These lists help you spot N-and-E spelling patterns, pick stronger word-game plays, and write cleaner sentences with less second-guessing.
If you’re hunting for words that contain both n and e, you’re in the right place. Maybe you’re staring at a rack of tiles, trying to squeeze out one more point. Maybe you’re teaching spelling and want dependable examples. Or maybe you just want better word choices when you write.
This article gives you two things at once: a practical way to think about N-and-E words, plus ready-to-copy lists you can use right away. You’ll see patterns that repeat across English, so you’re not stuck memorizing random piles of words.
What Counts As Words With N And E
For this topic, a word qualifies if it includes both letters n and e anywhere in the word. The letters can sit side by side (like ne in “next”), or they can be separated (like the e and n in “agent”).
You’ll also run into patterns that show up over and over:
- NE near the start: near, need, next
- EN near the end: open, often, listen
- -EN as a verb ending: widen, soften, sharpen
- -NESS as a noun ending: kindness, openness
Once you get used to these shapes, you’ll find N-and-E words faster, spell them with less friction, and make better guesses when you’re unsure.
How To Spot N-And-E Words In Seconds
When you scan for N and E, don’t search letter by letter. Search by chunks. English is full of common letter pairs, and many of them carry meaning or grammar cues.
Start With The Most Common Pair: EN
EN shows up in everyday words, and it loves to sit near the end: often, listen, garden, sudden. If you see an e, your eyes can jump forward for a nearby n and catch “en” fast.
Then Check NE At The Front And Middle
NE is another easy win: near, neat, never, planet. You’ll also see “ne” buried inside longer words: benefit, cinema, generate.
Use Endings That Practically Hand You The Letters
Some endings almost guarantee both letters appear:
- -EN verbs: shorten, tighten, lengthen
- -MENT nouns: statement, movement, alignment
- -ENCE nouns: silence, patience, science
- -ENER agent nouns: listener, opener, gardener
In word games, endings are your best friends. They’re predictable, they stack well with hooks, and they cut down the number of tiles you must brute-force.
Patterns That Boost Spelling, Writing, And Word Games
Knowing lists is nice. Knowing the logic behind the lists is better. These patterns can steer your guesses when you’re stuck, and they can sharpen your choices when several words fit.
Verb Builders With -EN
English uses -en to make verbs that mean “make more X.” That’s why widen means “make wider,” and soften means “make softer.” Once you notice this, a whole family of words becomes easier to recall.
Noun Builders With -NESS
-ness turns adjectives into nouns: kindness, openness, sharpness. If you’re teaching parts of speech, these are clean examples. If you’re playing word games, they’re handy for extending a base word.
Reliable Middle Chunks: -ENT- And -END-
Chunks like -ent- and -end- show up in a lot of useful words: gentle, enter, sentence, weekend, lender. When you’re scanning a word, the middle can be a shortcut, not a speed bump.
If you play Scrabble-style games, it also helps to know which word list your game uses. Tournament word lists and game dictionaries aren’t always identical. The North American word-list organization explains how lexicons work and what gets accepted in competitive play on its NASPA word-list and lexicon tools pages.
| Pattern | Where It Shows Up | Example Words |
|---|---|---|
| EN (ending) | Common word endings | open, often, wooden |
| NE (starting) | Everyday starters | near, neat, never |
| -EN (verb suffix) | “Make more X” verbs | widen, soften, tighten |
| -NESS (noun suffix) | Adjective → noun | kindness, openness, rudeness |
| -MENT | Action/state nouns | movement, statement, agreement |
| -ENCE / -ANCE | Abstract nouns | silence, patience, distance |
| GEN / GENE | Common roots in longer words | generate, general, generous |
| BEN / BENE | “Good/well” root family | benefit, benevolent, benign |
| MENTAL / MEN | Mind-related clusters | mental, mention, mentor |
| ENT (ending) | Adjectives and nouns | absent, urgent, student |
Short Words With N And E For Tile Racks And Spelling Drills
Short words are gold in tight spaces. They’re also great for quick spelling practice because you can focus on sounds and letter order without extra baggage.
Two- And Three-Letter Picks
English doesn’t have many two-letter words with both letters, but you can still get mileage from three-letter choices. Here are short, common options:
- Three letters: end, ten, hen, pen, den, net, new, men
- Short, game-friendly forms: ens (plural of “en” as a letter name in some contexts), one
Note: word-game acceptance can vary by dictionary. If you’re studying for spelling or writing, stick to the everyday words. If you’re playing, match your game’s word list.
Four-Letter Workhorses
Four-letter words are where N-and-E lists start to feel roomy:
- near, neat, neck, need, nerd, nest, next
- open, neon, then, when, rent, sent, bent
- omen, knee (includes n? no), note (no e), tone (no n)
That last line is a little reminder: your brain likes to “autocomplete” patterns. You’ll often reach for a word that feels right but misses one letter. A quick letter check saves you the headache.
Medium-Length Words That Show Clear N-E Patterns
Words in the five-to-seven-letter range tend to show strong structure: prefixes, suffixes, and steady vowel-consonant rhythm. That makes them easier to remember and easier to slot into writing.
Five-Letter Words
- linen, novel, spend, spent, stern, green, then (4)
- needy, never, newly, tenure, enter
- given, taken, begun (has e? no), widen
If you teach phonics or spelling, enter and tenure are nice for talking about syllables and vowel sounds. If you’re playing word games, widen and given are handy for extensions with common letters.
