0%

8-letter words containing m, o, h, e

  • outhomer — to score more home runs than
  • outshame — to shame greatly or surpass in shamefulness
  • overmuch — If something happens overmuch, it happens too much or very much.
  • peamouth — a minnow, Mylocheilus caurinus, of northwestern U.S. and British Columbian waters.
  • philemon — an Epistle written by Paul. Abbreviation: Phil.
  • philomel — the nightingale.
  • phlegmon — a swollen, red, and painful mass affecting bodily tissue that may progress to abscess
  • phonecam — a digital camera incorporated in a mobile phone
  • phonemes — any of a small set of units, usually about 20 to 60 in number, and different for each language, considered to be the basic distinctive units of speech sound by which morphemes, words, and sentences are represented. They are arrived at for any given language by determining which differences in sound function to indicate a difference in meaning, so that in English the difference in sound and meaning between pit and bit is taken to indicate the existence of different labial phonemes, while the difference in sound between the unaspirated p of spun and the aspirated p of pun, since it is never the only distinguishing feature between two different words, is not taken as ground for setting up two different p phonemes in English. Compare distinctive feature (def 1).
  • phonemic — of or relating to phonemes: a phonemic system.
  • phyllome — a leaf of a plant.
  • rehoboam — the successor of Solomon and the first king of Judah, reigned 922?–915? b.c. I Kings 11:43.
  • resmooth — to make smooth again
  • rhamnose — deoxymannose; a deoxy hexose sugar, C 6 H 1 2 O 5 , that is an important component of the polysaccharides of plant cell walls.
  • rheotome — an interrupter of an electric current
  • rushmoreMount, a peak in the Black Hills of South Dakota that is a memorial (Mount Rushmore National Memorial) having 60-foot (18-meter) busts of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt, carved into its face between 1927 and 1941, from a design by and under the direction of Gutzon Borglum. 5600 feet (1707 meters).
  • schmooze — to chat idly; gossip.
  • semihobo — a person looking almost like a hobo
  • shame on — shame should be felt by; this is shameful of
  • sheikdom — the land or territory under the control of a sheik.
  • shoreman — a person who lives on the shore
  • showtime — the time at which an entertainment is scheduled to begin.
  • smoocher — to kiss.
  • smoothen — to make or become smooth
  • smoothie — a person who has a winningly polished manner: He's such a smoothie he could charm the stripes off a tiger.
  • smothery — stifling; close: a smothery atmosphere.
  • somewhat — in some measure or degree; to some extent: not angry, just somewhat disturbed.
  • somewhen — sometime.
  • sondheim — Stephen (Joshua) born 1930, U.S. composer and lyricist.
  • sopherim — scribe1 (def 3).
  • stoneham — a town in E Massachusetts, near Boston.
  • stroheimErich von [er-ik] /ˈɛr ɪk/ (Show IPA), 1885–1957, U.S. actor and director, born in Austria.
  • thanedom — something that belongs to or lies within the jurisdiction of a thane
  • the atom — nuclear energy
  • the bomb — a hydrogen or atomic bomb considered as the ultimate destructive weapon
  • the morn — tomorrow
  • the most — more than any other
  • the tomb — death
  • theonomy — the state of an individual or society that regards its own nature and norms as being in accord with the divine nature.
  • thermion — an ion emitted by incandescent material.
  • thothmes — flourished c1475 b.c, Egyptian ruler: conqueror of the Middle East.
  • thutmose — flourished c1475 b.c, Egyptian ruler: conqueror of the Middle East.
  • townhome — town house (def 3).
  • trichome — Botany. an outgrowth from the epidermis of plants, as a hair.
  • umeboshi — a salty and tart Japanese condiment made from unripened plums pickled in a brine.
  • unhomely — not homely
  • vermouth — an aromatized white wine in which herbs, roots, barks, bitters, and other flavorings have been steeped.
  • weymouth — a town in E Massachusetts, S of Boston.
  • whomever — Used instead of “ whoever ” as the object of a verb or preposition.
  • whompage — (rare humorous slang) Whomping or whomping on; acts of whomping or whomping on, taken collectively.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?