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8-letter words containing s, t, r, o, m

  • molester — to bother, interfere with, or annoy.
  • monastir — Bitola
  • monitors — Plural form of monitor.
  • monstera — any of various tropical American climbing plants belonging to the genus Monstera, of the arum family, especially M. deliciosa, having split or perforated leaves and often grown as a houseplant.
  • monsters — Plural form of monster.
  • monstery — Resembling a monster.
  • montroseJames Graham, Marquis of, 1612–50, Scottish supporter of Charles I.
  • moralist — a person who teaches or inculcates morality.
  • mordants — Plural form of mordant.
  • mordents — Plural form of mordent.
  • morosity — gloomily or sullenly ill-humored, as a person or mood.
  • mortised — a notch, hole, groove, or slot made in a piece of wood or the like to receive a tenon of the same dimensions.
  • mortises — Plural form of mortise.
  • mortsafe — a heavy iron cage or grille placed over the grave of a newly deceased person in order to deter body snatchers
  • motorbus — a passenger bus powered by a motor.
  • motorise — Alternative spelling of motorize.
  • motorist — a person who drives or travels in a privately owned automobile.
  • muskroot — The root of Ferula sumbul, a tall umbelliferous plant, formerly used in medicine and as a substitute for musk.
  • mutators — Plural form of mutator.
  • nostromo — a novel (1904) by Joseph Conrad.
  • nostrums — a medicine sold with false or exaggerated claims and with no demonstrable value; quack medicine.
  • onstream — Being produced.
  • ostmarks — Plural form of ostmark.
  • outsmart — to get the better of (someone); outwit.
  • overmast — to provide (a ship) with a mast that is too tall or heavy
  • postform — to remould or reshape plastic after reheating
  • postmark — an official mark stamped on letters and other mail, serving as a cancellation of the postage stamp and indicating the place, date, and sometimes time of sending or receipt.
  • rearmost — farthest in the rear; last.
  • remotest — far apart; far distant in space; situated at some distance away: the remote jungles of Brazil.
  • resmooth — to make smooth again
  • restroom — rooms or a room having a washbowl, toilet, and other facilities for use by employees, visitors, etc., as in a store, theater, or office.
  • rimstone — a calcareous deposit forming a dam at the edge or outlet of an overflowing pool of water, as in a cavern.
  • robotism — a machine that resembles a human and does mechanical, routine tasks on command.
  • romanist — Disparaging. a member of the Roman Catholic Church.
  • rosemont — a town in central California, near Sacramento.
  • setiform — bristle-shaped; setaceous.
  • shortarm — (of a punch) with the arm bent
  • smothery — stifling; close: a smothery atmosphere.
  • somerset — an acrobatic movement, either forward or backward, in which the body rolls end over end, making a complete revolution.
  • sortment — an assortment or classification
  • stamford — a city in SW Connecticut.
  • stem rot — a symptom or phase of many diseases of plants, characterized by decay of the stem tissues.
  • stereome — the tissue of a plant that provides mechanical support
  • stompers — stamp (defs 1–3).
  • storeman — a man employed to look after a storeroom
  • stormful — having many storms; stormy
  • storming — a disturbance of the normal condition of the atmosphere, manifesting itself by winds of unusual force or direction, often accompanied by rain, snow, hail, thunder, and lightning, or flying sand or dust.
  • stormont — a suburb of Belfast: site of Parliament House (1928–30), formerly the seat of the parliament of Northern Ireland (1922–72) and since 1998 of the Northern Ireland assembly, and Stormont Castle, formerly the residence of the prime minister of Northern Ireland and since 1998 the office of the province's first minister
  • strijdom — Johannes Gerhardus (joˈhanəs ɡeːrˈhɑːdəs). 1893–1958, South African statesman; prime minister (1954–58)
  • stroheimErich von [er-ik] /ˈɛr ɪk/ (Show IPA), 1885–1957, U.S. actor and director, born in Austria.
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