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6-letter words containing i, n, e, l

  • enlink — to link or connect closely
  • enlist — Enroll or be enrolled in the armed services.
  • enlive — (archaic) To enliven.
  • ensile — Put (grass or another crop) into a silo in order to preserve it as silage.
  • entail — A settlement of the inheritance of property over a number of generations so that it remains within a family or other group.
  • entoil — to trap in toils or snares; ensnare
  • eolian — Alternative spelling of aeolian.
  • feline — belonging or pertaining to the cat family, Felidae.
  • fileneEdward Albert, 1860–1937, U.S. retail merchant.
  • finale — the last piece, division, or movement of a concert, opera, or composition.
  • finely — in a fine manner; excellently; elegantly; delicately; minutely; nicely; subtly.
  • finlet — a small, detached ray of a fin in certain fishes, as mackerels.
  • finley — a male given name.
  • genial — of or relating to the chin.
  • gentil — gentle
  • gilden — (obsolete) Golden; made of gold.
  • gingle — Obsolete form of jingle.
  • ginnel — (British, especially Yorkshire and Lancashire) A narrow passageway or alley often between terraced houses.
  • girnel — a large chest for storing meal
  • heling — Present participle of hele.
  • helion — (physics) The nucleus of a helium-3 atom.
  • inable — (obsolete, now nonstandard) Unable, not able.
  • indole — a colorless to yellowish solid, C 8 H 7 N, having a low melting point and a fecal odor, found in the oil of jasmine and clove and as a putrefaction product from animals' intestines: used in perfumery and as a reagent.
  • infelt — heartfelt; felt inwardly
  • inflex — To bend; to cause to become curved; to make crooked; to deflect.
  • inhale — to breathe in; draw in by breathing: to inhale the polluted air.
  • inheld — Simple past tense and past participle of inhold.
  • inkles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of inkle.
  • inlace — enlace.
  • inlead — (transitive, mechanical, and, electrical) To lead into; conduct.
  • inlets — Plural form of inlet.
  • inlier — an outcrop of a formation completely surrounded by rocks of younger age.
  • inline — an ornamented type with a line of white or of a contrasting color running just inside the edge and following the contour of each letter.
  • insole — the inner sole of a shoe or boot.
  • inveil — (transitive) To cover with a veil.
  • invile — (obsolete, transitive) To render vile.
  • inwale — (in an open boat) a horizontal timber binding together the frames along the top strake.
  • jingle — to make clinking or tinkling sounds, as do coins, keys, or other light, resonant metal objects when coming into contact or being struck together repeatedly: The keys on his belt jingled as he walked.
  • k-line — one of a series of lines (K-series) in the x-ray spectrum of an atom corresponding to radiation (K-radiation) produced by the transition of an electron to the K-shell.
  • kelvinWilliam Thomson, 1st Baron, 1824–1907, English physicist and mathematician.
  • kilned — Simple past tense and past participle of kiln.
  • kindle — (of animals, especially rabbits) to bear (young); produce (offspring).
  • kingle — a type of hard sandstone
  • kinkle — a little kink.
  • l-line — one of a series of lines (L-series) in the x-ray spectrum of an atom corresponding to radiation (L-radiation) caused by the transition of an electron to the L-shell.
  • lanierSidney, 1842–81, U.S. poet and literary scholar.
  • larine — characteristic of or resembling a gull.
  • lectin — any of a group of proteins that bind to particular carbohydrates in the manner of an antibody and are commonly extracted from plants for use as an agglutinin, as in clumping red blood cells for blood typing.
  • leggin — a covering for the leg, usually extending from the ankle to the knee but sometimes higher, worn by soldiers, riders, workers, etc. Compare chaps, gaiter, puttee.
  • leging — Present participle of lege.
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