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6-letter words containing i, r, l

  • realia — real-life facts and material used in teaching
  • rebill — to bill or charge (someone or something) again
  • recoil — to draw back; start or shrink back, as in alarm, horror, or disgust.
  • redial — Also, re-dial. to dial again.
  • refile — legal: resubmit
  • refill — a material, supply, or the like, to replace something that has been used up: a refill for a prescription.
  • refilm — to film again
  • regild — to gild again
  • relics — a surviving memorial of something past.
  • relict — Ecology. a species or community living in an environment that has changed from that which is typical for it.
  • relied — to depend confidently; put trust in (usually followed by on or upon): You can rely on her work.
  • relief — prominence, distinctness, or vividness due to contrast.
  • relier — a person or thing that relies.
  • relies — to depend confidently; put trust in (usually followed by on or upon): You can rely on her work.
  • reline — to add a new lining to
  • relink — to link or connect again
  • relish — liking or enjoyment of the taste of something.
  • relist — to list again
  • relive — to experience again, as an emotion.
  • rellie — a relative
  • remail — to send again or forward (an email message)
  • renail — a slender, typically rod-shaped rigid piece of metal, usually in any of numerous standard lengths from a fraction of an inch to several inches and having one end pointed and the other enlarged and flattened, for hammering into or through wood, other building materials, etc., as used in building, in fastening, or in holding separate pieces together.
  • rerail — to put (a train etc that has been derailed) back on a railway line
  • resail — to sail back or again.
  • resile — to spring back; rebound; resume the original form or position, as an elastic body.
  • resoil — to replace topsoil, especially that lost by erosion.
  • retail — the sale of goods to ultimate consumers, usually in small quantities (opposed to wholesale).
  • retial — a pierced plate on an astrolabe, having projections whose points correspond to the fixed stars.
  • retile — a thin slab or bent piece of baked clay, sometimes painted or glazed, used for various purposes, as to form one of the units of a roof covering, floor, or revetment.
  • revile — to assail with contemptuous or opprobrious language; address or speak of abusively.
  • rewild — to introduce (animals or plants) to their original habitat or to a habitat similar to their natural one: proposals to rewild elephants to the American plains.
  • rhinal — of or relating to the nose; nasal.
  • rialto — an exchange or mart.
  • ribald — vulgar or indecent in speech, language, etc.; coarsely mocking, abusive, or irreverent; scurrilous.
  • ribble — a river in NW England, flowing south and west through Lancashire to the Irish Sea. Length: 121 km (75 miles)
  • riblet — a boneless cut of meat from the end of a rib of veal, lamb, or pork.
  • richly — having wealth or great possessions; abundantly supplied with resources, means, or funds; wealthy: a rich man; a rich nation.
  • rickle — an unsteady or shaky structure, esp a dilapidated building
  • rickly — run-down or rickety
  • riddle — a coarse sieve, as one for sifting sand in a foundry.
  • ridley — Also called Atlantic ridley, bastard ridley, bastard turtle. a gray sea turtle, Lepidochelys kempii, of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of North America, about 24 inches (61 cm) long, previously thought to be a hybrid of the loggerhead and green turtles: an endangered species.
  • riffle — a rapid, as in a stream.
  • rifled — a shoulder firearm with spiral grooves cut in the inner surface of the gun barrel to give the bullet a rotatory motion and thus a more precise trajectory.
  • rifles — a unit of soldiers equipped with rifles
  • riflip — RFLP.
  • riling — to irritate or vex.
  • rillet — a little rill; streamlet.
  • rimple — a wrinkle.
  • ripleyGeorge, 1802–80, U.S. literary critic, author, and social reformer: associated with the founding of Brook Farm.
  • ripple — (of a liquid surface) to form small waves or undulations, as water agitated by a breeze.
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