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5-letter words containing m, e, s

  • smaze — a mixture of haze and smoke.
  • smear — to spread or daub (an oily, greasy, viscous, or wet substance) on or over something: to smear butter on bread.
  • smeek — the fumes or smoke produced from something burning
  • smell — to perceive the odor or scent of through the nose by means of the olfactory nerves; inhale the odor of: I smell something burning.
  • smelt — to perceive the odor or scent of through the nose by means of the olfactory nerves; inhale the odor of: I smell something burning.
  • smile — a pleasant or agreeable appearance, look, or aspect.
  • smise — to smile with one’s eyes
  • smite — to strike or hit hard, with or as with the hand, a stick, or other weapon: She smote him on the back with her umbrella.
  • smoke — the visible vapor and gases given off by a burning or smoldering substance, especially the gray, brown, or blackish mixture of gases and suspended carbon particles resulting from the combustion of wood, peat, coal, or other organic matter.
  • smote — a simple past tense of smite.
  • somer — summer2 (def 1).
  • somme — a river in N France, flowing NW to the English Channel: battles, World War I, 1916, 1918; World War II, 1944. 150 miles (241 km) long.
  • sperm — semen.
  • spoem — a poem made up entirely from the subject lines of different spam emails
  • spume — to eject or discharge as or like foam or froth; spew (often followed by forth).
  • steam — water in the form of an invisible gas or vapor.
  • stems — science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, considered as a group of academic or career fields (often used attributively): degree programs in STEM disciplines; teaching STEM in high school.
  • stime — the smallest bit; a drop, taste, or glimpse.
  • styme — to peer
  • sumer — an ancient region in southern Mesopotamia that contained a number of independent cities and city-states of which the first were established possibly as early as 5000 b.c.: conquered by the Elamites and, about 2000 b.c., by the Babylonians; a number of its cities, as Ur, Uruk, Kish, and Lagash, are major archaeological sites in southern Iraq.
  • tames — changed from the wild or savage state; domesticated: a tame bear.
  • teems — to abound or swarm; be prolific or fertile (usually followed by with).
  • temps — part of a dance step in which there is no transfer of weight.
  • temse — a sieve used to strain meal
  • terms — a word or group of words designating something, especially in a particular field, as atom in physics, quietism in theology, adze in carpentry, or district leader in politics.
  • times — multiplied by: Two times four is eight.
  • tomes — a book, especially a very heavy, large, or learned book.
  • wames — Scot. and North England. belly.
  • weemsMason Locke ("Parson Weems") 1759–1825, U.S. clergyman and biographer.
  • zymes — the specific principle regarded as the cause of a zymotic disease.
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