6-letter words containing a, e, r, i
- lazier — averse or disinclined to work, activity, or exertion; indolent.
- leiria — a city in central Portugal: site of the first printing press in Portugal (1466). Pop: 119 870 (2001)
- lerida — a city in NE Spain.
- libera — an ancient Italian goddess of wine, vineyards, and fertility and the wife of Liber, in later times identified with Persephone.
- librae — Plural form of libra.
- linear — of, consisting of, or using lines: linear design.
- maigre — containing neither flesh nor its juices, as food permissible on days of religious abstinence.
- mailer — letters, packages, etc., that are sent or delivered by means of the postal system: Storms delayed delivery of the mail.
- maimer — Agent noun of maim; one who maims.
- mainer — a principal pipe or duct in a system used to distribute water, gas, etc.
- marcie — a female given name, form of Marcia.
- margie — a female given name, form of Margaret.
- mariel — a city and seaport of Cuba, on the W coast, SW of Havana.
- marine — of or relating to the sea; existing in or produced by the sea: marine vegetation.
- marrie — (archaic) alternative spelling of marry.
- mehari — A type of fast-running dromedary camel, which can be used for racing or transport.
- mercia — an early English kingdom in central Britain.
- merida — a peninsula in SE Mexico and N Central America comprising parts of SE Mexico, N Guatemala, and Belize.
- merina — a member of a Malagasy-speaking people who primarily inhabit the interior plateau of Madagascar.
- mezair — a movement in which the horse makes a series of short jumps forward while standing on its hind legs.
- mierda — (neologism, vulgar) shit.
- mirage — an optical phenomenon, especially in the desert or at sea, by which the image of some object appears displaced above, below, or to one side of its true position as a result of spatial variations of the index of refraction of air.
- mirena — a type of intrauterine system
- nailer — a person or thing that drives nails, as a machine that drives nails automatically.
- naiver — Comparative form of naive.
- namier — Sir Lewis Bernstein, original name Ludwik Bernsztajn vel Niemirowski. 1888–1960, British historian, born in Poland: noted esp for his studies of 18th-century British politics
- napier — Sir Charles James, 1782–1853, British general.
- newari — a Sino-Tibetan language, the language of the Newar.
- pairle — a device representing the front of an ecclesiastical pallium, consisting of a broad Y -shaped form covered with crosses.
- panier — a basket, especially a large one, for carrying goods, provisions, etc.
- pardie — verily; indeed
- paries — Usually, parietes. Biology. a wall, as of a hollow organ; an investing part.
- parkie — a park keeper
- patier — (of a cross) having arms of equal length, each expanding outward from the center; formée: a cross paty.
- peoria — a city in central Illinois, on the Illinois River.
- pereia — (in a crustacean) the thorax.
- persia — Also called Persian Empire. an ancient empire located in W and SW Asia: at its height it extended from Egypt and the Aegean to India; conquered by Alexander the Great 334–331 b.c.
- pieria — a coastal region in NE Greece, W of the Gulf of Salonika.
- pirate — software pirate
- praise — the act of expressing approval or admiration; commendation; laudation.
- pratie — a potato
- rabies — an infectious disease of dogs, cats, and other animals, transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected animal and usually fatal if prophylactic treatment is not administered: caused by an RNA virus of the rhabdovirus group; hydrophobia.
- racier — slightly improper or indelicate; suggestive; risqué.
- racine — Jean Baptiste [zhahn ba-teest] /ʒɑ̃ baˈtist/ (Show IPA), 1639–99, French dramatist.
- raetia — Rhaetia
- raetic — an extinct language of uncertain affinities that was spoken in Rhaetia and written with the Etruscan alphabet.
- raided — a sudden assault or attack, as upon something to be seized or suppressed: a police raid on a gambling ring.
- raider — a person or thing that raids.
- railed — a bar of wood or metal fixed horizontally for any of various purposes, as for a support, barrier, fence, or railing.
- railer — to utter bitter complaint or vehement denunciation (often followed by at or against): to rail at fate.