0%

5-letter words that end in e

  • bruce — James. 1730–94, British explorer, who discovered the source of the Blue Nile (1770)
  • brule — (in the Pacific Northwest) an area of forest destroyed by fire.
  • brume — heavy mist or fog
  • brute — If you call someone, usually a man, a brute, you mean that they are rough, violent, and insensitive.
  • bryce — Viscount James1838-1922; Eng. jurist, statesman, & historian, born in Ireland
  • buaze — a flowering shrub commonly found in savannah woodland areas of Africa
  • budge — If someone will not budge on a matter, or if nothing budges them, they refuse to change their mind or to come to an agreement.
  • buffe — plate armor for the lower part of the face and the throat, used with a burgonet.
  • bugle — A bugle is a simple brass musical instrument that looks like a small trumpet. Bugles are often used in the army to announce when activities such as meals are about to begin.
  • bulge — If something such as a person's stomach bulges, it sticks out.
  • bulse — a purse or bag for diamonds
  • bunce — a windfall or boom
  • bunde — a short form of “German-American Volksbund,” a pro-Nazi organization in the U.S. during the 1930s and 1940s.
  • burke — Edmund. 1729–97, British Whig statesman, conservative political theorist, and orator, born in Ireland: defended parliamentary government and campaigned for a more liberal treatment of the American colonies; denounced the French Revolution
  • burse — a flat case used at Mass as a container for the corporal
  • butle — to act as butler
  • butte — an isolated steep-sided flat-topped hill
  • byrneDonn [don] /dɒn/ (Show IPA), Donn-Byrne, Brian Oswald.
  • cable — A cable is a thick wire, or a group of wires inside a rubber or plastic covering, which is used to carry electricity or electronic signals.
  • cabre — heraldic term designating an animal rearing
  • cache — A cache is a quantity of things such as weapons that have been hidden.
  • cadge — If someone cadges food, money, or help from you, they ask you for it and succeed in getting it.
  • cadie — a person in a large town or city in the 18th century who was on the lookout for chance employment, for example, as a messenger
  • cadre — A cadre is a small group of people who have been specially chosen, trained, and organized for a particular purpose.
  • caese — a Shakespearean interjection of uncertain meaning
  • caine — Sir Michael. real name Maurice Micklewhite. born 1933, British film actor. His films include The Ipcress File (1965), Get Carter (1971), Educating Rita (1983), Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), and The Cider House Rules (1999)
  • caise — Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering.
  • calpe — Rock of Gibraltar
  • calve — When a cow calves, it gives birth to a calf.
  • canne — Obsolete spelling of can.
  • canoe — A canoe is a small, narrow boat that you move through the water using a stick with a wide end called a paddle.
  • caple — a horse
  • carie — a female given name, form of Caroline.
  • carle — Scot. a strong, robust fellow, especially a strong manual laborer. a miser; an extremely thrifty person.
  • carme — a nymph who was one of Diana's attendants and mother of Britomaris by Jupiter
  • carne — Marcel (marsɛl). 1906–96, French film director. His films include Le Jour se lève (1939), Les Portes de la nuit (1946), and La Bible (1976)
  • carse — a riverside area of flat fertile alluvium
  • carte — ˈRichard D'Oyly (ˈdɔɪli ) ; doiˈlē) 1844-1901; Eng. producer of Gilbert & Sullivan operas
  • carve — If you carve an object, you make it by cutting it out of a substance such as wood or stone. If you carve something such as wood or stone into an object, you make the object by cutting it out.
  • cashe — (spelling)   It's spelled "cache".
  • caste — A caste is one of the traditional social classes into which people are divided in a Hindu society.
  • cause — a person or thing that acts, happens, or exists in such a way that some specific thing happens as a result; the producer of an effect: You have been the cause of much anxiety. What was the cause of the accident?
  • cavie — a hen coop
  • cayce — a town in central South Carolina.
  • cease — If something ceases, it stops happening or existing.
  • celle — a city in N Germany, on the Aller River in Lower Saxony: from 1378 to 1705 the residence of the Dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg. Pop: 71 319 (2003 est)
  • cense — to burn incense near or before (an altar, shrine, etc)
  • cerge — a large altar candle
  • cezve — a small metal pot, usually of copper, with a long metal handle, used for preparing Turkish, Arabic, or Greek style coffee
  • chace — (obsolete) chase; pursue.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?