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5-letter words containing m, e

  • axmen — Irregular plural form of axman.
  • azyme — unleavened bread
  • baume — designating or of either of two hydrometer scales used to indicate specific gravity
  • beams — Plural form of beam.
  • beamy — sending out beams of light; radiant; bright
  • bedim — to make dim or obscure
  • begem — to decorate with gems
  • begum — (in Pakistan and certain other Muslim countries) a woman of high rank, esp the widow of a prince
  • belem — a port in N Brazil, the capital of Pará state, on the Pará River: major trading centre for the Amazon basin. Pop: 2 097 000 (2005 est)
  • bemad — to cause to become mad
  • bemba — a member of a Negroid people of Africa, living chiefly in Zambia on a high infertile plateau
  • bembo — Pietro (ˈpjɛːtro). 1470–1547, Italian scholar, poet, and cardinal (1539). His treatise Prose della volgar lingua (1525) helped to establish a standard form of literary Italian
  • bemix — to mix thoroughly
  • bemud — to cover with mud
  • berme — Also, berme. Fortification. a horizontal surface between the exterior slope of a rampart and the moat.
  • besom — a broom, esp one made of a bundle of twigs tied to a handle
  • biome — a major ecological community, extending over a large area and usually characterized by a dominant vegetation
  • blame — If you blame a person or thing for something bad, you believe or say that they are responsible for it or that they caused it.
  • bleam — (jargon)   To transmit or send data. "Bleam that binary to me in an e-mail".
  • blumeJudy, born 1938, U.S. novelist.
  • bmews — Ballistic Missile Early Warning System.
  • bohme — Jakob (ˈjaːkɔp). 1575–1624, German mystic
  • bombe — a dessert of ice cream lined or filled with custard, cake crumbs, etc
  • brame — a fierce passion or vexation
  • bream — any of several Eurasian freshwater cyprinid fishes of the genus Abramis, esp A. brama, having a deep compressed body covered with silvery scales
  • breme — fierce, strong, distinct
  • brome — any of a large genus (Bromus) of grasses of the temperate zone, having closed sheaths and spikelets with awns: a few are crop plants but many are weeds
  • brume — heavy mist or fog
  • camel — A camel is a large animal that lives in deserts and is used for carrying goods and people. Camels have long necks and one or two lumps on their backs called humps.
  • cameo — A cameo is a short description or piece of acting which expresses cleverly and neatly the nature of a situation, event, or person's character.
  • cames — a slender, grooved bar of lead for holding together the pieces of glass in windows of latticework or stained glass.
  • carme — a nymph who was one of Diana's attendants and mother of Britomaris by Jupiter
  • cecum — the pouch that is the beginning of the large intestine
  • celom — coelom
  • ceram — one of the Molucca Islands, in Indonesia, west of New Guinea: 6,621 sq mi (17,148 sq km)
  • cheem — (Singapore,informal) Deep; profound; complex.
  • chem. — chemical
  • chemo — Chemo is the same as chemotherapy.
  • chemy — (obsolete) alchemy, chemistry (prior to their being properly distinguished).
  • chime — When a bell or a clock chimes, it makes ringing sounds.
  • chyme — the thick fluid mass of partially digested food that leaves the stomach
  • cimex — any of the heteropterous insects of the genus Cimex, esp the bedbug
  • clems — Plural form of clem.
  • clime — You use clime in expressions such as warmer climes and foreign climes to refer to a place that has a particular kind of climate.
  • cname — (networking)   The canonical name query type for Domain Name System. This query asks a DNS server for a host's official hostname.
  • comae — Plural form of coma (In the cometary nuclear dust cloud sense.).
  • combe — coomb
  • comen — Alternative past participle of come.
  • comer — You can use comers to refer to people who arrive at a particular place.
  • comes — Astronomy. companion1 (def 6).
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