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5-letter words containing a, b, l, e

  • -able — -able combines with verbs to form adjectives. Adjectives formed in this way describe someone or something that can have a particular thing done to them. For example, if something is avoidable, it can be avoided.
  • abele — white poplar (sense 1)
  • abled — having a range of physical powers as specified (esp in the phrases less abled, differently abled)
  • abler — having necessary power, skill, resources, or qualifications; qualified: able to lift a two-hundred-pound weight; able to write music; able to travel widely; able to vote.
  • ables — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of able.
  • ablet — a small freshwater fish, Leuciscus alburnus
  • albee — Edward. 1928–2016, US dramatist. His plays include Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1962), Seascape (1975), Marriage Play (1986), Three Tall Women (1990), and Goat (2004)
  • amble — When you amble, you walk slowly and in a relaxed manner.
  • babel — If there is a babel of voices, you hear a lot of people talking at the same time, so that you cannot understand what they are saying.
  • baels — Plural form of bael.
  • bagel — A bagel is a ring-shaped bread roll.
  • baile — (in the southwestern US and parts of Central and South America) a gathering for dancing.
  • baled — Also, bailer. a bucket, dipper, or other container used for bailing.
  • baler — an agricultural machine for making bales of hay, etc
  • bales — Also, bailer. a bucket, dipper, or other container used for bailing.
  • basel — city in NW Switzerland, on the Rhine: pop. 180,000
  • basle — a canton of NW Switzerland, divided into the demicantons of Basle-Landschaft and Basle-Stadt. Pops.: 263 200 and 186 900 (2002 est). Areas: 427 sq km (165 sq miles) and 36 sq km (14 sq miles) respectively
  • bayle — Pierre (pjɛr). 1647–1706, French philosopher and critic, noted for his Dictionnaire historique et critique (1697), which profoundly influenced Voltaire and the French Encyclopedists
  • beale — Dorothea. 1831–1906, British schoolmistress, a champion of women's education and suffrage. As principal of Cheltenham Ladies' College (1858–1906) she introduced important reforms
  • befal — (obsolete) befall.
  • belah — an Australian casuarina tree, Casuarina cristata, yielding a useful timber
  • belau — Palau
  • belay — to make fast (a line) by securing to a pin, cleat, or bitt
  • belga — a former Belgian monetary unit worth five francs
  • bella — a feminine name
  • blade — The blade of a knife, axe, or saw is the edge, which is used for cutting.
  • blaes — hardened clay or shale, esp when crushed and used to form the top layer of a sports pitch: bluish-grey or reddish in colour
  • blaeu — Willem Janszoon [vil-uh m yahn-suh n,, -sohn] /ˈvɪl əm ˈyɑn sən,, -soʊn/ (Show IPA), 1571–1638, Dutch cartographer, geographer, astronomer, and mathematician.
  • blake — Sir Peter. born 1932, British painter, a leading exponent of pop art in the 1960s: co-founder of the Brotherhood of Ruralists (1969)
  • blame — If you blame a person or thing for something bad, you believe or say that they are responsible for it or that they caused it.
  • blare — If something such as a siren or radio blares or if you blare it, it makes a loud, unpleasant noise.
  • blase — If you describe someone as blasé, you mean that they are not easily impressed, excited, or worried by things, usually because they have seen or experienced them before.
  • blate — exhibiting corpselike qualities, for example a pallid tone, insensibility, or lack of spirits
  • blaze — When a fire blazes, it burns strongly and brightly.
  • bleak — If a situation is bleak, it is bad, and seems unlikely to improve.
  • bleam — (jargon)   To transmit or send data. "Bleam that binary to me in an e-mail".
  • blear — to make (eyes or sight) dim with or as if with tears; blur
  • bleat — When a sheep or goat bleats, it makes the sound that sheep and goats typically make.
  • cable — A cable is a thick wire, or a group of wires inside a rubber or plastic covering, which is used to carry electricity or electronic signals.
  • caleb — a masculine name
  • ebola — Also called Ebola fever, Ebola hemorrhagic fever, Ebola virus disease. a usually fatal disease, a type of hemorrhagic fever, caused by the Ebola virus and marked by high fever, severe gastrointestinal distress, and bleeding.
  • fable — a short tale to teach a moral lesson, often with animals or inanimate objects as characters; apologue: the fable of the tortoise and the hare; Aesop's fables.
  • gabel — (UK, legal, obsolete) A rent, service, tribute, custom, tax, impost, or duty; an excise.
  • gable — (William) Clark, 1901–60, U.S. film actor.
  • gleba — the sporogenous tissue forming the central part of the sporophore in certain fungi, as in puffballs and stinkhorns.
  • hable — Obsolete form of habile.
  • haleb — Aleppo
  • label — a slip of paper, cloth, or other material, marked or inscribed, for attachment to something to indicate its manufacturer, nature, ownership, destination, etc.
  • leban — Coagulated sour milk diluted with water.
  • mabel — a female given name.

On this page, we collect all 5-letter words with A-B-L-E. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 5-letter word that contains in A-B-L-E to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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