5-letter words that end in le
- coble — a small single-masted flat-bottomed fishing boat
- codle — Obsolete form of coddle.
- coole — Obsolete spelling of cool.
- crile — George Washington1864-1943; U.S. surgeon
- cycle — If you cycle, you ride a bicycle.
- deale — Archaic spelling of deal.
- dekle — (art) Alternative form of deckle.
- dhole — a fierce canine mammal, Cuon alpinus, of the forests of central and SE Asia, having a reddish-brown coat and rounded ears: hunts in packs
- dowle — Feathery or woolly down; filament of a feather.
- doyle — Sir Arthur Conan [kaw-nuh n,, koh-] /ˈkɔ nən,, ˈkoʊ-/ (Show IPA), 1859–1930, British physician, novelist, and detective-story writer.
- drole — a scoundrel
- duple — having two parts; double; twofold.
- dwale — Deadly nightshade or belladonna.
- dwile — a cloth, rag, or mop used for various cleaning purposes around the house
- eagle — any of several large, soaring birds of prey belonging to the hawk family Accipitridae, noted for their size, strength, and powers of flight and vision: formerly widespread in North America, eagles are mostly confined to Alaska and a few isolated populations. Compare bald eagle, golden eagle.
- earle — a male given name: from the old English word meaning “noble.”.
- easle — a quantity of hot embers or ashes
- eccle — Alternative form of eckle.
- eckle — (dialectal) An icicle.
- ecole — school1 .
- edile — one of a board of magistrates in charge of public buildings, streets, markets, games, etc.
- engle — A favourite; a paramour; an ingle.
- esile — vinegar
- ettle — (transitive, dialectal, chiefly, Scotland) To aim; purpose; intend; attempt; try.
- exile — The state of being barred from one's native country, typically for political or punitive reasons.
- fable — a short tale to teach a moral lesson, often with animals or inanimate objects as characters; apologue: the fable of the tortoise and the hare; Aesop's fables.
- faile — Archaic spelling of fail.
- farle — a thin, circular cake of flour or oatmeal.
- fille — a girl or young woman
- fogle — (obsolete) A pocket handkerchief.
- foule — type of woollen cloth
- fowle — Obsolete spelling of fowl.
- fugle — to act as a guide or model.
- gable — (William) Clark, 1901–60, U.S. film actor.
- galle — a seaport in SW Sri Lanka.
- gavle — a seaport in E Sweden.
- gayle — a female or male given name.
- goole — an inland port in NE England, in the East Riding of Yorkshire at the confluence of the Ouse and Don Rivers, 75 km (47 miles) from the North Sea. Pop: 18 741 (2001)
- goyle — a ravine
- guile — insidious cunning in attaining a goal; crafty or artful deception; duplicity.
- hable — Obsolete form of habile.
- halle — Morris, born 1923, U.S. linguist, born in Latvia.
- haole — (among Polynesian Hawaiians) a term used to refer to a non-Polynesian, especially a white person.
- harle — A bird, the red-breasted merganser.
- hayle — health and welfare
- hazle — Archaic form of hazel.
- helle — a daughter of King Athamas, who was borne away with her brother Phrixus on the golden winged ram. She fell from its back and was drowned in the Hellespont
- hoyle — Edmond, 1672–1769, English authority and writer on card games.
- ickle — (dialectal) An icicle.
- idele — (mathematics) An invertible element of the adele ring.