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6-letter words containing m, y, n, e

  • baymen — Plural form of bayman.
  • byname — a name that is additional to a person's main name, such as a surname
  • cymene — a colourless insoluble liquid with an aromatic odour that exists in three isomeric forms; methylpropylbenzene: used as solvents and for making synthetic resins. The para- isomer is present in several essential oils. Formula: CH3C6H4CH(CH3)2
  • enmity — The state or feeling of being actively opposed or hostile to someone or something.
  • enzyme — A substance produced by a living organism that acts as a catalyst to bring about a specific biochemical reaction.
  • eponym — A person after whom a discovery, invention, place, etc., is named or thought to be named.
  • etymon — A word or morpheme from which a later word is derived.
  • euonym — (rare) A name well suited to a person, place or thing so named.
  • exonym — A name given to a group or category of people by a secondary person or persons other than the people it refers to.
  • flymen — Plural form of flyman.
  • geminy — a pair
  • gensym — (library)   /jen'sim/ (From the MacLISP for "generated symbol") To invent a new name for something temporary, in such a way that the name is almost certainly not in conflict with one already in use. The canonical form of a gensym is "Gnnnn" where nnnn represents a number; any LISP hacker would recognise G0093 (for example) as a gensym. Gensymmed names are useful for storing or uniquely identifying crufties.
  • hymens — Plural form of hymen.
  • hymned — Simple past tense and past participle of hymn.
  • keyman — a person highly important or essential to the functioning of an organization, as the head of a sales force or branch office.
  • laymen — a person who is not a member of the clergy; one of the laity.
  • lemony — the yellowish, acid fruit of a subtropical citrus tree, Citrus limon.
  • mangey — having, caused by, or like the mange.
  • manley — Michael (Norman).1924–97, Jamaican statesman; prime minister of Jamaica (1972–80; 1989–92)
  • mayten — a tree, Maytenus boaria, native to Chile, having narrow leaves and drooping branches, planted as a street tree in Florida and southern California.
  • meanly — moderately.
  • minyae — descended from Minyas.
  • moneys — any circulating medium of exchange, including coins, paper money, and demand deposits.
  • monkey — any mammal of the order Primates, including the guenons, macaques, langurs, and capuchins, but excluding humans, the anthropoid apes, and, usually, the tarsier and prosimians. Compare New World monkey, Old World monkey.
  • munseyFrank Andrew, 1854–1925, U.S. publisher.
  • myelin — a soft, white, fatty material in the membrane of Schwann cells and certain neuroglial cells: the substance of the myelin sheath.
  • myelon — (anatomy) The spinal cord.
  • myogen — any of several proteins found in muscle
  • myxine — (zoology) Any member of the genus Myxine of hagfish.
  • namely — that is to say; explicitly; specifically; to wit: an item of legislation, namely, the housing bill.
  • niamey — a republic in NW Africa: formerly part of French West Africa. 458,976 sq. mi. (1,188,748 sq. km). Capital: Niamey.
  • nyeman — Russian name of Neman.
  • romneyGeorge, 1734–1802, English painter.
  • tymnet — (networking, history)   A United States-wide commercial computer network, created by Tymshare, Inc. some time before 1970, and used for remote login and file transfer. The network public went live in November 1971. In its original implementation, it consisted of fairly simple circuit-oriented nodes, whose circuits were created by central network supervisors writing into the appropriate nodes' "permuter tables". The supervisors also performed login validations as well as circuit management. Circuits were character oriented and the network was oriented toward interactive character-by-character full-duplex communications circuits. The network had more than one supervisor running, but only one was active, the others being put to sleep with "sleeping pill" messages. If the active supervisor went down, all the others would wake up and battle for control of the network. After the battle, the supervisor with the highest pre-set priority would dominate, and the network would then again be controlled by only one supervisor. (During the takeover battle, the net consisted of subsets of itself across which new circuits could not be built). Existing circuits were not affected by supervisor switches. There was a clever scheme to switch the echoing function between the local node and the host based on whether or not a special character had been typed by the user. Data transfers were also possible via "auxiliary circuits". The Tymshare hosts (which ran customer code) were SDS 940, DEC PDP-10, and eventually IBM 370 computers. Xerox XDS 940 might have been used if Xerox, who bought the design for the SDS 940 from Scientific Data Systems, had ever built any. The switches were originally Varian Data Machines 620i. The Interdata 8/32 was never used because the performance was disappointing. The TYMNET Engine, based loosely on the Interdata 7/32, was developed instead to replace the Varian 620i. In the early 1990s, newer "Turbo" nodes based on the Motorola 68000 began to replace the 7/32s. These were later replaced with SPARCs. PDP-10s supported (and still do in 1999) cross-platform development and billing. La Roy Tymes booted up the public TYMNET in November of 1971 and, as of March 2002, it had been running ever since without a single system crash. TYMNET was the largest commercial network in the United States in its heyday, with nodes in every major US city and a few overseas as well. Tymshare acquired a French subsidiary, SLIGOS, and had TYMNET nodes in Paris, France. Tymshare sold the TYMNET network software to TRW, who created their own private network (which was not called TYMNET). In about 1979, TYMNET Inc. was spun off from Tymshare, Inc. to continue administration and development of the network. TYMNET outlived its parent company Tymshare and was acquired by MCI. As of May 1994 they still ran three DEC KL-10s under TYMCOM-X, although they planned to decommission them soon. The original creators of TYMNET included: Ann Hardy, Norm Hardy, Bill Frantz. La Roy Tymes (who always insisted that his name was NOT the source of the name) wrote the first supervisor which ran on the 940. Joe Rinde made many significant technical and marketing contributions. La Roy wrote most of the code of the network proper. Several others wrote code in support of development and administration. Just recently (1999) La Roy, on contract, wrote a version of the supervisor to run on SPARC hardware. The name TYMNET was suggested by Vigril Swearingen in a weekly meeting between Tymshare technical and marketing staff in about 1970.
  • tyumen — a city in the SW Russian Federation in Asia.
  • yemeni — a native or inhabitant of Yemen.
  • yeoman — a petty officer in a navy, having chiefly clerical duties in the U.S. Navy.
  • yeomen — a petty officer in a navy, having chiefly clerical duties in the U.S. Navy.

On this page, we collect all 6-letter words with M-Y-N-E. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 6-letter word that contains in M-Y-N-E to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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