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6-letter words containing f, l, s

  • fliers — Plural form of flier.
  • flimsy — without material strength or solidity: a flimsy fabric; a flimsy structure.
  • flings — Plural form of fling.
  • flints — Plural form of flint.
  • flirts — Plural form of flirt.
  • flisky — skittish; frisking; flighty
  • floats — to rest or remain on the surface of a liquid; be buoyant: The hollow ball floated.
  • flocks — Plural form of flock.
  • flongs — Plural form of flong.
  • floods — Plural form of flood.
  • floors — Plural form of floor.
  • floosy — a gaudily dressed, usually immoral woman, especially a prostitute.
  • floras — Plural form of flora.
  • flores — Juan José [hwahn haw-se] /ʰwɑn hɔˈsɛ/ (Show IPA), 1800–64, Ecuadorian general and statesman: president 1830–35, 1839–45.
  • flossy — made of or resembling floss; downy.
  • flotus — First Lady of the United States.
  • flours — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flour.
  • flouse — to splash or make a splash
  • flouts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flout.
  • fluffs — Plural form of fluff.
  • fluids — Plural form of fluid.
  • fluish — having flu-like symptoms; like someone who has the flu
  • flukes — Plural form of fluke.
  • flumes — Plural form of flume.
  • flumps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flump.
  • flunks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flunk.
  • flushy — ruddy; reddish
  • flutes — Plural form of flute.
  • fluxes — a flowing or flow.
  • flyers — Plural form of flyer.
  • flyest — clever; keen; ingenious.
  • flysch — an association of certain types of marine sedimentary rocks characteristic of deposition in a foredeep.
  • flytes — to dispute; wrangle; scold; jeer.
  • folios — Plural form of folio.
  • folksy — friendly or neighborly; sociable.
  • follis — a bag of copper or bronze coins with a fixed weight, used as money of account in the later Roman Empire.
  • folsom — of, relating to, or characteristic of a prehistoric North American cultural tradition extensive in the Great Plains about 11,000 years ago and typified by the use of the Folsom point.
  • fossil — any remains, impression, or trace of a living thing of a former geologic age, as a skeleton, footprint, etc.
  • fowles — John (Martin). 1926–2005, British novelist. His books include The Collector (1963), The Magus (1966), The French Lieutenant's Woman (1969), and The Tree (1991)
  • fplmts — (communications)   Future Public Land Mobile Telecommunications System.
  • frails — having delicate health; not robust; weak: My grandfather is rather frail now.
  • frills — a trimming, as a strip of cloth or lace, gathered at one edge and left loose at the other; ruffle.
  • fsplit — A tool to split up monolithic Fortran programs.
  • fuseli — (John) Henry (Johann Heinrich Füssli) 1741–1825, English painter, illustrator, and essayist; born in Switzerland.
  • fusile — formed by melting or casting; fused; founded.
  • fusula — (in the spinneret of a spider) the terminal tube of a silk gland.
  • futsal — a form of association football, played indoors with five players on each side
  • gflops — gigaflops
  • half's — one of two equal or approximately equal parts of a divisible whole, as an object, or unit of measure or time; a part of a whole equal or almost equal to the remainder.
  • itself — Used as the object of a verb or preposition to refer to a thing or animal previously mentioned as the subject of the clause.
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