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6-letter words containing ce

  • inlace — enlace.
  • intice — Archaic spelling of entice.
  • jacent — Lying at length.
  • janice — a female given name, form of Jane.
  • jaunce — to prance
  • jaycee — a member of a civic group for young business and community leaders.
  • jounce — a jouncing movement.
  • juiced — intoxicated from alcohol; drunk: When arrested he was definitely juiced.
  • juicer — a kitchen appliance for extracting juice from fruits and vegetables.
  • juices — Plural form of juice.
  • kelcey — a female given name.
  • kielce — a city in S Poland.
  • kosice — a city in SE Slovakia.
  • lacert — (obsolete) A fleshy muscle of the human body.
  • lacery — Lace or laces collectively.
  • lanced — Simple past tense and past participle of lance.
  • lancer — a cavalry soldier armed with a lance.
  • lances — Plural form of lance.
  • lancet — a small surgical instrument, usually sharp-pointed and two-edged, for making small incisions, opening abscesses, etc.
  • launce — sand lance.
  • lidice — a village in the W Czech Republic: suffered a ruthless reprisal by the Nazis in 1942 for the assassination of a high Nazi official.
  • lucent — shining.
  • lucern — (obsolete) A lamp.
  • lyceum — an institution for popular education providing discussions, lectures, concerts, etc.
  • maced. — Macedonia(n)
  • maceio — a state in NE Brazil. 10,674 sq. mi. (27,650 sq. km). Capital: Maceió.
  • macers — Plural form of macer.
  • malice — desire to inflict injury, harm, or suffering on another, either because of a hostile impulse or out of deep-seated meanness: the malice and spite of a lifelong enemy.
  • manace — Obsolete form of menace.
  • marcel — to wave (the hair) by means of special irons, producing the effect of regular, continuous waves (marcel waves)
  • mcewan — Ian (Russell). born 1948, British novelist and short-story writer. His books include First Love, Last Rites (1975), The Child in Time (1987), The Innocent (1990), Amsterdam (which won the Booker prize in 1998), Atonement (2001), Saturday (2005), and On Chesil Beach (2007)
  • mcewen — Sir John. 1900–80, Australian politician; prime minister of Australia (1967–68)
  • meeces — (jargon)   /mees'*z/ (TMRC) Occasional furry visitors who are not urchins; that is, mice. This may no longer be in live use. According to ESR it derives from the refrain of the early-1960s cartoon character Mr. Jinx: "I hate meeces to *pieces*!"
  • menace — something that threatens to cause evil, harm, injury, etc.; a threat: Air pollution is a menace to health.
  • merced — a city in central California.
  • mercer — a dealer in textile fabrics; dry-goods merchant.
  • mice's — any of numerous small Old World rodents of the family Muridae, especially of the genus Mus, introduced widely in other parts of the world.
  • minced — Simple past tense and past participle of mince.
  • mincer — to cut or chop into very small pieces.
  • minces — Plural form of mince.
  • morice — (obsolete) A morris dance.
  • mycele — one of many microfibres in cervical mucus through which sperm must pass to reach the uterus
  • narced — Simple past tense and past participle of narc.
  • nicely — pleasing; agreeable; delightful: a nice visit.
  • nicene — of or relating to Nicaea.
  • nicest — pleasing; agreeable; delightful: a nice visit.
  • nicety — a delicate or fine point; punctilio: niceties of protocol.
  • nieces — a daughter of a person's brother or sister.
  • niepce — Joseph Nicéphore [zhaw-zef nee-sey-fawr] /ʒɔ zɛf ni seɪˈfɔr/ (Show IPA), 1765–1833, French inventor.
  • nocebo — an inactive substance or a real medication that produces unpleasant or worsening symptoms in a patient or research participant because the person expects negative effects.
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