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8-letter words containing m, n, e, i

  • munchies — crunchy or chewy. Informal. for snacking: munchy foods like popcorn and cookies.
  • munimentmuniments, Law. a document, as a title deed or a charter, by which rights or privileges are defended or maintained.
  • muraenid — any fish of the family Muraenidae, comprising the morays.
  • murrhine — of, relating to, or manufactured of murra.
  • museveni — Yoweri Kaguta [yohwer-ee kah-goo-tah] /ˈyoʊwɛr i kɑˈgu tɑ/ (Show IPA), born 1944, Ugandan politician: president 1986-.
  • muslined — draped or covered with muslin
  • muslinet — a thick type of muslin
  • mutineer — a person who mutinies.
  • mutinied — revolt or rebellion against constituted authority, especially by sailors against their officers.
  • mutinies — Plural form of mutiny.
  • mylonite — Geology. a rock that has been crushed and sheared to such an extent that its original texture has been destroyed.
  • myogenic — originating in muscle, as an impulse or sensation.
  • mytilene — Also called Lesbos. a Greek island in the NE Aegean. 836 sq. mi. (2165 sq. km).
  • naderism — the philosophy and beliefs of consumerism and environmentalism preached by Ralph Nader
  • nebulium — a hypothetical element once thought to be present in emission nebulae because of certain unidentified spectral lines, now known to be forbidden transitions of oxygen and nitrogen ions.
  • negroism — the doctrine or advocacy of equal rights for black people.
  • nehemiah — a Hebrew leader of the 5th century b.c.
  • neomycin — an antibiotic produced by an actinomycete, Streptomyces fradiae, administered orally or locally, used chiefly for skin, urinary tract, and eye infections and as a surgical antiseptic.
  • nephrism — chronic kidney disease, renal failure
  • nepotism — patronage bestowed or favoritism shown on the basis of family relationship, as in business and politics: She was accused of nepotism when she made her nephew an officer of the firm.
  • neumatic — any of various symbols representing from one to four notes, used in the musical notation of the Middle Ages but now employed solely in the notation of Gregorian chant in the liturgical books of the Roman Catholic Church.
  • new-mint — to mint or coin afresh.
  • ngaliemaMount, a mountain with two summits, in central Africa, between Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo: highest peak in the Ruwenzori group. 16,790 feet (5119 meters).
  • nichrome — An alloy of nickel with chromium (10 to 20 percent) and sometimes iron (up to 25 percent), used chiefly in high-temperature applications such as electrical heating elements.
  • nickname — a name added to or substituted for the proper name of a person, place, etc., as in affection, ridicule, or familiarity: He has always loathed his nickname of “Whizzer.”.
  • niemeyerOscar, 1907–2012, Brazilian architect.
  • niflheim — a place of eternal cold, darkness, and fog, ruled over by Hel: abode of those who die of illness or old age.
  • nijmegen — a city in the E Netherlands, on the Waal River: peace treaty 1678.
  • nim tree — neem (def 2).
  • nimblest — Superlative form of nimble.
  • nimbuses — Plural form of nimbus.
  • nimwegen — German name of Nijmegen.
  • nizamate — the position held or territory governed by a Nizam.
  • nobelium — a transuranic element in the actinium series. Symbol: No; atomic number: 102.
  • nomadize — to live in the manner of a nomad.
  • nominate — to propose (someone) for appointment or election to an office.
  • nominees — Plural form of nominee.
  • noncrime — an incident that is not considered to be against the law
  • nonimage — That which is not an image.
  • noontime — noon; noontide; noonday: Will he be home at noontime?
  • novelism — an innovative idea or concept; innovation; novelty
  • numerics — The field of numerically-controlled engineering.
  • ointment — a soft, unctuous preparation, often medicated, for application to the skin; unguent.
  • omnicode — Thompson, 1956. Ran on IBM 650.
  • omnimode — of all functions
  • omnivore — someone or something that is omnivorous.
  • on merit — If you judge something or someone on merit or on their merits, your judgment is based on what you notice when you consider them, rather than on things that you know about them from other sources.
  • one-time — having been as specified at one time; former: my one-time partners.
  • oneirism — (rare) Dream-like experiences or qualities; dreaminess.
  • orpiment — a mineral, arsenic trisulfide, As 2 S 3 , found usually in soft, yellow, foliated masses, used as a pigment.
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