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7-letter words containing m, o, u, r

  • monture — a mounting or a means for supporting or fixing something in place
  • monuron — a white crystalline solid, C 9 H 11 ClN 2 O, used as a herbicide, especially for broad-leaved plants.
  • morceau — piece; morsel.
  • morgues — Plural form of morgue.
  • morrhua — a codfish
  • morsure — a bite or the act of biting
  • morulae — Plural form of morula.
  • morular — Relating to a morula.
  • moucher — someone who eats hungrily or greedily
  • moulder — to turn to dust by natural decay; crumble; disintegrate; waste away: a house that had been left to molder.
  • mounter — One who mounts.
  • mourned — Simple past tense and past participle of mourn.
  • mourner — A person who attends a funeral as a relative or friend of the dead person.
  • mousers — Plural form of mouser.
  • mousery — a place infested with mice
  • mouther — A person who mouths.
  • mowburn — the natural process of heating and fermenting that takes place when hay or corn is piled up when it is damp or green
  • mudroom — A room used to act as a barrier between outdoors and indoors.
  • mudwort — a plant of the genus Limosella found growing in muddy areas near water
  • mugwort — any of certain weedy composite plants of the genus Artemisia, especially A. vulgaris, having aromatic leaves and small, greenish flower heads.
  • mumfordLewis, 1895–1990, U.S. author and social scientist.
  • murcott — a thin-skinned, juicy variety of tangerine.
  • murdoch — (Dame) (Jean) Iris, 1919–99, British novelist and philosopher, born in Ireland.
  • murgeon — a grimace; a wry face.
  • murghob — a river in NE Afghanistan and SE Turkmenistan, flowing from the Hindu Kush W and NW to the Kara Kum Desert. 530 miles (853 km) long.
  • murillo — Bartolomé Esteban [bahr-taw-law-me es-te-vahn] /ˌbɑr tɔ lɔˈmɛ ɛsˈtɛ vɑn/ (Show IPA), 1617–82, Spanish painter.
  • mutator — That which causes mutation or change.
  • neuroma — a tumor formed of nerve tissue.
  • noricum — an ancient Roman province in central Europe, roughly corresponding to the part of Austria south of the Danube.
  • nostrum — our sea, especially the Mediterranean to the ancient Romans.
  • oestrum — Alternative spelling of estrum.
  • orarium — orarion.
  • organum — an organon.
  • orgasum — Misspelling of orgasm.
  • outform — (obsolete) external appearance.
  • ovarium — ovary.
  • profumo — John (Dennis). 1915–2006 British Conservative politician; secretary of state for war (1960–63). He resigned after a scandal that threatened the government of Harold Macmillan
  • protium — the lightest and most common isotope of hydrogen. Symbol: H 1.
  • quorums — Plural form of quorum.
  • remould — A remould is an old tyre which has been given a new surface or tread and can be used again.
  • remount — a fresh horse or supply of fresh horses.
  • rhodium — a silvery-white metallic element of the platinum family, forming salts that give rose-colored solutions: used to electroplate microscopes and instrument parts to prevent corrosion. Symbol: Rh; atomic weight: 102.905; atomic number: 45; specific gravity: 12.5 at 20°C.
  • rhombus — an oblique-angled equilateral parallelogram; any equilateral parallelogram except a square.
  • romanus — died a.d. 897, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 897.
  • romaunt — a romantic tale or poem; romance.
  • romulus — the founder of Rome, in 753 b.c., and its first king: a son of Mars and Rhea Silvia, he and his twin brother (Remus) were abandoned as babies, suckled by a she-wolf, and brought up by a shepherd; Remus was finally killed for mocking the fortifications of Rome, which Romulus had just founded.
  • roomful — an amount or number sufficient to fill a room.
  • rostrum — any platform, stage, or the like, for public speaking.
  • rouming — the division of common pasture into individual portions
  • rumfordCount, Benjamin Thompson.
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