6-letter words containing k, r, e
- fucker — an inconsequential, annoying, or disgusting person.
- funker — cowering fear; state of great fright or terror.
- fusker — a piece of software that generates obvious passwords and filenames in order to extract data that is held on free websites
- gawker — Someone who gawks, someone who stares stupidly.
- gierek — Edward [ed-werd;; Polish ed-vahrt] /ˈɛd wərd;; Polish ˈɛd vɑrt/ (Show IPA), 1913–2001, Polish political leader: first secretary of the Polish Communist Party 1970–80.
- gorked — Heavily sedated; knocked out.
- greeks — Plural form of greek.
- grikes — Plural form of grike.
- grimke — Sarah Moore, 1792–1873, and her sister Angelina Emily, 1805–79, U.S. abolitionists and women's-rights leaders.
- hacker — a person, as an artist or writer, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and mediocre work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts: As a painter, he was little more than a hack.
- hanker — to have a restless or incessant longing (often followed by after, for, or an infinitive).
- harked — to listen attentively; hearken.
- harken — Literary. to give heed or attention to what is said; listen.
- hawker — a person who offers goods for sale by shouting his or her wares in the street or going from door to door; peddler.
- hicker — an unsophisticated, boorish, and provincial person; rube.
- hikers — Plural form of hiker.
- hocker — pawn1 .
- hokier — Comparative form of hokey.
- honker — honky.
- hooker — Joseph, 1814–79, Union general in the U.S. Civil War.
- howker — (nautical) Alternative form of hooker.
- hucker — Someone who hucks (any meaning).
- hunker — to squat on one's heels (often followed by down).
- hurkle — (intransitive) to draw in the parts of the body, especially with pain or cold.
- husker — the dry external covering of certain fruits or seeds, especially of an ear of corn.
- ickier — Comparative form of icky.
- inkers — Plural form of inker.
- jacker — any of various portable devices for raising or lifting heavy objects short heights, using various mechanical, pneumatic, or hydraulic methods.
- janker — a device for transporting logs
- jerked — jerky2 .
- jerker — A North American river chub (Hybopsis biguttatus).
- jerkin — a close-fitting jacket or short coat, usually sleeveless, as one of leather worn in the 16th and 17th centuries.
- jinker — a sulky.
- jokers — Plural form of joker.
- junker — any old or discarded material, as metal, paper, or rags.
- kadder — (dialect) The jackdaw.
- kagera — a river in equatorial Africa flowing into Lake Victoria from the west: the most remote headstream of the Nile. 430 miles (690 km) long.
- kaiser — Henry J(ohn) 1882–1967, U.S. industrialist.
- karate — a method developed in Japan of defending oneself without the use of weapons by striking sensitive areas on an attacker's body with the hands, elbows, knees, or feet. Compare judo, jujitsu.
- kareem — a male given name: from an Arabic word meaning “generous.”.
- karree — (South African English) A plant root which produces honey beer when powdered and fermented.
- karrer — Paul, 1889–1971, Swiss chemist, born in Russia: Nobel Prize 1937.
- karter — a person who drives a kart
- kasher — kosher.
- kasper — a male given name, form of Caspar.
- kaveri — a river in S India, flowing SE from the Western Ghats in Karnatka state through Tamil Nadu state to the Bay of Bengal: sacred to the Hindus. 475 miles (765 km) long.
- kayser — A unit of wavenumber in the CGS system of units, equivalent to the number of waves in one centimeter.
- kearns — a town in N Utah, near Salt Lake City.
- kearny — Philip, 1814–62, U.S. general.
- kediri — a city on E Java, in Indonesia.