6-letter words containing l, r, a
- barely — You use barely to say that something is only just true or only just the case.
- barfly — A barfly is a person who spends a lot of time drinking in bars
- barful — presenting difficulties or obstacles
- barkla — Charles Glover. 1877–1944, British physicist, noted for his work on X-rays: Nobel prize for physics 1917
- barley — Barley is a grain that is used to make food, beer, and whisky.
- barlow — a large strong pocket-knife with a single blade
- barolo — a dry red wine produced in the Piedmont region of Italy
- barrel — A barrel is a large, round container for liquids or food.
- batler — a flat piece of wood once used for beating clothes during washing or to smooth them when dry
- bawler — to cry or wail lustily.
- baylor — Elgin, born 1934, U.S. basketball player.
- bearly — Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of bears; ursine.
- bedral — a minor official in the Scottish Episcopal Church, similar but not identical to the English beadle
- bharal — a wild Himalayan sheep, Pseudois nayaur, with a bluish-grey coat and round backward-curving horns
- blader — a person who skates with in-line skates
- blamer — someone who blames
- blared — to emit a loud, raucous sound: The trumpets blared as the procession got under way.
- blargh — /blarg/ [MIT] The opposite of ping. An exclamation indicating that one has absorbed or is emitting a quantum of unhappiness. Less common than ping.
- blazar — a type of galaxy supplying more radiation than a quasar
- blazer — A blazer is a kind of jacket which is often worn by members of a particular group, especially schoolchildren and members of a sports team.
- bleary — If your eyes are bleary, they look dull or tired, as if you have not had enough sleep or have drunk too much alcohol.
- boreal — of or relating to the north or the north wind
- bragly — in an ostentatious or proud manner
- braila — a port in E Romania: belonged to Turkey (1544–1828). Pop: 192 000 (2005 est)
- branle — an old French country dance performed in a linked circle
- brasil — Brazil
- brawly — fine or fine-looking; excellent.
- brazil — the red wood obtained from various tropical leguminous trees of the genus Caesalpinia, such as C. echinata of America: used for cabinetwork
- bridal — Bridal is used to describe something that belongs or relates to a bride, or to both a bride and her bridegroom.
- brolga — a large grey Australian crane, Grus rubicunda, having a red-and-green head and a trumpeting call
- bromal — a yellowish oily synthetic liquid formerly used medicinally as a sedative and hypnotic; tribromoacetaldehyde. Formula: Br3CCHO
- brumal — of, characteristic of, or relating to winter; wintry
- brutal — A brutal act or person is cruel and violent.
- bulbar — of or relating to a bulb, esp the medulla oblongata
- bulgar — a member of a group of non-Indo-European peoples that settled in SE Europe in the late 7th century ad and adopted the language and culture of their Slavonic subjects
- burial — A burial is the act or ceremony of putting a dead body into a grave in the ground.
- burlap — Burlap is a thick, rough fabric that is used for making sacks.
- bursal — Anatomy, Zoology. a pouch, sac, or vesicle, especially a sac containing synovia, to facilitate motion, as between a tendon and a bone.
- cabler — a cable broadcasting company
- cabral — Pedro Álvares (ˈpɛːdru ˈɑlvərəʃ). ?1460–?1526, Portuguese navigator: discovered and took possession of Brazil for Portugal in 1500
- calcar — a spur or spurlike process, as on the leg of a bird or the corolla of a flower
- calder — Alexander. 1898–1976, US sculptor, who originated mobiles and stabiles (moving or static abstract sculptures, generally suspended from wire)
- calker — a person who caulks the seams of boats or the like.
- caller — A caller is a person who is making a telephone call.
- calmer — without rough motion; still or nearly still: a calm sea.
- calory — calorie
- calver — to prepare (a fish) while it is still fresh
- carcel — a former French unit of light equal to about 9.74 candelas
- carful — the maximum number of people a car will hold
- carlin — an old woman.