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6-letter words containing e, n, d

  • cinder — a piece of incombustible material left after the combustion of coal, coke, etc; clinker
  • cloned — Simple past tense and past participle of clone.
  • cnidae — a nematocyst.
  • cobden — Richard. 1804–65, British economist and statesman: with John Bright a leader of the successful campaign to abolish the Corn Laws (1846)
  • coined — a piece of metal stamped and issued by the authority of a government for use as money.
  • coldenCadwallader, 1688–1776, Scottish physician, botanist, and public official in America, born in Ireland.
  • conder — a person who directs the steering of a ship
  • condie — a culvert or tunnel
  • conked — a method of chemically straightening the hair.
  • conned — to strike, hit, or rap (something or someone).
  • cooned — Simple past tense and past participle of coon.
  • corned — (esp of beef) cooked and then preserved or pickled in salt or brine, now often canned
  • craned — any large wading bird of the family Gruidae, characterized by long legs, bill, and neck and an elevated hind toe.
  • cruden — Alexander. 1701–70, Scottish bookseller and compiler of a well-known biblical concordance (1737)
  • cudden — a coalfish
  • daemon — a demigod
  • daimen — occasional; odd
  • dairen — former Japanese name of Dalian (def 2).
  • damien — Joseph (ʒozɛf), known as Father Damien. 1840–89, Belgian Roman Catholic missionary to the leper colony at Molokai, Hawaii
  • damned — Damned is used by some people to emphasize what they are saying, especially when they are angry or frustrated.
  • damner — a person who damns
  • dampen — To dampen something such as someone's enthusiasm or excitement means to make it less lively or intense.
  • danced — Simple past tense and past participle of dance.
  • dancer — A dancer is a person who earns money by dancing, or a person who is dancing.
  • dances — Plural form of dance.
  • dancey — of, relating to, or resembling dance music
  • dander — small particles or scales of hair or feathers
  • dandle — to move (a young child, etc) up and down (on the knee or in the arms)
  • danged — damn (used euphemistically).
  • danger — Danger is the possibility that someone may be harmed or killed.
  • dangle — If something dangles from somewhere or if you dangle it somewhere, it hangs or swings loosely.
  • daniel — a youth who was taken into the household of Nebuchadnezzar, received guidance and apocalyptic visions from God, and was given divine protection when thrown into the lions' den
  • danite — of the Hebrew tribe of Dan
  • danker — Comparative form of dank.
  • danube — a river in central and SE Europe, rising in the Black Forest in Germany and flowing to the Black Sea. Length: 2859 km (1776 miles)
  • daphne — any shrub of the Eurasian thymelaeaceous genus Daphne, such as the mezereon and spurge laurel: ornamentals with shiny evergreen leaves and clusters of small bell-shaped flowers
  • darien — the E part of the Isthmus of Panama, between the Gulf of Darien on the Caribbean coast and the Gulf of San Miguel on the Pacific coast; chiefly within the republic of Panama but extending also into Colombia: site of a disastrous attempt to establish a Scottish colony in 1698
  • darken — If something darkens or if a person or thing darkens it, it becomes darker.
  • darned — (intensifier)
  • darnel — any of several grasses of the genus Lolium, esp L. temulentum, that grow as weeds in grain fields in Europe and Asia
  • darner — a person or thing that darns.
  • darren — a male given name.
  • dasein — (philosophy) Being; especially the nature of being; existence, presence, hereness, suchness, essence.
  • dauner — an amble or walk
  • dawned — the first appearance of daylight in the morning: Dawn broke over the valley.
  • dawney — (of a person) dull or slow; listless
  • de manPaul, 1919–83, U.S. literary critic and theorist, born in Belgium.
  • de-man — to reduce the workforce of (a plant, industry, etc)
  • deacon — A deacon is a member of the clergy, for example in the Church of England, who is lower in rank than a priest.
  • deaden — If something deadens a feeling or a sound, it makes it less strong or loud.
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