] A person who takes a mechanical view | [noun] A maker of machines; one skilled in mechanics. MECHANIZED (27) [verb] To equip something with machinery. | [verb] To equip a military unit with tanks and other armed vehicles. | [verb] To make something routine, automatic or monotonous. MECHANIZER (26) MECHANIZES (26) [verb] To equip something with machinery. | [verb] To equip a military unit with tanks and other armed vehicles. | [verb] To make something routine, automatic or monotonous. MECLIZINES (23) MEDAILLONS (13) MEDALLIONS (13) [noun] A large medal, usually decorative. | [noun] A cut of meat resembling a medallion. | [noun] A usually round or oval frame (often made of stucco) containing a decoration. MEDALLISTS (13) [noun] One who has received a medal; one who has medalled. | [noun] An engraver, designer or collector of medals. MEDDLESOME (16) [adjective] Characterised or marked by meddling; inclined or having a tendency to meddle or interfere in other people's business. MEDEVACKED (23) [verb] To transport (patients) by medevac. MEDIAEVALS (16) MEDIAGENIC (16) [adjective] Thought of by the news media as an attractive subject MEDIASTINA (13) [noun] The region in mammals between the pleural sacs, containing the heart and all of the thoracic viscera except the lungs. MEDIATIONS (13) [noun] Negotiation to resolve differences conducted by some impartial party. | [noun] The act of intervening for the purpose of bringing about a settlement. MEDICAMENT (17) [noun] A medicine, medication or drug. MEDICATING (16) [verb] To prescribe or administer medication to. MEDICATION (15) [noun] A medicine, or all the medicines regularly taken by a patient. | [noun] The administration of medicine. MEDICINALS (15) [noun] Any plant that can be used for medicinal purposes. MEDICINING (16) MEDIEVALLY (19) MEDIOCRITY (18) [noun] The quality of being intermediate between two extremes; a mean. | [noun] A middle course of action; moderation, balance. | [noun] The condition of being mediocre; having only an average degree of quality, skills etc.; no better than standard. MEDITATING (14) [verb] To contemplate; to keep the mind fixed upon something; to study. | [verb] To sit or lie down and come to a deep rest while still remaining conscious. | [verb] To consider; to reflect on. MEDITATION (13) [noun] A devotional exercise of, or leading to contemplation. | [noun] A contemplative discourse, often on a religious or philosophical subject. | [noun] A musical theme treated in a meditative manner. MEDITATIVE (16) [adjective] Of or pertaining to meditation. | [adjective] Thoughtful; pensive. MEDITATORS (13) MEDIUMSHIP (20) MEDULLATED (14) MEEKNESSES (16) MEERSCHAUM (19) [noun] A soft white mineral, chiefly used for smoking-pipes and cigar holders. | [noun] A smoking-pipe made from meerschaum. MEETNESSES (12) MEGACITIES (15) [noun] A very large city; a megalopolis. MEGACYCLES (20) MEGADEATHS (17) [noun] One million deaths, especially as a unit of measure in reference to nuclear warfare. MEGAFAUNAE (16) MEGAFAUNAL (16) MEGAFAUNAS (16) MEGAGAMETE (16) [noun] A macrogamete. MEGALITHIC (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to megaliths, to the people who made them, or to the period when they were made. MEGALOPSES (15) MEGAPARSEC (17) MEGAPHONED (19) [verb] To use a megaphone; to speak through a megaphone. MEGAPHONES (18) [noun] A portable, usually hand-held, funnel-shaped device that is used to amplify a person’s natural voice toward a targeted direction. | [noun] Mouthpiece or promoter; one who speaks for or publicizes on behalf of another. | [verb] To use a megaphone; to speak through a megaphone. MEGAPHONIC (20) MEGASCOPIC (19) MEGASPORES (15) [noun] The larger spore of a heterosporous plant, typically producing a female gametophyte MEGASPORIC (17) MEITNERIUM (14) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Mt) with atomic number 109. MELANCHOLY (20) [noun] Black bile, formerly thought to be one of the four "cardinal humours" of animal bodies. | [noun] Great sadness or depression, especially of a thoughtful or introspective nature. | [adjective] Affected with great sadness or depression. MELANISTIC (14) MELANIZING (22) MELANOCYTE (17) [noun] A cell in the skin that produces the pigment melanin. MELANOMATA (14) MELANOSOME (14) MELATONINS (12) MELIORATED (13) [verb] To make better; to improve; to solve a problem. | [verb] To become better. | [adjective] Made better; improved MELIORATES (12) [verb] To make better; to improve; to solve a problem. | [verb] To become better. MELIORATOR (12) MELIORISMS (14) MELIORISTS (12) MELISMATIC (16) MELLOPHONE (17) [noun] A brass instrument frequently used in place of the French horn in marching bands and similar performance groups MELLOTRONS (12) [noun] An early electronic keyboard instrument that played back prerecorded sounds. MELLOWNESS (15) MELODISING (14) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODIZERS (22) MELODIZING (23) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODRAMAS (15) [noun] A kind of drama having a musical accompaniment to intensify the effect of certain scenes. | [noun] A drama abounding in romantic sentiment and agonizing situations, with a musical accompaniment only in parts which are especially thrilling or pathetic. In opera, a passage in which the orchestra plays a somewhat descriptive accompaniment, while the actor speaks | [noun] Any situation or action which is blown out of proportion. MELPHALANS (17) MELTWATERS (15) [noun] Water from melting ice or snow. MEMBERSHIP (21) [noun] The state of being a member of a group or organization. | [noun] The body of members of an organization. | [noun] The fact of being a member of a set. MEMBRANOUS (16) MEMOIRISTS (14) MEMORANDUM (17) [noun] A short note serving as a reminder. | [noun] A written business communication. | [noun] A brief diplomatic communication. MEMORIALLY (17) MEMORISING (15) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORIZERS (23) MEMORIZING (24) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MENACINGLY (18) [adverb] In a menacing manner. MENADIONES (13) MENAGERIES (13) [noun] A collection of live wild animals on exhibition; the enclosure where they are kept. | [noun] A diverse or miscellaneous group. MENARCHEAL (17) MENDACIOUS (15) [adjective] (of a person) Lying, untruthful or dishonest. | [adjective] (of a statement, etc) False or untrue. MENDICANCY (20) MENDICANTS (15) [noun] A pauper who lives by begging. | [noun] A religious friar, forbidden to own personal property, who begs for a living. MENINGIOMA (15) [noun] A common tumour of the central nervous system, occurring in the meninges, usually benign. MENINGITIC (15) MENINGITIS (13) [noun] Inflammation of the meninges, characterized by headache, neck stiffness and photophobia and also fever, chills, vomiting and myalgia. MENISCUSES (14) MENOLOGIES (13) [noun] (often capitalized) A service book of the Eastern Orthodox Church that corresponds, though very roughly, to the proprium sanctorum of the Latin breviary. They include all the movable parts of the services connected with the commemoration of saints and in particular the canons sung in the Orthros, the office which corresponds with Catholic lauds, including the synaxaries, i. e. the historical notices regarding the saints of the day. | [noun] The tables of scriptural lessons, arranged according to months and saints' days, which are often found at the beginning of manuscripts of the gospels or other lectionaries. The saints' days are briefly named and the readings indicated beside each. | [noun] A collection of long lives of the saints of the Eastern Orthodox Church, whenever these lives, are arranged according to months and days of the year. MENOPAUSAL (14) [adjective] Of, or pertaining to the menopause MENOPAUSES (14) [noun] The period in a woman's life when menstruation becomes irregular and less frequent before eventually stopping altogether, usually accompanied by a range of unpleasant symptoms; the period spanning perimenopause up to postmenopause. | [noun] The final menstrual period of a woman after which ovulation no longer occurs. MENSTRUATE (12) [verb] To stain with or as if with menses. | [verb] To undergo menstruation, to have a period. | [adjective] Menstrual. MENSTRUUMS (14) MENSURABLE (14) [adjective] Measurable | [adjective] Having a fixed rhythm. MENTALISMS (14) MENTALISTS (12) [noun] A practitioner of mentalism. | [noun] An insane person. MENTATIONS (12) [noun] Mental activity; the process of thinking. MENTIONERS (12) MENTIONING (13) [verb] To make a short reference to something. | [verb] To utter a word or expression in order to refer to the expression itself, as opposed to its usual referent. MENTORSHIP (17) [noun] State of being a mentor MEPERIDINE (15) [noun] The opioid analgesic drug pethidine (INN). MEPHITISES (17) [noun] A poisonous or foul-smelling gas, especially as emitted from the earth; an unpleasant smell. | [noun] A dilution of fluids derived from skunks or polecats. MERBROMINS (16) MERCANTILE (14) [adjective] Concerned with the exchange of goods for profit. | [adjective] Of or relating to mercantilism. MERCAPTANS (16) [noun] Any of a class of organic compounds of sulphur, ( R1.S.R2 ); they tend to be foul-smelling. When R2 is a hydrogen atom, they are termed thiols or thioalcohols. MERCERISED (15) [verb] To treat cotton fabric with sodium hydroxide to make it more lustrous and accepting of dyes. MERCERISES (14) MERCERIZED (24) [verb] To treat cotton fabric with sodium hydroxide to make it more lustrous and accepting of dyes. MERCERIZES (23) MERCHANTED (18) MERCIFULLY (20) [adverb] In a merciful manner. | [adverb] Thankfully MERCURATED (15) MERCURATES (14) MERCURIALS (14) [noun] Any of the plants known as mercury, especially the annual mercury or French mercury (Mercurialis annua). | [noun] A person born under the influence of the planet Mercury; hence, a person having an animated, lively, quick-witted or volatile character. | [noun] A chemical compound containing mercury. MERGANSERS (13) [noun] Any of various diving ducks of the genera Mergus or Lophodytes, which feed on fish and have a sharply serrated bill. MERIDIONAL (13) [noun] An inhabitant of a southern region, especially the south of France | [adjective] Located in the south, southern; later especially, pertaining to the south of France or other southern parts of Europe. | [adjective] Along a north-south direction, or relative to a meridian; or relating to meridians or a meridian MERITOCRAT (14) [noun] An advocate of meritocracy. | [noun] A person who has authority allegedly based on ability. MEROMYOSIN (17) MEROZOITES (21) MERRIMENTS (14) MERRYMAKER (21) MESCALINES (14) MESENCHYME (22) [noun] That part of the mesoderm of an embryo that develops into connective tissue, bone, cartilage, etc. MESENTERIC (14) MESENTERON (12) [noun] The midgut. MESMERISED (15) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESMERISES (14) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESMERISMS (16) MESMERISTS (14) MESMERIZED (24) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. | [adjective] Spellbound or enthralled. MESMERIZER (23) MESMERIZES (23) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESNALTIES (12) MESODERMAL (15) MESOGLOEAS (13) MESOMORPHS (19) [noun] A person with pronounced muscular development and low body fat. | [noun] : Theoretical body type in which a person naturally has lower body fat and greater ability to achieve muscular development than average. MESOMORPHY (22) MESOPAUSES (14) [noun] In the atmosphere, the boundary between the mesosphere and the ionosphere. It is the atmospheric boundary where the temperature reaches its minimum value. MESOPHYLLS (20) MESOPHYTES (20) [noun] Any normal terrestrial plant that grows in environments that have an average supply of water. MESOPHYTIC (22) MESOSPHERE (17) [noun] The layer of the Earth's atmosphere that is directly above the stratosphere and directly below the thermosphere. | [noun] The part of the Earth's mantle below the asthenosphere and above the outer core. MESOTHELIA (15) [noun] A membrane of flat epithelial cells that lines the body cavity of embryos and forms the squamous cells of the peritoneum, pericardium, and pleura MESOTHORAX (22) [noun] The middle of the three segments of the thorax of an insect, carrying the second pair of legs, and the forewings when present. MESSALINES (12) MESSENGERS (13) [noun] One who brings messages. | [noun] A light line with which a heavier line may be hauled e.g. from the deck of a ship to the pier. | [noun] The supporting member of an aerial cable (electric power or telephone or data). MESSIANISM (14) MESTRANOLS (12) METABOLISM (16) [noun] The chemical processes that occur within a living organism in order to maintain life. | [noun] (by extension) The processes that maintain any dynamic system. METABOLITE (14) [noun] Any substance produced by, or taking part in, a metabolic reaction. METABOLIZE (23) [verb] To undergo metabolism. | [verb] To cause a substance to undergo metabolism. | [verb] To produce a substance using metabolism. METACARPAL (16) [noun] Any of the bones of the metacarpus. | [adjective] Of the metacarpus. METACARPUS (16) [noun] The five bones that form intermediate part of the hand between the fingers and the wrist. METACENTER (14) [noun] A midway point between a ship's centre of buoyancy when upright and its centre of buoyancy when tilted; it must be above the centre of gravity to enable a tilting ship to return to an upright position. METAETHICS (17) METAGALAXY (23) METALISING (13) METALIZING (22) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLIZED (22) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLIZES (21) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLOIDS (13) [noun] An element, such as silicon or germanium, intermediate in properties between that of a metal and a nonmetal; especially one that exhibits the external characteristics of a metal, but behaves chemically more as a nonmetal. | [noun] The metallic base of a fixed alkali, or alkaline earth; applied to sodium, potassium, and some other metallic substances whose metallic character was supposed to be not well defined. METALLURGY (16) [noun] The science of metals; their extraction from ores, purification and alloying, heat treatment, and working. METALMARKS (18) [noun] Any butterfly of the family Riodinidae. METALSMITH (17) METALWARES (15) [noun] Any wares made out of metal, such as pots and pans. METALWORKS (19) METAMERISM (16) METAPHASES (17) METAPHORIC (19) [adjective] Like a metaphor. METAPHRASE (17) [noun] A literal, word-for-word translation. | [noun] An answering phrase; repartee. | [verb] To make such a literal translation. METAPHYSIC (22) [noun] The field of study of metaphysics. | [noun] The metaphysical system of a particular philosopher or of a particular school of thought. | [noun] A fundamental principle or key concept. METAPLASIA (14) [noun] The conversion of one type of tissue into another. METASTABLE (14) [noun] A particle, etc. in the metastable state. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a physical or chemical state that is relatively long-lived, but may decay to a lower energy state when slightly perturbed or through a quantum transition. METASTABLY (17) METASTASES (12) [noun] A change in nature, form, or quality. | [noun] The transference of a bodily function or disease to another part of the body, specifically the development of a secondary area of disease remote from the original site, as with some cancers. | [noun] The spread of a harmful event to another location, like the metastasis of a cancer. METASTASIS (12) [noun] A change in nature, form, or quality. | [noun] The transference of a bodily function or disease to another part of the body, specifically the development of a secondary area of disease remote from the original site, as with some cancers. | [noun] The spread of a harmful event to another location, like the metastasis of a cancer. METASTATIC (14) [adjective] Relating to, or producing metastasis METATARSAL (12) [noun] Any of the bones of the metatarsus. | [adjective] Of the metatarsus. METATARSUS (12) [noun] The part of the foot between the toes and the ankle, especially its five bones. METATHESES (15) [noun] The transposition of letters, syllables or sounds within a word, such as in ask as /æks/. | [noun] The double decomposition of inorganic salts. | [noun] The breaking and reforming of double bonds in olefins in which substituent groups are swapped. METATHESIS (15) [noun] The transposition of letters, syllables or sounds within a word, such as in ask as /æks/. | [noun] The double decomposition of inorganic salts. | [noun] The breaking and reforming of double bonds in olefins in which substituent groups are swapped. METATHETIC (17) METATHORAX (22) [noun] The hindmost of the three sections of the thorax of an insect, carrying the posterior pair of legs and the hindwings when present. METAXYLEMS (24) METEORITES (12) [noun] A metallic or stony object or body that is the remains of a meteoroid. METEORITIC (14) METEOROIDS (13) [noun] A relatively small (sand- to boulder-sized) fragment of debris in a star system that produces a meteor when it hits the atmosphere METERSTICK (18) METHADONES (16) METHEDRINE (16) [noun] Methamphetamine METHEGLINS (16) METHIONINE (15) [noun] A lipotropic, sulphur-containing essential amino acid, C5H11NO2S, found in most protein. METHODICAL (18) [adjective] In an organized manner; proceeding with regard to method; systematic. | [adjective] Arranged with regard to method; disposed in a suitable manner, or in a manner to illustrate a subject, or to facilitate practical observation. METHODISED (17) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODISES (16) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODISMS (18) METHODISTS (16) [noun] One who follows a method. METHODIZED (26) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODIZES (25) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHYLASES (18) METHYLATED (19) [verb] To add, or treat with methyl alcohol (see methylated spirits) | [verb] To add a methyl group to a compound | [verb] To add a methyl group to a nucleic acid as part of the process of gene expression METHYLATES (18) [noun] The anion -O-CH3- derived from methanol by loss of a proton; any salt containing this anion | [verb] To add, or treat with methyl alcohol (see methylated spirits) | [verb] To add a methyl group to a compound METHYLATOR (18) METHYLDOPA (21) METHYLENES (18) METICULOUS (14) [adjective] Characterized by very precise, conscientious attention to details. | [adjective] Timid, fearful, overly cautious. METONYMIES (17) [noun] The use of a single characteristic or part of an object, concept or phenomenon to identify the entire object, concept, phenomenon or a related object. | [noun] A metonym. METRICALLY (17) [adverb] In a metrical manner. METRICIZED (24) METRICIZES (23) METRIFYING (19) METRITISES (12) METRONOMES (14) [noun] A device, containing an inverted pendulum, used to mark time by means of regular ticks at adjustable intervals; an electronic equivalent that emits flashes. METRONOMIC (16) METROPOLIS (14) [noun] (history) The mother (founding) polis (city state) of a colony. | [noun] A large, busy city, especially as the main city in an area or country or as distinguished from surrounding rural areas. | [noun] (canon law) The see of a metropolitan archbishop, ranking above its suffragan diocesan bishops. METTLESOME (14) [adjective] Marked by mettle or bravery; courageous. MEZZANINES (30) [noun] A secondary floor, in between the main floors of a building; entresol. | [noun] A small window used to light such a secondary floor. | [noun] The lowest balcony in an auditorium. MEZZOTINTS (30) [noun] A form of intaglio etching in which a metal plate is roughened evenly and then smoothed to bring out an image. | [noun] An etching or print made using this method. MICRIFYING (21) MICROBEAMS (18) MICROBREWS (19) [noun] A beer produced by a small local brewery, or microbrewery. MICROBURST (16) [noun] A strong downdraft, of less than 2.5 miles in diameter, that can cause damaging winds. MICROBUSES (16) MICROCHIPS (21) [noun] Integrated circuit; microprocessor. | [verb] To fit (an animal) with a microchip. MICROCLINE (16) [noun] A common feldspar of igneous, plutonic, and metamorphic rocks, made of potassium aluminum silicate, with the chemical formula KAlSi3O8. MICROCOCCI (20) [noun] Any of a group of spherical, aerobic, gram-positive bacteria, of the genus Micrococcus, that are wide-ranging and harmless. MICROCODES (17) MICROCOSMS (18) [noun] Human nature or the human body as representative of the wider universe; man considered as a miniature counterpart of divine or universal nature. | [noun] The human body; a person. | [noun] A smaller system which is seen as representative of a larger one. MICROCURIE (16) MICROCYTES (19) [noun] An unusually small red blood cell found in some forms of anemia MICROCYTIC (21) MICROFARAD (18) [noun] One millionth ( 10-6 ) of a farad, abbreviated as µF. MICROFAUNA (17) [noun] The smallest of the faunal size divisions, including mainly microorganisms but also sometimes applied to the tiniest species of animal groups such as ticks, insects, etc. MICROFICHE (22) [noun] A sheet of microfilm, six by four inches, holding several hundred reduced images of document pages; read using a microfiche reader or microfilm reader. | [noun] A device used to magnify and read these sheets. MICROFILMS (19) [noun] A continuous roll of film containing photographs of documents at a greatly reduced size | [verb] To reproduce documents on such film MICROFLORA (17) [noun] Microscopic plant life, especially the bacterial colonies found in the gut of normal, healthy animals and humans. MICROFORMS (19) [noun] Microfilm, microfiche or similar materials. | [noun] A microscopic form of life; an animal or vegetable organism of microscopic size. MICROFUNGI (18) [noun] A fungus of microscopic size. MICROGRAMS (17) [noun] A unit of mass equal to one millionth of a gram, or 0.000 001 grams (symbol: μg or mcg). MICROGRAPH (20) [noun] An image such as a photograph that presents the microscopic at a macroscopic scale; an image produced with a microscope | [noun] A pantograph instrument for executing minute writing or engraving. | [verb] To produce such an image by micrography. MICROIMAGE (17) MICROLITER (14) [noun] A unit of fluid measure being one millionth (10−6) of a litre. Symbol: μl MICROLITHS (17) [noun] A small stone tool. | [noun] The microscopic acicular components of rocks. MICROLUCES (16) MICROLUXES (21) MICROMERES (16) MICROMETER (16) [noun] An SI/MKS unit of measure, the length of one millionth of a meter. Symbols: µm, um, rm. | [noun] A device used to measure distance very precisely but within a limited range, especially depth, thickness, and diameter. MICROMINIS (16) MICROMOLAR (16) MICROMOLES (16) MICRONIZED (24) [verb] To reduce in size, often to micrometer scale. MICRONIZES (23) [verb] To reduce in size, often to micrometer scale. MICROPHAGE (20) [noun] A small phagocyte, especially a polymorphonuclear leucocyte MICROPHONE (19) [noun] A device (transducer) used to convert sound waves into a varying electric current; normally fed into an amplifier and either recorded or broadcast. | [verb] To put one or more microphones on or in. MICROPHYLL (22) [noun] A leaf having a single unbranched vein, or a structure that is derived from such a leaf. | [noun] A very small leaf MICROPIPET (18) [noun] A very small pipette. MICROPORES (16) [noun] A microscopic pore MICROPRISM (18) [noun] Any of many very small prisms used, either to form a reflective surface, or to form an area in a camera's viewfinder that blurs if the image is not precisely in focus MICROPROBE (18) [noun] An instrument used to determine the chemical composition at a point on a solid surface, such as that of a mineral. It analyzes the X-rays emitted when a beam of electrons are focused on the sample. MICROPYLAR (19) MICROPYLES (19) [noun] In seed-bearing plants, a small opening in the integuments of the ovule through which sperm are able to access the ovum. | [noun] The hilum of an ovum at the point of attachment to the ovary; any opening in the coverings of an ovum by which spermatozoa may find entrance. MICROQUAKE (27) MICROSCALE (16) [noun] A very small or microscopic scale | [noun] The scale of microanalysis | [noun] A scale of physical consideration or of bounds having a characteristic dimension typically ranging from 1 to 999 µm (under 1 mm) MICROSCOPE (18) [noun] An optical instrument used for observing small objects. | [noun] Any instrument for imaging very small objects (such as an electron microscope). | [verb] To examine with a microscope, to put under a microscope (literally or figuratively). MICROSCOPY (21) [noun] The study of microscopes, their design and manufacture. | [noun] The use of microscopes. MICROSEISM (16) [noun] A faint earth tremor caused by natural phenomena, such as wind. MICROSOMAL (16) MICROSOMES (16) [noun] A vesicle formed as an artifact of cell disruption MICROSPORE (16) [noun] The smaller of the two spores produced by plants; compare megaspore. | [noun] One of the numerous tiny spore-like elements produced through the encystment and subdivision of many monads MICROSTATE (14) [noun] A country that has a very small population and land area | [noun] The specific detailed microscopic configuration of a system. MICROTOMES (16) [noun] A special instrument that produces very thin slices of plant and animal tissues, for later examination by light microscope or electron microscope. MICROTONAL (14) [adjective] Of, relating to, or written using microtones. MICROTONES (14) [noun] Any interval smaller than a semitone MICROVILLI (17) [noun] Any of many fingerlike extensions on the surfaces of many cells, consisting of the proteins actin, fimbrin, and villin. MICROVOLTS (17) MICROWATTS (17) MICROWAVED (21) [verb] To cook (something) in a microwave oven. MICROWAVES (20) [noun] An electromagnetic wave with wavelength between that of infrared light and radio waves. | [verb] To cook (something) in a microwave oven. | [noun] An oven that uses microwave energy to heat food or other items placed within it. MICROWORLD (18) MICRURGIES (15) MICTURATED (15) [verb] To urinate. MICTURATES (14) [verb] To urinate. MIDDLEBROW (19) [noun] A person or thing that is neither highbrow nor lowbrow, but in between. | [adjective] Neither highbrow or lowbrow, but somewhere in between. MIDDLINGLY (18) MIDFIELDER (17) [noun] A player who operates behind the attackers and in front of the defence. MIDNIGHTLY (20) MIDRASHOTH (19) MIDSECTION (15) [noun] The middle section of something. | [noun] The midriff; the section of the human torso, from below the chest to above the waist. MIDSHIPMAN (20) [noun] An officer of the lowest rank in several navies; especially, a trainee officer. | [noun] A midshipman fish. MIDSHIPMEN (20) [noun] An officer of the lowest rank in several navies; especially, a trainee officer. | [noun] A midshipman fish. MIDSTORIES (13) MIDSTREAMS (15) MIDSUMMERS (17) [noun] The period around the summer solstice; about 21st June in the northern hemisphere. | [noun] The first day of summer | [noun] The middle of summer. MIDWATCHES (21) MIDWINTERS (16) [noun] The middle of winter. | [noun] The winter solstice; about December 21st or 22nd. MIGHTINESS (16) MIGNONETTE (13) [noun] A plant, Reseda odorata, having greyish-green flowers with orange-coloured stamens, and exhaling a delicious fragrance. In Africa it is a low shrub, but further north it is usually an annual herb. | [noun] A mignonette tree (Lawsonia inermis), source of the dye henna. | [noun] A mignonette vine MIGRAINOUS (13) MIGRATIONS (13) [noun] An instance of moving to live in another place for a while. | [noun] Seasonal moving of animals, as mammals, birds or fish, especially between breeding and non-breeding areas. | [noun] Movement in general. MILDNESSES (13) MILESTONES (12) [noun] A stone milepost (or by extension in other materials), one of a series of numbered markers placed along a road at regular intervals, typically at the side of the road or in a median. | [noun] An important event in a person's life or career, in the history of a nation, in the life of some project, etc. MILITANCES (14) MILITANTLY (15) MILITARIES (12) [noun] Armed forces. MILITARILY (15) [adverb] In a military or martial manner; not peaceably. | [adverb] By way of military or otherwise belligerent means. MILITARISE (12) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARISM (14) [noun] An ideology which claims that the military is the foundation of a society's security, and thereby its most important aspect. | [noun] A focus on, or excessive use of, military force. MILITARIST (12) [noun] One who believes in the use of military force. MILITARIZE (21) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITATING (13) [verb] To give force or effect toward; to influence. | [verb] To fight. MILITIAMAN (14) [noun] A member of a militia. MILITIAMEN (14) [noun] A member of a militia. MILKFISHES (22) [noun] Chanos chanos, an important food fish in southeast Asia. MILLEFIORI (15) [noun] A decorative glassware technique using a mosaic of coloured beads. MILLEFLEUR (15) MILLENNIAL (12) [noun] A demographic term for a person from the generation born from around the early 1980s to the mid 1990s or early 2000s; individuals who reached adulthood early in the 3rd millennium, C.E. | [adjective] Referring to the 1,000th anniversary of an event or happening. | [adjective] Occurring every thousand years. MILLENNIUM (14) [noun] A period of time consisting of one thousand years. | [noun] The period of one thousand years during which Christ will reign on earth (according to Millenarianist interpretations). | [noun] A period of universal happiness, peace or prosperity; a utopia. MILLERITES (12) MILLESIMAL (14) [adjective] Thousandth; consisting of thousandth parts MILLIARIES (12) MILLICURIE (14) MILLIGRAMS (15) [noun] An SI unit of mass, equivalent to one thousandth of a gram. Symbol: mg MILLIHENRY (18) MILLILITER (12) [noun] A unit of measure of capacity, being one thousandth of a litre. Symbol: ml MILLILUCES (14) MILLILUXES (19) MILLIMETER (14) [noun] An SI/MKS unit of measure, the length of 1/1000 of a meter. Symbol: mm MILLIMOLAR (14) MILLIMOLES (14) MILLIONTHS (15) [noun] The person or thing in the millionth position. | [noun] One of a million equal parts of a whole. Term ppm (parts per million) is also used. MILLIOSMOL (14) MILLIPEDES (15) [noun] Any of many elongated arthropods, of the class Diplopoda, with cylindrical bodies that have two