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9-letter words containing a, r, e, o, m

  • orangeism — the principles and practices of the Orangemen.
  • orangeman — a member of a secret society formed in the north of Ireland in 1795, having as its object the maintenance and political ascendancy of Protestantism.
  • orangemen — a member of a secret society formed in the north of Ireland in 1795, having as its object the maintenance and political ascendancy of Protestantism.
  • oriflamme — the red banner of St. Denis, near Paris, carried before the early kings of France as a military ensign.
  • orkneyman — a native or inhabitant of Orkney
  • ornaments — Plural form of ornament.
  • osmeteria — glands in some caterpillars that secrete foul-smelling substances to deter predators
  • other man — a man who is romantically or sexually involved with another man's wife or lover, especially a man who is having an affair with a married woman.
  • outmaster — to surpass
  • outscream — to scream louder than
  • outstream — a body of water flowing in a channel or watercourse, as a river, rivulet, or brook. Synonyms: rill, run, streamlet, runnel.
  • overclaim — to demand by or as by virtue of a right; demand as a right or as due: to claim an estate by inheritance.
  • overhuman — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or having the nature of people: human frailty.
  • overmatch — to be more than a match for; surpass; defeat: an assignment that clearly overmatched his abilities; an able task force that overmatched the enemy fleet.
  • oysterman — a person who gathers, cultivates, or sells oysters.
  • palampore — a cotton print woven in India and used for clothing, canopies, etc.
  • palempore — an ornately patterned Indian cloth; a bed covering
  • paroemiac — proverbial; axiomatic
  • pauperdom — the state of being a person who is extremely poor
  • peperomia — any of numerous tropical and subtropical plants belonging to the genus Peperomia, of the pepper family, cultivated as houseplants for their ornamental foliage.
  • permalloy — any of various alloys containing iron and nickel (45–80 per cent) and sometimes smaller amounts of chromium and molybdenum
  • permeator — to pass into or through every part of: Bright sunshine permeated the room.
  • petrogram — a drawing or painting on rock, especially one made by a member of a prehistoric people.
  • phenogram — a diagram depicting taxonomic relationships among organisms based on overall similarity of many characteristics without regard to evolutionary history or assumed significance of specific characters: usually generated by computer.
  • placoderm — any of various extinct jawed fishes of the class Placodermi, dominant in seas and rivers during the Devonian Period and characterized by bony armored plates on the head and upper trunk.
  • polemarch — (in ancient Greece) a civilian official, originally a supreme general
  • pomerania — a former province of NE Germany, now mostly in NW Poland.
  • powderman — a person in charge of explosives, especially in a demolition crew.
  • power mac — (computer)   Apple Computer's personal computer based on the PowerPC, introduced on 1994-03-14. The Power Mac G4 (Quicksilver 2002) was the first Power Mac to clock at 1 GHz. In mid-2003, the Power Mac G5 was released, the first Mac to be based on a 64-bit architecture. IBM manufactured the CPU for this new model. The clock speed was initially 1.6 GHz but a dual 2 GHz system was available in September. Existing 680x0 code (both applications and device drivers) run on Power Mac systems without modification via a Motorola 68LC040 emulator. The performance of these unmodified applications is equivalent to a fast 68040-based Macintosh, e.g. a fast Macintosh Quadra. The Power Mac runs Macintosh operating system from System 7.5 to Mac OS 8.5.
  • praenomen — the first or personal name of a Roman citizen, as “Gaius” in “Gaius Julius Caesar.”.
  • pranksome — tending to play pranks; mischievous; prankish
  • pre-roman — of or relating to the ancient or modern city of Rome, or to its inhabitants and their customs and culture: Roman restaurants.
  • preatomic — of or relating to the period of history preceding the atomic age.
  • predomain — (theory)   A domain with no bottom element.
  • preformat — to format in advance
  • premortal — subject to death; having a transitory life: all mortal creatures.
  • premosaic — of the period before Moses
  • prenomina — praenomen.
  • progamete — a cell that is the precursor of one ovum or many spermatozoa; a spermatocyte or oocyte.
  • programed — a plan of action to accomplish a specified end: a school lunch program.
  • programer — a person who writes code for computer programs.
  • programme — a plan of action to accomplish a specified end: a school lunch program.
  • prolamine — any of the class of simple proteins, as gliadin, hordein, or zein, found in grains, soluble in dilute acids, alkalis, and alcohols, and insoluble in water, neutral salt solutions, and absolute alcohol.
  • promazine — a compound, C 17 H 20 N 2 S, used as a tranquilizer.
  • promenade — a stroll or walk, especially in a public place, as for pleasure or display.
  • protamine — any of a group of arginine-rich, strongly basic proteins that are not coagulated by heat, occurring primarily in the sperm of fish.
  • protonema — a primary, usually filamentous structure produced by the germination of the spore in mosses and certain related plants, and from which the leafy plant which bears the sexual organs arises as a lateral or terminal shoot.
  • proximate — next; nearest; immediately before or after in order, place, occurrence, etc.
  • pyelogram — an x-ray produced by pyelography.
  • pyroceram — a strong heat-resistant glass which has been heat-treated so that it is made up of microscopic crystalline domains
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