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3-letter words containing e, y

  • -ey — -y3
  • aye — Aye means yes; used in some dialects of British English.
  • bey — (in the Ottoman Empire) a title given to senior officers, provincial governors, certain other officials or nobles, and (sometimes) Europeans
  • bye — Bye and bye-bye are informal ways of saying goodbye.
  • dey — the title given to commanders or (from 1710) governors of the Janissaries of Algiers (1671–1830)
  • dye — a coloring material or matter.
  • ely — a cathedral city in E England, in E Cambridgeshire on the River Ouse. Pop: 13 954 (2001)
  • eny — Eye dialect of any.
  • ety — Etymology.
  • eye — Each of a pair of globular organs in the head through which people and vertebrate animals see, the visible part typically appearing almond-shaped in animals with eyelids.
  • eyr — Obsolete form of air.
  • eys — Plural form of ey.
  • fey — British Dialect. doomed; fated to die.
  • fye — Alternative form of fie.
  • gey — Scot. considerably; very.
  • hey — Used to attract attention, to express surprise, interest, or annoyance, or to elicit agreement.
  • hye — Obsolete spelling of high.
  • key — a small metal instrument specially cut to fit into a lock and move its bolt.
  • kye — a private Korean-American banking club to which members pay contributions and from which they may take out loans, usually to start small businesses.
  • ley — a pewter containing about 80 percent tin and 20 percent lead.
  • lye — a highly concentrated, aqueous solution of potassium hydroxide or sodium hydroxide.
  • ney — Michel [mee-shel] /miˈʃɛl/ (Show IPA), Duke of Elchingen [el-khing-uh n] /ˈɛl xɪŋ ən/ (Show IPA), 1769–1815, French revolutionary and Napoleonic military leader: marshal of France 1805–15.
  • nyeEdgar Wilson ("Bill Nye") 1850–96, U.S. humorist.
  • pye — (in England before the Reformation) a book of ecclesiastical rules for finding the particulars of the service for the day.
  • rey — a city in N Iran, near Teheran.
  • rye — a city in SE New York, on Long Island Sound.
  • sey — a part of a beef carcass
  • sye — to strain
  • tye — (in mining) a trough used to separate valuable material from dross
  • uey — a U-turn
  • wey — an old British unit of weight of various values, especially 16 stones of 16 pounds each, or 256 pounds.
  • wye — the letter Y, or something having a similar shape.
  • yea — to the extent, amount, etc., indicated: The doll is about yay high.
  • yed — (intransitive, archaic) To speak; sing.
  • yee — (archaic, and, Geordie) you (the people being addressed).
  • yeg — Alternative form of yegg.
  • yeh — (colloquial, informal) altform yeah1; yes.
  • yel — Obsolete spelling of yell.
  • yem — (Geordie) alternative spelling of hyem.
  • yen — an aluminum coin and monetary unit of Japan, equal to 100 sen or 1000 rin. Symbol: ¥; Abbreviation: Y.
  • yeo — (Southwest England) A stream or ditch.
  • yep — Yes.
  • yer — You are, used in representing dialectal speech.
  • yes — (used to express affirmation or assent or to mark the addition of something emphasizing and amplifying a previous statement): Do you want that? Yes, I do.
  • yet — at the present time; now: Don't go yet. Are they here yet?
  • yew — any of several evergreen, coniferous trees and shrubs of the genera Taxus and Torreya, constituting the family Taxaceae, of the Old World, North America, and Japan, having needlelike or scalelike foliage and seeds enclosed in a fleshy aril.
  • yex — (archaic) Hiccup.
  • yey — Alternative spelling of yay.
  • ype — Youve Played Enough

On this page, we collect all 3-letter words with E-Y. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 3-letter word that contains in E-Y to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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