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5-letter words containing i, c, e

  • -cide — indicating a person or thing that kills
  • aecia — the fruiting body of rust fungi, which bears chainlike or stalked spores.
  • alice — a feminine name: dim. Elsie; var. Alicia
  • amice — a rectangular piece of white linen worn by priests around the neck and shoulders under the alb or, formerly, on the head
  • areic — relating to division by area
  • bicep — a biceps muscle, especially the one at the front of the upper arm.
  • bices — either of two colors, bice blue or bice green.
  • brice — Fanny, real name Fannie Borach. 1891–1951, US actress and singer. The film Funny Girl was based on her life
  • cadie — a person in a large town or city in the 18th century who was on the lookout for chance employment, for example, as a messenger
  • caine — Sir Michael. real name Maurice Micklewhite. born 1933, British film actor. His films include The Ipcress File (1965), Get Carter (1971), Educating Rita (1983), Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), and The Cider House Rules (1999)
  • caise — Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering.
  • carie — a female given name, form of Caroline.
  • cavie — a hen coop
  • cebid — any member of the Cebidae, a family of New World monkeys
  • cecil — Lord David. 1902–86, English literary critic and biographer
  • ceiba — any bombacaceous tropical tree of the genus Ceiba, such as the silk-cotton tree
  • ceili — A social event with traditional Irish or Scottish music and dancing.
  • ceils — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ceil.
  • celia — a feminine name
  • celip — (language)   A cellular language for image processing.
  • celli — (rare) Plural form of cello.
  • cenci — a verse tragedy (1819) by Shelley.
  • cenis — Montmountain pass between France and Italy in the Graian Alps: 6,830 ft (2,082 m) high
  • cerci — one of a pair of appendages at the rear of the abdomen of certain insects and other arthropods, serving as tactile organs.
  • ceria — cerium dioxide, CeO2, a white compound used as in ceramics
  • ceric — of or containing cerium in the tetravalent state
  • cesti — Marcantonio [mahr-kahn-taw-nyaw] /ˌmɑr kɑnˈtɔ nyɔ/ (Show IPA), 1623–69, Italian composer.
  • cetin — a white, crystalline, water-insoluble fat, C 32 H 64 O 2 , obtained from spermaceti by extraction with ether: used chiefly as an emulsive agent in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals and cosmetics and as a base in the manufacture of candles and soaps.
  • chedi — A Thai Buddhist monument similar to a stupa.
  • cheri — a female given name.
  • chide — If you chide someone, you speak to them angrily because they have done something wicked or foolish.
  • chief — The chief of an organization is the person who is in charge of it.
  • chiel — a young man; lad
  • chile — a republic in South America, on the Pacific, with a total length of about 4090 km (2650 miles) and an average width of only 177 km (110 miles): gained independence from Spain in 1818; the government of President Allende (elected 1970) attempted the implementation of Marxist policies within a democratic system until overthrown by a military coup (1973); democracy restored 1988. Chile consists chiefly of the Andes in the east, the Atacama Desert in the north, a central fertile region, and a huge S region of almost uninhabitable mountains, glaciers, fjords, and islands; an important producer of copper, iron ore, nitrates, etc. Language: Spanish. Religion: Roman Catholic majority. Currency: peso. Capital: Santiago. Pop: 17 216 945 (2013 est). Area: 756 945 sq km (292 256 sq miles)
  • chime — When a bell or a clock chimes, it makes ringing sounds.
  • chine — the backbone
  • chive — a small Eurasian purple-flowered alliaceous plant, Allium schoenoprasum, whose long slender hollow leaves are used in cooking to flavour soups, stews, etc
  • cider — Cider is a drink made from apples which in Britain usually contains alcohol. In the United States, cider does not usually contain alcohol, and if it does contain alcohol, it is usually called hard cider.
  • cimex — any of the heteropterous insects of the genus Cimex, esp the bedbug
  • cine- — indicating motion picture or cinema
  • circe — an enchantress who detained Odysseus on her island and turned his men into swine
  • cited — to quote (a passage, book, author, etc.), especially as an authority: He cited the Constitution in his defense.
  • citer — to quote (a passage, book, author, etc.), especially as an authority: He cited the Constitution in his defense.
  • cites — Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species
  • citie — Archaic spelling of city.
  • civet — any catlike viverrine mammal of the genus Viverra and related genera, of Africa and S Asia, typically having blotched or spotted fur and secreting a powerfully smelling fluid from anal glands
  • clime — You use clime in expressions such as warmer climes and foreign climes to refer to a place that has a particular kind of climate.
  • cline — a continuous variation in form between members of a species having a wide variable geographical or ecological range
  • clite — Classical Mythology. the wife of Cyzicus, who hanged herself when her husband was mistakenly killed by the Argonauts.
  • clive — Robert, Baron Clive of Plassey. 1725–74, British general and statesman, whose victory at Plassey (1757) strengthened British control in India

On this page, we collect all 5-letter words with I-C-E. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 5-letter word that contains in I-C-E to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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