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7-letter words containing o, n, s, m

  • onymous — Having a name.
  • openvms — Virtual Memory System
  • oronyms — Plural form of oronym.
  • oskemen — a city in NE Kazakhstan, on the Irtysh River.
  • osman i — 1259–1326, Turkish sultan; founder of the Ottoman Empire
  • osmanli — an Ottoman.
  • osmunda — any fern of the genus Osmunda, especially the royal fern.
  • owenism — the socialistic philosophy of Robert Owen.
  • ownsome — a solitary state
  • plasmon — the sum total of plasmagenes in a cell
  • postman — a postal employee who carries and delivers mail; mail carrier.
  • psammon — the community of microscopic life forms living between grains of sand on shores
  • ramsons — a garlic, Allium ursinum, having broad leaves.
  • ransome — Arthur. 1884–1967, English writer, best known for his books for children, including Swallows and Amazons (1930) and Great Northern? (1947)
  • romainsJules [zhyl] /ʒül/ (Show IPA), (Louis Farigoule) 1885–1972, French novelist, poet, and dramatist.
  • romanes — Romany; the language of the Gypsies
  • romansh — a group of three Rhaeto-Romanic dialects spoken in E Switzerland. Compare Ladin (def 2).
  • romanus — died a.d. 897, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 897.
  • salamon — a word used in taking oaths
  • salmond — Alex(ander Elliot Anderson). born 1954, Scottish Nationalist politician; first minister of the Scottish Parliament (2007–2014)
  • salmony — like salmon
  • salomonHaym [hahym] /haɪm/ (Show IPA), 1740?–85, American financier and patriot, born in Poland.
  • sampsonDeborah, 1760–1827, U.S. Revolutionary War soldier who fought disguised as a man.
  • sangoma — a witch doctor, healer, or herbalist
  • semeion — a unit of meter or time in ancient poetry
  • semenov — Nicolai N [nik-uh-lahy;; Russian nyi-kuh-lahy] /ˈnɪk əˌlaɪ;; Russian nyɪ kʌˈlaɪ/ (Show IPA), 1896–1986, Russian chemist: Nobel prize 1956.
  • shopman — a man who is employed to work in a shop
  • showman — a person who presents or produces a show, especially of a theatrical nature.
  • simenon — Georges (Joseph Christian) [zhawrzh zhoh-zef krees-tyan] /ʒɔrʒ ʒoʊˈzɛf krisˈtyɛ̃/ (Show IPA), 1903–1989, French writer of detective novels, born in Belgium.
  • simonov — Konstantin M [kuh n-stuhn-tyeen] /kən stʌnˈtyin/ (Show IPA), 1915–79, Russian journalist and playwright.
  • simplon — a mountain pass in S Switzerland, in the Lepontine Alps: crossed by a carriage road constructed 1800–06 on Napoleon's orders. 6592 feet (2010 meters) high.
  • simpsonJames Young, 1811–70, Scottish professor of obstetrics and obstetrician: pioneer in use of ether and chloroform as anesthetics.
  • smeatonJohn, 1724–92, English engineer.
  • smoking — the visible vapor and gases given off by a burning or smoldering substance, especially the gray, brown, or blackish mixture of gases and suspended carbon particles resulting from the combustion of wood, peat, coal, or other organic matter.
  • snowman — a figure of a person made of packed snow.
  • so many — a large number of
  • sokeman — a tenant holding land in socage.
  • solanum — any tree, shrub, or herbaceous plant of the mainly tropical solanaceous genus Solanum: includes the potato, aubergine, and certain nightshades
  • soliman — Suleiman I.
  • solomon — fl. 10th century b.c., king of Israel (son of David).
  • solyman — Suleiman I.
  • someone — somebody
  • somnial — relating to dreams
  • songman — a man who sings
  • spumone — an Italian style of ice cream of a very fine and smooth texture, usually containing layers of various colors and flavors and chopped fruit or nuts.
  • spumoni — an Italian style of ice cream of a very fine and smooth texture, usually containing layers of various colors and flavors and chopped fruit or nuts.
  • stamnos — a storage jar having an oval body tapering at the base and two horizontal handles set on the shoulder.
  • stemson — a curved timber in a wooden bow, scarfed at its lower end to the keelson.
  • stimson — Henry L(ewis) 1867–1950, U.S. statesman: secretary of war 1911–13, 1940–45; secretary of state 1929–33.
  • strimon — Struma
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