8-letter words containing mor
- morrison — Herbert Stanley, 1888–1965, English labor leader and statesman.
- morrocoy — A red-footed tortoise, of the species Chelonoidis carbonaria, from the West Indies.
- mortally — subject to death; having a transitory life: all mortal creatures.
- mortared — a mixture of lime or cement or a combination of both with sand and water, used as a bonding agent between bricks, stones, etc.
- mortbell — a bell rung for a funeral
- mortgage — the rights conferred by it, or the state of the property conveyed.
- mortific — causing death
- mortimer — Roger de [duh] /də/ (Show IPA), 8th Baron of Wigmore [wig-mawr,, -mohr] /ˈwɪgˌmɔr,, -ˌmoʊr/ (Show IPA), and 1st Earl of March, 1287–1330, English rebel leader: paramour of Isabella, queen of Edward II of England.
- 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.
- mortling — wool obtained from dead sheep.
- mortmain — the condition of lands or tenements held without right of alienation, as by an ecclesiastical corporation; inalienable ownership.
- mortsafe — a heavy iron cage or grille placed over the grave of a newly deceased person in order to deter body snatchers
- mortuary — funeral home.
- morwongs — Plural form of morwong.
- nemorous — (rare) Forested; full of trees, dark with shady groves.
- neomorph — (genetics) a gain of function mutation that causes novel gene function.
- nonmoral — having no relation to morality; neither moral nor immoral: It was a completely nonmoral problem and involved only judgments as to efficacy.
- outhumor — to exceed in humouring
- overmore — constituting or forming a large number; numerous: many people.
- oxymoron — a figure of speech by which a locution produces an incongruous, seemingly self-contradictory effect, as in “cruel kindness” or “to make haste slowly.”.
- passmore — George. Born 1943, a British artist who is noted esp for his photomontages and performance works with Gilbert Proesch
- premoral — of, relating to, or concerned with the principles or rules of right conduct or the distinction between right and wrong; ethical: moral attitudes.
- premorse — having the end irregularly truncate, as if bitten or broken off.
- remorses — deep and painful regret for wrongdoing; compunction.
- rumorous — relating to or containing rumours
- rushmore — Mount, a peak in the Black Hills of South Dakota that is a memorial (Mount Rushmore National Memorial) having 60-foot (18-meter) busts of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt, carved into its face between 1927 and 1941, from a design by and under the direction of Gutzon Borglum. 5600 feet (1707 meters).
- sagamore — (among the American Indians of New England) a chief or leader.
- sycamore — Also called buttonwood. any of several North American plane trees, especially Platanus occidentalis, having shallowly lobed ovate leaves, globular seed heads, and wood valued as timber.
- the morn — tomorrow
- timorese — of or relating to Timor.
- timorous — full of fear; fearful: The noise made them timorous.
- tomorrow — the day following today: Tomorrow is supposed to be sunny.
- trimorph — a substance existing in three structurally distinct forms; a trimorphous substance.
- tumorous — a swollen part; swelling; protuberance.
- zoomorph — of or relating to a deity or other being conceived of as having the form of an animal.