6-letter words containing n, o
- astron — astronomer
- aswoon — swooning
- at one — in a state of agreement or harmony
- athlon — (hardware) (K7) AMD's 7th generation x86 processor, released in June 1999. Athlon uses a Slot A motherboard and is not compatible with Slot 1 motherboards.
- atonal — Atonal music is music that is not written or played in any key or system of scales.
- atoned — to make amends or reparation, as for an offense or a crime, or for an offender (usually followed by for): to atone for one's sins.
- atoner — to make amends or reparation, as for an offense or a crime, or for an offender (usually followed by for): to atone for one's sins.
- atones — to make amends or reparation, as for an offense or a crime, or for an offender (usually followed by for): to atone for one's sins.
- atonia — a deficiency of usual or expected tone in the muscles
- atonic — (of a syllable, word, etc) carrying no stress; unaccented
- attone — to appease or pacify
- attorn — to acknowledge a new owner of land as one's landlord
- audion — an early type of triode.
- avalon — an island paradise in the western seas: in Arthurian legend it is where King Arthur was taken after he was mortally wounded
- avedon — Richard, 1923–2004, U.S. photographer.
- averno — a crater lake in Italy, near Naples: in ancient times regarded as an entrance to hell
- avlona — former name of Vlorë.
- awoken — Awoken is the past participle of awake.
- awrong — in a wrong way; wrongly
- axions — Plural form of axion.
- axonal — Cell Biology. the appendage of the neuron that transmits impulses away from the cell body.
- axonic — of or relating to the long, single projection of nerve cells conducting nerve impulses away from the cell's body
- azione — a term used for certain genres of musical drama of the 17th–18th century, particularly the azione teatrale (a short musical play or opera) and the azione sacra (sacred drama)
- azonal — not divided into zones
- azonic — not confined to any particular region or zone
- azorin — real name José Martínez Ruiz. 1874–1967, Spanish writer: noted for his stories of the Spanish countryside
- baboon — A baboon is a large monkey that lives in Africa.
- babson — Roger Ward, 1875–1967, U.S. statistician and businessman.
- bacons — Plural form of bacon.
- bagnio — a brothel
- balcon — Sir Michael. 1896–1977, British film producer; his films made at Ealing Studios include the comedies Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949) and The Lavender Hill Mob (1951)
- ballon — a quality of gracefulness, poise and buoyancy as found in good dancers
- bandog — a ferocious dog, whether by nature or trained as a guard dog
- bandon — (obsolete) disposal; control; licence.
- bangor — a university town in NW Wales, in Gwynedd, on the Menai Strait. Pop: 15 280 (2001)
- banjos — Plural form of banjo.
- banquo — a character in Shakespeare's Macbeth: the ghost of Banquo appears to Macbeth, who had ordered his murder
- barong — a broad-bladed cleaver-like knife used in the Philippines
- barons — a member of the lowest grade of nobility.
- barony — A barony is the rank or position of a baron.
- barron — Clarence Walker, 1855–1928, U.S. financial publisher.
- barton — a farmyard
- baryon — any of a class of elementary particles that have a mass greater than or equal to that of the proton, participate in strong interactions, and have a spin of 1⁄2. Baryons are either nucleons or hyperons. The baryon number is the number of baryons in a system minus the number of antibaryons
- basion — the midpoint on the forward border of the foramen magnum
- baston — (heraldry) Obsolete form of baton.
- batons — Plural form of baton.
- batton — Alternative form of batten.
- bauson — a badger (applied contemptuously to people).
- beacon — A beacon is a light or a fire, usually on a hill or tower, which acts as a signal or a warning.
- beamon — Robert ("Bob") born 1946, U.S. track-and-field athlete.