0%

5-letter words containing pe

  • kopek — A monetary unit of Russia and some other countries of the former Soviet Union, equal to one hundredth of a ruble.
  • lapel — either of the two parts of a garment folded back on the chest, especially a continuation of a coat collar.
  • leper — a person who has leprosy.
  • lippe — a former state in NW Germany: now part of North Rhine-Westphalia.
  • loipe — a cross-country skiing track
  • loped — to move or run with bounding steps, as a quadruped, or with a long, easy stride, as a person.
  • loper — a person or thing that lopes, as a horse with a loping gait.
  • lopes — Plural form of lope.
  • lopez — Osvaldo [aws-vahl-daw] /ɔsˈvɑl dɔ/ (Show IPA), (Osvaldo López Arellano) 1921–2010, Honduran air force general: president of Honduras 1963–75.
  • loupe — any of several varieties of magnifying glasses, used by jewelers and watchmakers, of from 2 to 20 power and intended to fit in the eye socket, to be attached to spectacles, or to be held in the hand.
  • mapesWalter, c1140–1209? Welsh ecclesiastic, poet, and satirist.
  • moped — a person who mopes or is given to moping.
  • moper — to be sunk in dejection or listless apathy; sulk; brood.
  • mopes — to be sunk in dejection or listless apathy; sulk; brood.
  • mopey — languishing, listless, droopy, or glum.
  • myope — A nearsighted person.
  • naped — Simple past tense and past participle of nape.
  • napes — the back of the neck (usually used in the phrase nape of the neck).
  • nappe — Geology. a large mass of rock thrust a considerable distance along a nearly horizontal fault plane or in an overturned anticlinal fold.
  • neperJohn, Napier, John.
  • oapec — Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries
  • olpes — Plural form of olpe.
  • opens — Plural form of open.
  • opepe — a West African tree, esp Nauclea diderrichii (family Rubiaceae), or the yellow wood of this tree
  • opera — a plural of opus.
  • opers — Plural form of oper.
  • orpen — Sir William Newenham Montague [noo-uh-nuh m,, nyoo-] /ˈnu ə nəm,, ˈnyu-/ (Show IPA), 1878–1931, Irish painter.
  • papenFranz von [frahnts fuh n] /frɑnts fən/ (Show IPA), 1879–1969, German diplomat, statesman, and soldier.
  • paper — a substance made from wood pulp, rags, straw, or other fibrous material, usually in thin sheets, used to bear writing or printing, for wrapping things, etc.
  • peace — the normal, nonwarring condition of a nation, group of nations, or the world.
  • peach — the subacid, juicy, drupaceous fruit of a tree, Prunus persica, of the rose family.
  • peake — Mervyn. 1911–68, English novelist, poet, and illustrator. In his trilogy Gormenghast (1946–59), he creates, with vivid imagination, a grotesque Gothic world
  • peaky — peaked2 .
  • peale — Charles Willson [wil-suh n] /ˈwɪl sən/ (Show IPA), 1741–1827, and his brother James, 1749–1831, U.S. painters.
  • peano — Giuseppe Peano
  • peans — any song of praise, joy, or triumph.
  • pearl — a basic stitch in knitting, the reverse of the knit, formed by pulling a loop of the working yarn back through an existing stitch and then slipping that stitch off the needle. Compare knit (def 11).
  • pears — the edible fruit, typically rounded but elongated and growing smaller toward the stem, of a tree, Pyrus communis, of the rose family.
  • peart — lively; brisk; cheerful.
  • pearyRobert Edwin, 1856–1920, U.S. admiral and arctic explorer.
  • pease — a pea.
  • peaty — of, pertaining to, resembling, or containing the substance peat.
  • peavy — peavey.
  • pebi- — denoting 250
  • pecan — a tall hickory tree, Carya illinoinensis, of the southern U.S. and Mexico, cultivated for its oval, smooth-shelled, edible nuts: the state tree of Texas.
  • pecky — spotted with fungi.
  • pecos — a river flowing SE from N New Mexico through W Texas to the Rio Grande. 735 miles (1183 km) long.
  • pedal — a foot-operated lever used to control certain mechanisms, as automobiles, or to play or modify the sounds of certain musical instruments, as pianos, organs, or harps.
  • pedes — a foot or footlike part.
  • pedi- — indicating the foot
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?