Anagrams of merely
Word merely has
69 anagrams
that can be made by using the letters of merely.
- Elmer
-
noun,
a male given name: from Old English words meaning “noble” and “famous.”.
- Meryl
-
noun,
a female given name, form of Merle.
- 30-30
-
- Merle
-
noun,
the blackbird, Turdus merula.
- myel-
-
- Meyer
-
noun,
Adolf, 1866–1950, U.S. psychiatrist, born in Switzerland.
- leery
-
adjective,
wary; suspicious (usually followed by of):
- Emery
-
noun,
a granular mineral substance consisting typically of corundum mixed with magnetite or hematite, used powdered, crushed, or consolidated for grinding and polishing.
- elem.
-
- 1080
-
- lyre
-
noun,
a musical instrument of ancient Greece consisting of a soundbox made typically from a turtle shell, with two curved arms connected by a yoke from which strings are stretched to the body, used especially to accompany singing and recitation.
- Meer
-
noun,
Jan van der [yahn vahn der] /yɑn vɑn dɛr/ (Show IPA), Vermeer, Jan.
- 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.
- leer
-
noun,
a lascivious or sly look.
- 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.
- mere
-
noun,
Chiefly British Dialect. a lake or pond.
- Reel
-
noun,
a cylinder, frame, or other device that turns on an axis and is used to wind up or pay out something.
- Eyre
-
noun,
a circuit made by an itinerant judge (justice in eyre) in medieval England.
- rel.
-
- eery
-
adjective,
eerie.
- rely
-
verb (used without object),
to depend confidently; put trust in (usually followed by on or upon):
- Ryle
-
noun,
Sir Martin, 1918–84, British astronomer: Nobel Prize in physics 1974.
- ylem
-
noun,
the initial substance of the universe from which all matter is said to be derived.
- Mel
-
noun,
honey.
- 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.
- MLR
-
- my-
-
- ml.
-
- Mr.
-
plural,
mister: a title of respect prefixed to a man's name or position:
- MRE
-
- Re.
-
- Ree
-
noun,
reeve3 .
- 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.
- Me.
-
- Ler
-
noun,
the personification of the sea and the father of Manannan: corresponds to the Welsh Llyr.
- lye
-
noun,
a highly concentrated, aqueous solution of potassium hydroxide or sodium hydroxide.
- yer
-
- EEL
-
noun,
any of numerous elongated, snakelike marine or freshwater fishes of the order Apodes, having no ventral fins.
- eye
-
noun,
the organ of sight, in vertebrates typically one of a pair of spherical bodies contained in an orbit of the skull and in humans appearing externally as a dense, white, curved membrane, or sclera, surrounding a circular, colored portion, or iris, that is covered by a clear, curved membrane, or cornea, and in the center of which is an opening, or pupil, through which light passes to the retina.
- Ely
-
noun,
Isle of, a former administrative county in E England: now part of Cambridgeshire.
- ELM
-
noun,
any tree of the genus Ulmus, as U. procera (English elm) characterized by the gradually spreading columnar manner of growth of its branches.
Compare American elm, elm family.
- eme
-
noun,
friend.
- EMR
-
- ERE
-
preposition, conjunction,
before.
- ery
-
- rm.
-
plural,
ream.
- Lee
-
noun,
protective shelter:
- Ley
-
noun,
leu.
- L1
-
- el
-
noun,
Informal. elevated railroad.
- E.
-
noun,
Edward (St. John) 1925–2000, U.S. writer and illustrator.
- ee
-
- ry
-
- er
-
interjection,
(used to express or represent a pause, hesitation, uncertainty, etc.).
- LR
-
- ey
-
- M.
-
- ly
-
- 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):
- yr
-
- R.
-
- yl
-
- le
-
- L2
-
- LM
-
- Y.
-
- L.
-