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6-letter words containing l, a, r

  • sacral — of or relating to the sacrum.
  • safrol — an oily liquid obtained from sassafras
  • sailer — Anton [ahn-tohn] /ˈɑn toʊn/ (Show IPA), ("Toni") 1935–2009, Austrian skier.
  • sailor — a person whose occupation is sailing or navigation; mariner.
  • salary — a fixed compensation periodically paid to a person for regular work or services.
  • salter — a crystalline compound, sodium chloride, NaCl, occurring as a mineral, a constituent of seawater, etc., and used for seasoning food, as a preservative, etc.
  • salver — a tray, especially one used for serving food or beverages.
  • salvor — a person who salvages or helps to salvage a ship, cargo, etc.
  • samlor — a three-wheeled motor vehicle in Thailand
  • sardel — a precious stone
  • saurel — any of several elongated marine fishes of the genus Trachurus, having bony plates along each side.
  • scalar — representable by position on a scale or line; having only magnitude: a scalar variable.
  • scaler — a person or thing that scales.
  • sclera — a dense, white, fibrous membrane that, with the cornea, forms the external covering of the eyeball.
  • scrawl — to write or draw in a sprawling, awkward manner: He scrawled his name hastily across the blackboard.
  • sealer — a person or ship engaged in hunting seals.
  • searle — Ronald (William Fordham) [fawr-duh m,, fohr-] /ˈfɔr dəm,, ˈfoʊr-/ (Show IPA), 1920–2011, British cartoonist and artist.
  • serial — anything published, broadcast, etc., in short installments at regular intervals, as a novel appearing in successive issues of a magazine.
  • serval — a long-limbed, nocturnal African cat, Felis serval, about the size of a bobcat, having a tawny coat spotted with black: now rare in many former habitats.
  • slaker — a person or thing that slakes.
  • slaterSamuel, 1768–1835, U.S. industrialist, born in England.
  • slaver — saliva coming from the mouth.
  • slayer — to kill by violence.
  • snarly — full of knotty snarls; tangled.
  • solera — (especially in Spain) a series of casks, graded according to age, in which sherries and brandies are stored while maturing.
  • sollar — solar2 .
  • sortal — a concept, grasp of which includes knowledge of criteria of individuation and reidentification, such as dog or concerto, but not flesh or music
  • spiral — Geometry. a plane curve generated by a point moving around a fixed point while constantly receding from or approaching it.
  • sporal — Biology. a walled, single- to many-celled, reproductive body of an organism, capable of giving rise to a new individual either directly or indirectly.
  • sprawl — to be stretched or spread out in an unnatural or ungraceful manner: The puppy's legs sprawled in all directions.
  • stelar — an upright stone slab or pillar bearing an inscription or design and serving as a monument, marker, or the like.
  • stylar — having the shape of an ancient style; resembling a pen, pin, or peg.
  • tailer — the limitation of an estate to a person and the person’s heirs or some particular class of such heirs.
  • tailor — a stroke of a bell indicating someone's death; knell.
  • talara — a seaport in NW Peru.
  • talker — to communicate or exchange ideas, information, etc., by speaking: to talk about poetry.
  • taller — having a relatively great height; of more than average stature: a tall woman; tall grass.
  • tarlac — a city on N central Luzon, in the N Philippines.
  • tarnal — damned
  • tarsal — of or relating to the tarsus of the foot.
  • tartly — sharp to the taste; sour or acid: Tart apples are best for pie. Synonyms: astringent, acrid, piquant. Antonyms: sweet, sugary, bland, mellow.
  • tatler — a triweekly periodical (1709–11) written, edited, and published by Richard Steele with the collaboration of Joseph Addison.
  • taylor — A(lan) J(ohn) P(ercivale) 1906–90, English historian.
  • telary — relating to a web
  • tergal — of or relating to the tergum.
  • ternal — having three parts
  • thaler — any of various former large coins of various German states; dollar.
  • thraleHester Lynch (Hester Lynch Piozzi) 1741–1821, Welsh writer and friend of Samuel Johnson.
  • thrall — a person who is in bondage; slave.
  • torula — a highly nutritious yeast produced commercially on a sugar recovered from the manufacture of wood products or from processed fruit.
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