0%

8-letter words that end in e

  • aftereye — to look at or watch someone or something that has passed by
  • agaçante — irritating
  • agacerie — allurement, enticement, enchantment, coquetry
  • age-mate — a person or animal of the same age, or nearly the same age, as another
  • agentive — (in some inflected languages) denoting a case of nouns, etc, indicating the agent described by the verb
  • aggerate — (transitive) To heap up.
  • aggrieve — to grieve; distress; afflict
  • agiotage — the business of exchanging currencies
  • agitable — easily agitated or moved
  • aglycone — a chemical compound
  • agminate — gathered or clustered together
  • agreable — Obsolete spelling of agreeable.
  • aguacate — an avocado
  • aguelike — as if suffering from fever
  • aigrette — a long plume worn on hats or as a headdress, esp one of long egret feathers
  • aiguille — a rock mass or mountain peak shaped like a needle
  • air base — An air base is a centre where military aircraft take off or land and are serviced, and where many of the centre's staff live.
  • air date — the date of a broadcast or scheduled broadcast.
  • air hole — a hole that allows the passage of air, esp for ventilation
  • air lane — a route for travel by air; airway
  • air mile — nautical mile
  • air rage — Air rage is aggressive or violent behaviour by airline passengers.
  • air time — The airtime that something gets is the amount of time taken up with broadcasts about it.
  • air-core — having a nonmagnetic core, as one of fiber or plastic, encircled by a coil (air-core coil) or containing one or more such coils: air-core transformer.
  • air-line — straight; direct; traveling a direct route: Some railroads advertise air-line routes between stations.
  • airborne — If an aircraft is airborne, it is in the air and flying.
  • airbrake — A brake (slowing device) that is operated pneumatically (by air pressure).
  • airdrome — An airdrome is a place or area where small aircraft can land and take off.
  • airedale — a large rough-haired tan-coloured breed of terrier characterized by a black saddle-shaped patch covering most of the back
  • airforce — Alternative spelling of air force.
  • airframe — the body of an aircraft, excluding its engines
  • airplane — An airplane is a vehicle with wings and one or more engines that enable it to fly through the air.
  • airscape — a view of the land or sea below from the air
  • airspace — A country's airspace is the part of the sky that is over that country and is considered to belong to it.
  • akaryote — a cell without a nucleus
  • al dente — If you cook pasta or a vegetable until it is al dente, you cook it just long enough so that it is neither hard nor soft but is firm and slightly chewy.
  • alaouite — a member of a Shiite sect of Syrian Muslims
  • albacete — a city in SE Spain: metal goods manufacturing. Pop: 155 142 (2003 est)
  • albacore — a tunny, Thunnus alalunga, occurring mainly in warm regions of the Atlantic and Pacific. It has very long pectoral fins and is a valued food fish
  • albanese — Licia [lee-chee-uh;; Italian lee-chah] /ˈli tʃi ə;; Italian ˈli tʃɑ/ (Show IPA), 1913–2014, Italian operatic soprano.
  • albitize — to turn into albite
  • albronze — aluminum bronze.
  • albumose — any of a class of chemical compounds derived from albumins by the action of certain enzymes, as in digestion
  • alcandre — the wife of Polybus who received Helen and Menelaus on their way home from Troy.
  • alchuine — (Ealhwine Flaccus) a.d. 735–804, English theologian and scholar: teacher and adviser of Charlemagne.
  • alcidine — of, relating to, or belonging to the Alcidae, a family of sea birds including the auks, guillemots, puffins, and related forms
  • alcimede — the mother of Jason.
  • alcithoe — a daughter of Minyas who was driven mad for mocking Dionysus.
  • aldehyde — any organic compound containing the group -CHO. Aldehydes are oxidized to carboxylic acids and take part in many addition reactions
  • aldimine — (organic chemistry) An imine derived from an aldehyde; general formula RCH=NR.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?