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9-letter words containing s, i, g, n, m

  • neogamist — A person recently married; newlywed.
  • neologism — a new word, meaning, usage, or phrase.
  • niggerism — the condition of being a Black person
  • nystagmic — Exhibiting or pertaining to nystagmus (involuntary eye movement).
  • orangeism — the principles and practices of the Orangemen.
  • organisms — Plural form of organism.
  • orgasming — the physical and emotional sensation experienced at the peak of sexual excitation, usually resulting from stimulation of the sexual organ and usually accompanied in the male by ejaculation.
  • panegoism — a form of scepticism; subjective idealism
  • panlogism — the doctrine that the universe is a realization or act of the logos.
  • presuming — presumptuous.
  • promising — giving favorable promise; likely to turn out well: a promising young man; a promising situation.
  • ram singh — 1816–85, Indian leader of a puritanical Sikh sect, the Kukas, who tried to remove the British from India through a policy of noncooperation
  • ramblings — If you describe a speech or piece of writing as someone's ramblings, you are saying that it is meaningless because the person who said or wrote it was very confused or insane.
  • schmelingMax [maks;; German mahks] /mæks;; German mɑks/ (Show IPA), 1905–2005, German boxer: world heavyweight champion 1930–32.
  • scramming — to go away; get out (usually used as a command): I said I was busy, so scram.
  • screaming — uttering screams.
  • seemingly — apparent; appearing, whether truly or falsely, to be as specified: a seeming advantage.
  • semiangle — half of a particular angle
  • sermoning — the preaching of sermons
  • shambling — to walk or go awkwardly; shuffle.
  • sightsman — a tourist guide
  • sigismund — 1368–1437, Holy Roman emperor 1411–37.
  • sigmatron — a machine for generating X-rays
  • signalman — a person whose occupation or duty is signaling, as on a railroad or in the army.
  • simmering — to cook or cook in a liquid at or just below the boiling point.
  • simpering — to smile in a silly, self-conscious way.
  • singledom — the state of being unmarried or not involved in a long-term relationship
  • skimmings — Usually, skimmings. something that is removed by skimming.
  • skin game — a dishonest or unscrupulous business operation, scheme, etc.
  • smilingly — If someone does something smilingly, they smile as they do it.
  • smooching — smutch.
  • smooshing — to mash or push, especially to push down or in; compress: to smush a pie in someone's face.
  • smuggling — to import or export (goods) secretly, in violation of the law, especially without payment of legal duty.
  • something — Informal. a person or thing of some value or consequence: He is really something! This writer has something to say and she says it well.
  • songsmith — a writer of songs.
  • squirming — to wriggle or writhe.
  • streaming — a body of water flowing in a channel or watercourse, as a river, rivulet, or brook. Synonyms: rill, run, streamlet, runnel.
  • stumbling — to strike the foot against something, as in walking or running, so as to stagger or fall; trip.
  • stymieing — Golf. (on a putting green) an instance of a ball's lying on a direct line between the cup and the ball of an opponent about to putt.
  • summering — the season between spring and autumn, in the Northern Hemisphere from the summer solstice to the autumnal equinox, and in the Southern Hemisphere from the winter solstice to the vernal equinox.
  • summiting — the highest point or part, as of a hill, a line of travel, or any object; top; apex.
  • symington — (William) Stuart, 1901–1988, U.S. politician: senator 1952–77.
  • synangium — a common vascular junction from which several arteries branch
  • synergism — synergy (def 1).
  • trimmings — anything used or serving to decorate or complete: the trimmings of a Christmas tree.
  • unamusing — pleasantly entertaining or diverting: an amusing speaker.
  • unmasking — to strip a mask or disguise from.
  • unseeming — unseemly; not apparent
  • unsmiling — to assume a facial expression indicating pleasure, favor, or amusement, but sometimes derision or scorn, characterized by an upturning of the corners of the mouth.
  • vikingism — savageness or other behaviour considered characteristic of a Viking
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