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5-letter words containing ne

  • payneJohn Howard, 1791–1852, U.S. actor and dramatist.
  • peene — a river in NE Germany, flowing E to the Baltic Sea. About 97 miles (155 km) long.
  • pene- — almost
  • penes — the male organ of copulation and, in mammals, of urinary excretion.
  • penne — a type of tubular pasta having diagonally cut ends.
  • phene — any characteristic of an individual organism that is genetically determined.
  • phone — a speech sound: There are three phonetically different “t” phones in an utterance of “titillate,” and two in an utterance of “tattletale.”.
  • 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.
  • plane — plane tree.
  • pones — the player on the dealer's right. Compare eldest hand.
  • ppnet — peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumour
  • prone — having a natural inclination or tendency to something; disposed; liable: to be prone to anger.
  • prune — a variety of plum that dries without spoiling.
  • pwned — Slang. to totally defeat or dominate, especially in a video or computer game: You just got pwned! I pwned those guys in the end.
  • quine — Willard van Orman [awr-muh n] /ˈɔr mən/ (Show IPA), 1908–2000, U.S. philosopher and logician.
  • ranee — the wife of a rajah.
  • renee — a female given name, French form of Renata.
  • renew — to begin or take up again, as an acquaintance, a conversation, etc.; resume.
  • rhineJoseph Banks, 1895–1980, U.S. psychologist: pioneer in parapsychology.
  • rhone — a river flowing from the Alps in S Switzerland through the Lake of Geneva and SE France into the Mediterranean. 504 miles (810 km) long.
  • roneo — to duplicate (a document) from a stencil
  • ronne — a seaport on W Bornholm island, Denmark, in the S Baltic Sea: stone quarries.
  • runed — having runes inscribed: a runed ornament.
  • runes — 1. Anything that requires heavy wizardry or black art to parse: core dumps, JCL commands, APL or code in a language you haven't a clue how to read. Not quite as bad as line noise, but close. Compare casting the runes, Great Runes. 2. Special display characters (for example, the high-half graphics on an IBM PC).
  • saner — free from mental derangement; having a sound, healthy mind: a sane person.
  • saone — a river flowing S from NE France to the Rhone. 270 miles (435 km) long.
  • scene — the place where some action or event occurs: He returned to the scene of the murder.
  • scone — a village in central Scotland: site of coronation of Scottish kings until 1651.
  • seine — a river in France, flowing NW through Paris to the English Channel. 480 miles (773 km) long.
  • shane — a male given name.
  • shine — to give forth or glow with light; shed or cast light.
  • shone — a simple past tense and past participle of shine1 .
  • sinew — a tendon.
  • skene — (in the ancient Greek theater) a structure facing the audience and forming the background before which performances were given.
  • slane — a spade for cutting turf
  • sneadSamuel Jackson ("Slamming Sammy") 1912–2002, U.S. golfer.
  • sneak — to go in a stealthy or furtive manner; slink; skulk.
  • sneap — to scold or rebuke
  • sneck — a small stone, as a spall, inserted into the spaces between larger pieces of rubble in a wall.
  • sneer — to smile, laugh, or contort the face in a manner that shows scorn or contempt: They sneered at his pretensions.
  • snell — Peter (George) born 1938, New Zealand distance runner.
  • soaneSir John, 1753–1837, English architect.
  • sones — a unit for measuring the loudness of sound, equal to the loudness of a sound that, in the judgment of a group of listeners, is equal to that of a 1000-cycle-per-second reference sound having an intensity of 40 decibels.
  • sonet — Synchronous Optical NETwork
  • spane — a chip of wood
  • spine — the spinal or vertebral column; backbone.
  • stane — stone.
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