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5-letter words containing a, e, r

  • feard — (archaic) Simple past tense and past participle of fear.
  • feare — Obsolete spelling of fear.
  • fears — Plural form of fear.
  • feart — afraid
  • feral — causing death; fatal.
  • feria — Ecclesiastical. a weekday on which no feast is celebrated.
  • feuar — (legal, Scotland) One who holds a feu.
  • flare — to burn with an unsteady, swaying flame, as a torch or candle in the wind.
  • frame — a border or case for enclosing a picture, mirror, etc.
  • frape — (obsolete) A crowd, a rabble.
  • frate — a monk or friar
  • freak — a fleck or streak of color.
  • freat — Alternative form of freet.
  • freda — a female given name.
  • frena — a fold of membrane that checks or restrains the motion of a part, as the fold on the underside of the tongue.
  • freya — the goddess of love and fertility, sister of Frey, daughter of Njord; one of the Vanir.
  • gager — a person or thing that gauges.
  • gamer — an amusement or pastime: children's games.
  • gaper — a person or thing that gapes.
  • garbe — a wheat-sheaf
  • garde — Obsolete form of guard.
  • garre — to compel; cause
  • gaser — Alternative form of graser.
  • gater — Southern U.S. Informal. alligator.
  • gayer — of, relating to, or exhibiting sexual desire or behavior directed toward a person or persons of one's own sex; homosexual: a gay couple. Antonyms: straight.
  • gazer — to look steadily and intently, as with great curiosity, interest, pleasure, or wonder.
  • gears — Plural form of gear.
  • gerah — an ancient Hebrew weight and coin, equal to 1/20 (0.05) of a shekel.
  • gerar — an ancient city in Palestine, near the Mediterranean: now an archaeological site in Israel.
  • glare — a bright, smooth surface, as of ice.
  • graceWilliam Russell, 1832–1904, U.S. financier and shipping magnate, born in Ireland: mayor of New York City 1880–88.
  • grade — a degree or step in a scale, as of rank, advancement, quality, value, or intensity: the best grade of paper.
  • grame — (obsolete) Anger; wrath; scorn; bitterness; repugnance.
  • grape — the edible, pulpy, smooth-skinned berry or fruit that grows in clusters on vines of the genus Vitis, and from which wine is made.
  • grate — a frame of metal bars for holding fuel when burning, as in a fireplace, furnace, or stove.
  • grave — the grave accent.
  • graze — to touch or rub something lightly, or so as to produce slight abrasion, in passing: to graze against a rough wall.
  • great — unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions: A great fire destroyed nearly half the city.
  • grefa — griefo.
  • greta — a female given name, form of Margaret.
  • guareJohn, born 1938, U.S. playwright.
  • haberFritz, 1868–1934, German chemist: Nobel Prize 1918.
  • haire — Obsolete spelling of hair.
  • haler — heller2 (def 1).
  • hamerFannie Lou, 1917–77, U.S. civil rights activist.
  • hared — any rodentlike mammal of the genus Lepus, of the family Leporidae, having long ears, a divided upper lip, and long hind limbs adapted for leaping.
  • harem — the part of a Muslim palace or house reserved for the residence of women.
  • hares — Plural form of hare.
  • harle — A bird, the red-breasted merganser.
  • harpe — (Ancient Greece) A type of curved weapon or implement, variously described as a sickle, a pruning hook, or a curved sword like a scimitar. In later depictions it became a combination of a straight sword on one side and a curved blade on the other.
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