These are the meanings of the letters HMLOAI when you unscramble them.
- Hail (a.)
Healthy. See Hale (the preferable spelling).
- Hail (n.)
A wish of health; a salutation; a loud call.
- Hail (n.)
Small roundish masses of ice precipitated from the clouds, where they are formed by the congelation of vapor. The separate masses or grains are called hailstones.
- Hail (v. i.)
To declare, by hailing, the port from which a vessel sails or where she is registered; hence, to sail; to come; -- used with from; as, the steamer hails from New York.
- Hail (v. i.)
To pour down particles of ice, or frozen vapors.
- Hail (v. i.)
To report as one's home or the place from whence one comes; to come; -- with from.
- Hail (v. t.)
An exclamation of respectful or reverent salutation, or, occasionally, of familiar greeting.
- Hail (v. t.)
To call loudly to, or after; to accost; to salute; to address.
- Hail (v. t.)
To name; to designate; to call.
- Hail (v. t.)
To pour forcibly down, as hail.
- Halm (n.)
Same as Haulm.
- Halo (n.)
A circle of light; especially, the bright ring represented in painting as surrounding the heads of saints and other holy persons; a glory; a nimbus.
- Halo (n.)
A colored circle around a nipple; an areola.
- Halo (n.)
A luminous circle, usually prismatically colored, round the sun or moon, and supposed to be caused by the refraction of light through crystals of ice in the atmosphere. Connected with halos there are often white bands, crosses, or arches, resulting from the same atmospheric conditions.
- Halo (n.)
An ideal glory investing, or affecting one's perception of, an object.
- Halo (v. t. & i.)
To form, or surround with, a halo; to encircle with, or as with, a halo.
- hila (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Holm (n.)
A common evergreen oak, of Europe (Quercus Ilex); -- called also ilex, and holly.
- Holm (n.)
An islet in a river.
- Holm (n.)
Low, flat land.
- Lima (n.)
The capital city of Peru, in South America.
- limo (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Loam (n.)
A kind of soil; an earthy mixture of clay and sand, with organic matter to which its fertility is chiefly due.
- Loam (n.)
A mixture of sand, clay, and other materials, used in making molds for large castings, often without a pattern.
- Loam (v. i.)
To cover, smear, or fill with loam.
- Mail (n.)
A bag; a wallet.
- Mail (n.)
A contrivance of interlinked rings, for rubbing off the loose hemp on lines and white cordage.
- Mail (n.)
A flexible fabric made of metal rings interlinked. It was used especially for defensive armor.
- Mail (n.)
A small piece of money; especially, an English silver half-penny of the time of Henry V.
- Mail (n.)
A spot.
- Mail (n.)
A trunk, box, or bag, in which clothing, etc., may be carried.
- Mail (n.)
Any hard protective covering of an animal, as the scales and plates of reptiles, shell of a lobster, etc.
- Mail (n.)
Hence generally, armor, or any defensive covering.
- Mail (n.)
Rent; tribute.
- Mail (n.)
That which comes in the mail; letters, etc., received through the post office.
- Mail (n.)
The bag or bags with the letters, papers, papers, or other matter contained therein, conveyed under public authority from one post office to another; the whole system of appliances used by government in the conveyance and delivery of mail matter.
- Mail (v. t.)
To arm with mail.
- Mail (v. t.)
To deliver into the custody of the postoffice officials, or place in a government letter box, for transmission by mail; to post; as, to mail a letter.
- Mail (v. t.)
To pinion.
- milo (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Moil (n.)
A spot; a defilement.
- Moil (v. i.)
To soil one's self with severe labor; to work with painful effort; to labor; to toil; to drudge.
- Moil (v. t.)
To daub; to make dirty; to soil; to defile.
- Mola (n.)
See Sunfish, 1.
- ohia (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.