pairs of legs for each one of their 20 to 100 or more body segments. MILLIVOLTS (15) [noun] One thousandth (10-3) of a volt, abbreviated as mV. MILLIWATTS (15) [noun] One thousandth ( 10-3 ) of a watt, abbreviated as mW. MILLSTONES (12) [noun] A large round stone used for grinding grain. | [noun] A coarse-grained sandstone used for making such stones; millstone grit. | [noun] Often in a millstone round one's neck (referring to Matthew 18:6 in the Bible): a heavy responsibility that is difficult to bear. MILLSTREAM (14) [noun] The water that runs through a millrace to power a mill. MILLWRIGHT (19) [noun] A person who designed, erected and built mills and milling machinery. | [noun] A person engaged in the erection of machinery. MIMEOGRAPH (20) [noun] A machine for making printed copies using typed stencil, eventually superseded by photocopying. | [verb] To make mimeograph copies. MINACITIES (14) MINAUDIERE (13) MINCEMEATS (16) MINDBLOWER (18) MINDEDNESS (14) MINDLESSLY (16) [adverb] In a mindless manner. MINEFIELDS (16) [noun] An area in which land mines have been laid. | [noun] (by extension) A dangerous situation. | [noun] A pitch that has dried out and crumbled and on which the ball is bouncing and spinning unpredictably. MINELAYERS (15) [noun] A ship capable of laying mines. MINERALISE (12) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALIZE (21) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALOGY (16) [noun] The branch of petrology that studies minerals. | [noun] Its mineral materials. | [noun] A treatise on mineralogy. MINESTRONE (12) [noun] Any of many thick Italian vegetable soups. MINIATURES (12) [noun] Greatly diminished size or form; reduced scale. | [noun] A small version of something; a model of reduced scale. | [noun] A small, highly detailed painting, a portrait miniature. MINIBIKERS (18) MINIBUSSES (14) MINICOURSE (14) MINIMALISM (16) [noun] A style of art that emphasises extreme simplicity of form. | [noun] A style of music that emphasises extreme simplicity of rhythms and melodic forms to achieve a trancelike effect. MINIMALIST (14) [noun] One who believes in or seeks a minimal state; one who seeks to minimize or reduce to a minimum. | [adjective] Believing in or seeking a minimal state; seeking to minimize or reduce to a minimum. MINIMISING (15) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMIZERS (23) MINIMIZING (24) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINISCHOOL (17) MINISCULES (14) MINISERIES (12) [noun] A radio or television series with a small number of episodes not intended to last a complete season. | [noun] A relatively short comic book series with a predetermined number of instalments. MINISKIRTS (16) [noun] A short skirt with its hemline well above the knees, generally at mid-thigh level. MINISTATES (12) MINISTERED (13) [verb] To attend to (the needs of); to tend; to take care (of); to give aid; to give service. | [verb] To function as a clergyman or as the officiant in church worship | [verb] To afford, to give, to supply. MINISTRANT (12) MINISTRIES (12) [noun] Government department, at the administrative level normally headed by a minister (or equivalent rank, e.g. secretary of state), who holds it as portfolio, especially in a constitutional monarchy, but also as a polity | [noun] The complete body of government ministers (whether or not they are in cabinet) under the leadership of a head of government (such as a prime minister) | [noun] A ministration MINORITIES (12) [noun] The state of being a minor; youth, the period of a person's life prior to reaching adulthood. | [noun] Any subgroup that does not form a numerical majority. | [noun] (used attributively of a party, government, etc.) Empowered by or representing a minority (usually a plurality) of votes cast, legislative seats, etc., rather than an outright majority thereof. MINOXIDILS (20) MINSTRELSY (15) [noun] The musical and other art and craft of a minstrel. | [noun] A group of minstrels. | [noun] Any similar modern group performing song and verse. MINUSCULES (14) [noun] A lowercase letter. | [noun] Either of the two medieval handwriting styles minuscule cursive and Caroline minuscule. | [noun] A letter in these styles. MINUTENESS (12) MIRACIDIAL (15) MIRACIDIUM (17) [noun] A free-living motile form of a trematode, covered with cilia, which settles in a mollusc intermediate host to become a sporocyst MIRACULOUS (14) [adjective] By supernatural or uncommon causes, e.g. by a god; that cannot be explained in terms of normal events. | [adjective] Very surprising; amazing. MIRINESSES (12) MIRRORLIKE (16) [adjective] Resembling a mirror; reflective MIRTHFULLY (21) MISADAPTED (16) MISADDRESS (14) [verb] To address (a letter, etc.) incorrectly. MISADJUSTS (20) MISADVISED (17) MISADVISES (16) MISALIGNED (14) [verb] To align incorrectly | [adjective] Out of alignment. MISALLYING (16) MISALTERED (13) MISANDRIES (13) MISAPPLIED (17) [verb] To apply incorrectly; to misuse. MISAPPLIES (16) [verb] To apply incorrectly; to misuse. MISASSAYED (16) MISATONING (13) MISAVERRED (16) MISAWARDED (17) MISBALANCE (16) MISBECOMES (18) MISBEHAVED (21) [verb] To act or behave in an inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected manner. MISBEHAVER (20) MISBEHAVES (20) [verb] To act or behave in an inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected manner. MISBELIEFS (17) [noun] An erroneous belief | [noun] A heresy; an unorthodox belief MISBELIEVE (17) MISBIASING (15) MISBIASSED (15) MISBIASSES (14) MISBILLING (15) MISBINDING (16) MISBRANDED (16) MISBUTTONS (14) MISCALLING (15) [verb] To call (someone) bad names; to insult, abuse. | [verb] To call (something) by the wrong name. | [verb] To make a wrong call; to announce (one's hand of cards) incorrectly. MISCAPTION (16) MISCARRIED (15) [verb] To have an unfortunate accident of some kind; to be killed, or come to harm. | [verb] To go astray; to do something wrong. | [verb] To have a miscarriage; to abort a foetus, usually without intent to do so. MISCARRIES (14) [verb] To have an unfortunate accident of some kind; to be killed, or come to harm. | [verb] To go astray; to do something wrong. | [verb] To have a miscarriage; to abort a foetus, usually without intent to do so. MISCASTING (15) [verb] To cast or reckon incorrectly. | [verb] To cast or direct erroneously or improperly. | [verb] To cast an actor in an inappropriate role. MISCATALOG (15) MISCELLANY (17) [noun] Miscellaneous items. | [noun] A collection of writings on various subjects or topics; an anthology. MISCHANCES (19) [noun] Bad luck, misfortune. | [noun] A mishap, an unlucky circumstance. MISCHANNEL (17) MISCHARGED (19) MISCHARGES (18) MISCHOICES (19) MISCLAIMED (17) MISCLASSED (15) MISCLASSES (14) MISCOINING (15) MISCOLORED (15) MISCOMPUTE (18) MISCONDUCT (17) [noun] Behavior that is considered to be unacceptable. | [verb] To mismanage. | [verb] To behave inappropriately, to misbehave. MISCONNECT (16) MISCOOKING (19) MISCOPYING (20) [verb] To copy incorrectly; to copy with mistakes. MISCOUNTED (15) [verb] To incorrectly count or add up. MISCREANTS (14) [noun] One who has behaved badly, or illegally. | [noun] One not restrained by moral principles; an unscrupulous villain. | [noun] One who holds a false religious belief; a misbeliever. MISCREATED (15) [verb] To create wrongly or poorly | [adjective] Misshapen, deformed; created unnaturally or wrongly. MISCREATES (14) MISCUTTING (15) MISDEALING (14) [verb] To deal or distribute wrongly. | [noun] Fraudulent dealing MISDEEMING (16) MISDEFINED (17) MISDEFINES (16) MISDEVELOP (18) MISDIALING (14) [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. | [noun] An instance of reaching an unintended phone number due to an error in dialing or in using a keypad. MISDIALLED (14) [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDIRECTS (15) [verb] To direct something wrongly | [verb] To direct attention away from covert actions or intended targets. | [verb] To put the incorrect address on a mail item MISDOUBTED (16) [verb] To doubt the existence or reality of. | [verb] To have suspicions about. MISDRAWING (17) MISDRIVING (17) MISEDITING (14) MISEDUCATE (15) [verb] To educate wrongly. MISEMPLOYS (19) [verb] To employ incorrectly; to misuse. MISENROLLS (12) MISENTERED (13) MISENTRIES (12) MISERABLES (14) MISERICORD (15) [noun] Relaxation of monastic rules. | [noun] The room in a monastery for monks granted such relaxation. | [noun] A ledge, sometimes ornately carved, attached to a folding church seat to provide support for a person standing for long periods; a subsellium. MISESTEEMS (14) MISFEASORS (15) MISFIELDED (17) [verb] To field the ball clumsily or ineptly; in cricket this can result in the batsman scoring another run. MISFITTING (16) MISFOCUSED (18) MISFOCUSES (17) MISFORMING (18) MISFORTUNE (15) [noun] Bad luck | [noun] An undesirable event such as an accident MISFRAMING (18) MISGAUGING (15) MISGIVINGS (17) [noun] Doubt, apprehension, a feeling of dread MISGOVERNS (16) [verb] To govern badly or wrongly. MISGRADING (15) MISGRAFTED (17) MISGROWING (17) MISGUESSED (14) MISGUESSES (13) MISGUIDERS (14) MISGUIDING (15) [verb] To guide poorly or incorrectly. | [verb] To lead astray; to lead into error. MISHANDLED (17) [verb] To manipulate something roughly, causing physical damage. | [verb] To deal with a situation incorrectly or ineffectively; to make a mistake in handling a situation. MISHANDLES (16) [verb] To manipulate something roughly, causing physical damage. | [verb] To deal with a situation incorrectly or ineffectively; to make a mistake in handling a situation. MISHANTERS (15) MISHEARING (16) [verb] To hear wrongly. | [verb] To misunderstand. | [noun] The act of hearing something incorrectly. MISHITTING (16) [verb] To incorrectly or badly hit. MISHMASHES (20) [noun] A collection containing a variety of miscellaneous things. MISHMOSHES (20) MISINFORMS (17) [verb] To give or deliver false, fake, or misleading information. MISJOINDER (20) MISJOINING (20) MISJUDGING (22) [verb] To make an error in judging, to incorrectly assess. MISKEEPING (19) MISKICKING (23) [verb] To kick incorrectly or badly. MISKNOWING (20) MISLABELED (15) [verb] To label incorrectly. MISLABORED (15) MISLEADERS (13) MISLEADING (14) [verb] To lead astray, in a false direction. | [verb] To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. | [verb] To deceptively trick into something wrong. MISLEARNED (13) MISLIGHTED (17) MISLOCATED (15) MISLOCATES (14) MISLODGING (15) MISMANAGED (16) [verb] To manage an area of responsibility in a way which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. | [verb] To behave, in a management capacity, in a manner which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. MISMANAGES (15) [verb] To manage an area of responsibility in a way which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. | [verb] To behave, in a management capacity, in a manner which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. MISMARKING (19) MISMATCHED (20) [verb] To match unsuitably; to fail to match | [adjective] Unsuitably matched; ill joined. MISMATCHES (19) [verb] To match unsuitably; to fail to match | [noun] Something that does not match; something dissimilar, inappropriate or unsuitable. MISMEETING (15) MISNOMERED (15) MISOGAMIES (15) MISOGAMIST (15) MISOGYNIES (16) MISOGYNIST (16) [noun] One who professes misogyny; a hater of women. | [noun] One who displays prejudice against or looks down upon women. | [adjective] Misogynistic: relating to or exhibiting misogyny. MISOLOGIES (13) MISONEISMS (14) MISORDERED (14) MISORIENTS (12) MISPACKAGE (21) MISPAINTED (15) MISPARSING (15) MISPARTING (15) MISPATCHED (20) MISPATCHES (19) MISPENNING (15) MISPLACING (17) [verb] To put something somewhere and then forget its location; to mislay | [verb] To apply one's talents inappropriately. | [verb] To put something in the wrong location. MISPLANNED (15) MISPLANTED (15) MISPLAYING (18) [verb] To play incorrectly or poorly. MISPLEADED (16) MISPOINTED (15) MISPOISING (15) MISPRICING (17) MISPRINTED (15) [verb] To make a misprint. MISPRISION (14) [noun] Criminal neglect of duty or wrongful execution of official duties. | [noun] The failure to give information about a crime that one knows to be taking place. | [noun] Misinterpretation or misunderstanding. MISPRIZING (24) [verb] To despise or hold in contempt; to undervalue. MISPROGRAM (17) MISQUOTING (22) [verb] To incorrectly recite a quote. | [verb] To incorrectly record a quote. MISRAISING (13) MISREADING (14) [verb] To read wrongly, normally by accident; misconstrue; misinterpret; mistake the sense or significance of. | [noun] An incorrect reading MISRECKONS (18) MISRECORDS (15) MISRELATED (13) MISRELATES (12) MISRELYING (16) MISRENDERS (13) [verb] To render incorrectly. MISREPORTS (14) [verb] To report erroneously; to give an incorrect account of. MISROUTING (13) [verb] To route incorrectly; to send the wrong way. MISSEATING (13) MISSENDING (14) MISSETTING (13) MISSHAPING (18) [verb] To shape badly or incorrectly. MISSILEERS (12) MISSILEMAN (14) MISSILEMEN (14) MISSILRIES (12) MISSIOLOGY (16) [noun] The area of practical theology which studies the mandate, message and work of the Christian missionary. MISSIONARY (15) [noun] One who is sent on a mission. | [noun] A person who travels attempting to spread a religion or a creed. | [noun] A religious messenger. MISSIONERS (12) [noun] A missionary. MISSIONING (13) MISSIONIZE (21) MISSORTING (13) MISSOUNDED (14) MISSPACING (17) MISSPELLED (15) [verb] To spell incorrectly. MISSTARTED (13) MISSTATING (13) [verb] To make a statement that is in error, inadvertently; to say incorrectly, through a slip of the tongue. MISSTEERED (13) MISSTOPPED (17) MISSTRIKES (16) MISSTYLING (16) MISSUITING (13) MISTAKABLE (18) MISTAKENLY (19) [adverb] Wrongly, erroneously | [adverb] By accident, by mistake, in error (without intention to do so) MISTEACHES (17) [verb] To teach incorrectly. MISTENDING (14) MISTERMING (15) MISTHOUGHT (19) MISTITLING (13) [verb] To title incorrectly; to give the wrong name to. MISTLETOES (12) [noun] Any of several hemiparasitic evergreen plants of the order Santalales with white berries that grow in the crowns of apple trees, oaks, and other trees, such as the European mistletoe (Viscum album) and American mistletoe or eastern mistletoe (Phoradendron leucarpum). | [noun] A sprig of one such plant used as a Christmas decoration, associated with the custom that a man may kiss any woman standing beneath it. MISTOUCHED (18) MISTOUCHES (17) MISTRACING (15) MISTRAINED (13) MISTREATED (13) [verb] To treat someone, or something roughly or badly. MISTRESSES (12) [noun] A woman, specifically one with great control, authority or ownership | [noun] A female teacher | [noun] The other woman in an extramarital relationship, generally including sexual relations MISTRUSTED (13) [verb] To have no confidence in (something or someone). | [verb] To be wary, suspicious or doubtful of (something or someone). | [verb] To suspect, to imagine or suppose (something) to be the case. MISTRYSTED (16) MISTUTORED (13) MISVALUING (16) MISWORDING (17) MISWRITING (16) MISWRITTEN (15) MITERWORTS (15) MITHRIDATE (16) [noun] A supposed universal antidote against poison. MITIGATING (14) [verb] To reduce, lessen, or decrease; to make less severe or easier to bear. | [verb] To downplay. | [adjective] That serves to mitigate MITIGATION (13) [noun] A reduction or decrease of something harmful or unpleasant. MITIGATIVE (16) MITIGATORS (13) [noun] Someone or something that mitigates. MITIGATORY (16) MITOMYCINS (19) MITREWORTS (15) MITTIMUSES (14) [noun] (obsolete outside the United States) A warrant issued for someone to be taken into custody. | [noun] A writ for moving records from one court to another. | [noun] A formal dismissal from a situation. MIXOLOGIES (20) MIXOLOGIST (20) [noun] A person who creates cocktails; a bartender. | [noun] A disc jockey. MIZZENMAST (32) [noun] The aftmost mast on a ship having three or more masts. | [noun] The second mast of a ship having two masts where the second one is shorter, such as a ketch or yawl. MOBILISING (15) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILITIES (14) MOBILIZING (24) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBOCRATIC (18) MODALITIES (13) [noun] The fact of being modal. | [noun] The classification of propositions on the basis on whether they claim possibility, impossibility, contingency or necessity; mode. | [noun] The inflection of a verb that shows how its action is conceived by the speaker; mood MODERATELY (16) [adverb] In a moderate manner. | [adverb] To a moderate extent or degree. MODERATING (14) [verb] To reduce the excessiveness of (something) | [verb] To become less excessive | [verb] To preside over (something) as a moderator MODERATION (13) [noun] The state or quality of being moderate; avoidance of extremes | [noun] An instance of moderating: bringing something away from extremes, especially in a beneficial way | [noun] The process of moderating a discussion MODERATORS (13) [noun] Someone who moderates | [noun] The person who presides over a synod of a Presbyterian Church | [noun] A substance (often water or graphite) used to decrease the speed of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor and hence increase likelihood of fission MODERNISED (14) [adjective] That has undergone modernisation. | [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNISES (13) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNISMS (15) MODERNISTS (13) [noun] A follower or proponent of modernism. MODERNIZED (23) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNIZER (22) MODERNIZES (22) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNNESS (13) MODIFIABLE (18) MODILLIONS (13) [noun] A decoratively carved supporting block atop a column. MODISHNESS (16) MODULARITY (16) MODULATING (14) [verb] To regulate, adjust or adapt | [verb] To change the pitch, intensity or tone of one's voice or of a musical instrument | [verb] To vary the amplitude, frequency or phase of a carrier wave in proportion to the amplitude etc of a source wave (such as speech or music) MODULATION (13) [noun] The process of applying a signal to a carrier, modulating. | [noun] The variation and regulation of a population, physiological response, etc. | [noun] A change in key. MODULATORS (13) MODULATORY (16) MOISTENERS (12) MOISTENING (13) [verb] To make moist or moister. | [verb] To become moist or moister. | [noun] The act of making something moist. MOISTURISE (12) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURIZE (21) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOLALITIES (12) MOLARITIES (12) MOLASSESES (12) MOLDBOARDS (16) [noun] A curved piece of metal on a plow or bulldozer that clears the free dirt from the blade. | [noun] (founding) A follow board. MOLLIFYING (19) [verb] To ease a burden, particularly worry; make less painful; to comfort. | [verb] To appease (anger), pacify, gain the good will of. | [verb] To soften; to make tender MOLYBDATES (18) [noun] The anion MoO42−. | [noun] Any salt of molybdic acid. MOLYBDENUM (20) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Mo) with an atomic number of 42: a silvery metal, not found as a free element, used in steel alloys. | [noun] A single atom of this element. MONACHISMS (19) MONADNOCKS (19) [noun] A hill or mountain standing isolated above a predominantly flat plain. MONANDRIES (13) MONARCHIAL (17) MONARCHIES (17) [noun] A government in which sovereignty is embodied within a single, today usually hereditary head of state (whether as a figurehead or as a powerful ruler). | [noun] The territory ruled over by a monarch; a kingdom. | [noun] A form of government where sovereignty is embodied by a single ruler in a state and his high aristocracy representing their separate divided lands within the state and their low aristocracy representing their separate divided fiefs. MONARCHISM (19) [noun] Rule by a monarchy. | [noun] The advocacy of such a political system. MONARCHIST (17) [noun] An advocate of, or believer in, monarchy. MONAURALLY (15) MONESTROUS (12) MONETARILY (15) MONETARISM (14) [noun] The doctrine that economic systems are controlled by variations in the supply of money. | [noun] The political doctrine that a nation's economy can be controlled by regulating the money supply. MONETARIST (12) MONETISING (13) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETIZING (22) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONEYMAKER (21) [noun] Someone or something that earns or makes money; anything lucrative or profitable. | [noun] (usually a woman's) butt, ass, rear end | [noun] A lady’s breast. MONEYWORTS (18) [noun] A European vine, Lysimachia nummularia, having yellow flowers; creeping Jenny, creeping Charlie. MONGOLISMS (15) MONGOLOIDS (14) [noun] A member of the racial classification of humanity composed of peoples native to North Asia, East Asia, Pacific Oceania, and the Americas, as well as their diaspora in other parts of the world. | [noun] A person with Down syndrome. | [noun] Idiot, retard; a general term of abuse, due to association with Down syndrome. MONGRELIZE (22) [verb] To breed a mongrel | [verb] To cross-breed MONILIASES (12) MONILIASIS (12) MONILIFORM (17) [adjective] Having a form resembling a string of beads, where the component parts or segments are more or less uniform in size and are spherical or rounded in shape. MONITORIAL (12) MONITORIES (12) [noun] A written letter giving admonition MONITORING (13) [verb] To watch over; to guard. | [noun] The carrying out of surveillance on, or continuous or regular observation of, an environment or people in order to detect signals, movements or changes of state or quality. MONKEYPODS (22) MONKFISHES (22) [noun] Any large bottom-dwelling anglerfish of the genus Lophius, such as Lophius piscatorius, of the Atlantic, having a large head and mouth. | [noun] Angel sharks of the genus Squatina. MONKSHOODS (20) [noun] Any of various poisonous plants, of the genus Aconitum, with blue or white flowers in the shape of a hood | [noun] The dried leaves or flowers of these plants formerly used as a source of medicinal alkaloids MONOACIDIC (17) MONOAMINES (14) [noun] Any compound having a single amino functional group, especially a neurotransmitter. MONOCARPIC (18) [adjective] (of a plant) That flowers and bears fruit only once before dying. MONOCHASIA (17) [noun] A type of cyme on which each single axis bears one flower. MONOCHORDS (18) [noun] A musical instrument for experimenting with the mathematical relations of musical sounds, consisting of a single string stretched between two bridges, one or both of which can be moved, and which stand upon a graduated rule for the purpose of changing and measuring the length of the part of the string between them. | [noun] A stringed instrument with only one string. MONOCHROME (19) [noun] A black and white image, especially such a photograph. | [noun] A painting executed in shades of a single colour. | [noun] A ceramic glaze of a single colour; an object so glazed. MONOCLINES (14) [noun] A unidirectional dip in strata that is not a part of an anticline or syncline | [noun] A single flexure in otherwise flat-lying strata MONOCLINIC (16) [adjective] Having three unequal axes with two perpendicular and one oblique intersections. MONOCLONAL (14) [noun] Something produced from a single clone, especially a monoclonal antibody | [adjective] Genetically engineered from a single clone; used especially of a protein or antibody MONOCOQUES (23) [noun] A structure design in which the frame and body are built as a single integrated structure. MONOCRATIC (16) MONOCULARS (14) [noun] A monocle. | [noun] (retronym) A monocular telescope, as opposed to binoculars. MONOCYCLIC (21) [noun] Any monocyclic compound. | [adjective] Having a single cycle of development or activity. | [adjective] Having a single ring of atoms in the molecule; such as benzene or cyclopropane. MONODRAMAS (15) [noun] A play in the form of a monologue MONOECIOUS (14) [adjective] (invertebrate) Having both the male and female reproductive organs in the same individual, either in different flowers or in the same or different flowers; hermaphrodite. MONOECISMS (16) MONOESTERS (12) MONOGAMIES (15) MONOGAMIST (15) MONOGAMOUS (15) [adjective] Being married to one person at a time. | [adjective] Having only one sexual partner at a time. | [adjective] Monogamic; having a simple flower with united anthers. MONOGENEAN (13) [noun] Any of the many trematode flatworms of the class Monogenea, mostly ectoparasites on fish MONOGENIES (13) MONOGRAMED (16) MONOGRAPHS (18) [noun] A scholarly book or a treatise on a single subject or a group of related subjects, usually written by one person. MONOGYNIES (16) MONOGYNOUS (16) [adjective] Exhibiting or relating to monogyny. | [adjective] Of or relating to the Monogynia; having only one style or stigma. MONOHYBRID (21) [noun] A hybrid between two species that only have a difference of one gene. MONOHYDRIC (21) [adjective] Having a single replaceable hydrogen atom | [adjective] Having a single hydroxy group MONOLAYERS (15) [noun] A layer of material that is one molecule thick | [noun] A layer of tissue that is one cell thick MONOLITHIC (17) [adjective] Of or resembling a monolith. | [adjective] Having a massive, unchanging structure that does not permit individual variation. | [adjective] (said of an operating system's kernel) consisting of a single program using a single memory-addressing space MONOLOGIES (13) MONOLOGIST (13) [noun] A person who performs a monologue or monologues. MONOLOGUES (13) [noun] (authorship) A long speech by one person in a play; sometimes a soliloquy; other times spoken to other characters. | [noun] A long series of comic stories and jokes as an entertainment. | [noun] A long, uninterrupted utterance that monopolizes a conversation. MONOMANIAC (16) [noun] A person who is obsessed with a single thing, to the exclusion of other concerns. | [adjective] Focused on one thing above all others. MONOMANIAS (14) [noun] Excessive interest or concentration on a singular object or subject. | [noun] A pathological obsession with one person, thing or idea. MONOMETERS (14) [noun] A line of verse containing a single metrical foot. MONOPHONIC (19) [adjective] (of sound reproduction) having a single channel; monaural (compare stereophonic) | [adjective] Having a single melodic line and no harmony (compare polyphonic) | [adjective] Having simple one-to-one mapping between letters and phonemes MONOPLANES (14) [noun] An airplane that has a single pair of wings MONOPLOIDS (15) MONOPODIAL (15) MONOPODIES (15) MONOPOLIES (14) [noun] A situation, by legal privilege or other agreement, in which solely one party (company, cartel etc.) exclusively provides a particular product or service, dominating that market and generally exerting powerful control over it. | [noun] An exclusive control over the trade or production of a commodity or service through exclusive possession. | [noun] The privilege granting the exclusive right to exert such control. MONOPOLISE (14) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLIST (14) [noun] One who has, or attempts to acquire, a monopoly on something. MONOPOLIZE (23) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONORCHIDS (18) [noun] An individual having only one testicle within the scrotum. MONORHYMED (21) MONORHYMES (20) MONOSOMICS (16) MONOSOMIES (14) MONOSTELES (12) MONOSTELIC (14) MONOTHEISM (17) [noun] The belief in a single deity (one god or goddess); especially within an organized religion. MONOTHEIST (15) MONOTONIES (12) MONOTONOUS (12) [adjective] Having an unvarying tone or pitch. | [adjective] Tedious, repetitious or lacking in variety. MONOTREMES (14) [noun] A mammal that lays eggs and has a single urogenital and digestive orifice. Only the echidnas and platypuses are included in this group MONOVALENT (15) [adjective] Univalent. MONSIGNORI (13) MONSIGNORS (13) MONSTRANCE (14) [noun] An ornamental, often precious receptacle, either open or with a transparent cover, in which the sacramental bread is placed for veneration. MONTADALES (13) MONTAGNARD (14) MONUMENTAL (14) [adjective] In the manner of a monument. | [adjective] Large, grand and imposing. | [adjective] Taking a great amount of time and effort to complete. MONZONITES (21) [noun] An intrusive igneous rock composed mostly of plagioclase and orthoclase MOONCALVES (17) [noun] An abnormal mass within the uterus; a false conception. | [noun] A poorly-conceived idea or plan. | [noun] A dreamer, someone absent-minded or distracted; a fool, simpleton. MOONFISHES (18) [noun] Any of various flat, oval marine fish species. MOONFLOWER (18) [noun] Any of several plants that flower at night: MOONLIGHTS (16) [verb] To work on the side (at a secondary job), often in the evening or during the night. | [verb] (by extension) To engage in an activity other than what one is known for. | [verb] (by extension, of an inanimate object) To perform a secondary function substantially different from its supposed primary function, as in protein moonlighting. MOONQUAKES (25) [noun] A seismic event occurring on the moon; the lunar equivalent of an earthquake. MOONSCAPES (16) [noun] A view of an area of the Moon | [noun] (by extension) A desolate or devastated landscape. MOONSHINER (15) [noun] Someone who makes or distributes moonshine MOONSHINES (15) MOONSTONES (12) [noun] A translucent gemstone, an orthoclase feldspar, that has a pearly lustre. MOONSTRUCK (18) [adjective] Crazy or insane when affected by the phases of the Moon. | [adjective] (by extension) Showing irrational behaviour, especially of a romantic or sentimental nature. | [adjective] Made sick, or (like fishes) unsuitable for food, by the supposed influence of the Moon. MORALISING (13) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALISTIC (14) [adjective] Characteristic of or relating to a narrow-minded concern of the morals of others; self-righteous MORALITIES (12) [noun] Recognition of the distinction between good and evil or between right and wrong; respect for and obedience to the rules of right conduct; the mental disposition or characteristic of behaving in a manner intended to produce morally good results. | [noun] A set of social rules, customs, traditions, beliefs, or practices which specify proper, acceptable forms of conduct. | [noun] A set of personal guiding principles for conduct or a general notion of how to behave, whether respectable or not. MORALIZERS (21) MORALIZING (22) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORATORIUM (14) [noun] An authorization to a