6-letter words containing c, r, e, d
- creeds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of creed.
- creped — a lightweight fabric of silk, cotton, or other fiber, with a finely crinkled or ridged surface.
- crewed — (especially of an aircraft, ship, or spacecraft) operated by a crew on board.
- crowed — to utter the characteristic cry of a rooster.
- cruden — Alexander. 1701–70, Scottish bookseller and compiler of a well-known biblical concordance (1737)
- cruder — in a raw or unprepared state; unrefined or natural: crude sugar.
- crudes — Plural form of crude.
- curbed — Also, British, kerb. a rim, especially of joined stones or concrete, along a street or roadway, forming an edge for a sidewalk.
- curded — Simple past tense and past participle of curd.
- curdle — If milk or eggs curdle or if you curdle them, they separate into different bits.
- curled — in a curved or spiral shape or position
- curred — to make a low, purring sound, as a cat.
- cursed — If you are cursed with something, you are very unlucky in having it.
- curved — A curved object has the shape of a curve or has a smoothly bending surface.
- dacker — to walk slowly; to saunter
- dancer — A dancer is a person who earns money by dancing, or a person who is dancing.
- decare — ten ares or 1000 square metres
- decern — to decree or adjudge
- decker — Thomas Dekker
- decore — (transitive) To remove the core from.
- decors — Plural form of decor.
- decree — A decree is an official order or decision, especially one made by the ruler of a country.
- decrew — to become less or weaker
- decury — (in ancient Rome) a body of ten men
- deicer — a device or a chemical substance for preventing or removing ice.
- dermic — dermal
- descry — to discern or make out; catch sight of
- deucer — Cards. a card having two pips; a two, or two-spot.
- dicier — unpredictable; risky; uncertain.
- dicker — If you say that people are dickering about something, you mean that they are arguing or disagreeing about it, often in a way that you think is foolish or unnecessary.
- direct — to manage or guide by advice, helpful information, instruction, etc.: He directed the company through a difficult time.
- docker — a person or thing that docks or cuts short.
- doucer — sedate; modest; quiet.
- dreich — (Scotland, Northern Ireland) Bleak, miserable, dismal, cheerless, dreary.
- drench — to wet thoroughly; soak.
- dretch — (transitive) To vex; grill; trouble; oppress.
- driech — dree.
- ducker — a person or thing that ducks.
- e-card — a greeting card chosen from a website by the sender, and sent by the site to the recipient as an email with a link back to the site to view the card: Personalize your e-card with a message and photograph.
- echard — the water in soil that is not available for absorption by plants.
- farced — Simple past tense and past participle of farce.
- forced — strained, unnatural, or affected: a forced smile.
- graced — elegance or beauty of form, manner, motion, or action: We watched her skate with effortless grace across the ice. Synonyms: attractiveness, charm, gracefulness, comeliness, ease, lissomeness, fluidity. Antonyms: stiffness, ugliness, awkwardness, clumsiness; klutziness.
- herdic — a low-hung carriage with two or four wheels, having the entrance at the back and the seats at the sides.
- merced — a city in central California.
- nacred — lined with or resembling nacre.
- narced — Simple past tense and past participle of narc.
- ochred — to color or mark with ocher.
- racked — Also called cloud rack. a group of drifting clouds.
- recede — to go or move away; retreat; go to or toward a more distant point; withdraw.