7-letter words containing f, e, l, r
- ferally — Wildly; in the manner of an undomesticated animal.
- ferrule — a ring or cap, usually of metal, put around the end of a post, cane, or the like, to prevent splitting.
- fertile — bearing, producing, or capable of producing vegetation, crops, etc., abundantly; prolific: fertile soil.
- feruled — Simple past tense and past participle of ferule.
- ferules — Plural form of ferule.
- ferulic — (organic chemistry) Of or pertaining to ferulic acid or its derivatives.
- fettler — A person who maintains railway lines.
- fiddler — a person who plays a fiddle.
- fiedler — Arthur, 1894–1979, U.S. symphony conductor.
- fielder — an expanse of open or cleared ground, especially a piece of land suitable or used for pasture or tillage.
- fierily — In a fiery manner.
- filacer — (in former times) a legal officer of the British superior courts
- filaree — Any plant of the species of Erodium.
- filbert — the thick-shelled, edible nut of certain cultivated varieties of hazel, especially of Corylus avellana, of Europe.
- filcher — to steal (especially something of small value); pilfer: to filch ashtrays from fancy restaurants.
- fillers — Plural form of filler.
- filters — Plural form of filter.
- firable — Capable of being fired (in various senses).
- firefly — any nocturnal beetle of the family Lampyridae, characterized by a soft body with a light-producing organ at the rear of the abdomen.
- firelit — Illuminated by a fire.
- flacker — To flutter as a bird.
- flaffer — to flutter
- flagger — flagstone (def 1).
- flagler — Henry Morrison, 1830–1913, U.S. financier and developer in Florida.
- flamers — Plural form of flamer.
- flaneur — idler; dawdler; loafer.
- flanger — An electronic device that alters a sound signal by introducing a cyclically varying phase shift into one of two identical copies of the signal and recombining them, used especially in popular music to alter the sound of an instrument.
- flanker — a person or thing that flanks.
- flanner — Janet (Genêt) 1892–1978, U.S. journalist: long based in Paris.
- flapper — something broad and flat used for striking or for making a noise by striking.
- flareup — a sudden flaring up of flame or light.
- flasher — a brief, sudden burst of bright light: a flash of lightning.
- flatter — to make flat.
- flecker — James Elroy. 1884–1915, English poet and dramatist; author of Hassan (1922)
- fleecer — A person who fleeces; a swindler.
- fleered — Simple past tense and past participle of fleer.
- fleerer — a person who fleers
- fleeter — swift; rapid: to be fleet of foot; a fleet horse.
- flesher — a person who fleshes hides.
- fleuret — An ornament resembling a small flower.
- fleuron — a floral motif, as one used as a terminal point or in a decorative series on an object.
- flexner — Abraham, 1866–1959, U.S. educator.
- flexors — Plural form of flexor.
- flexure — the act of flexing or bending.
- flicker — to burn unsteadily; shine with a wavering light: The candle flickered in the wind and went out.
- flinder — a piece or fragment
- flinger — a person or thing that flings.
- flipper — a broad, flat limb, as of a seal or whale, especially adapted for swimming.
- flirted — Simple past tense and past participle of flirt.
- flirter — to court triflingly or act amorously without serious intentions; play at love; coquet.