0%

10-letter words that end in le

  • aquamanale — aquamanile.
  • aquamanile — a medieval water vessel
  • araeostyle — having an intercolumniation of four diameters.
  • arbitrable — that can be arbitrated; subject to arbitration
  • arctophile — a person who collects teddy bears or is fond of them
  • arrestable — An arrestable offence is an offence that you can be arrested for.
  • as a whole — If you refer to something as a whole, you are referring to it generally and as a single unit.
  • ascaridole — a liquid, C 10 H 16 O 2 , constituting the active principle of chenopodium oil, used chiefly as a catalyst in polymerization reactions.
  • ascendable — having the ability to be ascended
  • ascendible — Capable of being ascended; climbable.
  • ascii file — a file that uses the ASCII code
  • ascribable — to credit or assign, as to a cause or source; attribute; impute: The alphabet is usually ascribed to the Phoenicians.
  • aspectable — having the ability to be seen
  • assailable — to attack vigorously or violently; assault.
  • assertable — having the ability to be affirmed or professed or deserving of affirmation
  • assessable — to estimate officially the value of (property, income, etc.) as a basis for taxation.
  • assignable — capable of being specified: The word has no assignable meaning in our language.
  • associable — that can be associated or connected in the mind
  • attachable — to fasten or affix; join; connect: to attach a photograph to an application with a staple.
  • attackable — Which may be attacked.
  • attainable — Something that is attainable can be achieved.
  • attenuable — Capable of being attenuated.
  • attestable — Able to be attested.
  • audiophile — a person who has a great interest in high-fidelity sound reproduction
  • autojumble — a sale of second-hand car parts, esp for car enthusiasts
  • automobile — An automobile is a car.
  • avouchable — able to be avouched
  • b particle — B meson.
  • backpaddle — to propel a boat by paddling backward, as by using a stroke in the direction of stern to bow.
  • bald eagle — A bald eagle is a large eagle with a white head that lives in North America. It is the national bird of the United States of America.
  • barcarolle — a boating song of the Venetian gondoliers.
  • barnstable — a city in SE Massachusetts.
  • barnstaple — a town in SW England, in Devon, on the estuary of the River Taw: tourism, agriculture. Pop: 30 765 (2001)
  • batch file — a computer file with sequential commands to be executed when the file is read
  • beaglehole — John. 1901–71, New Zealand historian and author. His works include Exploration of the Pacific (1934) and The Journals of James Cook (1955)
  • bee beetle — a European beetle, Trichodes apiarius, that is often parasitic in beehives: family Cleridae
  • believable — Something that is believable makes you think that it could be true or real.
  • belle isle — an island in the Atlantic, at the N entrance to the Strait of Belle Isle, between Labrador and Newfoundland. Area: about 39 sq km (15 sq miles)
  • belleville — a city in SW Illinois.
  • beltsville — a town in central Maryland, near Washington, D.C.
  • bescribble — to cover with scribbles
  • besprinkle — to sprinkle all over with liquid, powder, etc
  • bestraddle — to sit with one's legs either side of something
  • bibliopole — a dealer in books, esp rare or decorative ones
  • bidonville — a shanty town
  • biquintile — the aspect of planets when they are at an angle of 144° to one another
  • bird table — A bird table is a small wooden platform on a pole which some people put in their garden in order to put food for the birds on it.
  • birtwistle — Sir Harrison. born 1934, English composer, whose works include the operas Punch and Judy (1967), The Mask of Orpheus (1984), Gawain (1991), Exody (1998), and The Minotaur (2008)
  • bissextile — (of a month or year) containing the extra day of a leap year
  • black bile — one of the four bodily humours; melancholy
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?