6-letter words containing d, a, m
- mashed — a flirtation or infatuation.
- masjid — a mosque.
- masked — using or wearing a mask or masks: a masked burglar; masked actors.
- massed — a body of coherent matter, usually of indefinite shape and often of considerable size: a mass of dough.
- masted — Having masts.
- matadi — a seaport in the W Democratic Republic of the Congo, near the mouth of the Congo (Zaire) River.
- matted — having a dull or lusterless surface: matte paint; a matte complexion; a photograph with a matte finish.
- maudit — cursed; damned; wretched
- maudle — (obsolete, transitive) To throw into confusion or disorder.
- mauled — a heavy hammer, as for driving stakes or wedges.
- maunds — Plural form of maund.
- maundy — the ceremony of washing the feet of the poor, especially commemorating Jesus' washing of His disciples' feet on Maundy Thursday.
- mawlid — a Muslim holiday celebrating the birth of Muhammad, occurring on the twelfth day of the month of Rabiʿ al-awwal, and characterized especially by the recitation of panegyrical poems honoring Muhammad.
- mayday — the international radiotelephone distress signal, used by ships and aircraft.
- mazard — Archaic. head. face.
- mcadoo — William Gibbs, 1863–1941, U.S. lawyer and statesman: Secretary of the Treasury 1913–18.
- meader — (UK dialectal) A mower.
- meadow — a tract of grassland used for pasture or serving as a hayfield.
- meated — Fed; fattened.
- medaka — a small Japanese fish, Oryzias latipes, common in rice fields, often kept in aquariums.
- medals — Plural form of medal.
- mediad — toward the middle line or plane.
- mediae — a plural of medium.
- medial — situated in or pertaining to the middle; median; intermediate.
- median — a Mede.
- medias — Plural form of media.
- medina — a city in W Saudi Arabia, where Muhammad was first accepted as the supreme Prophet from Allah and where his tomb is located.
- medlar — a small tree, Mespilus germanica, of the rose family, the fruit of which resembles a crab apple and is not edible until the early stages of decay.
- medusa — a saucer-shaped or dome-shaped, free-swimming jellyfish or hydra.
- medway — a river in SE England, flowing through Kent and the Medway towns (Rochester, Chatham, and Gillingham) to the Thames estuary. Length: 110 km (70 miles)
- meidan — Alternative spelling of maidan An urban open space.
- menado — a seaport on NE Sulawesi, in NE Indonesia.
- merida — a peninsula in SE Mexico and N Central America comprising parts of SE Mexico, N Guatemala, and Belize.
- mesiad — relating to or situated at the middle or centre
- midair — any point in the air not contiguous with the earth or other solid surface: to catch a ball in midair.
- midcap — (of investments) involving a medium amount of capital
- midday — the middle of the day; noon or the time centering around noon.
- midian — a son of Abraham and Keturah. Gen. 25:1–4.
- midpay — (of an occupation, industry, etc) paying or tending to pay more than an unskilled job but less than a high-income one
- midsea — A point out at sea, away from the shore.
- midway — several U.S. islets in the N Pacific, about 1300 miles (2095 km) NW of Hawaii: Japanese defeated in a naval battle June, 1942; 2 sq. mi. (5 sq. km).
- mierda — (neologism, vulgar) shit.
- mikado — (sometimes initial capital letter) a title of the emperor of Japan.
- miladi — an English noblewoman (often used as a term of address).
- milady — an English noblewoman (often used as a term of address).
- misadd — to unite or join so as to increase the number, quantity, size, or importance: to add two cups of sugar; to add a postscript to her letter; to add insult to injury.
- mladic — Ratko (ˈratko). born 1943, Bosnian military figure, commander of the Bosnian Serb forces during the civil war of 1992–95; indicted by the UN for war crimes, including the massacre of 6000 Bosnian Muslims at Srebrenica (1995); his trial at an international criminal tribunal in the Hague began in 2012
- moaned — a prolonged, low, inarticulate sound uttered from or as if from physical or mental suffering.
- moated — Surrounded with a moat.
- modals — Plural form of modal.