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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern M--M--OU-. That is, nine letter words with 1st letter M and 4th letter M and 7th letter O and 8th letter U. In alphabetical order, they are:

murmurous

myomatous

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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern M--M--OU-. That is, nine letter words with 1st letter M and 4th letter M and 7th letter O and 8th letter U. In alphabetical order, they are:

murmurous

myomatous

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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern MUR----U-. That is, nine letter words with 1st letter M and 2nd letter U and 3rd letter R and 8th letter U. In alphabetical order, they are:

murderous

murmurous

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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 47 words with the pattern -U----OU-. That is, nine letter words with 2nd letter U and 7th letter O and 8th letter U. In alphabetical order, they are:

audacious

autecious

autoicous

bumptious

burdenous

cutaneous

euryokous

eutropous

fugacious

fulgorous

fulgurous

fulminous

furacious

furfurous

gummatous

gumptious

humongous

humungous

judicious

lubricous

ludicrous

luteolous

luxurious

murderous

murmurous

musaceous

musculous

pudendous

pulverous

pumiceous

pustulous

quartzous

querulous

rubineous

rudaceous

rutaceous

subdolous

subereous

submucous

succubous

sulfurous

sumptuous

susurrous

tufaceous

tungstous

turnabout

vulturous

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"Ode to a Nightingale" by John Keats is considered a romantic poem because it explores themes of nature, imagination, and the supernatural. The poem expresses the poet's longing for a transcendent experience and his desire to escape from the harsh realities of life through the beauty and music of the nightingale's song. Keats uses vivid imagery and rich language to evoke a sense of wonder and awe, characteristic of the Romantic literary movement.

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Land that I love: farewell: O land the sun loves:

Pearl in the sea of the Orient: Eden lost to your brood!

Gaily go I to present you this hapless hopeless life:

Were it more brilliant: had it more freshness, more bloom:

Still for you would I give it: would give it for your good!

On the field of battle, fighting with delirium,

others give you their lives without doubts, without gloom.

The site nought matters: cypress, laurel or lily:

gibbet or open field: combat or cruel martyrdom

are equal if demanded by country and home.

I am to die when I see the heavens go vivid,

announcing the day at last behind the dead night.

If you need color - color to stain that dawn with,

let spill my blood: scatter it in good hour:

and drench in its gold one beam of the newborn light.

My dreams when a lad, when scarcely adolescent:

my dreams when a young man, now with vigor inflamed:

were to behold you one day: Jewel of eastern waters:

griefless the dusky eyes: lifted the upright brow:

unclouded, unfurrowed, unblemished and unashamed!

Enchantment of my life: my ardent avid obsession:

To your health! cries the soul, so soon to take the last leap:

To your health! O lovely: how lovely: to fall that you may rise!

to perish that you may live! to die beneath you skies!

and upon your enchanted ground the eternities to sleep!

Should you find someday somewhere on my gravemound, fluttering

among tall grasses, a flower of simple fame:

caress it with your lips and you kiss my soul:

I shall feel on my face across the cold tombstone:

of your tenderness, the breath; of your breath, the flame.

Suffer the moon to keep watch, tranquil and suave, over me:

suffer the dawn its flying lights to release:

suffer the wind to lament in murmurous and grave manner:

and should a bird drift down and alight on my cross,

suffer the bird to intone its canticle of peace.

Suffer the rains to dissolve in the fiery sunlight

and purified reascending heavenward bear my cause:

suffer a friend to grieve I perished so soon:

and on fine evenings, when someone prays in my memory,

pray also - O my land! - that in God I repose.

Pray for all who have fallen befriended by no fate:

for all who braved the bearing of torments all bearing past:

to our poor mothers piteously breathing forth bitterness:

for widows and orphans: for those in tortured captivity

and yourself: pray to behold your redemption at last.

And when in dark night shrouded obscurely the graveyard lies

and only, only the dead keep vigil the night through:

keep holy the peace: keep holy the mystery.

Strains perhaps you will hear - of zither, or of psalter:

It is I - O land I love! - it is I, singing to you!

And when my grave is wholly unremembered

and unlocated (no cross upon it, no stone there plain);

let the site be wracked by the plow and cracked by the spade

and let my ashes, before they vanish to nothing,

as dust be formed a part of your carpet again.

Nothing then will it matter to place me in oblivion!

Across your air, your space, your valleys shall pass my wraith!

A pure chord, strong and resonant, shall I be in your ears:

fragrance, light and color: whispers, lyric and sigh:

constantly repeating the essence of my faith!

Land that I idolized: prime sorrow among my sorrows:

beloved Filipinas, hear me the farewell word:

I bequeath you everything - my family, my affections:

I go where no slaves are - nor butchers: nor oppressors:

where faith cannot kill: where God's the sovereign lord!

Farewell, my parents, my brothers - fragments of my soul:

friends of old and playmates in childhood's vanished house:

offer thanks that I rest from the restless day!

Farewell, sweet foreigner - my darling, my delight!

Creatures I love, farewell! To die is to repose.

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