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6-letter words containing p, r, e, c

  • picker — someone or something that picks.
  • piecer — a person whose occupation is the joining together of pieces or threads, as in textile work.
  • pierce — to penetrate into or run through (something), as a sharp, pointed dagger, object, or instrument does.
  • piercyMarge, born 1936, U.S. poet and novelist.
  • pincer — insect, crab: claws
  • placer — a person who sets things in their place or arranges them.
  • prance — to spring from the hind legs; to move by springing, as a horse.
  • pre-cc — PREttier Compiler-Compiler. An earlier version of PRECCX.
  • preach — to proclaim or make known by sermon (the gospel, good tidings, etc.).
  • preact — anything done, being done, or to be done; deed; performance: a heroic act.
  • preccx — (tool)   (Pre-C-Compiler eXtended) An infinite-lookahead compiler-compiler by Peter Breuer <[email protected]> for context dependent grammars. PRECCX generates ANSI C. Specification scripts are in very EBNF with inherited attributes and synthetic attributes allowed. Scripts can be compiled in separate modules and linked later. Meta-production rules are allowed. Grammars can be essentially LL(oo) with optimisations. A converter for yacc scripts is available. Versions 1.xx were known as "PRECC" and only had unbounded lookahead. The 2.xx series added the "X" for "extended" and featured higher order parameterisation (inherited attributes). Version 2.42 integrates inherited and synthesized attributes by using a "monadic" model for parsing. You can now synthsize attributes during the pass and inherit them in the remainder, e.g. @ foo = bar\x gum(x) synthesises an x in bar and passes it down into gum as a parameter. Useful for @ what = ?\x did_you_say(x), for example. It now compiles into C instead of running an interpreter at parse-time. Version 2.42 runs under Unix and MS-DOS. E-mail: Peter Breuer <[email protected]>, Jonathan Bowen <[email protected]>.
  • preces — prayers
  • precis — a concise summary.
  • precut — cut to a specific shape or size before being assembled or used: a kit with precut parts.
  • pricer — (especially in retail stores) an employee who establishes prices at which articles will be sold, or one who affixes price tags to merchandise.
  • pricey — expensive or unduly expensive: a pricey wine.
  • prince — a treatise on statecraft (1513) by Niccolò Machiavelli.
  • procne — a princess of Athens, who punished her husband for raping her sister Philomela by feeding him the flesh of their son. She was changed at her death into a swallow
  • pucker — a wrinkle; an irregular fold.
  • purace — an active volcano in SW Colombia. 15,603 feet (4756 meters).
  • recept — an idea formed by the repetition of similar percepts, as successive percepts of the same object.
  • rechip — to put a new chip into (a stolen mobile phone) so it can be reused
  • recipe — suspension
  • recopy — an imitation, reproduction, or transcript of an original: a copy of a famous painting.
  • recoup — to get back the equivalent of: to recoup one's losses by a lucky investment.
  • redcap — a baggage porter at a railroad station.
  • repack — fill luggage again
  • repics — the scoring of 30 points in the declaration of hands before one's opponent scores a point.
  • scrape — to deprive of or free from an outer layer, adhering matter, etc., or to smooth by drawing or rubbing something, especially a sharp or rough instrument, over the surface: to scrape a table to remove paint and varnish.
  • secpar — (in astronomy) a unit of distance equivalent to 3.262 light years
  • spacer — the unlimited or incalculably great three-dimensional realm or expanse in which all material objects are located and all events occur.
  • spruce — any evergreen, coniferous tree of the genus Picea, of the pine family, having short, angular, needle-shaped leaves attached singly around twigs and bearing hanging cones with persistent scales.
  • tricep — a triceps muscle, especially the one at the back of the upper arm.
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