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6-letter words containing ne

  • apneic — a temporary suspension of breathing, occurring in some newborns (infant apnea) and in some adults during sleep (sleep apnea)
  • arcane — Something that is arcane is secret or mysterious.
  • arcnet — (networking)   A network developed by DataPoint. ARCnet was proprietary until the late 1980s and had about as large a marketshare as Ethernet among small businesses. It was almost as fast and was considerably cheaper at the time.
  • ariane — Rocketry. a French-built, three-stage, liquid-propellant rocket for launching satellites into orbit around the earth.
  • arlene — a feminine name: var. Arline, Arleen
  • arsine — a colourless poisonous gas used in the manufacture of organic compounds, to dope transistors, and as a military poisonous gas. Formula: AsH3
  • as one — If a group of people does something as one, all the people do the same thing at the same time or in the same way.
  • ashine — in a shining manner
  • at one — in a state of agreement or harmony
  • athene — Also, Athene [uh-thee-nee] /əˈθi ni/ (Show IPA). Also called Pallas, Pallas Athena. the virgin deity of the ancient Greeks worshiped as the goddess of wisdom, fertility, the useful arts, and prudent warfare. At her birth she sprang forth fully armed from the head of her father, Zeus. Compare Minerva.
  • atoned — to make amends or reparation, as for an offense or a crime, or for an offender (usually followed by for): to atone for one's sins.
  • atoner — to make amends or reparation, as for an offense or a crime, or for an offender (usually followed by for): to atone for one's sins.
  • atones — to make amends or reparation, as for an offense or a crime, or for an offender (usually followed by for): to atone for one's sins.
  • attone — to appease or pacify
  • attune — to adjust or accustom (a person or thing); acclimatize
  • azines — Plural form of azine.
  • azione — a term used for certain genres of musical drama of the 17th–18th century, particularly the azione teatrale (a short musical play or opera) and the azione sacra (sacred drama)
  • b-line — An early CAD language.
  • banned — to prohibit, forbid, or bar; interdict: to ban nuclear weapons; The dictator banned all newspapers and books that criticized his regime.
  • banner — A banner is a long strip of cloth with something written on it. Banners are usually attached to two poles and carried during a protest or rally.
  • bannet — a bonnet
  • barned — a building for storing hay, grain, etc., and often for housing livestock.
  • barnes — Djuna. 1892–1982, US novelist, noted for Nightwood (1936)
  • barnet — a borough of N Greater London: scene of a Yorkist victory (1471) in the Wars of the Roses. Pop: 324 400 (2003 est). Area: 89 sq km (34 sq miles)
  • barney — a noisy argument
  • basnet — basinet.
  • beaned — the edible nutritious seed of various plants of the legume family, especially of the genus Phaseolus.
  • beaner — A Mexican or a person of Mexican descent.
  • beaune — a town in E France, near Dijon: an important trading centre for Burgundy wines. Pop: 22 218 (2008)
  • begone — go away!
  • beneba — (formerly, especially in creole-speaking cultures) a name given at birth to a black child, in accordance with African customs, indicating the child's sex and the day of the week on which he or she was born, as the male and female names for Sunday (Quashee and Quasheba) Monday (Cudjo or Cudjoe and Juba) Tuesday (Cubbena and Beneba) Wednesday (Quaco and Cuba or Cubba) Thursday (Quao and Abba) Friday (Cuffee or Cuffy and Pheba or Phibbi) and Saturday (Quamin or Quame and Mimba)
  • bennet — herb bennet.
  • bicone — an object shaped like two cones with their bases together.
  • bienne — Biel
  • bimane — a bimanous animal.
  • bitnet — (networking)   /bit'net/ (Because It's Time NETwork) An academic and research computer network connecting approximately 2500 computers. BITNET provides interactive, electronic mail and file transfer services, using a store and forward protocol, based on IBM Network Job Entry protocols. Bitnet-II encapsulates the Bitnet protocol within IP packets and depends on the Internet to route them. BITNET traffic and Internet traffic are exchanged via several gateway hosts. BITNET is now operated by CREN. BITNET is everybody's least favourite piece of the network. The BITNET hosts are a collection of IBM dinosaurs, VAXen (with lobotomised communications hardware), and Prime Computer supermini computers. They communicate using 80-character EBCDIC card images (see eighty-column mind); thus, they tend to mangle the headers and text of third-party traffic from the rest of the ASCII/RFC 822 world with annoying regularity. BITNET is also notorious as the apparent home of BIFF.
  • bivane — a sensitive vane that measures both the horizontal and vertical components of wind direction.
  • bizone — an area comprising two administrative zones
  • blaine — James G(illespie)1830-93; U.S. statesman: secretary of state (1881, 1889-92)
  • boline — (in Wicca) a knife, usually sickle-shaped and with a white handle, used for gathering herbs and carving symbols
  • bonnet — The bonnet of a car is the metal cover over the engine at the front.
  • booner — a young working-class person from Canberra
  • borane — any compound of boron and hydrogen, used in the synthesis of other boron compounds and as high-energy fuels
  • borneo — an island in the W Pacific, between the Sulu and Java Seas, part of the Malay Archipelago: divided into Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo), the Malaysian states of Sarawak and Sabah, and the sultanate of Brunei; mountainous and densely forested. Area: about 750 000 sq km (290 000 sq miles)
  • botnet — a network of computers infected by a program that communicates with its creator in order to send unsolicited emails, attack websites, etc
  • botoné — terminating in three ornamental budlike lobes
  • bourne — a brook or rivulet.
  • bovine — Bovine means relating to cattle.
  • braine — John (Gerard). 1922–86, English novelist, whose works include Room at the Top (1957) and Life at the Top (1962)
  • brenne — to burn
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