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5-letter words containing m, n, e

  • mneme — Psychology. the retentive basis or basic principle in a mind or organism accounting for memory.
  • monde — the world; people; society.
  • moner — (zoology) Any member of the Monera.
  • mones — Alternative form of 'mones (
  • monetClaude [klawd;; French klohd] /klɔd;; French kloʊd/ (Show IPA), 1840–1926, French painter.
  • money — any circulating medium of exchange, including coins, paper money, and demand deposits.
  • monge — Gaspard [gas-par] /gasˈpar/ (Show IPA), Comte de Péluse [pey-lyz] /peɪˈlüz/ (Show IPA), 1746–1818, French mathematician.
  • monie — Archaic spelling of money.
  • monte — a city in SW California, near Los Angeles.
  • moone — Obsolete spelling of moon.
  • munge — (transitive, computing) To transform data in an undefined or unexplained manner.
  • mynde — Obsolete spelling of mind.
  • mynes — (in the Iliad) a king of Lyrnessus killed by Achilles in the Trojan War.
  • named — a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing, a body or class, or any object of thought is designated, called, or known.
  • namen — Namur
  • namer — a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing, a body or class, or any object of thought is designated, called, or known.
  • names — a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing, a body or class, or any object of thought is designated, called, or known.
  • neems — Plural form of neem.
  • neman — a river rising in central Byelorussia (Belarus), flowing W through Lithuania into the Baltic. 582 miles (937 km) long.
  • nemea — a valley in SE Greece, in ancient Argolis.
  • neume — 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.
  • nexum — A contract in early Ancient Rome in which the debtor pledged his own person as collateral should he default on his loan (thus risking becoming a slave to the creditor).
  • nimes — a department in S France. 2271 sq. mi. (5882 sq. km). Capital: Nîmes.
  • noema — (philosophy) The perceived as perceived.
  • noemi — Naomi (def 1).
  • nomen — (in ancient Rome) the second name of a citizen, indicating his gens, as “Gaius Julius Caesar.”.
  • nomes — Plural form of nome.
  • nomex — a lightweight, fire-resistant, nylon fiber made into garments, aircraft upholstery, etc.
  • numen — divine power or spirit; a deity, especially one presiding locally or believed to inhabit a particular object.
  • omens — Plural form of omen.
  • ramen — a bowl of clear soup containing noodles, vegetables, and often bits of meat.
  • reman — to man again; furnish with a fresh supply of personnel.
  • remen — an ancient Egyptian measurement unit of length
  • rumen — the first stomach of ruminating animals, lying next to the reticulum.
  • semen — the viscid, whitish fluid produced in the male reproductive organs, containing spermatozoa.
  • temin — Howard M(artin) 1934–94, U.S. virologist: Nobel Prize in medicine 1975.
  • temne — a member of a people living mainly in Sierra Leone.
  • tumen — a river in E Asia, flowing NE along the China-North Korea border and then SE along the border between China and Russia to the Sea of Japan. About 325 miles (525 km) long.
  • unmet — simple past tense and past participle of meet1 .
  • unmew — to set free (something mewed up); release, as from confinement.
  • venom — the poisonous fluid that some animals, as certain snakes and spiders, secrete and introduce into the bodies of their victims by biting, stinging, etc.
  • vimen — a long, flexible shoot of a plant.
  • women — plural of woman.
  • yamen — (in the Chinese Empire) the residence or office of a public official.
  • yemenRepublic of, a country in S Arabia, formed in 1990 by the merger of the Yemen Arab Republic and the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen. 207,000 sq. mi. (536,130 sq. km). Capital: Aden.
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