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5-letter words containing m, e

  • gnome — GNU Network Object Model Environment
  • golem — Jewish Folklore. a figure artificially constructed in the form of a human being and endowed with life.
  • gombe — a state of Nigeria, in the NE. Capital: Gombe. Pop: 2 353 879(2006). Area: 18 768 sq km (7246 sq miles)
  • gomel — a city in SE Byelorussia (Belarus), on a tributary of the Dnieper.
  • gomer — an undesirable hospital patient.
  • gomez — Juan Vicente [hwahn bee-sen-te] /ʰwɑn biˈsɛn tɛ/ (Show IPA), 1857?–1935, Venezuelan soldier and political leader: commander in chief and dictator of Venezuela 1908–35; president of Venezuela 1908–15, 1922–29, 1931–35.
  • grame — (obsolete) Anger; wrath; scorn; bitterness; repugnance.
  • grime — dirt, soot, or other filthy matter, especially adhering to or embedded in a surface.
  • grume — blood when viscous.
  • gumbe — A style of music from Guinea-Bissau which is primarily vocal and percussive.
  • gymel — the technique, found in some medieval English music, of singing voice parts in parallel thirds.
  • haemo — (informal) haemodialysis.
  • hamerFannie Lou, 1917–77, U.S. civil rights activist.
  • hames — either of two curved pieces lying upon the collar in the harness of an animal, to which the traces are fastened.
  • harem — the part of a Muslim palace or house reserved for the residence of women.
  • helms — Plural form of helm.
  • hema- — hemo-
  • hemal — Also, hematal. of or relating to the blood or blood vessels.
  • heman — Misspelling of he-man.
  • hemet — a city in SW California.
  • hemi- — half
  • hemic — hematic.
  • hemin — the typical, microscopic reddish-brown crystals, C 34 H 32 N 4 O 4 FeCl, resulting when a sodium chloride crystal, a drop of glacial acetic acid, and some blood are heated on a slide: used to indicate the presence of blood.
  • hemo- — blood
  • hemonLouis [lwee] /lwi/ (Show IPA), 1880–1913, Canadian novelist, born in France.
  • hemps — Plural form of hemp.
  • hempy — mischievous; often in trouble for mischief.
  • hepvm — A collaboration among various HEP institutes to implement "compatible" versions of IBM's VM-CMS operating system at their sites.
  • herem — the most severe form of excommunication, formerly used by rabbis in sentencing wrongdoers, usually for an indefinite period of time.
  • herma — herm.
  • herms — Plural form of herm.
  • hiems — winter
  • himem — (software, storage)   An IBM PC extended memory manager, part of MS-DOS version 5.00 or higher. HIMEM can also act as an A20 handler.
  • himes — Chester (Bomar) [boh-mer] /ˈboʊ mər/ (Show IPA), 1909–84, U.S. novelist.
  • hmake — (programming)   A compilation manager for Haskell. hmake recompiles a given module or program by extracting dependencies between source modules and issuing appropriate compiler commands to rebuild only changed modules. hmake can use whatever Haskell compilers and preprocessors you have installed. If an .hi interface file is unchanged then changes in the corresponding implementation code will not trigger recompilation of calling code. Malcolm Wallace of the York Functional Programming Group developed hmake in 2005 based on Thomas Hallgren's hbcmake and nhc13make.
  • holme — Small island.
  • homed — a house, apartment, or other shelter that is the usual residence of a person, family, or household.
  • homee — Misspelling of homey.
  • homer — 9th-century b.c, Greek epic poet: reputed author of the Iliad and Odyssey.
  • homes — a house, apartment, or other shelter that is the usual residence of a person, family, or household.
  • homey — comfortably informal and inviting; cozy; homelike: a homey little inn.
  • homie — a homeboy or homegirl.
  • homme — a man.
  • horme — activity directed toward a goal; purposive effort.
  • hulme — T(homas) E(rnest). 1883–1917, English literary critic and poet; a proponent of imagism
  • hymen — the ancient Greek god of marriage.
  • hymie — a contemptuous term used to refer to a Jewish male.
  • ileum — Anatomy. the third and lowest division of the small intestine, extending from the jejunum to the cecum.
  • image — a physical likeness or representation of a person, animal, or thing, photographed, painted, sculptured, or otherwise made visible.
  • imake — A tool which generates Makefiles from a template, a set of cpp macros, and a per-directory input file called an Imakefile. This allows machine dependencies (such has compiler options, alternate command names, and special make rules) to be kept separate from the descriptions of the various items to be built. imake is distributed with, and used extensively by, the X Window System.
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