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10-letter words containing m, o, n, l, e

  • laumontite — a white zeolite mineral, chiefly hydrated silicate of aluminum and calcium.
  • lawn mower — a hand-operated or motor-driven machine for cutting the grass of a lawn.
  • lawnmowers — Plural form of lawnmower.
  • leamington — a city in Warwickshire, central England: health resort.
  • leguminous — pertaining to, of the nature of, or bearing legumes.
  • lemon balm — any of various oily, fragrant, resinous substances, often of medicinal value, exuding from certain plants, especially tropical trees of the genus Commiphora.
  • lemon curd — lemon paste made with eggs and sugar
  • lemon drop — a lemon-flavored lozenge.
  • lemon fish — the cobia.
  • lemon kali — an artificially flavored carbonated lemon drink; lemon soda pop.
  • lemon mint — a plant, Mentha piperita, of the central U.S., having white or pinkish flowers and lemon-scented leaves when crushed.
  • lemon soda — a sweet fizzy drink that tastes of lemon
  • lemon sole — any of various popular food flatfishes, as Parophrys vetulus of the Pacific (English sole) and Pseudopleuronectes americanus of the Atlantic (winter flounder or blackback flounder)
  • lemon tree — plant: bears lemons
  • lemon vine — Barbados gooseberry (def 1).
  • lemongrass — A fragrant tropical grass that yields an oil that smells lemon. It is widely used in Asian cooking and in perfumery and medicine.
  • lemoniness — The state or quality of being lemony.
  • lenocinium — tacit encouragement of, or assent to, adultery committed by one's partner
  • lentissimo — very slow.
  • leominster — a city in N Massachusetts.
  • leucomaine — any of a group of toxic amines produced during animal metabolism
  • lienectomy — splenectomy.
  • limestones — Plural form of limestone.
  • limicoline — shore-inhabiting; of or pertaining to numerous birds of the families Charadriidae, comprising the plovers, and Scolopacidae, comprising the sandpipers.
  • limoncello — A lemon-flavored Italian liqueur.
  • limousines — Plural form of limousine.
  • line storm — equinoctial storm.
  • lineswoman — a female official, as in tennis, soccer, ice hockey, and football, who assists the referee.
  • lineswomen — Plural form of lineswoman.
  • lion-tamer — a person who trains lions, esp for entertainment in a circus
  • lobsterman — a person who traps lobsters.
  • lobstermen — Plural form of lobsterman.
  • loculament — (botany) The cell of a pericarp in which the seed is lodged.
  • lodgements — Plural form of lodgement.
  • login-name — Also called login name, logon name, sign-in name, sign-on name. a unique sequence of characters used to identify a user and allow access to a computer system, computer network, or online account.
  • lonesomely — In a lonesome manner, in a way missing companionship.
  • lonesomest — Superlative form of lonesome.
  • long metre — a stanzaic form consisting of four octosyllabic lines, used esp for hymns
  • longmeadow — a town in S Massachusetts.
  • longprimer — in printing, a size of type intermediate between small pica and bourgeois
  • longsomely — lengthily, slowly, and tediously
  • lovemaking — the act of courting or wooing.
  • low german — the West Germanic languages not included in the High German group, as English, Dutch, Flemish, or Plattdeutsch. Abbreviation: LG. Compare High German (def 1).
  • low-income — of or relating to those with a relatively small income.
  • low-minded — having or showing a coarse or vulgar taste or interests.
  • lumen-hour — a unit of luminous energy, equal to that emitted in 1 hour by a light source emitting a luminous flux of 1 lumen. Abbreviation: lm-hr.
  • lye hominy — whole or ground hulled corn from which the bran and germ have been removed by bleaching the whole kernels in a lye bath (lye hominy) or by crushing and sifting (pearl hominy)
  • lyme-hound — lyam-hound.
  • lymph node — any of the glandlike masses of tissue in the lymphatic vessels containing cells that become lymphocytes.
  • lymphokine — any lymphocyte product, as interferon, that is not an antibody but may participate in the immune response through its effect on the function of other cells, as destroying antigen-coated cells or stimulating macrophages.
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