These are the meanings of the letters EAMYUR when you unscramble them.
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Aery (n.)
An aerie.
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Aery (a.)
Aerial; ethereal; incorporeal; visionary.
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Army (n.)
A collection or body of men armed for war, esp. one organized in companies, battalions, regiments, brigades, and divisions, under proper officers.
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Army (n.)
A body of persons organized for the advancement of a cause; as, the Blue Ribbon Army.
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Army (n.)
A great number; a vast multitude; a host.
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Arum (n.)
A genus of plants found in central Europe and about the Mediterranean, having flowers on a spadix inclosed in a spathe. The cuckoopint of the English is an example.
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Eyra (n.)
A wild cat (Felis eyra) ranging from southern Brazil to Texas. It is reddish yellow and about the size of the domestic cat, but with a more slender body and shorter legs.
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Mare (n.)
The female of the horse and other equine quadrupeds.
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Mare (n.)
Sighing, suffocative panting, intercepted utterance, with a sense of pressure across the chest, occurring during sleep; the incubus; -- obsolete, except in the compound nightmare.
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Mure (n.)
A wall.
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Mure (n.)
To inclose in walls; to wall; to immure; to shut up.
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Ream (n.)
Cream; also, the cream or froth on ale.
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Ream (v. i.)
To cream; to mantle.
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Ream (v. t.)
To stretch out; to draw out into thongs, threads, or filaments.
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Ream (n.)
A bundle, package, or quantity of paper, usually consisting of twenty quires or 480 sheets.
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Ream (v. t.)
To bevel out, as the mouth of a hole in wood or metal; in modern usage, to enlarge or dress out, as a hole, with a reamer.
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Urea (a.)
A very soluble crystalline body which is the chief constituent of the urine in mammals and some other animals. It is also present in small quantity in blood, serous fluids, lymph, the liver, etc.
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Yare (n.)
Ready; dexterous; eager; lively; quick to move.
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Yare (adv.)
Soon.
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Year (n.)
The time of the apparent revolution of the sun trough the ecliptic; the period occupied by the earth in making its revolution around the sun, called the astronomical year; also, a period more or less nearly agreeing with this, adopted by various nations as a measure of time, and called the civil year; as, the common lunar year of 354 days, still in use among the Mohammedans; the year of 360 days, etc. In common usage, the year consists of 365 days, and every fourth year (called bissextile, or leap year) of 366 days, a day being added to February on that year, on account of the excess above 365 days (see Bissextile).
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Year (n.)
The time in which any planet completes a revolution about the sun; as, the year of Jupiter or of Saturn.
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Year (n.)
Age, or old age; as, a man in years.