6-letter words that end in es
- arkies — a term used to refer to a migrant worker originally from Arkansas.
- armies — Plural form of army.
- asides — Plural form of aside.
- 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.
- aviles — a port in Asturias, NW Spain, on the Bay of Biscay.
- awakes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of awake.
- axises — the line about which a rotating body, such as the earth, turns.
- azides — Plural form of azide.
- azines — Plural form of azine.
- azoles — Plural form of azole.
- azores — group of islands in the N Atlantic, c. 800 mi (1,287 km) west of Portugal and constituting an autonomous region of that country: 900 sq mi (2,331 sq km); pop. 238,000; chief city, Ponta Delgada
- babies — an infant or very young child.
- badges — Plural form of badge.
- baizes — Plural form of baize.
- bankes — Plural form of banke.
- barges — Plural form of barge.
- barnes — Djuna. 1892–1982, US novelist, noted for Nightwood (1936)
- barres — Maurice (mɔris). 1862–1923, French novelist, essayist, and politician: a fervent nationalist and individualist
- bashes — to strike with a crushing or smashing blow.
- basses — Plural form of bass.
- bastes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of baste.
- bathes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bathe.
- beames — Lb archaic Plural form of beam.
- beares — Archaic spelling of bears, Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bear.
- beeves — beef
- belies — to show to be false; contradict: His trembling hands belied his calm voice.
- bevies — a group of birds, as larks or quail, or animals, as roebuck, in close association.
- biases — a particular tendency, trend, inclination, feeling, or opinion, especially one that is preconceived or unreasoned: illegal bias against older job applicants; the magazine’s bias toward art rather than photography; our strong bias in favor of the idea.
- bilges — Nautical. either of the rounded areas that form the transition between the bottom and the sides on the exterior of a hull. Also, bilges. (in a hull with a double bottom) an enclosed area between frames at each side of the floors, where seepage collects. Also called bilge well. a well into which seepage drains to be pumped away. Also called bilge water. seepage accumulated in bilges.
- blazes — (intensifier)
- bodies — the physical structure and material substance of an animal or plant, living or dead.
- bootes — a constellation in the N hemisphere lying near Ursa Major and containing the first magnitude star Arcturus
- borges — Jorge Luis (ˈxorxe lwis). 1899–1986, Argentinian poet, short-story writer, and literary scholar. The short stories collected in Ficciones (1944) he described as "games with infinity"
- bosses — a familiar name for a calf or cow.
- boules — Boules is a game in which a small ball is thrown and then the players try to throw other balls as close to the first ball as possible.
- bowles — Paul. 1910–99, US novelist, short-story writer, and composer, living in Tangiers. His novels include The Sheltering Sky (1949) and The Spider's House (1955)
- braces — a pair of straps worn over the shoulders by men for holding up the trousers
- brakes — any of several large or coarse ferns, especially the bracken, Pteridium aquilinum.
- braves — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
- brazes — to unite (metal objects) at high temperatures by applying any of various nonferrous solders.
- broses — a porridge made by stirring boiling liquid into oatmeal or other meal.
- bruges — a city in NW Belgium, capital of West Flanders province: centre of the medieval European wool and cloth trade. Pop: 117 025 (2004 est)
- bubkes — nothing
- buboes — an inflammatory swelling of a lymphatic gland, especially in the groin or armpit.
- buries — to put in the ground and cover with earth: The pirates buried the chest on the island.
- busses — bus
- buzzes — a man's very short haircut; crew cut.
- byrnes — James Francis, 1879–1972, U.S. statesman and jurist: secretary of state 1945–47.
- cables — Plural form of cable.
- caches — Plural form of cache.