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6-letter words containing n, o, m

  • cædmon — 7th century ad, Anglo-Saxon poet and monk, the earliest English poet whose name survives
  • daemon — a demigod
  • daimon — daemon
  • damson — A damson is a small, sour, purple plum.
  • deamon — (spelling)   It's spelled "daemon".
  • demons — sources of worry or conflict which trouble a person or a group of people
  • denom. — (religious) denomination
  • dodman — (UK, dialect) A snail.
  • dogman — a person who directs the operation of a crane whilst riding on an object being lifted by it
  • dolman — a woman's mantle with capelike arm pieces instead of sleeves.
  • dolmen — a structure usually regarded as a tomb, consisting of two or more large, upright stones set with a space between and capped by a horizontal stone.
  • domain — the territory governed by a single ruler or government; realm.
  • domina — The head of a nunnery.
  • domine — lord; master (used as a title of address).
  • doming — Architecture. a vault, having a circular plan and usually in the form of a portion of a sphere, so constructed as to exert an equal thrust in all directions. a domical roof or ceiling. a polygonal vault, ceiling, or roof.
  • domino — a flat, thumbsized, rectangular block, the face of which is divided into two parts, each either blank or bearing from one to six pips or dots: 28 such pieces form a complete set.
  • domnus — Donus.
  • dormin — abscisic acid.
  • dromon — (historical, nautical) a Byzantine bireme, similar to the chelandion, but used primarily for naval combat.
  • dumont — a city in NE New Jersey.
  • dynamo — A machine for converting mechanical energy into electrical energy; a generator.
  • edmond — a town in central Oklahoma.
  • egmont — Lamoral (lamoˈral), Count of Egmont, Prince of Gavre. 1522–68, Flemish statesman and soldier. He attempted to secure limited reforms and religious tolerance in the Spanish government of the Netherlands, refused to join William the Silent's rebellion, but was nevertheless executed for treason by the Duke of Alva
  • emodin — (organic compound) A purgative resin, 6-methyl-1,3,8-trihydroxyanthraquinone, obtained from some rhubarbs and other plants.
  • empson — Sir William. 1906–84, English poet and critic; author of Seven Types of Ambiguity (1930)
  • enamor — Be filled with a feeling of love for.
  • entomb — Place (a dead body) in a tomb.
  • enwomb — (poetic, archaic) To place or cause to be contained in the womb; to make pregnant; to conceive.
  • eonism — the adoption of female dress and behaviour by a male
  • 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.
  • fandom — fans collectively, as of a motion-picture star or a professional game or sport.
  • fantom — an apparition or specter.
  • foeman — an enemy in war.
  • fogman — a person in charge of railway fog-signals
  • foment — to instigate or foster (discord, rebellion, etc.); promote the growth or development of: to foment trouble; to foment discontent.
  • forman — Milos [mee-lawsh] /ˈmi lɔʃ/ (Show IPA), (Jan Tomas Forman) born 1932, U.S. film director, born in the former Czechoslovakia.
  • gammon — deceitful nonsense; bosh.
  • gamone — any chemical substance secreted by a gamete that attracts another gamete during sexual reproduction
  • garmon — A kind of smaller Russian button accordion.
  • genome — a full set of chromosomes; all the inheritable traits of an organism.
  • geonim — a plural of Gaon.
  • gnomes — Plural form of gnome.
  • gnomic — like or containing gnomes or aphorisms.
  • gnomon — the raised part of a sundial that casts the shadow; a style.
  • godman — (India, colloquial, deregatory) A type of charismatic guru.
  • gonium — the germ cell during the phase marked by mitosis.
  • gymno- — naked, bare, or exposed
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