6-letter words containing y, n
- smyrna — former name of Izmir.
- snaggy — having snags or sharp projections, as a tree.
- snaily — resembling a snail
- snappy — Snappy Video Snapshot
- snarky — testy or irritable; short.
- snarly — full of knotty snarls; tangled.
- snazzy — extremely attractive or stylish; flashy; fancy: a snazzy dresser.
- sneaky — like or suggestive of a sneak; furtive; deceitful.
- sneery — contemptuous or scornful; inclined to be dismissive
- sneezy — to emit air or breath suddenly, forcibly, and audibly through the nose and mouth by involuntary, spasmodic action.
- snelly — in a sharp or snell manner
- sniffy — inclined to sniff, as in scorn; disdainful; supercilious: He was very sniffy about breaches of etiquette.
- snifty — having a pleasant smell
- snippy — sharp or curt, especially in a supercilious or haughty way; impertinent.
- snobby — condescending, patronizing, or socially exclusive; snobbish.
- snoopy — characterized by meddlesome curiosity; prying.
- snooty — snobbish.
- snoozy — to sleep; slumber; doze; nap.
- snorty — in a snorting manner
- snotty — Vulgar. of or relating to snot.
- snouty — resembling a snout
- snubby — somewhat snub, as the nose.
- snuffy — resembling snuff.
- snugly — warmly comfortable or cozy, as a place, accommodations, etc.: a snug little house.
- snyder — Gary, born 1930, U.S. poet and essayist.
- sonnys — a male given name.
- spawny — resembling spawn
- spendy — expensive
- sphynx — a breed of medium-sized hairless cat with large ears and a long whiplike tail
- spongy — of the nature of or resembling a sponge; light, porous, and elastic or readily compressible, as pith or bread.
- spoony — foolishly or sentimentally amorous.
- spunky — plucky; spirited.
- spy on — a person employed by a government to obtain secret information or intelligence about another, usually hostile, country, especially with reference to military or naval affairs.
- spying — a person employed by a government to obtain secret information or intelligence about another, usually hostile, country, especially with reference to military or naval affairs.
- stingy — having a sting.
- stinky — foul smelling; stinking.
- stinty — inadequate, limited, stinted
- stoney — full of or abounding in stones or rock: a stony beach.
- styron — William, 1925–2006, U.S. author.
- sunday — William Ashley [ash-lee] /ˈæʃ li/ (Show IPA), ("Billy Sunday") 1862–1935, U.S. evangelist.
- sundry — various or diverse: sundry persons.
- sunray — a ray of sunlight; sunbeam.
- swanky — elegant or ostentatious; swank.
- swanny — swanlike
- sweeny — atrophy of the shoulder muscles in horses.
- swingy — characterized by swing; lively; swinging: swingy dance tunes.
- swoony — tending to swoon
- sydney — a state in SE Australia. 309,433 sq. mi. (801,430 sq. km). Capital: Sydney.
- sylvan — of, relating to, or inhabiting the woods.
- sylvin — a common mineral, potassium chloride, KCl, colorless to milky-white or red, occurring in crystals, usually cubes, and masses with cubic cleavage, bitter in taste: the most important source of potassium.