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9-letter words containing l, e, o, m

  • goldminer — a person who mines gold or works in a gold mine.
  • gremolata — A paste of capers, parsley, lemon zest, olives and olive oil served as an accompaniment to meat or fish.
  • gromwells — Plural form of gromwell.
  • guacamole — a dip of mashed avocado mixed with tomato, onion, and seasonings.
  • guillemot — a black or brown-speckled seabird of the genus Cepphus, of northern seas, having a sharply pointed black bill, red legs, and white wing patches, as C. grylle (black guillemot) of the North Atlantic and the similar C. columba (pigeon guillemot) of the North Pacific.
  • haemocoel — (biology) A cavity, between the organs of arthropods and mollusks, through which the blood etc. circulates.
  • haemolyse — to break down red blood cells so that haemoglobin is released
  • heirlooms — Plural form of heirloom.
  • helidrome — a small airport for helicopters
  • heliogram — a message sent by a heliograph.
  • helm port — the opening at the stern of a ship, through which a rudderstock passes.
  • helmholtz — Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von [her-mahn loot-vik fer-di-nahnt fuh n] /ˈhɛr mɑn ˈlut vɪk ˈfɛr dɪˌnɑnt fən/ (Show IPA), 1821–94, German physiologist and physicist.
  • hemoblast — hematoblast.
  • hemocoels — Plural form of hemocoel.
  • hemolymph — a fluid in the body cavities and tissues of invertebrates, in arthropods functioning as blood and in some other invertebrates functioning as lymph.
  • hemolysin — a substance, as an antibody, that in cooperation with complement causes dissolution of red blood cells.
  • hemolysis — the breaking down of red blood cells with liberation of hemoglobin.
  • hemolytic — the breaking down of red blood cells with liberation of hemoglobin.
  • hemolyzed — to subject (red blood cells) to hemolysis.
  • hemophile — a hemophiliac.
  • home help — A home help is a person who is employed to visit sick or old people at home and help with their cleaning or cooking.
  • home life — a person's life at home; private life
  • home rule — self-government in local matters by a city, province, state, colony, or the like.
  • homebuilt — Constructed at home, rather than being obtained from a manufacturer etc.
  • homegirls — Plural form of homegirl.
  • homelands — Plural form of homeland.
  • homeliest — lacking in physical attractiveness; not beautiful; unattractive: a homely child.
  • homeplace — a person's birthplace or family home.
  • homer leaHomer, 1876–1912, U.S. soldier and author: adviser 1911–12 to Sun Yat-sen in China.
  • homeslice — Alternative spelling of home slice (Someone from one's home town.).
  • homestall — Dialect. a farmyard.
  • homestyle — simple and unpretentious, evoking the comforts of home: homestyle cooking; home-style hospitality.
  • homiletic — of or relating to preaching or to homilies.
  • homologue — something homologous.
  • homophile — a homosexual.
  • hordeolum — sty2 .
  • hot metal — metallic type and printing elements produced by a casting machine; foundry type.
  • humoredly — (only in combination with good, bad or ill) American standard spelling of humouredly.
  • humorless — a comic, absurd, or incongruous quality causing amusement: the humor of a situation.
  • hyalomere — the transparent part of a blood platelet, surrounding the chromomere.
  • hyalonema — a species of sponge with a long stem made up of long, twisted glass-like fibres
  • ileostomy — the construction of an artificial opening from the ileum through the abdominal wall, permitting drainage of the contents of the small intestine.
  • imidazole — a colorless, crystalline, water-soluble, heterocyclic compound, C 3 H 4 N 2 , used chiefly in organic synthesis.
  • immokalee — a town in S Florida.
  • immolated — Simple past tense and past participle of immolate.
  • immolates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of immolate.
  • immovable — incapable of being moved; fixed; stationary.
  • impletion — An act of filling; the state of being full.
  • implexion — a complication or entanglement
  • implosive — characterized by a partial vacuum behind the point of closure.
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