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6-letter words containing e, n, o

  • plonge — to clean (drains) by action of the tide
  • pointe — the tip of the toe.
  • poleyn — a piece for the knee, made of plate or leather.
  • pollen — the fertilizing element of flowering plants, consisting of fine, powdery, yellowish grains or spores, sometimes in masses.
  • ponape — an island in the W Pacific: part of the Federated States of Micronesia. 134 sq. mi. (347 sq. km).
  • poncey — If you say that someone or something is poncey, you mean you do not like them because they are too feminine or artistic.
  • ponded — a body of water smaller than a lake, sometimes artificially formed, as by damming a stream.
  • ponder — to consider something deeply and thoroughly; meditate (often followed by over or upon).
  • ponent — the west
  • pongee — silk of a slightly uneven weave made from filaments of wild silk woven in natural tan color.
  • poonce — a male homosexual
  • posnet — a small pot with a handle and three feet
  • poteen — the first distillation of a fermented mash in the making of whiskey.
  • potent — (of a cross) having a crosspiece at the extremity of each arm: a cross potent.
  • pounce — to swoop down suddenly and grasp, as a bird does in seizing its prey.
  • procne — a princess of Athens, who punished her husband for raping her sister Philomela by feeding him the flesh of their son. She was changed at her death into a swallow
  • proner — having a natural inclination or tendency to something; disposed; liable: to be prone to anger.
  • prones — a sermon or a brief hortatory introduction to a sermon, usually delivered at a service at which the Eucharist is celebrated.
  • pronet — (language)  
  • proven — to establish the truth or genuineness of, as by evidence or argument: to prove one's claim.
  • pteron — (in a classical temple) a colonnade parallel to, but apart from, the cella.
  • pyrone — either of two heterocyclic ketones having the formula C 5 H 4 O 2 .
  • quezon — Maˈnuel Luˈis (mɑnˈwɛl luˈis ) ; mänwelˈ lo̅oēsˈ) 1878-1944; Philippine statesman: 1st president of the Philippines (1935-44)
  • reason — a basis or cause, as for some belief, action, fact, event, etc.: the reason for declaring war.
  • reborn — having undergone rebirth.
  • reckon — to count, compute, or calculate, as in number or amount.
  • recoin — a piece of metal stamped and issued by the authority of a government for use as money.
  • redone — to do again; repeat.
  • region — an extensive, continuous part of a surface, space, or body: a region of the earth.
  • rejoin — to say in answer; reply, especially to counterreply.
  • reknot — to knot again
  • reloan — a further loan of the same money, a renewed loan
  • renoirJean [zhahn] /ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1894–1979, French film director and writer.
  • renown — widespread and high repute; fame.
  • renton — a city in W Washington, near Seattle.
  • renvoi — the expulsion by a government of an alien, especially a foreign diplomat, from the country.
  • reopen — shop: open again
  • repone — to restore (someone) to his or her former status, office, etc; rehabilitate
  • repton — Humphry. 1752–1818, English landscape gardener
  • reston — James (Barrett) ("Scotty") 1909–1995, U.S. journalist, born in Scotland.
  • retcon — a subsequent revision of an established story in film, TV, video games, or comics: In an awkward retcon of his origin story, the hero’s parents survived the attack but suffered complete memory loss.
  • rezone — to reclassify (a property, neighborhood, etc.) as belonging to a different zone or being subject to different zoning restrictions.
  • rockne — Knute (Kenneth) [noot] /nut/ (Show IPA), 1888–1931, U.S. football coach, born in Norway.
  • rodent — belonging or pertaining to the gnawing or nibbling mammals of the order Rodentia, including the mice, squirrels, beavers, etc.
  • rodney — George Brydges [brij-iz] /ˈbrɪdʒ ɪz/ (Show IPA), Baron, 1718–92, British admiral.
  • romneyGeorge, 1734–1802, English painter.
  • rondel — Prosody. a short poem of fixed form, consisting usually of 14 lines on two rhymes, of which four are made up of the initial couplet repeated in the middle and at the end, with the second line of the couplet sometimes being omitted at the end.
  • ronnel — a type of pesticide
  • ronnie — a male or female given name, form of Ronald or Veronica.
  • rooney — Wayne (Mark). born 1985, English footballer; he played for Everton (2002–2004) and Manchester United (from 2004); England's record goalscorer
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