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7-letter words containing a, m, s

  • hetmans — Plural form of hetman.
  • heymans — Corneille [kawr-ne-yuh] /kɔrˈnɛ yə/ (Show IPA), 1892–1968, Belgian physiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1938.
  • heysham — a port in NW England, in NW Lancashire. Pop (with Morecambe): 16 136 (2001)
  • homages — Plural form of homage.
  • hoseman — a fireman
  • housman — A(lfred) E(dward) 1859–1936, English poet and classical scholar.
  • hsiamen — Xiamen.
  • hymnals — Plural form of hymnal.
  • iambics — Plural form of iambic.
  • iambist — a person who writes iambs
  • imagism — (often initial capital letter) a theory or practice of a group of poets in England and America between 1909 and 1917 who believed that poetry should employ the language of common speech, create new rhythms, have complete freedom in subject matter, and present a clear, concentrated, and precise image.
  • imagist — (often initial capital letter) a theory or practice of a group of poets in England and America between 1909 and 1917 who believed that poetry should employ the language of common speech, create new rhythms, have complete freedom in subject matter, and present a clear, concentrated, and precise image.
  • impacts — Plural form of impact.
  • impairs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impair.
  • impalas — Plural form of impala.
  • impales — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impale.
  • impalsy — (transitive) To strike with palsy; to paralyze; to deaden.
  • imparks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impark.
  • imparts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impart.
  • impasse — a position or situation from which there is no escape; deadlock.
  • impaste — to cover with or enclose in a paste.
  • impasto — the laying on of paint thickly.
  • impresa — a device or emblem.
  • in arms — armed and prepared for war
  • inmates — Plural form of inmate.
  • inmeats — (archaic) The edible viscera of animals, such as heart, liver, etc.
  • inseams — Plural form of inseam.
  • ishmael — the son of Abraham and Hagar: both he and Hagar were cast out of Abraham's family by Sarah. Gen. 16:11, 12.
  • islamic — the religious faith of Muslims, based on the words and religious system founded by the prophet Muhammad and taught by the Koran, the basic principle of which is absolute submission to a unique and personal god, Allah.
  • isleman — an islander
  • ismaili — a member of the Ismaʿiliya sect.
  • ismatic — following fashionable doctrines
  • isoamyl — containing the isoamyl group; isopentyl.
  • isogamy — the fusion of two gametes of similar form, as in certain algae.
  • isogram — a line representing equality with respect to a given variable, used to relate points on maps, charts, etc.
  • itacism — the pronunciation of the Greek letter eta as in Modern Greek
  • jahvism — Yahwism.
  • jahwism — the worship of Yahweh or the religious system based on such worship.
  • jainism — a dualistic religion founded in the 6th century b.c. as a revolt against current Hinduism and emphasizing the perfectibility of human nature and liberation of the soul, especially through asceticism and nonviolence toward all living creatures.
  • james i — 1566–1625, king of England and Ireland 1603–25; as James VI, king of Scotland 1567–1625 (son of Mary Stuart).
  • james v — 1512–42, king of Scotland (1513–42), son of James IV
  • jamesonSir Leander Starr [stahr] /stɑr/ (Show IPA), ("Doctor Jameson") 1853–1917, Scottish physician and statesman: colonial administrator in South Africa.
  • jamisonJudith, born 1943, U.S. dancer and choreographer.
  • jammers — Plural form of jammer.
  • jammies — pajamas.
  • jamshid — the king of the peris who, given a human form as punishment for his boast of immortality, became a powerful and wonder-working Persian king.
  • jasmine — a female given name.
  • jessamy — jasmine
  • jiamusi — a city in E Heilongjiang province, in NE China.
  • jicamas — Plural form of jicama.
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