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8-letter words containing e, n, m, a, s

  • leaseman — a person who leases land and obtains the rights to its use, especially oil-drilling rights.
  • linesman — Sports. an official, as in tennis and soccer, who assists the referee. Football. an official who marks the distances gained and lost in the progress of play and otherwise assists the referee and field judge. Ice Hockey. either of two officials who assist the referee by watching for icing, offside, and substitution violations and fouls and by conducting face-offs.
  • lodesman — a person who steers a ship
  • macanese — a native or inhabitant of Macao.
  • machines — Plural form of machine.
  • maecenas — Gaius Cilnius [sil-nee-uh s] /ˈsɪl ni əs/ (Show IPA), c70–8 b.c, Roman statesman: friend and patron of Horace and Vergil.
  • magnates — a person of great influence, importance, or standing in a particular enterprise, field of business, etc.: a railroad magnate.
  • magnesia — ancient name of Manisa.
  • magnetos — Plural form of magneto.
  • maleness — a person bearing an X and Y chromosome pair in the cell nuclei and normally having a penis, scrotum, and testicles, and developing hair on the face at adolescence; a boy or man.
  • mamelons — Plural form of mamelon.
  • manacles — Plural form of manacle.
  • managers — Plural form of manager.
  • manasseh — the first son of Joseph. Gen. 41:51.
  • manatees — Plural form of manatee.
  • mandates — a command or authorization to act in a particular way on a public issue given by the electorate to its representative: The president had a clear mandate to end the war.
  • mandrels — Plural form of mandrel.
  • maneless — the long hair growing on the back of or around the neck and neighboring parts of some animals, as the horse or lion.
  • mangiest — Superlative form of mangy.
  • manholes — Plural form of manhole.
  • manifest — readily perceived by the eye or the understanding; evident; obvious; apparent; plain: a manifest error.
  • maniples — Plural form of maniple.
  • manliest — having qualities traditionally ascribed to men, as strength or bravery.
  • manscape — A view of a group of people.
  • mansuete — gentle or tame
  • manswear — (transitive, UK dialectal) To swear falsely; perjure oneself.
  • mantises — Plural form of mantis.
  • manyness — The quality or state of being many.
  • margents — (obsolete) Plural form of margent.
  • mariners — a person who directs or assists in the navigation of a ship; sailor.
  • marksmen — Plural form of marksman.
  • marlines — Plural form of marline.
  • marsanne — a white grape grown in the N Rhône region of France and in California and Australia, used for making wine
  • masonite — A type of hardboard formed using wooden chips and blasting them into long fibers with steam and then forming them into boards.
  • massenet — Jules Émile Frédéric [zhyl ey-meel frey-dey-reek] /ʒül eɪˈmil freɪ deɪˈrik/ (Show IPA), 1842–1912, French composer.
  • matinees — Plural form of matinee.
  • matiness — sociable; friendly: a matey chat.
  • matteson — a town in NE Illinois.
  • mean sun — an imaginary sun moving uniformly in the celestial equator and taking the same time to make its annual circuit as the true sun does in the ecliptic.
  • meanders — Plural form of meander.
  • meanings — what is intended to be, or actually is, expressed or indicated; signification; import: the three meanings of a word.
  • meanness — the state or quality of being mean.
  • measling — A form of delamination, or separation in a laminate material, resulting in a spotty appearance.
  • megatons — Plural form of megaton.
  • melanise — Alt form melanize.
  • melanism — Ethnology. the condition in human beings of having a high amount of melanin granules in the skin, hair, and eyes.
  • melanist — a melanistic person
  • melanous — having a dark, swarthy complexion and dark-colored hair.
  • menelaus — Classical Mythology. a king of Sparta, the husband of Helen and brother of Agamemnon, to whom he appealed for an army against Troy in order to recover Helen from her abductor, Paris.
  • meniscal — Pertaining to, or having the form of, a meniscus.
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