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6-letter words containing g, u, l, e

  • gurlet — a pickaxe with a double-sided head, one side being a sharp point and the other side being a cutting edge
  • gursel — Cemal [je-mahl] /dʒɛˈmɑl/ (Show IPA), 1895–1966, Turkish army officer and statesman: president 1961–66.
  • guttle — To put into the gut; to eat voraciously; to swallow greedily; to gorge, gormandize.
  • guyler — a person who tricks or hoodwinks
  • guzzle — South Midland and Southern U.S. gozzle.
  • hugely — extraordinarily large in bulk, quantity, or extent: a huge ship; a huge portion of ice cream.
  • huggle — (Internet, childish) To hug and snuggle simultaneously: gesture of tender non-sexual affection.
  • juggle — to keep (several objects, as balls, plates, tenpins, or knives) in continuous motion in the air simultaneously by tossing and catching.
  • juglet — a small jug
  • jungle — a novel (1906) by Upton Sinclair.
  • kludge — a software or hardware configuration that, while inelegant, inefficient, clumsy, or patched together, succeeds in solving a specific problem or performing a particular task.
  • kugels — Plural form of kugel.
  • lagune — lagoon (def 2).
  • langue — the linguistic system shared by the members of a community (contrasted with parole).
  • league — a unit of distance, varying at different periods and in different countries, in English-speaking countries usually estimated roughly at 3 miles (4.8 kilometers).
  • leg up — either of the two lower limbs of a biped, as a human being, or any of the paired limbs of an animal, arthropod, etc., that support and move the body.
  • leguia — Augusto Bernardino [ou-goos-taw ber-nahr-th ee-naw] /aʊˈgus tɔ ˌbɛr nɑrˈði nɔ/ (Show IPA), 1863–1932, president of Peru 1908–12, 1919–30.
  • legume — any plant of the legume family, especially those used for feed, food, or as a soil-improving crop.
  • lengua — a member of a group of Indian peoples living in the Gran Chaco area of Paraguay.
  • ligule — a thin, membranous outgrowth from the base of the blade of most grasses.
  • ligure — a precious stone, probably the jacinth. Ex. 28:19.
  • lounge — to pass time idly and indolently.
  • lugers — a one- or two-person sled for coasting or racing down a chute, used especially in Europe.
  • lugged — to pull or carry with force or effort: to lug a suitcase upstairs.
  • lugger — a small ship lug-rigged on two or three masts.
  • luggie — any wooden container with a lug, or handle, as a mug, a pail, or a dish with a handle on the side.
  • lunged — a sudden forward thrust, as with a sword or knife; stab.
  • lungee — a cloth used as a turban, scarf, sarong, etc., in India, Pakistan, and Burma.
  • lunger — a person or thing that lunges.
  • lunges — Plural form of lunge.
  • lungie — (UK, Scotland, dialect) A guillemot.
  • muggle — A person who is not conversant with a particular activity or skill.
  • plague — French La Peste. a novel (1947) by Albert Camus.
  • plunge — to cast or thrust forcibly or suddenly into something, as a liquid, a penetrable substance, a place, etc.; immerse; submerge: to plunge a dagger into one's heart.
  • puggle — to stir up by poking
  • pungle — to make a payment or contribution of (money)
  • reglue — to glue again; to apply fresh glue to
  • regula — (in a Doric entablature) a fillet, continuing a triglyph beneath the taenia, from which guttae are suspended.
  • regulo — any of a number of temperatures to which a gas oven may be set
  • sludge — mud, mire, or ooze; slush.
  • tegula — (in certain insects) a scalelike lobe at the base of the forewing.
  • telegu — Telugu
  • telugu — a Dravidian language spoken mainly in Andhra Pradesh state, SE India.
  • tugela — a river in E South Africa, rising in the Drakensberg where it forms the Tugela Falls, 856 m (2810 ft) high (highest waterfall in Africa), before flowing east to the Indian Ocean: scene of battles during the Zulu War (1879) and the Boer War (1899–1902). Length: about 500 km (312 miles)
  • uglier — very unattractive or unpleasant to look at; offensive to the sense of beauty; displeasing in appearance.
  • ullage — the amount by which the contents fall short of filling a container, as a cask or bottle.
  • unglue — to separate or detach by or as if by overcoming an adhesive agent: to unglue a sticker from a wall.
  • voulge — a medieval pole weapon used in close combat
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