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6-letter words containing n, a, d, e

  • leaned — to incline or bend from a vertical position: She leaned out the window.
  • learnd — Lb obsolete Simple past tense and past participle of learn: obsolete spelling of learned.
  • leland — a male given name.
  • lenard — Philipp [fee-lip] /ˈfi lɪp/ (Show IPA), 1862–1947, German physicist, born in Austria-Hungary: Nobel Prize 1905.
  • loaned — Simple past tense and past participle of loan.
  • madden — to anger or infuriate: The delays maddened her.
  • madmen — a person who is or behaves as if insane; lunatic; maniac.
  • madnep — (obsolete) The masterwort (Peucedanum ostruthium).
  • maenad — bacchante.
  • maiden — a girl or young unmarried woman; maid.
  • mained — chief in size, extent, or importance; principal; leading: the company's main office; the main features of a plan.
  • malden — a city in E Massachusetts, near Boston.
  • manded — Simple past tense and past participle of mand.
  • mandel — a male given name.
  • mandem — (UK, Multicultural London English) men or boys; male friends.
  • mander — Alternative form of maunder.
  • manged — /mahnjd/ [probably from the French "manger" or Italian "mangiare", to eat; perhaps influenced by English "mange", "mangy"] Refers to anything that is mangled or damaged, usually beyond repair. "The disk was manged after the electrical storm." Compare mung.
  • manned — carrying or operated by one or more persons: a manned spacecraft.
  • manred — homage
  • median — a Mede.
  • medina — a city in W Saudi Arabia, where Muhammad was first accepted as the supreme Prophet from Allah and where his tomb is located.
  • meidan — Alternative spelling of maidan An urban open space.
  • menado — a seaport on NE Sulawesi, in NE Indonesia.
  • moaned — a prolonged, low, inarticulate sound uttered from or as if from physical or mental suffering.
  • modena — a city in N Italy, NW of Bologna.
  • nabbed — to arrest or capture.
  • nacked — Simple past tense and past participle of nack.
  • nacred — lined with or resembling nacre.
  • nadger — (jargon)   /nad'jr/ [Great Britain] To modify software or hardware in a hidden manner, generally so that it conforms better to some format. For instance, an assembly code string printing subroutine that takes its string argument from the instruction stream would be called like this: jsr print:"Hello world" The print routine would use the saved instruction pointer (its return address) to find its argument and would have to "nadger" it so that the processor returns to the instruction after the string.
  • nadine — a female given name.
  • nagged — Simple past tense and past participle of nag.
  • nailed — a slender, typically rod-shaped rigid piece of metal, usually in any of numerous standard lengths from a fraction of an inch to several inches and having one end pointed and the other enlarged and flattened, for hammering into or through wood, other building materials, etc., as used in building, in fastening, or in holding separate pieces together.
  • napped — to sleep for a short time; doze.
  • narced — Simple past tense and past participle of narc.
  • narked — British Slang. a stool pigeon or informer.
  • neaped — grounded until the next cycle of spring tides.
  • neared — close; to a point or place not far away: Come near so I won't have to shout.
  • nefand — (obsolete) unspeakable; nefandous.
  • neruda — Pablo [pah-vlaw;; English pah-bloh] /ˈpɑ vlɔ;; English ˈpɑ bloʊ/ (Show IPA), (Neftali Ricardo Reyes Basoalto) 1904–73, Chilean poet and diplomat: Nobel Prize in literature 1971.
  • nevada — a state in the W United States. 110,540 sq. mi. (286,300 sq. km). Capital: Carson City. Abbreviation: NV (for use with zip code), Nev.
  • nidate — (of a new embryo) to undergo nidation, to implant (oneself) in the uterus
  • nomade — Archaic form of nomad.
  • noyade — destruction or execution by drowning, especially as practiced at Nantes, France, in 1793–94, during the Reign of Terror.
  • ogaden — an arid region in SE Ethiopia.
  • oneida — a member of an Iroquois people formerly inhabiting the region east of Oneida Lake.
  • orenda — a supernatural force believed by the Iroquois Indians to be present, in varying degrees, in all objects or persons, and to be the spiritual force by which human accomplishment is attained or accounted for.
  • pained — hurt; injured.
  • pander — a person who furnishes clients for a prostitute or supplies persons for illicit sexual intercourse; procurer; pimp.
  • panned — the act of panning a camera.
  • panted — to breathe hard and quickly, as after exertion.
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