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8-letter words containing m, e, n

  • demining — Present participle of demine.
  • deminish — Obsolete form of diminish.
  • demising — death or decease.
  • demitint — (arts) That part of a painting, engraving, etc. which is neither in full darkness nor full light.
  • demixing — Demixing is the unintended separation of the substances in a mixture.
  • demoness — a female demon
  • demoniac — of, like, or suggestive of a demon; demonic
  • demonian — of, relating to, or resembling a demon
  • demonise — to turn into a demon or make demonlike.
  • demonish — Like or characterisic of a demon; demonic.
  • demonism — belief in the existence and power of demons
  • demonist — A believer in, or worshipper of, demons.
  • demonize — If people demonize someone, they convince themselves that that person is evil.
  • demoting — Present participle of demote.
  • demotion — to reduce to a lower grade, rank, class, or position (opposed to promote): They demoted the careless waiter to busboy.
  • determin — Obsolete form of determine.
  • diamante — Diamante jewellery is made from small pieces of cut glass which look like diamonds.
  • diamonte — A seven-line poem describing two opposite subjects using only adjectives, nouns and participles.
  • dimensia — Misspelling of dementia.
  • dimented — Misspelling of demented.
  • dimentia — Misspelling of dementia.
  • diriment — causing to become wholly void; nullifying.
  • doberman — Doberman pinscher.
  • document — a written or printed paper furnishing information or evidence, as a passport, deed, bill of sale, or bill of lading; a legal or official paper.
  • dolmenic — of or relating to a dolmen
  • dominate — to rule over; govern; control.
  • domineer — Assert one's will over another in an arrogant way.
  • dominoes — a flat, thumbsized, rectangular block, the face of which is divided into two parts, each either blank or bearing from one to six pips or dots: 28 such pieces form a complete set.
  • dopamine — Biochemistry. a catecholamine neurotransmitter in the central nervous system, retina, and sympathetic ganglia, acting within the brain to help regulate movement and emotion: its depletion may cause Parkinson's disease. Compare dopa.
  • dormient — sleeping; dormant.
  • downcome — a downcomer.
  • downhome — Alternative form of down-home.
  • downtime — a time during a regular working period when an employee is not actively productive.
  • dream on — It isn't true
  • dreaming — (often initial capital letter) the ancient time of the creation of all things by sacred ancestors, whose spirits continue into the present, as conceived in the mythology of the Australian Aborigines.
  • drumline — A group of percussionists in a marching band.
  • dumbness — lacking intelligence or good judgment; stupid; dull-witted.
  • duncedom — the characteristic behaviour or the realm of a dunce or a dullard
  • dungmere — a hole or a trench for the collection of waste matter
  • duodenum — the first portion of the small intestine, from the stomach to the jejunum.
  • dynamise — Alternative spelling of dynamize.
  • dynamite — A high explosive consisting of nitroglycerine mixed with an absorbent material and typically molded into sticks.
  • dynamize — Give power or energy to; make dynamic.
  • e number — E numbers are artificial substances which are added to some foods and drinks to improve their flavour or colour or to make them last longer. They are called E numbers because they are represented in Europe by code names which begin with the letter 'E'.
  • earthman — a human inhabitant or native of the planet Earth.
  • earthmen — Plural form of earthman.
  • easement — Law. a right held by one property owner to make use of the land of another for a limited purpose, as right of passage.
  • eastmain — a river in central Quebec, Canada, flowing W to James Bay. 510 miles (821 km) long.
  • ebionism — the teaching upheld by the Ebionites that said that Jesus was a mortal human being, that Christians should adhere to Jewish law and that absence of wealth was a preferred religious quality
  • economic — of or relating to the science of economics.
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