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5-letter words containing m, r

  • grume — blood when viscous.
  • grump — a person given to constant complaining.
  • gumri — a city in NW Armenia, NW of Yerevan.
  • hamerFannie Lou, 1917–77, U.S. civil rights activist.
  • haram — the part of a Muslim palace or house reserved for the residence of women.
  • harem — the part of a Muslim palace or house reserved for the residence of women.
  • harim — the part of a Muslim palace or house reserved for the residence of women.
  • harms — a U.S. air-to-surface missile designed to detect and destroy radar sites by homing on their emissions.
  • herem — the most severe form of excommunication, formerly used by rabbis in sentencing wrongdoers, usually for an indefinite period of time.
  • herma — herm.
  • herms — Plural form of herm.
  • hiram — a king of Tyre in the 10th century b.c. I Kings 5.
  • homer — 9th-century b.c, Greek epic poet: reputed author of the Iliad and Odyssey.
  • horme — activity directed toward a goal; purposive effort.
  • humor — hacker humour
  • ihram — the dress worn by male Muslims on their pilgrimage to Mecca, consisting of two white cotton cloths, one worn round the waist, the other over the left shoulder.
  • imare — Institute of Marine Engineers
  • imari — a type of decorated Japanese porcelain
  • impar — unpaired; azygous.
  • imper — imperative
  • impro — Improv.
  • inarm — to embrace
  • inerm — (of plants) without thorns or prickles
  • izmir — Formerly Smyrna. a seaport in W Turkey on the Gulf of Izmir: important city of Asia Minor from ancient times.
  • jarmo — a Neolithic village site in northeastern Iraq, dated c6500 b.c. and noted as one of the world's earliest food-producing settlements.
  • joram — Alternative spelling of jorum.
  • jorum — a large bowl or container for holding drink.
  • jumar — A clamp that is attached to a fixed rope and automatically tightens when weight is applied and relaxes when it is removed.
  • karma — Hinduism, Buddhism. action, seen as bringing upon oneself inevitable results, good or bad, either in this life or in a reincarnation: in Hinduism one of the means of reaching Brahman. Compare bhakti (def 1), jnana.
  • kerma — the quotient of the sum of the initial kinetic energies of all the charged particles liberated by indirectly ionizing radiation in a volume element of a material divided by the mass of the volume element. The SI unit is the gray
  • khmer — a member of a people in Cambodia whose ancestors established an empire about the 5th century a.d. and who reached their zenith during the 9th to the 12th centuries when they dominated most of Indochina.
  • korma — A mildly spiced Indian curry dish of meat or fish marinated in yogurt or curds.
  • krama — A traditional Cambodian garment with many uses, including as a scarf or bandanna or to carry children.
  • krems — a city in NE Austria, on the Danube.
  • krump — Krumping: an energetic style of hip-hop dance.
  • kurmi — a member of a major agricultural caste widespread in northern and central India.
  • kymry — the Welsh, or the branch of the Celtic people to which the Welsh belong, comprising also the Cornish people and the Bretons.
  • lamarJoseph R. 1857–1916, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1911–16.
  • lamer — crippled or physically disabled, especially in the foot or leg so as to limp or walk with difficulty.
  • larum — alarum.
  • lemur — any of various small, arboreal, chiefly nocturnal mammals of the family Lemuridae, of Madagascar and the Comoro Islands, especially of the genus Lemur, usually having large eyes, a foxlike face, and woolly fur: most lemurs are endangered.
  • limer — (obsolete) A kind of dog kept on a lead; a bloodhound; a mongrel.
  • maars — Plural form of maar.
  • macer — macebearer.
  • macro — very large in scale, scope, or capability.
  • madre — mother1 .
  • maera — Hecuba, after being changed into a dog for blinding Polymestor.
  • maerl — an accumulation of red coralline algae
  • maira — Maera.
  • maire — a tall native New Zealand tree, olea cunninghami, with dark brown wood
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