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8-letter words containing m, i, s, r, e

  • moraines — Plural form of moraine.
  • moralise — to reflect on or express opinions about something in terms of right and wrong, especially in a self-righteous or tiresome way.
  • mortised — a notch, hole, groove, or slot made in a piece of wood or the like to receive a tenon of the same dimensions.
  • mortises — Plural form of mortise.
  • motorise — Alternative spelling of motorize.
  • murkiest — Superlative form of murky.
  • murphies — Plural form of murphy.
  • musicker — a musician
  • naderism — the philosophy and beliefs of consumerism and environmentalism preached by Ralph Nader
  • negroism — the doctrine or advocacy of equal rights for black people.
  • nephrism — chronic kidney disease, renal failure
  • numerics — The field of numerically-controlled engineering.
  • ockerism — the conduct or actions that are characteristic of an ocker
  • oneirism — (rare) Dream-like experiences or qualities; dreaminess.
  • overswim — to swim across
  • pelorism — a floral mutation involving the formation of peloric flowers
  • peronism — the principles or policies of Juan Perón.
  • phrenism — one of the three vital forces, which are non-physical life forces. Phrenism is the thought force, as opposed to neurism, the nerve force, and bathmism, the growth force.
  • premiers — the winners of a premiership
  • premised — Also, premiss. Logic. a proposition supporting or helping to support a conclusion.
  • premises — Also, premiss. Logic. a proposition supporting or helping to support a conclusion.
  • primates — Ecclesiastical. an archbishop or bishop ranking first among the bishops of a province or country.
  • primness — formally precise or proper, as persons or behavior; stiffly neat.
  • primroseArchibald Philip, 5th Earl of Rosebery, Rosebery, Archibald Philip Primrose, 5th Earl of.
  • promised — a declaration that something will or will not be done, given, etc., by one: unkept political promises.
  • promisee — a person to whom a promise is made.
  • racemism — (of a compound) the state of being optically inactive and separable into two other substances of the same chemical composition as the original substance, one of which is dextrorotatory and the other levorotatory, as racemic acid.
  • ramses i — 1324?–1258 b.c, king of ancient Egypt.
  • realisms — interest in or concern for the actual or real, as distinguished from the abstract, speculative, etc.
  • red mist — a feeling of extreme anger that clouds one's judgment temporarily
  • regalism — the principle that royalty have the highest power, esp when referring to church affairs
  • reimpose — to lay on or set as something to be borne, endured, obeyed, fulfilled, paid, etc.: to impose taxes.
  • reinsman — a person who rides or drives horses, especially a skillful one, as a jockey or harness driver.
  • residuum — the residue, remainder, or rest of something.
  • resubmit — to give over or yield to the power or authority of another (often used reflexively).
  • resuming — to take up or go on with again after interruption; continue: to resume a journey.
  • ribosome — a tiny, somewhat mitten-shaped organelle occurring in great numbers in the cell cytoplasm either freely, in small clusters, or attached to the outer surfaces of endoplasmic reticula, and functioning as the site of protein manufacture.
  • rimester — a writer of inferior verse; poetaster.
  • riminess — the state or quality of being rimy
  • rimstone — a calcareous deposit forming a dam at the edge or outlet of an overflowing pool of water, as in a cavern.
  • samphire — a European succulent plant, Crithmum maritimum, of the parsley family, having compound leaves and small, whitish flowers, growing in clefts of rock near the sea.
  • sapremia — blood poisoning caused by the toxins produced by bacterial putrefaction, as in gangrene.
  • schirmer — Gustav [goo s-tahf] /ˈgʊs tɑf/ (Show IPA), 1829–93, born in Germany, and his sons Rudolph Edward, 1859–1919, and Gustave, 1864–1907, U.S. music publishers.
  • scrimper — a person who scrimps
  • semiarch — a half arch.
  • semiarid — characterized by very little annual rainfall, usually from 10 to 20 inches (25 to 50 cm): the struggle to raise vegetables in semiarid regions.
  • semihard — partly hard; not completely hard
  • seminary — a special school providing education in theology, religious history, etc., primarily to prepare students for the priesthood, ministry, or rabbinate.
  • seraphim — a plural of seraph.
  • seriatim — in a series; one after another in regular order
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