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5-letter words containing le

  • atole — A thick drink or thin gruel made from cornmeal.
  • avale — (transitive, obsolete) To cause to descend; to lower; to let fall; to doff.
  • avile — (obsolete) To abase or debase; to vilify; to depreciate.
  • axile — of, relating to, or attached to the axis
  • axled — having an axle
  • axles — Plural form of axle.
  • azole — an organic five-membered ring compound containing one or more atoms in the ring, the number usually being specified by a prefix
  • baile — (in the southwestern US and parts of Central and South America) a gathering for dancing.
  • baled — Also, bailer. a bucket, dipper, or other container used for bailing.
  • baler — an agricultural machine for making bales of hay, etc
  • bales — Also, bailer. a bucket, dipper, or other container used for bailing.
  • basle — a canton of NW Switzerland, divided into the demicantons of Basle-Landschaft and Basle-Stadt. Pops.: 263 200 and 186 900 (2002 est). Areas: 427 sq km (165 sq miles) and 36 sq km (14 sq miles) respectively
  • bayle — Pierre (pjɛr). 1647–1706, French philosopher and critic, noted for his Dictionnaire historique et critique (1697), which profoundly influenced Voltaire and the French Encyclopedists
  • bdle. — bundle.
  • beale — Dorothea. 1831–1906, British schoolmistress, a champion of women's education and suffrage. As principal of Cheltenham Ladies' College (1858–1906) she introduced important reforms
  • belee — to position on the sheltered side
  • belem — a port in N Brazil, the capital of Pará state, on the Pará River: major trading centre for the Amazon basin. Pop: 2 097 000 (2005 est)
  • belle — A belle is a beautiful woman, especially the most beautiful woman at a party or in a group.
  • berleMilton, 1908–2002, U.S. comedian.
  • beyle — Marie Henri [ma-ree ahn-ree] /maˈri ɑ̃ˈri/ (Show IPA) real name of Stendhal.
  • bible — The Bible is the holy book on which the Jewish and Christian religions are based.
  • biles — Physiology. a bitter, alkaline, yellow or greenish liquid, secreted by the liver, that aids in absorption and digestion, especially of fats.
  • birle — to pour (a drink) or ply with drink
  • bleak — If a situation is bleak, it is bad, and seems unlikely to improve.
  • bleam — (jargon)   To transmit or send data. "Bleam that binary to me in an e-mail".
  • blear — to make (eyes or sight) dim with or as if with tears; blur
  • bleat — When a sheep or goat bleats, it makes the sound that sheep and goats typically make.
  • bleed — When you bleed, you lose blood from your body as a result of injury or illness.
  • bleep — A bleep is a short, high-pitched sound, usually one of a series, that is made by an electrical device.
  • blend — If you blend substances together or if they blend, you mix them together so that they become one substance.
  • blent — blend
  • blert — a fool
  • bless — When someone such as a priest blesses people or things, he asks for God's favour and protection for them.
  • blest — bless
  • bleve — A BLEVE is an explosion caused by a liquid which is boiling and continuing to produce a flammable vapor.
  • bodle — a Scottish coin issued under Charles II, worth two Scots pennies or approximately one sixth of an English penny
  • bogle — a scarecrow
  • boles — any of a variety of soft, unctuous clays of various colors, used as pigments.
  • boole — George. 1815–64, English mathematician. In Mathematical Analysis of Logic (1847) and An Investigation of the Laws of Thought (1854), he applied mathematical formulae to logic, creating Boolean algebra
  • boule — the parliament in modern Greece
  • boyle — Robert. 1627–91, Irish scientist who helped to dissociate chemistry from alchemy. He established that air has weight and studied the behaviour of gases; author of The Sceptical Chymist (1661)
  • brule — (in the Pacific Northwest) an area of forest destroyed by fire.
  • bugle — A bugle is a simple brass musical instrument that looks like a small trumpet. Bugles are often used in the army to announce when activities such as meals are about to begin.
  • butle — to act as butler
  • cable — A cable is a thick wire, or a group of wires inside a rubber or plastic covering, which is used to carry electricity or electronic signals.
  • caleb — a masculine name
  • caple — a horse
  • carle — Scot. a strong, robust fellow, especially a strong manual laborer. a miser; an extremely thrifty person.
  • celeb — A celeb is the same as a celebrity.
  • celle — a city in N Germany, on the Aller River in Lower Saxony: from 1378 to 1705 the residence of the Dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg. Pop: 71 319 (2003 est)
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