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7-letter words containing s, i, m, o

  • misload — (transitive) To load incorrectly.
  • mislook — (intransitive) To sin by looking.
  • mismove — a wrong or prohibited move, as in a game.
  • misshod — badly shod
  • mission — a city in S Texas.
  • missort — a particular kind, species, variety, class, or group, distinguished by a common character or nature: to develop a new sort of painting; nice people, of course, but not really our sort.
  • missout — (in the game of craps) a losing throw of the dice.
  • misstop — (rare) To stop badly or wrongly.
  • mistbow — fogbow.
  • mistico — a small Mediterranean sailing ship with three masts
  • mistook — simple past tense of mistake.
  • misword — to word incorrectly.
  • misyoke — To join or yoke improperly.
  • mitoses — the usual method of cell division, characterized typically by the resolving of the chromatin of the nucleus into a threadlike form, which condenses into chromosomes, each of which separates longitudinally into two parts, one part of each chromosome being retained in each of two new cells resulting from the original cell.
  • mitosis — the usual method of cell division, characterized typically by the resolving of the chromatin of the nucleus into a threadlike form, which condenses into chromosomes, each of which separates longitudinally into two parts, one part of each chromosome being retained in each of two new cells resulting from the original cell.
  • mobbish — Like a mob, characteristic of a mob.
  • mobbism — the conduct that is characteristic of a mob
  • mobbist — One who engages in mobbism; a member of a mob.
  • mobiles — Plural form of mobile.
  • moccies — moccasin shoes or slippers
  • modiste — Older Use. a female maker of or dealer in women's fashionable attire.
  • moebiusAugust Ferdinand, Möbius, August Ferdinand.
  • moggies — Plural form of moggy.
  • moissan — Henri [ahn-ree] /ɑ̃ˈri/ (Show IPA), 1852–1907, French chemist: Nobel prize 1906.
  • moisten — Wet slightly.
  • moister — moderately or slightly wet; damp.
  • moistly — In a moist manner.
  • mojitos — Plural form of mojito.
  • molines — a city in NW Illinois, on the Mississippi.
  • molinos — Miguel de [mee-gel de] /miˈgɛl dɛ/ (Show IPA), c1640–c95, Spanish priest and mystic: chief exponent of quietism.
  • mollies — Plural form of molly.
  • mommies — Plural form of mommy.
  • monesia — a preparation extracted from the bark of a South American tree, Pradosia lactescens, and used chiefly as an astringent and as an expectorant.
  • monists — Plural form of monist.
  • monkish — of, relating to, or resembling a monk: a monkish manner.
  • monosis — a disjunction of plant parts that are usually joined together
  • monoski — A single broad ski attached to both feet.
  • moonish — capricious; inconstant.
  • moorish — of or relating to the Moors, a Muslim people of NW Africa.
  • moreish — (informal, of food) Causing one to want to have more.
  • morisco — Moorish.
  • morisonSamuel Eliot, 1887–1976, U.S. historian.
  • morisotBerthe [bert] /bɛrt/ (Show IPA), 1841–95, French Impressionist painter.
  • mortise — a notch, hole, groove, or slot made in a piece of wood or the like to receive a tenon of the same dimensions.
  • mosaics — Plural form of mosaic.
  • mosconiWilliam Joseph ("Willie") 1913–93, U.S. billiards and pool player.
  • moshing — to engage in a form of frenzied, violent dancing; slam-dance.
  • moshpit — The moshpit at a rock concert is the area in front of the stage where people jump up and down.
  • mossier — Comparative form of mossy.
  • motions — Plural form of motion.
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