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6-letter words containing r, e, m, a

  • marrie — (archaic) alternative spelling of marry.
  • marted — Simple past tense and past participle of mart.
  • martelCharles, Charles Martel.
  • marten — any of several slender, chiefly arboreal carnivores of the genus Martes, of northern forests, having a long, glossy coat and bushy tail.
  • marvel — something that causes wonder, admiration, or astonishment; a wonderful thing; a wonder or prodigy: The new bridge is an engineering marvel.
  • marver — a hard, flat surface of stone, wood, or metal, on which a mass of molten glass is rolled and shaped in glassmaking.
  • masers — Plural form of maser.
  • maseru — a monarchy in S Africa: formerly a British protectorate; gained independence 1966; member of the Commonwealth of Nations. 11,716 sq. mi. (30,344 sq. km). Capital: Maseru.
  • masher — a man who makes advances, especially to women he does not know, with a view to physical intimacy.
  • masker — a person who masks; a person who takes part in a masque.
  • masser — (obsolete) A priest who celebrates Mass.
  • master — botmaster
  • maters — British Informal. mother1 .
  • matherCotton, 1663–1728, American clergyman and author.
  • matres — Plural form of mater.
  • matter — a dull or dead surface, often slightly roughened, as on metals, paint, paper, or glass.
  • mature — complete in natural growth or development, as plant and animal forms: a mature rose bush.
  • mauger — in spite of; notwithstanding.
  • maugre — in spite of; notwithstanding.
  • mauler — One who mauls.
  • mauserPeter Paul, 1838–1914, and his brother, Wilhelm, 1834–82, German inventors of firearms.
  • mauver — a pale bluish purple.
  • mawger — (of persons or animals) thin or lean
  • mazers — Plural form of mazer.
  • mccraeJohn, 1872–1918, Canadian physician, soldier, and poet.
  • meader — (UK dialectal) A mower.
  • meager — deficient in quantity or quality; lacking fullness or richness; scanty; inadequate: a meager salary; meager fare; a meager harvest.
  • meagre — deficient in quantity or quality; lacking fullness or richness; scanty; inadequate: a meager salary; meager fare; a meager harvest.
  • mealer — a person eating but not lodging at a boarding house
  • meaner — occupying a middle position or an intermediate place, as in kind, quality, degree, or time: a mean speed; a mean course; the mean annual rainfall.
  • medlar — a small tree, Mespilus germanica, of the rose family, the fruit of which resembles a crab apple and is not edible until the early stages of decay.
  • megara — a city in ancient Greece: the chief city of Megaris.
  • mehari — A type of fast-running dromedary camel, which can be used for racing or transport.
  • menora — Alternative spelling of menorah.
  • merano — a town and resort in NE Italy, in the foothills of the central Alps: capital of the Tyrol (12th–15th century); under Austrian rule until 1919. Pop: 33 656 (2001)
  • mercia — an early English kingdom in central Britain.
  • merida — a peninsula in SE Mexico and N Central America comprising parts of SE Mexico, N Guatemala, and Belize.
  • merina — a member of a Malagasy-speaking people who primarily inhabit the interior plateau of Madagascar.
  • merman — (in folklore) a male marine creature, having the head, torso, and arms of a man and the tail of a fish.
  • mezair — a movement in which the horse makes a series of short jumps forward while standing on its hind legs.
  • mierda — (neologism, vulgar) shit.
  • mirage — an optical phenomenon, especially in the desert or at sea, by which the image of some object appears displaced above, below, or to one side of its true position as a result of spatial variations of the index of refraction of air.
  • mirena — a type of intrauterine system
  • moaner — One who moans.
  • monera — a taxonomic kingdom of prokaryotic organisms that typically reproduce by asexual budding or fission and have a nutritional mode of absorption, photosynthesis, or chemosynthesis, comprising the bacteria, blue-green algae, and various primitive pathogens.
  • moraea — any of various plants belonging to the genera Moraea and Dietes, of the iris family, native to tropical Africa.
  • morale — emotional or mental condition with respect to cheerfulness, confidence, zeal, etc., especially in the face of opposition, hardship, etc.: the morale of the troops.
  • moreauGustave [gys-tav] /güsˈtav/ (Show IPA), 1826–98, French painter.
  • morena — (South Africa) Someone in authority, a master or leader, especially among Sotho-speakers. (Chiefly as a form of address.) (from 19th c.).
  • murage — a toll or tax for the repair or construction of the walls or fortifications of a town.
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