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9-letter words containing p, e, n

  • impellent — impelling: an impellent power; an impellent cause.
  • impelling — to drive or urge forward; press on; incite or constrain to action.
  • impendent — impending.
  • impending — about to happen; imminent: their impending marriage.
  • impennate — (zoology) Characterized by short wings covered with feathers resembling scales, as in the penguins.
  • impingent — to make an impression; have an effect or impact (usually followed by on or upon): to impinge upon the imagination; social pressures that impinge upon one's daily life.
  • implanted — Simple past tense and past participle of implant.
  • implanter — Someone or something that implants.
  • implement — any article used in some activity, especially an instrument, tool, or utensil: agricultural implements.
  • impletion — An act of filling; the state of being full.
  • implexion — a complication or entanglement
  • importune — to press or beset with solicitations; demand with urgency or persistence.
  • impose on — to lay on or set as something to be borne, endured, obeyed, fulfilled, paid, etc.: to impose taxes.
  • impotence — the condition or quality of being impotent; weakness.
  • impotency — the condition or quality of being impotent; weakness.
  • impounded — Simple past tense and past participle of impound.
  • impounder — One who impounds.
  • imprinted — Simple past tense and past participle of imprint.
  • imprinter — a person or thing that imprints.
  • imprudent — not prudent; lacking discretion; incautious; rash.
  • impsonite — a black variety of asphaltite with a jagged fracture.
  • impudence — the quality or state of being impudent; effrontery; insolence.
  • impudency — (now rare) Impudence.
  • in a heap — If someone collapses in a heap, they fall heavily and untidily and do not move.
  • in person — a human being, whether an adult or child: The table seats four persons.
  • in places — If something has particular characteristics or features in places, it has them at several points within an area.
  • in plenty — If there are things in plenty, those things exist or happen in large amounts or numbers.
  • in pocket — a shaped piece of fabric attached inside or outside a garment and forming a pouch used especially for carrying small articles.
  • in spades — a tool for digging, having an iron blade adapted for pressing into the ground with the foot and a long handle commonly with a grip or crosspiece at the top, and with the blade usually narrower and flatter than that of a shovel.
  • in specie — coined money; coin.
  • in-person — a human being, whether an adult or child: The table seats four persons.
  • inaptness — Quality of being inapt.
  • incapable — not capable.
  • incepting — to take in; ingest.
  • inception — beginning; start; commencement.
  • inceptive — beginning; initial.
  • incipient — beginning to exist or appear; in an initial stage: an incipient cold.
  • incomplex — Not complex; simple.
  • inculpate — to charge with fault; blame; accuse.
  • indalpine — A selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor marketed in 1983 as an antidepressant but swiftly withdrawn when found to cause neutropenia.
  • indepthly — (nonstandard) in depth.
  • indispose — to make ill, especially slightly.
  • ineptness — without skill or aptitude for a particular task or assignment; maladroit: He is inept at mechanical tasks. She is inept at dealing with people.
  • innkeeper — a person who owns or manages an inn or, sometimes, a hotel.
  • inoperant — Not operant.
  • inopinate — unexpected
  • inpatient — a patient who stays in a hospital while receiving medical care or treatment.
  • inpayment — a sum of money paid into a bank account
  • insipient — lack of wisdom; foolishness.
  • inspanned — Simple past tense and past participle of inspan.
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