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8-letter words containing o, m, e

  • coliseum — a large building, such as a stadium or theatre, used for entertainments, sports, etc
  • colombes — an industrial and residential suburb of NW Paris. Pop: 83 220 (2006)
  • columnea — any plant belonging to the genus Columnea, a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Gesneriaceae, with bright red, yellow, or orange tubular flowers and glossy leaves
  • columned — Having columns.
  • comanche — a member of a Native American people, formerly ranging from the River Platte to the Mexican border, now living in Oklahoma
  • comaneci — Nadia. born 1961, Romanian gymnast: gold medal winner in the 1976 Olympic Games where she became the first female gymnast to be awarded a perfect score of 10; defected to the US in 1989
  • comatose — A person who is comatose is in a coma.
  • combahee — a river in S South Carolina, flowing SE to the Atlantic Ocean. 40 miles (64 km) long.
  • combated — to fight or contend against; oppose vigorously: to combat crime.
  • combater — One who combats.
  • combined — A combined effort or attack is made by two or more groups of people at the same time.
  • combiner — Any of various electronic devices that combine signals, in particular.
  • combines — Plural form of combine.
  • combless — without a comb
  • comblike — resembling a comb
  • combover — Hair that is combed over a bald spot in an attempt to cover it.
  • combwise — in the manner of a comb
  • come and — to move towards a particular person or thing or accompany a person with some specified purpose
  • come for — If people such as soldiers or police come for you, they come to find you, usually in order to harm you or take you away, for example to prison.
  • come off — If something comes off, it is successful or effective.
  • come out — When a new product such as a book or CD comes out, it becomes available to the public.
  • comeback — If someone such as an entertainer or sports personality makes a comeback, they return to their profession or sport after a period away.
  • comeddle — to mix (two or more things) together
  • comedial — a play, movie, etc., of light and humorous character with a happy or cheerful ending; a dramatic work in which the central motif is the triumph over adverse circumstance, resulting in a successful or happy conclusion.
  • comedian — A comedian is an entertainer whose job is to make people laugh, by telling jokes or funny stories.
  • comedies — Plural form of comedy.
  • comedist — a writer of comedies.
  • comedown — If you say that something is a comedown, you think that it is not as good as something else that you have just done or had.
  • comelier — Comparative form of comely.
  • comelily — in a comely manner
  • comeling — (obsolete) A comer; (person) an arrival.
  • comenius — John Amos, Czech name Jan Amos Komensky. 1592–1670, Czech educational reformer
  • comeover — a person who has come from Britain to settle in the Isle of Man; used by people native to the island, often pejoratively about someone with a complaining or arrogant attitude
  • cometary — a celestial body moving about the sun, usually in a highly eccentric orbit, consisting of a central mass surrounded by an envelope of dust and gas that may form a tail that streams away from the sun.
  • comether — the act of persuading or coaxing
  • comfiest — comfortable.
  • comingle — Alternative spelling of commingle.
  • comities — Plural form of comity.
  • commagerHenry Steele, 1902–98, U.S. historian, author, and teacher.
  • commence — When something commences or you commence it, it begins.
  • commends — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commend.
  • comments — Plural form of comment.
  • commerce — Commerce is the activities and procedures involved in buying and selling things.
  • commerge — to merge together
  • commines — Philippe de Comines
  • commixed — Simple past tense and past participle of commix.
  • commixes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commix.
  • commodes — Plural form of commode.
  • commoner — In countries which have a nobility, commoners are the people who are not members of the nobility.
  • commoney — (in the game of marbles) a standard marble
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