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6-letter words containing e, l, y, s

  • -lepsy — indicating a seizure or attack
  • -style — -style combines with nouns and adjectives to form adjectives which describe the style or characteristics of something.
  • alleys — Plural form of alley.
  • ashley — Jack, Baron. 1922–2012, British Labour politician and campaigner for deaf and disabled people
  • astely — the lack of a central cylinder or stele
  • asylee — a person who is granted asylum
  • basely — morally low; without estimable personal qualities; dishonorable; meanspirited; selfish; cowardly.
  • beltsy — a city in NW Moldavia, NW of Kishinev.
  • bisley — a village in SE England, in Surrey: annual meetings of the National Rifle Association
  • bluesy — If you describe a song or the way it is performed as bluesy, you mean that it is performed in a way that is characteristic of the blues.
  • cresyl — the univalent radical of cresol
  • cycles — Plural form of cycle.
  • delays — Plural form of delay.
  • easely — Obsolete form of easily.
  • easily — in an easy manner; with ease; without trouble: The traffic moved along easily.
  • easley — a town in NW South Carolina.
  • elysée — a palace in Paris, in the Champs Elysées: official residence of the president of France
  • elytis — Odysseus, real name Odysseus Alepoudelis. 1912–96, Greek poet, author of the long poems To Axion Esti (1959) and Maria Nefeli (1978): Nobel prize for literature 1979
  • fleshy — having much flesh; plump; fat.
  • flyers — Plural form of flyer.
  • flyest — clever; keen; ingenious.
  • flytes — to dispute; wrangle; scold; jeer.
  • halseyWilliam Frederick ("Bull") 1882–1959, U.S. admiral.
  • haysel — the season for making hay
  • heelys — a brand of training shoes with wheels fitted in the heel to allow them to be used like in-line skates
  • kayles — (uncountable, only as plural, obsolete, or, dialect) The game of skittles or ninepins, or the set of pins used in the game.
  • kelsey — a male or female given name.
  • kylies — Plural form of kylie.
  • layers — A sheet, quantity, or thickness of material, typically one of several, covering a surface or body.
  • limeys — Plural form of limey.
  • linsey — linsey-woolsey.
  • loosey — (US, slang) A single cigarette, sold individually (\u201cloose\u201d).
  • loveys — Plural form of lovey.
  • lyases — Plural form of lyase.
  • lynxes — Plural form of lynx.
  • lysate — the mixture of substances formed by the lysis of cells.
  • lysine — a crystalline, basic, amino acid, H 2 N(CH 2) 4 CH(NH 2)COOH, produced chiefly from many proteins by hydrolysis, essential in the nutrition of humans and animals. Symbol: K. Abbreviation: Lys;
  • measly — Informal. contemptibly small, meager, or slight: They paid me a measly fifteen dollars for a day's work. wretchedly bad or unsatisfactory: a measly performance.
  • milsey — a milk strainer
  • mosley — (Sir) Oswald Ernald [ur-nuh ld] /ˈɜr nəld/ (Show IPA), 1896–1980, English politician and fascist leader.
  • muleys — Plural form of muley.
  • myself — There is no disagreement over the use of myself and other -self forms when they are used intensively (I myself cannot agree) or reflexively (He introduced himself proudly). Questions are raised, however, when the -self forms are used instead of the personal pronouns (I, me, etc.) as subjects, objects, or complements.  Myself occurs only rarely as a single subject in place of I:  Myself was the one who called.  The recorded instances of such use are mainly poetic or literary. It is also uncommon as a simple object in place of me:  Since the letter was addressed to myself, I opened it.  As part of a compound subject, object, or complement, myself and to a lesser extent the other -self forms are common in informal speech and personal writing, somewhat less common in more formal speech and writing:  The manager and myself completed the arrangements. Many came to welcome my husband and myself back to Washington.   Myself and other -self forms are also used, alone or with other nouns or pronouns, in constructions after as, than, or but in all varieties of speech and writing:  The captain has far more experience than myself in such matters. Orders have arrived for everyone but the orderlies and yourself.   There is ample precedent, going as far back as Chaucer and running through the whole range of British and American literature and other serious formal writing, for all these uses. Many usage guides, however, state that to use myself in any construction in which I or me could be used instead (as My daughter and myself play the flute instead of My daughter and I, or a gift for my husband and myself instead of for my husband and me) is characteristic only of informal speech and that such use ought not to occur in writing. See also me.  
  • safely — secure from liability to harm, injury, danger, or risk: a safe place.
  • sagely — a profoundly wise person; a person famed for wisdom.
  • samely — monotonous
  • sanely — free from mental derangement; having a sound, healthy mind: a sane person.
  • schley — Winfield Scott [win-feeld] /ˈwɪnˌfild/ (Show IPA), 1839–1911, U.S. rear admiral.
  • seemly — fitting or becoming with respect to propriety or good taste; decent; decorous: Your outburst of rage was hardly seemly.
  • sexily — concerned predominantly or excessively with sex; risqué: a sexy novel.
  • shaley — a rock of fissile or laminated structure formed by the consolidation of clay or argillaceous material.

On this page, we collect all 6-letter words with E-L-Y-S. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 6-letter word that contains in E-L-Y-S to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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