9-letter words containing o, m, e, n
- cleanroom — A room or environment that is controlled in such a way as to minimize airborne particulate matter, typically for the purpose of fabricating sensitive electronic or other devices.
- clubwomen — Plural form of clubwoman.
- co-manage — to manage (something) jointly
- coal mine — A coal mine is a place where coal is dug out of the ground.
- coalminer — One who mines for coal.
- coalmines — Plural form of coalmine.
- cob money — crude silver coins issued in the Spanish colonies of the New World from about 1600 until 1820
- cockleman — a man who collects cockles
- code name — A code name is a name used for someone or something in order to keep their identity secret.
- code-name — to assign a code name to.
- codenamed — Simple past tense and past participle of codename.
- codenames — Plural form of codename.
- coemption — the buying up of the complete supply of a commodity
- coenamour — to enamour jointly
- coenobium — a monastery or convent
- coenzymes — Plural form of coenzyme.
- cognomens — Plural form of cognomen.
- columbine — any plant of the ranunculaceous genus Aquilegia, having purple, blue, yellow, or red flowers with five spurred petals
- combinate — combined
- come down — If the cost, level, or amount of something comes down, it becomes less than it was before.
- come into — If someone comes into some money, some property, or a title, they inherit it.
- come upon — If you come upon someone or something, you meet them or find them by chance.
- comedians — Plural form of comedian.
- comedones — a thickened secretion plugging a duct of the skin, especially of a sebaceous gland; blackhead.
- comedowns — Plural form of comedown.
- comfiness — the feeling or quality of being comfortable
- comingled — Simple past tense and past participle of comingle.
- comintern — short for Communist International: an international Communist organization founded by Lenin in Moscow in 1919 and dissolved in 1943; it degenerated under Stalin into an instrument of Soviet politics
- commanded — to direct with specific authority or prerogative; order: The captain commanded his men to attack.
- commander — A commander is an officer in charge of a military operation or organization.
- commenced — Simple past tense and past participle of commence.
- commences — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commence.
- commendam — the temporary holding of an ecclesiastical benefice
- commended — to present, mention, or praise as worthy of confidence, notice, kindness, etc.; recommend: to commend a friend to another; to commend an applicant for employment.
- commender — a person who commends
- commensal — (of two different species of plant or animal) living in close association, such that one species benefits without harming the other
- commented — a remark, observation, or criticism: a comment about the weather.
- commenter — a remark, observation, or criticism: a comment about the weather.
- comminate — to anathematize
- commingle — to mix or be mixed; blend
- comminute — to break (a bone) into several small fragments
- commonage — the use of something, esp a pasture, in common with others
- commoners — Plural form of commoner.
- commonest — belonging equally to, or shared alike by, two or more or all in question: common property; common interests.
- commonise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of commonize.
- commonize — To make similar or common.
- communise — (British spelling) alternative spelling of communize.
- communize — to make (property) public; nationalize
- comonomer — a monomer that, with another monomer, forms a copolymer
- compagnie — company.