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6-letter words containing p, e, n

  • picine — of or relating to woodpeckers or the Piciformes
  • piecen — to join (broken threads) together
  • piegan — a member of a subtribe of the Blackfoot Indians
  • pieing — to reduce (printing types) to a state of confusion.
  • pieman — a seller of pies
  • pigeon — (not in technical use) pidgin; pidgin English.
  • pigpen — a pen for keeping pigs.
  • pilsen — German name of Plzeň.
  • piment — wine flavoured with spices and honey
  • pincer — insect, crab: claws
  • pinder — peanut.
  • pineal — resembling a pine cone in shape.
  • pinene — a liquid terpene, C 1 0 H 1 6 , the principal constituent of oil of turpentine, found in other essential oils: used chiefly in the manufacture of camphor.
  • pineroSir Arthur Wing, 1855–1934, English playwright and actor.
  • pinery — a place in which pineapples are grown.
  • pinged — to produce a sharp sound like that of a bullet striking a sheet of metal.
  • pinger — a device that makes a pinging sound, esp one that can be preset to ring at a particular time
  • pingle — to pick at or fiddle with (one's food)
  • pinite — a micaceous mineral, similar in composition to muscovite, formed by chemical alteration of various other minerals.
  • pinked — to pierce with a rapier or the like; stab.
  • pinken — to grow or turn pink.
  • pinker — a color varying from light crimson to pale reddish purple.
  • pinkey — a ship with a narrow overhanging stern
  • pinkie — inferior or cheap wine, especially red wine.
  • pinnae — Botany. one of the primary divisions of a pinnate leaf.
  • pinned — a small, slender, often pointed piece of wood, metal, etc., used to fasten, support, or attach things.
  • pinner — a person or thing that pins.
  • pinnet — a pinnacle
  • pinole — a town in W California.
  • pinterHarold, 1930–2008, English playwright.
  • pintle — a pin or bolt, especially one on which something turns, as the gudgeon of a hinge.
  • pioned — abounding in wild flowers
  • pirnie — a stripy woollen nightcap
  • pitten — placed; put
  • planed — Carpentry. any of various woodworking instruments for paring, truing, or smoothing, or for forming moldings, chamfers, rabbets, grooves, etc., by means of an inclined, adjustable blade moved along and against the piece being worked.
  • planer — Carpentry. a power machine for removing the rough or excess surface from a board.
  • planet — Astronomy. Also called major planet. any of the eight large heavenly bodies revolving about the sun and shining by reflected light: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, or Neptune, in the order of their proximity to the sun. Until 2006, Pluto was classified as a planet ninth in order from the sun; it has been reclassified as a dwarf planet. a similar body revolving about a star other than the sun. (formerly) a celestial body moving in the sky, as distinguished from a fixed star, applied also to the sun and moon.
  • planteJacques [zhahk] /ʒɑk/ (Show IPA), 1929–86, Canadian ice-hockey player.
  • platen — a flat plate in a printing press for pressing the paper against the inked type or plate to produce an impression.
  • plauen — a city in E Germany.
  • plench — a tool combining pliers and wrench: used especially by astronauts.
  • plenty — a full or abundant supply or amount: There is plenty of time.
  • plenum — the state or a space in which a gas, usually air, is contained at a pressure greater than atmospheric pressure.
  • pleven — a city in N Bulgaria: siege of 143 days 1877.
  • plonge — to clean (drains) by action of the tide
  • plunge — to cast or thrust forcibly or suddenly into something, as a liquid, a penetrable substance, a place, etc.; immerse; submerge: to plunge a dagger into one's heart.
  • pneum- — pneumo-
  • pneuma — the vital spirit; the soul.
  • pointe — the tip of the toe.
  • poleyn — a piece for the knee, made of plate or leather.
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