0%

7-letter words containing m, e, o, r, i

  • moldier — Comparative form of moldy.
  • moliere — (Jean Baptiste Poquelin) 1622–73, French actor and playwright.
  • moniker — a person's name, especially a nickname or alias.
  • moniter — (spelling)   It's spelled "monitor".
  • moodier — given to gloomy, depressed, or sullen moods; ill-humored.
  • moraine — a ridge, mound, or irregular mass of unstratified glacial drift, chiefly boulders, gravel, sand, and clay.
  • moreish — (informal, of food) Causing one to want to have more.
  • morelia — a state in SW Mexico. 23,196 sq. mi. (60,080 sq. km). Capital: Morelia.
  • morrice — A morris dance.
  • mortice — to secure with a mortise and tenon.
  • mortise — a notch, hole, groove, or slot made in a piece of wood or the like to receive a tenon of the same dimensions.
  • mossier — Comparative form of mossy.
  • mothier — Comparative form of mothy.
  • ogreism — an occurrence of behaviour characteristic of an ogre
  • omitter — to leave out; fail to include or mention: to omit a name from a list.
  • overmix — to combine (substances, elements, things, etc.) into one mass, collection, or assemblage, generally with a thorough blending of the constituents.
  • pompier — a conventional or imitative artist
  • primero — a card game fashionable in England in the 16th and 17th centuries.
  • promine — a substance promoting cell growth
  • promise — a declaration that something will or will not be done, given, etc., by one: unkept political promises.
  • rhizome — a rootlike subterranean stem, commonly horizontal in position, that usually produces roots below and sends up shoots progressively from the upper surface.
  • romaine — Also called romaine lettuce, cos, cos lettuce. a variety of lettuce, Lactuca sativa longifolia, having a cylindrical head of long, relatively loose leaves.
  • roomies — roommate.
  • semipro — semiprofessional
  • trisome — a trisomic individual.
  • verismo — the use of everyday life and actions in artistic works: introduced into opera in the early 1900s in reaction to contemporary conventions, which were seen as artificial and untruthful.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?