Six-Letter Words
- listen, sudden, garden, golden, tender, sender
- engine, invent, intent, tenant, moment (has n and e? yes)
- second, render, wonder (has e? no), recent
Watch the “-en” cluster inside longer words like engine. It’s a strong anchor when you’re spelling from sound.
Seven-Letter Words
- beneath, benefit, general, generous
- silence, patience, sentence
- tighten, lengthen, sharpen
If you’re writing, these are the words that can carry a sentence without sounding stiff. If you’re doing vocabulary study, many of these sit in families you can expand with prefixes and suffixes.
| Length | Starter List | How To Use Them |
|---|---|---|
| 3 | end, ten, hen, pen, den, net, new, men | Great for hooks and quick drills |
| 4 | near, neat, neck, need, nest, next, rent, sent | Clean patterns; easy to scan |
| 5 | enter, never, newly, widen, spend, stern, green | Good balance of common letters |
| 6 | listen, tender, engine, invent, intent, recent, garden | Strong chunks like EN, ENT, INE |
| 7 | benefit, silence, patience, sentence, tighten, sharpen | Useful for writing and longer plays |
| 8 | generate, evergreen, agreement, statement | Look for prefixes plus -ment/-ate |
| 9 | convention, entertain, enrichment | Great for studying word families |
| 10+ | benevolent, unconventional, interconnection | Best for reading and vocabulary growth |
Longer Words With N And E That Level Up Writing
Longer N-and-E words are where you can make your writing feel more precise without sounding showy. The trick is choosing words that stay clear on a first read.
Academic And School-Friendly Words
If your site is education-focused, these show up often in reading passages, essays, and test prompts:
- evidence, sentence, reference, inference
- generalize, generate, determine, represent
- environment (skip), (avoid that word), experiment, measurement
Pick words that match the grade level you’re writing for. A short, clear word beats a longer one when the longer one slows the reader down.
Word-Family Clusters You Can Grow
Here are clusters that make it easy to expand vocabulary with small changes:
- generate: generate, generation, generator, regenerative
- benefit: benefit, beneficial, beneficiary
- sentence: sentence, sentencing, unsentenced (rare), sentence-level
- invent: invent, invention, inventive, reinvent
If you’re teaching, this is where you can show how a base word shifts with prefixes and suffixes. If you’re writing, these clusters help you keep tone consistent across a paragraph.
Game Tactics For Finding N-And-E Words Under Pressure
When a timer’s running or the board is tight, your brain wants shortcuts. Here are a few that work without turning play into guesswork.
Check Common Hooks And Add-Ons
Look for ways to attach a letter or two to a base word you already see. N-and-E words often accept easy add-ons:
- Add -en to an adjective root: tight → tighten
- Add -ness to an adjective: kind → kindness
- Add -ment to a verb: agree → agreement
Those endings can turn a dead rack into a scoring rack, since they use common letters and create longer placements.
Keep A Personal “Go-To” Set
Don’t try to memorize every word in a giant list. Build a small set you can recall instantly: 20–40 words that show up a lot, fit common board shapes, and feel natural in writing too. Words like enter, listen, tender, and sentence earn their spot because you’ll keep running into them.
Verify With A Trusted Dictionary When Needed
For writing and study, it helps to check spelling, pronunciation, and usage notes on a reputable dictionary page. Merriam-Webster’s entry pages are handy when you want a quick check on meaning and usage, like the Merriam-Webster definition for “sentence”.
Teaching Ideas Using N-And-E Word Lists
If you’re teaching language skills, word lists work best when they’re tied to a task. Here are a few classroom-friendly ways to use N-and-E words without making it feel like a rote drill.
Sort By Pattern
Give students a mixed list and ask them to sort into buckets:
- Words that start with ne-
- Words that end with -en
- Words that contain -ent-
- Words that end with -ness or -ment
This turns “memorize these words” into a puzzle. It also helps students notice spelling patterns that carry across new words later.
Build Sentences That Prove Meaning
Pick ten words from the lists and write one sentence for each that shows meaning through context. Use short sentences. Make them specific. “The student wrote a sentence” is fine, but “The student wrote one clear sentence that answered the prompt” gives more signal.
Mini Dictation With A Twist
Read a sentence aloud that includes two or three N-and-E words. Students write it down, then circle the chunks: en, ne, -ment, -ness. This links sound, spelling, and pattern recognition in one pass.
Printable-Style Master List You Can Copy
Here’s a larger mixed list of everyday words with both letters. It’s not meant to be “all possible words.” It’s meant to be useful on day one.
- near, neat, neck, need, needy, never, new, newly, next
- ten, net, den, hen, pen, men, end, send, tend
- enter, intent, invent, investor, interval, internal
- listen, lesson, lengthen, tighten, soften, sharpen, widen
- sentence, silence, patience, evidence, reference, inference
- benefit, beneficial, beneficiary, benevolent, benign
- general, generate, generous, genuine, engineer, engine
- statement, movement, agreement, alignment, engagement
- garden, golden, tender, lender, sender, cleaner
If you want to squeeze more value from this list, pick a theme each time you practice. One day: words that start with “ne.” Next day: words that end with “-en.” Then: words that end with “-ment.” Your recall will climb faster when your brain knows what it’s hunting.
References & Sources
- NASPA (North American Scrabble Players Association).“NASPA Zyzzyva (Word List And Lexicon Tools).”Explains Scrabble-style lexicons and provides official word-list tools used by many players.
- Merriam-Webster.“Sentence (Dictionary Entry).”Provides spelling, pronunciation, meanings, and usage notes for a common N-and-E word.