debtor, permitting temporary suspension of payments. | [noun] A suspension of an ongoing activity. MORBIDNESS (15) MORDANCIES (15) MORDANTING (14) [verb] To subject to the action of, or imbue with, a mordant. | [noun] The use of mordant to fix a dye to a fibre. MORGANATIC (15) [adjective] Designating a marriage (or the wife involved) between a man of higher rank and a woman of lower rank, often having various legal repercussions (typically that such a wife has no claim on the husband's possessions or title). It was not an aspect of English law, but was common in other royal houses, especially in Germany. MORGANITES (13) [noun] A gemstone of pegmatite deposits. Morganite is a transparent pink variety of beryl. MORONITIES (12) MOROSENESS (12) MOROSITIES (12) MORPHACTIN (19) MORPHEMICS (21) [noun] The study of morphemes, or of the morphemic structure of a language. MORPHINISM (19) [noun] Morphine addiction. | [noun] Disease caused by excessive usage of morphine. MORPHOGENS (18) [noun] Any substance that governs the movement and development of cells during morphogenesis by forming a concentration gradient in the developing tissue. MORPHOLOGY (21) [noun] A scientific study of form and structure, usually without regard to function. Especially: | [noun] The form and structure of something. | [noun] A description of the form and structure of something. MORSELLING (13) MORTADELLA (13) [noun] A smooth-textured Italian pork sausage with lumps of fat, flavoured with spices; eaten cold. MORTARLESS (12) MORTGAGEES (14) [noun] One who provides a loan secured upon the borrowers' property, the lender in a mortgage agreement. MORTGAGERS (14) [noun] One who uses property they own as security for a loan; the borrower in a mortgage agreement. MORTGAGING (15) [verb] To borrow against a property, to obtain a loan for another purpose by giving away the right of seizure to the lender over a fixed property such as a house or piece of land; to pledge a property in order to get a loan. | [verb] To pledge and make liable; to make subject to obligation; to achieve an immediate result by paying for it in the long term. | [noun] The act by which something is mortgaged. MORTGAGORS (14) [noun] One who uses property they own as security for a loan; the borrower in a mortgage agreement. MORTICIANS (14) [noun] An undertaker or funeral director. MORTIFYING (19) [verb] To discipline (one's body, appetites etc.) by suppressing desires; to practise abstinence on. | [verb] (usually used passively) To embarrass, to humiliate. To injure one's dignity. | [verb] To kill. MORTUARIES (12) [noun] A place where dead bodies are stored prior to burial or cremation. | [noun] A sort of ecclesiastical heriot, a customary gift claimed by, and due to, the minister of a parish on the death of a parishioner. MORULATION (12) MOSAICALLY (17) MOSAICISMS (16) MOSAICISTS (14) MOSAICKING (19) [noun] A process in which a mosaic (of images) is constructed MOSAICLIKE (18) MOSQUITOES (21) [noun] A small flying insect of the family Culicidae, the females of which bite humans and animals and suck blood, leaving an itching bump on the skin, and sometimes carrying diseases like malaria and yellow fever. MOSQUITOEY (24) MOSSBACKED (21) MOTHBALLED (18) [verb] To store or shelve something no longer used. | [verb] To stop using (something), but keep it in good condition. | [adjective] (of something out of use) Kept in good condition for possible future use. MOTHERHOOD (19) [noun] The state of being a mother. | [noun] Mothers, considered as a group. MOTHERLAND (16) [noun] The country of one's ancestors. | [noun] The country of one's birth. | [noun] Country of origin. MOTHERLESS (15) [adjective] Without a (living) mother. | [adjective] Without mother (mucilaginous substance in fermenting liquid). | [adjective] Without a history or predecessor. MOTHPROOFS (20) [verb] To apply odoriferous materials intended to repel moths from clothing. MOTILITIES (12) MOTIONLESS (12) [adjective] At rest, stationary, immobile, not moving. MOTIVATING (16) [verb] To provide someone with an incentive to do something; to encourage. | [verb] To animate; to propel; to cause to take action | [adjective] Effectively providing an incentive. MOTIVATION (15) [noun] Willingness of action especially in behavior. | [noun] The action of motivating. | [noun] Something which motivates. MOTIVATIVE (18) MOTIVATORS (15) [noun] Agent noun of motivate; one who motivates. MOTIVELESS (15) MOTIVITIES (15) MOTONEURON (12) [noun] A motor neuron. MOTORBIKED (19) MOTORBIKES (18) [noun] A motorcycle. | [noun] A small and light motorcycle. | [verb] To ride a motorbike; to travel by motorbike. MOTORBOATS (14) [noun] Any vessel driven by an engine (either inboard or outboard), but especially a small one. | [verb] To press one's face between a woman's breasts. MOTORBUSES (14) [noun] A motorised bus, or coach. MOTORCADED (16) MOTORCADES (15) [noun] A procession of cars carrying VIPs, especially political figures. MOTORCYCLE (19) [noun] An open-seated motor vehicle with handlebars instead of a steering wheel, and having two (or sometimes three) wheels. | [verb] To ride a motorcycle. MOTORISING (13) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORIZING (22) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORMOUTH (17) [noun] One who talks very fast or incessantly; a chatty or loquacious person. | [verb] To talk very fast or incessantly. MOTORTRUCK (18) MOULDERING (14) [verb] To decay or rot. | [adjective] That moulders; decaying MOUNTEBANK (18) [noun] One who sells dubious medicines. | [noun] One who sells by deception; a con artist; a charlatan. | [noun] An acrobat. MOURNFULLY (18) MOURNINGLY (16) MOUSETRAPS (14) [noun] A device for capturing or killing mice and other rodents. | [noun] A website designed to open another copy of itself when the user tries to close the webpage. Frequently used by advertisers and pornographers. | [noun] Ordinary, everyday cheese. MOUSSELINE (12) [noun] A very fine, semi-opaque fabric similar to muslin, typically made of silk, wool or cotton. | [noun] A soft, light sweet or savoury mousse. | [noun] A hollandaise sauce that has been made frothy with whipped cream or egg white, served mainly with fish or asparagus. MOUSTACHES (17) [noun] A growth of facial hair between the nose and the upper lip. MOUSTACHIO (17) MOUTHPARTS (17) [noun] (usually in plural) An appendage-like structure on the outside of an insect's or other arthropod's mouth, serving to manipulate and masticate food. MOUTHPIECE (19) [noun] A part of any device that functions in or near the mouth, especially: | [noun] A spokesman; one who speaks on behalf of someone else. | [noun] A lawyer for the defense. MOVABILITY (20) MOVELESSLY (18) MOVIEGOERS (16) [noun] Person who regularly frequents movie theaters. MOVIEGOING (17) MOVIEMAKER (21) [noun] A person who makes movies as a profession; a cinematographer MOZZARELLA (30) [noun] Soft Italian cheese made from cow's or buffalo's milk and commonly used as a pizza topping and in salads etc. | [noun] Money. MRIDANGAMS (16) [noun] A percussion instrument used in southern Indian music, consisting of a two-sided drum whose body is usually made from a hollowed piece of jackfruit wood. MUCHNESSES (17) MUCIDITIES (15) MUCKRAKERS (22) MUCKRAKING (23) [verb] To search for and expose corruption or scandal, especially as a form of investigative journalism. MUCOSITIES (14) MUDCAPPING (20) MUDPUPPIES (19) [noun] An aquatic salamander of the family Proteidae. MUDSKIPPER (21) [noun] Any of various gobies of the subfamily Oxudercinae that are able to survive out of water by breathing through their skins and having strong pectoral fins that act as simple legs. MUDSLINGER (14) MUJAHEDEEN (23) MUJAHIDEEN (23) [noun] A Muslim engaging in jihad, especially armed jihad; a jihadist. MULBERRIES (14) [noun] Any of several trees, of the genus Morus, having edible fruits. | [noun] The fruit of this tree. | [noun] A dark purple colour tinted with red. MULIEBRITY (17) [noun] The state or quality of being a woman; the features of a woman's nature; femininity, womanhood. | [noun] The state of attainment of womanhood following maidenhood. | [noun] The state of puberty in a female. MULISHNESS (15) MULLAHISMS (17) MULLIONING (13) MULTIARMED (15) MULTIAXIAL (19) [adjective] Having more than one axis MULTICHAIN (17) MULTICOLOR (14) [noun] A display of many colors. | [adjective] Having, resembling, or pertaining to many colors. MULTICURIE (14) MULTIFLASH (18) MULTIFOCAL (17) [adjective] Arising from or occurring in more than one focus or location. | [adjective] (of an eyeglass lens) having several focusing areas that correct for both nearsightedness and farsightedness. MULTIGENIC (15) MULTIGRADE (14) [adjective] Having the characteristics of multiple grades of a product (especially of a lubricating oil) | [adjective] Relating to students of differing grade levels MULTIGRAIN (13) [adjective] (of a food) Containing multiple types of grain, usually in processed form MULTIGROUP (15) MULTIHULLS (15) [noun] A boat with two or more hulls. MULTILAYER (15) [adjective] Any system of multiple layers, especially of multiple monolayers MULTILEVEL (15) [adjective] Having several levels or floors. MULTILOBED (15) MULTIMEDIA (15) [noun] The combined use of sound, video, and text to present an idea. | [adjective] Of, or relating to this combined use of media | [adjective] Of, or relating to an application that can combine such media into an integrated package MULTIMODAL (15) [adjective] Having, or employing multiple modes MULTIPANED (15) MULTIPARTY (17) [adjective] Involving several different political parties. | [adjective] Having multiple parties (involved persons). MULTIPHASE (17) [adjective] That generates, or employs, multiple alternating current supplies with the same voltage but different phase angles MULTIPIECE (16) MULTIPLANT (14) MULTIPLETS (14) [noun] A spectral line that has multiple components. | [noun] A compound peak produced in several forms of spectroscopy. | [noun] Any of several groupings of subatomic particles that share most properties, but have different charges. MULTIPLIED (15) [verb] To increase the amount, degree or number of (something). | [verb] (with by) To perform multiplication on (a number). | [verb] To grow in number. MULTIPLIER (14) [noun] A number by which another (the multiplicand) is to be multiplied. | [noun] (grammar) An adjective indicating the number of times something is to be multiplied. | [noun] A ratio used to estimate total economic effect for a variety of economic activities. MULTIPLIES (14) [noun] An act or instance of multiplying. | [verb] To increase the amount, degree or number of (something). | [verb] (with by) To perform multiplication on (a number). MULTIPOLAR (14) [noun] An electromagnetic machine in which several magnetic poles exist. | [adjective] Having more than two poles. | [adjective] Of or relating to an international system in which a number of states wield most of the cultural, economic, and political influence. MULTIPOWER (17) MULTIRANGE (13) MULTISENSE (12) MULTISIDED (14) MULTISPEED (15) MULTISPORT (14) MULTISTAGE (13) [adjective] Having more than one step or phase. | [adjective] (of a rocket) Composed of multiple detachable parts. MULTISTATE (12) MULTISTORY (15) [adjective] (of a building) Having more than one storey. MULTITRACK (18) [verb] To record on multiple tracks simultaneously (typically with each performer or instrument having its own track) | [adjective] Having or involving more than one track. MULTITUDES (13) [noun] A great amount or number, often of people; abundance, myriad, profusion. | [noun] The mass of ordinary people; the masses, the populace. MULTIUNION (12) MUMMICHOGS (22) [noun] A hardy killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus, found in brackish and coastal waters of the United States and Canada. MUMMIFYING (23) [verb] To make into a mummy, by preserving a dead body. | [verb] To become a mummy. MUNICIPALS (16) MUNIFICENT (17) [adjective] (of a person or group) Very liberal in giving or bestowing. | [adjective] (of a gift, donation, etc.) Very generous; lavish. MUNITIONED (13) [verb] To supply with munitions. MURTHERING (16) [verb] To deliberately kill (a person or persons) without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To kick someone's ass or chew someone out (used to express one’s anger at somebody). MUSCADINES (15) [noun] An American vine of the subgenus Vitis subg. Muscadinia, Vitis rotundifolia | [noun] A grape variety from this vine. | [noun] A wine produced from these grapes. MUSCARINES (14) MUSCARINIC (16) [adjective] Of or pertaining to muscarine MUSCOVITES (17) [noun] A pale brown mineral of the mica group, being a basic potassium aluminosilicate with the chemical formula KAl2(Si3Al)O10(OH,F)2; used as an electrical insulator etc. MUSCULARLY (17) MUSHROOMED (18) [verb] To grow quickly to a large size. | [verb] To gather mushrooms. | [verb] To form the shape of a mushroom. MUSICALISE (14) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICALITY (17) [noun] The condition of being musical. | [noun] Talent or sensitivity in the playing of music. MUSICALIZE (23) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICIANLY (17) MUSICOLOGY (18) [noun] The scholarly or scientific study of music, as in historical research, musical theory, or the physical nature of sound. MUSKETEERS (16) [noun] A foot soldier armed with a musket. | [noun] In 17th- and 18th-century France, a member of the royal household bodyguard. | [noun] A comrade or fellow. MUSKETRIES (16) MUSKMELONS (18) [noun] A type of melon, Cucumis melo subsp. melo, with sweet orange flesh and a rough skin resembling netting. MUSQUASHES (24) [noun] The muskrat, Ondatra zibethicus. MUSTACHIOS (17) [noun] A mustache, especially a large or lush one. | [verb] To adorn with a mustachio, or something that resembles a mustachio. MUTABILITY (17) [noun] The quality or state of being mutable. MUTATIONAL (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or the result of mutation MUTENESSES (12) MUTILATING (13) [verb] To physically harm as to impair use, notably by cutting off or otherwise disabling a vital part, such as a limb. | [verb] To destroy beyond recognition. | [verb] To render imperfect or defective. MUTILATION (12) [noun] The act of mutilating or the state of being mutilated. MUTILATORS (12) MUTINEERED (13) MUTINOUSLY (15) MUTTONFISH (18) MUTUALISMS (14) MUTUALISTS (12) MUTUALIZED (22) [verb] To make, or to become mutual | [verb] To organize a business (especially a financial business) so that it is owned by its customers (or its employees) MUTUALIZES (21) [verb] To make, or to become mutual | [verb] To organize a business (especially a financial business) so that it is owned by its customers (or its employees) MYASTHENIA (18) [noun] Abnormal weakness of the muscles; but especially myasthenia gravis. MYASTHENIC (20) MYCETOMATA (19) MYCETOZOAN (26) MYCOFLORAE (20) MYCOFLORAS (20) MYCOLOGIES (18) MYCOLOGIST (18) MYCOPHILES (22) MYCOPLASMA (21) [noun] Any infectious bacterium of the genus Mycoplasma, often specifically Mycoplasma pneumoniae MYCORRHIZA (29) [noun] A symbiosis between the mycelium of a fungus and the roots of a plant. MYCOTOXINS (24) [noun] Any substance, produced by a mold or fungus, that is injurious to vertebrates upon ingestion, inhalation or skin contact MYDRIATICS (18) MYELINATED (16) [adjective] Of nerves, having a coating of myelin. MYELITIDES (16) MYELOBLAST (17) MYELOCYTES (20) MYELOCYTIC (22) MYELOPATHY (23) [noun] A disorder in which the tissue of the spinal cord is diseased or damaged. | [noun] A disturbance or disease of the spinal cord. MYOCARDIAL (18) [adjective] Relating to the myocardium, the thick muscular wall of the heart. MYOCARDIUM (20) [noun] The muscular substance of the heart; the middle of the three layers forming the outer wall of the human heart. MYOFIBRILS (20) [noun] Any of the cylindrical organelles, found within muscle cells, that are the contractile unit of muscles. MYOGLOBINS (18) MYOPATHIES (20) [noun] Any of several diseases of muscle that are not caused by nerve disorders MYOPICALLY (22) MYOSITISES (15) MYOSOTISES (15) [noun] Any plant of the genus Myosotis, the forget-me-nots. MYROBALANS (17) [noun] A plum-like fruit from various trees of the genus Terminalia, formerly used in medicine and now in the dyeing industry; also, the tree itself. MYSTAGOGUE (17) [noun] A person who prepares an initiate for entry into a mystery cult, or who teaches mystical doctrines | [noun] One who keeps and shows church relics. MYSTERIOUS (15) [adjective] Of unknown origin. | [adjective] Having unknown qualities. | [adjective] Difficult to understand. MYSTICALLY (20) MYSTICISMS (19) MYSTIFIERS (18) MYSTIFYING (22) [verb] To thoroughly confuse, befuddle, or bewilder. | [adjective] Very hard to understand; baffling. MYTHICALLY (23) MYTHICIZED (30) [verb] To make into a myth. | [verb] To interpret in terms of mythology. MYTHICIZER (29) MYTHICIZES (29) [verb] To make into a myth. | [verb] To interpret in terms of mythology. MYTHMAKERS (24) MYTHMAKING (25) MYTHOLOGER (19) MYTHOLOGIC (21) MYTHOMANIA (20) [noun] A compulsion to tell lies and exaggerate the truth. MYTHOPOEIA (20) [noun] Creation of any myth. MYTHOPOEIC (22) MYXOMATOUS (24) MYXOMYCETE (29) [noun] Any protozoan of the phylum Myxomycota; the slime molds

11-Letter Words (961)

MACADAMIZED (28) [verb] To cover, as a road, or street, with small, broken stones, so as to form a smooth, hard, convex surface. MACADAMIZES (27) MACERATIONS (15) MACHINATING (19) [verb] To devise a plot or secret plan; to conspire. MACHINATION (18) [noun] A clever scheme or artful plot, usually crafted for evil purposes. | [noun] The act of machinating or plotting. MACHINATORS (18) MACHINEABLE (20) MACHINELIKE (22) MACHINERIES (18) MACINTOSHES (18) [noun] A raincoat. MACROBIOTIC (19) [adjective] Of a lifestyle incorporating a dietary regimen including locally grown, seasonal, natural foods, or of the diet itself. | [adjective] Long-lived. MACROCOSMIC (21) MACROCYCLIC (24) [adjective] (of an organic compound) having a closed ring of more than about twelve atoms | [adjective] Of, or relating to a macrocycle MACROFOSSIL (18) MACROGAMETE (18) [noun] The larger of a pair of conjugating gametes; often the female. MACRONUCLEI (17) MACROPHAGES (21) [noun] A white blood cell that phagocytizes necrotic cell debris and foreign material, including viruses, bacteria, and tattoo ink. It presents foreign antigens on MHC II to lymphocytes. Part of the innate immune system. MACROPHAGIC (23) MACROPHYTES (23) [noun] Any normal macroscopic plant, especially an aquatic one. MACROPHYTIC (25) MACROSCALES (17) [noun] A relatively large scale MACROSCOPIC (21) [adjective] Visible to the unassisted eye | [adjective] Having an appreciable mass MACULATIONS (15) MADDENINGLY (19) [adverb] In a maddening manner. MADREPORIAN (16) MADREPORITE (16) [noun] A calcareous opening in the body of echinoderms which connects the water vascular system to the environment. | [noun] A fossil stony coral, or a deposit composed of the same. MADRIGALIAN (15) MADRIGALIST (15) MAGAZINISTS (23) MAGISTERIAL (14) [adjective] Befitting the status or skill of a magister or master; authoritative, masterly. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a master, magistrate, the magisterium, or one in authority. | [adjective] Pertaining to, produced by, or of the nature of, magistery. MAGISTERIUM (16) [noun] The teaching office or authority of the Roman Catholic Church. | [noun] An authoritative statement. MAGISTRALLY (17) MAGISTRATES (14) [noun] A judicial officer with limited authority to administer and enforce the law. A magistrate's court may have jurisdiction in civil or criminal cases, or both. | [noun] A high official of the state or a municipality in ancient Greece or Rome. | [noun] (by extension) A comparable official in medieval or modern institutions. MAGNANIMITY (19) [noun] The quality of being magnanimous; greatness of mind; elevation or dignity of soul. | [noun] That quality or combination of qualities, in character, which enables one to encounter danger and trouble with tranquility and firmness, to disdain injustice, meanness and revenge, and to act and sacrifice for noble objectives. MAGNANIMOUS (16) [adjective] Noble and generous in spirit. MAGNETISING (15) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETIZERS (23) MAGNETIZING (24) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNIFICATS (19) MAGNIFICENT (19) [adjective] Grand, elegant or splendid in appearance. | [adjective] Grand or noble in action. | [adjective] Exceptional for its kind. MAGNIFICOES (19) [noun] A grandee or nobleman of Venice. | [noun] A rector of a German university. MAIDENHAIRS (17) [noun] A woman's pubic hair | [noun] Either of two species of genus Adiantum of fern with delicate, hair-like stalks, especially Adiantum capillus-veneris | [noun] Designating various types of moss or flowering plants. MAIDENHEADS (18) [noun] Virginity. | [noun] The hymen. MAIDENHOODS (18) [noun] The condition of being a maiden; the time when one is a maiden or young girl. | [noun] A woman's virginity or maidenhead. | [noun] Freshness; newness. MAIDSERVANT (17) [noun] A female servant; a maid. MAILABILITY (18) MAINLANDERS (14) MAINSPRINGS (16) [noun] The principal spring of a clockwork mechanism, which drives it by uncoiling. | [noun] The most important reason for something (Cf. spring "origin of something" (literary) (often in the plural) the springs of her ambition). MAINSTREAMS (15) [verb] To popularize, to normalize, to render mainstream. | [verb] To become mainstream. | [verb] To educate (a disabled student) together with non-disabled students. MAINTAINERS (13) [noun] Someone who keeps or upholds something; a steward. | [noun] A person who does maintenance work. | [noun] A device used to keep teeth in a given position. MAINTAINING (14) [verb] To support (someone), to back up or assist (someone) in an action. | [verb] To keep up; to preserve; to uphold (a state, condition etc.). | [verb] To declare or affirm (a clause) to be true; to assert. MAINTENANCE (15) [noun] Actions performed to keep some machine or system functioning or in service. | [noun] A tort committed when a third party who does not have a bona fide interest in a lawsuit provides help or acquires an interest to a litigant's lawsuit. | [noun] Alimony, a periodical payment or a lump sum made or ordered to be made to a spouse after a divorce. MAISONETTES (13) [noun] A small house | [noun] An apartment often on two floors MAKEREADIES (18) MAKEWEIGHTS (24) [noun] Something of inferior quality which is included in a shipment to make up the weight. | [noun] Something included to add to the apparent weight or force of an argument. MALADAPTIVE (19) [adjective] (chiefly of behaviour) Showing inadequate or faulty adaptation to a new situation. MALADJUSTED (22) [adjective] Badly adjusted to the demands and stresses of daily living; unable to cope. MALADROITLY (17) MALAPROPIAN (17) MALAPROPISM (19) [noun] The blundering use of an absurdly inappropriate word or expression in place of a similar-sounding one. | [noun] An instance of this; malaprop. MALAPROPIST (17) MALARIOLOGY (17) [noun] The scientific study of malaria. MALCONTENTS (15) [noun] A person who is not satisfied with current conditions; a discontented person, a rebel. | [noun] A state of discontentment or dissatisfaction; something that causes discontent. | [verb] To cause discontent or dissatisfaction. MALEDICTING (17) MALEDICTION (16) [noun] A curse. | [noun] Evil speech. MALEDICTORY (19) MALEFACTION (18) MALEFACTORS (18) [noun] A criminal or felon. | [noun] An evildoer. MALEFICENCE (20) MALEVOLENCE (18) [noun] Hostile attitude or feeling. | [noun] Behavior exhibiting a hostile attitude. MALFEASANCE (18) [noun] Wrongdoing. | [noun] Misconduct or wrongdoing, especially by a public official and causing damage. MALFUNCTION (18) [noun] Faulty functioning | [noun] Failure to function | [verb] To function improperly MALICIOUSLY (18) [adverb] In a malicious manner, or for malicious reasons MALIGNANCES (16) MALIGNANTLY (17) MALIGNITIES (14) MALINGERERS (14) [noun] A person who malingers. MALINGERING (15) [verb] To feign illness, injury, or incapacitation in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. | [verb] To self-inflict real injury or infection (to inflict self-harm) in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. MALPOSITION (15) MALPRACTICE (19) [noun] The improper treatment of a patient by a physician that results in injury or loss. | [noun] Improper or unethical conduct by a professional or official person. MALTREATERS (13) MALTREATING (14) [verb] To treat badly, to abuse. MAMMALOGIES (18) MAMMALOGIST (18) MAMMILLATED (18) [adjective] Having small nipples, or small protuberances like nipples or mammae. | [adjective] Bounded like a nipple; said of the apex of some shells. MAMMOGRAPHY (26) [noun] X-ray examination of the breasts for diagnosing and locating abnormalities, especially tumours. MANAGEMENTS (16) [noun] Administration; the use of limited resources combined with forecasting, planning, leadership and execution skills to achieve predetermined specific goals. | [noun] The executives of an organisation, especially senior executives. | [noun] Judicious use of means to accomplish an end. MANAGERSHIP (19) MANCHINEELS (18) [noun] A tropical American tree, Hippomane mancinella, having apple-like, poisonous fruit, and a sap that causes blisters on contact with the skin MANDAMUSING (17) MANDARINATE (14) MANDARINISM (16) MANDATARIES (14) [noun] One who receives a mandate. MANDATORIES (14) [noun] A sign or line that require the path of the disc to be above, below or to one side of it. | [noun] A person, organisation or state who receives a mandate; a mandatary. MANDATORILY (17) MANDIBULATE (16) MANDOLINIST (14) MANDRAGORAS (15) [noun] Mandrake (genus Mandragora); often specifically mandrake root, traditionally used as a narcotic. | [noun] A kind of tiny dragon immune to fire. MANEUVERERS (16) MANEUVERING (17) [verb] To move (something, or oneself) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position. | [verb] To guide, steer, manage purposefully | [verb] To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme MANGANESIAN (14) MANGINESSES (14) MANGOSTEENS (14) [noun] A tropical fruit of the tree genus Garcinia. | [noun] The tree on which the fruit grows. MANHANDLING (18) [verb] To move something heavy by force of men, without aid of levers, pulleys, machine, or tackles. | [verb] To assault or beat up a person. | [verb] To mishandle; to handle roughly; to mangle. MANICURISTS (15) [noun] A person who performs manicures. MANIFESTANT (16) MANIFESTERS (16) MANIFESTING (17) [verb] To show plainly; to make to appear distinctly, usually to the mind; to put beyond question or doubt; to display; to exhibit. | [verb] To exhibit the manifests or prepared invoices of; to declare at the customhouse. MANIFESTOED (17) MANIFESTOES (16) MANIFOLDING (18) MANIPULABLE (17) MANIPULATED (16) [verb] To move, arrange or operate something using the hands | [verb] To influence, manage, direct, control or tamper with something | [verb] To handle and move a body part, either as an examination or for a therapeutic purpose MANIPULATES (15) [verb] To move, arrange or operate something using the hands | [verb] To influence, manage, direct, control or tamper with something | [verb] To handle and move a body part, either as an examination or for a therapeutic purpose MANIPULATOR (15) [noun] Agent noun of manipulate; one who manipulates. | [noun] A device which can be used to move, arrange or operate something. | [noun] A puppeteer, especially one controlling marionettes. MANLINESSES (13) MANNERISTIC (15) MANNISHNESS (16) MANOEUVRING (17) [verb] To move (something, or oneself) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position. | [verb] To guide, steer, manage purposefully | [verb] To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme MANOMETRIES (15) MANORIALISM (15) MANSUETUDES (14) MANTELPIECE (17) [noun] A shelf that is affixed to the wall above a fireplace. MANTELSHELF (19) [noun] A shelf above a fireplace. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. MANUFACTORY (21) [noun] A manufacturing process; a particular industry or part of an industry. | [noun] A plant where something is manufactured; a factory. | [adjective] Relating to manufacture. MANUFACTURE (18) [noun] The action or process of making goods systematically or on a large scale. | [noun] Anything made, formed or produced; product. | [noun] The process of such production; generation, creation. MANUMISSION (15) [noun] Release from slavery or other legally sanctioned servitude; the giving of freedom; the act of manumitting. MANUMITTING (16) [verb] To release from slavery, to free. MANUSCRIPTS (17) [noun] A book, composition or any other document, written by hand (or manually typewritten), not mechanically reproduced. | [noun] A single, original copy of a book, article, composition etc, written by hand or even printed, submitted as original for (copy-editing and) reproductive publication. MAQUILADORA (23) [noun] An assembly plant in Mexico owned by a company from the United States or another foreign country, using cheap local labour and imported components, and which then exports its products to the company's country of origin; also (by extension) similar factories in other countries. MAQUILLAGES (23) MARASCHINOS (18) [noun] A sweet liqueur made from marasca cherries MARATHONERS (16) MARATHONING (17) MARBLEISING (16) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEIZING (25) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARCHIONESS (18) [noun] The wife of a marquess. | [noun] A woman holding the rank of marquess in her own right. MARGINALITY (17) MARGINALIZE (23) [verb] To relegate (something, especially a topic or a group of people) to the margins or to a lower limit; to exclude socially or otherwise. MARGINATING (15) [verb] To provide with margins. MARGINATION (14) MARGRAVATES (17) [noun] The status or rank of margrave. | [noun] A territory governed by a margrave or margravine. MARGRAVIATE (17) [noun] The status or rank of margrave. | [noun] A territory governed by a margrave or margravine. MARGRAVINES (17) [noun] The wife of a margrave. | [noun] A woman with the rank and responsibilities of a margrave. MARGUERITES (14) [noun] An oxeye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare). | [noun] A shrub with daisy-like flowers, Argyranthemum frutescens | [noun] The China aster. MARICULTURE (15) [noun] Aquaculture using seawater MARINATIONS (13) MARIONETTES (13) [noun] A puppet, usually made of wood, which is animated by the pulling of strings. | [noun] The buffel duck. MARKETPLACE (21) [noun] An open area in a town housing a public market. | [noun] The space, actual or metaphorical, in which a market operates. | [noun] (by extension) The world of commerce and trade. MARLINSPIKE (19) [noun] A tool, consisting of a pointed metal spike, used to manipulate the strands of rope or cable when knotting and splicing. MARMOREALLY (18) MARQUESSATE (22) [noun] The territory of a marquess, margrave or person of comparable rank. MARQUETERIE (22) [noun] A decorative technique in which veneers of wood, ivory, metal etc. are inlaid into a wood surface to form intricate designs. | [noun] An example of this work MARQUETRIES (22) MARQUISATES (22) [noun] The territory held by a marquis, margrave or marchioness. | [noun] The state or rank of a marquis. MARQUISETTE (22) [noun] A sheer cotton fabric used for mosquito nets and curtains MARROWBONES (18) [noun] A bone containing edible marrow. