6-letter words containing r, e, a, n
- dauner — an amble or walk
- deaner — (in Britain) a shilling or coin in common use before decimalization in 1971
- denary — calculated by tens; based on ten; decimal
- dendra — a plural of dendron.
- derain — André (ɑ̃dre). 1880–1954, French painter, noted for his Fauvist pictures (1905–08)
- draine — (obsolete) The missel thrush.
- drawne — Past participle of draw; obsolete spelling of drawn.
- earcon — a short, organized sound sequence that stands for an object or an incident
- earing — the part of a cereal plant, as corn, wheat, etc., that contains the flowers and hence the fruit, grains, or kernels.
- earned — Simple past tense and past participle of earn.
- earner — to gain or get in return for one's labor or service: to earn one's living.
- enamor — Be filled with a feeling of love for.
- endart — (obsolete, rare) To throw or shoot out like a dart.
- endear — Cause to be loved or liked.
- endura — (ecclesiastical history) A fast or series of privations undertaken by the Cathars to purify the soul, often resulting in death.
- engram — A hypothetical permanent change in the brain accounting for the existence of memory; a memory trace.
- enlard — To cover or dress with lard or grease.
- enrace — to bring into a race of people
- enrage — Make very angry.
- enrank — to put in a row or rank
- enrapt — Fascinated; enthralled.
- ensear — to sear or dry up
- entrap — Catch (someone or something) in or as in a trap.
- enwrap — Wrap; envelop.
- erivan — Yerevan
- erlang — (communication) A dimensionless statistical measure of the volume of telecommunications traffic relative to the capacity of a single channel.
- errand — A short journey undertaken in order to deliver or collect something, often on someone else's behalf.
- errant — Erring or straying from the proper course or standards.
- fainer — gladly; willingly: He fain would accept.
- fanger — (Now chiefly dialectal) A receiver.
- fanner — any device for producing a current of air by the movement of a broad surface or a number of such surfaces.
- farden — (UK, obsolete, Northern England) eye dialect of farthing.
- farnet — A non-profit corporation, established in 1987, whose mission is to advance the use of computer networks to improve research and education.
- farren — an allotted area of land
- fawner — One who fawns; a sycophant.
- fraena — frenum.
- france — Anatole [a-na-tawl] /a naˈtɔl/ (Show IPA), (Jacques Anatole Thibault) 1844–1924, French novelist and essayist: Nobel Prize 1921.
- furane — (organic compound) Furan.
- gainer — a person or thing that gains.
- gander — a town in E Newfoundland, in Canada: airport on the great circle route between New York and northern Europe.
- ganger — a foreman of a gang of laborers.
- garden — Alexander, 1730?–91, U.S. naturalist, born in Scotland.
- garner — to gather or deposit in or as if in a granary or other storage place.
- garnet — Henry Highland, 1815–82, U.S. clergyman and abolitionist.
- genera — a plural of genus.
- gerant — The manager or acting partner of a company, joint-stock association, etc.
- german — of or relating to Germany, its inhabitants, or their language.
- gerona — a city in NE Spain: city walls and 14th-century cathedral; often besieged, in particular by the French (1809). Pop: 81 220 (2003 est)
- gnawer — A rodent or other similar type of animal that gnaws.
- graben — a portion of the earth's crust, bounded on at least two sides by faults, that has dropped downward in relation to adjacent portions.