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6-letter words containing a, l, d, r

  • herald — (formerly) a royal or official messenger, especially one representing a monarch in an ambassadorial capacity during wartime.
  • holard — (dated) The total water content of a sample of soil.
  • iridal — (rare) Pertaining to a rainbow.
  • labrid — any of numerous fishes of the family Labridae, including the wrasses, the tautog, and the cunner, and characterized chiefly by well-developed teeth and, often, brilliant colors.
  • ladder — a structure of wood, metal, or rope, commonly consisting of two sidepieces between which a series of bars or rungs are set at suitable distances, forming a means of climbing up or down.
  • ladler — a person who serves something out with a ladle
  • ladron — a thief.
  • lairds — Plural form of laird.
  • laired — British Dialect. mud; mire.
  • lander — a space probe designed to land on a planet or other solid celestial body.
  • landorWalter Savage, 1775–1864, English poet and prose writer.
  • landryThomas Wade ("Tom") 1924–2000, U.S. football player and coach.
  • larded — the rendered fat of hogs, especially the internal fat of the abdomen.
  • larder — a room or place where food is kept; pantry.
  • lardon — a strip of fat used in larding, especially as drawn through the substance of meat, chicken, etc., with a kind of needle or pin.
  • laredo — a city in S Texas, on the Rio Grande.
  • larked — Simple past tense and past participle of lark.
  • larned — Simple past tense and past participle of larn.
  • laroid — belonging or relating to gulls or specifically the Larus genus of the gull family
  • lauder — Sir Harry (MacLennan) [muh-klen-uh n] /məˈklɛn ən/ (Show IPA), 1870–1950, Scottish balladeer and composer.
  • layard — Sir Austen Henry [aw-stuh n] /ˈɔ stən/ (Show IPA), 1817–94, English archaeologist, writer, and diplomat.
  • leader — a person or thing that leads.
  • learnd — Lb obsolete Simple past tense and past participle of learn: obsolete spelling of learned.
  • lenard — Philipp [fee-lip] /ˈfi lɪp/ (Show IPA), 1862–1947, German physicist, born in Austria-Hungary: Nobel Prize 1905.
  • lerida — a city in NE Spain.
  • liards — Plural form of liard.
  • lidars — Plural form of lidar.
  • lizard — a promontory in SW Cornwall, in SW England: the southernmost point in England.
  • loader — a person or thing that loads.
  • lurdan — a lazy, stupid, loutish fellow.
  • marled — fertilized with marl.
  • medlar — a small tree, Mespilus germanica, of the rose family, the fruit of which resembles a crab apple and is not edible until the early stages of decay.
  • myrdal — Alva (Reimer) [al-vuh rey-mer;; Swedish ahl-vah rey-muh r] /ˈæl və ˈreɪ mər;; Swedish ˈɑl vɑ ˈreɪ mər/ (Show IPA), 1902–86, Swedish sociologist and diplomat: Nobel Peace Prize 1982 (wife of Gunnar Myrdal).
  • ordeal — any extremely severe or trying test, experience, or trial.
  • parled — talk; parley.
  • pedlar — a person who sells from door to door or in the street.
  • raddle — ruddle.
  • radial — arranged like radii or rays.
  • radula — a chitinous band in the mouth of most mollusks, set with numerous, minute, horny teeth and drawn backward and forward over the floor of the mouth in the process of breaking up food.
  • railed — a bar of wood or metal fixed horizontally for any of various purposes, as for a support, barrier, fence, or railing.
  • randal — a male given name.
  • reclad — to dress; attire.
  • redeal — to deal again in a card game
  • redial — Also, re-dial. to dial again.
  • reland — to land again
  • reload — anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • ribald — vulgar or indecent in speech, language, etc.; coarsely mocking, abusive, or irreverent; scurrilous.
  • rldram — (storage)   (Reduced Latency DRAM) A kind of dynamic random access memory. RLDRAM comes in "common IO" and "separate IO" configurations. It supports broadside addressing. It is typically used in networking gear and set-top boxes that require high bandwidth memory.
  • roland — Italian Orlando. the greatest of the paladins in the Charlemagne cycle of the chansons de geste, renowned for his prowess and the manner of his death in the battle of Roncesvalles (a.d. 778), also for his five days' combat with Oliver in which neither was the victor.
  • ronald — a male given name: from Scandinavian words meaning “counsel” and “rule.”.
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