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The shins or knees, chiefly in references to kneeling. MARSHALCIES (18) MARSHALLING (17) [verb] To arrange (troops, etc.) in line for inspection or a parade. | [verb] (by extension) To arrange (facts, etc.) in some methodical order. | [verb] To ceremoniously guide, conduct or usher. MARSHALSHIP (21) MARSHMALLOW (21) [noun] A species of mallow, Althaea officinalis, that grows in marshy terrain. | [noun] A type of confectionery, originally (since Ancient Egyptian times) made from this plant, but now generally made of sugar or corn syrup, gelatin that has been pre-softened in water, gum arabic, flavorings, and sometimes beaten egg whites, all whipped to a spongy consistency. | [noun] Someone who is soft and benign. MARTENSITES (13) MARTENSITIC (15) MARTINGALES (14) [noun] A piece of harness used on a horse to keep it from raising its head above a desired point. | [noun] A spar, or piece of rigging that strengthens the bowsprit. | [noun] A stochastic process for which the conditional expectation of future values given the sequence of all prior values is equal to the current value. MARTYRIZING (26) [verb] To make a martyr of (someone). MARTYROLOGY (20) [noun] A catalogue or list of martyrs (or, more precisely, of saints), arranged in the order of their anniversaries. | [noun] The story of the deaths of several famous Rabbis (including Rabbi Akiva) by Romans, read both on Yom Kippur and Tisha b'Av. MARVELOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a marvellous manner. | [adverb] To a great or impressive degree; very. MASCARPONES (17) MASCULINELY (18) MASCULINISE (15) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINIST (15) [noun] An advocate of masculinism. | [adjective] Relating to or in accordance with masculinism. MASCULINITY (18) [noun] The degree or property of being masculine or manly; manliness. MASCULINIZE (24) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASOCHISTIC (20) [adjective] Deriving (especially sexual) pleasure from abuse, being punished, or dominated. MASQUERADED (24) [verb] To take part in a masquerade; to assemble in masks and costumes; to wear a disguise. | [verb] To pass off as a different person or a person with qualities that one does not possess; also, to make a pretentious show of being what one is not. | [verb] To conceal (someone) with, or as if with, a mask; to disguise. MASQUERADER (23) MASQUERADES (23) [noun] An assembly or party of people wearing (usually elaborate or fanciful) masks and costumes, and amusing themselves with dancing, conversation, or other diversions. | [noun] The act of wearing a mask or dressing up in a costume for, or as if for, a masquerade ball. | [noun] An act of living under false pretenses; a concealment of something by a false or unreal show; a disguise, a pretence; also, a pretentious display. MASSASAUGAS (14) [noun] The rattlesnake Sistrurus catenatus (formerly Crotalinus catenatus) in the family Viperidae, found in three subspecies. MASSIVENESS (16) MASTERFULLY (19) [adverb] In a masterful manner; in an extremely confident and competent manner. MASTERMINDS (16) [noun] A person with an extraordinary intellect or skill that is markedly superior to his or her peers. | [noun] A person responsible for the highest level of planning and execution of a major operation. | [verb] To act in the role of mastermind. MASTERPIECE (17) [noun] A piece of work that has been given much critical praise, especially one that is considered the greatest work of a person's career. | [noun] A work of outstanding creativity, skill or workmanship. | [noun] A work created in order to qualify as a master craftsman and member of a guild. MASTERSHIPS (18) MASTERWORKS (20) [noun] A piece done to prove possession of skill sufficient to be ranked a master. | [noun] A piece of quality, indicative of having been made by a master; a masterpiece. | [noun] An act of primary importance. MASTHEADING (18) [verb] To send to the masthead as a punishment. MASTICATING (16) [verb] To chew (food). | [verb] To grind or knead something into a pulp. MASTICATION (15) MASTICATORS (15) [noun] Someone who masticates. | [noun] A machine for cutting meat into fine pieces for toothless people. | [noun] A machine for cutting leather, India rubber, or similar tough substances, into fine pieces, in some processes of manufacture. MASTICATORY (18) MASTOIDITIS (14) [noun] Inflammation of the mastoid process of the temporal bone. MASTURBATED (16) [verb] To stimulate oneself sexually, especially by use of one’s hand or a sex toy made for this purpose, often to the point of ejaculation. | [verb] To stimulate someone else sexually without penetration of the penis. | [verb] To stimulate or please oneself by means of anything, not necessarily sexual, that does not get them anywhere; something that wastes their time; something that does not help others or achieve any important goal. MASTURBATES (15) [verb] To stimulate oneself sexually, especially by use of one’s hand or a sex toy made for this purpose, often to the point of ejaculation. | [verb] To stimulate someone else sexually without penetration of the penis. | [verb] To stimulate or please oneself by means of anything, not necessarily sexual, that does not get them anywhere; something that wastes their time; something that does not help others or achieve any important goal. MASTURBATOR (15) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) Someone who masturbates. | [noun] A sex toy used to complement and help stimulate its user's erogenous zone(s) during masturbation, and often designed to simulate an erotic body part (of an imaginary partner). MATCHBOARDS (21) MATCHLESSLY (21) MATCHMAKERS (24) [noun] Someone who finds suitable dates or marriage partners for other people. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who arranges professional boxing matches. | [noun] Someone who makes matchsticks. MATCHMAKING (25) [verb] To do matchmaking: to set up a date between two people or to arrange a marriage. | [noun] An attempt to make two people romantically interested in each other, especially an attempt to set up a date between people or to arrange a marriage. | [noun] A service aiming to bring together sellers and buyers or potential partners. MATCHSTICKS (24) [noun] A small, slender piece of wood or cardboard serving as a component of a match. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Any similarly small and thin piece. MATERIALISE (13) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALISM (15) [noun] Constant concern over material possessions and wealth; a great or excessive regard for worldly concerns. | [noun] The philosophical belief that nothing exists beyond what is physical. | [noun] Material substances in the aggregate; matter. MATERIALIST (13) [noun] Someone who is materialistic, concerned only with material possessions. | [noun] A follower or proponent of philosophical materialism. | [adjective] Having features typical of philosophical materialism. MATERIALITY (16) [noun] The quality of being material; having a physical existence. | [noun] The quality of being of consequence to a legal decision. MATERIALIZE (22) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERNITIES (13) MATEYNESSES (16) MATHEMATICS (20) [noun] An abstract representational system used in the study of numbers, shapes, structure, change and the relationships between these concepts. | [noun] A person's ability to count, calculate, and use different systems of mathematics at differing levels. MATHEMATIZE (27) [verb] To describe in terms of a mathematical equation. MATRIARCHAL (18) [adjective] Governed by (or as if by) a matriarch. | [adjective] Governed by females, rather than by males. MATRICULANT (15) [noun] A person who has matriculated or been registered on a list or roll, usually at a school. MATRICULATE (15) [noun] A person admitted to membership in a society. | [verb] To enroll as a member of a body, especially of a college or university | [verb] To be enrolled as a member of a body, especially of a college or university. MATRILINEAL (13) [adjective] Tracing descent only through female ancestors. MATRIMONIAL (15) [noun] A classified advertisement describing an individual who wishes to find a marriage partner. | [adjective] Of, or having to do with matrimony and marriage. MATRIMONIES (15) MATRONYMICS (20) [noun] A surname or byname acquired from the given name of one's mother. | [noun] By extension, a surname or byname acquired from the given name from a female ancestor. MATURATIONS (13) MATUTINALLY (16) MAVOURNEENS (16) MAWKISHNESS (23) MAXILLARIES (20) MAXILLIPEDS (23) [noun] One of the appendages on the heads of centipedes and some crustaceans behind the maxillae, used for feeding. The maxillipeds, known as forcipules, give centipedes their scientific name, Chilopoda (lip-foot). MAXIMALISTS (22) [noun] A person with maximalist beliefs or tendencies; someone who prefers redundancy or excess MAYONNAISES (16) [noun] A dressing made from vegetable oil, raw egg yolks and seasoning, used on salads, with french fries, in sandwiches etc. | [noun] Any cold dish with that dressing as an ingredient. | [noun] Any cream, for example for moisturizing the face or conditioning the hair, for which the base is egg yolks and oil. MAYORALTIES (16) [noun] The office (or term of office) of a mayor. MEADOWLANDS (18) [noun] A tract of land cultivated as a meadow. MEADOWLARKS (21) [noun] The meadow pipit (Anthus pratensis). | [noun] Any of several songbirds of the genera Sturnella and Leistes, native to the Americas. MEADOWSWEET (20) [noun] A Eurasian perennial flowering plant of Rosaceae family, Filipendula ulmaria. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Spiraea of the Rosaceae family, native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere and consisting of about 80-100 species of shrubs. MEANINGLESS (14) [adjective] Lacking meaning. | [adjective] Insignificant; not worthy of importance. MEASURELESS (13) [adjective] Not measured because it is so large that it is difficult or impossible to do so. MEASUREMENT (15) [noun] The act of measuring. | [noun] Magnitude (or extent or amount) determined by an act of measuring. MEATINESSES (13) MEATPACKING (22) [noun] The slaughter and further processing of animals for meat. MECHANICALS (20) [noun] Manually created layout of artwork that is camera ready for photographic reproduction. | [noun] One who does manual labor, especially one who is similar to Shakespeare's rude mechanicals | [noun] A robot or mechanical creature. MECHANICIAN (20) [noun] One skilled in the theory or construction of machines. | [noun] One skilled in building, using, or repairing machines, or who makes machines or tools. | [noun] One skilled in mechanics. MECHANISTIC (20) [adjective] Having the impersonal and automatic characteristics of a machine. | [adjective] Predetermined by, or as if by, a mechanism. | [adjective] Having a physical or biological cause. MECHANIZERS (27) MECHANIZING (28) [verb] To equip something with machinery. | [verb] To equip a military unit with tanks and other armed vehicles. | [verb] To make something routine, automatic or monotonous. MEDEVACKING (24) [verb] To transport (patients) by medevac. MEDIASTINAL (14) MEDIASTINUM (16) [noun] The region in mammals between the pleural sacs, containing the heart and all of the thoracic viscera except the lungs. MEDIATIONAL (14) MEDIATRICES (16) MEDIATRIXES (21) MEDICAMENTS (18) [noun] A medicine, medication or drug. MEDICATIONS (16) [noun] A medicine, or all the medicines regularly taken by a patient. | [noun] The administration of medicine. MEDICINABLE (18) MEDICINALLY (19) MEDICOLEGAL (17) MEDIEVALISM (19) MEDIEVALIST (17) MEDITATIONS (14) [noun] A devotional exercise of, or leading to contemplation. | [noun] A contemplative discourse, often on a religious or philosophical subject. | [noun] A musical theme treated in a meditative manner. MEDIUMISTIC (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to mediums (people claiming to contact the dead); relating to or having the ability to communicate with spirits. MEDIUMSHIPS (21) MEERSCHAUMS (20) [noun] A soft white mineral, chiefly used for smoking-pipes and cigar holders. | [noun] A smoking-pipe made from meerschaum. MEGAGAMETES (17) [noun] A macrogamete. MEGALOBLAST (16) [noun] An abnormally large red blood cell associated with pernicious anemia and with folic acid deficiency. MEGALOMANIA (16) [noun] A psychopathological condition characterized by delusional fantasies of wealth, power, or omnipotence. | [noun] Narcissistic personality disorder. | [noun] An obsession with grandiose or extravagant things or actions. MEGALOMANIC (18) MEGALOPOLIS (16) [noun] A large conurbation, where two or more large cities have sprawled outward to meet, forming something larger than a metropolis; a megacity. MEGAPARSECS (18) MEGAPHONING (20) [verb] To use a megaphone; to speak through a megaphone. MEGAPROJECT (25) MEGATONNAGE (15) MEGAVITAMIN (19) MEIOTICALLY (18) MEITNERIUMS (15) MELANCHOLIA (18) [noun] Deep sadness or gloom; melancholy. | [noun] Clinical depression, characterised by irrational fears, guilt and apathy. MELANCHOLIC (20) [noun] A person who is habitually melancholy. | [adjective] Filled with or affected by melancholy—great sadness or depression, especially of a thoughtful or introspective nature. MELANOBLAST (15) MELANOCYTES (18) [noun] A cell in the skin that produces the pigment melanin. MELANOPHORE (18) MELANOSOMES (15) MELIORATING (14) [verb] To make better; to improve; to solve a problem. | [verb] To become better. MELIORATION (13) MELIORATIVE (16) MELIORATORS (13) MELIORISTIC (15) MELLIFLUENT (16) [adjective] Mellifluous. MELLIFLUOUS (16) [adjective] Flowing like honey. | [adjective] Sweet, smooth and musical; pleasant to hear (generally used of a person's voice, tone or writing style). MELLOPHONES (18) [noun] A brass instrument frequently used in place of the French horn in marching bands and similar performance groups MELODICALLY (19) MELODIOUSLY (17) MELTABILITY (18) MEMBERSHIPS (22) [noun] The state of being a member of a group or organization. | [noun] The body of members of an organization. | [noun] The fact of being a member of a set. MEMORABILIA (17) [noun] Objects that are connected to or remind their owner of past events. | [noun] Things worth remembering: noteworthy points. MEMORANDUMS (18) [noun] A short note serving as a reminder. | [noun] A written business communication. | [noun] A brief diplomatic communication. MEMORIALISE (15) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALIST (15) [noun] A writer of memorials. | [noun] One who signs a petition. MEMORIALIZE (24) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIZABLE (26) MENDACITIES (16) MENDELEVIUM (19) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Md, formerly Mv) with atomic number 101. MENDICITIES (16) MENINGIOMAS (16) [noun] A common tumour of the central nervous system, occurring in the meninges, usually benign. MENORRHAGIA (17) [noun] Excessive menstruation. | [noun] The normal flow of the menses. MENSERVANTS (16) [noun] A male servant. MENSTRUALLY (16) MENSTRUATED (14) [verb] To stain with or as if with menses. | [verb] To undergo menstruation, to have a period. MENSTRUATES (13) [verb] To stain with or as if with menses. | [verb] To undergo menstruation, to have a period. MENSURATION (13) [noun] The act or process of measuring; measurement. | [noun] The study of measurement, especially the derivation and use of algebraic formulae to measure the areas, volumes and different parameters of geometric figures. | [noun] A 13th century system for governing rhythmic relationships in music that was a precursor to the modern use of time signatures; The use of mensural notation. MENTALISTIC (15) MENTALITIES (13) [noun] A mindset; a way of thinking; a set of beliefs. | [noun] The characteristics of a mind described as a system of distinctive structures and processes based in biology, language, or culture, etc.; a mental system. MENTHOLATED (17) [adjective] Impregnated with menthol. MENTIONABLE (15) MENTORSHIPS (18) [noun] State of being a mentor MEPERIDINES (16) MEPROBAMATE (19) [noun] A carbamate derivative used as an anxiolytic drug. MERCENARIES (15) [noun] One motivated by gain, especially monetary. | [noun] A person employed to fight in an armed conflict who is not a member of the state or military group for which they are fighting and whose primary motivation is private gain. | [noun] One hired to engage in a figurative battle, as a corporate takeover, a lawsuit, or a political campaign. MERCENARILY (18) MERCERISING (16) MERCERIZING (25) MERCHANDISE (19) [noun] Commodities offered for sale. | [noun] A commodity offered for sale; an article of commerce; a kind of merchandise. | [noun] The act or business of trading; trade; traffic. MERCHANDIZE (28) [noun] Commodities offered for sale. | [noun] A commodity offered for sale; an article of commerce; a kind of merchandise. | [noun] The act or business of trading; trade; traffic. MERCHANTING (19) MERCHANTMAN (20) [noun] A merchant. | [noun] A cargo ship, engaged in commercial activities, as opposed to a warship. MERCHANTMEN (20) [noun] A merchant. | [noun] A cargo ship, engaged in commercial activities, as opposed to a warship. MERCILESSLY (18) [adverb] In a merciless manner. MERCURATING (16) MERCURATION (15) MERCURIALLY (18) MERIDIONALS (14) [noun] An inhabitant of a southern region, especially the south of France MERITOCRACY (20) [noun] Rule by merit, and talent. | [noun] A type of society where wealth, income, and social status are assigned through competition. MERITOCRATS (15) [noun] An advocate of meritocracy. | [noun] A person who has authority allegedly based on ability. MERITORIOUS (13) [adjective] Deserving of merit or commendation; deserving reward. MEROBLASTIC (17) MEROMORPHIC (22) MEROMYOSINS (18) MERRINESSES (13) MERRYMAKERS (22) MERRYMAKING (23) [noun] Joyful festivities, especially as a celebration. MESALLIANCE (15) MESENCHYMAL (23) MESENCHYMES (23) MESENTERIES (13) [noun] The membrane that attaches the intestines to the wall of the abdomen, maintaining their position in the abdominal cavity, and supplying them with blood vessels, nerves, and lymphatics. MESHUGGENER (18) [noun] A madman; a crazy person, a nutter. | [adjective] Crazy, insane MESMERISING (16) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESMERIZERS (24) MESMERIZING (25) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. | [adjective] Exercising mesmerism on; spellbinding; enthralling. MESOCYCLONE (20) MESOMORPHIC (22) MESONEPHRIC (20) MESONEPHROI (18) MESONEPHROS (18) MESOPELAGIC (18) [noun] A mesopelagic fish | [adjective] Describing a pelagic zone of the oceans between the photic epipelagic and the aphotic bathypelagic zones MESOPHYLLIC (23) MESOSPHERES (18) MESOSPHERIC (20) MESOTHELIAL (16) MESOTHELIUM (18) [noun] A membrane of flat epithelial cells that lines the body cavity of embryos and forms the squamous cells of the peritoneum, pericardium, and pleura MESOTROPHIC (20) MESSIAHSHIP (21) MESSIANISMS (15) MESSINESSES (13) METABOLISMS (17) METABOLITES (15) [noun] Any substance produced by, or taking part in, a metabolic reaction. METABOLIZED (25) [verb] To undergo metabolism. | [verb] To cause a substance to undergo metabolism. | [verb] To produce a substance using metabolism. METABOLIZES (24) [verb] To undergo metabolism. | [verb] To cause a substance to undergo metabolism. | [verb] To produce a substance using metabolism. METACARPALS (17) [noun] Any of the bones of the metacarpus. METACENTERS (15) [noun] A midway point between a ship's centre of buoyancy when upright and its centre of buoyancy when tilted; it must be above the centre of gravity to enable a tilting ship to return to an upright position. METACENTRIC (17) METAETHICAL (18) METAFICTION (18) [noun] A form of self-referential literature concerned with the art and devices of fiction itself. METAGENESES (14) METAGENESIS (14) [noun] The production of sexual and asexual organisms in alternate generations METAGENETIC (16) METALLIZING (23) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLOIDAL (14) METALSMITHS (18) METALWORKER (20) METAMERISMS (17) METAMORPHIC (22) [noun] A rock that has been changed from its original form by subjection to heat and/or pressure. | [adjective] Characterised by or exhibiting a change in form or character. | [adjective] Pertaining to metamorphism; having been structurally altered as a result of, or resulting from, exposure to intense heat and/or pressure (at the contact zone between colliding plates, for example). METANALYSES (16) [noun] Analysis of analyses. | [noun] The act of breaking down a word or phrase into segments or meanings not original to it; breaking down the boundaries between words or other units. METANALYSIS (16) [noun] Analysis of analyses. | [noun] The act of breaking down a word or phrase into segments or meanings not original to it; breaking down the boundaries between words or other units. METANEPHRIC (20) METANEPHROI (18) METANEPHROS (18) METAPHRASES (18) [noun] A literal, word-for-word translation. | [noun] An answering phrase; repartee. | [verb] To make such a literal translation. METAPHYSICS (23) [noun] The field of study of metaphysics. | [noun] The metaphysical system of a particular philosopher or of a particular school of thought. | [noun] A fundamental principle or key concept. METAPLASIAS (15) METAPLASTIC (17) [adjective] Relating to, or produced by metaplasia | [adjective] Relating to metaplasticity METASEQUOIA (22) METASOMATIC (17) METASTASIZE (22) [verb] (of a disease or tumour) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis. METATARSALS (13) [noun] Any of the bones of the metatarsus. METEORITICS (15) METEOROIDAL (14) METEOROLOGY (17) [noun] The science that deals with the study of the atmosphere and its phenomena, especially with weather and weather forecasting. | [noun] The atmospheric phenomena in a specific region or period. METERSTICKS (19) METESTRUSES (13) METHANATION (16) METHEDRINES (17) METHENAMINE (18) METHICILLIN (18) [noun] An antibiotic drug, chemically related to penicillin, often used against strains of bacteria which have become resistant to penicillin. METHIONINES (16) METHODISING (18) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODISTIC (19) METHODIZING (27) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODOLOGY (21) [noun] (originally science) The study of methods used in a field. | [noun] A collection of methods, practices, procedures and rules used by those who work in some field. | [noun] The implementation of such methods etc. METHYLAMINE (21) METHYLATING (20) [verb] To add, or treat with methyl alcohol (see methylated spirits) | [verb] To add a methyl group to a compound | [verb] To add a methyl group to a nucleic acid as part of the process of gene expression METHYLATION (19) METHYLATORS (19) METHYLDOPAS (22) METONYMICAL (20) METRICATION (15) METRICIZING (25) METROLOGIES (14) METROLOGIST (14) MIASMICALLY (20) MICROAMPERE (19) MICROBREWER (20) MICROBURSTS (17) [noun] A strong downdraft, of less than 2.5 miles in diameter, that can cause damaging winds. MICROBUSSES (17) MICROCLINES (17) MICROCOCCAL (21) MICROCOCCUS (21) [noun] Any of a group of spherical, aerobic, gram-positive bacteria, of the genus Micrococcus, that are wide-ranging and harmless. MICROCOPIES (19) [noun] A photocopy that is greatly reduced in size. | [noun] Very short copy. MICROCOSMIC (21) MICROCOSMOS (19) [noun] A small or microscopic cosmos; a microcosm. MICROCURIES (17) MICROFARADS (19) [noun] One millionth ( 10-6 ) of a farad, abbreviated as µF. MICROFAUNAE (18) MICROFAUNAL (18) MICROFAUNAS (18) MICROFIBRIL (20) [noun] A bundle of cellulose polymer chains held together by weak bonds. MICROFICHES (23) [noun] A sheet of microfilm, six by four inches, holding several hundred reduced images of document pages; read using a microfiche reader or microfilm reader. | [noun] A device used to magnify and read these sheets. MICROFILMED (21) [verb] To reproduce documents on such film MICROFILMER (20) MICROFLORAE (18) MICROFLORAL (18) MICROFLORAS (18) MICROFOSSIL (18) [noun] A microscopic fossil MICROFUNGUS (19) [noun] A fungus of microscopic size. MICROGAMETE (18) [noun] The smaller of a pair of conjugating gametes; often the male MICROGRAPHS (21) [noun] An image such as a photograph that presents the microscopic at a macroscopic scale; an image produced with a microscope | [noun] A pantograph instrument for executing minute writing or engraving. MICROGROOVE (19) [noun] The long, spiral groove of a vinyl LP record | [noun] Any microscopic groove MICROIMAGES (18) MICROINCHES (20) MICROINJECT (24) [verb] To inject with a micropipette. MICROLITERS (15) [noun] A unit of fluid measure being one millionth (10−6) of a litre. Symbol: μl MICROLITHIC (20) MICROMANAGE (18) [verb] To manage, direct, or control a person, group, or system to an unnecessary level of detail or precision. MICROMETERS (17) [noun] An SI/MKS unit of measure, the length of one millionth of a meter. Symbols: µm, um, rm. | [noun] A device used to measure distance very precisely but within a limited range, especially depth, thickness, and diameter. MICROMETHOD (21) MICRONIZING (25) [verb] To reduce in size, often to micrometer scale. MICRONUCLEI (17) MICROPHAGES (21) [noun] A small phagocyte, especially a polymorphonuclear leucocyte MICROPHONES (20) [noun] A device (transducer) used to convert sound waves into a varying electric current; normally fed into an amplifier and either recorded or broadcast. | [verb] To put one or more microphones on or in. MICROPHONIC (22) MICROPHYLLS (23) [noun] A leaf having a single unbranched vein, or a structure that is derived from such a leaf. | [noun] A very small leaf MICROPIPETS (19) [noun] A very small pipette. MICROPOROUS (17) MICROPRISMS (19) [noun] Any of many very small prisms used, either to form a reflective surface, or to form an area in a camera's viewfinder that blurs if the image is not precisely in focus MICROPROBES (19) [noun] An instrument used to determine the chemical composition at a point on a solid surface, such as that of a mineral. It analyzes the X-rays emitted when a beam of electrons are focused on the sample. MICROQUAKES (28) MICROREADER (16) [noun] Any device used to read microfilm or microfiche MICROSCALES (17) [noun] A very small or microscopic scale | [noun] The scale of microanalysis | [noun] A scale of physical consideration or of bounds having a characteristic dimension typically ranging from 1 to 999 µm (under 1 mm) MICROSCOPES (19) [noun] An optical instrument used for observing small objects. | [noun] Any instrument for imaging very small objects (such as an electron microscope). MICROSCOPIC (21) [adjective] Of, or relating to microscopes or microscopy; microscopal | [adjective] So small that it can only be seen using a microscope. | [adjective] Very small; minute MICROSECOND (18) [noun] An SI unit of time equal to 10-6 seconds. Symbol: μs It is commonly represented with symbol µs. MICROSEISMS (17) [noun] A faint earth tremor caused by natural phenomena, such as wind. MICROSPHERE (20) [noun] Any sphere whose size is measured in micrometres MICROSPORES (17) [noun] The smaller of the two spores produced by plants; compare megaspore. | [noun] One of the numerous tiny spore-like elements produced through the encystment and subdivision of many monads MICROSTATES (15) [noun] A country that has a very small population and land area | [noun] The specific detailed microscopic configuration of a system. MICROSWITCH (23) [noun] An electrical switch that operates with very little travel of (or pressure on) the actuator. MICROTUBULE (17) [noun] A small tube made of protein and found in cells; part of the cytoskeleton. MICROVILLAR (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a microvillus MICROVILLUS (18) [noun] Any of many fingerlike extensions on the surfaces of many cells, consisting of the proteins actin, fimbrin, and villin. MICROWAVING (22) [verb] To cook (something) in a microwave oven. MICROWORLDS (19) MICTURATING (16) [verb] To urinate. MICTURITION (15) [noun] Urination MIDDLEBROWS (20) [noun] A person or thing that is neither highbrow nor lowbrow, but in between. MIDFIELDERS (18) [noun] A player who operates behind the attackers and in front of the defence. MIDLATITUDE (15) MIDSAGITTAL (15) MIDSECTIONS (16) [noun] The middle section of something. | [noun] The midriff; the section of the human torso, from below the chest to above the waist. MIDWIFERIES (20) MIGNONETTES (14) [noun] A plant, Reseda odorata, having greyish-green flowers with orange-coloured stamens, and exhaling a delicious fragrance. In Africa it is a low shrub, but further north it is usually an annual herb. | [noun] A mignonette tree (Lawsonia inermis), source of the dye henna. | [noun] A mignonette vine MIGRATIONAL (14) MILITANCIES (15) MILITARISED (14) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARISES (13) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARISMS (15) MILITARISTS (13) [noun] One who believes in the use of military force. MILITARIZED (23) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARIZES (22) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILKINESSES (17) MILLEFIORIS (16) MILLEFLEURS (16) [noun] A background of many small flowers and plants, popular in tapestry of the Middle Ages in Europe. MILLENARIAN (13) [noun] A person who believes in an apocalyptic millennium. | [adjective] Pertaining to the belief in an impending period of one thousand years of peace and righteousness associated with the Second Coming of Christ. | [adjective] Pertaining to any of various religious or social movements which believe in a coming radical change to existing world order. MILLENARIES (13) [noun] A period of one thousand years; a millennium. MILLENNIUMS (15) [noun] A period of time consisting of one thousand years. | [noun] The period of one thousand years during which Christ will reign on earth (according to Millenarianist interpretations). | [noun] A period of universal happiness, peace or prosperity; a utopia. MILLESIMALS (15) MILLIAMPERE (17) [noun] One thousandth (10-3) of an ampere. MILLICURIES (15) MILLIDEGREE (15) MILLIHENRYS (19) MILLILITERS (13) [noun] A unit of measure of capacity, being one thousandth of a litre. Symbol: ml MILLIMETERS (15) [noun] An SI/MKS unit of measure, the length of 1/1000 of a meter. Symbol: mm MILLIMICRON (17) MILLINERIES (13) [noun] Women's hats. | [noun] A shop selling women's hats. | [noun] The business and work that a milliner engages in. MILLIONAIRE (13) [noun] (strictly) A person whose net worth is at or greater than one million units of the local currency, but less than two million. | [noun] A person whose net worth is at or greater than one million units of the local currency; a multimillionaire. MILLIONFOLD (17) MILLIOSMOLS (15) MILLIRADIAN (14) MILLISECOND (16) [noun] One one-thousandth of a second. Symbol: ms. MILLSTREAMS (15) [noun] The water that runs through a millrace to power a mill. MILLWRIGHTS (20) [noun] A person who designed, erected and built mills and milling machinery. | [noun] A person engaged in the erection of machinery. MIMEOGRAPHS (21) [noun] A machine for making printed copies using typed stencil, eventually superseded by photocopying. | [verb] To make mimeograph copies. MIMETICALLY (20) MINAUDIERES (14) MINDBLOWERS (19) MINDFULNESS (17) [noun] Awareness. | [noun] Inclination to be mindful or aware. | [noun] (as understood in Buddhism and psychology) Paying attention on purpose, in the present moment, and non-judgementally. MINERALISED (14) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALISES (13) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALIZED (23) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALIZER (22) MINERALIZES (22) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALOGIC (16) MINESTRONES (13) MINESWEEPER (18) [noun] A vehicle, device or person with the purpose of removing explosive mines (landmines or water mines). | [noun] A logic-based computer game in which the player has to discover the position of mines in a rectangular grid, based on numerical hints. MINIATURIST (13) [noun] An artist who paints miniature figures or scenes. | [noun] A person who creates or collects miniature figurines (such as dolls). MINIATURIZE (22) [verb] To design or construct something on a miniature scale. MINICOURSES (15) MINIMALISMS (17) MINIMALISTS (15) [noun] One who believes in or seeks a minimal state; one who seeks to minimize or reduce to a minimum. MINISCHOOLS (18) MINISKIRTED (18) MINISTERIAL (13) [noun] A member of the mediaeval estate or caste of unfree nobles. | [adjective] Related to a religious minister or ministry. | [adjective] Related to a governmental minister or ministry. MINISTERING (14) [verb] To attend to (the needs of); to tend; to take care (of); to give aid; to give service. | [verb] To function as a clergyman or as the officiant in church worship | [verb] To afford, to give, to supply. MINISTRANTS (13) MINNESINGER (14) [noun] In 12th- to 14th-century Germany, a peripatetic musician, often performing songs of courtly love. MIRTHLESSLY (19) MISADAPTING (17) MISADJUSTED (22) MISADVISING (18) MISALIGNING (15) MISALLIANCE (15) [noun] An unsuitable alliance, especially an unsuitable marriage. MISALLOCATE (15) [verb] To allocate incorrectly or inappropriately. MISALTERING (14) MISANALYSES (16) MISANALYSIS (16) MISANTHROPE (18) [noun] One who hates all mankind; one who hates the human race. MISANTHROPY (21) [noun] Hatred or dislike of people or mankind. MISAPPLYING (21) [verb] To apply incorrectly; to misuse. MISASSAYING (17) MISASSEMBLE (17) MISAVERRING (17) MISAWARDING (18) MISBALANCED (18) MISBALANCES (17) MISBECOMING (20) MISBEGOTTEN (16) [verb] To beget wrongly or badly. