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6-letter words containing m, a, n, s

  • maslin — a mixture of different grains, flours, or meals, especially rye mixed with wheat.
  • masons — Plural form of mason.
  • matins — (often initial capital letter) matins, Also, especially British, mattins. (usually used with a singular verb) Ecclesiastical. the first of the seven canonical hours. the service for it, properly beginning at midnight, but sometimes beginning at daybreak. Also called Morning Prayer. the service of public prayer, said in the morning, in the Anglican Church.
  • maunds — Plural form of maund.
  • mavens — An expert or connoisseur.
  • mavins — an expert or connoisseur.
  • mawsonSir Douglas, 1882–1958, Australian antarctic explorer, born in England.
  • mensae — Irregular plural form of mensa.
  • mensal — of, relating to, or used at the table.
  • mensan — an international fellowship organization for people with IQ's in the top 2 percent of the general population.
  • messan — a lap dog; small pet dog.
  • minyas — a king of Orchomenus, famed for his wealth.
  • mishna — the collection of oral laws compiled about a.d. 200 by Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi and forming the basic part of the Talmud.
  • monads — Plural form of monad.
  • monals — Plural form of monal.
  • monash — Sir John. 1865–1931, Australian military commander. Leader of Australian forces in World War I
  • mungas — Plural form of munga.
  • musang — A small animal of Java (Paradoxirus fasciatus), allied to the civets. It swallows, but does not digest, large quantities of ripe coffee berries, thus serving to disseminate the coffee plant.
  • mynahs — Plural form of mynah.
  • mysian — an ancient country in NW Asia Minor.
  • mzansi — a low-cost national banking account
  • namers — Plural form of namer.
  • nanism — the condition of being unusually or abnormally small in size or stature; dwarfism.
  • nazism — the principles or methods of the Nazis.
  • nomads — a member of a people or tribe that has no permanent abode but moves about from place to place, usually seasonally and often following a traditional route or circuit according to the state of the pasturage or food supply.
  • ramson — a garlic, Allium ursinum, having broad leaves.
  • ransomJohn Crowe [kroh] /kroʊ/ (Show IPA), 1888–1974, U.S. poet, critic, and teacher.
  • romans — a native, inhabitant, or citizen of ancient or modern Rome.
  • saimin — a Hawaiian dish of noodles
  • salmon — a marine and freshwater food fish, Salmo salar, of the family Salmonidae, having pink flesh, inhabiting waters off the North Atlantic coasts of Europe and North America near the mouths of large rivers, which it enters to spawn.
  • samain — a festival of the ancient Celts, held around November 1 to celebrate the beginning of winter.
  • samian — of or relating to the Greek island of Samos.
  • samoan — pertaining to Samoa or its Polynesian people.
  • sampan — any of various small boats of the Far East, as one propelled by a single scull over the stern and provided with a roofing of mats.
  • samson — a judge of Israel famous for his great strength. Judges 13–16.
  • samsun — a city in N Turkey, in Asia.
  • sansom — a male given name, form of Samson.
  • seaman — a person skilled in seamanship.
  • seamen — a person skilled in seamanship.
  • semang — a member of a Negrito people of the Malay Peninsula.
  • shaman — (especially among certain tribal peoples) a person who acts as intermediary between the natural and supernatural worlds, using magic to cure illness, foretell the future, control spiritual forces, etc.
  • simian — of or relating to an ape or monkey.
  • skyman — an aviator or paratrooper.
  • smyrna — former name of Izmir.
  • socman — sokeman.
  • sonoma — a town in W California: center of wine-producing region.
  • stamen — the pollen-bearing organ of a flower, consisting of the filament and the anther.
  • stamin — a coarse woolen fabric, used in the manufacture of garments.
  • subman — a primitive form of human
  • tasman — Abel Janszoon [ah-buh l yahn-sohn] /ˈɑ bəl ˈyɑn soʊn/ (Show IPA), 1602?–59, Dutch navigator and explorer.
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