6-letter words containing a, c, e, r
- farced — Simple past tense and past participle of farce.
- farces — Plural form of farce.
- fiacre — a small horse-drawn carriage.
- france — Anatole [a-na-tawl] /a naˈtɔl/ (Show IPA), (Jacques Anatole Thibault) 1844–1924, French novelist and essayist: Nobel Prize 1921.
- graced — elegance or beauty of form, manner, motion, or action: We watched her skate with effortless grace across the ice. Synonyms: attractiveness, charm, gracefulness, comeliness, ease, lissomeness, fluidity. Antonyms: stiffness, ugliness, awkwardness, clumsiness; klutziness.
- graces — William Russell, 1832–1904, U.S. financier and shipping magnate, born in Ireland: mayor of New York City 1880–88.
- hacker — a person, as an artist or writer, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and mediocre work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts: As a painter, he was little more than a hack.
- horace — (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) 65–8 b.c, Roman poet and satirist.
- jacker — any of various portable devices for raising or lifting heavy objects short heights, using various mechanical, pneumatic, or hydraulic methods.
- lacert — (obsolete) A fleshy muscle of the human body.
- lacery — Lace or laces collectively.
- lacier — Comparative form of lacy.
- lacker — to coat with lacquer.
- lancer — a cavalry soldier armed with a lance.
- macers — Plural form of macer.
- macher — A person who gets things done.
- marcel — to wave (the hair) by means of special irons, producing the effect of regular, continuous waves (marcel waves)
- marche — The, a region in central Italy, bordering the Adriatic. 3743 sq. mi. (9695 sq. km).
- marcie — a female given name, form of Marcia.
- mccrae — John, 1872–1918, Canadian physician, soldier, and poet.
- mercia — an early English kingdom in central Britain.
- nacred — lined with or resembling nacre.
- narced — Simple past tense and past participle of narc.
- neckar — a river in SW Germany, flowing N and NE from the Black Forest, then W to the Rhine River. 246 miles (395 km) long.
- nectar — the saccharine secretion of a plant, which attracts the insects or birds that pollinate the flower.
- ochrea — ocrea.
- ocreae — a sheathing part, as a pair of stipules united about a stem.
- orache — any plant of the genus Atriplex, especially A. hortensis, of the amaranth family, cultivated for use like spinach.
- oracle — Oracle Corporation
- packer — a group of things wrapped or tied together for easy handling or carrying; a bundle, especially one to be carried on the back of an animal or a person: a mule pack; a hiker's pack.
- parcae — an ancient Roman goddess of childbirth and destiny. Compare Parcae.
- parcel — an object, article, container, or quantity of something wrapped or packed up; small package; bundle.
- parsec — a unit of distance equal to that required to cause a heliocentric parallax of one second of an arc, equivalent to 206,265 times the distance from the earth to the sun, or 3.26 light-years.
- placer — a person who sets things in their place or arranges them.
- prance — to spring from the hind legs; to move by springing, as a horse.
- preach — to proclaim or make known by sermon (the gospel, good tidings, etc.).
- preact — anything done, being done, or to be done; deed; performance: a heroic act.
- purace — an active volcano in SW Colombia. 15,603 feet (4756 meters).
- raceme — a simple indeterminate inflorescence in which the flowers are borne on short pedicels lying along a common axis, as in the lily of the valley.
- racers — Plural form of racer.
- racest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of race.
- rachel — Jacob's favorite wife, the mother of Joseph and Benjamin. Gen. 29–35.
- rachet — flashy, unrefined, etc.; low-class: ratchet girls wearing too much makeup.
- racier — slightly improper or indelicate; suggestive; risqué.
- racine — Jean Baptiste [zhahn ba-teest] /ʒɑ̃ baˈtist/ (Show IPA), 1639–99, French dramatist.
- racked — Also called cloud rack. a group of drifting clouds.
- racker — One who racks.
- racket — a light bat having a netting of catgut or nylon stretched in a more or less oval frame and used for striking the ball in tennis, the shuttlecock in badminton, etc.
- rackle — headstrong; rash.
- raetic — an extinct language of uncertain affinities that was spoken in Rhaetia and written with the Etruscan alphabet.