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) One born illegitimately (i.e., out of wedlock); a bastard. | [noun] (in the plural) A person born into infelicitous circumstances. MISBEHAVERS (21) MISBEHAVING (22) [noun] Bad conduct or actions | [verb] To act or behave in an inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected manner. MISBEHAVIOR (21) [noun] Action or conduct that is inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected. MISBELIEVED (19) MISBELIEVER (18) MISBELIEVES (18) MISBIASSING (16) MISBRANDING (17) MISBUILDING (17) MISBUTTONED (16) MISCAPTIONS (17) MISCARRIAGE (16) [noun] A failure; a mistake or error. | [noun] The spontaneous natural termination of a pregnancy, especially before it is viable; the fatal expulsion of a foetus from the womb before term. MISCARRYING (19) [verb] To have an unfortunate accident of some kind; to be killed, or come to harm. | [verb] To go astray; to do something wrong. | [verb] To have a miscarriage; to abort a foetus, usually without intent to do so. MISCATALOGS (16) MISCELLANEA (15) [noun] A miscellaneous collection of different things; a miscellany. | [noun] A miscellany. MISCHANNELS (18) MISCHARGING (20) MISCHIEVOUS (21) [adjective] Causing mischief; injurious. | [adjective] Troublesome, cheeky, badly behaved. MISCIBILITY (20) MISCITATION (15) MISCLAIMING (18) MISCLASSIFY (21) [verb] To classify incorrectly. MISCLASSING (16) MISCOLORING (16) MISCOMPUTED (20) MISCOMPUTES (19) MISCONCEIVE (20) [verb] To misunderstand MISCONDUCTS (18) [noun] Behavior that is considered to be unacceptable. | [verb] To mismanage. | [verb] To behave inappropriately, to misbehave. MISCONNECTS (17) MISCONSTRUE (15) [verb] To interpret erroneously, to understand incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISCOUNTING (16) [verb] To incorrectly count or add up. MISCREATING (16) MISCREATION (15) [noun] A faulty or unnatural making or creation. MISDEFINING (18) MISDEMEANOR (16) [noun] A crime usually punishable upon conviction by a small fine or by a short term of imprisonment. In the USA, misdemeanants usually are incarcerated in county jail for less than one year, but felons usually are incarcerated in state or federal prison for more than one year. Crimes which are punishable by large fines or by longer imprisonment are sometimes called felonies. MISDESCRIBE (18) [verb] To incorrectly explain or detail something or someone. MISDEVELOPS (19) MISDIAGNOSE (15) [verb] To incorrectly diagnose. MISDIALLING (15) [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDIRECTED (17) [verb] To direct something wrongly | [verb] To direct attention away from covert actions or intended targets. | [verb] To put the incorrect address on a mail item MISDIVISION (17) MISDOUBTING (17) [verb] To doubt the existence or reality of. | [verb] To have suspicions about. | [noun] Doubt MISEDUCATED (17) [verb] To educate wrongly. MISEDUCATES (16) [verb] To educate wrongly. MISEMPHASES (20) MISEMPHASIS (20) MISEMPLOYED (21) [verb] To employ incorrectly; to misuse. MISENROLLED (14) MISENTERING (14) MISERICORDE (16) MISERICORDS (16) [noun] Relaxation of monastic rules. | [noun] The room in a monastery for monks granted such relaxation. | [noun] A ledge, sometimes ornately carved, attached to a folding church seat to provide support for a person standing for long periods; a subsellium. MISERLINESS (13) [noun] The property of being miserly. MISESTEEMED (16) MISESTIMATE (15) [verb] To estimate erroneously. MISEVALUATE (16) MISFEASANCE (18) [noun] An actual or alleged wrong that arises from an action; often, the wrongful use of legal authority. MISFIELDING (18) [verb] To field the ball clumsily or ineptly; in cricket this can result in the batsman scoring another run. MISFOCUSING (19) MISFOCUSSED (19) MISFOCUSSES (18) MISFORTUNES (16) [noun] Bad luck | [noun] An undesirable event such as an accident MISFUNCTION (18) MISGOVERNED (18) [verb] To govern badly or wrongly. MISGRAFTING (18) MISGUESSING (15) MISGUIDANCE (17) MISGUIDEDLY (19) MISHANDLING (18) [verb] To manipulate something roughly, causing physical damage. | [verb] To deal with a situation incorrectly or ineffectively; to make a mistake in handling a situation. | [noun] Incorrect handling; mismanagement. MISIDENTIFY (20) [verb] To mistake the identity. MISINFERRED (17) MISINFORMED (19) [verb] To give or deliver false, fake, or misleading information. MISINTERRED (14) MISJOINDERS (21) MISJUDGMENT (24) MISLABELING (16) [verb] To label incorrectly. | [noun] An incorrect labeling. MISLABELLED (16) [verb] To label incorrectly. MISLABORING (16) MISLEARNING (14) MISLIGHTING (18) MISLOCATING (16) MISLOCATION (15) MISMANAGING (17) [verb] To manage an area of responsibility in a way which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. | [verb] To behave, in a management capacity, in a manner which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. MISMARRIAGE (16) [noun] Bad or unsuitable marriage. MISMATCHING (21) [verb] To match unsuitably; to fail to match | [noun] An incorrect match or pairing; a mismatch. MISOGAMISTS (16) MISOGYNISTS (17) [noun] One who professes misogyny; a hater of women. | [noun] One who displays prejudice against or looks down upon women. MISORDERING (15) MISORIENTED (14) MISPACKAGED (23) MISPACKAGES (22) MISPAINTING (16) MISPATCHING (21) MISPERCEIVE (20) [verb] To perceive erroneously. MISPLANNING (16) MISPLANTING (16) MISPLEADING (17) MISPOINTING (16) MISPOSITION (15) MISPRINTING (16) [verb] To make a misprint. MISPRISIONS (15) [noun] Criminal neglect of duty or wrongful execution of official duties. | [noun] The failure to give information about a crime that one knows to be taking place. | [noun] Misinterpretation or misunderstanding. MISPROGRAMS (18) MISRECKONED (20) MISRECORDED (17) MISREFERRED (17) MISREGISTER (14) MISRELATING (14) MISREMEMBER (19) [verb] To remember incorrectly. MISRENDERED (15) [verb] To render incorrectly. MISREPORTED (16) [verb] To report erroneously; to give an incorrect account of. MISSHAPENLY (21) MISSILERIES (13) MISSIONIZED (23) MISSIONIZER (22) MISSIONIZES (22) MISSOUNDING (15) MISSPEAKING (20) [noun] Speaking ill; defamation, slander. | [noun] The fact or instance of speaking falsely or unclearly. MISSPELLING (16) [verb] To spell incorrectly. | [noun] A misspelt word. MISSPENDING (17) [noun] Improper, wasteful, or incorrect spending; squandering | [verb] To spend poorly, incorrectly or unwisely. MISSTARTING (14) MISSTEERING (14) MISSTOPPING (18) MISSTRICKEN (19) MISSTRIKING (18) MISTEACHING (19) [verb] To teach incorrectly. | [noun] Wrong, false, or incorrect teaching. MISTHINKING (21) MISTHROWING (20) MISTINESSES (13) MISTOUCHING (19) MISTRAINING (14) MISTREATING (14) [verb] To treat someone, or something roughly or badly. MISTRUSTFUL (16) [adjective] Having mistrust, lacking trust (in someone or something). | [adjective] Expressing or showing a lack of trust. | [adjective] Having a suspicion, imagining or supposing (that something undesirable is the case). MISTRUSTING (14) [verb] To have no confidence in (something or someone). | [verb] To be wary, suspicious or doubtful of (something or someone). | [verb] To suspect, to imagine or suppose (something) to be the case. MISTRYSTING (17) MISTUTORING (14) MITHRIDATES (17) [noun] A supposed universal antidote against poison. MITIGATIONS (14) MITOTICALLY (18) MIXOLOGISTS (21) [noun] A person who creates cocktails; a bartender. | [noun] A disc jockey. MIZZENMASTS (33) [noun] The aftmost mast on a ship having three or more masts. | [noun] The second mast of a ship having two masts where the second one is shorter, such as a ketch or yawl. MOBOCRACIES (19) [noun] Rule or control by the mob (or by the mass of ordinary people); a mob as a politically powerful force. MOCKINGBIRD (23) [noun] A long-tailed American songbird of the Mimidae family, noted for its ability to mimic calls of other birds. MODERATIONS (14) [noun] The state or quality of being moderate; avoidance of extremes | [noun] An instance of moderating: bringing something away from extremes, especially in a beneficial way | [noun] The process of moderating a discussion MODERNISING (15) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNISTIC (16) MODERNITIES (14) [noun] The quality of being modern or contemporary. | [noun] Modern times. | [noun] (history) Quality of being of the modern period of contemporary historiography. MODERNIZERS (23) MODERNIZING (24) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODULARIZED (24) MODULATIONS (14) [noun] The process of applying a signal to a carrier, modulating. | [noun] The variation and regulation of a population, physiological response, etc. | [noun] A change in key. MOISTNESSES (13) MOISTURISED (14) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURISES (13) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURIZED (23) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURIZER (22) [noun] Something that causes moisture or a a condition of wetness; something that makes things moist. | [noun] Moisturising cream, emollient. MOISTURIZES (22) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOLDINESSES (14) MOLECULARLY (18) MOLESTATION (13) [noun] The act of molesting. MOLLYCODDLE (20) [noun] A person, especially a man or a boy, who is pampered and overprotected. | [verb] To be overprotective and indulgent toward; to pamper. MOLYBDENITE (19) [noun] A mineral, molybdenum disulfide MoS2, that is the principal ore of molybdenum; it is structurally similar to graphite and has a similar look and feel. MOLYBDENUMS (21) MOMENTARILY (18) [adverb] (manner) In a momentary manner; for a moment or instant. | [adverb] (duration) In a moment or very soon; any minute now, any time now. | [adverb] Progressively; moment by moment. MOMENTOUSLY (18) MONARCHICAL (20) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a monarch or monarchy. | [adjective] Having sole or undivided authority. MONARCHISMS (20) MONARCHISTS (18) [noun] An advocate of, or believer in, monarchy. MONASTERIES (13) [noun] Building for housing monks or others who have taken religious vows MONASTICISM (17) MONETARISMS (15) MONETARISTS (13) MONEYLENDER (17) [noun] A person who lends money and charges interest, especially one who is not part of the official financial industry MONEYMAKERS (22) [noun] Someone or something that earns or makes money; anything lucrative or profitable. | [noun] (usually a woman's) butt, ass, rear end | [noun] A lady’s breast. MONEYMAKING (23) [noun] The acquisition of money | [adjective] Profitable. | [adjective] For profit. MONGRELIZED (24) [verb] To breed a mongrel | [verb] To cross-breed MONGRELIZES (23) [verb] To breed a mongrel | [verb] To cross-breed MONITORSHIP (18) MONKEYSHINE (23) MONOCHASIAL (18) MONOCHASIUM (20) [noun] A type of cyme on which each single axis bears one flower. MONOCHROMAT (20) MONOCHROMES (20) [noun] A black and white image, especially such a photograph. | [noun] A painting executed in shades of a single colour. | [noun] A ceramic glaze of a single colour; an object so glazed. MONOCHROMIC (22) MONOCLONALS (15) MONOCRACIES (17) [noun] A form of government in which unlimited power is held by a single individual. | [noun] An instance of this government. MONOCRYSTAL (18) MONOCULARLY (18) MONOCULTURE (15) [noun] The cultivation of a single crop at a time. | [noun] A culture or society that lacks diversity; a society marked by monoculturalism. MONODICALLY (19) MONOGAMISTS (16) MONOGASTRIC (16) MONOGENEANS (14) [noun] Any of the many trematode flatworms of the class Monogenea, mostly ectoparasites on fish MONOGENESES (14) MONOGENESIS (14) [noun] The theory that mankind originated with a single ancestor or ancestral couple. | [noun] The theory that all languages, or a particular set of languages, originated from a single source. | [noun] Development of the ovum from a parent like itself. MONOGENETIC (16) MONOGRAMING (17) MONOGRAMMED (19) [verb] To mark something with a monogram. MONOGRAMMER (18) MONOGRAPHED (20) [verb] To write a monograph on (a subject). | [verb] Of the FDA: to publish a standard that authorizes the use of (a substance). MONOGRAPHIC (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a monograph or treatise. | [adjective] Drawn in lines without colours. MONOHYBRIDS (22) [noun] A hybrid between two species that only have a difference of one gene. MONOHYDROXY (30) MONOLINGUAL (14) [noun] A person who knows or uses only a single language; a monoglot | [adjective] Knowing or using a single language; written or spoken in a single language. MONOLOGISTS (14) [noun] A person who performs a monologue or monologues. MONOLOGUIST (14) [noun] A person who performs a monologue or monologues. MONOMANIACS (17) [noun] A person who is obsessed with a single thing, to the exclusion of other concerns. MONOMORPHIC (22) [adjective] Having or existing in a single shape or form | [adjective] (of a gene) invariant across a species | [adjective] (of a function) taking only a single data type MONONUCLEAR (15) [adjective] Having a single nucleus | [adjective] Monocyclic MONOPHAGIES (19) MONOPHAGOUS (19) [adjective] That eats only one kind of food. MONOPHONIES (18) MONOPHTHONG (22) [noun] A vowel (in the sense of a sound rather than a letter of the alphabet) that has the same sound throughout its pronunciation, such as the short vowels in "pap", "pep", "pip", "pop" and "pup", as opposed to a diphthong (eg, /aɪ/, the vowel in "pipe") or a triphthong (eg, /aɪə/, the sound in the non-rhotic pronunciation of "pyre"). MONOPHYLIES (21) MONOPOLISED (16) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLISES (15) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLISTS (15) [noun] One who has, or attempts to acquire, a monopoly on something. MONOPOLIZED (25) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLIZER (24) MONOPOLIZES (24) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPSONIES (15) [noun] A market situation in which there is only one buyer for a product. | [noun] A buyer with disproportionate power. MONOSTELIES (13) MONOTERPENE (15) MONOTHEISMS (18) MONOTHEISTS (16) MONOZYGOTIC (28) [adjective] (of an identical twin) That has developed from a single fertilized ovum. MONSEIGNEUR (14) [noun] An honorific form of address for an eminent person in France, especially under the Ancien Régime. | [noun] (in particular) A title of the Dauphin of France. MONSTRANCES (15) [noun] An ornamental, often precious receptacle, either open or with a transparent cover, in which the sacramental bread is placed for veneration. MONSTROSITY (16) [noun] An organism showing abnormal development or deformity. | [noun] A monstrous thing, person or act. | [noun] The state of being monstrous. MONSTROUSLY (16) MONTAGNARDS (15) MOODINESSES (14) MOONFLOWERS (19) [noun] Any of several plants that flower at night: MOONLIGHTED (18) [verb] To work on the side (at a secondary job), often in the evening or during the night. | [verb] (by extension) To engage in an activity other than what one is known for. | [verb] (by extension, of an inanimate object) To perform a secondary function substantially different from its supposed primary function, as in protein moonlighting. MOONLIGHTER (17) MOONSHINERS (16) [noun] Someone who makes or distributes moonshine MORATORIUMS (15) [noun] An authorization to a debtor, permitting temporary suspension of payments. | [noun] A suspension of an ongoing activity. MORBIDITIES (16) MORIBUNDITY (19) MORONICALLY (18) MORPHACTINS (20) MORPHINISMS (20) MORPHOGENIC (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a morphogen, a morphogene or morphogenesis. MORPHOLOGIC (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to morphology; morphological MORPHOMETRY (23) [noun] The measurement of the form of organisms MORTADELLAS (14) MORTALITIES (13) [noun] The state or quality of being mortal. | [noun] The number of deaths. | [noun] Death. MORTARBOARD (16) [noun] A square board, with a handle, on which mortar or plaster is carried: a hawk. | [noun] An academic cap that has a flat square top with a tassel. MORULATIONS (13) MOTHBALLING (19) [verb] To store or shelve something no longer used. | [verb] To stop using (something), but keep it in good condition. MOTHERBOARD (19) [noun] The primary circuit board of a personal computer, containing the circuitry for the central processing unit, keyboard, mouse and monitor, together with slots for other devices. MOTHERHOODS (20) MOTHERHOUSE (19) [noun] The monastery from which the other 'houses' of a religious order or congregation were (directly or indirectly) founded, often eponymous. | [noun] The convent which is the seat (and often the above original foundation) of the superior of an order or congregation, and/or on which lower ranking houses (such as priories under an abbot) depend. MOTHERLANDS (17) [noun] The country of one's ancestors. | [noun] The country of one's birth. | [noun] Country of origin. MOTHPROOFED (22) [verb] To apply odoriferous materials intended to repel moths from clothing. MOTHPROOFER (21) MOTIVATIONS (16) [noun] Willingness of action especially in behavior. | [noun] The action of motivating. | [noun] Something which motivates. MOTOCROSSES (15) MOTONEURONS (13) [noun] A motor neuron. MOTORBIKING (20) MOTORBOATER (15) MOTORBUSSES (15) [noun] A motorised bus, or coach. MOTORCADING (17) MOTORCYCLED (21) MOTORCYCLES (20) [noun] An open-seated motor vehicle with handlebars instead of a steering wheel, and having two (or sometimes three) wheels. | [verb] To ride a motorcycle. MOTORICALLY (18) MOTORMOUTHS (18) [noun] One who talks very fast or incessantly; a chatty or loquacious person. MOTORTRUCKS (19) MOUNTAINEER (13) [noun] A person who climbs mountains for sport or pleasure. | [noun] A person who lives in a mountainous area (often with the connotation that such people are outlaws or uncivilized). | [noun] An animal or plant that is native to a mountainous area. MOUNTAINOUS (13) [adjective] Having many mountains; characterized by mountains; of the nature of a mountain; rough (terrain); rocky. | [adjective] Resembling a mountain, especially in size; huge; towering. | [adjective] (of a problem or task) Very difficult. MOUNTAINTOP (15) [noun] The summit of a mountain. | [adjective] Situated or occurring on the summit of a mountain. MOUNTEBANKS (19) [noun] One who sells dubious medicines. | [noun] One who sells by deception; a con artist; a charlatan. | [noun] An acrobat. MOURNFULLER (16) MOUSINESSES (13) MOUSSELINES (13) [noun] A very fine, semi-opaque fabric similar to muslin, typically made of silk, wool or cotton. | [noun] A soft, light sweet or savoury mousse. | [noun] A hollandaise sauce that has been made frothy with whipped cream or egg white, served mainly with fish or asparagus. MOUSTACHIOS (18) MOUTHPIECES (20) [noun] A part of any device that functions in or near the mouth, especially: | [noun] A spokesman; one who speaks on behalf of someone else. | [noun] A lawyer for the defense. MOUTHWASHES (22) [noun] A liquid used to clean one's mouth. MOVABLENESS (18) MOVIEGOINGS (18) MOVIEMAKERS (22) [noun] A person who makes movies as a profession; a cinematographer MOVIEMAKING (23) [noun] The production of movies MOZZARELLAS (31) MUCOPEPTIDE (20) MUCOPROTEIN (17) MUDDINESSES (15) MUDSKIPPERS (22) [noun] Any of various gobies of the subfamily Oxudercinae that are able to survive out of water by breathing through their skins and having strong pectoral fins that act as simple legs. MUDSLINGERS (15) MUDSLINGING (16) [noun] Casting aspersions with intent to discredit. | [noun] An act of making damaging or spiteful remarks with the intent to discredit. MUGGINESSES (15) MULTIAGENCY (19) [adjective] Involving multiple agencies MULTIAUTHOR (16) MULTIBARREL (15) MULTIBLADED (17) MULTICAMPUS (19) MULTICARBON (17) MULTICAUSAL (15) MULTICELLED (16) MULTICENTER (15) [adjective] (of a study) Taking place at multiple locations MULTICLIENT (15) MULTICOATED (16) MULTICOLORS (15) MULTICOLUMN (17) MULTICOUNTY (18) MULTICOURSE (15) MULTIDOMAIN (16) MULTIENGINE (14) MULTIENZYME (27) MULTIETHNIC (18) [noun] A member of more than one ethnic group. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or consisting of several ethnic groups. MULTIFACTOR (18) MULTIFAMILY (21) [noun] A residence intended for more than one family. | [adjective] Intended for more than one family. Particularly applied to residences. MULTIHEADED (18) MULTIMANNED (16) MULTIMEDIAS (16) MULTIMEMBER (19) MULTINATION (13) MULTINOMIAL (15) [noun] Polynomial | [adjective] Polynomial MULTIPAROUS (15) [adjective] Having two or more pregnancies resulting in viable offspring. | [adjective] Producing several offspring at one time. MULTIPHASIC (20) MULTIPHOTON (18) MULTIPISTON (15) MULTIPLAYER (18) [noun] (games) The feature of a video game where multiple human players play simultaneously. | [adjective] (games) Requiring or allowing multiple human players to play simultaneously. MULTIPLEXED (23) [verb] To interleave several activities. | [verb] To combine several signals into one. | [verb] To convert (a cinema business) into a large complex, or multiplex. MULTIPLEXER (22) MULTIPLEXES (22) [noun] A building or a place where several activities occur in multiple units concurrently or different times. | [noun] (by extension) A large cinema complex comprising many (typically more than five, and often over ten) movie theatres or houses. | [noun] Throwing motion where more than one ball is thrown with one hand at the same time. MULTIPLEXOR (22) MULTIPLIERS (15) [noun] A number by which another (the multiplicand) is to be multiplied. | [noun] (grammar) An adjective indicating the number of times something is to be multiplied. | [noun] A ratio used to estimate total economic effect for a variety of economic activities. MULTIPLYING (19) [verb] To increase the amount, degree or number of (something). | [verb] (with by) To perform multiplication on (a number). | [verb] To grow in number. MULTIRACIAL (15) [noun] An individual of more than one race. | [adjective] Composed of, or having a mixture of, multiple races. MULTISCREEN (15) [adjective] Having multiple screens MULTISOURCE (15) MULTISYSTEM (18) MULTITIERED (14) MULTIVALENT (16) [noun] Any multivalent chromosome. | [adjective] Having more than one valency or having a valency greater than 3; polyvalent. | [adjective] Having three or more homologous chromosomes during the first division of meiosis. MULTIVOLUME (18) MUNDANENESS (14) MUNDANITIES (14) MUNDUNGUSES (15) MUNICIPALLY (20) MUNIFICENCE (20) [noun] The quality of being munificent; generosity. | [noun] Means of defence; fortification. MUNITIONING (14) [verb] To supply with munitions. MURDERESSES (14) MURDEROUSLY (17) MURKINESSES (17) MURMUROUSLY (18) MUSCULARITY (18) MUSCULATURE (15) [noun] The collection of all muscles in a single body or in a single organ. | [noun] The structural configuration of muscle in a body or organ. MUSEOLOGIES (14) MUSEOLOGIST (14) MUSHINESSES (16) MUSHROOMING (19) [verb] To grow quickly to a large size. | [verb] To gather mushrooms. | [verb] To form the shape of a mushroom. MUSICALISED (16) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work | [adjective] That has been set to music MUSICALISES (15) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICALIZED (25) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICALIZES (24) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSKELLUNGE (18) [noun] A large freshwater gamefish of the pike family, native to the lakes and rivers of eastern and middle western North America; Esox masquinongy. MUSKINESSES (17) MUSSINESSES (13) MUSTACHIOED (19) [verb] To adorn with a mustachio, or something that resembles a mustachio. MUSTINESSES (13) MUTAGENESES (14) MUTAGENESIS (14) [noun] The creation or formation of a genetic mutation. MUTILATIONS (13) [noun] The act of mutilating or the state of being mutilated. MUTINEERING (14) MUTTONCHOPS (20) [noun] A cut of sheep's meat, often containing a section of a rib. | [noun] (by extension) A facial hairstyle consisting of sideburns and a moustache without a beard. MUTUALISTIC (15) MUTUALITIES (13) MUTUALIZING (23) [verb] To make, or to become mutual | [verb] To organize a business (especially a financial business) so that it is owned by its customers (or its employees) MUZZINESSES (31) MYASTHENIAS (19) MYASTHENICS (21) MYCETOZOANS (27) MYCOLOGICAL (21) MYCOLOGISTS (19) MYCOPHAGIES (24) MYCOPHAGIST (24) MYCOPHAGOUS (24) MYCOPLASMAL (22) MYCOPLASMAS (22) [noun] Any infectious bacterium of the genus Mycoplasma, often specifically Mycoplasma pneumoniae MYCORRHIZAE (30) [noun] A symbiosis between the mycelium of a fungus and the roots of a plant. MYCORRHIZAL (30) MYCORRHIZAS (30) MYELOBLASTS (18) MYELOGENOUS (17) MYELOMATOUS (18) MYELOPATHIC (23) MYOCARDITIS (19) [noun] Inflammation of the myocardium. MYOCLONUSES (18) MYOELECTRIC (20) MYOFILAMENT (21) MYOINOSITOL (16) MYRMECOLOGY (24) [noun] The study of ants. MYSTAGOGIES (18) MYSTAGOGUES (18) [noun] A person who prepares an initiate for entry into a mystery cult, or who teaches mystical doctrines | [noun] One who keeps and shows church relics. MYTHICIZERS (30) MYTHICIZING (31) [verb] To make into a myth. | [verb] To interpret in terms of mythology. MYTHMAKINGS (26) MYTHOGRAPHY (28) [noun] A depiction of a myth in literature or the arts. MYTHOLOGERS (20) MYTHOLOGIES (20) [noun] The collection of myths of a people, concerning the origin of the people, history, deities, ancestors and heroes. | [noun] A similar body of myths concerning an event, person or institution. | [noun] Pervasive elements of a fictional universe that resemble a mythological universe. MYTHOLOGIST (20) MYTHOLOGIZE (29) [verb] To interpret (a story etc.) as mythological; to explain the symbolic meaning of. | [verb] To construct a myth or mythology. | [verb] To make (something or someone) into a myth; to create a legend about. MYTHOMANIAC (23) MYTHOMANIAS (21) MYTHOPOEIAS (21) MYTHOPOETIC (23) [adjective] Giving rise to myths; pertaining to the creation of myth. | [adjective] Being a creative interpretation. | [adjective] Given the quality of a myth or a poem, used typically in opposition to a purely factual account. MYXOMATOSES (25) MYXOMATOSIS (25) [noun] A usually fatal viral disease of rabbits, causing skin tumors. MYXOMYCETES (30) [noun] Any protozoan of the phylum Myxomycota; the slime molds MYXOVIRUSES (26) [noun] Any of a group of RNA viruses of the Orthomyxoviridae and Paramyxoviridae families.

