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6-letter words containing am

  • champs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of champ.
  • champy — (of earth) churned up by the feet or hooves of animals
  • clammy — Something that is clammy is unpleasantly damp or sticky.
  • clamor — If people are clamoring for something, they are demanding it in a noisy or angry way.
  • clamps — Plural form of clamp.
  • cobhamSir John, Oldcastle, Sir John.
  • corfam — a synthetic water-repellent material used as a substitute for shoe leather
  • crambe — any plant of the Crambe genus of the Brassicaceae family native to Europe, eastern Africa, and central and southern Asia
  • crambo — a word game in which one team says a rhyme or rhyming line for a word or line given by the other team
  • crames — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of crame.
  • cramps — A cramping of muscles, especially in the abdomen or uterus.
  • crampy — affected with cramp
  • creams — Plural form of cream.
  • creamy — Food or drink that is creamy contains a lot of cream or milk.
  • culham — a village in S central England, in Oxfordshire: site of the UK centre for thermonuclear reactor research and of the Joint European Torus (JET) programme
  • damage — To damage an object means to break it, spoil it physically, or stop it from working properly.
  • damara — a member of a Negroid people of South West Africa
  • damask — Damask is a type of heavy cloth with a pattern woven into it.
  • damien — Joseph (ʒozɛf), known as Father Damien. 1840–89, Belgian Roman Catholic missionary to the leper colony at Molokai, Hawaii
  • dammar — any of various resins obtained from SE Asian trees, esp of the genera Agathis (conifers) and Shorea (family Dipterocarpaceae): used for varnishes, lacquers, bases for oil paints, etc
  • dammed — a barrier to obstruct the flow of water, especially one of earth, masonry, etc., built across a stream or river.
  • dammer — Also called gum dammar. a copallike resin derived largely from dipterocarpaceous trees of southern Asia, especially Malaya and Sumatra, and used chiefly for making colorless varnish.
  • dammit — a contracted form of damn it
  • damned — Damned is used by some people to emphasize what they are saying, especially when they are angry or frustrated.
  • damner — a person who damns
  • damnit — (especially, southern US) misspelling of dammit.
  • damnum — (legal) harm; detriment.
  • damped — Simple past tense and past participle of damp.
  • dampen — To dampen something such as someone's enthusiasm or excitement means to make it less lively or intense.
  • damper — A damper is a small sheet of metal in a fire, boiler, or furnace that can be moved to increase or reduce the amount of air that enters.
  • damply — In a damp manner.
  • damsel — A damsel is a young, unmarried woman.
  • damson — A damson is a small, sour, purple plum.
  • deamon — (spelling)   It's spelled "daemon".
  • decamp — If you decamp, you go away from somewhere secretly or suddenly.
  • dedham — a town in E Massachusetts, near Boston.
  • defame — If someone defames another person or thing, they say bad and untrue things about them.
  • defoam — to remove foam from (something)
  • degame — a deciduous tree of South and Central America, Calycophyllum candidissimum
  • denhamSir John, 1615–69, English poet and architect.
  • dhaman — a large, harmless, colubrid snake, Ptyas mucosus, of southern Asia, the skin of which is used in making shoes, purses, and other items.
  • dhamma — essential quality or character, as of the cosmos or one's own nature.
  • diamag — An interactive extension of ALGOL.
  • diamyl — (of a chemical compound) containing two amyl groups
  • digamy — a second marriage, after the death or divorce of the first husband or wife; deuterogamy. Compare monogamy (def 3).
  • digram — a sequence of two adjacent letters or symbols.
  • dirham — a money of account of Iraq, the 20th part of a dinar, equal to 50 fils.
  • djambi — a province on SE Sumatra, in W Indonesia.
  • dramas — Plural form of drama.
  • dreame — Obsolete spelling of dream.
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