6-letter words containing e, y
- chesty — If you have a chesty cough, you have a lot of mucus in your lungs.
- cheyne — Thomas Kelly [kel-ee] /ˈkɛl i/ (Show IPA), 1841–1915, English clergyman and Biblical scholar.
- chokey — (dated, British) prison.
- chypre — a perfume made from sandalwood
- cicely — a feminine name
- cidery — of or relating to cider
- clayed — a natural earthy material that is plastic when wet, consisting essentially of hydrated silicates of aluminum: used for making bricks, pottery, etc.
- clayey — of, smeared with, or full of clay
- cleary — Beverly, born 1916, U.S. author.
- clergy — The clergy are the official leaders of the religious activities of a particular group of believers.
- clerky — Clerklike; clerkish.
- cloyed — to weary by an excess of food, sweetness, pleasure, etc.; surfeit; satiate.
- clypei — Plural form of clypeus.
- colley — Dated form of collie (dog breed).
- comedy — Comedy consists of types of entertainment, such as plays and films, or particular scenes in them, that are intended to make people laugh.
- comely — A comely woman is attractive.
- coneys — Plural form of coney.
- convey — To convey information or feelings means to cause them to be known or understood by someone.
- cooley — Charles Horton [hawr-tn] /ˈhɔr tn/ (Show IPA), 1864–1929, U.S. author and pioneer in the field of sociology.
- copley — John Singleton. 1738–1815, US painter
- corsey — a pavement or pathway
- cotyle — a cavity that resembles a cup
- cotype — an additional type specimen from the same brood as the original type specimen
- covery — (rare) a dispelling of false or misleading notions.
- coveys — Plural form of covey.
- cowley — Abraham. 1618–67, English poet and essayist, who introduced the Pindaric ode to English literature
- coyest — Superlative form of coy.
- coyote — A coyote is a small wolf which lives in the plains of North America.
- coypel — Antoine. 1661–1722, French baroque painter, noted esp for his large biblical compositions
- crayer — a small sailing vessel formerly used in trade along the coasts of western Europe.
- creaky — A creaky object creaks when it moves.
- creamy — Food or drink that is creamy contains a lot of cream or milk.
- creasy — full of creases.
- creeky — having many creeks
- creepy — If you say that something or someone is creepy, you mean they make you feel very nervous or frightened.
- crepey — wrinkled like crepe cloth or paper
- cressy — Crécy
- cresyl — the univalent radical of cresol
- crikey — Some people say crikey in order to express surprise, especially at something unpleasant.
- curley — James M(ichael) 1874–1958, U.S. politician.
- curvey — curved.
- cutely — attractive, especially in a dainty way; pleasingly pretty: a cute child; a cute little apartment.
- cutesy — If you describe someone or something as cutesy, you dislike them because you think they are unpleasantly pretty and sentimental.
- cybele — the Phrygian goddess of nature, mother of all living things and consort of Attis; identified with the Greek Rhea or Demeter
- cyber- — indicating computers
- cybers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cyber.
- cycled — Simple past tense and past participle of cycle.
- cycler — a person who rides or travels by bicycle, motorcycle, etc.
- cycles — Plural form of cycle.
- cyesis — pregnancy.