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4-letter words that end in n

  • behn — Aphra (ˈæfrə). 1640–89, English dramatist and novelist, best known for her play The Rover (1678) and her novel Oroonoko (1688)
  • bein — comfortable; well-off
  • benn — Antony (Neil) Wedgwood, known as Tony Benn. 1925–2014, British Labour politician, a leading figure on the party's left wing. He renounced (1963) the title of Viscount Stansgate
  • bern — the capital of Switzerland, in the W part, on the Aar River: entered the Swiss confederation in 1353 and became the capital in 1848. Pop: 122 700 (2002 est)
  • bien — well
  • bion — fl. 2d cent. b.c.; Gr. pastoral poet
  • blin — singular of blini.
  • bonn — a city in W Germany, in North Rhine-Westphalia on the Rhine: the former capital (1949–90) of West Germany; university (1786). Pop: 311 052 (2003 est)
  • boon — You can describe something as a boon when it makes life better or easier for someone.
  • born — When a baby is born, it comes out of its mother's body at the beginning of its life. In formal English, if you say that someone is born of someone or to someone, you mean that person is their parent.
  • boun — prepared, ready
  • bran — Bran is the outer skin of grain that is left when the grain has been used to make flour.
  • bren — type of machine gun
  • brin — one of two filaments of silk combined by the silkworm to form a strand of silk
  • bunn — bun1 (def 1).
  • burn — If there is a fire or a flame somewhere, you say that there is a fire or flame burning there.
  • caen — an industrial city in NW France. Pop: 112 790 (2008)
  • cain — (in Scotland and Ireland) payment in kind, usually farm produce paid as rent
  • cann — to con, or direct the steering of (a ship)
  • carn — cairn.
  • cbrn — (of weapons or warfare) chemical, bacteriological, radiological, or nuclear
  • cern — Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire; an organization of European states with a centre in Geneva for research in high-energy particle physics, now called the European Laboratory for Particle Physics
  • chan — Zen (def 1).
  • chen — Peter Chen
  • chin — Your chin is the part of your face that is below your mouth and above your neck.
  • chon — a North and South Korean monetary unit worth one hundredth of a won
  • cien — Obsolete spelling of scion.
  • cion — scion (sense 1)
  • clan — A clan is a group which consists of families that are related to each other.
  • coen — Jan Pieterszoon. 1587–1629, Dutch colonial administrator; governor general of the Dutch East Indies (1618–23, 1627–29)
  • cohn — Ferdinand Julius1828-98; Ger. botanist and early bacteriologist
  • coin — A coin is a small piece of metal which is used as money.
  • coln — former German name of Cologne.
  • conn — 2nd century ad, king of Leinster and high king of Ireland
  • coon — A coon is a raccoon.
  • corn — Corn is used to refer to crops such as wheat and barley. It can also be used to refer to the seeds from these plants.
  • coun — Abbreviation of council.
  • cpan — Comprehensive Perl Archive Network
  • cran — a unit of capacity used for measuring fresh herring, equal to 37.5 gallons
  • cren — Corporation for Research and Educational Networking
  • crin — Horsehair fabric.
  • cron — (operating system)   The Unix clock daemon that executes commands at specified dates and times according to instructions in a "crontab" file.
  • curn — a grain of corn
  • cyan — a highly saturated green-blue that is the complementary colour of red and forms, with magenta and yellow, a set of primary colours
  • cyon — Obsolete spelling of scion.
  • dahn — Eye dialect of down.
  • damn — Damn, damn it, and dammit are used by some people to express anger or impatience.
  • darn — If you darn something knitted or made of cloth, you mend a hole in it by sewing stitches across the hole and then weaving stitches in and out of them.
  • dawn — Dawn is the time of day when light first appears in the sky, just before the sun rises.
  • dean — A dean is an important official at a university or college.
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