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7-letter words containing o, m

  • maintop — a platform at the head of the lower mainmast.
  • majorat — the right of succession which belongs to the first-born child or son of a family
  • majorca — a Spanish island in the W Mediterranean: the largest of the Balearic Islands. 1405 sq. mi. (3640 sq. km). Capital: Palma.
  • majored — a commissioned military officer ranking next below a lieutenant colonel and next above a captain.
  • majorly — Slang. extremely; thoroughly: The class was majorly hard.
  • make do — something that serves as a substitute, especially of an inferior or expedient nature: We had to get along with make-dos during the war.
  • make of — to bring into existence by shaping or changing material, combining parts, etc.: to make a dress; to make a channel; to make a work of art.
  • make-do — something that serves as a substitute, especially of an inferior or expedient nature: We had to get along with make-dos during the war.
  • makedoc — A program from Carleton University, Ottawa that generates documentation for Objective C programs. It will also generate a class hierarchy diagram. The output format is similar to that used by StepStone.
  • makeout — Of, involving, or suited to making out.
  • makonde — a member of a people living in northeastern Mozambique and southeastern Tanzania, renowned as woodcarvers.
  • malaco- — denoting softness
  • malayo- — Malay and
  • malcolm — a male given name: from a Gaelic word meaning “disciple of Saint Columba.”.
  • malicho — mischief or wrongdoing
  • malison — a curse.
  • malloryStephen Russell, 1813?–73, U.S. lawyer and politician.
  • mallows — Plural form of mallow.
  • malodor — an unpleasant or offensive odor; stench.
  • malonic — of or derived from malonic acid; propanedioic.
  • malonyl — containing the malonyl group.
  • malosol — A lightly-salted Russian caviar.
  • maltose — a white, crystalline, water-soluble sugar, C 1 2 H 2 2 O 1 1 ⋅H 2 O, formed by the action of diastase, especially from malt, on starch: used chiefly as a nutrient, as a sweetener, and in culture media.
  • mamboed — Simple past tense and past participle of mambo.
  • mamelon — A hillock; a rounded elevation or protuberance.
  • mammock — a fragment; scrap.
  • mammoth — any large, elephantlike mammal of the extinct genus Mammuthus, from the Pleistocene Epoch, having hairy skin and ridged molar teeth.
  • mampoer — a home-distilled brandy made from peaches, prickly pears, etc
  • manbote — a sum of money paid to a lord whose vassal was murdered.
  • mandioc — (obsolete) manioc.
  • mandola — an early lute resembling a large mandolin.
  • mandora — a type of bass lute which was the ancestor of the mandolin
  • mandore — (musical instruments) An early form of lute, that gave rise to the mandolin.
  • manetho — flourished c250 b.c, Egyptian high priest of Heliopolis: author of a history of Egypt.
  • mangeao — a small tree with glossy leaves, Litsae calicaris, of New Zealand's North Island
  • mangoes — Plural form of mango.
  • mangoky — a river in S central Madagascar, flowing W and then N to the Mozambique Channel. About 350 miles (565 km) long.
  • mangold — Mangelwurzel.
  • manhole — a hole, usually with a cover, through which a person may enter a sewer, drain, steam boiler, etc., especially one located in a city street.
  • manhood — the state or time of being a man or adult male person; male maturity.
  • manhour — Alternative form of man-hour.
  • manicou — The common opossum, taxonomic name Didelphis marsupialis.
  • manihot — (obsolete) manioc.
  • manitou — (among the Algonquian Indians) a supernatural being that controls nature; a spirit, deity, or object that possesses supernatural power.
  • mankato — a city in S Minnesota, on the Minnesota River.
  • mannose — a hexose, C 6 H 1 2 O 6 , obtained from the hydrolysis of the ivory nut and yielding mannitol upon reduction.
  • manroot — man-of-the-earth.
  • manrope — a rope placed at the side of a gangway, ladder, or the like, to serve as a rail.
  • mansion — a very large, impressive, or stately residence.
  • mantaro — a river in central Peru, flowing SE to the Apurímac River. About 360 miles (580 km) long.
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