Anagrams of merely

Word merely has 69 anagrams that can be made by using the letters of merely.

5 letter words you can make with 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.
Word Value for merely
Scrable

11

Words with friends

12

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