6-letter words containing a, m, e
- dreame — Obsolete spelling of dream.
- dreams — a succession of images, thoughts, or emotions passing through the mind during sleep.
- dreamt — a simple past tense and past participle of dream.
- dreamy — of the nature of or characteristic of dreams; visionary.
- dumela — hello; good morning
- dyerma — Djerma.
- e-mail — electronic mail
- eaprom — Electrically Alterable Programmable Read-Only Memory
- ecomap — a diagram showing the links between an individual and his or her community
- eczema — an inflammatory condition of the skin attended with itching and the exudation of serous matter.
- emails — Plural form of email.
- embail — to enclose in a circle
- embale — to bind or wrap (goods) into a package or bale
- emball — to enclose in a circle
- embalm — Preserve (a corpse) from decay, originally with spices and now usually by arterial injection of a preservative.
- embank — Construct a wall or bank of earth or stone in order to confine (a river) within certain limits.
- embark — Go on board a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle.
- embase — to degrade or debase
- embola — Plural form of embolon.
- emotag — A mock HTML tag incorporated into writing to express a state of mind.
- empair — Obsolete form of impair.
- empale — Obsolete form of impale.
- empark — Obsolete form of impark.
- empath — (chiefly in science fiction) a person with the paranormal ability to apprehend the mental or emotional state of another individual.
- empusa — a goblin in Greek mythology
- enamel — An opaque or semitransparent glassy substance applied to metallic or other hard surfaces for ornament or as a protective coating.
- enamor — Be filled with a feeling of love for.
- encalm — to becalm, settle
- encamp — Settle in or establish a camp, especially a military one.
- enemas — Plural form of enema.
- engram — A hypothetical permanent change in the brain accounting for the existence of memory; a memory trace.
- enigma — A person or thing that is mysterious, puzzling, or difficult to understand.
- enjamb — to encroach
- enseam — to put a seam on
- entame — to make tame
- exacum — any plant of the annual or perennial tropical genus Exacum; some are grown as greenhouse biennials for their bluish-purple platter-shaped flowers: family Gentianaceae
- examen — A formal examination of the soul or conscience, made usually daily by Jesuits and some other Roman Catholics.
- examin — Obsolete form of examine.
- excamb — to exchange
- exclam — (grammar) abbreviation of exclamation.
- famble — (obsolete, slang) A hand.
- famine — extreme and general scarcity of food, as in a country or a large geographical area.
- farmed — a tract of land, usually with a house, barn, silo, etc., on which crops and often livestock are raised for livelihood.
- farmer — Fannie (Merritt) [mer-it] /ˈmɛr ɪt/ (Show IPA), 1857–1915, U.S. authority on cooking.
- female — a person bearing two X chromosomes in the cell nuclei and normally having a vagina, a uterus and ovaries, and developing at puberty a relatively rounded body and enlarged breasts, and retaining a beardless face; a girl or woman.
- femora — Anatomy. a bone in the human leg extending from the pelvis to the knee, that is the longest, largest, and strongest in the body; thighbone.
- fenman — a dweller in the Fens of England.
- ferbam — an iron carbamate, C 9 H 18 FeN 3 S 6 , used chiefly as a fungicide for protecting certain farm crops.
- fermat — Pierre de [pyer duh] /pyɛr də/ (Show IPA), 1601–65, French mathematician.
- flambe — Also, flambéed [flahm-beyd] /flɑmˈbeɪd/ (Show IPA). (of food) served in flaming liquor, especially brandy: steak flambé.