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8-letter words containing o, m, e

  • communed — Simple past tense and past participle of commune.
  • communer — a person who participates in the Eucharist
  • communes — Plural form of commune.
  • commuted — to change (a prison sentence or other penalty) to a less severe one: The death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment.
  • commuter — a person who travels to work over an appreciable distance, usually from the suburbs to the centre of a city
  • commutes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commute.
  • comnenus — an important Byzantine family from which the imperial dynasties of Constantinople (1057–59; 1081–1185) and Trebizond (1204–1461) derived
  • compadre — a male friend
  • compages — a structure or framework
  • companie — Obsolete spelling of company.
  • compared — to examine (two or more objects, ideas, people, etc.) in order to note similarities and differences: to compare two pieces of cloth; to compare the governments of two nations.
  • comparer — One who, or that which, compares.
  • compares — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compare.
  • compeers — A person of equal rank, status, or ability.
  • compends — Plural form of compend.
  • compense — (obsolete) To compensate.
  • compered — a host, master of ceremonies, or the like, especially of a stage revue or television program.
  • comperes — Plural form of compere.
  • compesce — to curb or restrain
  • competed — to strive to outdo another for acknowledgment, a prize, supremacy, profit, etc.; engage in a contest; vie: to compete in a race; to compete in business.
  • competer — to strive to outdo another for acknowledgment, a prize, supremacy, profit, etc.; engage in a contest; vie: to compete in a race; to compete in business.
  • competes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compete.
  • compiled — to put together (documents, selections, or other materials) in one book or work.
  • compiler — A compiler is someone who compiles books, reports, or lists of information.
  • compiles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compile.
  • compleat — an archaic spelling of complete, used esp in the titles of handbooks, in imitation of The Compleat Angler by Izaak Walton
  • complect — to interweave or entwine
  • complete — You use complete to emphasize that something is as great in extent, degree, or amount as it possibly can be.
  • completo — (slang) A hot dog with the works.
  • complice — an associate or accomplice
  • complied — to act or be in accordance with wishes, requests, demands, requirements, conditions, etc.; agree (sometimes followed by with): They asked him to leave and he complied. She has complied with the requirements.
  • complier — a person who complies
  • complies — to act or be in accordance with wishes, requests, demands, requirements, conditions, etc.; agree (sometimes followed by with): They asked him to leave and he complied. She has complied with the requirements.
  • compline — the last of the seven canonical hours of the divine office
  • composed — If someone is composed, they are calm and able to control their feelings.
  • composer — A composer is a person who writes music, especially classical music.
  • composes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compose.
  • compotes — Plural form of compote.
  • compress — When you compress something or when it compresses, it is pressed or squeezed so that it takes up less space.
  • comprise — If you say that something comprises or is comprised of a number of things or people, you mean it has them as its parts or members.
  • comprize — comprise.
  • compulse — to compel
  • computed — Calculate or reckon (a figure or amount).
  • computer — a device, usually electronic, that processes data according to a set of instructions. The digital computer stores data in discrete units and performs arithmetical and logical operations at very high speed. The analog computer has no memory and is slower than the digital computer but has a continuous rather than a discrete input. The hybrid computer combines some of the advantages of digital and analog computers
  • computes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compute.
  • comrades — A companion who shares one's activities or is a fellow member of an organization.
  • comtesse — countess
  • con game — a swindle involving money, goods, etc, in which the victim's trust is won by the swindler; a shortened form of confidence game
  • condemns — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of condemn.
  • confirme — Obsolete spelling of confirm.
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