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5-letter words containing f, e

  • enuff — (informal) Simplified variant of enough.
  • erfpi — An early system on the LGP-30 computer.
  • f eng — Fellow of the Fellowship of Engineering
  • 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.
  • fabre — Jean Henri [zhahn ahn-ree] /ʒɑ̃ ɑ̃ˈri/ (Show IPA), 1823–1915, French entomologist and popular writer on insect life.
  • faced — having a specified kind of face or number of faces (usually used in combination): a sweet-faced child; the two-faced god.
  • facer — a person or thing that faces.
  • faces — Plural form of face.
  • facet — one of the small, polished plane surfaces of a cut gem.
  • facey — Cheeky; impudent.
  • faded — to lose brightness or vividness of color.
  • fader — a person or thing that fades.
  • fades — Plural form of fade.
  • fadge — to agree
  • faena — the final third of a bullfight in which the matador uses a muleta and the sword in making the final series of passes preparatory to the kill.
  • faery — the imaginary land of the fairies; fairyland.
  • faile — Archaic spelling of fail.
  • faine — Obsolete spelling of fane.
  • faire — Obsolete spelling of fair.
  • faked — to lay (a rope) in a coil or series of long loops so as to allow to run freely without fouling or kinking (often followed by down).
  • faker — anything made to appear otherwise than it actually is; counterfeit: This diamond necklace is a fake.
  • fakes — Plural form of fake.
  • fakey — (colloquial) Fake.
  • fakie — (in skateboarding or snowboarding) a movement in which the board is ridden backward.
  • false — not true or correct; erroneous: a false statement.
  • famed — very well known and, often, highly regarded; famous.
  • fames — widespread reputation, especially of a favorable character; renown; public eminence: to seek fame as an opera singer.
  • faned — (dated, fandom slang) The editor of a fandom publication, most commonly a fanzine.
  • fanes — a temple.
  • fanne — (dated, fandom) A female science fiction fan.
  • farce — a light, humorous play in which the plot depends upon a skillfully exploited situation rather than upon the development of character.
  • fared — the price of conveyance or passage in a bus, train, airplane, or other vehicle.
  • farer — the price of conveyance or passage in a bus, train, airplane, or other vehicle.
  • fares — Plural form of fare.
  • farle — a thin, circular cake of flour or oatmeal.
  • farse — A vernacular paraphrase inserted into Latin liturgy.
  • fated — subject to, guided by, or predetermined by fate; destined.
  • fates — something that unavoidably befalls a person; fortune; lot: It is always his fate to be left behind.
  • faure — Gabriel Urbain [ga-bree-el oor-ban] /ga briˈɛl urˈbɛ̃/ (Show IPA), 1845–1924, French composer.
  • fauve — (sometimes lowercase) any of a group of French artists of the early 20th century whose works are characterized chiefly by the use of vivid colors in immediate juxtaposition and contours usually in marked contrast to the color of the area defined.
  • favel — a fallow-coloured horse
  • faves — Plural form of fave.
  • faxed — (obsolete) Having a head of hair; hairy.
  • faxer — facsimile (def 2).
  • faxes — Plural form of fax.
  • fayed — Simple past tense and past participle of fay.
  • fayre — (archaic) fair, beautiful.
  • fazed — to cause to be disturbed or disconcerted; daunt: The worst insults cannot faze him.
  • fazes — to cause to be disturbed or disconcerted; daunt: The worst insults cannot faze him.
  • feard — (archaic) Simple past tense and past participle of fear.
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