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6-letter words containing e, l, d

  • ederleGertrude Caroline, 1906–2003, U.S. swimmer.
  • edgily — nervously irritable; impatient and anxious.
  • edible — fit to be eaten as food; eatable; esculent.
  • elands — Plural form of eland.
  • elapid — (zoology) Any of many species of snakes of the family Elapidae, including the cobras, mambas, and coral snakes.
  • elated — Extremely happy and excited; delighted; pleased.
  • elders — Plural form of elder.
  • eldest — (of one out of a group of related or otherwise associated people) of the greatest age; oldest.
  • eliade — Mircea. 1907–86, Romanian scholar and writer, noted for his study of religious symbolism. His works include Patterns of Comparative Religion (1949)
  • elided — Simple past tense and past participle of elide.
  • elides — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elide.
  • elodea — An aquatic plant of a genus that includes the ornamental waterweeds.
  • eloped — Simple past tense and past participle of elope.
  • Éluard — Paul (pɔl), real name Eugène-Émile-Paul Grindel. 1895–1952, French surrealist poet, noted for his political and love poems
  • eluded — Simple past tense and past participle of elude.
  • eluder — Agent noun of elude; one who eludes.
  • eludes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elude.
  • eluted — Simple past tense and past participle of elute.
  • enfold — Surround; envelop.
  • engild — (transitive) To gild; to make splendid.
  • enlard — To cover or dress with lard or grease.
  • enodal — having no nodes
  • euclid — (language)   (Named after the Greek geometer, fl ca 300 BC.) A Pascal descendant for development of verifiable system software. No goto, no side effects, no global assignments, no functional arguments, no nested procedures, no floats, no enumeration types. Pointers are treated as indices of special arrays called collections. To prevent aliasing, Euclid forbids any overlap in the list of actual parameters of a procedure. Each procedure gives an imports list, and the compiler determines the identifiers that are implicitly imported. Iterators. Ottawa Euclid is a variant.
  • exiled — Simple past tense and past participle of exile.
  • extold — Lb obsolete Simple past tense and past participle of extol.
  • eyelid — Each of the upper and lower folds of skin that cover the eye when closed.
  • fabled — celebrated in fables: a fabled goddess of the wood.
  • faddle — To trifle; to toy.
  • failed — unsuccessful; failed: a totally fail policy.
  • fardel — a bundle; burden.
  • fealed — Simple past tense and past participle of feal.
  • feddle — A shortened form of the term \"federal agent\".
  • felids — Plural form of felid.
  • felled — simple past tense of fall.
  • felted — simple past tense and past participle of feel.
  • feudal — of, relating to, or like the feudal system, or its political, military, social, and economic structure.
  • fiddle — a musical instrument of the viol family.
  • fields — an expanse of open or cleared ground, especially a piece of land suitable or used for pasture or tillage.
  • filled — to make full; put as much as can be held into: to fill a jar with water.
  • filmed — Simple past tense and past participle of film.
  • flaked — fake2 (defs 2, 3).
  • flamed — Cooked or seared over open flames.
  • flared — to burn with an unsteady, swaying flame, as a torch or candle in the wind.
  • flawed — characterized by flaws; having imperfections: a flawed gem; a seriously flawed piece of work.
  • flayed — to strip off the skin or outer covering of.
  • fleadh — a festival of Irish music, dancing, and culture
  • fledge — to bring up (a young bird) until it is able to fly.
  • fledgy — feathered or feathery.
  • flewed — (of hounds) having flews
  • flexed — (of a human leg) depicted as bent at the knee.
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