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4-letter words containing a, r

  • care — If you care about something, you feel that it is important and are concerned about it.
  • cark — to break down; die
  • carl — a masculine name
  • carn — cairn.
  • caro — Sir Antony. 1924–2013, British sculptor, best known for his abstract steel sculptures
  • carp — A carp is a kind of fish that lives in lakes and rivers.
  • carr — an area of bog or fen in which scrub, esp willow, has become established
  • cars — Plural form of car.
  • cart — A cart is an old-fashioned wooden vehicle that is used for transporting goods or people. Some carts are pulled by animals.
  • cary — (Arthur) Joyce (Lunel). 1888–1957, British novelist; author of Mister Johnson (1939), A House of Children (1941), and The Horse's Mouth (1944)
  • cera — (in prescriptions) wax.
  • char — If food chars or if you char it, it burns slightly and turns black as it is cooking.
  • cnar — compound net annual rate
  • cora — a feminine name
  • crab — A crab is a sea creature with a flat round body covered by a shell, and five pairs of legs with large claws on the front pair. Crabs usually move sideways.
  • crac — Careers Research and Advisory Centre
  • crag — A crag is a steep rocky cliff or part of a mountain.
  • cram — If you cram things or people into a container or place, you put them into it, although there is hardly enough room for them.
  • cran — a unit of capacity used for measuring fresh herring, equal to 37.5 gallons
  • crap — If you describe something as crap, you think that it is wrong or of very poor quality.
  • crat — Bureaucrat.
  • craw — the stomach of an animal
  • cray — a crayfish
  • cria — a baby llama, alpaca, or vicuña
  • csar — Alternative form of tsar.
  • czar — an emperor: title of any of the former emperors of Russia and, at various times, the sovereigns of other Slavic nations
  • darb — something excellent of its kind
  • dard — a member of any of the Indo-European peoples speaking a Dardic language
  • dare — If you do not dare to do something, you do not have enough courage to do it, or you do not want to do it because you fear the consequences. If you dare to do something, you do something which requires a lot of courage.
  • darg — a day's work
  • dari — the local name for the dialect of the Persian language spoken in Afghanistan
  • dark — When it is dark, there is not enough light to see properly, for example because it is night.
  • darn — If you darn something knitted or made of cloth, you mend a hole in it by sewing stitches across the hole and then weaving stitches in and out of them.
  • darr — (UK, dialect, Norfolk) A bird, the European black tern.
  • dart — If a person or animal darts somewhere, they move there suddenly and quickly.
  • dear — You use dear to describe someone or something that you feel affection for.
  • dora — a female given name: from a Greek word meaning “gift.”.
  • drab — dull; cheerless; lacking in spirit, brightness, etc.
  • drag — drag and drop
  • dram — dynamic random-access memory
  • drat — to damn; confound: Drat your interference.
  • drau — a river in S central Europe, rising in N Italy and flowing east through Austria, then southeast along the southern Hungarian border to join the River Danube. Length: 725 km (450 miles)
  • draw — to cause to move in a particular direction by or as if by a pulling force; pull; drag (often followed by along, away, in, out, or off).
  • dray — a low, strong cart without fixed sides, for carrying heavy loads.
  • duar — a mountain pass
  • dura — dura mater.
  • eare — Archaic spelling of ear.
  • earl — a male given name: from the old English word meaning “noble.”.
  • earn — to gain or get in return for one's labor or service: to earn one's living.
  • earp — Wyatt (Ber·ry Stapp) [wahy-uh t-ber-ee-stap] /ˈwaɪ ətˈbɛr i stæp/ (Show IPA), 1848–1929, U.S. frontiersman, law officer, and gunfighter.
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