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8-letter words containing s, o, m, a

  • cimarosa — Domenico. 1749–1801, Italian composer, chiefly remembered for his opera buffa The Secret Marriage (1792)
  • ciswoman — (LGBT) A cisgender woman, a woman who is biologically female.
  • clamours — Plural form of clamour.
  • coamings — Plural form of coaming, especially all sides of a single coach roof, hatch, or cockpit.
  • coassume — to assume jointly
  • cocksman — A man who is sexually talented.
  • comatose — A person who is comatose is in a coma.
  • commands — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of command.
  • compacts — Plural form of compact.
  • compages — a structure or framework
  • compares — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compare.
  • comparsa — a song and folk dance of Cuba.
  • comrades — A companion who shares one's activities or is a fellow member of an organization.
  • coprosma — any shrub of the Australasian rubiaceous genus Coprosma: sometimes planted for ornament
  • corpsman — a medical orderly or stretcher-bearer
  • cosmical — of or relating to the cosmos: cosmic laws.
  • costmary — a herbaceous plant, Chrysanthemum balsamita, native to Asia. Its fragrant leaves were used as a seasoning and to flavour ale: family Asteraceae (composites)
  • costumal — Pertaining to costume or dress.
  • cramoisy — of a crimson colour
  • crampons — Plural form of crampon.
  • crossarm — a horizontal bar or arm
  • crossman — Richard (Howard Stafford). 1907–74, British Labour politician. His diaries, published posthumously as the Crossman Papers (1975), revealed details of cabinet discussions
  • daimones — disembodied souls
  • damocles — a sycophant forced by Dionysius, tyrant of Syracuse, to sit under a sword suspended by a hair to demonstrate that being a king was not the happy state Damocles had said it was
  • damrosch — Walter (Johannes)1862-1950; U.S. conductor & composer, born in Germany
  • darksome — dark or darkish
  • diamonds — one of the four suits in an ordinary pack of cards bearing red lozenge-shapes symbols
  • dioramas — Plural form of diorama.
  • diplomas — Plural form of diploma.
  • docimasy — the close examination of a person or substance in order to determine nature, quality and characteristics, formerly used to describe the evaluation of aspirants for public office or citizenship in Ancient Greece, now used of assaying metallic ores
  • dolmades — Plural form of dolmade.
  • domesday — doomsday.
  • donatism — (Christianity) An early Christian belief which maintained that apostate priests were incapable of administering the sacraments, as opposed to the orthodox view that any sacrament administered by a properly ordained priest or bishop is valid, regardless of how sinful he is or if he has converted to another religion.
  • doomsday — the day of the Last Judgment, at the end of the world.
  • doomsman — Archaic. a judge.
  • doormats — Plural form of doormat.
  • dramshop — bar; barroom; saloon.
  • dysosmia — an impairment of the sense of smell.
  • earldoms — Plural form of earldom.
  • earworms — Plural form of earworm.
  • eastmost — easternmost.
  • embrasor — a person who commits or attempts to commit embracery
  • enamours — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enamour.
  • episomal — (biology) Pertaining to an episome or DNA fragments not contained within a chromosome.
  • famously — having a widespread reputation, usually of a favorable nature; renowned; celebrated: a famous writer. Synonyms: famed, notable, illustrious. Antonyms: unknown, obscure.
  • fearsome — causing fear: a fearsome noise.
  • fibromas — Plural form of fibroma.
  • flashmob — Alternative spelling of flash mob.
  • flaysome — (UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Terrifying; frightful.
  • fleasome — having fleas; flea-ridden
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