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6-letter words containing r, p, m

  • impure — not pure; mixed with extraneous matter, especially of an inferior or contaminating nature: impure water and air.
  • jimper — slender; trim; delicate.
  • jumper — an act or instance of jumping; leap.
  • kemper — One who kemps, or strives, for superiority.
  • lamper — One who takes part in lamping, or hunting with bright lights.
  • laperm — a breed of medium-sized curly-haired cat with large ears
  • lemper — Ute (ˈuːtɪ). born 1963, German singer and actress, noted esp for her performances of songs by Kurt Weill
  • limper — lacking stiffness or firmness, as of substance, fiber, structure, or bodily frame: a limp body.
  • lumper — a piece or mass of solid matter without regular shape or of no particular shape: a lump of coal.
  • mapper — a representation, usually on a flat surface, as of the features of an area of the earth or a portion of the heavens, showing them in their respective forms, sizes, and relationships according to some convention of representation: a map of Canada.
  • markup — Commerce. the amount added by a seller to the cost of a commodity to cover expenses and profit in fixing the selling price. the difference between the cost price and the selling price, computed as a percentage of either the selling price or the cost price. an increase in price, as of a commodity. the amount by which a price is increased.
  • merope — a queen of Corinth and the foster mother of Oedipus.
  • merops — (in the Iliad) a Percosian augur who foresaw and unsuccessfully tried to prevent the death of his sons in the Trojan War.
  • mmorpg — Massively Multiplayer Online Game
  • mopery — mopish behavior.
  • mopier — mopey.
  • mopper — One who mops.
  • morphe — (archaic) alternative spelling of morphew.
  • morpho — any of various large, tropical American butterflies of the genus Morpho, having brilliant blue, iridescent wings with an underside of brown or gray and eyelike spots.
  • morphs — Plural form of morph.
  • morphyPaul Charles, 1837–84, U.S. chess player.
  • mp3pro — (audio, compression)   An extention of MP3 using SBR, targetting data rates of 64-96 kbps.
  • mpr ii — a standard developed in Sweden that limits to 250 nanoteslas the electromagnetic radiation emissions from a computer monitor at a distance of a half meter.
  • mrp ii — Manufacturer Resource Planning
  • mumper — (British, or, obsolete) A beggar.
  • murphy — an Irish or white potato.
  • onramp — an entrance lane for traffic from a street to a turnpike or freeway.
  • otprom — One Time Programmable Read-Only Memory
  • palmar — of, relating to, or located in or on the palm of the hand or to the corresponding part of the forefoot of an animal.
  • palmerAlice Elvira, 1855–1902, U.S. educator.
  • pamiri — a member of a Caucasian people inhabiting the Pamirs.
  • pamirsthe, a mountainous region in central Asia, largely in Tajikistan, where the Hindu Kush, Tien Shan, and Himalaya mountain ranges converge: highest peaks, about 25,000 feet (7600 meters).
  • pamper — to treat or gratify with extreme or excessive indulgence, kindness, or care: to pamper a child; to pamper one's stomach.
  • paraml — An extension of Standard ML which supports coarse-grained parallelism. Peter Bailey, while at the Edinburgh Parallel Computing Centre at University of Edinburgh, has implemented of Murray Cole's original four skeletons in paraML. See also Skel-ML.
  • paramo — a high, cold plateau of South America.
  • parfum — perfume.
  • parmod — "Parallel Programming with ParMod", S. Eichholz, Proc 1987 Intl Conf on Parallel Proc, pp.377-380.
  • partim — in part
  • perma- — indicating a fixed state
  • permed — permanent (def 4).
  • permic — a subfamily of Finnic, comprising the modern languages Udmurt and Komi, spoken in northeastern European Russia, and fragmentary attestations of an earlier language (Old Permic) dating from the 15th century.
  • permie — a person, esp an office worker, employed by a firm on a permanent basis
  • permit — to allow to do something: Permit me to explain.
  • pharma — a pharmaceutical company.
  • plomer — William (Charles Franklyn). 1903–73, British poet, novelist, and short-story writer, born in South Africa. His novels include Turbott Wolfe (1926) and The Case is Altered (1932)
  • pogrom — an organized massacre, especially of Jews.
  • porism — a type of mathematical proposition considered by Euclid, the meaning of which is now obscure. It is thought to be a proposition affirming the possibility of finding such conditions as will render a certain problem indeterminate or capable of innumerable solutions
  • pragma — (programming)   (pragmatic information) A standardised form of comment which has meaning to the compiler or some other program. It may use a special syntax or a specific form within the normal comment syntax. A pragma usually conveys non-essential information, often intended to help the compiler to optimise the program or to generate formatted documentation.
  • preamp — a preamplifier.
  • prearm — to arm (literally or figuratively) in advance
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