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6-letter words containing e, y, s

  • naseby — a village in W Northamptonshire, in central England: Royalist defeat 1645.
  • nursey — Alternative form of nursie.
  • osiery — An osier bed.
  • osprey — Also called fish hawk. a large hawk, Pandion haliaetus, that feeds on fish.
  • oyster — any of several edible, marine, bivalve mollusks of the family Ostreidae, having an irregularly shaped shell, occurring on the bottom or adhering to rocks or other objects in shallow water.
  • physed — physical education
  • physes — the principle of growth or change in nature.
  • pressy — A pressy is something that you give to someone, for example at Christmas, or when you visit them.
  • psyche — to intimidate or frighten psychologically, or make nervous (often followed by out): to psych out the competition.
  • pudsey — a town in N England, in Leeds unitary authority, West Yorkshire. Pop: 32 391 (2001)
  • queasy — inclined to or feeling nausea, as the stomach, a person, etc.; nauseous; nauseated.
  • queys' — a heifer.
  • ramseyArthur Michael (Baron Ramsey of Canterbury) 1904–1988, English clergyman and scholar: archbishop of Canterbury 1961–74.
  • reasty — rancid
  • resiny — resembling, containing, or covered with resin
  • rosery — a bed or garden of roses
  • rosety — resinous
  • rumseyJames, 1743–92, U.S. engineer and inventor.
  • safely — secure from liability to harm, injury, danger, or risk: a safe place.
  • safety — the state of being safe; freedom from the occurrence or risk of injury, danger, or loss.
  • 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.
  • sankey — Ira David. 1840–1908, US evangelist and hymnodist, noted for his revivalist campaigns in Britain and the US with D. L. Moody
  • savery — Thomas. ?1650–1715, English engineer, who built (1698) the first practical steam engine, used to pump water from mines
  • sawney — a fool
  • sawyer — a person who saws wood, especially as an occupation.
  • sayers — Dorothy L(eigh) 1893–1957, English novelist, essayist, and dramatist.
  • sayest — 2nd person singular of say1 .
  • schley — Winfield Scott [win-feeld] /ˈwɪnˌfild/ (Show IPA), 1839–1911, U.S. rear admiral.
  • screwy — crazy; nutty: I think you're screwy, refusing an invitation to the governor's dinner.
  • scryer — a person who scries
  • scythe — an agricultural implement consisting of a long, curving blade fastened at an angle to a handle, for cutting grass, grain, etc., by hand.
  • searcy — a city in central Arkansas.
  • seaway — a way over the sea.
  • seemly — fitting or becoming with respect to propriety or good taste; decent; decorous: Your outburst of rage was hardly seemly.
  • segway — a two-wheeled self-balancing electric vehicle, ridden while standing up
  • senary — of or relating to the number six.
  • senryu — a form of Japanese short poem similar to a haiku, but traditionally on the theme of human nature
  • sentry — a soldier stationed at a place to stand guard and prevent the passage of unauthorized persons, watch for fires, etc., especially a sentinel stationed at a pass, gate, opening in a defense work, or the like.
  • set by — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • severy — (in a vaulted structure) one bay between two principal transverse arches.
  • sexily — concerned predominantly or excessively with sex; risqué: a sexy novel.
  • seyhan — Adana.
  • shaley — a rock of fissile or laminated structure formed by the consolidation of clay or argillaceous material.
  • sheafy — composed of, related to, or resembling a sheaf
  • sheeny — shining; lustrous.
  • sheepy — of, related to, or resembling sheep
  • sheety — spreading, covering, or stretching out in a broad sheet
  • shelby — a city in S North Carolina.
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