12-Letter Words (655)

MACADAMIZING (29) MACHICOLATED (22) [verb] To furnish with machicolations. | [adjective] Having machicolations. MACHINATIONS (19) [noun] A clever scheme or artful plot, usually crafted for evil purposes. | [noun] The act of machinating or plotting. MACKINTOSHES (23) [noun] A waterproof long coat made of rubberized cloth. | [noun] By extension, any waterproof coat or raincoat. | [noun] Waterproof rubberized cloth. MACROCYTOSES (21) MACROCYTOSIS (21) MACROFOSSILS (19) MACROGAMETES (19) [noun] The larger of a pair of conjugating gametes; often the female. MACRONUCLEAR (18) MACRONUCLEUS (18) MACROPTEROUS (18) MADEMOISELLE (17) [noun] Courtesy title for an unmarried woman in France or a French-speaking country. | [noun] (jocular or affected) A young woman or girl, especially one who is French or French-speaking. MADREPORIANS (17) MADREPORITES (17) [noun] A calcareous opening in the body of echinoderms which connects the water vascular system to the environment. | [noun] A fossil stony coral, or a deposit composed of the same. MADRIGALISTS (16) MAGISTERIUMS (17) MAGISTRACIES (17) [noun] The office or dignity of a magistrate. | [noun] The collective body of magistrates. MAGISTRATURE (15) MAGNETICALLY (20) MAGNETIZABLE (26) MAGNETOGRAPH (21) [noun] An instrument for measuring changes in the direction and intensity of magnetic fields. MAGNETOMETER (17) [noun] An instrument used to measure the intensity and direction of a magnetic field, especially at points on the Earth's surface. MAGNETOMETRY (20) MAGNETOPAUSE (17) [noun] The boundary between the Earth's magnetosphere and the sun's plasma. MAGNIFICALLY (23) MAGNIFICENCE (22) [noun] Grandeur, brilliance, lavishness or splendor | [noun] The act of doing what is magnificent; the state or quality of being magnificent. | [noun] Impressiveness MAGNILOQUENT (24) [adjective] Speaking pompously; using deliberately long or esoteric words. MAIDENLINESS (15) MAIDSERVANTS (18) [noun] A female servant; a maid. MAINSTREAMED (17) [verb] To popularize, to normalize, to render mainstream. | [verb] To become mainstream. | [verb] To educate (a disabled student) together with non-disabled students. MAINTAINABLE (16) MAINTENANCES (16) MAJESTICALLY (26) [adverb] In a majestic manner. MAJORITARIAN (21) [noun] One who supports the dominance of the majority over the minority. | [adjective] Supporting the dominance of the majority over the minority. MALACOLOGIES (17) MALACOLOGIST (17) MALADJUSTIVE (25) MALAPERTNESS (16) MALAPROPISMS (20) [noun] The blundering use of an absurdly inappropriate word or expression in place of a similar-sounding one. | [noun] An instance of this; malaprop. MALAPROPISTS (18) MALCONTENTED (17) MALEDICTIONS (17) [noun] A curse. | [noun] Evil speech. MALEFACTIONS (19) MALEFICENCES (21) MALEVOLENCES (19) MALEVOLENTLY (20) MALFEASANCES (19) MALFORMATION (19) [noun] An abnormal formation. | [noun] An abnormal developmental feature of offspring. MALFUNCTIONS (19) [noun] Faulty functioning | [noun] Failure to function | [verb] To function improperly MALIGNANCIES (17) [noun] The state of being malignant or diseased. | [noun] A malignant cancer; specifically, any neoplasm that is invasive or otherwise not benign. | [noun] That which is malign; evil, depravity, malevolence. MALLEABILITY (19) MALNOURISHED (18) [verb] To feed insufficiently, to cause malnutrition. | [adjective] Suffering from malnutrition MALNUTRITION (14) [noun] A lack of adequate nourishment. MALOCCLUSION (18) [noun] A misalignment of the upper and lower sets of teeth. MALODOROUSLY (18) MALPOSITIONS (16) MALPRACTICES (20) [noun] The improper treatment of a patient by a physician that results in injury or loss. | [noun] Improper or unethical conduct by a professional or official person. MALTREATMENT (16) [noun] Cruel or harmful treatment or abuse; mistreatment. MALVERSATION (17) [noun] Corrupt behaviour, illegitimate activity, especially by someone in authority MAMMALOGISTS (19) MAMMOGRAPHIC (26) MANAGEMENTAL (17) MANAGERESSES (15) [noun] A female manager. MANAGERIALLY (18) MANAGERSHIPS (20) MANDARINATES (15) MANDARINISMS (17) MANDOLINISTS (15) MANEUVERABLE (19) [adjective] (often in combination) Able to be maneuvered MANFULNESSES (17) MANIFESTANTS (17) MANIFESTOING (18) MANIFOLDNESS (18) MANIPULATING (17) [verb] To move, arrange or operate something using the hands | [verb] To influence, manage, direct, control or tamper with something | [verb] To handle and move a body part, either as an examination or for a therapeutic purpose MANIPULATION (16) [noun] The practice of manipulating or the state of being manipulated. | [noun] The skillful use of the hands in, for example, chiropractic. | [noun] The usage of underhanded influence over a person, event, or situation to gain a desired outcome. MANIPULATIVE (19) [noun] A manipulable object designed to demonstrate a mathematical concept. | [adjective] Using manipulation purposefully. | [adjective] Tending to manipulate. MANIPULATORS (16) [noun] Agent noun of manipulate; one who manipulates. | [noun] A device which can be used to move, arrange or operate something. | [noun] A puppeteer, especially one controlling marionettes. MANIPULATORY (19) MANNERLINESS (14) MANORIALISMS (16) MANSLAUGHTER (18) [noun] The slaying of a human being. | [noun] The unlawful killing of a human, either in negligence or incidentally to the commission of some unlawful act, but without specific malice, or upon a sudden excitement of anger. MANTELPIECES (18) [noun] A shelf that is affixed to the wall above a fireplace. MANUFACTURED (20) [verb] To make things, usually on a large scale, with tools and either physical labor or machinery. | [verb] To work (raw or partly wrought materials) into suitable forms for use. | [verb] To fabricate; to create false evidence to support a point. MANUFACTURER (19) [noun] One that manufactures MANUFACTURES (19) [noun] The action or process of making goods systematically or on a large scale. | [noun] Anything made, formed or produced; product. | [noun] The process of such production; generation, creation. MANUMISSIONS (16) [noun] Release from slavery or other legally sanctioned servitude; the giving of freedom; the act of manumitting. MAQUILADORAS (24) [noun] An assembly plant in Mexico owned by a company from the United States or another foreign country, using cheap local labour and imported components, and which then exports its products to the company's country of origin; also (by extension) similar factories in other countries. MARATHONINGS (18) MARGINALIZED (25) [verb] To relegate (something, especially a topic or a group of people) to the margins or to a lower limit; to exclude socially or otherwise. | [adjective] Subject to marginalization. MARGINALIZES (24) [verb] To relegate (something, especially a topic or a group of people) to the margins or to a lower limit; to exclude socially or otherwise. MARGINATIONS (15) MARGRAVIATES (18) [noun] The status or rank of margrave. | [noun] A territory governed by a margrave or margravine. MARICULTURES (16) MARKEDNESSES (19) MARKETPLACES (22) [noun] An open area in a town housing a public market. | [noun] The space, actual or metaphorical, in which a market operates. | [noun] (by extension) The world of commerce and trade. MARKSMANSHIP (25) [noun] The ability to shoot accurately at a target. MARLINESPIKE (20) [noun] A tool, consisting of a pointed metal spike, used to manipulate the strands of rope or cable when knotting and splicing. MARLINSPIKES (20) [noun] A tool, consisting of a pointed metal spike, used to manipulate the strands of rope or cable when knotting and splicing. MARQUESSATES (23) [noun] The territory of a marquess, margrave or person of comparable rank. MARQUETERIES (23) MARQUISETTES (23) MARRIAGEABLE (17) [noun] One who is suitable for marriage. | [adjective] Suitable for marriage; nubile. MARSHALSHIPS (22) MARSHINESSES (17) MARSHMALLOWS (22) [noun] A species of mallow, Althaea officinalis, that grows in marshy terrain. | [noun] A type of confectionery, originally (since Ancient Egyptian times) made from this plant, but now generally made of sugar or corn syrup, gelatin that has been pre-softened in water, gum arabic, flavorings, and sometimes beaten egg whites, all whipped to a spongy consistency. | [noun] Someone who is soft and benign. MARSHMALLOWY (25) MASCULINISED (17) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINISES (16) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINISTS (16) [noun] An advocate of masculinism. MASCULINIZED (26) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINIZES (25) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASQUERADERS (24) MASQUERADING (25) [verb] To take part in a masquerade; to assemble in masks and costumes; to wear a disguise. | [verb] To pass off as a different person or a person with qualities that one does not possess; also, to make a pretentious show of being what one is not. | [verb] To conceal (someone) with, or as if with, a mask; to disguise. MASTECTOMIES (18) [noun] The surgical procedure to remove of all or part of a breast; mammectomy. MASTERLINESS (14) MASTERMINDED (18) [verb] To act in the role of mastermind. MASTERPIECES (18) [noun] A piece of work that has been given much critical praise, especially one that is considered the greatest work of a person's career. | [noun] A work of outstanding creativity, skill or workmanship. | [noun] A work created in order to qualify as a master craftsman and member of a guild. MASTERSINGER (15) [noun] A German lyric poet of the late Middle Ages. MASTERSTROKE (18) [noun] An action which demonstrates great skill or artistry. MASTICATIONS (16) MASTURBATING (17) [verb] To stimulate oneself sexually, especially by use of one’s hand or a sex toy made for this purpose, often to the point of ejaculation. | [verb] To stimulate someone else sexually without penetration of the penis. | [verb] To stimulate or please oneself by means of anything, not necessarily sexual, that does not get them anywhere; something that wastes their time; something that does not help others or achieve any important goal. MASTURBATION (16) [noun] Manual erotic stimulation of the genitals or other erotic regions, often to orgasm, either by oneself or a partner. | [noun] A vain activity. MASTURBATORS (16) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) Someone who masturbates. | [noun] A sex toy used to complement and help stimulate its user's erogenous zone(s) during masturbation, and often designed to simulate an erotic body part (of an imaginary partner). MASTURBATORY (19) MATCHMAKINGS (26) MATERIALISED (15) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALISES (14) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALISMS (16) MATERIALISTS (14) [noun] Someone who is materialistic, concerned only with material possessions. | [noun] A follower or proponent of philosophical materialism. MATERIALIZED (24) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALIZER (23) MATERIALIZES (23) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALNESS (14) MATHEMATICAL (21) [adjective] Of, or relating to mathematics | [adjective] Possible but highly improbable MATHEMATIZED (29) [verb] To describe in terms of a mathematical equation. MATHEMATIZES (28) [verb] To describe in terms of a mathematical equation. MATRIARCHATE (19) [noun] A matriarchal system or community. | [noun] The position of a matriarch. MATRIARCHIES (19) [noun] A social system in which the mother is head of household, having authority over men and children. | [noun] A system of government by females (particularly as a kind of polity). | [noun] The dominance of women in social or cultural systems. MATRICULANTS (16) [noun] A person who has matriculated or been registered on a list or roll, usually at a school. MATRICULATED (17) [verb] To enroll as a member of a body, especially of a college or university | [verb] To be enrolled as a member of a body, especially of a college or university. MATRICULATES (16) [verb] To enroll as a member of a body, especially of a college or university | [verb] To be enrolled as a member of a body, especially of a college or university. MATURATIONAL (14) MAXIMIZATION (32) MEADOWSWEETS (21) [noun] A Eurasian perennial flowering plant of Rosaceae family, Filipendula ulmaria. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Spiraea of the Rosaceae family, native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere and consisting of about 80-100 species of shrubs. MEAGERNESSES (15) MEALYMOUTHED (23) [adjective] Prone to speaking evasively, indirectly, or duplicitously; not forthright MEANINGFULLY (21) [adverb] In a meaningful or significant manner. MEASUREMENTS (16) [noun] The act of measuring. | [noun] Magnitude (or extent or amount) determined by an act of measuring. MEATPACKINGS (23) MECAMYLAMINE (23) MECHANICALLY (24) [adverb] In a mechanical manner. MECHANICIANS (21) [noun] One skilled in the theory or construction of machines. | [noun] One skilled in building, using, or repairing machines, or who makes machines or tools. | [noun] One skilled in mechanics. MECHANIZABLE (30) MEDIEVALISMS (20) MEDIEVALISTS (18) MEDIOCRITIES (17) [noun] The quality of being intermediate between two extremes; a mean. | [noun] A middle course of action; moderation, balance. | [noun] The condition of being mediocre; having only an average degree of quality, skills etc.; no better than standard. MEDITATIVELY (21) MEETINGHOUSE (18) [noun] A building where people meet for a purpose. | [noun] A building where a Quaker congregation assembles for worship. MEGALOBLASTS (17) [noun] An abnormally large red blood cell associated with pernicious anemia and with folic acid deficiency. MEGALOMANIAC (19) [noun] One affected with or exhibiting megalomania. MEGALOMANIAS (17) MEGAPROJECTS (26) MEGATONNAGES (16) MEGAVITAMINS (20) MELANCHOLIAC (21) [noun] A person who is habitually melancholy. MELANCHOLIAS (19) MELANCHOLICS (21) MELANCHOLIES (19) MELANIZATION (23) MELANOBLASTS (16) MELANOPHORES (19) MELIORATIONS (14) MELLOWNESSES (17) MELODRAMATIC (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to melodrama; like or suitable to a melodrama; unnatural in situation or action. | [adjective] Exaggeratedly emotional or sentimental. MEMBRANOUSLY (21) MEMORABILITY (21) MEMORIALISED (17) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALISES (16) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALISTS (16) [noun] A writer of memorials. | [noun] One who signs a petition. MEMORIALIZED (26) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALIZES (25) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIZATION (25) [noun] The act of committing something to memory or memorizing. MENDACIOUSLY (20) MENDELEVIUMS (20) MENDICANCIES (19) MENINGIOMATA (17) [noun] A common tumour of the central nervous system, occurring in the meninges, usually benign. MENINGITIDES (16) MENINGOCOCCI (21) [noun] A pathogenic bacterium, Neisseria meningitidis, common cause of cerebrospinal meningitis MENORRHAGIAS (18) MENSTRUATING (15) [verb] To stain with or as if with menses. | [verb] To undergo menstruation, to have a period. MENSTRUATION (14) [noun] The periodic discharging of the menses, the flow of blood and cells from the lining of the uterus in unfertilized females of humans and other primates. MENSURATIONS (14) [noun] The act or process of measuring; measurement. | [noun] The study of measurement, especially the derivation and use of algebraic formulae to measure the areas, volumes and different parameters of geometric figures. | [noun] A 13th century system for governing rhythmic relationships in music that was a precursor to the modern use of time signatures; The use of mensural notation. MEPROBAMATES (20) MERCANTILISM (18) [noun] The theory that a nation must always have a positive balance of trade, in the manner that a merchant would operate a shop. Typically this model presupposes protectionism. | [noun] The theory that holds that the prosperity of a nation depends upon its supply of capital, and that the global volume of trade is unchangeable. MERCANTILIST (16) MERCHANDISED (21) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCHANDISER (20) MERCHANDISES (20) [noun] Commodities offered for sale. | [noun] A commodity offered for sale; an article of commerce; a kind of merchandise. | [noun] The act or business of trading; trade; traffic. MERCHANDIZED (30) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCHANDIZES (29) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCHANTABLE (21) [adjective] Fit for the market, i.e. suitable for selling for an ordinary price. Sometimes, this is a technical designation for a particular kind or class. MERCIFULNESS (19) MERCURATIONS (16) MERETRICIOUS (16) [adjective] Tastelessly gaudy; superficially attractive but having in reality no value or substance; falsely alluring. | [adjective] Involving unlawful sexual connection or lack of consent by at least one party (said of a romantic relationship) | [adjective] Of, or relating to prostitutes or prostitution. MERIDIONALLY (18) MERISTEMATIC (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the meristem MERISTICALLY (19) MERITOCRATIC (18) [adjective] Pertaining to a meritocracy. MERRYMAKINGS (24) MERRYTHOUGHT (24) [noun] The furcula or wishbone. MESALLIANCES (16) MESENCEPHALA (21) MESHUGGENERS (19) [noun] A madman; a crazy person, a nutter. MESMERICALLY (21) MESOCYCLONES (21) MESOMORPHIES (21) MESOPHYLLOUS (22) MESOTHELIOMA (19) [noun] An uncommon malignant tumour of the mesothelium, usually of the lungs after exposure to asbestos. MESOTHORACES (19) MESOTHORACIC (21) MESOTHORAXES (24) [noun] The middle of the three segments of the thorax of an insect, carrying the second pair of legs, and the forewings when present. MESSEIGNEURS (15) [noun] An honorific form of address for an eminent person in France, especially under the Ancien Régime. | [noun] (in particular) A title of the Dauphin of France. MESSIAHSHIPS (22) METABOLIZING (26) [verb] To undergo metabolism. | [verb] To cause a substance to undergo metabolism. | [verb] To produce a substance using metabolism. METACENTRICS (18) METACERCARIA (18) METAFICTIONS (19) [noun] A form of self-referential literature concerned with the art and devices of fiction itself. METAGALACTIC (19) METAGALAXIES (22) METALANGUAGE (16) [noun] (critical theory) Any language or vocabulary of specialized terms used to describe or analyze a language or linguistic process. | [noun] Any similar language used to define a programming language. METALLICALLY (19) METALLOPHONE (19) [noun] Any musical instrument consisting of tuned metal bars which are struck to make sound. METALLURGIES (15) METALLURGIST (15) METALWORKERS (21) METALWORKING (22) METAMORPHISM (23) [noun] The process by which rocks are changed into other forms by the application of heat and/or pressure. | [noun] The process by which insects develop through life stages, for example, those of embryo, larva, pupa and imago. The life cycle of the butterfly is one of complete metamorphosis, in which the embryo grows within the egg, hatches into the larval stage caterpillar, enters the pupal stage within its chrysalis, and finally emerges as an adult butterfly imago. | [noun] (by extension) Any dramatic change from one thing to another METAMORPHOSE (21) [verb] (of a moth or insect) To undergo metamorphosis. | [verb] (by extension) To undergo some transformation. | [verb] To transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance. METAPHORICAL (21) [adjective] Pertaining to or characterized by a metaphor; figurative; symbolic. METAPHYSICAL (24) [adjective] Of or pertaining to metaphysics. | [adjective] Being an adherent of the philosophy of metaphysics. | [adjective] Immaterial, supersensual, not physical (more properly, "beyond" that which is physical). METASEQUOIAS (23) METASOMATISM (18) [noun] The process by which the bulk chemical composition of a rock is changed by the introduction of components from an external source, especially by a hydrothermal fluid. METASTASIZED (24) [verb] (of a disease or tumour) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis. METASTASIZES (23) [verb] (of a disease or tumour) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis. METATHETICAL (19) METATHORACES (19) METATHORACIC (21) METATHORAXES (24) [noun] The hindmost of the three sections of the thorax of an insect, carrying the posterior pair of legs and the hindwings when present. METENCEPHALA (21) METEORICALLY (19) METEORITICAL (16) METEOROLOGIC (17) METHACRYLATE (22) [noun] Any salt or ester of methacrylic acid, especially an ester used in the manufacture of resins and plastics. | [noun] A resin manufactured from methacrylic acid or a methacrylate. METHANATIONS (17) METHAQUALONE (26) [noun] A sedative drug that has effects similar to barbiturates. Also used recreationally. METHENAMINES (19) METHICILLINS (19) METHODICALLY (23) [adverb] In a methodical manner; with order. METHOTREXATE (24) [noun] An antimetabolite and antifolate drug used in treatment of cancer and autoimmune diseases. METHOXYCHLOR (32) METHYLAMINES (22) METHYLATIONS (20) METHYSERGIDE (22) METICULOSITY (19) METICULOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a meticulous manner. METRICATIONS (16) METROLOGICAL (17) METROLOGISTS (15) METRONOMICAL (18) METROPOLISES (16) [noun] (history) The mother (founding) polis (city state) of a colony. | [noun] A large, busy city, especially as the main city in an area or country or as distinguished from surrounding rural areas. | [noun] (canon law) The see of a metropolitan archbishop, ranking above its suffragan diocesan bishops. METROPOLITAN (16) [noun] A bishop empowered to oversee other bishops; an archbishop. | [noun] The inhabitant of a metropolis. | [adjective] Pertaining to the see or province of a metropolitan. METRORRHAGIA (18) [noun] Abnormal uterine bleeding MICROAMPERES (20) MICROANALYST (19) MICROANATOMY (21) MICROBALANCE (20) [noun] Any balance capable of weighing objects having a mass less than a milligram MICROBIOLOGY (22) [noun] The branch of biology that deals with microorganisms, especially their effects on man and other living organisms. MICROBREWERS (21) MICROBREWERY (24) [noun] A small commercial brewery, often one serving a single pub at which it is physically located; in the United States, often used to indicate a brewery that produces fewer than 15,000 barrels of beer annually. MICROBREWING (22) MICROCAPSULE (20) [noun] A very small capsule designed to release its contents when broken (typically, after being swallowed). MICROCEPHALY (26) [noun] A neurological disorder in which the person affected has an abnormally small head due to a failure of brain growth. MICROCIRCUIT (20) [noun] An electronic device, usually fabricated by photolithography, that is very small and implements several components or their equivalent; an integrated circuit. MICROCLIMATE (20) [noun] A small, local region having a unique pattern of weather or weather effects that differ from the local climate. MICROCRYSTAL (21) MICROCULTURE (18) MICROELEMENT (18) MICROFIBRILS (21) [noun] A bundle of cellulose polymer chains held together by weak bonds. MICROFILARIA (19) [noun] The very small larva of a filarial worm. MICROFILMERS (21) MICROFILMING (22) [verb] To reproduce documents on such film MICROFOSSILS (19) [noun] A microscopic fossil MICROGAMETES (19) [noun] The smaller of a pair of conjugating gametes; often the male MICROGRAPHED (23) MICROGRAPHIC (24) MICROGRAVITY (23) [noun] A state of very low acceleration between two free floating objects, as found in sustained freefall, in orbit, or in interstellar space. MICROGROOVES (20) [noun] The long, spiral groove of a vinyl LP record | [noun] Any microscopic groove MICROHABITAT (21) [noun] A specific habitat, typically extremely small, such as a cave corner or a cardboard box. MICROINJECTS (25) [verb] To inject with a micropipette. MICROMANAGED (20) [verb] To manage, direct, or control a person, group, or system to an unnecessary level of detail or precision. MICROMANAGER (19) MICROMANAGES (19) [verb] To manage, direct, or control a person, group, or system to an unnecessary level of detail or precision. MICROMETHODS (22) MICRONUCLEUS (18) MICROPHONICS (23) MICROPHYSICS (26) [noun] That branch of physics that deals with objects smaller than a molecule MICROPIPETTE (20) [noun] A very small pipette. | [verb] To transfer or measure the volume of a liquid using a micropipette. MICROPROGRAM (21) [noun] A set of microinstructions in a CPU, used to implement machine instructions | [verb] To manually write a microprogram MICROREADERS (17) [noun] Any device used to read microfilm or microfiche MICROSCOPIES (20) MICROSCOPIST (20) MICROSECONDS (19) [noun] An SI unit of time equal to 10-6 seconds. Symbol: μs It is commonly represented with symbol µs. MICROSEISMIC (20) MICROSPHERES (21) [noun] Any sphere whose size is measured in micrometres MICROSPOROUS (18) MICROSURGERY (20) [noun] Surgical procedures that are very small. | [adjective] Relating to techniques of surgery on very small or delicate parts of the body. MICROTECHNIC (23) MICROTONALLY (19) MICROTUBULAR (18) MICROTUBULES (18) [noun] A small tube made of protein and found in cells; part of the cytoskeleton. MICROVILLOUS (19) MICROWAVABLE (24) MICTURITIONS (16) [noun] Urination MIDDLEWEIGHT (23) [noun] A weight class in professional boxing between light middleweight or welterweight and super middleweight or cruiserweight; a similar division in wrestling and other sports | [noun] A boxer who fights in this division; a similar wrestler etc | [noun] (by extension) An employee ranking anywhere between junior and senior. MIDLATITUDES (16) MIFEPRISTONE (19) [noun] (steroid drug) A steroid pharmaceutical used to induce abortion, or as an emergency contraceptive. MIGHTINESSES (18) MILITANTNESS (14) MILITARISING (15) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARISTIC (16) [adjective] Using the power of the military. | [adjective] Related to the use of the military. MILITARIZING (24) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILLENARIANS (14) [noun] A person who believes in an apocalyptic millennium. MILLESIMALLY (19) MILLIAMPERES (18) [noun] One thousandth (10-3) of an ampere. MILLIDEGREES (16) MILLIHENRIES (17) MILLILAMBERT (18) MILLIMICRONS (18) MILLIONAIRES (14) [noun] (strictly) A person whose net worth is at or greater than one million units of the local currency, but less than two million. | [noun] A person whose net worth is at or greater than one million units of the local currency; a multimillionaire. MILLIRADIANS (15) MILLISECONDS (17) [noun] One one-thousandth of a second. Symbol: ms. MIMEOGRAPHED (23) [verb] To make mimeograph copies. MINDEDNESSES (16) MINDLESSNESS (15) MINERALISING (15) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALIZERS (23) MINERALIZING (24) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALOGIES (15) MINERALOGIST (15) MINESWEEPERS (19) [noun] A vehicle, device or person with the purpose of removing explosive mines (landmines or water mines). | [noun] A logic-based computer game in which the player has to discover the position of mines in a rectangular grid, based on numerical hints. MINESWEEPING (20) MINIATURISTS (14) [noun] An artist who paints miniature figures or scenes. | [noun] A person who creates or collects miniature figurines (such as dolls). MINIATURIZED (24) [verb] To design or construct something on a miniature scale. | [adjective] That is a miniature version of something MINIATURIZES (23) [verb] To design or construct something on a miniature scale. MINICOMPUTER (20) [noun] A computer smaller than a mainframe, but larger than a microcomputer. MINIMIZATION (25) [noun] The act of lowering something to its smallest value or extent. | [noun] The process of finding the minimum value of a function. MINISTRATION (14) [noun] The act of ministering. MINNESINGERS (15) [noun] In 12th- to 14th-century Germany, a peripatetic musician, often performing songs of courtly love. MINSTRELSIES (14) MINUTENESSES (14) MIRACULOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a miraculous manner. MIRTHFULNESS (20) MISADDRESSED (17) [verb] To address (a letter, etc.) incorrectly. MISADDRESSES (16) [verb] To address (a letter, etc.) incorrectly. MISADJUSTING (23) MISADVENTURE (18) [noun] An accidental mishap or misfortune. MISALIGNMENT (17) [noun] The state, or an instance, of being misaligned MISALLIANCES (16) [noun] An unsuitable alliance, especially an unsuitable marriage. MISALLOCATED (17) [verb] To allocate incorrectly or inappropriately. MISALLOCATES (16) [verb] To allocate incorrectly or inappropriately. MISANTHROPES (19) [noun] One who hates all mankind; one who hates the human race. MISANTHROPIC (21) [adjective] Hating or disliking mankind. MISAPPRAISAL (18) MISAPPREHEND (22) [verb] To interpret incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISASSEMBLED (19) MISASSEMBLES (18) MISATTRIBUTE (16) [verb] To erroneously attribute; to falsely ascribe; used especially of authorship. MISBALANCING (19) MISBEGINNING (18) MISBEHAVIORS (22) [noun] Action or conduct that is inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected. MISBELIEVERS (19) MISBELIEVING (20) MISBUTTONING (17) MISCALCULATE (18) [verb] To calculate incorrectly. | [verb] To make a gross error in judgement. MISCAPTIONED (19) MISCARRIAGES (17) [noun] A failure; a mistake or error. | [noun] The spontaneous natural termination of a pregnancy, especially before it is viable; the fatal expulsion of a foetus from the womb before term. MISCATALOGED (18) MISCELLANIES (16) [noun] Miscellaneous items. | [noun] A collection of writings on various subjects or topics; an anthology. MISCELLANIST (16) MISCHANNELED (20) MISCITATIONS (16) MISCOMPUTING (21) MISCONCEIVED (22) [verb] To misunderstand MISCONCEIVER (21) MISCONCEIVES (21) [verb] To misunderstand MISCONDUCTED (20) [verb] To mismanage. | [verb] To behave inappropriately, to misbehave. | [verb] To act improperly. MISCONNECTED (19) MISCONSTRUED (17) [verb] To interpret erroneously, to understand incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISCONSTRUES (16) [verb] To interpret erroneously, to understand incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISCREATIONS (16) [noun] A faulty or unnatural making or creation. MISDEMEANANT (17) [noun] One who commits misdemeanors MISDEMEANORS (17) [noun] A crime usually punishable upon conviction by a small fine or by a short term of imprisonment. In the USA, misdemeanants usually are incarcerated in county jail for less than one year, but felons usually are incarcerated in state or federal prison for more than one year. Crimes which are punishable by large fines or by longer imprisonment are sometimes called felonies. MISDESCRIBED (20) [verb] To incorrectly explain or detail something or someone. MISDESCRIBES (19) [verb] To incorrectly explain or detail something or someone. MISDEVELOPED (21) MISDIAGNOSED (17) [verb] To incorrectly diagnose. MISDIAGNOSES (16) [verb] To incorrectly diagnose. | [noun] An incorrect diagnosis. MISDIAGNOSIS (16) [noun] An incorrect diagnosis. MISDIRECTING (18) [verb] To direct something wrongly | [verb] To direct attention away from covert actions or intended targets. | [verb] To put the incorrect address on a mail item MISDIRECTION (17) [noun] An act of misleading, of convincing someone to concentrate in an incorrect direction. | [noun] An error of law within a judgement committed by a judge or judges of a lower court, particularly as found by an appeals court MISDIVISIONS (18) MISEDUCATING (18) [verb] To educate wrongly. MISEDUCATION (17) MISEMPHASIZE (30) MISEMPLOYING (22) [verb] To employ incorrectly; to misuse. MISENROLLING (15) MISERICORDES (17) MISESTEEMING (17) MISESTIMATED (17) [verb] To estimate erroneously. MISESTIMATES (16) [verb] To estimate erroneously. MISEVALUATED (18) MISEVALUATES (17) MISFEASANCES (19) [noun] An actual or alleged wrong that arises from an action; often, the wrongful use of legal authority. MISFOCUSSING (20) MISFUNCTIONS (19) MISGOVERNING (19) [verb] To govern badly or wrongly. MISGUIDANCES (18) MISINFERRING (18) MISINFORMING (20) [verb] To give or deliver false, fake, or misleading information. MISINTERPRET (16) [verb] To make an incorrect interpretation; to misunderstand. MISINTERRING (15) MISJUDGMENTS (25) MISKNOWLEDGE (23) MISLABELLING (17) [verb] To label incorrectly. | [noun] An incorrect labelling. MISLEADINGLY (19) [adverb] In a misleading manner. MISLOCATIONS (16) MISMARRIAGES (17) [noun] Bad or unsuitable marriage. MISOGYNISTIC (20) [adjective] Of, relating to or exhibiting misogyny. MISORIENTING (15) MISPACKAGING (24) MISPERCEIVED (22) [verb] To perceive erroneously. MISPERCEIVES (21) [verb] To perceive erroneously. MISPLACEMENT (20) MISPOSITIONS (16) MISPROGRAMED (20) MISPRONOUNCE (18) [verb] To pronounce (a word, phrase, etc.) incorrectly. MISQUOTATION (23) MISRECKONING (21) MISRECORDING (18) MISREFERENCE (19) MISREFERRING (18) MISREGISTERS (15) MISREMEMBERS (20) [verb] To remember incorrectly. MISRENDERING (16) [verb] To render incorrectly. | [noun] An incorrect rendering. MISREPORTING (17) [verb] To report erroneously; to give an incorrect account of. | [noun] Incorrect reporting MISREPRESENT (16) [verb] To represent falsely; to inaccurately portray something. MISSIOLOGIES (15) MISSIONARIES (14) [noun] One who is sent on a mission. | [noun] A person who travels attempting to spread a religion or a creed. | [noun] A religious messenger. MISSIONIZERS (23) MISSIONIZING (24) MISSPELLINGS (17) [noun] A misspelt word. MISSTATEMENT (16) MISTRANSLATE (14) [verb] To translate incorrectly. MISTREATMENT (16) [noun] Cruel, abusive , bad, unfair, or thoughtless treatment of a person or animal (only rarely of an object or a machine; usually: mishandle). MITOCHONDRIA (20) [noun] A spherical or ovoid organelle found in the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells and containing genetic material separate from that of the host; it is responsible for the conversion of food to usable energy in the form of ATP. | [noun] (sometimes proscribed) mitochondrion MITOGENICITY (20) MNEMONICALLY (21) MOBILIZATION (25) [noun] The act of mobilizing | [noun] The marshalling of troops and national resources in preparation for war. | [noun] The process by which the armed forces of a nation are brought to a state of readiness for a conflict. MOCKINGBIRDS (24) [noun] A long-tailed American songbird of the Mimidae family, noted for its ability to mimic calls of other birds. MODERATENESS (15) MODERNNESSES (15) MODIFICATION (20) [noun] The form of existence belonging to a particular object, entity etc.; a mode of being. | [noun] The change undergone by a word when used in a construction (for instance am => 'm in I'm) | [noun] The result of modifying something; a new or changed form. MODISHNESSES (18) MODULABILITY (20) MODULARITIES (15) MOISTURISING (15) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURIZERS (23) [noun] Something that causes moisture or a a condition of wetness; something that makes things moist. | [noun] Moisturising cream, emollient. MOISTURIZING (24) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. | [noun] (cosmo) The act of making something moist; but especially, of a cosmetic, of making the skin or hair less dry MOLESTATIONS (14) [noun] The act of molesting. MOLLUSCICIDE (19) MOLLYCODDLED (22) [verb] To be overprotective and indulgent toward; to pamper. MOLLYCODDLER (21) MOLLYCODDLES (21) [noun] A person, especially a man or a boy, who is pampered and overprotected. MOLYBDENITES (20) MONADELPHOUS (20) [adjective] Having all its stamens within a flower fused together at least partly by the filaments. MONASTICALLY (19) MONASTICISMS (18) MONETIZATION (23) [noun] The conversion of something (especially metal) into money. | [noun] The process of making a business activity profit-generating, particularly in computer and Internet-related activities. MONEYLENDERS (18) [noun] A person who lends money and charges interest, especially one who is not part of the official financial industry MONEYMAKINGS (24) MONGRELIZING (25) [verb] To breed a mongrel | [verb] To cross-breed MONITORSHIPS (19) MONKEYSHINES (24) [noun] A puerile trick or prank MONOCHROMATS (21) MONOCHROMIST (21) MONOCRYSTALS (19) MONOCULTURAL (16) MONOCULTURES (16) MONODISPERSE (17) [verb] To cause to become monodisperse. | [adjective] (of a colloid) Having particles of (approximately) the same size. | [adjective] Unvarying; all the same. MONODRAMATIC (19) MONOFILAMENT (19) [noun] A single strand of man-made fiber MONOGAMOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a monogamous manner. MONOGRAMMERS (19) MONOGRAMMING (20) [verb] To mark something with a monogram. MONOGRAPHING (21) [verb] To write a monograph on (a subject). | [verb] Of the FDA: to publish a standard that authorizes the use of (a substance). MONOLINGUALS (15) [noun] A person who knows or uses only a single language; a monoglot MONOLOGUISTS (15) [noun] A person who performs a monologue or monologues. MONOMANIACAL (18) MONOMETALLIC (18) [adjective] Consisting of a single metal. