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6-letter words containing f, i, l

  • filing — A small particle rubbed off by a file when smoothing or shaping something.
  • filius — a son
  • 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.
  • fillip — to strike with the nail of a finger snapped from the end of the thumb.
  • filmed — Simple past tense and past participle of film.
  • filmer — One who films; that is, one who copies media to microfilm.
  • filmic — of, relating to, or characteristic of motion pictures: a filmic adaptation of a novel.
  • 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.
  • filthy — foul with, characterized by, or having the nature of filth; disgustingly or completely dirty.
  • 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.
  • finals — pertaining to or coming at the end; last in place, order, or time: the final meeting of the year.
  • finely — in a fine manner; excellently; elegantly; delicately; minutely; nicely; subtly.
  • finial — Architecture. a relatively small, ornamental, terminal feature at the top of a gable, pinnacle, etc.
  • finlay — Carlos Juan [kahr-lohs wahn] /ˈkɑr loʊs wɑn/ (Show IPA), 1833–1915, U.S. physician, born in Cuba: first to suggest mosquito as carrier of yellow fever.
  • finlet — a small, detached ray of a fin in certain fishes, as mackerels.
  • finley — a male given name.
  • finlit — the understanding of the concepts and terminology associated with finance
  • 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.
  • firlot — one of two different Scottish units of measurement for grain, the first (for measuring commodities sold by level measure, such as wheat) roughly equal to an imperial bushel, the second (for measuring commodities sold by heaped measure, such as barley or corn) roughly half as large again
  • firmly — 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.
  • fiscal — of or relating to the public treasury or revenues: fiscal policies.
  • fissle — bustle
  • fitful — coming, appearing, acting, etc., in fits or by spells; recurring irregularly.
  • fizzle — to make a hissing or sputtering sound, especially one that dies out weakly.
  • flails — Plural form of flail.
  • flairs — Plural form of flair.
  • flavia — a female given name.
  • flavin — a complex heterocyclic ketone that is common to the nonprotein part of several important yellow enzymes, the flavoproteins.
  • flicks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flick.
  • flicky — (slang) Easily flicked; thus, light and fast.
  • fliers — Plural form of flier.
  • flieth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fly.
  • flight — an act or instance of fleeing or running away; hasty departure.
  • flimsy — without material strength or solidity: a flimsy fabric; a flimsy structure.
  • flinch — to draw back or shrink, as from what is dangerous, difficult, or unpleasant.
  • flings — Plural form of fling.
  • flints — Plural form of flint.
  • flinty — composed of, containing, or resembling flint, especially in hardness.
  • fliped — Simple past tense and past participle of flipe.
  • flippy — Having a tendency to flip.
  • flirts — Plural form of flirt.
  • flirty — given or inclined to flirtation.
  • flisky — skittish; frisking; flighty
  • flitch — the side of a hog (or, formerly, some other animal) salted and cured: a flitch of bacon.
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