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6-letter words that end in i

  • mirchi — hot
  • miriti — any of several palms of the genus Mauritia, which are native to South America and Trinidad and which have pinnate leaves
  • mishmi — a member of a Mongoloid hill people of the Brahmaputra area of NE India
  • moduli — Physics. a coefficient pertaining to a physical property.
  • moirai — Classical Mythology. the personification of fate. Moirai, the Fates.
  • mokihi — a type of raft, usually made out of flax stems
  • mopani — a leguminous tree, Colophospermum (or Copaifera) mopane, native to southern Africa, that is highly resistant to drought and produces very hard wood
  • moriniErika, 1906–1995, U.S. violinist, born in Austria.
  • moroniFederal and Islamic Republic of the, a republic comprising three of the Comoro Islands (Grand Comoro, Mohéli, and Anjouan): a former overseas territory of France; declared independence 1975. 719 sq. mi. (1862 sq. km). Capital: Moroni.
  • moulvi — maulvi.
  • mpl ii — [Burroughs VMS MPL II Language Reference Manual].
  • mpr ii — a standard developed in Sweden that limits to 250 nanoteslas the electromagnetic radiation emissions from a computer monitor at a distance of a half meter.
  • mrp ii — Manufacturer Resource Planning
  • msggui — (library)   A graphical user interface for GNU Smalltalk. The msgGUI package contains the basics for creating window applications in the manner available in other graphical Smalltalk implementations. Version 1.0 of the library was by Mark Bush, ECS, Oxford University, UK.
  • muesli — a breakfast cereal similar to granola, usually consisting of rolled oats and dried fruit.
  • mumbai — a state in W central India. 118,800 sq. mi. (307,690 sq. km). Capital: Mumbai.
  • munshi — a native interpreter or language instructor.
  • my lai — a hamlet in S Vietnam: U.S. forces' massacre of South Vietnamese civilians 1968.
  • mythoi — plural of mythos.
  • mzansi — a low-cost national banking account
  • nagari — a group of related scripts, including Devanagari, derived from Brahmi and used for the writing of many of the languages of India.
  • namhoi — Nanhai.
  • nanhai — former name of Foshan.
  • napoli — Italian name of Naples.
  • naskhi — the cursive variety of Arabic script from which was derived the variety used in modern printed works.
  • neinei — a New Zealand shrub, Dracophyllum latifolium, with clusters of long narrow leaves
  • nepali — Also, Nepalese. an Indic language spoken in Nepal.
  • neroli — An essential oil distilled from the flowers of the Seville orange, used in perfumery.
  • netbui — (spelling)   It's spelled "NetBEUI".
  • nevskiAlexander, Alexander Nevski.
  • newari — a Sino-Tibetan language, the language of the Newar.
  • nigiri — Regular sushi: a piece of raw fish (or other topping) on top of a small oblong brick of sticky white rice.
  • nihari — A South Asian stew of slow-cooked beef or lamb with bone marrow.
  • nikkei — an index showing the average closing prices of 225 stocks on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
  • nilgai — a large, Indian antelope, Boselaphus tragocamelus, the male of which is bluish gray with small horns, the female tawny and hornless.
  • ninigi — the grandson of Amaterasu and first ruler of Japan.
  • nuclei — plural of nucleus.
  • ocelli — a type of simple eye common to invertebrates, consisting of retinal cells, pigments, and nerve fibers.
  • octopi — any octopod of the genus Octopus, having a soft, oval body and eight sucker-bearing arms, living mostly at the bottom of the sea.
  • octroi — (formerly especially in France and Italy) a local tax levied on certain articles, such as foodstuffs, on their entry into a city.
  • olaf i — (Olaf Tryggvessön) a.d. 969–1000, king of Norway 995–1000.
  • onagri — a wild ass, Equus hemionus, of southwestern Asia.
  • onetti — Juan Carlos [wahn kahr-lohs,, -luh s;; Spanish hwahn kahr-laws] /wɑn ˈkɑr loʊs,, -ləs;; Spanish ʰwɑn ˈkɑr lɔs/ (Show IPA), 1909–94, Uruguayan novelist and short-story writer.
  • oorali — a tribe of people found in the Idukki District in India
  • oppari — An impromptu folk song of southern India, traditionally sung by women during a death ceremony in order to memorialize the person who has died.
  • orsini — an Italian aristocratic family that was prominent in Rome from the 12th to the 18th century
  • otto i — ("the Great") a.d. 912–973, king of the Germans 936–973; emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 962–973.
  • ourali — a plant from which curare comes
  • ourari — curare.
  • owerri — a market town in S Nigeria, capital of Imo state. Pop (local government areas): 401 873 (2006)
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