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6-letter words containing c, r, e, a

  • rancel — to search or rummage; ransack
  • raucle — bold, rash
  • re-act — to act or perform again.
  • reachs — to get to or get as far as in moving, going, traveling, etc.: The boat reached the shore.
  • reback — to provide (a book) with a new back, backing or lining
  • recage — a boxlike enclosure having wires, bars, or the like, for confining and displaying birds or animals.
  • recall — to bring back from memory; recollect; remember: Can you recall what she said?
  • recane — a stick or short staff used to assist one in walking; walking stick.
  • recant — to withdraw or disavow (a statement, opinion, etc.), especially formally; retract.
  • recast — to cast again or anew.
  • rechar — an EU funding programme providing grants for the reconversion or development of depressed mining areas
  • reckan — a chain, hook or bar for hanging a pot over a fire
  • reclad — to dress; attire.
  • recoal — to supply (an engine, fire, etc) or (of an engine, fire, etc) to be loaded with fresh coal
  • recoat — to coat (something) again or with a new coat of paint, varnish, etc
  • rectal — of, relating to, or for the rectum.
  • redact — to put into suitable literary form; revise; edit.
  • redcap — a baggage porter at a railroad station.
  • redcar — a town in NE England, in Redcar and Cleveland district, on the North Sea.
  • reface — to renew, restore, or repair the face or surface of (buildings, stone, etc.).
  • reicha — Anton or Antonín [Czech ahn-taw-nyeen] /Czech ˈɑn tɔ nyin/ (Show IPA), 1770–1836, Czech composer.
  • relace — a netlike ornamental fabric made of threads by hand or machine.
  • repack — fill luggage again
  • rerack — (in billiards) the act of replacing the object balls in the triangular rack to restart the game, esp when the previous game has not been completed but abandoned
  • retack — to tack again
  • rosace — rosette (def 3).
  • sacker — a person who sacks; plunderer; pillager.
  • sacred — devoted or dedicated to a deity or to some religious purpose; consecrated.
  • saucer — a small, round, shallow dish to hold a cup.
  • scaler — a person or thing that scales.
  • scarce — insufficient to satisfy the need or demand; not abundant: Meat and butter were scarce during the war.
  • scared — to fill, especially suddenly, with fear or terror; frighten; alarm.
  • scarer — to fill, especially suddenly, with fear or terror; frighten; alarm.
  • scarfe — Gerald. born 1936, British cartoonist, famous for his scathing caricatures of politicians and celebrities
  • scarre — to scare
  • sclera — a dense, white, fibrous membrane that, with the cornea, forms the external covering of the eyeball.
  • scrape — to deprive of or free from an outer layer, adhering matter, etc., or to smooth by drawing or rubbing something, especially a sharp or rough instrument, over the surface: to scrape a table to remove paint and varnish.
  • screak — to screech.
  • scream — to utter a loud, sharp, piercing cry.
  • searce — to sift
  • search — to go or look through (a place, area, etc.) carefully in order to find something missing or lost: They searched the woods for the missing child. I searched the desk for the letter.
  • searcy — a city in central Arkansas.
  • secpar — (in astronomy) a unit of distance equivalent to 3.262 light years
  • spacer — the unlimited or incalculably great three-dimensional realm or expanse in which all material objects are located and all events occur.
  • tacker — a short, sharp-pointed nail, usually with a flat, broad head.
  • tanrec — tenrec.
  • termac — An interactive matrix language.
  • thrace — an ancient region of varying extent in the E part of the Balkan Peninsula: later a Roman province; now in Bulgaria, Turkey, and Greece.
  • traced — a surviving mark, sign, or evidence of the former existence, influence, or action of some agent or event; vestige: traces of an advanced civilization among the ruins.
  • tracer — a person or thing that traces.
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