6-letter words containing c, i, e, r
- gricer — (informal) A railway enthusiast.
- herdic — a low-hung carriage with two or four wheels, having the entrance at the back and the seats at the sides.
- heroic — Also, heroical. of, relating to, or characteristic of a hero or heroine.
- hicker — an unsophisticated, boorish, and provincial person; rube.
- ickier — Comparative form of icky.
- incher — something that has or is associated with a height or length of an inch or a specified number of inches (often used in combination): The flat-screen televisions are 23-inchers.
- irenic — tending to promote peace or reconciliation; peaceful or conciliatory.
- juicer — a kitchen appliance for extracting juice from fruits and vegetables.
- kicker — a person or thing that kicks.
- lacier — Comparative form of lacy.
- licker — to pass the tongue over the surface of, as to moisten, taste, or eat (often followed by up, off, from, etc.): to lick a postage stamp; to lick an ice-cream cone.
- marcie — a female given name, form of Marcia.
- mercia — an early English kingdom in central Britain.
- metric — software metric
- micher — One who goes sneaking about for dishonest or improper purposes; one who skulks, or keeps out of sight; a pander or go-between.
- mincer — to cut or chop into very small pieces.
- morice — (obsolete) A morris dance.
- nicher — a neigh
- nicker — a person or thing that nicks.
- norice — Obsolete form of nurse.
- orcein — a red dye, the principal coloring matter of cudbear and orchil, obtained by oxidizing an ammoniacal solution of orcinol.
- peirce — Benjamin, 1809–80, U.S. mathematician.
- permic — a subfamily of Finnic, comprising the modern languages Udmurt and Komi, spoken in northeastern European Russia, and fragmentary attestations of an earlier language (Old Permic) dating from the 15th century.
- picker — someone or something that picks.
- piecer — a person whose occupation is the joining together of pieces or threads, as in textile work.
- pierce — to penetrate into or run through (something), as a sharp, pointed dagger, object, or instrument does.
- piercy — Marge, born 1936, U.S. poet and novelist.
- pincer — insect, crab: claws
- precis — a concise summary.
- pricer — (especially in retail stores) an employee who establishes prices at which articles will be sold, or one who affixes price tags to merchandise.
- pricey — expensive or unduly expensive: a pricey wine.
- prince — a treatise on statecraft (1513) by Niccolò Machiavelli.
- racier — slightly improper or indelicate; suggestive; risqué.
- racine — Jean Baptiste [zhahn ba-teest] /ʒɑ̃ baˈtist/ (Show IPA), 1639–99, French dramatist.
- raetic — an extinct language of uncertain affinities that was spoken in Rhaetia and written with the Etruscan alphabet.
- rechie — smoky
- rechip — to put a new chip into (a stolen mobile phone) so it can be reused
- recife — a state in NE Brazil. 38,000 sq. mi. (98,420 sq. km). Capital: Recife.
- recipe — suspension
- recite — to repeat the words of, as from memory, especially in a formal manner: to recite a lesson.
- recoil — to draw back; start or shrink back, as in alarm, horror, or disgust.
- recoin — a piece of metal stamped and issued by the authority of a government for use as money.
- recti- — straight or right
- reicha — Anton or Antonín [Czech ahn-taw-nyeen] /Czech ˈɑn tɔ nyin/ (Show IPA), 1770–1836, Czech composer.
- relics — a surviving memorial of something past.
- relict — Ecology. a species or community living in an environment that has changed from that which is typical for it.
- repics — the scoring of 30 points in the declaration of hands before one's opponent scores a point.
- rhenic — of or containing rhenium.
- richen — to make rich or richer; enrich
- richer — having wealth or great possessions; abundantly supplied with resources, means, or funds; wealthy: a rich man; a rich nation.