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to monometallism. MONOMORPHISM (23) MONONUCLEARS (16) MONONUCLEATE (16) MONOPHTHONGS (23) [noun] A vowel (in the sense of a sound rather than a letter of the alphabet) that has the same sound throughout its pronunciation, such as the short vowels in "pap", "pep", "pip", "pop" and "pup", as opposed to a diphthong (eg, /aɪ/, the vowel in "pipe") or a triphthong (eg, /aɪə/, the sound in the non-rhotic pronunciation of "pyre"). MONOPHYLETIC (24) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or affecting a single phylum (or other taxon) of organisms. | [adjective] Deriving from a single clade (monophylum). | [adjective] Descending from a single ancestral species. MONOPODIALLY (20) MONOPOLISING (17) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLISTIC (18) [adjective] Acting in the manner of a monopoly. MONOPOLIZERS (25) MONOPOLIZING (26) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONORCHIDISM (22) MONOSPECIFIC (23) [adjective] (Of a genus) containing only one known species. | [adjective] (Of a group of antibodies) with affinity for the same antigen. MONOSYLLABIC (21) [noun] A word consisting of one syllable | [adjective] Consisting of one syllable. | [adjective] Using monosyllables, speaking in monosyllables; curt. MONOSYLLABLE (19) [noun] A word of one syllable. | [noun] A euphemism for the word cunt MONOSYNAPTIC (21) [adjective] Having, or involving a single synapse | [adjective] Stupid, lacking in brainpower MONOTERPENES (16) MONOTHEISTIC (19) [adjective] Believing in a single god, deity, spirit, etc., especially for an organized religion, faith, or creed. MONOTONICITY (19) MONOTONOUSLY (17) MONSIGNORIAL (15) MONUMENTALLY (19) [adverb] To a monumental extent; very greatly. MOONLIGHTERS (18) MOONLIGHTING (19) [verb] To work on the side (at a secondary job), often in the evening or during the night. | [verb] (by extension) To engage in an activity other than what one is known for. | [verb] (by extension, of an inanimate object) To perform a secondary function substantially different from its supposed primary function, as in protein moonlighting. MORALIZATION (23) MORBIDNESSES (17) MOROSENESSES (14) MORPHALLAXES (26) MORPHALLAXIS (26) [noun] The regeneration of specific tissue due to loss or death of the existing tissue. MORPHOLOGIES (20) [noun] A scientific study of form and structure, usually without regard to function. Especially: | [noun] The form and structure of something. | [noun] A description of the form and structure of something. MORPHOLOGIST (20) MORPHOMETRIC (23) MORTARBOARDS (17) [noun] A square board, with a handle, on which mortar or plaster is carried: a hawk. | [noun] An academic cap that has a flat square top with a tassel. MOTHERBOARDS (20) [noun] The primary circuit board of a personal computer, containing the circuitry for the central processing unit, keyboard, mouse and monitor, together with slots for other devices. MOTHERFUCKER (26) [noun] (strongly vulgar) An extremely contemptible or mean person. | [noun] (strongly vulgar) Any person, often but not always with the connotation that the person is disliked or is threatening. | [noun] (markedly vulgar) An extremely intense experience, often but not always negative. MOTHERHOUSES (20) [noun] The monastery from which the other 'houses' of a religious order or congregation were (directly or indirectly) founded, often eponymous. | [noun] The convent which is the seat (and often the above original foundation) of the superior of an order or congregation, and/or on which lower ranking houses (such as priories under an abbot) depend. MOTHERLINESS (17) MOTHPROOFERS (22) MOTHPROOFING (23) [verb] To apply odoriferous materials intended to repel moths from clothing. MOTIONLESSLY (17) MOTIVATIONAL (17) [adjective] Tending or intended to motivate. MOTIVELESSLY (20) MOTONEURONAL (14) MOTORBOATERS (16) MOTORBOATING (17) MOTORCYCLING (22) [verb] To ride a motorcycle. | [noun] The activity or hobby of travelling on a motorcycle MOTORCYCLIST (21) [noun] Someone who rides a motorcycle MOTORIZATION (23) MOUNTAINEERS (14) [noun] A person who climbs mountains for sport or pleasure. | [noun] A person who lives in a mountainous area (often with the connotation that such people are outlaws or uncivilized). | [noun] An animal or plant that is native to a mountainous area. MOUNTAINSIDE (15) [noun] The sloping side of a mountain. MOUNTAINTOPS (16) [noun] The summit of a mountain. MOUNTEBANKED (21) MOURNFULLEST (17) MOURNFULNESS (17) MOUSETRAPPED (19) [verb] To trap; to trick or fool (someone) into a bad situation. | [verb] To prevent (the user) from leaving a website by opening another copy when it is closed. MOUTHBREEDER (20) MOVABILITIES (19) MOVELESSNESS (17) MOVIEMAKINGS (24) MUCILAGINOUS (17) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or resembling mucus; slimy and viscous. MUCOPEPTIDES (21) MUCOPROTEINS (18) MUDDLEHEADED (21) [adjective] Confused, groggy, semi-conscious. | [adjective] Foolish, stupid MUDSLINGINGS (17) MULIEBRITIES (16) MULISHNESSES (17) MULLIGATAWNY (21) [noun] An Indian soup having a meat base and curry seasoning. MULTIBILLION (16) [adjective] Having a value of several billion (in general, at least two billion) MULTICHANNEL (19) [adjective] A connection, usually electronic, that uses multiple channels to process or transmit signals MULTICOLORED (17) [adjective] Having multiple colors. MULTIELEMENT (16) MULTIETHNICS (19) MULTIFACETED (20) [adjective] Having multiple facets. | [adjective] Having many aspects; nuanced or diverse. MULTIFARIOUS (17) [adjective] Having great diversity or variety; of various kinds; made up of many differing parts; manifold. | [adjective] (of lawsuits) In which a party or a cause of action has been improperly or wrongfully joined together in the same suit, as in a misjoinder, perhaps as a result of a joinder of unrelated, distinct, independent parties or matters. MULTIFORMITY (22) MULTILATERAL (14) [noun] A group with representatives from three or more parties or nations. | [adjective] Having many sides or points of view. | [adjective] Involving three or more parties or nations. MULTILAYERED (18) [adjective] Having more than one layer. MULTILEVELED (18) MULTILINGUAL (15) [noun] A polyglot | [adjective] Of, relating to, or involving multiple languages. | [adjective] (Of a person) able to communicate in a number of languages. MULTIMEGATON (17) MULTIMILLION (16) [adjective] Having several millions; costing or worth many millions of dollars, pounds, euros or some other currency. MULTINOMIALS (16) [noun] Polynomial MULTINUCLEAR (16) MULTIPARTITE (16) [adjective] Divided into multiple parts | [adjective] Involving multiple nations; multilateral | [adjective] Describing a system of three or more entangled quantum states MULTIPICTURE (18) MULTIPLEXERS (23) MULTIPLEXING (24) [verb] To interleave several activities. | [verb] To combine several signals into one. | [verb] To convert (a cinema business) into a large complex, or multiplex. MULTIPLEXORS (23) MULTIPLICAND (19) [noun] A number that is to be multiplied by another (the multiplier). MULTIPLICITY (21) [noun] The state of being made of multiple diverse elements. | [noun] The number of values for which a given condition holds. | [noun] A large indeterminate number. MULTIPROBLEM (20) MULTIPRODUCT (19) MULTIPRONGED (18) MULTIPURPOSE (18) [adjective] Designed or intended to fit more than one type of function or application; having multiple uses. MULTISENSORY (17) [adjective] Pertaining to the integration of information from different sensory modalities MULTISERVICE (19) MULTISKILLED (19) [adjective] Having multiple skills MULTISPECIES (18) MULTISTEMMED (19) MULTISTORIED (15) [adjective] Multi-storey. MULTITASKING (19) [verb] To schedule and execute multiple tasks (program) simultaneously; control being passed from one to the other using interrupts. | [verb] (of a person) To handle multiple tasks at once. | [noun] The simultaneous execution of multiple tasks (programs) under the control of an interrupt-driven operating system. MULTITOWERED (18) MULTIVALENCE (19) MULTIVALENTS (17) MULTIVARIATE (17) [noun] A vector, each of whose elements is a variate. | [adjective] Having or involving multiple variables. MULTIVERSITY (20) [noun] A kind of modern, large-scale university, open to all, proposed by Clark Kerr in the 1960s. MULTIVITAMIN (19) [noun] A mixture of vitamins | [noun] A preparation containing such a mixture | [adjective] Containing or relating to multiple vitamins. MULTIVOLTINE (17) MULTIWARHEAD (21) MUNICIPALITY (21) [noun] A district with a government that typically encloses no other governed districts; a borough, city, or incorporated town or village. | [noun] The governing body of such a district. MUNICIPALIZE (27) [verb] To convert into a municipality MUNIFICENCES (21) [noun] The quality of being munificent; generosity. MUNIFICENTLY (22) MUSCULATURES (16) MUSEOLOGICAL (17) MUSEOLOGISTS (15) MUSICALISING (17) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICALITIES (16) MUSICALIZING (26) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSICIANSHIP (21) [noun] The skill of a musician or of a composer. MUSICOLOGIES (17) MUSICOLOGIST (17) [noun] One who studies musicology. MUTABILITIES (16) MUTAGENICITY (20) MUTATIONALLY (17) MUTINOUSNESS (14) MUTTONFISHES (20) MYCETOMATOUS (21) MYCOBACTERIA (23) [noun] Any of many rod-shaped, aerobic bacteria, of the genus Mycobacterium, that cause diseases such as tuberculosis and leprosy. MYCOPHAGISTS (25) MYCOPLASMATA (23) [noun] Any infectious bacterium of the genus Mycoplasma, often specifically Mycoplasma pneumoniae MYELOBLASTIC (21) MYELOPATHIES (22) MYOFIBRILLAR (22) MYOFILAMENTS (22) MYOINOSITOLS (17) MYRMECOPHILE (26) [noun] An organism, especially an insect, that lives in close association with or shares a nest with a species of ant. MYSTERIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a mysterious manner MYSTIFYINGLY (27) MYTHOGRAPHER (26) [noun] One who studies or writes down myths and legends MYTHOLOGICAL (23) [adjective] Of, or relating to myths or mythology. | [adjective] Legendary. | [adjective] Imaginary. MYTHOLOGISTS (21) MYTHOLOGIZED (31) [verb] To interpret (a story etc.) as mythological; to explain the symbolic meaning of. | [verb] To construct a myth or mythology. | [verb] To make (something or someone) into a myth; to create a legend about. MYTHOLOGIZER (30) MYTHOLOGIZES (30) [verb] To interpret (a story etc.) as mythological; to explain the symbolic meaning of. | [verb] To construct a myth or mythology. | [verb] To make (something or someone) into a myth; to create a legend about. MYTHOMANIACS (24) MYXEDEMATOUS (27)

13-Letter Words (457)

MACHICOLATION (22) [noun] An opening between corbels that support a projecting parapet, or in the floor of a gallery or the roof of a portal, of a fortified building from which missiles can be shot or heated items dropped upon assailants attacking the base of the walls. | [noun] A projecting parapet with a series of such openings. MACHINABILITY (25) MACROECONOMIC (23) [adjective] Relating to macroeconomics. | [adjective] Relating to the entire economy, including the growth rate, money and credit, exchange rates, the total amount of goods and services produced, total income earned, the level of employment of productive resources, and the general behavior of prices. MACROGLOBULIN (20) MACROMOLECULE (21) [noun] A very large molecule, especially used in reference to large biological polymers (e.g. nucleic acids and proteins). MACRONUTRIENT (17) [noun] Any of the elements required in large amounts by all living things. MADEMOISELLES (18) MAGISTERIALLY (19) MAGISTRATICAL (18) MAGISTRATURES (16) MAGNANIMITIES (18) MAGNANIMOUSLY (21) MAGNETIZATION (25) MAGNETOGRAPHS (22) [noun] An instrument for measuring changes in the direction and intensity of magnetic fields. MAGNETOMETERS (18) [noun] An instrument used to measure the intensity and direction of a magnetic field, especially at points on the Earth's surface. MAGNETOMETRIC (20) MAGNETOPAUSES (18) [noun] The boundary between the Earth's magnetosphere and the sun's plasma. MAGNETOSPHERE (21) [noun] The comet-shaped region around Earth or another planet in which charged particles are trapped or deflected. Shaped by the solar wind and the planet's magnetic field. MAGNETOSTATIC (18) MAGNIFICATION (21) [noun] The act of magnifying; enlargement; exaggeration. | [noun] The apparent enlargement of an object in an image. MAGNIFICENCES (23) MAGNIFICENTLY (24) [adverb] In a magnificent manner. MAGNILOQUENCE (27) [noun] The quality of being magniloquent; pompous discourse. MAILABILITIES (17) MAINSTREAMING (18) [verb] To popularize, to normalize, to render mainstream. | [verb] To become mainstream. | [verb] To educate (a disabled student) together with non-disabled students. MAJORITARIANS (22) [noun] One who supports the dominance of the majority over the minority. MALABSORPTION (19) [noun] The state arising from abnormality in digestion or absorption of food nutrients across the gastrointestinal tract. MALACOLOGICAL (20) MALACOLOGISTS (18) MALACOSTRACAN (19) [noun] Any of very many crustaceans of the class Malacostraca MALADAPTATION (18) [noun] The state of being poorly adapted to an environment MALADJUSTMENT (25) [noun] A poor or faulty adjustment, especially of a mechanism. | [noun] The inability to adapt oneself to the needs of others, or to the stresses of normal life. MALADMINISTER (18) [verb] To administer wrongly or badly. MALADROITNESS (16) MALARIOLOGIES (16) MALARIOLOGIST (16) MALFORMATIONS (20) [noun] An abnormal formation. | [noun] An abnormal developmental feature of offspring. MALFUNCTIONED (21) [verb] To function improperly | [verb] To fail to function MALICIOUSNESS (17) MALNUTRITIONS (15) MALOCCLUSIONS (19) [noun] A misalignment of the upper and lower sets of teeth. MALTREATMENTS (17) [noun] Cruel or harmful treatment or abuse; mistreatment. MALVERSATIONS (18) MAMMOGRAPHIES (25) MANAGEABILITY (21) MANIFESTATION (18) [noun] The act or process of becoming manifest. | [noun] The embodiment of an intangible, or variable thing. | [noun] The symptoms or observable conditions which are seen as a result of some disease. MANIPULATABLE (19) MANIPULATIONS (17) [noun] The practice of manipulating or the state of being manipulated. | [noun] The skillful use of the hands in, for example, chiropractic. | [noun] The usage of underhanded influence over a person, event, or situation to gain a desired outcome. MANNISHNESSES (18) MANSLAUGHTERS (19) [noun] The slaying of a human being. | [noun] The unlawful killing of a human, either in negligence or incidentally to the commission of some unlawful act, but without specific malice, or upon a sudden excitement of anger. MANTELSHELVES (21) [noun] A shelf above a fireplace. | [noun] A maneuver to surmount a ledge, involving pushing down on the ledge to bring up the body. MANUFACTORIES (20) [noun] A manufacturing process; a particular industry or part of an industry. | [noun] A plant where something is manufactured; a factory. MANUFACTURERS (20) [noun] One that manufactures MANUFACTURING (21) [verb] To make things, usually on a large scale, with tools and either physical labor or machinery. | [verb] To work (raw or partly wrought materials) into suitable forms for use. | [verb] To fabricate; to create false evidence to support a point. MARCHIONESSES (20) [noun] The wife of a marquess. | [noun] A woman holding the rank of marquess in her own right. MARGINALITIES (16) MARGINALIZING (26) [verb] To relegate (something, especially a topic or a group of people) to the margins or to a lower limit; to exclude socially or otherwise. MARICULTURIST (17) MARKETABILITY (24) [noun] The likelihood that something will sell; market appeal. MARKSMANSHIPS (26) MARLINESPIKES (21) [noun] A tool, consisting of a pointed metal spike, used to manipulate the strands of rope or cable when knotting and splicing. MARTYRIZATION (27) MARTYROLOGIES (19) [noun] A catalogue or list of martyrs (or, more precisely, of saints), arranged in the order of their anniversaries. | [noun] The story of the deaths of several famous Rabbis (including Rabbi Akiva) by Romans, read both on Yom Kippur and Tisha b'Av. MARTYROLOGIST (19) MARVELOUSNESS (18) MASCULINISING (18) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINITIES (17) [noun] The degree or property of being masculine or manly; manliness. MASCULINIZING (27) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASSIVENESSES (18) MASTERFULNESS (18) MASTERMINDING (19) [verb] To act in the role of mastermind. | [noun] A creativity technique by which a group tries to find solutions for a specific problem from ideas spontaneously contributed by its members. MASTERSINGERS (16) [noun] A German lyric poet of the late Middle Ages. MASTERSTROKES (19) [noun] An action which demonstrates great skill or artistry. MASTICATORIES (17) MASTIGOPHORAN (21) MASTOIDECTOMY (23) MASTOIDITISES (16) MASTURBATIONS (17) [noun] Manual erotic stimulation of the genitals or other erotic regions, often to orgasm, either by oneself or a partner. | [noun] A vain activity. MATERFAMILIAS (20) [noun] The female head of a household MATERIALISING (16) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALISTIC (17) [adjective] Being overly concerned with material possessions and wealth. | [adjective] Of or concerning philosophical materialism. MATERIALITIES (15) MATERIALIZERS (24) MATERIALIZING (25) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATHEMATICIAN (22) [noun] An expert on mathematics. MATHEMATIZING (30) [verb] To describe in terms of a mathematical equation. MATRIARCHATES (20) [noun] A matriarchal system or community. | [noun] The position of a matriarch. MATRICULATING (18) [verb] To enroll as a member of a body, especially of a college or university | [verb] To be enrolled as a member of a body, especially of a college or university. MATRICULATION (17) [noun] Enrollment in a college or university | [noun] A pass in some university examinations | [noun] A registration of armorial bearings MATRILINEALLY (18) MATRIMONIALLY (20) MAWKISHNESSES (25) MAXILLOFACIAL (27) [adjective] Of or relating to the jaw and face. MAXIMIZATIONS (33) MEANINGLESSLY (19) MEASURABILITY (20) MECAMYLAMINES (24) MECHANIZATION (29) [noun] The use of machinery to replace human or animal labour, especially in agriculture and industry. MEDICAMENTOUS (20) MEDITERRANEAN (16) MEETINGHOUSES (19) [noun] A building where people meet for a purpose. | [noun] A building where a Quaker congregation assembles for worship. MEGAKARYOCYTE (28) MEGALOBLASTIC (20) MEGALOMANIACS (20) [noun] One affected with or exhibiting megalomania. MEGALOPOLISES (18) [noun] A large conurbation, where two or more large cities have sprawled outward to meet, forming something larger than a metropolis; a megacity. MEGALOPOLITAN (18) [noun] An inhabitant or a resident of a megalopolis. | [adjective] Of, or relating to a megalopolis MEGASPORANGIA (19) MELANCHOLIACS (22) [noun] A person who is habitually melancholy. MELANIZATIONS (24) MELANOGENESES (16) MELANOGENESIS (16) MELLIFLUENTLY (21) MELLIFLUOUSLY (21) MELODIOUSNESS (16) MELODRAMATICS (20) [noun] Overemotional, exaggerated behavior calculated for effect. MELODRAMATISE (18) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATIST (18) MELODRAMATIZE (27) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELTABILITIES (17) MEMORABLENESS (19) MEMORIALISING (18) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALIZING (27) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIZATIONS (26) [noun] The act of committing something to memory or memorizing. MENINGOCOCCAL (22) MENINGOCOCCIC (24) MENINGOCOCCUS (22) [noun] A pathogenic bacterium, Neisseria meningitidis, common cause of cerebrospinal meningitis MENSTRUATIONS (15) MENSURABILITY (20) MERCANTILISMS (19) MERCANTILISTS (17) MERCENARINESS (17) MERCERIZATION (26) MERCHANDISERS (21) MERCHANDISING (22) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCHANDIZING (31) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCILESSNESS (17) MERCURIALNESS (17) MERITOCRACIES (19) [noun] Rule by merit, and talent. | [noun] A type of society where wealth, income, and social status are assigned through competition. MERITORIOUSLY (18) MERRYTHOUGHTS (25) [noun] The furcula or wishbone. MESENCEPHALIC (24) MESENCEPHALON (22) [noun] A part of the brain located rostral to the pons and caudal to the thalamus and the basal ganglia, composed of the tectum (dorsal portion) and the tegmentum (ventral portion). MESOTHELIOMAS (20) [noun] An uncommon malignant tumour of the mesothelium, usually of the lungs after exposure to asbestos. METABOLICALLY (22) METABOLIZABLE (28) METACERCARIAE (19) METACERCARIAL (19) METACHROMATIC (24) METAFICTIONAL (20) METALANGUAGES (17) [noun] (critical theory) Any language or vocabulary of specialized terms used to describe or analyze a language or linguistic process. | [noun] Any similar language used to define a programming language. METALLIFEROUS (18) [adjective] Containing a metallic element. Often used to describe ores that are mined commercially. METALLIZATION (24) METALLOGRAPHY (24) [noun] The study of the structure of metals and their alloys, by any of a variety of techniques | [noun] A process for utilising metal plates in a manner similar to lithographic stones. | [noun] A process of imitating the grain of wood on metals. METALLOPHONES (20) [noun] Any musical instrument consisting of tuned metal bars which are struck to make sound. METALLURGICAL (18) METALLURGISTS (16) METALWORKINGS (23) METAMERICALLY (22) METAMORPHISMS (24) METAMORPHOSED (23) [verb] (of a moth or insect) To undergo metamorphosis. | [verb] (by extension) To undergo some transformation. | [verb] To transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance. METAMORPHOSES (22) [verb] (of a moth or insect) To undergo metamorphosis. | [verb] (by extension) To undergo some transformation. | [verb] To transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance. METAMORPHOSIS (22) [noun] A transformation, such as one performed by magic. | [noun] A noticeable change in character, appearance, function or condition. | [noun] A change in the form and often habits of an animal after the embryonic stage during normal development. (e.g. the transformation of a caterpillar into a butterfly or a tadpole into a frog.) METAPHOSPHATE (25) [noun] Any salt or ester of metaphosphoric acid. METAPHYSICIAN (25) [noun] A philosopher who specializes in the scholarly study of metaphysics. METASOMATISMS (19) METASTABILITY (20) METASTASIZING (25) [verb] (of a disease or tumour) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis. METENCEPHALIC (24) METENCEPHALON (22) METEORITICIST (17) METEOROLOGIES (16) METEOROLOGIST (16) [noun] A person who studies meteorology | [noun] A weather forecaster METHACRYLATES (23) [noun] Any salt or ester of methacrylic acid, especially an ester used in the manufacture of resins and plastics. | [noun] A resin manufactured from methacrylic acid or a methacrylate. METHAQUALONES (27) METHEMOGLOBIN (23) [noun] An oxidized form of hemoglobin, containing ferric rather than ferrous iron, that cannot transport oxygen. METHODOLOGIES (20) [noun] (originally science) The study of methods used in a field. | [noun] A collection of methods, practices, procedures and rules used by those who work in some field. | [noun] The implementation of such methods etc. METHODOLOGIST (20) METHOTREXATES (25) METHOXYCHLORS (33) METHYLMERCURY (28) METHYSERGIDES (23) METRONIDAZOLE (25) [noun] An antibiotic of the nitroimidazole group, used to treat a range of bacterial, fungal and protozoan infections METROPOLITANS (17) [noun] A bishop empowered to oversee other bishops; an archbishop. | [noun] The inhabitant of a metropolis. METRORRHAGIAS (19) MICROANALYSES (20) MICROANALYSIS (20) [noun] The analysis (and subsequent identification) of very small quantities of material. MICROANALYSTS (20) MICROANALYTIC (22) MICROBALANCES (21) [noun] Any balance capable of weighing objects having a mass less than a milligram MICROBIOLOGIC (22) MICROBREWINGS (23) MICROCAPSULES (21) [noun] A very small capsule designed to release its contents when broken (typically, after being swallowed). MICROCASSETTE (19) MICROCEPHALIC (26) MICROCIRCUITS (21) [noun] An electronic device, usually fabricated by photolithography, that is very small and implements several components or their equivalent; an integrated circuit. MICROCLIMATES (21) [noun] A small, local region having a unique pattern of weather or weather effects that differ from the local climate. MICROCLIMATIC (23) MICROCOMPUTER (23) [noun] A computer designed around a microprocessor, smaller than a minicomputer or a mainframe. MICROCOSMOSES (21) [noun] A small or microscopic cosmos; a microcosm. MICROCRYSTALS (22) MICROCULTURAL (19) MICROCULTURES (19) MICROECONOMIC (23) [adjective] Of, or relating to, a microeconomy or microeconomics. MICROELEMENTS (19) MICROFILAMENT (22) [noun] A very fine (thin) filament. MICROFILARIAE (20) [noun] The very small larva of a filarial worm. MICROFILARIAL (20) MICROFILMABLE (24) MICROGRAPHICS (25) MICROGRAPHING (24) MICROHABITATS (22) [noun] A specific habitat, typically extremely small, such as a cave corner or a cardboard box. MICROINJECTED (27) [verb] To inject with a micropipette. MICROMANAGERS (20) MICROMANAGING (21) [verb] To manage, direct, or control a person, group, or system to an unnecessary level of detail or precision. MICRONUTRIENT (17) [noun] A mineral, vitamin or other substance that is essential, even in very small quantities, for growth or metabolism. MICROORGANISM (20) [noun] An organism that is too small to be seen by the unaided eye, especially a single-celled organism, such as a bacterium. MICROPARTICLE (21) [noun] An extremely small particle. MICROPHYLLOUS (25) MICROPHYSICAL (27) MICROPIPETTES (21) [noun] A very small pipette. MICROPLANKTON (23) MICROPOROSITY (22) MICROPROGRAMS (22) [noun] A set of microinstructions in a CPU, used to implement machine instructions MICROPUNCTURE (21) MICROSCOPICAL (23) MICROSCOPISTS (21) MICROSURGICAL (20) [adjective] Of or pertaining to microsurgery. MICROSWITCHES (25) [noun] An electrical switch that operates with very little travel of (or pressure on) the actuator. MICROTECHNICS (24) MICROTONALITY (20) MICROVASCULAR (22) [adjective] Of or pertaining to extremely small blood vessels MICROWAVEABLE (25) MIDDLEWEIGHTS (24) [noun] A weight class in professional boxing between light middleweight or welterweight and super middleweight or cruiserweight; a similar division in wrestling and other sports | [noun] A boxer who fights in this division; a similar wrestler etc | [noun] (by extension) An employee ranking anywhere between junior and senior. MIFEPRISTONES (20) MILLENNIALISM (17) [noun] Millenarianism MILLENNIALIST (15) MILLILAMBERTS (19) MILLIONAIRESS (15) [noun] A woman whose wealth is greater than one million dollars, or the local currency. MILLIROENTGEN (16) MIMEOGRAPHING (24) [verb] To make mimeograph copies. MINDFULNESSES (19) MINERALIZABLE (26) MINERALOGICAL (18) MINERALOGISTS (16) MINESWEEPINGS (21) MINIATURISTIC (17) MINIATURIZING (25) [verb] To design or construct something on a miniature scale. MINICOMPUTERS (21) [noun] A computer smaller than a mainframe, but larger than a microcomputer. MINIMIZATIONS (26) [noun] The act of lowering something to its smallest value or extent. | [noun] The process of finding the minimum value of a function. MINISTERIALLY (18) MINISTRATIONS (15) [noun] The act of ministering. MISADDRESSING (18) [verb] To address (a letter, etc.) incorrectly. MISADVENTURES (19) [noun] An accidental mishap or misfortune. MISALIGNMENTS (18) [noun] The state, or an instance, of being misaligned MISALLOCATING (18) [verb] To allocate incorrectly or inappropriately. MISALLOCATION (17) MISANTHROPIES (20) MISAPPRAISALS (19) MISAPPREHENDS (23) [verb] To interpret incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISARTICULATE (17) MISASSEMBLING (20) MISASSUMPTION (19) MISATTRIBUTED (18) [verb] To erroneously attribute; to falsely ascribe; used especially of authorship. MISATTRIBUTES (17) [verb] To erroneously attribute; to falsely ascribe; used especially of authorship. MISCALCULATED (20) [verb] To calculate incorrectly. | [verb] To make a gross error in judgement. MISCALCULATES (19) [verb] To calculate incorrectly. | [verb] To make a gross error in judgement. MISCAPTIONING (20) MISCATALOGING (19) MISCEGENATION (18) [noun] (see usage notes) The mixing or blending of race in marriage or breeding, interracial marriage. | [noun] A mixing or blending, especially one which is considered to be inappropriate. MISCELLANEOUS (17) [adjective] Consisting of a variety of ingredients or parts. | [adjective] Having diverse characteristics, abilities or appearances. MISCELLANISTS (17) MISCHANNELING (21) MISCHANNELLED (21) MISCHIEVOUSLY (26) [adverb] In a mischievous manner. MISCIBILITIES (19) MISCLASSIFIED (21) [verb] To classify incorrectly. MISCLASSIFIES (20) [verb] To classify incorrectly. MISCONCEIVERS (22) MISCONCEIVING (23) [verb] To misunderstand | [adjective] Having false ideas; misleading. MISCONCEPTION (21) [noun] A mistaken