6-letter words containing f, i, e
- fields — an expanse of open or cleared ground, especially a piece of land suitable or used for pasture or tillage.
- fielty — The state of owing one's service (particularly of a soldier, warrior, knight, rider) to a king, queen, or other ruler.
- fiends — Plural form of fiend.
- fierce — menacingly wild, savage, or hostile: fierce animals; a fierce look.
- fiesta — any festival or festive celebration.
- fiftie — Obsolete spelling of fifty (50).
- figger — figure.
- figure — a numerical symbol, especially an Arabic numeral.
- fikery — fidgetiness, fussiness, restlessness
- filate — threadlike.
- filene — Edward Albert, 1860–1937, U.S. retail merchant.
- filers — Plural form of filer.
- filets — Plural form of filet.
- filled — to make full; put as much as can be held into: to fill a jar with water.
- filler — an aluminum coin of Hungary, the 100th part of a forint.
- fillet — Cookery. a boneless cut or slice of meat or fish, especially the beef tenderloin. a piece of veal or other meat boned, rolled, and tied for roasting.
- filmed — Simple past tense and past participle of film.
- filmer — One who films; that is, one who copies media to microfilm.
- filose — threadlike.
- filter — any substance, as cloth, paper, porous porcelain, or a layer of charcoal or sand, through which liquid or gas is passed to remove suspended impurities or to recover solids.
- filtre — Obsolete form of filter.
- fimble — the male or staminate plant of hemp, which is harvested before the female or pistillate plant.
- finale — the last piece, division, or movement of a concert, opera, or composition.
- finded — (nonstandard, childish) Simple past tense and past participle of find.
- finder — a person or thing that finds.
- finely — in a fine manner; excellently; elegantly; delicately; minutely; nicely; subtly.
- finers — Plural form of finer.
- finery — fine or showy dress, ornaments, etc.
- finest — fines. Mining. crushed ore sufficiently fine to pass through a given screen. Compare short (def 29e). Agriculture. the fine bits of corn kernel knocked off during handling of the grain.
- finger — any of the terminal members of the hand, especially one other than the thumb.
- finite — compact
- finked — Simple past tense and past participle of fink.
- finlet — a small, detached ray of a fin in certain fishes, as mackerels.
- finley — a male given name.
- finned — having fins.
- finner — A finback whale.
- finney — Charles Grandison [gran-di-suh n] /ˈgræn dɪ sən/ (Show IPA), 1792–1875, U.S. clergyman and educator.
- finsen — Niels Ryberg [neels ry-ber] /nils ˈrü bɛr/ (Show IPA), 1860–1904, Danish physician: Nobel Prize 1903.
- fipple — a plug stopping the upper end of a pipe, as a recorder or a whistle, and having a narrow slit through which the player blows.
- firers — Plural form of firer.
- firmed — not soft or yielding when pressed; comparatively solid, hard, stiff, or rigid: firm ground; firm texture.
- firmer — not soft or yielding when pressed; comparatively solid, hard, stiff, or rigid: firm ground; firm texture.
- firtle — (Cumbrian dialect) To mess around, to waste time.
- fished — Simple past tense and past participle of fish.
- fisher — Andrew, 1862–1928, Australian statesman, born in Scotland: prime minister 1908–09, 1910–13, 1914–15.
- fishes — any of various cold-blooded, aquatic vertebrates, having gills, commonly fins, and typically an elongated body covered with scales.
- fishie — (childish) diminutive of fish; alternative spelling of fishy.
- fisked — Simple past tense and past participle of fisk.
- fissle — bustle
- fisted — Chiefly South Midland and Southern U.S. a small mongrel dog, especially one that is ill-tempered; cur; mutt.