0%

5-letter words that end in e

  • blumeJudy, born 1938, U.S. novelist.
  • blype — a small piece of skin, particularly one which has peeled off following sunburn
  • bocce — an Italian variety of lawn bowling played on a dirt court that is shorter and narrower than the rink of a bowling green.
  • boche — a German, esp a German soldier
  • bodge — If you bodge something, you make it or mend it in a way that is not as good as it should be.
  • bodle — a Scottish coin issued under Charles II, worth two Scots pennies or approximately one sixth of an English penny
  • boece — Boethius.
  • bogie — an assembly of four or six wheels forming a pivoted support at either end of a railway coach. It provides flexibility on curves
  • bogle — a scarecrow
  • bogue — a Mediterranean fish, Boops boops
  • bohme — Jakob (ˈjaːkɔp). 1575–1624, German mystic
  • boise — a city in SW Idaho: the state capital. Pop: 190 117 (2003 est)
  • boite — a small nightclub, cabaret, or restaurant
  • bombe — a dessert of ice cream lined or filled with custard, cake crumbs, etc
  • bonce — Your bonce is your head.
  • bonne — a housemaid or female servant
  • bonze — a Chinese or Japanese Buddhist priest or monk
  • 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
  • boone — Daniel. 1734–1820, American pioneer, explorer, and guide, esp in Kentucky
  • booze — Booze is alcoholic drink.
  • borne — Borne is the past participle of bear1.
  • bosie — a googly
  • bothe — Walther (Wilhelm Georg Franz) (ˈvaltər). 1891–1957, German physicist, who developed new methods of detecting subatomic particles. He shared the Nobel prize for physics 1954
  • botte — a thrust or hit
  • bouge — to swell or bulge
  • boule — the parliament in modern Greece
  • bouse — to raise or haul with a tackle
  • bowie — David, real name David Jones. 1947–2016, British rock singer, songwriter, and film actor. His recordings include "Space Oddity" (1969), The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1972), Young Americans (1975), Heroes (1977), Let's Dance (1983), The Next Day (2013), and Blackstar (2016)
  • bowse — to haul with tackle.
  • boyce — William. ?1710–79, English composer, noted esp for his church music and symphonies
  • 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)
  • boyne — a river in the E Republic of Ireland, rising in the Bog of Allen and flowing northeast to the Irish Sea: William III of England defeated the deposed James II in a battle (Battle of the Boyne) on its banks in 1690, completing the overthrow of the Stuart cause in Ireland. Length: about 112 km (70 miles)
  • brace — If you brace yourself for something unpleasant or difficult, you prepare yourself for it.
  • brahe — Tycho (ˈtyːço). 1546–1601, Danish astronomer, who designed and constructed instruments that he used to plot accurately the positions of the planets, sun, moon, and stars
  • brake — Brakes are devices in a vehicle that make it go slower or stop.
  • brame — a fierce passion or vexation
  • brane — a hypothetical component of string theory
  • brave — Someone who is brave is willing to do things which are dangerous, and does not show fear in difficult or dangerous situations.
  • braze — to decorate with, make like, or make of brass
  • brede — braiding or embroidery
  • breme — fierce, strong, distinct
  • breve — an accent, (˘), placed over a vowel to indicate that it is of short duration or is pronounced in a specified way
  • bribe — A bribe is a sum of money or something valuable that one person offers or gives to another in order to persuade him or her to do something.
  • brice — Fanny, real name Fannie Borach. 1891–1951, US actress and singer. The film Funny Girl was based on her life
  • bride — A bride is a woman who is getting married or who has just got married.
  • brine — Brine is salty water, especially salty water that is used for preserving food.
  • brise — an area of untilled land
  • broke — Broke is the past tense of break.
  • brome — any of a large genus (Bromus) of grasses of the temperate zone, having closed sheaths and spikelets with awns: a few are crop plants but many are weeds
  • brose — oatmeal or pease porridge, sometimes with butter or fat added
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?