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6-letter words containing n, a, s

  • mancus — A gold coin used in Medieval Europe.
  • mangas — Plural form of manga.
  • mangos — Plural form of mango.
  • manias — Plural form of mania.
  • manies — constituting or forming a large number; numerous: many people.
  • manisa — a city in W Turkey, near the Aegean: Roman defeat of Antiochus the Great 190 b.c.
  • manism — Ancestor-worship.
  • manist — Ancestor-worshipper.
  • mannesLeopold Damrosch, 1899–1964, U.S. composer and chemist.
  • manors — Plural form of manor.
  • manses — the house and land occupied by a minister or parson.
  • manson — Sir Patrick. 1844–1922, British physician, who established that mosquitoes transmit certain parasites responsible for human diseases
  • mansur — (ʿAbdullāh al-Mansūr) a.d. 712?–775, Arab caliph 754–775: founder of Baghdad 764.
  • mantis — any of several predaceous insects of the order Mantidae, having a long prothorax and typically holding the forelegs in an upraised position as if in prayer.
  • mascon — a massive concentration of high-density material beneath the surface of the moon.
  • maslin — a mixture of different grains, flours, or meals, especially rye mixed with wheat.
  • masons — Plural form of mason.
  • matins — (often initial capital letter) matins, Also, especially British, mattins. (usually used with a singular verb) Ecclesiastical. the first of the seven canonical hours. the service for it, properly beginning at midnight, but sometimes beginning at daybreak. Also called Morning Prayer. the service of public prayer, said in the morning, in the Anglican Church.
  • maunds — Plural form of maund.
  • mavens — An expert or connoisseur.
  • mavins — an expert or connoisseur.
  • mawsonSir Douglas, 1882–1958, Australian antarctic explorer, born in England.
  • mensae — Irregular plural form of mensa.
  • mensal — of, relating to, or used at the table.
  • mensan — an international fellowship organization for people with IQ's in the top 2 percent of the general population.
  • messan — a lap dog; small pet dog.
  • minyas — a king of Orchomenus, famed for his wealth.
  • mishna — the collection of oral laws compiled about a.d. 200 by Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi and forming the basic part of the Talmud.
  • monads — Plural form of monad.
  • monals — Plural form of monal.
  • monash — Sir John. 1865–1931, Australian military commander. Leader of Australian forces in World War I
  • mungas — Plural form of munga.
  • musang — A small animal of Java (Paradoxirus fasciatus), allied to the civets. It swallows, but does not digest, large quantities of ripe coffee berries, thus serving to disseminate the coffee plant.
  • mynahs — Plural form of mynah.
  • mysian — an ancient country in NW Asia Minor.
  • mzansi — a low-cost national banking account
  • nablus — a town of ancient Palestine, near the city of Samaria; occupied by Israel 1967–96; since 1996 under Palestinian self-rule: first capital of the northern kingdom of Israel.
  • nabobs — Plural form of nabob.
  • nachas — a feeling of satisfaction or pleasure
  • naches — Pride or gratification, especially at the achievements of one’s children.
  • nachos — a snack or appetizer consisting of a small piece of tortilla topped with cheese, hot peppers, etc., and broiled.
  • nacods — National Association of Colliery Overmen, Deputies, and Shotfirers
  • nadirs — Plural form of nadir.
  • nadors — a thirst brought on by excessive consumption of alcohol
  • naevus — (anatomy) A pigmented, raised or otherwise abnormal area on the skin. Naevi may be congenital or acquired. This term is reserved for benign skin lesions.
  • naiads — Plural form of naiad.
  • nakfas — Plural form of nakfa.
  • namers — Plural form of namer.
  • nanism — the condition of being unusually or abnormally small in size or stature; dwarfism.
  • nansen — Fridtjof [frit-yof] /ˈfrɪt yɒf/ (Show IPA), 1861–1930, Norwegian arctic explorer, zoologist, and statesman: Nobel Peace Prize 1922.
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