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5-letter words containing m, o

  • duomo — cathedral, especially in Italy.
  • earom — Electrically Alterable Read-Only Memory.
  • embog — (transitive) To bog down.
  • embow — (obsolete) To bend like a bow; to curve.
  • embox — to put in a box
  • emoji — Any of the standardized emoticons used in Japanese text messaging.
  • emory — a masculine name: var. Emery; equiv. Ger. Emmerich, It. Amerigo
  • emote — (especially of an actor) portray emotion in a theatrical manner.
  • emove — to cause to feel emotion
  • enorm — (obsolete) enormous.
  • eprom — (storage)   (EPROM) A type of storage device in which the data is determined by electrical charge stored in an isolated ("floating") MOS transistor gate. The isolation is good enough to retain the charge almost indefinitely (more than ten years) without an external power supply. The EPROM is programmed by "injecting" charge into the floating gate, using a technique based on the tunnel effect. This requires higher voltage than in normal operation (usually 12V - 25V). The floating gate can be discharged by applying ultraviolet light to the chip's surface through a quartz window in the package, erasing the memory contents and allowing the chip to be reprogrammed.
  • epsom — a town in SE England, in Surrey: famous for its mineral springs and for horse racing. Pop (with Ewell): 64 492 (2001)
  • floom — (US, archaic) A flume, as in a mill flume.
  • foams — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of foam.
  • foamy — covered with or full of foam.
  • foism — Chinese Buddhism.
  • fomes — any agent, as clothing or bedding, that is capable of absorbing and transmitting the infecting organism of a disease.
  • foram — foraminifer.
  • forme — form (def 30).
  • forml — 1.   (language)   Formal Object Role Modeling Language. 2.   (event)   Forth Modification Lab.
  • forms — Plural form of form.
  • forum — the marketplace or public square of an ancient Roman city, the center of judicial and business affairs and a place of assembly for the people.
  • fromm — Erich [er-ik] /ˈɛr ɪk/ (Show IPA), 1900–80, U.S. psychoanalyst and author, born in Germany.
  • fyrom — Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
  • g ohm — Georg Simon [gey-awrk zee-mawn] /geɪˈɔrk ˈzi mɔn/ (Show IPA), 1787–1854, German physicist.
  • gambo — a simple farm cart
  • gamo- — indicating sexual union or reproduction
  • gamowGeorge, 1904–68, U.S. nuclear physicist and writer, born in Russia.
  • gecom — (language)   A language for the GE-255 series, like COBOL with some ALGOL features added, in use around 1964-5. GECOM included many of the early COBOL constructs including report writer and TABSOL (programming by truth table). Another (planned but unimplemented?) component was FRINGE.
  • gemot — (in Anglo-Saxon England) a legislative or judicial assembly.
  • genom — a full set of chromosomes; all the inheritable traits of an organism.
  • geom. — geometric(al)
  • gismo — a gadget or device: What is this gismo supposed to do?
  • gitmo — Guantánamo: referring more specifically to the detainment camp run there by the US military, in which suspected terrorists are detained and questioned
  • gizmo — gismo.
  • gloam — twilight; gloaming.
  • glome — (anatomy) One of the two prominences at the posterior extremity of the frog of a horse's foot.
  • glomp — (slang, transitive) to embrace enthusiastically; to pounce on and hug, often from a running start.
  • gloms — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of glom.
  • gloom — total or partial darkness; dimness.
  • gnome — GNU Network Object Model Environment
  • golem — Jewish Folklore. a figure artificially constructed in the form of a human being and endowed with life.
  • gombe — a state of Nigeria, in the NE. Capital: Gombe. Pop: 2 353 879(2006). Area: 18 768 sq km (7246 sq miles)
  • gombo — gumbo.
  • gomel — a city in SE Byelorussia (Belarus), on a tributary of the Dnieper.
  • gomer — an undesirable hospital patient.
  • gomez — Juan Vicente [hwahn bee-sen-te] /ʰwɑn biˈsɛn tɛ/ (Show IPA), 1857?–1935, Venezuelan soldier and political leader: commander in chief and dictator of Venezuela 1908–35; president of Venezuela 1908–15, 1922–29, 1931–35.
  • gompa — a Tibetan monastery or temple
  • gormy — gormless
  • goyim — goy.
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