6-letter words containing p, r, e, u
- pruner — to cut or lop off (twigs, branches, or roots).
- prunes — a variety of plum that dries without spoiling.
- pucker — a wrinkle; an irregular fold.
- pudder — a small pool or something resembling a pool
- pudeur — a holding back or concealing from others, as of one's intimate feelings; reserve; restraint
- puffer — a person or thing that puffs.
- pugree — a light turban worn in India.
- puller — to draw or haul toward oneself or itself, in a particular direction, or into a particular position: to pull a sled up a hill.
- pulper — the soft, juicy, edible part of a fruit.
- pulser — a machine that produces pulses
- pulver — powder
- pumper — a person or thing that pumps.
- punker — Slang. something or someone worthless or unimportant. a young ruffian; hoodlum. an inexperienced youth. a young male partner of a homosexual. an apprentice, especially in the building trades. Prison Slang. a boy.
- punner — a rammer for compacting earth or fresh concrete.
- punter — Cards. a person who lays a stake against the bank.
- purace — an active volcano in SW Colombia. 15,603 feet (4756 meters).
- pureed — a cooked food, especially a vegetable or fruit, that has been put through a sieve, blender, or the like.
- purely — entirely; completely.
- purest — free from anything of a different, inferior, or contaminating kind; free from extraneous matter: pure gold; pure water.
- purfle — to finish with an ornamental border.
- purger — to rid of whatever is impure or undesirable; cleanse; purify.
- purges — to rid of whatever is impure or undesirable; cleanse; purify.
- purine — a white, crystalline compound, C 5 H 4 N 4 , from which is derived a group of compounds including uric acid, xanthine, and caffeine.
- purled — the action or sound of purling.
- purler — a headlong or spectacular fall (esp in the phrase come a purler)
- purple — any color having components of both red and blue, such as lavender, especially one deep in tone.
- purred — to utter a low, continuous, murmuring sound expressive of contentment or pleasure, as a cat does.
- purree — Indian yellow (defs 1, 2a).
- pursed — a woman's handbag or pocketbook.
- purser — an officer on a ship who handles financial accounts and various documents relating to the ship and who keeps money and valuables for passengers.
- pursue — to strive to gain; seek to attain or accomplish (an end, object, purpose, etc.).
- purvey — to provide, furnish, or supply (especially food or provisions) usually as a business or service.
- pusher — a person or thing that pushes.
- pusser — a purser
- putter — to busy or occupy oneself in a leisurely, casual, or ineffective manner: to putter in the garden.
- puture — a forester's rightful claim to food, drink, and lodging within the bounds of the forest
- recoup — to get back the equivalent of: to recoup one's losses by a lucky investment.
- replum — the thin internal separating wall or partition between valves or compartments in some fruits
- repour — to send (a liquid, fluid, or anything in loose particles) flowing or falling, as from one container to another, or into, over, or on something: to pour a glass of milk; to pour water on a plant.
- repub. — Republic
- repugn — to oppose or refute.
- repulp — to pulp or turn into pulp again
- repump — to pump again
- repute — estimation in the view of others; reputation: persons of good repute.
- rev up — a revolution (in an engine or the like).
- roupet — hoarse; croaky
- rumple — to crumple or crush into wrinkles: to rumple a sheet of paper.
- rupert — Prince, 1619–82, German Royalist general and admiral in the English Civil War (nephew of Charles I of England).
- souper — a person dispensing soup in the name of charity
- 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.