Anagrams of gremmy

Word gremmy has 51 anagrams that can be made by using the letters of gremmy.

5 letter words you can make with gremmy

gemmy
adjective, having gems; set with gems.
30-30
germy
adjective, full of germs.
Ger.
M-14
noun, a fully automatic, gas-operated, .30 caliber rifle developed from the M-1: replaced the M-1 as the standard U.S. Army combat rifle.
M-16
noun, a lightweight, fully automatic rifle shooting a small-caliber bullet at an extremely high velocity: a U.S. Army combat weapon for mobile units and jungle fighting.
Grey
noun, Charles, 2nd Earl, 1764–1845, British statesman: prime minister 1830–34.
mem.
gyre
noun, a ring or circle.
gyr-
germ
noun, a microorganism, especially when disease-producing; microbe.
1080
Emmy
noun, (sometimes lowercase) any of several statuettes awarded annually by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for excellence in television programming, production, or performance.
mrem
Reg.
my-
MM.
MME
Mr.
plural, mister: a title of respect prefixed to a man's name or position:
MRE
MGr
Re.
Meg
noun, a megabyte.
Rey
noun, a city in N Iran, near Teheran.
REM
noun, the quantity of ionizing radiation whose biological effect is equal to that produced by one roentgen of x-rays.
Rye
noun, a widely cultivated cereal grass, Secale cereale, having one-nerved glumes and two- or three-flowered spikelets.
M-1
noun, a semiautomatic, gas-operated, .30 caliber, clip-fed rifle, with a weight of 8.56 pounds (3.88 kg): the standard U.S. Army rifle in World War II and in the Korean War.
yer
Me.
gym
noun, a gymnasium.
Eg.
EMR
ery
gey
adverb, Scot. considerably; very.
GEM
noun, a cut and polished precious stone or pearl fine enough for use in jewelry.
rm.
plural, ream.
Gr.
gre
MG
M.
G.
Y.
R.
ye
pronoun, Archaic, except in some elevated or ecclesiastical prose Literary, or British Dialect. (used nominatively as the plural of thou especially in rhetorical, didactic, or poetic contexts, in addressing a group of persons or things): (used nominatively for the second person singular, especially in polite address): (used objectively in the second person singular or plural):
ey
er
interjection, (used to express or represent a pause, hesitation, uncertainty, etc.).
yr
rg
ry
E.
noun, Edward (St. John) 1925–2000, U.S. writer and illustrator.
GM
Word Value for gremmy
Scrable

14

Words with friends

16

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