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8-letter words containing i, n, a, e

  • athenian — a native or inhabitant of Athens
  • atherine — any of several small fish of the genus Atherina
  • athonite — of or relating to Mount Athos.
  • atrazine — a white crystalline compound widely used as a weedkiller. Formula: C8H14N5Cl
  • atropine — a poisonous alkaloid obtained from deadly nightshade, having an inhibitory action on the autonomic nervous system. It is used medicinally in pre-anaesthetic medication, to speed a slow heart rate, and as an emergency first-aid counter to exposure to chemical warfare nerve agents. Formula: C17H23NO3
  • attained — to reach, achieve, or accomplish; gain; obtain: to attain one's goals.
  • attainer — a person who attains or achieves something
  • audience — The audience at a play, concert, film, or public meeting is the group of people watching or listening to it.
  • audients — Plural form of audient.
  • audioone — (tool, music)   Digital recording and editing software developed by BizTrack Software Development for the dance, music, and audio industries. AudioOne includes a waveform recorder that allows signal manipulation, editing, and recording.
  • auncient — Obsolete form of ancient.
  • auntlike — similar to or like an aunt
  • auramine — a yellow, crystalline solid, C 17 H 22 ClN 3 , soluble in water, alcohol, and ether, used chiefly as a dye for paper and leather.
  • aurelian — Latin name Lucius Domitius Aurelianus. ?212–275 ad, Roman emperor (270–275), who conquered Palmyra (273) and restored political unity to the Roman Empire
  • aureolin — a pigment used in painting, consisting of potassium cobaltinitrite and characterized by its brilliant yellow hue, transparency, and permanence.
  • autunite — a yellowish fluorescent radioactive mineral consisting of a hydrated calcium uranium phosphate in tetragonal crystalline form. It is found in uranium ores. Formula: Ca(UO2)2(PO4)2.10–12H2O
  • avenging — taking vengeance on someone or something for a wrong done
  • aventail — the movable front flap on a helmet
  • aventine — one of the seven hills on which Rome was built
  • averring — to assert or affirm with confidence; declare in a positive or peremptory manner.
  • aversion — If you have an aversion to someone or something, you dislike them very much.
  • averting — Present participle of avert.
  • avianize — to modify microorganisms by repeated culturing in chicken embryos
  • avicenna — Arabic name ibn-Sina. 980–1037, Arab philosopher and physician whose philosophical writings, which combined Aristotelianism with neo-Platonist ideas, greatly influenced scholasticism, and whose medical work Qanun was the greatest single influence on medieval medicine
  • avidness — a desire to advance; eagerness
  • awninged — sheltered by or covered with an awning
  • axle-pin — a pin that holds an axle in place
  • backline — (in some team sports) the defensive players considered as a unit
  • bacterin — a vaccine prepared from bacteria
  • baculine — relating to flogging with a rod
  • badigeon — a composition for patching surface defects in carpentry or masonry.
  • badinage — Badinage is humorous or light-hearted conversation that often involves teasing someone.
  • bailment — a contractual delivery of goods in trust to a person for a specific purpose
  • bailsmen — Plural form of bailsman.
  • baladine — a theatrical dancer or stage buffoon
  • balinese — of or relating to Bali, its people, or their language
  • balkline — a line at one end of a table from behind which opening shots with the cue ball are made
  • banalise — to render or make banal; trivialize: Television has often been accused of banalizing even the most serious subjects.
  • banalize — to make banal
  • bandeira — an expedition in search of gold or slaves
  • bandfile — to file with a file band on a band mill or band saw.
  • banished — Simple past tense and past participle of banish.
  • banisher — someone who or something which banishes
  • banishes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of banish.
  • banister — A banister is a rail supported by posts and fixed along the side of a staircase. The plural banisters can be used to refer to one of these rails.
  • bankside — the sloping side of any bank
  • banlieue — a suburb of a city
  • banville — Théodore de (teɔdɔr də). 1823–91, French poet, who anticipated the Parnassian school in his perfection of form and command of rhythm
  • bar line — the vertical line marking the boundary between one bar and the next
  • baregine — a whitish, mucilaginous substance found in the thermal waters of Barèges in France, considered to have healing properties
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