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5-letter words containing e, n, a

  • saner — free from mental derangement; having a sound, healthy mind: a sane person.
  • saone — a river flowing S from NE France to the Rhone. 270 miles (435 km) long.
  • scena — an extended operatic vocal solo, usually including an aria and a recitative.
  • sedan — a city in NE France, on the Meuse River: defeat and capture of Napoleon III 1870.
  • sedna — a red planet-like object, roughly half the size of the Earth's moon, orbiting the sun but considerably beyond Pluto; discovered in 2003
  • senna — any plant, shrub, or tree belonging to the genus Cassia, of the legume family, having pinnate leaves and large clusters of flowers.
  • sensa — plural of sensum.
  • senza — without; omitting
  • sewan — wampum (def 1).
  • shane — a male given name.
  • siena — a city in Tuscany, in central Italy, S of Florence: cathedral.
  • skean — a knife or dagger formerly used in Ireland and in the Scottish Highlands.
  • slane — a spade for cutting turf
  • snake — any of numerous limbless, scaly, elongate reptiles of the suborder Serpentes, comprising venomous and nonvenomous species inhabiting tropical and temperate areas.
  • snare — one of the strings of gut or of tightly spiraled metal stretched across the skin of a snare drum.
  • sneadSamuel Jackson ("Slamming Sammy") 1912–2002, U.S. golfer.
  • sneak — to go in a stealthy or furtive manner; slink; skulk.
  • sneap — to scold or rebuke
  • soaneSir John, 1753–1837, English architect.
  • spane — a chip of wood
  • spean — to wean.
  • stane — stone.
  • stean — an earthenware vessel made of clay or stone, originally made for holding liquid
  • ta'en — taken.
  • taine — Hippolyte Adolphe [ee-paw-leet a-dawlf] /i pɔˈlit aˈdɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1828–93, French literary critic and historian.
  • taken — past participle of take.
  • taneyRoger Brooke, 1777–1864, U.S. jurist: chief justice of the U.S. 1836–64.
  • tange — Kenzo. 1913–2005, Japanese architect. His buildings include the Kurashiki city hall (1960) and St Mary's Cathedral in Tokyo (1962–64)
  • tante — aunt
  • tapen — made or composed of tape
  • tarne — (in the Iliad) Sardis.
  • teena — a female given name, form of Albertina, Bettina, or Christina.
  • tenia — taenia.
  • terna — a list of three names submitted to the pope as recommended to fill a vacant bishopric or benefice.
  • texan — a state in the S United States. 267,339 sq. mi. (692,410 sq. km). Capital: Austin. Abbreviation: Tex., TX (for use with zip code).
  • thane — Early English History. a member of any of several aristocratic classes of men ranking between earls and ordinary freemen, and granted lands by the king or by lords for military service.
  • tinea — any of several skin diseases caused by fungi; ringworm.
  • ulnae — Anatomy. the bone of the forearm on the side opposite to the thumb. Compare radius (def 7).
  • urena — any tropical plant or shrub belonging to the genus Urena, of the mallow family, having clusters of small, yellow flowers, especially U. lobata, which yields a useful bast fiber.
  • usnea — any pale-green or gray, mosslike lichen of the genus Usnea, common on rocks and trees.
  • vance — a male given name.
  • vaned — weather vane.
  • vaner — a lake in SW Sweden. 2141 sq. mi. (5545 sq. km).
  • vaxen — /vak'sn/ (From "oxen", perhaps influenced by "vixen") The plural canonically used among hackers for the DEC VAX computers. "Our installation has four PDP-10s and twenty vaxen." See boxen.
  • veena — vina.
  • vegan — a vegetarian who omits all animal products from the diet.
  • venae — a vein.
  • venal — willing to sell one's influence, especially in return for a bribe; open to bribery; mercenary: a venal judge.
  • venda — a self-governing Bantu territory of South Africa in the NE part: granted independence in 1979 by South Africa, but not recognized by any other country as an independent state. 2510 sq. mi. (6500 sq. km). Capital: Thohoyandou.
  • verna — a female given name.
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