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6-letter words containing o, m, i

  • mainor — (legal, UK, obsolete) A stolen article found on the person of the thief.
  • maloti — plural of loti.
  • manioc — cassava.
  • manito — (among the Algonquian Indians) a supernatural being that controls nature; a spirit, deity, or object that possesses supernatural power.
  • manoir — A type of manor or country house.
  • maoism — the political, social, economic, and military theories and policies advocated by Mao Zedong, as those concerning revolutionary movements and guerrilla warfare.
  • maoist — the political, social, economic, and military theories and policies advocated by Mao Zedong, as those concerning revolutionary movements and guerrilla warfare.
  • marinoDaniel Constantine ("Dan") born 1961, U.S. football player.
  • marionFrancis ("the Swamp Fox") 1732?–95, American Revolutionary general.
  • maroni — a river in N South America, forming the border between French Guiana and Suriname, flowing N to the Atlantic Ocean: upper course called the Itany. 450 miles (724 km) long.
  • matico — a Peruvian shrub, Piper angustifolium, the leaves of which have medicinal properties
  • matipo — any of several shrubs and small trees, native to New Zealand, of the genera Myrsine and Pittosporum
  • medico — a physician or surgeon; doctor.
  • medio- — middle
  • medoid — (mathematics) A mathematically representative object in a set of objects; it has the smallest average dissimilarity to all other objects in the set.
  • mejico — Mexico.
  • meloid — a beetle of the family Meloidae, comprising the blister beetles.
  • memoir — a record of events written by a person having intimate knowledge of them and based on personal observation.
  • merino — (often initial capital letter) one of a breed of sheep, raised originally in Spain, valued for their fine wool.
  • mexico — a city in and the capital of Mexico, in the central part. About 7400 feet (2255 meters) above sea level.
  • miaous — the characteristic sound a cat makes.
  • miaows — Plural form of miaow.
  • michol — Michal.
  • micro- — prefix
  • micron — Micron Electronics, Inc.
  • micros — Plural form of micro.
  • mid on — the position of a fielder on the on side of the wicket.
  • mid-on — the position of a fielder on the on side of the wicket.
  • mignon — small and pretty; delicately pretty.
  • mikado — (sometimes initial capital letter) a title of the emperor of Japan.
  • mikron — micron.
  • milano — an industrial city in central Lombardy, in N Italy: cathedral.
  • milord — an English nobleman or gentleman (usually used as a term of address).
  • milosz — Czeslaw [ches-law;; Polish ches-wahf] /ˈtʃɛs lɔ;; Polish ˈtʃɛs wɑf/ (Show IPA), 1911–2004, U.S. poet and novelist, born in Poland: Nobel prize 1980.
  • miltonJohn, 1608–74, English poet.
  • mimola — Operational hardware specification language.
  • mimosa — any of numerous plants, shrubs, or trees belonging to the genus Mimosa, of the legume family, native to tropical or warm regions, having small flowers in globular heads or cylindrical spikes and often sensitive leaves.
  • minhow — Older Spelling. former name of Fuzhou.
  • minion — a servile follower or subordinate of a person in power.
  • minnow — a small, European cyprinoid fish, Phoxinus phoxinus.
  • minoan — of or relating to the ancient civilization of the island of Crete, dating from about 3000 to 1100 b.c.
  • minors — Plural form of minor.
  • minour — Obsolete form of minor.
  • minton — fine-quality porcelain ware produced in Stoke-on-Trent since 1793
  • miombo — (in E Africa) a dry wooded area with sparse deciduous growth
  • miosis — excessive constriction of the pupil of the eye, as a result of drugs, disease, or the like.
  • miotic — pertaining to or producing miosis.
  • mirror — any reflecting surface, as the surface of calm water under certain lighting conditions.
  • miseno — a cape in SW Italy, on the N shore of the Bay of Naples: ruins of ancient Misenum, a Roman naval station and resort.
  • miłosz — Czeslaw (ˈtʃɛslɔː, ˈtʃɛswaf). 1911–2004, US poet and writer, born in Lithuania, writing in Polish; author of The Captive Mind (1953). Nobel prize for literature 1980
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