7-letter words containing e, n, m
- animate — Something that is animate has life, in contrast to things like stones and machines which do not.
- animose — Resolute and full of vigor; vehement.
- anomers — Plural form of anomer.
- anomies — a state or condition of individuals or society characterized by a breakdown or absence of social norms and values, as in the case of uprooted people.
- anomite — a variety of mica, similar to biotite but differing in optical orientation.
- anthema — exanthema.
- anthems — Plural form of anthem.
- anymore — If something does not happen or is not true anymore, it has stopped happening or is no longer true.
- anytime — You use anytime to mean a point in time which is not fixed or set.
- ape-man — any of several extinct primates, as a pithecanthropine, with structural characteristics intermediate between ape and man
- aramean — a Semite of the division associated with Aram.
- armbone — (anatomy) A bone in the arm, specifically, the humerus.
- armenia — a republic in NW Asia: originally part of the historic Armenian kingdom; acquired by Russia in 1828; became the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1936; gained independence in 1991. It is mountainous, rising over 4000 m (13 000 ft). Language: Armenian. Religion: Christian (Armenian Apostolic) majority. Currency: dram. Capital: Yerevan. Pop: 2 974 184 (2013 est). Area: 29 800 sq km (11 490 sq miles)
- augment — To augment something means to make it larger, stronger, or more effective by adding something to it.
- axoneme — the part of a cell, consisting of proteins and microtubes, which forms the core
- b meson — a meson composed of a bottom quark and an up or down antiquark or of a bottom antiquark and an up or down quark.
- baseman — a fielder positioned near a base
- basemen — Plural form of baseman.
- batsmen — Plural form of batsman.
- beaming — sending out beams; shining
- behrman — S(amuel) N(athaniel)1893-1973; U.S. playwright
- bellman — a man who rings a bell, esp (formerly) a town crier
- belmont — Alva Ertskin Smith Vanderbilt [urt-skin] /ˈɜrt skɪn/ (Show IPA), 1853–1933, U.S. women's-rights activist and socialite.
- beltman — (formerly) the member of a beach life-saving team who swam out with a line attached to his belt
- benempt — past participles of bename.
- benomyl — a fungicide, derived from imidazole, used on cereal and fruit crops: suspected of being carcinogenic
- bentham — Jeremy. 1748–1832, British philosopher and jurist: a founder of utilitarianism. His works include A Fragment on Government (1776) and Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation (1789)
- bergman — (Ernst) Ingmar (ˈiŋmar). 1918–2007, Swedish film and stage director, whose films include The Seventh Seal (1956), Wild Strawberries (1957), Persona (1966), Scenes from a Marriage (1974), Autumn Sonata (1978), and Fanny and Alexander (1982)
- bitumen — Bitumen is a black sticky substance which is obtained from tar or petrol and is used in making roads.
- bondmen — a male slave.
- bozeman — a city in S Montana.
- brenham — a town in central Texas.
- bromine — a pungent dark red volatile liquid element of the halogen series that occurs in natural brine and is used in the production of chemicals, esp ethylene dibromide. Symbol: Br; atomic no: 35; atomic wt: 79.904; valency: 1, 3, 5, or 7; relative density 3.12; density (gas): 7.59 kg/m3; melting pt: –7.2°C; boiling pt: 58.78°C
- bushmen — a woodsman.
- by name — When you mention someone or something by name, or address someone by name, you use their name.
- by-name — a secondary name; cognomen; surname.
- byreman — a man who works in a byre
- cacumen — an apex
- cadmean — of or like Cadmus
- caedmon — fl. a.d. c670, Anglo-Saxon religious poet.
- cakeman — A man who sells cakes.
- camenae — a group of nymphs originally associated with a sacred spring in Rome, later identified with the Greek Muses
- cameron — David (William Donald). born 1966, British politician; leader of the Conservative party 2005–16; prime minister 2010–16
- camoens — Luis Vaz de (lwiʃ vɑʃ ˈdəː). 1524–80, Portuguese epic poet; author of The Lusiads (1572)
- carmine — Carmine is a deep bright-red colour.
- caseman — a person who sets and corrects type from which books are printed
- caveman — Cavemen were people in prehistoric times who lived mainly in caves.
- cavemen — Plural form of caveman.
- cements — Plural form of cement.
- cenaeum — (in ancient geography) a NW promontory of Euboea.