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7-letter words containing r, i, e, m, a

  • mirable — (obsolete) wonderful; admirable.
  • miracle — an effect or extraordinary event in the physical world that surpasses all known human or natural powers and is ascribed to a supernatural cause.
  • miraged — Simple past tense and past participle of mirage.
  • mirages — Plural form of mirage.
  • mirbane — nitrobenzene, as formerly used in perfumes
  • misaver — to state incorrectly
  • misfare — to get on or fare badly
  • mishear — to hear incorrectly or imperfectly: to mishear a remark.
  • misrate — to rate or estimate incorrectly
  • misread — Read (a piece of text) wrongly.
  • moraine — a ridge, mound, or irregular mass of unstratified glacial drift, chiefly boulders, gravel, sand, and clay.
  • morelia — a state in SW Mexico. 23,196 sq. mi. (60,080 sq. km). Capital: Morelia.
  • muriate — (not in scientific use) any chloride, especially potassium chloride, KCl, used as a fertilizer.
  • permian — Geology. noting or pertaining to a period of the Paleozoic Era occurring from about 280 to 230 million years ago and characterized by a profusion of amphibian species.
  • primage — a small allowance formerly paid by a shipper to the master and crew of a vessel for the loading and care of the goods: now charged with the freight and retained by the shipowner.
  • primate — Ecclesiastical. an archbishop or bishop ranking first among the bishops of a province or country.
  • racemic — noting or pertaining to any of various organic compounds in which racemism occurs.
  • ragtime — a novel (1975) by E. L. Doctorow.
  • raiment — clothing; apparel; attire.
  • ramekin — a small dish in which food can be baked and served.
  • rampike — a dead tree, especially the bleached skeleton or splintered trunk of a tree killed by fire, lightning, or wind.
  • readmit — to allow to enter; grant or afford entrance to: to admit a student to college.
  • realism — interest in or concern for the actual or real, as distinguished from the abstract, speculative, etc.
  • reaming — to enlarge to desired size (a previously bored hole) by means of a reamer.
  • reclaim — to claim or demand the return or restoration of, as a right, possession, etc.
  • reimage — a physical likeness or representation of a person, animal, or thing, photographed, painted, sculptured, or otherwise made visible.
  • remains — to continue in the same state; continue to be as specified: to remain at peace.
  • remanie — fragments and fossils of organic skeletal materials that have been transported before burial
  • remblai — earth used for an embankment or rampart
  • riemann — Georg Friedrich Bernhard [gey-awrk free-drikh bern-hahrt] /geɪˈɔrk ˈfri drɪx ˈbɛrn hɑrt/ (Show IPA), 1826–66, German mathematician.
  • riesmanDavid, 1909–2002, U.S. sociologist.
  • romaine — Also called romaine lettuce, cos, cos lettuce. a variety of lettuce, Lactuca sativa longifolia, having a cylindrical head of long, relatively loose leaves.
  • rumelia — a division of the former Turkish Empire, in the Balkan Peninsula: included Albania, Macedonia, and Thrace.
  • sedarim — a plural of Seder.
  • seminar — a small group of students, as in a university, engaged in advanced study and original research under a member of the faculty and meeting regularly to exchange information and hold discussions.
  • semiraw — (of food) not fully cooked; (of materials) not fully processed; raw to some degree
  • seriema — either of two birds of the family Cariamidae, Cariama cristata, of southern Brazil, or Chunga burmeisteri, of Argentina, having long legs, an erectile crest, a short, broad bill, and limited ability to fly.
  • sidearm — with a swinging motion of the arm moving to the side of the body at shoulder level or below and nearly parallel to the ground: to pitch sidearm.
  • trammie — the conductor or driver of a tram
  • uraemia — a condition resulting from the retention in the blood of constituents normally excreted in the urine.
  • vampire — a preternatural being, commonly believed to be a reanimated corpse, that is said to suck the blood of sleeping persons at night.
  • vermian — resembling or of the nature of a worm.
  • viremia — the presence of a virus in the blood.
  • vitamer — a chemical compound which exhibits vitamin activity
  • wartime — a time or period of war: Strict travel regulations apply only in wartime.
  • wireman — a person who installs and maintains electric wiring.
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