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7-letter words containing o, m, i

  • molting — (of birds, insects, reptiles, etc.) to cast or shed the feathers, skin, or the like, that will be replaced by a new growth.
  • mommies — Plural form of mommy.
  • monacid — (chemistry) Having one hydrogen atom replaceable by a negative or acid atom or radical; capable of neutralizing a monobasic acid.
  • monadic — Biology. any simple, single-celled organism. any of various small, flagellate, colorless ameboids with one to three flagella, especially of the genus Monas.
  • mondain — a man who moves in fashionable society
  • mondial — of or involving the whole world
  • monesia — a preparation extracted from the bark of a South American tree, Pradosia lactescens, and used chiefly as an astringent and as an expectorant.
  • moniker — a person's name, especially a nickname or alias.
  • monilia — a fungus of the genus Monilia, of the class Fungi Imperfecti, having spherical or oval conidia in branched chains.
  • monists — Plural form of monist.
  • moniter — (spelling)   It's spelled "monitor".
  • monitor — (especially formerly) a student appointed to assist in the conduct of a class or school, as to help take attendance or keep order.
  • monkish — of, relating to, or resembling a monk: a monkish manner.
  • monnion — spaulder.
  • monodic — of or relating to monody.
  • monofil — A monofilament yarn.
  • monosis — a disjunction of plant parts that are usually joined together
  • monoski — A single broad ski attached to both feet.
  • moodier — given to gloomy, depressed, or sullen moods; ill-humored.
  • moodily — given to gloomy, depressed, or sullen moods; ill-humored.
  • moolvie — (esp in India) a Muslim doctor of the law, teacher, or learned man: also used as a title of respect
  • mooning — the earth's natural satellite, orbiting the earth at a mean distance of 238,857 miles (384,393 km) and having a diameter of 2160 miles (3476 km).
  • moonish — capricious; inconstant.
  • moonlit — lighted by the moon.
  • moorill — a disease found in cattle grazing on the moors
  • mooring — the act of mooring.
  • moorish — of or relating to the Moors, a Muslim people of NW Africa.
  • mooting — Present participle of moot.
  • mopping — a wry face; grimace.
  • moraine — a ridge, mound, or irregular mass of unstratified glacial drift, chiefly boulders, gravel, sand, and clay.
  • morandi — Giorgio [jawr-jaw] /ˈdʒɔr dʒɔ/ (Show IPA), 1890–1964, Italian painter.
  • moravia — Alberto [ahl-ber-taw] /ɑlˈbɛr tɔ/ (Show IPA), (Alberto Pincherle) 1907–90, Italian writer.
  • mordida — a bribe or kickback.
  • mordvin — a member of a Uralic people living in scattered communities in the middle Volga basin, especially between Nizhni Novgorod and Saratov.
  • moreish — (informal, of food) Causing one to want to have more.
  • morelia — a state in SW Mexico. 23,196 sq. mi. (60,080 sq. km). Capital: Morelia.
  • moringa — Any of several trees, of genus Moringa, that grow in tropical and subtropical India and Africa.
  • morioka — a city in N Honshu, Japan, on the Kitakami River.
  • moriori — a Polynesian people of New Zealand, esp of the Chatham Islands, closely related to the mainland Māori: now racially intermixed
  • morisco — Moorish.
  • morisonSamuel Eliot, 1887–1976, U.S. historian.
  • morisotBerthe [bert] /bɛrt/ (Show IPA), 1841–95, French Impressionist painter.
  • morling — Alternative form of mortling.
  • morning — the first part or period of the day, extending from dawn, or from midnight, to noon.
  • moronic — Informal. a person who is notably stupid or lacking in good judgment: I wonder why they elected that narrow-minded moron to Congress.
  • morphia — a white, bitter, crystalline alkaloid, C 1 7 H 1 9 NO 3 ⋅H 2 O, the most important narcotic and addictive principle of opium, obtained by extraction and crystallization and used chiefly in medicine as a pain reliever and sedative.
  • morphic — Linguistics. a sequence of phonemes constituting a minimal unit of grammar or syntax, and, as such, a representation, member, or contextual variant of a morpheme in a specific environment. Compare allomorph (def 2).
  • morrice — A morris dance.
  • mortice — to secure with a mortise and tenon.
  • mortify — to humiliate or shame, as by injury to one's pride or self-respect.
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