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

  • placement — the act of placing.
  • placename — the name given to or held by a geographical location, as a town, city, village, etc.
  • pleaseman — a person who courts favour
  • plumbness — a small mass of lead or other heavy material, as that suspended by a line and used to measure the depth of water or to ascertain a vertical line. Compare plumb line.
  • plumpness — well filled out or rounded in form; somewhat fleshy or fat.
  • policeman — a member of a police force or body.
  • policemen — a member of a police force or body.
  • polyamine — a compound containing more than one amino group.
  • primuline — a synthetic yellow dye
  • prolamine — any of the class of simple proteins, as gliadin, hordein, or zein, found in grains, soluble in dilute acids, alkalis, and alcohols, and insoluble in water, neutral salt solutions, and absolute alcohol.
  • pulmonate — Zoology. having lungs or lunglike organs.
  • pummeling — to beat or thrash with or as if with the fists.
  • quelimane — a seaport in E Mozambique.
  • raddleman — ruddleman.
  • ramble on — to wander around in a leisurely, aimless manner: They rambled through the shops until closing time.
  • ranzelman — a type of police officer responsible for investigating minor crimes
  • ravelment — entanglement; confusion.
  • reddleman — ruddleman.
  • regiminal — relating to a regimen
  • reimplant — Surgery. to restore (a tooth, organ, limb, or other structure) to its original site.
  • reinflame — to inflame again
  • remindful — reviving memory of something; reminiscent.
  • remnantal — of or relating to a remnant
  • ruddleman — a person who deals in ruddle.
  • rumble on — If you say that something such as an argument rumbles on, you mean that it continues for a long time after it should have been settled.
  • salt mine — a mine from which salt is excavated.
  • salvemini — Gaetano [gah-e-tah-naw] /ˌgɑ ɛˈtɑ nɔ/ (Show IPA), 1873–1957, Italian historian in the U.S.
  • samuelson — Paul A(nthony) 1915–2009, U.S. economist: Nobel prize 1970.
  • schmelingMax [maks;; German mahks] /mæks;; German mɑks/ (Show IPA), 1905–2005, German boxer: world heavyweight champion 1930–32.
  • seemingly — apparent; appearing, whether truly or falsely, to be as specified: a seeming advantage.
  • segmental — of, relating to, or characterized by segments or segmentation.
  • selectman — (in most New England states) one of a board of town officers chosen to manage certain public affairs.
  • semblance — outward aspect or appearance.
  • semiangle — half of a particular angle
  • semicolon — the punctuation mark (;) used to indicate a major division in a sentence where a more distinct separation is felt between clauses or items on a list than is indicated by a comma, as between the two clauses of a compound sentence.
  • semifinal — of or relating to the round preceding the final one in a tournament from which losers are eliminated.
  • semilunar — shaped like a half-moon; crescent.
  • seminally — pertaining to, containing, or consisting of semen.
  • seminoles — a member of any of several groupings of North American Indians comprising emigrants from the Creek Confederacy territories to Florida or their descendants in Florida and Oklahoma, especially the culturally conservative present-day Florida Indians.
  • semuncial — of or pertaining to a semuncia or to half an ounce
  • sensillum — Zoology. a simple sense organ usually consisting of one or a few cells at the peripheral end of a sensory nerve fiber.
  • sickleman — a person reaping with a sickle
  • simmental — one of a large breed of cattle, yellowish-brown to red and white, originally of Switzerland, used for milk and beef and as a draft animal.
  • simpleton — an ignorant, foolish, or silly person.
  • singledom — the state of being unmarried or not involved in a long-term relationship
  • slamdance — to hurl oneself repeatedly into or through a crowd at a rock concert
  • smallness — of limited size; of comparatively restricted dimensions; not big; little: a small box.
  • solemnify — to make solemn: to solemnify an occasion with hymns and prayers.
  • solemnity — the state or character of being solemn; earnestness; gravity; impressiveness: the solemnity of a state funeral.
  • solemnize — to perform the ceremony of (marriage).
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