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6-letter words containing e, n, m

  • minden — a city in NW Louisiana.
  • minder — Chiefly British. a person who looks after something (usually used in combination): a baby-minder.
  • miners — Plural form of miner.
  • minged — Simple past tense and past participle of ming.
  • minger — an ugly, unpleasant, or smelly person or thing.
  • minges — Plural form of minge.
  • mingle — to become mixed, blended, or united.
  • minnie — a female given name, form of Mary.
  • minted — intent; purpose.
  • minter — One who mints.
  • minthe — a nymph who was changed into a mint plant by Persephone to protect her from Hades.
  • minuet — a slow, stately dance in triple meter, popular in the 17th and 18th centuries.
  • minute — the sixtieth part (1/60) of an hour; sixty seconds.
  • minxes — Plural form of minx.
  • minyae — descended from Minyas.
  • mirena — a type of intrauterine system
  • mirren — Dame Helen, original name Ilyena Vasilievna Mironov, born 1945, English actor; her films include Savage Messiah (1972), The Long Good Friday (1980), The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover (1989) and The Queen (2006), for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress
  • miseno — a cape in SW Italy, on the N shore of the Bay of Naples: ruins of ancient Misenum, a Roman naval station and resort.
  • misken — to be unaware or ignorant of
  • mispen — to write incorrectly
  • missen — (Yorkshire, colloquial) Myself.
  • mitten — a hand covering enclosing the four fingers together and the thumb separately.
  • mizzen — a fore-and-aft sail set on a mizzenmast. Compare crossjack, spanker (def 1a).
  • mnemic — Psychology. the retentive basis or basic principle in a mind or organism accounting for memory.
  • mnemon — a segment of memory
  • moaned — a prolonged, low, inarticulate sound uttered from or as if from physical or mental suffering.
  • moaner — One who moans.
  • modena — a city in N Italy, NW of Bologna.
  • modern — of or relating to present and recent time; not ancient or remote: modern city life.
  • moline — (of a cross) having arms of equal length, split and curved back at the ends, used especially as the cadency mark of an eighth son: a cross moline.
  • molten — a past participle of melt1 .
  • moment — an indefinitely short period of time; instant: I'll be with you in a moment.
  • moneme — (linguistics, uncommon) morpheme.
  • monera — a taxonomic kingdom of prokaryotic organisms that typically reproduce by asexual budding or fission and have a nutritional mode of absorption, photosynthesis, or chemosynthesis, comprising the bacteria, blue-green algae, and various primitive pathogens.
  • monest — (obsolete) To warn; to admonish; to advise.
  • moneta — Ernesto Teodoro [er-ne-staw te-aw-daw-raw] /ɛrˈnɛ stɔ ˌtɛ ɔˈdɔ rɔ/ (Show IPA), 1833–1918, Italian journalist: Nobel Peace Prize 1907.
  • moneth — Obsolete spelling of month.
  • moneys — any circulating medium of exchange, including coins, paper money, and demand deposits.
  • monged — under the influence of drugs
  • monger — a person who is involved with something in a petty or contemptible way (usually used in combination): a gossipmonger.
  • monied — moneyed.
  • monies — a plural of money.
  • monkey — any mammal of the order Primates, including the guenons, macaques, langurs, and capuchins, but excluding humans, the anthropoid apes, and, usually, the tarsier and prosimians. Compare New World monkey, Old World monkey.
  • monnetJean [zhahn] /ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1888–1979, French economist: originator of the European Common Market.
  • monroeHarriet, 1861?–1936, U.S. editor and poet.
  • montem — a former money-raising practice for the benefit of the senior college at Eton school, whereby pupils dressed up in fancy dress and walked to a hill near Slough and asked for donations from anyone they saw on the way there
  • montes — Plural form of mons.
  • montezLola (Marie Dolores Eliza Rosanna Gilbert) 1818?–61, British dancer, born in Ireland: gained notoriety as mistress of Franz Liszt, Alexandre Dumas père, and Louis I of Bavaria (1786–1868).
  • montre — An organ stop, usually the open diapason, having its pipes
  • mooned — ornamented with moons or crescents.
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