belief, a wrong idea MISCONDUCTING (21) [verb] To mismanage. | [verb] To behave inappropriately, to misbehave. | [verb] To act improperly. MISCONNECTING (20) MISCONNECTION (19) MISCONSTRUING (18) [verb] To interpret erroneously, to understand incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISDEMEANANTS (18) [noun] One who commits misdemeanors MISDESCRIBING (21) [verb] To incorrectly explain or detail something or someone. MISDEVELOPING (22) MISDIAGNOSING (18) [verb] To incorrectly diagnose. MISDIRECTIONS (18) [noun] An act of misleading, of convincing someone to concentrate in an incorrect direction. | [noun] An error of law within a judgement committed by a judge or judges of a lower court, particularly as found by an appeals court MISEDUCATIONS (18) MISEMPHASIZED (32) MISEMPHASIZES (31) MISEMPLOYMENT (24) MISERABLENESS (17) MISERLINESSES (15) MISESTIMATING (18) [verb] To estimate erroneously. MISESTIMATION (17) MISEVALUATING (19) MISEVALUATION (18) MISFUNCTIONED (21) MISGOVERNMENT (21) MISGUIDEDNESS (18) MISIDENTIFIED (20) [adjective] Identified incorrectly | [verb] To mistake the identity. MISIDENTIFIES (19) [verb] To mistake the identity. MISIMPRESSION (19) MISINTERPRETS (17) [verb] To make an incorrect interpretation; to misunderstand. MISKNOWLEDGES (24) MISMANAGEMENT (20) [noun] The process or practice of managing ineptly, incompetently, or dishonestly. MISPERCEIVING (23) [verb] To perceive erroneously. MISPERCEPTION (21) [noun] An incorrect perception. MISPLACEMENTS (21) MISPOSITIONED (18) MISPROGRAMING (21) MISPROGRAMMED (23) MISPRONOUNCED (20) [verb] To pronounce (a word, phrase, etc.) incorrectly. | [adjective] Pronounced incorrectly. MISPRONOUNCES (19) [verb] To pronounce (a word, phrase, etc.) incorrectly. MISQUOTATIONS (24) MISREFERENCES (20) MISREGISTERED (17) MISREMEMBERED (22) [verb] To remember incorrectly. MISREPRESENTS (17) [verb] To represent falsely; to inaccurately portray something. MISSTATEMENTS (17) MISTRANSCRIBE (19) MISTRANSLATED (16) [verb] To translate incorrectly. MISTRANSLATES (15) [verb] To translate incorrectly. MISTREATMENTS (17) [noun] Cruel, abusive , bad, unfair, or thoughtless treatment of a person or animal (only rarely of an object or a machine; usually: mishandle). MISTRUSTFULLY (21) MISUNDERSTAND (17) [verb] To understand incorrectly, while believing one has understood correctly. MISUNDERSTOOD (17) [verb] To understand incorrectly, while believing one has understood correctly. MITOCHONDRIAL (21) [adjective] Of, or relating to mitochondria. MITOCHONDRION (21) [noun] A spherical or ovoid organelle found in the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells and containing genetic material separate from that of the host; it is responsible for the conversion of food to usable energy in the form of ATP. MOBILIZATIONS (26) [noun] The act of mobilizing | [noun] The marshalling of troops and national resources in preparation for war. | [noun] The process by which the armed forces of a nation are brought to a state of readiness for a conflict. MODERATORSHIP (21) MODERNISATION (16) [noun] The process of modernizing. MODERNIZATION (25) [noun] The process of modernizing. MODIFIABILITY (24) MODIFICATIONS (21) [noun] The form of existence belonging to a particular object, entity etc.; a mode of being. | [noun] The change undergone by a word when used in a construction (for instance am => 'm in I'm) | [noun] The result of modifying something; a new or changed form. MOLLIFICATION (20) MOLLUSCICIDAL (20) MOLLUSCICIDES (20) MOLLYCODDLERS (22) MOLLYCODDLING (23) [verb] To be overprotective and indulgent toward; to pamper. MOMENTARINESS (17) MOMENTOUSNESS (17) MONARCHICALLY (25) MONETIZATIONS (24) MONEYGRUBBING (24) [adjective] Greedy or avaricious MONOAMINERGIC (20) MONOCHROMATIC (24) [adjective] Having only one color, represented by differing hues and tints. For example shades in a black and white television. | [adjective] Perceptive of only one color; unable to distinguish colors; total color blindness. | [adjective] Plain, dull, lifeless. MONOCHROMATOR (22) [noun] An optical device, consisting of one or more slits, that selects a narrow band of wavelengths from a broader spectrum. MONOCHROMISTS (22) MONOCOTYLEDON (21) [noun] Any plant whose seedlings typically have one cotyledon (seed leaf) (in contrast to the two cotyledons typical of dicots), thereby belonging to the taxonomic monocots, formerly variously known as Monocotyledones, Monocotyledonae, or Liliopsida, a class in the angiosperms (Angiospermae), the flowering plants. MONOFILAMENTS (20) [noun] A single strand of man-made fiber MONOGENICALLY (21) MONOGLYCERIDE (22) MONOGRAMMATIC (22) MONOMETALLISM (19) MONOMETALLIST (17) MONOMOLECULAR (19) [adjective] (of a reaction) involving a single molecule | [adjective] Consisting of a single layer of molecules MONOMORPHEMIC (26) [adjective] Consisting of only one morpheme; not divisible into smaller parts MONOMORPHISMS (24) MONONUCLEATED (18) MONONUCLEOSES (17) MONONUCLEOSIS (17) [noun] A viral infection marked by extreme fatigue, high fever, and swollen lymph nodes. MONOPHTHONGAL (24) MONOPSONISTIC (19) MONORCHIDISMS (23) MONOSYLLABLES (20) [noun] A word of one syllable. | [noun] A euphemism for the word cunt MONOTONICALLY (20) MONSTROSITIES (15) [noun] An organism showing abnormal development or deformity. | [noun] A monstrous thing, person or act. | [noun] The state of being monstrous. MONSTROUSNESS (15) MONUMENTALITY (20) MONUMENTALIZE (26) [verb] To make something become or appear monumental MORALIZATIONS (24) MORIBUNDITIES (18) MORPHEMICALLY (27) MORPHOGENESES (21) MORPHOGENESIS (21) [noun] The differentiation of tissues and subsequent growth of structures in an organism MORPHOGENETIC (23) MORPHOLOGICAL (23) [adjective] Of, or pertaining to, morphology. MORPHOLOGISTS (21) MORPHOMETRIES (22) MORTIFICATION (20) [noun] The act of mortifying. | [noun] A sensation of extreme shame or embarrassment. | [noun] The death of part of the body. MOTHERFUCKERS (27) [noun] (strongly vulgar) An extremely contemptible or mean person. | [noun] (strongly vulgar) Any person, often but not always with the connotation that the person is disliked or is threatening. | [noun] (markedly vulgar) An extremely intense experience, often but not always negative. MOTHERFUCKING (28) [adjective] An intensifier, used in the same contexts as fucking, but more intense. | [adverb] (very vulgar) To an extreme degree. MOTORBOATINGS (18) MOTORCYCLISTS (22) [noun] Someone who rides a motorcycle MOTORIZATIONS (24) MOUNTAINOUSLY (18) MOUNTAINSIDES (16) [noun] The sloping side of a mountain. MOUNTEBANKERY (24) MOUNTEBANKING (22) MOUSETRAPPING (20) [verb] To trap; to trick or fool (someone) into a bad situation. | [verb] To prevent (the user) from leaving a website by opening another copy when it is closed. MOUTHBREEDERS (21) MOUTHWATERING (22) [adjective] That is pleasing to the sense of taste; appetizing. | [adjective] (by extension) Enticing or tantalizing. MOVABLENESSES (20) MUCOCUTANEOUS (19) MULTIBARRELED (18) MULTIBRANCHED (23) MULTIBUILDING (19) MULTICELLULAR (17) [noun] Such an organism | [adjective] (of an organism) That has many cells, often differentiated in function. MULTICULTURAL (17) [adjective] Relating or pertaining to several different cultures. MULTICURRENCY (22) MULTIEMPLOYER (22) [noun] One of a group of multiple employers who work cooperatively on one or more personnel issues. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to more than one employer. MULTIFILAMENT (20) [noun] A yarn with multiple filaments. | [adjective] Having multiple filaments MULTIFUNCTION (20) [noun] A multivalued function. | [adjective] Having multiple functions. MULTIHOSPITAL (20) MULTIMEGAWATT (21) MULTIMETALLIC (19) MULTINATIONAL (15) [noun] A multinational company. | [adjective] Of, or involving more than two countries. | [adjective] (of a business organization) Operating, or having subsidiary companies in multiple countries (especially more than two). MULTINUCLEATE (17) MULTIORGASMIC (20) MULTIPARTICLE (19) MULTIPLICANDS (20) [noun] A number that is to be multiplied by another (the multiplier). MULTIPOLARITY (20) MULTIREGIONAL (16) MULTISPECTRAL (19) [adjective] Using light with two or more frequencies or frequency ranges MULTISTRANDED (17) MULTISYLLABIC (22) MULTITALENTED (16) [adjective] Having skill or talent in more than one field. MULTITASKINGS (20) MULTITERMINAL (17) MULTITRILLION (15) MULTITUDINOUS (16) [adjective] Existing in great numbers; innumerable. | [adjective] Comprising a large number of parts. | [adjective] Crowded with many people. MULTIVALENCES (20) MULTIVARIABLE (20) [adjective] Concerning more than one variable. MULTIVITAMINS (20) [noun] A mixture of vitamins | [noun] A preparation containing such a mixture MUMMIFICATION (24) MUNDANENESSES (16) MUNICIPALIZED (29) [verb] To convert into a municipality MUNICIPALIZES (28) [verb] To convert into a municipality MURDEROUSNESS (16) MUSCULARITIES (17) MUSICIANSHIPS (22) MUSICOLOGICAL (20) MUSICOLOGISTS (18) [noun] One who studies musicology. MUTAGENICALLY (21) MUTUALIZATION (24) MYCETOPHAGOUS (26) MYCOBACTERIAL (24) MYCOBACTERIUM (26) [noun] Any of many rod-shaped, aerobic bacteria, of the genus Mycobacterium, that cause diseases such as tuberculosis and leprosy. MYCOLOGICALLY (26) MYELENCEPHALA (25) MYELOFIBROSES (23) MYELOFIBROSIS (23) MYELOFIBROTIC (25) MYOCARDITISES (21) MYOELECTRICAL (22) MYRMECOLOGIES (23) MYRMECOLOGIST (23) MYRMECOPHILES (27) [noun] An organism, especially an insect, that lives in close association with or shares a nest with a species of ant. MYSTIFICATION (23) MYTHOGRAPHERS (27) [noun] One who studies or writes down myths and legends MYTHOGRAPHIES (27) MYTHOLOGIZERS (31) MYTHOLOGIZING (32) [verb] To interpret (a story etc.) as mythological; to explain the symbolic meaning of. | [verb] To construct a myth or mythology. | [verb] To make (something or someone) into a myth; to create a legend about. MYTHOPOETICAL (25)

14-Letter Words (275)

MACHICOLATIONS (23) [noun] An opening between corbels that support a projecting parapet, or in the floor of a gallery or the roof of a portal, of a fortified building from which missiles can be shot or heated items dropped upon assailants attacking the base of the walls. | [noun] A projecting parapet with a series of such openings. MACHINEABILITY (26) MACROAGGREGATE (21) MACROECONOMICS (24) [noun] The study of the entire economy in terms of the total amount of goods and services produced, total income earned, the level of employment of productive resources, and the general behavior of prices. MACROEVOLUTION (21) [noun] Large-scale patterns or processes in the history of life, including the origins of novel organism designs, evolutionary trends, adaptive radiations and extinctions. MACROGLOBULINS (21) MACROMOLECULAR (22) MACROMOLECULES (22) [noun] A very large molecule, especially used in reference to large biological polymers (e.g. nucleic acids and proteins). MACRONUTRIENTS (18) [noun] Any of the elements required in large amounts by all living things. MACROSTRUCTURE (20) [noun] The gross structure of a material or tissue as visible to the unaided eye or at very low levels of magnification. | [noun] The gross structure of a pure metal or alloy, as revealed by magnifications of 10X or less. MAGNETIZATIONS (26) MAGNETOMETRIES (19) MAGNETOSPHERES (22) [noun] The comet-shaped region around Earth or another planet in which charged particles are trapped or deflected. Shaped by the solar wind and the planet's magnetic field. MAGNETOSPHERIC (24) MAGNIFICATIONS (22) [noun] The act of magnifying; enlargement; exaggeration. | [noun] The apparent enlargement of an object in an image. MAGNILOQUENCES (28) MAGNILOQUENTLY (29) MAIDENLINESSES (17) MALABSORPTIONS (20) MALACOSTRACANS (20) [noun] Any of very many crustaceans of the class Malacostraca MALADAPTATIONS (19) [noun] The state of being poorly adapted to an environment MALADJUSTMENTS (26) [noun] A poor or faulty adjustment, especially of a mechanism. | [noun] The inability to adapt oneself to the needs of others, or to the stresses of normal life. MALADMINISTERS (19) [verb] To administer wrongly or badly. MALAPERTNESSES (18) MALAPPORTIONED (21) MALARIOLOGISTS (17) MALCONTENTEDLY (22) MALFUNCTIONING (22) [verb] To function improperly | [verb] To fail to function | [noun] A malfunction. MALLEABILITIES (18) MALODOROUSNESS (17) [noun] The state or condition of being malodorous. MANAGEABLENESS (19) MANIFESTATIONS (19) [noun] The act or process of becoming manifest. | [noun] The embodiment of an intangible, or variable thing. | [noun] The symptoms or observable conditions which are seen as a result of some disease. MANIFOLDNESSES (20) MANIPULABILITY (23) [noun] The condition of being manipulable. MANIPULATIVELY (24) MANNERLINESSES (16) MANOMETRICALLY (23) MANUFACTURINGS (22) MARICULTURISTS (18) MARTYRIZATIONS (28) MARTYROLOGISTS (20) MASTERLINESSES (16) MASTIGOPHORANS (22) MATERIALNESSES (16) MATHEMATICALLY (26) [adverb] According to or using mathematics. MATHEMATICIANS (23) [noun] An expert on mathematics. MATRICULATIONS (18) [noun] Enrollment in a college or university | [noun] A pass in some university examinations | [noun] A registration of armorial bearings MEANINGFULNESS (20) MECHANIZATIONS (30) MEDDLESOMENESS (20) MEDITATIVENESS (20) MEGAKARYOCYTES (29) MEGAKARYOCYTIC (31) MEGALOMANIACAL (21) MEGALOPOLITANS (19) [noun] An inhabitant or a resident of a megalopolis. MEGASCOPICALLY (26) MEGASPORANGIUM (22) MEGASPOROPHYLL (27) MELODRAMATISED (20) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATISES (19) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATISTS (19) MELODRAMATIZED (29) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATIZES (28) [verb] To make melodramatic. MEMORABILITIES (20) MENDACIOUSNESS (19) MERCANTILISTIC (20) MERCAPTOPURINE (22) MERCERIZATIONS (27) MERCHANDISINGS (23) MERCHANDIZINGS (32) MERCIFULNESSES (21) MERETRICIOUSLY (21) MESDEMOISELLES (19) [noun] Courtesy title for an unmarried woman in France or a French-speaking country. | [noun] (jocular or affected) A young woman or girl, especially one who is French or French-speaking. MESOTHELIOMATA (21) METAFICTIONIST (21) METALINGUISTIC (19) METALLIZATIONS (25) METALLOGRAPHER (22) METALLOGRAPHIC (24) METAMORPHOSING (24) [verb] (of a moth or insect) To undergo metamorphosis. | [verb] (by extension) To undergo some transformation. | [verb] To transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance. METAPHORICALLY (26) [adverb] (manner) In a metaphoric manner; not literally; by means of metaphor. | [adverb] Used to draw attention that what follows is a metaphor, not to be taken literally METAPHOSPHATES (26) [noun] Any salt or ester of metaphosphoric acid. METAPHYSICALLY (29) METAPHYSICIANS (26) [noun] A philosopher who specializes in the scholarly study of metaphysics. METAPSYCHOLOGY (30) [noun] The philosophical study of psychology and of the mind. | [noun] A set of principles governing Freudian psychology. | [noun] The study of how human experience forms, filters perception and shapes identity. METASTATICALLY (21) METATHETICALLY (24) METEMPSYCHOSES (28) [noun] Transmigration of the soul, especially its reincarnation after death. METEMPSYCHOSIS (28) [noun] Transmigration of the soul, especially its reincarnation after death. METEORITICISTS (18) METEOROLOGICAL (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to meteorology. METEOROLOGISTS (17) [noun] A person who studies meteorology | [noun] A weather forecaster METHEMOGLOBINS (24) METHODICALNESS (22) METHODOLOGICAL (23) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or using methodology METHODOLOGISTS (21) METHOXYFLURANE (32) METHYLXANTHINE (32) METICULOSITIES (18) METICULOUSNESS (18) METRONIDAZOLES (26) METRONOMICALLY (23) MICROANATOMIES (20) MICROBAROGRAPH (26) MICROBIOLOGIES (21) MICROBIOLOGIST (21) [noun] A scientist whose speciality is microbiology. MICROBREWERIES (23) [noun] A small commercial brewery, often one serving a single pub at which it is physically located; in the United States, often used to indicate a brewery that produces fewer than 15,000 barrels of beer annually. MICROCASSETTES (20) MICROCEPHALICS (27) MICROCEPHALIES (25) MICROCIRCUITRY (25) MICROCOMPUTERS (24) [noun] A computer designed around a microprocessor, smaller than a minicomputer or a mainframe. MICROECONOMICS (24) [noun] The field of economics that deals with small-scale economic activities such as those of an individual or company. MICROELECTRODE (21) MICROEVOLUTION (21) [noun] Small-scale changes in the history of life, such as changes in allele frequencies in a population (over a few generations); also known as change at or below the species level. MICROFIBRILLAR (23) MICROFILAMENTS (23) [noun] A very fine (thin) filament. MICROGRAVITIES (22) MICROINJECTING (28) [noun] Injecting via microinjection MICROINJECTION (27) MICROMETEORITE (20) [noun] An extraterrestrial particle, less than a millimeter in size, that has survived entry into the atmosphere without melting MICROMETEOROID (21) [noun] An extraterrestrial particle less than a millimeter in size MICROMINIATURE (20) MICRONUTRIENTS (18) [noun] A mineral, vitamin or other substance that is essential, even in very small quantities, for growth or metabolism. MICROORGANISMS (21) [noun] An organism that is too small to be seen by the unaided eye, especially a single-celled organism, such as a bacterium. MICROPARTICLES (22) [noun] An extremely small particle. MICROPLANKTONS (24) MICROPROCESSOR (22) [noun] The entire CPU of a computer on a single integrated circuit (chip). MICROPROJECTOR (29) MICROPUBLISHER (25) MICROPULSATION (20) MICROPUNCTURES (22) MICROSPHERICAL (25) MICROSPORANGIA (21) [noun] A case, capsule or container that holds microspores. MICROSPOROCYTE (25) MICROSTRUCTURE (20) [noun] The fine structure of a material or tissue as revealed by microscopy. | [noun] The fine structure of a pure metal or alloy, as revealed by magnifications of 25X or greater. | [noun] Fine-scale structure in such variables as temperature, salinity, velocity, etc. MICROSURGERIES (19) MICROTECHNIQUE (32) MILITANTNESSES (16) MILITARIZATION (25) MILLENARIANISM (18) [noun] A belief in a coming religious millennium, especially the belief in a coming thousand-year reign of peace heralded by the Second Coming of Christ; utopianism, belief in a coming era of peace and prosperity. MILLENNIALISMS (18) MILLENNIALISTS (16) MILLIROENTGENS (17) MINDLESSNESSES (17) MINERALIZATION (25) MIRACULOUSNESS (18) MIRTHFULNESSES (22) MISALLOCATIONS (18) MISAPPLICATION (22) MISAPPREHENDED (25) [verb] To interpret incorrectly; to misunderstand. | [adjective] Misunderstood. MISAPPROPRIATE (22) [verb] To take something for wrong or illegal purposes. | [verb] To embezzle. MISARTICULATED (19) MISARTICULATES (18) MISASSUMPTIONS (20) MISATTRIBUTING (19) [verb] To erroneously attribute; to falsely ascribe; used especially of authorship. MISATTRIBUTION (18) MISCALCULATING (21) [verb] To calculate incorrectly. | [verb] To make a gross error in judgement. MISCALCULATION (20) [noun] An incorrect or mistaken calculation MISCEGENATIONS (19) MISCHANNELLING (22) MISCLASSIFYING (25) [verb] To classify incorrectly. MISCOMPUTATION (22) MISCONCEPTIONS (22) [noun] A mistaken belief, a wrong idea MISCONNECTIONS (20) MISCORRELATION (18) MISDESCRIPTION (21) [noun] An inaccurate description, often fraudulent. MISEMPHASIZING (33) MISEMPLOYMENTS (25) MISESTIMATIONS (18) MISEVALUATIONS (19) MISFUNCTIONING (22) MISGOVERNMENTS (22) MISIDENTIFYING (24) [verb] To mistake the identity. MISIMPRESSIONS (20) MISINFORMATION (21) [noun] Information that is incorrect. MISINTERPRETED (19) [verb] To make an incorrect interpretation; to misunderstand. MISMANAGEMENTS (21) [noun] The process or practice of managing ineptly, incompetently, or dishonestly. MISORIENTATION (16) MISPERCEPTIONS (22) [noun] An incorrect perception. MISPOSITIONING (19) MISPROGRAMMING (24) MISPRONOUNCING (21) [verb] To pronounce (a word, phrase, etc.) incorrectly. | [noun] Mispronunciation MISREGISTERING (18) MISREMEMBERING (23) [verb] To remember incorrectly. | [noun] An instance of remembering something incorrectly. MISREPRESENTED (19) [verb] To represent falsely; to inaccurately portray something. MISSIONIZATION (25) MISTRANSCRIBED (21) MISTRANSCRIBES (20) MISTRANSLATING (17) [verb] To translate incorrectly. MISTRANSLATION (16) MISUNDERSTANDS (18) [verb] To understand incorrectly, while believing one has understood correctly. MISUTILIZATION (25) MITOGENICITIES (19) MODERATENESSES (17) MODERATORSHIPS (22) MODERNISATIONS (17) [noun] The process of modernizing. MODERNIZATIONS (26) [noun] The process of modernizing. MODULABILITIES (19) MOLLIFICATIONS (21) MONEYGRUBBINGS (25) MONGRELIZATION (26) MONOCARBOXYLIC (32) MONOCHROMATISM (25) [noun] The condition of being monochromatic | [noun] The condition of being totally colour blind; achromatopsia MONOCHROMATORS (23) [noun] An optical device, consisting of one or more slits, that selects a narrow band of wavelengths from a broader spectrum. MONOCOTYLEDONS (22) [noun] Any plant whose seedlings typically have one cotyledon (seed leaf) (in contrast to the two cotyledons typical of dicots), thereby belonging to the taxonomic monocots, formerly variously known as Monocotyledones, Monocotyledonae, or Liliopsida, a class in the angiosperms (Angiospermae), the flowering plants. MONOGLYCERIDES (23) MONOLITHICALLY (24) MONOMANIACALLY (23) MONOMETALLISMS (20) MONOMETALLISTS (18) MONONUCLEOTIDE (19) MONOPHONICALLY (26) MONOPOLIZATION (27) MONOPROPELLANT (20) [noun] Any propellant that consists of a single substance, or of a mixture of fuel and oxidant in the same container MONOSACCHARIDE (24) [noun] A simple sugar such as glucose, fructose or deoxyribose that has a single ring MONOTHEISTICAL (21) MONOTONICITIES (18) MONOTONOUSNESS (16) MONOUNSATURATE (16) MONUMENTALIZED (28) [verb] To make something become or appear monumental MONUMENTALIZES (27) [verb] To make something become or appear monumental MORALISTICALLY (21) MORGANATICALLY (22) MORTIFICATIONS (21) [noun] The act of mortifying. | [noun] A sensation of extreme shame or embarrassment. | [noun] The death of part of the body. MOTHERLESSNESS (19) MOTHERLINESSES (19) MOTIONLESSNESS (16) MOTIVATIONALLY (22) MOUNTAINEERING (17) [noun] The sport of climbing mountains. MOURNFULNESSES (19) MOVELESSNESSES (19) MUCILAGINOUSLY (22) MUDDLEHEADEDLY (26) MULLIGATAWNIES (20) MULTICHAMBERED (26) MULTICHARACTER (23) MULTICOMPONENT (22) MULTICONDUCTOR (21) MULTIDIALECTAL (19) MULTIELECTRODE (19) MULTIEMPLOYERS (23) MULTIFACTORIAL (21) [noun] A generalisation of a factorial in which each element to be multiplied differs from the next by an integer (e.g. n(n-3)(n-6)(n-9)...) | [adjective] Involving, or controlled by multiple factors | [adjective] (of a trait) Involving multiple genetic and/or environmental factors MULTIFORMITIES (21) MULTIFREQUENCY (33) MULTILATERALLY (19) MULTILINGUALLY (20) MULTIMEGAWATTS (22) MULTIMOLECULAR (20) MULTINATIONALS (16) [noun] A multinational company. MULTINUCLEATED (19) MULTIPARAMETER (20) MULTIPLICATION (20) [noun] The process of computing the sum of a number with itself a specified number of times, or any other analogous binary operation that combines other mathematical objects. | [noun] A calculation involving multiplication. | [noun] The process of multiplying or increasing in number; increase. MULTIPLICATIVE (23) [noun] (grammar) A grammatical adverbial case in Finnish. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to multiplication. | [adjective] (of a function, etc.) Distributive over multiplication. MULTIPLICITIES (20) [noun] The state of being made of multiple diverse elements. | [noun] The number of values for which a given condition holds. | [noun] A large indeterminate number. MULTIPOTENTIAL (18) MULTIPROCESSOR (20) [noun] A computer that has multiple CPUs or execution units under an integrated control. MULTIRACIALISM (20) MULTIRELIGIOUS (17) MULTIVERSITIES (19) [noun] A kind of modern, large-scale university, open to all, proposed by Clark Kerr in the 1960s. MUMMIFICATIONS (25) MUNICIPALITIES (20) [noun] A district with a government that typically encloses no other governed districts; a borough, city, or incorporated town or village. | [noun] The governing body of such a district. MUNICIPALIZING (30) [verb] To convert into a municipality MUSICALIZATION (27) MUTAGENICITIES (19) MUTINOUSNESSES (16) MUTUALIZATIONS (25) MYELENCEPHALIC (28) MYELENCEPHALON (26) MYRMECOLOGICAL (26) MYRMECOLOGISTS (24) MYRMECOPHILOUS (28) MYSTERIOUSNESS (19) MYSTIFICATIONS (24) MYTHOLOGICALLY (28)

15-Letter Words (188)

MACHINABILITIES (24) MACROAGGREGATED (23) MACROAGGREGATES (22) MACROCOSMICALLY (28) MACROEVOLUTIONS (22) MACROPHOTOGRAPH (30) MACROSCOPICALLY (28) MACROSTRUCTURAL (21) MACROSTRUCTURES (21) [noun] The gross structure of a material or tissue as visible to the unaided eye or at very low levels of magnification. | [noun] The gross structure of a pure metal or alloy, as revealed by magnifications of 10X or less. MAGISTRATICALLY (23) MAGNANIMOUSNESS (20) MAGNETOELECTRIC (22) MAINTAINABILITY (22) MAJORITARIANISM (26) MALADMINISTERED (21) [verb] To administer wrongly or badly. MALADROITNESSES (18) MALDISTRIBUTION (20) [noun] Bad or undesirable distribution of wealth, resources etc. MALICIOUSNESSES (19) MALPRACTITIONER (21) MANAGEABILITIES (20) MANEUVERABILITY (25) MARGINALIZATION (27) [noun] The act of marginalizing or something marginalized. MARKETABILITIES (23) MARRIAGEABILITY (23) MARTENSITICALLY (22) MARVELOUSNESSES (20) MASCULINIZATION (28) MASOCHISTICALLY (27) MASTERFULNESSES (20) MASTOIDECTOMIES (22) MATERFAMILIASES (22) MATERIALIZATION (26) MATHEMATIZATION (31) MEANINGLESSNESS (18) MEASURABILITIES (19) MECHANISTICALLY (27) MECHANOCHEMICAL (31) MECHANORECEPTOR (26) [noun] Any receptor that provides an organism with information about mechanical changes in its environment, such as movement, tension and pressure MEDULLOBLASTOMA (22) [noun] A malignant type of brain tumour that originates in the cerebellum MEGACORPORATION (22) MEGAGAMETOPHYTE (29) MEGASPOROPHYLLS (28) MELLIFLUOUSNESS (20) MELODIOUSNESSES (18) MELODRAMATISING (21) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATIZING (30) [verb] To make melodramatic. MEMORABLENESSES (21) MENSURABILITIES (19) MERCAPTOPURINES (23) MERCENARINESSES (19) MERCHANTABILITY (27) MERCILESSNESSES (19) MERCURIALNESSES (19) MERITORIOUSNESS (17) MEROBLASTICALLY (24) METAFICTIONISTS (22) METALINGUISTICS (20) [noun] The branch of linguistics that studies language and its relationship to culture and society. METALLOGRAPHERS (23) METALLOGRAPHIES (23) METALLURGICALLY (23) METAMATHEMATICS (26) [noun] A branch of mathematics dealing with mathematical systems and their nature. METAMORPHICALLY (29) METASTABILITIES (19) METHAMPHETAMINE (29) [noun] A highly addictive phenethylamine stimulant drug, similar to cocaine. Its systematic (IUPAC) name is (S)-N-methyl-1-phenylpropan-2-amine. METHOXYFLURANES (33) METHYLCELLULOSE (25) METHYLMERCURIES (27) METHYLPHENIDATE (29) [noun] A stimulant used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and narcolepsy, better known by the trade name Ritalin METHYLXANTHINES (33) MICROANALYTICAL (24) MICROANATOMICAL (23) MICROBAROGRAPHS (27) MICROBIOLOGICAL (24) MICROBIOLOGISTS (22) [noun] A scientist whose speciality is microbiology. MICROCOSMICALLY (28) MICRODISSECTION (22) MICROEARTHQUAKE (35) MICROELECTRODES (22) MICROELECTRONIC (23) MICROEVOLUTIONS (22) MICROGAMETOCYTE (27) MICROINJECTIONS (28) MICROMANAGEMENT (24) MICROMETEORITES (21) [noun] An extraterrestrial particle, less than a millimeter in size, that has survived entry into the atmosphere without melting MICROMETEORITIC (23) MICROMETEOROIDS (22) [noun] An extraterrestrial particle less than a millimeter in size MICROMORPHOLOGY (30) MICROPHOTOGRAPH (30) [noun] A photograph so reduced in size that it must be viewed through a lens or a microscope. | [noun] A photograph taken through a microscope, an enlarged picture of a very small item or area; a photomicrograph. | [verb] To create such a photograph MICROPHOTOMETER (26) MICROPHOTOMETRY (29) MICROPHYSICALLY (32) MICROPOROSITIES (21) MICROPROCESSORS (23) [noun] The entire CPU of a computer on a single integrated circuit (chip). MICROPROJECTION (30) MICROPROJECTORS (30) MICROPUBLISHERS (26) MICROPUBLISHING (27) MICROPULSATIONS (21) MICRORADIOGRAPH (26) MICROSCOPICALLY (28) MICROSEISMICITY (26) MICROSPORANGIUM (24) [noun] A case, capsule or container that holds microspores. MICROSPOROCYTES (26) MICROSPOROPHYLL (29) MICROSTRUCTURAL (21) MICROSTRUCTURES (21) [noun] The fine structure of a material or tissue as revealed by microscopy. | [noun] The fine structure of a pure metal or alloy, as revealed by magnifications of 25X or greater. | [noun] Fine-scale structure in such variables as temperature, salinity, velocity, etc. MICROTECHNIQUES (33) MICROTONALITIES (19) MILITARIZATIONS (26) MILLENARIANISMS (19) MILLIONAIRESSES (17) [noun] A woman whose wealth is greater than one million dollars, or the local currency. MINERALIZATIONS (26) MINERALOGICALLY (23) MINIATURIZATION (26) MISAPPLICATIONS (23) MISAPPREHENDING (26) [verb] To interpret incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISAPPREHENSION (24) [noun] A failure to understand something; an illusion, misconception or misunderstanding. MISAPPROPRIATED (24) [verb] To take something for wrong or illegal purposes. | [verb] To embezzle. MISAPPROPRIATES (23) [verb] To take something for wrong or illegal purposes. | [verb] To embezzle. MISARTICULATING (20) MISATTRIBUTIONS (19) MISCALCULATIONS (21) [noun] An incorrect or mistaken calculation MISCEGENATIONAL (20) MISCELLANEOUSLY (22) MISCHARACTERIZE (33) MISCHIEVOUSNESS (25) MISCOMPUTATIONS (23) MISCONSTRUCTION (21) [noun] A misunderstanding or misinterpretation resulting from the use of the wrong meaning of a word that has multiple meanings. | [noun] (grammar) An ungrammatical phrase. MISCORRELATIONS (19) MISDESCRIPTIONS (22) [noun] An inaccurate description, often fraudulent. MISDISTRIBUTION (20) MISERABLENESSES (19) MISGUIDEDNESSES (20) MISINFORMATIONS (22) MISINTERPRETING (20) [verb] To make an incorrect interpretation; to misunderstand. MISORIENTATIONS (17) MISRECOLLECTION (21) MISREGISTRATION (18) MISREPRESENTING (20) [verb] To represent falsely; to inaccurately portray something. | [noun] A misrepresentation. MISSIONIZATIONS (26) MISTRANSCRIBING (22) MISTRANSLATIONS (17) MISTRUSTFULNESS (20) MISUTILIZATIONS (26) MISVOCALIZATION (31) MODIFIABILITIES (23) MOMENTARINESSES (19) MOMENTOUSNESSES (19) MONGRELIZATIONS (27) MONOCHROMATISMS (26) MONOCRYSTALLINE (22) [adjective] Having a single crystalline form MONOMOLECULARLY (24) MONONUCLEOTIDES (20) MONOPOLIZATIONS (28) MONOPROPELLANTS (21) [noun] Any propellant that consists of a single substance, or of a mixture of fuel and oxidant in the same container MONOSACCHARIDES (25) [noun] A simple sugar such as glucose, fructose or deoxyribose that has a single ring MONOSPECIFICITY (29) MONOSYLLABICITY (27) MONOUNSATURATED (18) [adjective] (of an organic compound) having a single double or triple bond MONOUNSATURATES (17) MONSTROUSNESSES (17) MONTMORILLONITE (19) [noun] Any of a group of soft, clay-like silicate minerals having many industrial and technical uses. MONUMENTALITIES (19) MONUMENTALIZING (29) [verb] To make something become or appear monumental MORPHOLOGICALLY (28) MORPHOPHONEMICS (31) [noun] Morphophonology MOUNTAINEERINGS (18) MOUNTAINOUSNESS (17) MOUNTEBANKERIES (23) MOUTHWATERINGLY (27) MULTICURRENCIES (21) MULTIDISCIPLINE (22) MULTIDIVISIONAL (21) MULTIFUNCTIONAL (22) [adjective] Having multiple functions MULTILATERALISM (19) [noun] Unbiased trade between nations, in contrast to bilateralism. | [noun] A system by which nations consult others in matters of foreign policy, by way of organisations such as the United Nations. MULTILATERALIST (17) [noun] An advocate of multilateralism. | [adjective] Supporting or advocating multilateralism. MULTILINGUALISM (20) MULTIMILLENNIAL (19) MULTIPLICATIONS (21) [noun] The process of computing the sum of a number with itself a specified number of times, or any other analogous binary operation that combines other mathematical objects. | [noun] A calculation involving multiplication. | [noun] The process of multiplying or increasing in number; increase. MULTIPOLARITIES (19) MULTIPROCESSING (22) [noun] Computation using one more than one processor. MULTIPROCESSORS (21) [noun] A computer that has multiple CPUs or execution units under an integrated control. MULTIRACIALISMS (21) MULTITUDINOUSLY (21) MULTIWAVELENGTH (27) MURDEROUSNESSES (18) MUSCULOSKELETAL (23) [adjective] Of, or relating to both muscles and the skeleton MUSICALIZATIONS (28)

About This Word List

This page lists all words with friends words starting with the letter M. Whether you're playing Words With Friends, looking for crossword answers, or solving a word puzzle, this list gives you every valid word to choose from. Click any word to use our word unscrambler and see all possible words from those letters.

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