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10-letter words containing n, o, m, e, l

  • overmantel — situated above a mantelpiece.
  • owl monkey — douroucouli.
  • paddymelon — any of several small Australian wallabies, especially of the genus Thylogale.
  • palindrome — a word, line, verse, number, sentence, etc., reading the same backward as forward, as Madam, I'm Adam or Poor Dan is in a droop.
  • palmerstonHenry John Temple, 3rd Viscount, 1784–1865, British statesman: prime minister 1855–58, 1859–65.
  • peltmonger — a seller of pelts
  • phenomenal — highly extraordinary or prodigious; exceptional: phenomenal speed.
  • pheromonal — relating to or constituting a pheromone
  • phlegmonic — relating to or having the characteristics of a phlegmon
  • phone mail — voice mail
  • planometer — surface plate.
  • play money — paper that is cut and printed to resemble paper money, often used in playing board games.
  • polemonium — a member of the genus Polemonium
  • polishment — the state of being polished or the action of polishing
  • polygenism — the theory that the human race has descended from two or more ancestral types.
  • polysemant — a word with multiple meanings
  • prenominal — being such in name only; so-called; putative: a nominal treaty; the nominal head of the country.
  • propelment — the act of propulsion
  • ransomable — capable of being ransomed
  • ransomless — without ransom, not capable of being ransomed
  • red salmon — sockeye salmon.
  • remodeling — to model again.
  • roman mile — a unit of length used by the ancient Romans, equivalent to about 1620 yards (1480 meters).
  • rosemaling — decorative work of Norwegian folk origin consisting of painted or carved floral designs, as on furniture or woodwork.
  • saleswoman — a woman who sells goods, services, etc.
  • salmonella — any of several rod-shaped, facultatively anaerobic bacteria of the genus Salmonella, as S. typhosa, that may enter the digestive tract of humans and other mammals in contaminated food and cause abdominal pains and violent diarrhea.
  • seldomness — rareness
  • semi-colon — A semi-colon is the punctuation mark ; which is used in writing to separate different parts of a sentence or list or to indicate a pause.
  • semicolony — a country which is partly colonial or which is officially independent but which in fact depends on or is dominated by another country
  • smoldering — to burn without flame; undergo slow or suppressed combustion.
  • snowmobile — Also called skimobile, snowcat. a motor vehicle with a revolving tread in the rear and steerable skis in the front, for traveling over snow.
  • solacement — a comfort or consolation
  • solemn vow — a perpetual, irrevocable public vow taken by a religious, in which property may not be owned by the individual, and marriage is held invalid under canon law.
  • solemnised — to perform the ceremony of (marriage).
  • solemnizer — to perform the ceremony of (marriage).
  • solemnness — grave, sober, or mirthless, as a person, the face, speech, tone, or mood: solemn remarks.
  • somnambule — a person who sleepwalks
  • somnolence — sleepy; drowsy.
  • tablemount — guyot
  • tanglesome — tangled
  • teleonomic — Biology. the principle that the body's structures and functions serve an overall purpose, as in assuring the survival of the organism.
  • till money — money set aside for use by a teller, as distinguished from money kept in the vault.
  • tourmaline — any of a group of silicate minerals of complex composition, containing boron, aluminum, etc., usually black but having various colored, transparent varieties used as gems.
  • trampoline — a sheet, usually of canvas, attached by resilient cords or springs to a horizontal frame several feet above the floor, used by acrobats and gymnasts as a springboard in tumbling.
  • tremolando — (of a piece of music) to be played with tremulous effect
  • treponemal — any of several anaerobic spirochetes of the genus Treponema, certain species of which are parasitic in and pathogenic for humans and warm-blooded animals.
  • tumbledown — dilapidated; ruined; rundown: He lived in a tumble-down shack.
  • uncomplete — having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full: a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
  • undecimole — a cluster of notes dividing a section of music into eleven equal parts
  • unemployed — not employed; without a job; out of work: an unemployed secretary.
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