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6-letter words containing f, r, i

  • friuli — a historic region of SW Europe, between the Carnic Alps and the Gulf of Venice: the W part (Venetian Friuli) was ceded by Austria to Italy in 1866 and Eastern Friuli in 1919; in 1947 Eastern Friuli (except Gorizia) was ceded to Yugoslavia
  • frivol — to behave frivolously; trifle.
  • frizer — a person who gives a bur to the nap of a cloth
  • frizes — Plural form of frize.
  • frizzy — formed into small, tight curls, as hair; frizzed.
  • froing — Only used in toing and froing. present participle of fro.
  • froise — a type of pancake often made with bacon
  • frolic — merry play; merriment; gaiety; fun.
  • fruits — any product of plant growth useful to humans or animals.
  • fruity — resembling fruit; having the taste or smell of fruit.
  • frying — Present participle of fry.
  • furies — unrestrained or violent anger, rage, passion, or the like: The gods unleashed their fury on the offending mortal.
  • furkid — an animal kept for companionship
  • furrin — Eye dialect of foreign.
  • gifter — One who gives a gift.
  • griefe — Obsolete spelling of grief.
  • griefo — marijuana.
  • griefs — Plural form of grief.
  • griffa — griefo.
  • griffe — an ornament at the base of a column, projecting from the torus toward a corner of the plinth.
  • griffo — griefo.
  • grifts — Plural form of grift.
  • heifer — a young cow over one year old that has not produced a calf.
  • iframe — (Internet) A section of a web page that can act as the container for a second separate page or resource.
  • ilford — a former borough in SE England, now part of Redbridge, Greater London.
  • in for — about to endure
  • infare — a party or reception for a newly married couple.
  • infere — together; all together; in concert
  • infers — Deduce or conclude (information) from evidence and reasoning rather than from explicit statements.
  • infirm — feeble or weak in body or health, especially because of age; ailing.
  • inform — to give or impart knowledge of a fact or circumstance to: He informed them of his arrival.
  • infra- — below; beneath; after
  • ireful — full of intense anger; wrathful.
  • kaffir — Disparaging and Offensive. (in South Africa) a contemptuous term used to refer to a black person: originally used of the Xhosa people only.
  • kafiri — an Indo-Iranian language, or small group of languages, of Nuristan, closely related to but not a part of the Indic subbranch.
  • kafirs — Plural form of kafir.
  • keiferJoseph Warren, 1836–1932, U.S. lawyer and politician: Speaker of the House 1881–83.
  • kharif — (in India) a crop sown in early summer for harvesting in the autumn.
  • knifer — Someone who sells knives.
  • liefer — gladly; willingly: I would as lief go south as not.
  • lifers — Plural form of lifer.
  • lifter — a person or thing that lifts.
  • maftir — the concluding section of the portion of the Torah chanted or read in a Jewish service on the Sabbath and festivals.
  • mirfac — Mathematics in Recognizable Form Automatically Compiled
  • niffer — barter or an instance thereof
  • perfin — a postage stamp having perforated initials punched into the paper: used by businesses to prevent unauthorized use of stamps.
  • pilfer — steal in small amounts
  • prefix — Grammar. an affix placed before a word, base, or another prefix to modify a term's meaning, as by making the term negative, as un- in unkind, by signaling repetition, as re- in reinvent, or by indicating support, as pro- in proabolition. Compatible prefixes can work together, as un- and re- in unrefundable.
  • printf — (library)   The standard function in the C programming language library for printing formatted output. The first argument is a format string which may contain ordinary characters which are just printed and "conversion specifications" - sequences beginning with '%' such as %6d which describe how the other arguments should be printed, in this case as a six-character decimal integer padded on the right with spaces. Possible conversion specifications are d, i or u (decimal integer), o (octal), x, X or p (hexadecimal), f (floating-point), e or E (mantissa and exponent, e.g. 1.23E-22), g or G (f or e format as appropriate to the value printed), c (a single character), s (a string), % (i.e. %% - print a % character). d, i, f, e, g are signed, the rest are unsigned. The variant fprintf prints to a given output stream and sprintf stores what would be printed in a string variable.
  • profit — Often, profits. pecuniary gain resulting from the employment of capital in any transaction. Compare gross profit, net profit. the ratio of such pecuniary gain to the amount of capital invested. returns, proceeds, or revenue, as from property or investments.
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