5-letter words containing p, e
- piked — a shafted weapon having a pointed head, formerly used by infantry.
- piker — a person who does anything in a contemptibly small or cheap way.
- pikey — a gypsy or vagrant
- pilea — any of numerous plants belonging to the genus Pilea, of the nettle family, many species of which are cultivated for their ornamental foliage.
- piled — having a pile, as velvet and other fabrics.
- piler — someone who makes a pile or places things on a pile
- piles — a hemorrhoid.
- pined — to yearn deeply; suffer with longing; long painfully (often followed by for): to pine for one's home and family.
- pinel — Phillippe [fee-leep] /fiˈlip/ (Show IPA), 1745–1826, French physician: reformer in the treatment and care of the mentally ill.
- pines — Archaic. painful longing.
- piney — abounding in or covered with pine trees: piny hillsides.
- piped — a hollow cylinder of metal, wood, or other material, used for the conveyance of water, gas, steam, petroleum, etc.
- piper — a person who plays on a pipe.
- pipes — a large cask, of varying capacity, especially for wine or oil.
- pipet — pipette.
- pique — a fabric of cotton, spun rayon, or silk, woven lengthwise with raised cords.
- piste — a track or trail, as a downhill ski run or a spoor made by a wild animal.
- piute — Paiute.
- pixel — picture element
- pixes — Ecclesiastical. the box or vessel in which the reserved Eucharist or Host is kept. a watch-shaped container for carrying the Eucharist to the sick.
- pixie — a fairy or sprite, especially a mischievous one.
- pjpeg — Progressive JPEG
- place — a particular portion of space, whether of definite or indefinite extent.
- plage — a sandy bathing beach at a seashore resort.
- plane — plane tree.
- plate — the base at which the batter stands and which a base runner must reach safely in order to score a run, typically a five-sided slab of whitened rubber set at ground level at the front corner of the diamond.
- plead — to appeal or entreat earnestly: to plead for time.
- pleas — an appeal or entreaty: a plea for mercy.
- pleat — a fold of definite, even width made by doubling cloth or the like upon itself and pressing or stitching it in place.
- plebe — Also, pleb. (at the U.S. Military and Naval academies) a member of the freshman class.
- plebs — a member of the plebs; a plebeian or commoner.
- plena — the state or a space in which a gas, usually air, is contained at a pressure greater than atmospheric pressure.
- pleo- — more
- pleon — the abdomen of a crustacean.
- plied — British Dialect. to bend, fold, or mold.
- plier — pliers, (sometimes used with a singular verb) small pincers with long jaws, for bending wire, holding small objects, etc. (usually used with pair of).
- plies — a movement in which the knees are bent while the back is held straight.
- ploce — the repetition of a word or phrase to gain special emphasis or to indicate an extension of meaning, as in Ex. 3:14: “I am that I am.”.
- plume — a feather.
- plyer — pliers, (sometimes used with a singular verb) small pincers with long jaws, for bending wire, holding small objects, etc. (usually used with pair of).
- plzen — a city in Bohemia, in the W Czech Republic.
- po'ed — very angry.
- poake — a waste matter from the tanning of hides
- poche — the walls, columns, and other solids of a building or the like, as indicated on an architectural plan, usually in black.
- podex — the posterior of an animal
- podge — a short chubby person
- poesy — the work or the art of poetic composition.
- pogey — Slang.. Also, pogy. a package of food, candy, or other treats sent to a child at boarding school, a person in an institution, etc. candy or a treat.
- pogge — a poacher, Agonus cataphractus, common near the British Isles and ranging north to Greenland and Iceland.
- poise — a centimeter-gram-second unit of viscosity, equal to the viscosity of a fluid in which a stress of one dyne per square centimeter is required to maintain a difference of velocity of one centimeter per second between two parallel planes in the fluid that lie in the direction of flow and are separated by a distance of one centimeter. Symbol: P.