0%

6-letter words containing k, m

  • moksha — freedom from the differentiated, temporal, and mortal world of ordinary experience.
  • moltke — Helmuth Karl [hel-moot kahrl] /ˈhɛl mut kɑrl/ (Show IPA), 1800–91, Prussian field marshal: chief of staff 1858–88.
  • 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.
  • mopoke — (chiefly AU) A morepork. (from 19th c.).
  • morike — Eduard [ey-doo-ahrt] /ˈeɪ duˌɑrt/ (Show IPA), 1804–75, German poet.
  • morkin — an animal that died in an accident or from a disease
  • moskva — Russian name of Moscow.
  • moujik — a Russian peasant.
  • mucked — Simple past tense and past participle of muck.
  • mucker — Slang. a vulgar, illbred person.
  • muckle — mickle.
  • mujiks — Plural form of mujik.
  • mukden — a former name of Shenyang.
  • mukluk — a soft boot worn by Eskimos, often lined with fur and usually made of sealskin or reindeer skin.
  • muktar — Alt form mukhtar.
  • muktuk — the blubber and skin of a whale when eaten as a food, raw or cooked.
  • murked — Simple past tense and past participle of murk.
  • murker — darkness; gloom: the murk of a foggy night.
  • murkly — in a dark or obscure manner
  • musick — to compose music for (a poem, libretto, etc.)
  • muskat — Obsolete form of musk cat.
  • musked — Simple past tense and past participle of musk.
  • muskeg — a bog of northern North America, commonly having sphagnum mosses, sedge, and sometimes stunted black spruce and tamarack trees.
  • musket — a heavy, large-caliber smoothbore gun for infantry soldiers, introduced in the 16th century: the predecessor of the modern rifle.
  • muskie — Edmund (Sixtus) [sik-stuh s] /ˈsɪk stəs/ (Show IPA), 1914–96, U.S. politician: senator 1959–80; secretary of state 1980–81.
  • muskox — a bovine ruminant, Ovibos moschatus, of arctic regions of North America and Greenland, that is between an ox and a sheep in size and anatomy.
  • muzaky — (of music) having a light, bland sound
  • muzhik — a Russian peasant.
  • muzjik — Alternative spelling of mujik.
  • nickum — a mischievous person, mischief-maker
  • oakham — a market town in E central England, the administrative centre of Rutland. Pop: 9620 (2001)
  • ockhamWilliam of, died 1349? English scholastic philosopher.
  • okoume — gaboon.
  • olekma — a river in E Siberian Russia, flowing N to the Lena River. 820 miles (1319 km) long.
  • oomiak — an open Eskimo boat that consists of a wooden frame covered with skins and provided with several thwarts: used for transport of goods and passengers.
  • ramark — a radar beacon developed by the U.S. Coast Guard as a marine navigational aid.
  • remake — to make again or anew.
  • remark — to say casually, as in making a comment: Someone remarked that tomorrow would be a warm day.
  • rumaki — a dish of chicken liver and sliced water chestnuts wrapped in bacon
  • rumker — a crater in the second quadrant of the face of the moon: about 25 miles (40 km) in diameter.
  • rumkin — a drinking vessel
  • samekh — the 15th letter of the Hebrew alphabet.
  • shmuck — schmuck.
  • sikkim — a kingdom in NE India, in the Himalayas between Nepal and Bhutan. 2740 sq. mi. (7096 sq. km). Capital: Gangtok.
  • skimpy — lacking in size, fullness, etc.; scanty: a skimpy hem; a skimpy dinner.
  • skyman — an aviator or paratrooper.
  • smacks — heroin.
  • smirky — resembling a smirk
  • smoked — meat, fish: cured
  • smoker — a person or thing that smokes.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?