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5-letter words containing e, m, o

  • motel — a hotel providing travelers with lodging and free parking facilities, typically a roadside hotel having rooms adjacent to an outside parking area or an urban hotel offering parking within the building.
  • motes — Plural form of mote.
  • motet — a vocal composition in polyphonic style, on a Biblical or similar prose text, intended for use in a church service.
  • motey — full of moits.
  • motte — a grove or clump of trees in prairie land or open country.
  • motze — (Mo Ti) flourished 5th century b.c, Chinese philosopher.
  • moues — Plural form of moue.
  • moule — a mussel, esp. an edible variety
  • mouse — A small rodent that typically has a pointed snout, relatively large ears and eyes, and a long tail.
  • moved — to pass from one place or position to another.
  • mover — a person or thing that moves.
  • moves — to pass from one place or position to another.
  • movie — motion picture.
  • mowed — Simple past tense and past participle of mow.
  • mower — lawn mower.
  • moxie — vigor; verve; pep.
  • moyle — Alternative form of moil.
  • myope — A nearsighted person.
  • noema — (philosophy) The perceived as perceived.
  • noemi — Naomi (def 1).
  • nomen — (in ancient Rome) the second name of a citizen, indicating his gens, as “Gaius Julius Caesar.”.
  • nomes — Plural form of nome.
  • nomex — a lightweight, fire-resistant, nylon fiber made into garments, aircraft upholstery, etc.
  • odema — Misspelling of oedema.
  • odeum — a hall, theater, or other structure for musical or dramatic performances.
  • ofgem — Office of Gas and Electricity Markets: a government body formed in 1999 by the merger of the separate regulatory bodies for gas and electricity; its functions are to promote competition and protect consumers' interests
  • ojime — a Japanese bead which is used to secure cords in place
  • oleum — Pharmacology. oil.
  • olmec — of or designating a Mesoamerican civilization, c1000–400 b.c., along the southern Gulf coast of Mexico, characterized by extensive agriculture, a dating system, long-distance trade networks, pyramids and ceremonial centers, and very fine jade work.
  • omake — A portion of video that complements an episode of anime.
  • omber — a card game popular in the 17th and 18th centuries and played, usually by three persons, with 40 cards.
  • ombre — a card game popular in the 17th and 18th centuries and played, usually by three persons, with 40 cards.
  • omega — the 24th and last letter of the Greek alphabet (Ω, ω).
  • omens — Plural form of omen.
  • omers — Plural form of omer.
  • ormer — an abalone, Haliotis tuberculata, living in waters of the Channel Islands.
  • oueme — a river in Benin, flowing S to the Bight of Benin near Porto Novo. About 310 miles (500 km) long.
  • oxime — any of a group of compounds containing the group >C=NOH, produced by the condensation of ketones or aldehydes with hydroxylamine.
  • pombe — any alcoholic drink
  • pomes — the characteristic fruit of the apple family, as an apple, pear, or quince, in which the edible flesh arises from the greatly swollen receptacle and not from the carpels.
  • proem — an introductory discourse; introduction; preface; preamble.
  • prome — a city in central Burma, on the Irrawaddy River: location of several noted pagodas.
  • romeo — the romantic lover of Juliet in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
  • roremNed, born 1923, U.S. composer and author.
  • smoke — the visible vapor and gases given off by a burning or smoldering substance, especially the gray, brown, or blackish mixture of gases and suspended carbon particles resulting from the combustion of wood, peat, coal, or other organic matter.
  • smote — a simple past tense of smite.
  • somer — summer2 (def 1).
  • somme — a river in N France, flowing NW to the English Channel: battles, World War I, 1916, 1918; World War II, 1944. 150 miles (241 km) long.
  • spoem — a poem made up entirely from the subject lines of different spam emails
  • tempo — Music. relative rapidity or rate of movement, usually indicated by such terms as adagio, allegro, etc., or by reference to the metronome.
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