6-letter words containing n, e, s
- infers — Deduce or conclude (information) from evidence and reasoning rather than from explicit statements.
- infest — to live in or overrun to an unwanted degree or in a troublesome manner, especially as predatory animals or vermin do: Sharks infested the coastline.
- infuse — to introduce, as if by pouring; cause to penetrate; instill (usually followed by into): The energetic new principal infused new life into the school.
- ingest — to take, as food, into the body (opposed to egest).
- ingres — Jean Auguste Dominique [zhahn oh-gyst daw-mee-neek] /ʒɑ̃ oʊˈgüst dɔ miˈnik/ (Show IPA), 1780–1867, French painter.
- inkers — Plural form of inker.
- inkles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of inkle.
- inlets — Plural form of inlet.
- inmesh — enmesh.
- inners — Plural form of inner.
- inness — the state or quality of being fashionable: the in-ness of his new wardrobe.
- insane — not sane; not of sound mind; mentally deranged.
- inseam — an inside or inner seam of a garment, especially the seam of a trouser leg that runs from the crotch down to the bottom of the leg.
- insect — any animal of the class Insecta, comprising small, air-breathing arthropods having the body divided into three parts (head, thorax, and abdomen), and having three pairs of legs and usually two pairs of wings.
- inseem — to cover with grease
- insert — to put or place in: to insert a key in a lock.
- insets — something inserted; insert.
- inside — on the inner side or part of; within: inside the circle; inside the envelope.
- insole — the inner sole of a shoe or boot.
- instep — the arched upper surface of the human foot between the toes and the ankle.
- insure — to guarantee against loss or harm.
- intens — intensive
- inters — to place (a dead body) in a grave or tomb; bury.
- intuse — a contusion or bruise
- inures — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of inure.
- invest — to put (money) to use, by purchase or expenditure, in something offering potential profitable returns, as interest, income, or appreciation in value.
- ionise — to separate or change into ions.
- ismene — a daughter of Oedipus and Jocasta who did not join Antigone in her forbidden burial of their brother Polynices.
- itunes — a computer application enabling users to download music from the internet, create and order playlists, etc
- jane's — a female given name: derived from John.
- jansen — Cornelis Otto [kawr-ney-lis ot-oh] /kɔrˈneɪ lɪs ˈɒt oʊ/ (Show IPA), (Cornelius Jansenius) 1585–1638, Dutch Roman Catholic theologian.
- jensen — J. Hans D [hahns] /hɑns/ (Show IPA), 1907–73, German physicist: Nobel Prize 1963.
- jevons — William Stanley, 1835–82, English economist and logician.
- jinxes — Plural form of jinx.
- kasten — Plural form of kast.
- kearns — a town in N Utah, near Salt Lake City.
- kelson — keelson.
- kensho — (sumo) prize money given to encourage rikishi by sponsors.
- kernos — a Mycenaean ceramic piece, usually in the form of a ring, to which were attached a number of cups or vases.
- keynes — John Maynard, 1st Baron, 1883–1946, English economist and writer.
- kinase — a transferase that catalyzes the phosphorylation of a substrate by ATP.
- kindes — Plural form of kinde.
- kinsey — Alfred Charles, 1894–1956, U.S. zoologist; directed studies of human sexual behavior.
- knaves — an unprincipled, untrustworthy, or dishonest person.
- kneads — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of knead.
- kneels — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of kneel.
- knells — Plural form of knell.
- knifes — an instrument for cutting, consisting essentially of a thin, sharp-edged, metal blade fitted with a handle.
- knives — plural of knife.
- knowes — knoll1 .