5-letter words containing ce
- dulce — a female given name: from the Latin word meaning “sweet.”.
- dunce — a dull-witted, stupid, or ignorant person; dolt.
- educe — to draw forth or bring out, as something potential or latent; elicit; develop.
- emcee — A master of ceremonies.
- excel — Microsoft Excel
- 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.
- farce — a light, humorous play in which the plot depends upon a skillfully exploited situation rather than upon the development of character.
- feces — waste matter discharged from the intestines through the anus; excrement.
- fence — a barrier enclosing or bordering a field, yard, etc., usually made of posts and wire or wood, used to prevent entrance, to confine, or to mark a boundary.
- fices — Chiefly South Midland and Southern U.S. a small mongrel dog, especially one that is ill-tempered; cur; mutt.
- force — physical power or strength possessed by a living being: He used all his force in opening the window.
- fyces — feist.
- gance — Abel (abɛl). 1889–1981, French film director, whose works include J'accuse (1919, 1937) and Napoléon (1927), which introduced the split-screen technique
- glace — frozen.
- grace — William Russell, 1832–1904, U.S. financier and shipping magnate, born in Ireland: mayor of New York City 1880–88.
- grece — a flight of steps, or a single step in a flight
- grice — H(erbert) Paul, 1913–88, English philosopher.
- hacek — a diacritical mark (ˇ) placed over a letter in some languages, as Czech and Lithuanian, and in some systems of phonetic transcription, especially to indicate that a sound is palatalized.
- hance — (transitive, obsolete) To raise, to elevate.
- hence — as an inference from this fact; for this reason; therefore: The eggs were very fresh and hence satisfactory.
- iceni — an ancient Celtic tribe of eastern England, whose queen, Boadicea, headed an insurrection against the Romans in a.d. 61.
- incel — (neologism) A person who is celibate against their wishes.
- joyce — James (Augustine Aloysius) 1882–1941, Irish novelist.
- juice — the natural fluid, fluid content, or liquid part that can be extracted from a plant or one of its parts, especially of a fruit: orange juice.
- korce — a city in SE Albania.
- laced — Tainted with something, especially a drug.
- lacer — a netlike ornamental fabric made of threads by hand or machine.
- laces — Plural form of lace.
- lacet — braided work in lace
- lacey — a town in W Washington.
- lance — a male given name.
- lecce — a city in SE Italy: ancient Greek and Roman city; noted for its baroque architecture.
- licey — Containing lice (the insect).
- luces — a pike, especially when fully grown.
- lycee — a secondary school, especially in France, maintained by the government.
- maced — Simple past tense and past participle of mace.
- macer — macebearer.
- maces — a spice ground from the layer between a nutmeg shell and its outer husk, resembling nutmeg in flavor.
- merce — (obsolete) To subject to fine or amercement; to mulct; to amerce.
- mince — to cut or chop into very small pieces.
- misce — (in prescriptions) mix.
- nance — Offensive. an effeminate male.
- neice — Misspelling of niece.
- niced — Simple past tense and past participle of nice.
- nicen — To become nicer.
- nicer — pleasing; agreeable; delightful: a nice visit.