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3-Letter Words Containing N

How many 3-letter words containing N can you name? Only reasonably familiar words appear on this list; obscure words are excluded.
Proper nouns excluded
Quiz by Kymmenentuhatta
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Last updated: March 12, 2022
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First submittedDecember 29, 2017
Times taken163
Average score81.3%
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N**
nab
nag
nan
nap
nay
nee
net
new
N**
nib
nil
nip
nit
nix
nob
nod
N**
nog
nor
not
now
nub
nun
nut
*N*
and
ant
any
end
gnu
ink
inn
one
**N
ban
bin
bun
can
con
dan
den
din
**N
don
eon
fan
fen
fin
fun
gin
gun
**N
hen
hun
inn
ion
ken
kin
man
men
**N
nun
own
pan
pen
pin
pun
ran
run
**N
sin
son
sun
tan
ten
tin
ton
urn
**N
van
wan
win
won
yen
yin
zen
7 Comments
+1
Level 68
Dec 29, 2017
Bin.
+1
Level 76
Dec 29, 2017
Added :)
+1
Level 74
Jan 2, 2018
ani
+1
Level 76
Jan 2, 2018
A species of cuckoo... too obscure, I think.
+1
Level 67
Mar 12, 2022
I have never heard the words "hen" or "dan" spoken, other than as nicknames for Henry and Daniel. Meanwhile, I don't think that the words ani, yon, tun, nth, or dun are all that obscure. I would suggest using the Scrabble dictionary; it is a flawed document in my opinion, and in those of many of my Scrabble-playing friends, but it is at least an agreed-upon source.
+1
Level 76
Mar 12, 2022
A hen is a bird. A dan is a grading in judo. Never heard of the five words you mention, but in my opinion the scrabble dictionary is pretty contrived, full of non-words you can sneak onto a Scrabble board anyway.
+1
Level 67
Mar 13, 2022
I woke up in the middle of the night in horror! I realized that I raise chickens, and say the word "hen" every day! Now I have had coffee and defragmented my brain, so I feel better! Sorry to waste your time with a flawed comment. I agree with you on the Scrabble dictionary, but as I said, at least it is an agreed list. I am a retired English teacher, and was once beaten in Scrabble by an Indonesian woman who barely spoke English--but she had memorized that book! Anyway, as a birder, I say the word "Ani" many times a year. My friend the mathematician says "nth" quite often. "To dun" is to pester somebody who owes you money--used more in Britain than in the US, but still a pretty common word; I heard it often when I worked in a collection agency. A "tun" is a big wine cask; the word appears in "Moby Dick" and elsewhere. "Yon" is rather Shakespearean, but it pops up now and again when people want to say "yonder" in an old-fashioned way.