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5-letter words containing a, l, n

  • blank — Something that is blank has nothing on it.
  • canal — A canal is a long, narrow stretch of water that has been made for boats to travel along or to bring water to a particular area.
  • celan — Paul, real name Paul Antschel. 1920–70, Romanian Jewish poet, writing in German, whose work reflects the experience of Nazi persecution
  • clane — Eye dialect of clean.
  • clang — When a large metal object clangs, it makes a loud noise.
  • clank — When large metal objects clank, they make a noise because they are hitting together or hitting against something hard.
  • clans — Plural form of clan.
  • clean — Something that is clean is free from dirt or unwanted marks.
  • conal — Shaped like a cone or funnel; conic.
  • dalan — (in Persian and Indian architecture) a veranda or open hall for reception of visitors.
  • dalen — Nils Gustaf. 1869–1937, Swedish engineer, inventor of an automatic light-controlled valve known as 'Solventil'. Nobel prize for physics 1912
  • dalny — former Russian name of Dalian (def 2).
  • dylan — DYnamic LANguage
  • eland — A spiral-horned African antelope that lives in open woodland and grassland. It is the largest of the antelopes.
  • elman — ˈMischa (ˈmɪʃə ) ; mishˈə) 1891-1967; U.S. violinist, born in Russia
  • elsan — a type of portable lavatory in which chemicals are used to kill bacteria and deodorize the sludge
  • elvan — Pertaining to elves; elvish; elven.
  • enlay — Archaic form of inlay.
  • falun — a city in central Sweden: iron and pyrites mines. Pop: 55 009 (2004 est)
  • fanal — A lighthouse, or the apparatus placed in it for giving light.
  • final — pertaining to or coming at the end; last in place, order, or time: the final meeting of the year.
  • flane — to walk idly; saunter
  • flank — the side of an animal or a person between the ribs and hip.
  • flans — Plural form of flan.
  • flawn — Obsolete form of flan.
  • galen — Latin Galenus [guh-lee-nuh s] /gəˈli nəs/ (Show IPA). Claudius, a.d. c130–c200, Greek physician and writer on medicine.
  • genal — the cheek or side region of the head.
  • gland — a sleeve within a stuffing box, fitted over a shaft or valve stem and tightened against compressible packing in such a way as to prevent leakage of fluid while allowing the shaft or stem to move; lantern ring.
  • glans — the head of the penis (glans penis) or of the clitoris (glans clitoris)
  • glean — to gather slowly and laboriously, bit by bit.
  • gnarl — a knotty protuberance on a tree; knot.
  • halon — Any of a number of unreactive gaseous compounds of carbon with bromine and other halogens, used in fire extinguishers, but now known to damage the ozone layer.
  • ianal — (chat)   I Am Not A Lawyer (but my legal opinion is...).
  • iland — Obsolete form of island.
  • inlaw — to restore (an outlaw) to the benefits and protection of the law.
  • inlay — to decorate (an object) with layers of fine materials set in its surface: to inlay a chest with lighter wood.
  • inula — Any of several plants of the genus Inula, such as elecampane.
  • kalan — (archaic) The sea otter.
  • kalon — Ideal perfect beauty in the physical and moral sense, especially as perceived by Greek philosophers.
  • klang — a tone composed of several notes sounding together
  • kulan — the Asiatic wild ass of the Russian steppes, probably a variety of kiang or onager
  • laban — the father of Leah and Rachel and the father-in-law of Jacob. Gen. 24:29; 29:16–30.
  • lacanJacques, 1901–81, French philosopher and psychoanalyst.
  • laden — burdened; loaded down.
  • ladin — a Rhaeto-Romanic dialect of the southern Tyrol.
  • ladon — a dragon having 100 heads and guarding the garden of the Hesperides: killed by Hercules.
  • lagan — anything sunk in the sea, but attached to a buoy or the like so that it may be recovered.
  • lagen — Usually, laggins. the staves at the bottom of a barrel, cask, or other hooped vessel.
  • laine — (Sussex) an area of arable land at the foot of a hill.
  • laing — R(onald) D(avid) 1927–1989, British psychiatrist and author, born in Scotland.
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