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11-letter words containing mar

  • marshlander — a person inhabiting marshland
  • marshmallow — a sweetened paste or confection made from the mucilaginous root of the marsh mallow.
  • marshmellow — Misspelling of marshmallow.
  • martensitic — Of or pertaining to the mineral martensite.
  • martial art — Often, martial arts. any of the traditional forms of Asian self-defense or combat that utilize physical skill and coordination without weapons, as karate, aikido, judo, or kung fu, often practiced as sport.
  • martial law — the law temporarily imposed upon an area by state or national military forces when civil authority has broken down or during wartime military operations.
  • martingales — Plural form of martingale.
  • martinsburg — a city in NE West Virginia.
  • martyrology — the branch of knowledge dealing with the lives of martyrs.
  • marvelously — superb; excellent; great: a marvelous show.
  • mary leakey — Louis Seymour Bazett [baz-it] /ˈbæz ɪt/ (Show IPA), 1903–72, British archaeologist and anthropologist.
  • mary stuart — a member of the royal family that ruled in Scotland from 1371 to 1714 and in England from 1603 to 1714.
  • maryborough — a seaport in E Australia.
  • mass market — general public
  • mass-market — (of products) produced and distributed in large quantities and intended to appeal to the widest range of consumers.
  • meat market — a market where meat is sold
  • meter marks — special markings stamped onto privately franked mail by a machine
  • middlemarch — a novel (1871–72) by George Eliot.
  • mile-marker — a numbered milepost along a highway: used as a way of determining the exact location of a vehicle.
  • minute mark — the symbol ′ used for minutes of arc and linear feet
  • mismarriage — an unsuitable or unhappy marriage.
  • multimarket — an open place or a covered building where buyers and sellers convene for the sale of goods; a marketplace: a farmers' market.
  • munoz marinLuis [lwees] /lwis/ (Show IPA), 1898–1980, Puerto Rican political leader: governor 1948–64.
  • muscle mary — a homosexual man who practises bodybuilding
  • near-market — (of rates and amounts) similar to the market rate or amount
  • nightmarish — resembling a nightmare, especially in being terrifying, exasperating, or the like: his nightmarish experience in a concentration camp.
  • non-marxist — an adherent of Karl Marx or his theories.
  • nonmaritime — Not maritime.
  • nonmarketed — Unmarketed.
  • onyx marble — Mexican onyx.
  • open market — an unrestricted competitive market in which any buyer and seller is free to participate.
  • outsmarting — Present participle of outsmart.
  • pine marten — a marten, Martes martes, of Europe and western Asia.
  • postmarital — occurring, effective, or provided after marriage
  • postprimary — of or relating to education after primary school
  • premarriage — (broadly) any of the diverse forms of interpersonal union established in various parts of the world to form a familial bond that is recognized legally, religiously, or socially, granting the participating partners mutual conjugal rights and responsibilities and including, for example, opposite-sex marriage, same-sex marriage, plural marriage, and arranged marriage: Anthropologists say that some type of marriage has been found in every known human society since ancient times. See Word Story at the current entry.
  • primariness — the state of being primary
  • primary key — (database)   A unique identifier, often an integer, that labels a certain row in a table of a relational database. When this value occurs in other tables as a reference to a particular row in the first table it is called a "foreign key". Some RDBMSes can generate a new unique identifier each time a new row is inserted, others merely allow a column to be constrained to contain unique values. A table may have multiple candidate keys, from which the primary key is chosen. The primary key should be an arbitrary value, such as an autoincrementing integer. This avoids dependence on uniqueness, permanence and format of existing columns with real-world meaning (e.g. a person's name) or other external identifier (e.g. social security number). There should be enough possible primary key values to cater for the current and expected number of rows, bearing in mind that a wider column will generally be slower to process.
  • protomartyr — the first Christian martyr, Saint Stephen.
  • quechumaran — a proposed language stock comprising Quechua and Aymara
  • quick march — a march in quick time.
  • quick-march — a march in quick time.
  • repeat mark — a sign on a piece of music instructing the player to replay a certain passage or section
  • ripple mark — one of the wavy lines or ridges produced, especially on sand, by the action of waves, wind, or the like.
  • route march — march in which a unit retains its column formation but individuals are allowed to break step.
  • sand martin — the bank swallow.
  • santa maria — (italics) the flagship used by Columbus when he made his first voyage of discovery to America in 1492.
  • santa marta — a seaport in NW Colombia.
  • schoolmarms — a female schoolteacher, especially of the old-time country school type, popularly held to be strict and priggish.
  • scuff marks — marks made by scuffing
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