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5-letter words containing r, m, e

  • enorm — (obsolete) enormous.
  • eprom — (storage)   (EPROM) A type of storage device in which the data is determined by electrical charge stored in an isolated ("floating") MOS transistor gate. The isolation is good enough to retain the charge almost indefinitely (more than ten years) without an external power supply. The EPROM is programmed by "injecting" charge into the floating gate, using a technique based on the tunnel effect. This requires higher voltage than in normal operation (usually 12V - 25V). The floating gate can be discharged by applying ultraviolet light to the chip's surface through a quartz window in the package, erasing the memory contents and allowing the chip to be reprogrammed.
  • ercim — European Research Consortium on Informatics and Mathematics. An association of European research organisations promoting cooperative research on key issues in Information Technology.
  • ermin — Obsolete form of ermine.
  • femer — feminine.
  • femur — Anatomy. a bone in the human leg extending from the pelvis to the knee, that is the longest, largest, and strongest in the body; thighbone.
  • ferme — (cant) Hole.
  • fermi — Enrico [en-ree-koh;; Italian en-ree-kaw] /ɛnˈri koʊ;; Italian ɛnˈri kɔ/ (Show IPA), 1901–54, Italian physicist, in the U.S. after 1939: Nobel Prize 1938.
  • ferms — Plural form of ferm.
  • forme — form (def 30).
  • frame — a border or case for enclosing a picture, mirror, etc.
  • fremd — (rare, or, chiefly dialectal) Strange; foreign; alien; outlandish; far off or away; distant.
  • fumer — Often, fumes. any smokelike or vaporous exhalation from matter or substances, especially of an odorous or harmful nature: tobacco fumes; noxious fumes of carbon monoxide.
  • gamer — an amusement or pastime: children's games.
  • gerim — Plural form of ger.
  • germs — a microorganism, especially when disease-producing; microbe.
  • germy — full of germs.
  • gomer — an undesirable hospital patient.
  • grame — (obsolete) Anger; wrath; scorn; bitterness; repugnance.
  • grime — dirt, soot, or other filthy matter, especially adhering to or embedded in a surface.
  • grume — blood when viscous.
  • hamerFannie Lou, 1917–77, U.S. civil rights activist.
  • harem — the part of a Muslim palace or house reserved for the residence of women.
  • herem — the most severe form of excommunication, formerly used by rabbis in sentencing wrongdoers, usually for an indefinite period of time.
  • herma — herm.
  • herms — Plural form of herm.
  • homer — 9th-century b.c, Greek epic poet: reputed author of the Iliad and Odyssey.
  • horme — activity directed toward a goal; purposive effort.
  • imare — Institute of Marine Engineers
  • imper — imperative
  • inerm — (of plants) without thorns or prickles
  • kerma — the quotient of the sum of the initial kinetic energies of all the charged particles liberated by indirectly ionizing radiation in a volume element of a material divided by the mass of the volume element. The SI unit is the gray
  • khmer — a member of a people in Cambodia whose ancestors established an empire about the 5th century a.d. and who reached their zenith during the 9th to the 12th centuries when they dominated most of Indochina.
  • krems — a city in NE Austria, on the Danube.
  • lamer — crippled or physically disabled, especially in the foot or leg so as to limp or walk with difficulty.
  • lemur — any of various small, arboreal, chiefly nocturnal mammals of the family Lemuridae, of Madagascar and the Comoro Islands, especially of the genus Lemur, usually having large eyes, a foxlike face, and woolly fur: most lemurs are endangered.
  • limer — (obsolete) A kind of dog kept on a lead; a bloodhound; a mongrel.
  • macer — macebearer.
  • madre — mother1 .
  • maera — Hecuba, after being changed into a dog for blinding Polymestor.
  • maerl — an accumulation of red coralline algae
  • maire — a tall native New Zealand tree, olea cunninghami, with dark brown wood
  • maker — a person or thing that makes.
  • marae — (archaic) a Polynesian sacred altar or enclosure.
  • mares — Plural form of mare.
  • marge — a female given name, form of Margaret.
  • marie — (Marie Alexandra Victoria of Saxe-Coburg) 1875–1938, queen of Romania 1914–27.
  • marke — Obsolete spelling of mark.
  • marne — a river in NE France, flowing W to the Seine near Paris: battles 1914, 1918, 1944. 325 miles (525 km) long.
  • marse — (used chiefly in representation of southern black speech) master.
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