6-letter words containing m, e
- blamed — damned
- blamer — someone who blames
- blimey — You say blimey when you are surprised by something or feel strongly about it.
- boehme — Jakob [German yah-kawp] /German ˈyɑ kɔp/ (Show IPA), Böhme, Jakob.
- boheme — an opera (1896) by Giacomo Puccini.
- böhmen — an area of the W Czech Republic, formerly a province of Czechoslovakia (1918–1949). From 1939 until 1945 it formed part of the German protectorate of Bohemia-Moravia
- bombed — under the influence of alcohol or drugs (esp in the phrase bombed out of one's mind or skull)
- bomber — A bomber is a military aircraft which drops bombs.
- bommie — an outcrop of coral reef, often resembling a column, that is higher than the surrounding platform of reef and which may be partially exposed at low tide
- boomed — to sail at full speed.
- boomer — a large male kangaroo
- boomie — a person who was an adolescent in the 1960s.
- bpmake — Aspirin
- bregma — the point on the top of the skull where the coronal and sagittal sutures meet: in infants this corresponds to the anterior fontanelle
- bremen — a state of NW Germany, centred on the city of Bremen and its outport Bremerhaven. Pop: 663 000 (2003 est). Area: 404 sq km (156 sq miles)
- bumble — to speak or do in a clumsy, muddled, or inefficient way
- bummed — depressed, upset, distressed, annoyed, etc.
- bummel — a stroll
- bummer — If you say that something is a bummer, you mean that it is unpleasant or annoying.
- bumper — Bumpers are bars at the front and back of a vehicle which protect it if it bumps into something.
- byname — a name that is additional to a person's main name, such as a surname
- cabmen — Plural form of cabman.
- caecum — any structure or part that ends in a blind sac or pouch, esp the pouch that marks the beginning of the large intestine
- caelum — a small faint constellation in the S hemisphere close to Eridanus
- caeoma — an aecium in some rust fungi that has no surrounding membrane
- calmed — Simple past tense and past participle of calm.
- calmer — without rough motion; still or nearly still: a calm sea.
- camber — A camber is a gradual downward slope from the centre of a road to each side of it.
- cambre — Obsolete form of camber.
- camden — a borough of N Greater London. Pop: 210 700 (2003 est). Area: 21 sq km (8 sq miles)
- camels — Plural form of camel.
- cameos — Plural form of cameo.
- camera — A camera is a piece of equipment that is used for taking photographs, making films, or producing television pictures.
- camest — (archaic) second-person singular simple past of come.
- cameth — (hypercorrect, archaic) alternative third person singular past tense form of come.
- camise — a loose light shirt, smock, or tunic originally worn in the Middle Ages
- camlet — a tough waterproof cloth
- cammed — Simple past tense and past participle of cam.
- cammer — One who uses a webcam; a webcammer.
- cammie — a webcam award
- camões — Luˈiz Vaz de (luˈiʃ vaʒ də ) ; lo̅oēshˈ vȧzh də) 1524?-80; Port. epic poet
- camote — a sweet potato
- camped — If people are camped or camped out somewhere in the open air, they are living, staying, or waiting there, often in tents.
- camper — A camper is someone who is camping somewhere.
- cample — to argue
- carême — the forty days of Lent
- carmel — Mountmountain ridge in NW Israel, extending as a promontory into the Mediterranean: highest point, c. 1,800 ft (549 m)
- carmen — an opera (1875) by Georges Bizet.
- cembra — a large Swiss pine which yields nuts (cembra nuts)
- cement — Cement is a grey powder which is mixed with sand and water in order to make concrete.