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5-letter words containing m, r, s

  • mrcvs — Member of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons
  • mures — a river in SE central Europe, flowing W from the Carpathian Mountains in central Romania to the Tisza River in S Hungary. 400 miles (645 km) long.
  • murks — darkness; gloom: the murk of a foggy night.
  • murse — (US slang) a man's purse.
  • murus — (palynology) A pattern-forming ridge on the surface of a pollen grain.
  • musar — rabbinic literature concerned with ethics, right conduct, etc
  • muser — to think or meditate in silence, as on some subject.
  • myers — L(eopold) H(amilton). 1881–1944, British novelist, best known for his novel sequence The Near and the Far (1929–40)
  • norms — a standard, model, or pattern.
  • omers — Plural form of omer.
  • prims — formally precise or proper, as persons or behavior; stiffly neat.
  • prism — Optics. a transparent solid body, often having triangular bases, used for dispersing light into a spectrum or for reflecting rays of light.
  • ramosFidel V. born 1928, Philippine political leader: president 1992–98.
  • ramps — ramp3
  • ramus — a branch, as of a plant, vein, bone, etc.
  • rdbms — relational database
  • reams — a standard quantity of paper, consisting of 20 quires or 500 sheets (formerly 480 sheets), or 516 sheets (printer's ream or perfect ream)
  • reims — a city in NE France: scene of the coronation of most French monarchs. Pop: 188 078 (2006)
  • remus — 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.
  • rimes — identity in sound of some part, especially the end, of words or lines of verse.
  • romus — a son of either Aeneas or Ascanius: sometimes believed to be the founder of Rome.
  • rooms — lodgings or quarters, as in a house or building
  • rusma — a Turkish depilatory
  • samar — an island in the E central Philippines. 5309 sq. mi. (13,750 sq. km).
  • scram — to go away; get out (usually used as a command): I said I was busy, so scram.
  • scrim — a cotton or linen fabric of open weave used for bunting, curtains, etc.
  • scrum — a Rugby play in which, typically, three members of each team line up opposite one another with a group of two and a group of three players behind them, making an eight-person, three-two-three formation on each side; the ball is then rolled between the opposing front lines, the players of which stand with arms around a teammate's waist, meeting the opponent shoulder to shoulder, and attempt to kick the ball backward to a teammate.
  • sdram — Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory
  • seram — an island in Indonesia, in the Moluccas, separated from New Guinea by the Ceram Sea: mountainous and densely forested. Area: 17 150 sq km (6622 sq miles)
  • serum — the clear, pale-yellow liquid that separates from the clot in the coagulation of blood; blood serum.
  • sgram — Synchronous Graphics Random Access Memory
  • simar — Also, cymar. a loose, lightweight jacket or robe for women, fashionable in the 17th and 18th centuries.
  • slorm — to wipe carelessly
  • smarm — behavior or speech that is smarmy.
  • smart — having or showing quick intelligence or ready mental capability: a smart student.
  • smear — to spread or daub (an oily, greasy, viscous, or wet substance) on or over something: to smear butter on bread.
  • smirk — to smile in an affected, smug, or offensively familiar way.
  • smoor — to smother, suffocate or extinguish
  • somer — summer2 (def 1).
  • sperm — semen.
  • storm — Theodore Woldsen [tey-aw-dawr vawlt-suh n] /ˈteɪ ɔˌdɔr ˈvɔlt sən/ (Show IPA), 1817–88, German poet and novelist.
  • strim — to cut (grass) using a Strimmer
  • strum — to play on (a stringed musical instrument) by running the fingers lightly across the strings.
  • sumer — an ancient region in southern Mesopotamia that contained a number of independent cities and city-states of which the first were established possibly as early as 5000 b.c.: conquered by the Elamites and, about 2000 b.c., by the Babylonians; a number of its cities, as Ur, Uruk, Kish, and Lagash, are major archaeological sites in southern Iraq.
  • swarm — a body of honeybees that emigrate from a hive and fly off together, accompanied by a queen, to start a new colony.
  • terms — a word or group of words designating something, especially in a particular field, as atom in physics, quietism in theology, adze in carpentry, or district leader in politics.
  • warms — Make or become warm.
  • worms — Zoology. any of numerous long, slender, soft-bodied, legless, bilaterally symmetrical invertebrates, including the flatworms, roundworms, acanthocephalans, nemerteans, gordiaceans, and annelids.
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