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7-letter words containing o, m, e, r

  • prommer — a person who regularly attends promenade concerts
  • promote — to help or encourage to exist or flourish; further: to promote world peace.
  • pteroma — pteron.
  • ransome — Arthur. 1884–1967, English writer, best known for his books for children, including Swallows and Amazons (1930) and Great Northern? (1947)
  • re-form — When an organization, group, or shape re-forms, or when someone re-forms it, it is created again after a period during which it did not exist or existed in a different form.
  • re-home — to give (an animal, such as one that has been abandoned or is a stray,) a new home and owners
  • rebloom — (of a plant or flower) to bloom again
  • redmondJohn Edward, 1856–1918, Irish political leader.
  • reforms — the improvement or amendment of what is wrong, corrupt, unsatisfactory, etc.: social reform; spelling reform.
  • regroom — a bridegroom.
  • remodel — to model again.
  • remorse — deep and painful regret for wrongdoing; compunction.
  • remould — A remould is an old tyre which has been given a new surface or tread and can be used again.
  • remount — a fresh horse or supply of fresh horses.
  • removal — the act of removing.
  • removed — remote; separate; not connected with; distinct from.
  • remover — a person or thing that removes.
  • repoman — man employed to repossess goods in cases of non-payment
  • reymont — Władysław Stanisław [vwah-dee-swahf stah-nee-swahf] /vwɑˈdi swɑf stɑˈni swɑf/ (Show IPA), ("Ladislas Regmont") 1868–1925, Polish novelist: Nobel prize 1924.
  • rhizome — a rootlike subterranean stem, commonly horizontal in position, that usually produces roots below and sends up shoots progressively from the upper surface.
  • romaine — Also called romaine lettuce, cos, cos lettuce. a variety of lettuce, Lactuca sativa longifolia, having a cylindrical head of long, relatively loose leaves.
  • romance — Music. a short, simple melody, vocal or instrumental, of tender character.
  • romanes — Romany; the language of the Gypsies
  • romberg — Sigmund [sig-muh nd] /ˈsɪg mənd/ (Show IPA), 1887–1951, Hungarian composer of light opera, in the U.S. after 1913.
  • romneya — a bushy type of poppy
  • rompers — a person or thing that romps.
  • roomies — roommate.
  • rumored — a story or statement in general circulation without confirmation or certainty as to facts: a rumor of war.
  • screamo — a form of emo music typically featuring screaming vocals
  • seaworm — a marine worm
  • semipro — semiprofessional
  • serfdom — a person in a condition of servitude, required to render services to a lord, commonly attached to the lord's land and transferred with it from one owner to another.
  • seymourJane, c1510–37, third wife of Henry VIII of England and mother of Edward VI.
  • smolder — to burn without flame; undergo slow or suppressed combustion.
  • smother — to stifle or suffocate, as by smoke or other means of preventing free breathing.
  • spermo- — spermato-
  • stomper — stamp (defs 1–3).
  • stormer — an outstanding example of its kind
  • supremo — the person in charge; chief.
  • tearoom — a room or shop where tea and other refreshments are served to customers.
  • temblor — a tremor; earthquake.
  • tempore — in the time of
  • teraohm — a unit of electrical resistance equal to one million million ohms
  • theorem — Mathematics. a theoretical proposition, statement, or formula embodying something to be proved from other propositions or formulas.
  • thermo- — Thermo- combines with adjectives to form adjectives that mean using or relating to heat.
  • thermos — a vacuum bottle or similar container lined with an insulating material, such as polystyrene, to keep liquids hot or cold.
  • tonearm — pickup (sense 7) pickup (sense 7b)
  • torment — to afflict with great bodily or mental suffering; pain: to be tormented with violent headaches.
  • tremolo — a tremulous or vibrating effect produced on certain instruments and in the human voice, as to express emotion.
  • trisome — a trisomic individual.
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