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6-letter words containing m, e, r, u

  • mu ehr — cloud ear.
  • mucker — Slang. a vulgar, illbred person.
  • mudder — a racehorse able to perform well on a wet, muddy track.
  • mugger — A person who attacks and robs another in a public place.
  • mulier — a legitimate child.
  • muller — Friedrich Max [free-drik maks;; German free-drikh mahks] /ˈfri drɪk mæks;; German ˈfri drɪx mɑks/ (Show IPA), 1823–1900, English Sanskrit scholar and philologist born in Germany.
  • mummer — a person who wears a mask or fantastic costume while merrymaking or taking part in a pantomime, especially at Christmas and other festive seasons.
  • mumper — (British, or, obsolete) A beggar.
  • munroeCharles Edward, 1849–1938, U.S. chemist.
  • munter — (British, slang, pejorative) An ugly person.
  • murage — a toll or tax for the repair or construction of the walls or fortifications of a town.
  • murder — Law. the killing of another human being under conditions specifically covered in law. In the U.S., special statutory definitions include murder committed with malice aforethought, characterized by deliberation or premeditation or occurring during the commission of another serious crime, as robbery or arson (first-degree murder) and murder by intent but without deliberation or premeditation (second-degree murder)
  • murein — Peptidoglycan, mucopeptide.
  • muriel — a female given name.
  • murine — belonging or pertaining to the Muridae, the family of rodents that includes the mice and rats.
  • murked — Simple past tense and past participle of murk.
  • murker — darkness; gloom: the murk of a foggy night.
  • murree — a native Australian
  • murres — Plural form of murre.
  • murrey — a dark purplish-red color.
  • musher — a person who competes in cross-country races with dog team and sled.
  • muster — to assemble (troops, a ship's crew, etc.), as for battle, display, inspection, orders, or discharge.
  • mutare — a city in E Zimbabwe.
  • mutter — to utter words indistinctly or in a low tone, often as if talking to oneself; murmur.
  • muvver — Lb Cockney eye dialect of mother.
  • number — one of a series of things distinguished by or marked with numerals.
  • numero — The sign ⟨ № ⟩.
  • pumper — a person or thing that pumps.
  • rameau — Jean Philippe [zhahn fee-leep] /ʒɑ̃ fiˈlip/ (Show IPA), 1683–1764, French composer and musical theorist.
  • reaum. — Réaumur (scale)
  • rectum — the comparatively straight, terminal section of the intestine, ending in the anus.
  • regnum — a reign or rule
  • relume — to light or illuminate again; relumine.
  • remuda — a group of saddle horses from which ranch hands choose mounts for the day.
  • replum — the thin internal separating wall or partition between valves or compartments in some fruits
  • repump — to pump again
  • resume — a summing up; summary.
  • rheumy — pertaining to, causing, full of, or affected with rheum.
  • rumble — to make a deep, heavy, somewhat muffled, continuous sound, as thunder.
  • rumker — a crater in the second quadrant of the face of the moon: about 25 miles (40 km) in diameter.
  • rummer — a large drinking glass or cup.
  • rumple — to crumple or crush into wrinkles: to rumple a sheet of paper.
  • rumseyJames, 1743–92, U.S. engineer and inventor.
  • semeru — a volcano in Indonesia: the highest peak in Java. Height: 3676 m (12 060 ft)
  • stumer — something bogus or fraudulent.
  • summer — a principal beam or girder, as one running between girts to support joists.
  • sumnerCharles, 1811–74, U.S. statesman.
  • sumter — a city in central South Carolina.
  • tergum — the dorsal surface of a body segment of an arthropod.
  • umbery — resembling umber in colour
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