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6-letter words containing n, e, r, d

  • nudger — One who, or that which, nudges.
  • nurdle — (cricket) To score runs by gently nudging the ball into vacant areas of the field.
  • nurled — to make knurls or ridges on.
  • nursed — Simple past tense and past participle of nurse.
  • orenda — a supernatural force believed by the Iroquois Indians to be present, in varying degrees, in all objects or persons, and to be the spiritual force by which human accomplishment is attained or accounted for.
  • pander — a person who furnishes clients for a prostitute or supplies persons for illicit sexual intercourse; procurer; pimp.
  • pernod — an aniseed-flavoured apéritif from France
  • pinder — peanut.
  • ponder — to consider something deeply and thoroughly; meditate (often followed by over or upon).
  • pruned — Archaic. to preen.
  • rained — water that is condensed from the aqueous vapor in the atmosphere and falls to earth in drops more than 1/50 inch (0.5 mm) in diameter. Compare drizzle (def 6).
  • randem — with three horses harnessed together as a team
  • ranged — working or grazing on a range: range horses; range animals like steer and sheep.
  • ranted — to speak or declaim extravagantly or violently; talk in a wild or vehement way; rave: The demagogue ranted for hours.
  • rebind — fasten together again
  • redden — to make or cause to become red.
  • redeny — to deny again
  • redfin — any of various small freshwater minnows with red fins, especially a shiner, Notropis umbratilis, of streams in central North America.
  • redone — to do again; repeat.
  • reeden — of or consisting of reeds
  • refind — to come upon by chance; meet with: He found a nickel in the street.
  • refund — to fund anew.
  • reined — Often, reins. a leather strap, fastened to each end of the bit of a bridle, by which the rider or driver controls a horse or other animal by pulling so as to exert pressure on the bit.
  • reland — to land again
  • relend — to grant the use of (something) on condition that it or its equivalent will be returned.
  • remand — to send back, remit, or consign again.
  • remend — to make (something broken, worn, torn, or otherwise damaged) whole, sound, or usable by repairing: to mend old clothes; to mend a broken toy.
  • remind — to cause (a person) to remember; cause (a person) to think (of someone or something): Remind me to phone him tomorrow. That woman reminds me of my mother.
  • renard — Reynard.
  • rended — to separate into parts with force or violence: The storm rent the ship to pieces.
  • render — to cause to be or become; make: to render someone helpless.
  • repand — Botany. having a wavy margin, as a leaf.
  • resend — to send again.
  • retund — to weaken, dull or blunt
  • revend — to sell as one's business or occupation, especially by peddling: to vend flowers at a sidewalk stand.
  • rewind — an act or instance of rewinding.
  • ridden — a past participle of ride.
  • rident — laughing; smiling; cheerful.
  • ringed — having or wearing a ring or rings.
  • rodent — belonging or pertaining to the gnawing or nibbling mammals of the order Rodentia, including the mice, squirrels, beavers, etc.
  • rodney — George Brydges [brij-iz] /ˈbrɪdʒ ɪz/ (Show IPA), Baron, 1718–92, British admiral.
  • rondel — Prosody. a short poem of fixed form, consisting usually of 14 lines on two rhymes, of which four are made up of the initial couplet repeated in the middle and at the end, with the second line of the couplet sometimes being omitted at the end.
  • ruinedruins, the remains of a building, city, etc., that has been destroyed or that is in disrepair or a state of decay: We visited the ruins of ancient Greece.
  • rundle — a rung of a ladder.
  • runted — stunted
  • sander — a male given name, form of Alexander.
  • sender — a person or thing that sends.
  • snared — a device, often consisting of a noose, for capturing small game.
  • snider — derogatory in a nasty, insinuating manner: snide remarks about his boss.
  • snyderGary, born 1930, U.S. poet and essayist.
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