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6-letter words containing f, e, r

  • feater — apt; skillful; dexterous.
  • feaver — Obsolete spelling of fever.
  • febri- — indicating fever
  • febris — (in prescriptions) fever.
  • fedora — a soft felt hat with a curled brim, worn with the crown creased lengthwise.
  • feeder — a person or thing that supplies food or feeds something.
  • feeler — a person or thing that feels.
  • feeper — /fee'pr/ The device in a terminal or workstation (usually a loudspeaker of some kind) that makes the feep sound.
  • feerie — a theatrical production, often opera or ballet, involving fairies and depicting fairy scenes and landscapes, popular in the 18th and 19th centuries
  • feerin — a furrow ploughed as a guide to subsequent work
  • feirie — healthy; strong.
  • fellerRobert William Andrew ("Bob"; "Bullet Bob") 1918–2010, U.S. baseball player.
  • felter — To clot or mat together like felt.
  • femora — Anatomy. a bone in the human leg extending from the pelvis to the knee, that is the longest, largest, and strongest in the body; thighbone.
  • femurs — Plural form of femur.
  • fencer — a person who practices the art of fencing with a sword, foil, etc.
  • fender — the pressed and formed sheet-metal part mounted over the road wheels of an automobile, bicycle, etc., to reduce the splashing of mud, water, and the like.
  • fenrir — a wolflike monster, a son of Loki and Angerboda, chained by Gleipnir but destined to be released at Ragnarok to eat Odin and to be killed by Vidar.
  • fenris — a great wolf, bound by the gods with a magic rope
  • feprom — Flash Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory
  • ferbam — an iron carbamate, C 9 H 18 FeN 3 S 6 , used chiefly as a fungicide for protecting certain farm crops.
  • ferberEdna, 1887–1968, U.S. novelist, short-story writer, and playwright.
  • ferdus — Firdausi.
  • fergus — Irish Legend. one of the great warrior kings of Ulster.
  • ferial — Ecclesiastical. a weekday on which no feast is celebrated.
  • ferias — Plural form of feria.
  • ferine — feral1 .
  • ferior — (slang) From inferior by dropping prefix in-, meaning the opposite of inferior, or excellent, superior.
  • ferity — a wild, untamed, or uncultivated state.
  • ferlie — something unusual, strange, or causing wonder or terror.
  • fermatPierre de [pyer duh] /pyɛr də/ (Show IPA), 1601–65, French mathematician.
  • fermor — Sir Patrick (Michael) Leigh. 1915–2011, British traveller and author, noted esp for the travel books A Time of Gifts (1977) and Between the Woods and the Water (1986)
  • fernet — A particular type of Italian amaro.
  • ferous — Wild; savage.
  • ferrar — Nicholas. 1592–1637, English mystic. He founded (1625) an Anglican religious community at Little Gidding, Huntingdonshire
  • ferret — a narrow tape or ribbon, as of silk or cotton, used for binding, trimming, etc.
  • ferri- — indicating the presence of iron, esp in the trivalent state
  • ferric — of or containing iron, especially in the trivalent state.
  • ferro- — indicating a property of iron or the presence of iron
  • ferrol — a seaport in NW Spain: naval arsenal and dockyard.
  • ferula — Botany. any of various plants belonging to the genus Ferula, of the parsley family, chiefly of the Mediterranean region and central Asia, generally tall and coarse with dissected leaves, many of the Asian species yielding strongly scented, medicinal gum resins.
  • ferule — a ring or cap, usually of metal, put around the end of a post, cane, or the like, to prevent splitting.
  • fervid — heated or vehement in spirit, enthusiasm, etc.: a fervid orator.
  • fervor — great warmth and earnestness of feeling: to speak with great fervor.
  • fessor — a teacher.
  • fester — to form pus; generate purulent matter; suppurate.
  • fether — Archaic form of feather.
  • fetors — Plural form of fetor.
  • fetter — a chain or shackle placed on the feet.
  • feuars — Plural form of feuar.
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