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6-letter words that end in n

  • osteon — (anatomy) Any of the central canals, and surrounding bony layers, found in compact bone.
  • othman — Osman.
  • outgun — to exceed in firepower.
  • outken — (transitive) To surpass or exceed in kenning.
  • outman — to surpass in manpower.
  • outran — simple past tense of outrun.
  • outrun — to run faster or farther than.
  • outsin — to sin more than
  • outwin — to get out (from)
  • oxygen — a colorless, odorless, gaseous element constituting about one-fifth of the volume of the atmosphere and present in a combined state in nature. It is the supporter of combustion in air and was the standard of atomic, combining, and molecular weights until 1961, when carbon 12 became the new standard. Symbol: O; atomic weight: 15.9994; atomic number: 8; density: 1.4290 g/l at 0°C and 760 mm pressure.
  • paduan — a city in NE Italy.
  • paisan — compatriot.
  • panoan — a family of South American Indian languages spoken in Peru, Bolivia, and western Brazil.
  • panton — a soft horseshoe
  • pantun — pantoum.
  • papain — Biochemistry. a proteolytic enzyme found in the fruit of the papaya tree, Carica papaya.
  • papuan — of or relating to New Guinea or to Papua New Guinea.
  • pardon — kind indulgence, as in forgiveness of an offense or discourtesy or in tolerance of a distraction or inconvenience: I beg your pardon, but which way is Spruce Street?
  • parian — of or relating to Paros, noted for its white marble.
  • parkin — (in Britain and New Zealand) a moist spicy ginger cake usually containing oatmeal
  • parpen — perpend1 .
  • parranThomas, Jr. 1892–1968, U.S. public health official.
  • parson — a member of the clergy, especially a Protestant minister; pastor; rector.
  • partan — a crab.
  • parton — a constituent of the nucleon originally postulated in the theoretical analysis of high-energy scattering of electrons by nucleons and subsequently identified with quarks and gluons.
  • pascinJules [zhyl] /ʒül/ (Show IPA), (Julius Pincas) 1885–1930, French painter, born in Bulgaria.
  • pathan — Afghan (def 1).
  • patron — (in Mexico and the southwestern U.S.) a boss; employer.
  • pattenGilbert ("Burt L. Standish") 1866–1945, U.S. writer of adventure stories.
  • pattonCharley (Charlie Patton) 1881–1934, U.S. blues guitarist and singer.
  • patwin — a member of a North American Indian people of the western Sacramento River valley in California.
  • paulin — a tarpaulin
  • paxman — Jeremy (Dickson). born 1950, British journalist, broadcaster, and author, noted esp for his political interviews
  • paxtonSir Joseph, 1801–65, English horticulturist and architect.
  • pay in — a deposit in an account.
  • pay-in — a deposit in an account.
  • paytonWalter ("Sweetness") 1954–99, U.S. football player.
  • pdelan — Partial Differential Equation LANguage
  • peahen — the female peafowl.
  • peasen — bill3 (def 4).
  • pecten — Zoology, Anatomy. a comblike part or process. a pigmented vascular membrane with parallel folds suggesting the teeth of a comb, projecting into the vitreous humor of the eye in birds and reptiles.
  • pectin — a white, amorphous, colloidal carbohydrate of high molecular weight occurring in ripe fruits, especially in apples, currants, etc., and used in fruit jellies, pharmaceuticals, and cosmetics for its thickening and emulsifying properties and its ability to solidify to a gel.
  • pedion — a crystal form having only a single face, without a symmetrical equivalent: unique to the triclinic system.
  • pelionMount, a mountain near the E coast of Greece, in Thessaly. 5252 feet (1600 meters).
  • pellan — Alfred [French al-fred] /French alˈfrɛd/ (Show IPA), 1906–1988, Canadian painter.
  • penman — a person who writes or copies; scribe; copyist.
  • pennon — a distinctive flag in any of various forms, as tapering, triangular, or swallow-tailed, formerly one borne on the lance of a knight.
  • pepsin — an enzyme, produced in the stomach, that in the presence of hydrochloric acid splits proteins into proteoses and peptones.
  • perfin — a postage stamp having perforated initials punched into the paper: used by businesses to prevent unauthorized use of stamps.
  • perkinSir William Henry, 1838–1907, English chemist.
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