9-letter words containing i, n, s, o, m
- insomnias — Plural form of insomnia.
- intercoms — Plural form of intercom.
- intromits — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of intromit.
- iron mask — an iron covering for the face, supposedly used in the past to conceal the identity of a well-known prisoner
- ironsmith — a worker in iron; blacksmith.
- islomania — an obsessional enthusiasm or partiality for islands
- isoenzyme — isozyme.
- kalsomine — to wash or cover with calcimine.
- kinswoman — a female relative.
- kinswomen — Plural form of kinswoman.
- laconisms — Plural form of laconism.
- lemonfish — the cobia.
- limestone — a sedimentary rock consisting predominantly of calcium carbonate, varieties of which are formed from the skeletons of marine microorganisms and coral: used as a building stone and in the manufacture of lime.
- limonoids — Plural form of limonoid.
- limousine — any large, luxurious automobile, especially one driven by a chauffeur.
- macintosh — a raincoat made of rubberized cloth.
- magnolias — Plural form of magnolia.
- maidstone — a city in Kent, in SE England.
- mammonish — Actuated or prompted by a devotion to money getting or the service of Mammon.
- mammonism — the greedy pursuit of riches.
- mandolins — Plural form of mandolin.
- manifesto — a public declaration of intentions, opinions, objectives, or motives, as one issued by a government, sovereign, or organization.
- manifolds — Plural form of manifold.
- mansionry — (obsolete) The state of dwelling or residing; occupancy.
- martinson — Harry Edmund [har-ee ed-muh nd;; Swedish hah-ri ed-moo nt] /ˈhær i ˈɛd mənd;; Swedish ˈhɑ rɪ ˈɛd mʊnt/ (Show IPA), 1904–78, Swedish novelist and poet: Nobel prize 1974.
- masonried — built of masonry
- massillon — a city in NE Ohio.
- mcmansion — a large modern house considered to look mass-produced, lacking in distinguishing characteristics, and at variance with established local architecture
- melanosis — abnormal deposition or development of black or dark pigment in the tissues.
- meniscoid — a crescent or a crescent-shaped body.
- menoetius — a Titan, the brother of Prometheus, Epimetheus, and Atlas.
- menopolis — an area or city with a high proportion of single men
- michelson — Albert Abraham, 1852–1931, U.S. physicist, born in Prussia (now Poland): Nobel prize 1907.
- micronise — (British) To reduce in size often to micrometer scale.
- micronism — A theoretical microorganism living in the ice or under the surface of Jupiter's ice moon Europa.
- micronuts — Plural form of micronut.
- midpoints — Plural form of midpoint.
- midseason — The middle part of a season, such as a sporting, television, or growing season.
- milestone — a stone functioning as a milepost.
- millponds — Plural form of millpond.
- millstone — either of a pair of circular stones between which grain or another substance is ground, as in a mill.
- minacious — menacing; threatening.
- minestone — ore, esp iron ore
- minkowski — Hermann [hur-muh n;; German her-mahn] /ˈhɜr mən;; German ˈhɛr mɑn/ (Show IPA), 1864–1909, German mathematician.
- minnesota — a state in the N central United States. 84,068 sq. mi. (217,735 sq. km). Capital: St. Paul. Abbreviation: MN (for use with zip code), Minn.
- minorship — the state of being a minor
- minotaurs — Plural form of minotaur.
- minutiose — attentive to very small details
- misbutton — (transitive) To button wrongly.
- mischosen — to make a wrong or improper choice.