6-letter words containing e, s, m
- semite — a member of any of various ancient and modern peoples originating in southwestern Asia, including the Akkadians, Canaanites, Phoenicians, Hebrews, and Arabs.
- semmes — Raphael, 1809–77, Confederate admiral in the American Civil War.
- semmit — a vest
- semper — a Latin word meaning always
- semper — a Latin word meaning always
- semple — simple; straightforward; humble; honest; lowly; common
- sempre — throughout.
- semtex — a plastic explosive that is easily tractable and almost odorless, used especially by terrorists.
- sensum — sense datum (def 1).
- sepmag — designating a film or television programme for which the sound is recorded on separate magnetic material and run in synchronism with the picture
- septum — a dividing wall, membrane, or the like, in a plant or animal structure; dissepiment.
- sermon — a discourse for the purpose of religious instruction or exhortation, especially one based on a text of Scripture and delivered by a member of the clergy as part of a religious service.
- sesame — a tropical, herbaceous plant, Sesamum indicum, whose small oval seeds are edible and yield an oil.
- sexism — attitudes or behavior based on traditional stereotypes of gender roles.
- shamer — a person or thing that causes shame or disgrace
- shames — shammes.
- shembe — (in South Africa) an African sect that combines Christianity with aspects of Bantu religion
- shmear — schmear.
- shumen — a city in NE Bulgaria.
- simcoe — a town in SE Ontario, in S Canada.
- simeon — a son of Jacob and Leah. Gen. 29:33.
- simile — a figure of speech in which two unlike things are explicitly compared, as in “she is like a rose.”. Compare metaphor.
- simmel — Georg [gey-awrk] /geɪˈɔrk/ (Show IPA), 1858–1918, German sociologist and philosopher.
- simmer — to cook or cook in a liquid at or just below the boiling point.
- simnel — in England,
- simone — (language) A simulation language by A. Hoare et al. based on Pascal.
- simper — to smile in a silly, self-conscious way.
- simple — easy to understand, deal with, use, etc.: a simple matter; simple tools.
- smeary — showing smears; smeared.
- smeath — the merganser or smew duck
- smeeth — flat or smooth
- smegma — a thick, cheeselike, sebaceous secretion that collects beneath the foreskin or around the clitoris.
- smelly — emitting a strong or unpleasant odor; reeking.
- smeuse — a hole in a wall, hedge, etc
- smidge — a very small amount or part
- smiled — to assume a facial expression indicating pleasure, favor, or amusement, but sometimes derision or scorn, characterized by an upturning of the corners of the mouth.
- smiles — to assume a facial expression indicating pleasure, favor, or amusement, but sometimes derision or scorn, characterized by an upturning of the corners of the mouth.
- smilet — a little smile
- smiley — a digital icon, a sequence of keyboard symbols, or a handwritten or printed equivalent, that serves to represent a facial expression, as :‐) for a smiling face or ;‐) for a winking face. Compare emoticon.
- smiter — to strike or hit hard, with or as with the hand, a stick, or other weapon: She smote him on the back with her umbrella.
- smoked — meat, fish: cured
- smoker — a person or thing that smokes.
- smokey — an officer or officers of a state highway patrol.
- smokie — a smoked haddock
- smouse — to feast on or consume
- smudge — a dirty mark or smear.
- soemba — Dutch name of Sumba.
- solemn — grave, sober, or mirthless, as a person, the face, speech, tone, or mood: solemn remarks.
- somber — gloomily dark; shadowy; dimly lighted: a somber passageway.
- sombre — gloomily dark; shadowy; dimly lighted: a somber passageway.