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

  • dubber — to furnish (a film or tape) with a new sound track, as one recorded in the language of the country of import.
  • ducker — a person or thing that ducks.
  • dudder — to tremble or shudder
  • dueler — A person who fights a duel.
  • duffer — Informal. a plodding, clumsy, incompetent person. a person inept or inexperienced at a specific sport, as golf.
  • duiker — any of several small African antelopes of the Cephalophus, Sylvicapra, and related genera, the males and often the females having short, spikelike horns: some are endangered.
  • dukery — the domain of a duke
  • duller — not sharp; blunt: a dull knife.
  • dumber — lacking intelligence or good judgment; stupid; dull-witted.
  • dumper — to drop or let fall in a mass; fling down or drop heavily or suddenly: Dump the topsoil here.
  • dunder — the thick lees from boiled sugar-cane juice used in the distillation of rum.
  • dunger — an old decrepit car
  • dunker — a member of the Church of the Brethren, a denomination of Christians founded in Germany in 1708 and later reorganized in the U.S., characterized by the practice of trine immersion, the celebration of a love feast accompanying the Lord's Supper, and opposition to the taking of oaths and to military service.
  • dupery — an act, practice, or instance of duping.
  • dupper — Alternative form of dubber (a kind of bottle).
  • duress — compulsion by threat or force; coercion; constraint.
  • durned — darn2 .
  • durres — a seaport in W Albania, on the Adriatic: important ancient city.
  • durrie — a thick, nonpile cotton rug of India.
  • duryeaCharles Edgar, 1861–1938, U.S. inventor and manufacturer of automobiles and automotive devices.
  • duster — a person or thing that removes or applies dust.
  • earbud — a small earphone that fits in the ear: the best earbuds for your cell phone.
  • Éluard — Paul (pɔl), real name Eugène-Émile-Paul Grindel. 1895–1952, French surrealist poet, noted for his political and love poems
  • eluder — Agent noun of elude; one who eludes.
  • endura — (ecclesiastical history) A fast or series of privations undertaken by the Cathars to purify the soul, often resulting in death.
  • endure — Suffer (something painful or difficult) patiently.
  • enduro — A long-distance race, especially for motor vehicles, motorcycles, or bicycles, typically over rough terrain, designed to test endurance.
  • enured — Simple past tense and past participle of enure.
  • eperdu — distracted
  • erudit — (rare) An erudite person, a scholar, especially in French contexts.
  • eudora — Electronic mail software for communicating over TCP/IP from Macintosh, Microsoft Windows, Windows NT, and IBM OS/2 computers. Both commercial and free versions are produced by QUALCOMM, Inc.
  • fadeur — the quality of being bland or insipid
  • ferdus — Firdausi.
  • foudre — a large cask for maturing, storing, and transporting wine.
  • froudeJames Anthony, 1818–94, English historian.
  • funder — One who funds.
  • furder — Eye dialect of further Comparative form of far.
  • furled — to gather into a compact roll and bind securely, as a sail against a spar or a flag against its staff.
  • furred — of or relating to fur, animal skins, dressed pelts, etc.: a fur coat; a fur trader.
  • gerund — (in certain languages, as Latin) a form regularly derived from a verb and functioning as a noun, having in Latin all case forms but the nominative, as Latin dicendī gen., dicendō, dat., abl., etc., “saying.”. See also gerundive (def 1).
  • gourde — a paper money and monetary unit of Haiti, equal to 100 centimes. Abbreviation: G., Gde.
  • grudge — a feeling of ill will or resentment: to hold a grudge against a former opponent.
  • guarde — Obsolete form of guard.
  • guider — to assist (a person) to travel through, or reach a destination in, an unfamiliar area, as by accompanying or giving directions to the person: He guided us through the forest.
  • hulder — one of a race of sirens, living in the woods, seductive but dangerous.
  • huldre — one of a race of sirens, living in the woods, seductive but dangerous.
  • hurdle — a portable barrier over which contestants must leap in certain running races, usually a wooden frame with a hinged inner frame that swings down under impact to prevent injury to a runner who does not clear it.
  • hurled — to throw or fling with great force or vigor.
  • hurted — (archaic, or, nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of hurt.
  • indure — Obsolete spelling of endure.
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