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

  • parled — talk; parley.
  • pedlar — a person who sells from door to door or in the street.
  • pedler — peddler.
  • polder — a tract of low land, especially in the Netherlands, reclaimed from the sea or other body of water and protected by dikes.
  • purled — the action or sound of purling.
  • raddle — ruddle.
  • railed — a bar of wood or metal fixed horizontally for any of various purposes, as for a support, barrier, fence, or railing.
  • reclad — to dress; attire.
  • reddle — ruddle.
  • redeal — to deal again in a card game
  • redial — Also, re-dial. to dial again.
  • redleg — a member of a secret organization, formed in Kansas in 1862, that engaged in guerrilla activities during the Civil War.
  • reeled — an act of reeling; a reeling or staggering movement.
  • refold — to fold again
  • regild — to gild again
  • reland — to land again
  • relend — to grant the use of (something) on condition that it or its equivalent will be returned.
  • relied — to depend confidently; put trust in (usually followed by on or upon): You can rely on her work.
  • reload — anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • remold — To remold something such as an idea or an economy means to change it so that it has a new structure or is based on new principles.
  • repled — to appeal or entreat earnestly: to plead for time.
  • resold — Resold is the past tense and past participle of resell.
  • retold — to tell (a story, tale, etc.) over again or in a new way: It’s Sleeping Beauty retold with a different twist.
  • reweld — to weld again
  • rewild — to introduce (animals or plants) to their original habitat or to a habitat similar to their natural one: proposals to rewild elephants to the American plains.
  • riddle — a coarse sieve, as one for sifting sand in a foundry.
  • ridley — Also called Atlantic ridley, bastard ridley, bastard turtle. a gray sea turtle, Lepidochelys kempii, of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of North America, about 24 inches (61 cm) long, previously thought to be a hybrid of the loggerhead and green turtles: an endangered species.
  • rifled — a shoulder firearm with spiral grooves cut in the inner surface of the gun barrel to give the bullet a rotatory motion and thus a more precise trajectory.
  • roiled — to render (water, wine, etc.) turbid by stirring up sediment.
  • rolled — to move along a surface by revolving or turning over and over, as a ball or a wheel.
  • rondel — Prosody. a short poem of fixed form, consisting usually of 14 lines on two rhymes, of which four are made up of the initial couplet repeated in the middle and at the end, with the second line of the couplet sometimes being omitted at the end.
  • ruddle — a red variety of ocher, used for marking sheep, coloring, etc.
  • rudely — discourteous or impolite, especially in a deliberate way: a rude reply.
  • rundle — a rung of a ladder.
  • sardel — a precious stone
  • slider — a person or thing that slides.
  • solder — any of various alloys fused and applied to the joint between metal objects to unite them without heating the objects to the melting point.
  • welder — to unite or fuse (as pieces of metal) by hammering, compressing, or the like, especially after rendering soft or pasty by heat, and sometimes with the addition of fusible material like or unlike the pieces to be united.
  • weldor — to unite or fuse (as pieces of metal) by hammering, compressing, or the like, especially after rendering soft or pasty by heat, and sometimes with the addition of fusible material like or unlike the pieces to be united.
  • wilder — to travel around as a group, attacking or assaulting (people) in a random and violent way: The man was wilded and left for dead.
  • wordle — One of several pivoted pieces forming the throat of an adjustable die used in drawing wire, lead pipe, etc.
  • worlde — Archaic spelling of world.
  • yelder — barren; sterile.
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