6-letter words containing r, e, f
- fouter — something that has no value (used in expressions of contempt): A fouter for the world, say I!
- foutre — to mess around; to footer
- fowers — Plural form of fower.
- fowler — Henry H(amill) [ham-uh l] /ˈhæm əl/ (Show IPA), 1908–2000, U.S. lawyer and government official: secretary of the Treasury 1965–68.
- foxier — Comparative form of foxy.
- foyers — Plural form of foyer.
- fozier — (of a person) fat; flabby.
- fraena — frenum.
- fraile — Obsolete spelling of frail.
- fraise — Fortification. a defense consisting of pointed stakes projecting from the ramparts in a horizontal or an inclined position.
- frakel — (obsolete) Fraked.
- framed — (of a picture or similar) held in a frame.
- framer — a border or case for enclosing a picture, mirror, etc.
- frames — Plural form of frame.
- france — Anatole [a-na-tawl] /a naˈtɔl/ (Show IPA), (Jacques Anatole Thibault) 1844–1924, French novelist and essayist: Nobel Prize 1921.
- frappe — a fruit juice mixture frozen to a mush, to be served as a dessert, appetizer, or relish.
- fraser — James Earle, 1876–1953, U.S. sculptor.
- frater — the refectory of a religious house.
- frayed — a raveled or worn part, as in cloth: frays at the toes of well-worn sneakers.
- frazer — Sir James George, 1854–1941, Scottish anthropologist: writer of socio-anthropological studies.
- freaks — Plural form of freak.
- freaky — freakish.
- freash — Archaic form of fresh.
- freddy — a male given name, form of Fred.
- freely — in a free manner.
- freest — enjoying personal rights or liberty, as a person who is not in slavery: a land of free people.
- freeze — to become hardened into ice or into a solid body; change from the liquid to the solid state by loss of heat.
- freezy — Chilled almost to freezing.
- freind — Misspelling of friend.
- freity — superstitious
- frejol — Alt form frijol.
- french — of, relating to, or characteristic of France, its inhabitants, or their language, culture, etc.: French cooking.
- frenum — a fold of membrane that checks or restrains the motion of a part, as the fold on the underside of the tongue.
- frenzy — extreme mental agitation; wild excitement or derangement.
- fresco — A painting done rapidly in watercolor on wet plaster on a wall or ceiling, so that the colors penetrate the plaster and become fixed as it dries.
- fresh- — Fresh- is added to past participles in order to form adjectives which describe something as having been recently made or done.
- fresno — a city in central California.
- fretty — covered with criss-crossed and interlacing diagonal strips: argent, fretty sable.
- freyre — Gilberto [zhil-ber-too] /ʒɪlˈbɛr tʊ/ (Show IPA), 1900–87, Brazilian sociologist and anthropologist.
- fridge — a refrigerator.
- frieda — a female given name.
- friend — a person attached to another by feelings of affection or personal regard.
- frieze — a heavy, napped woolen cloth for coats.
- fringe — a decorative border of thread, cord, or the like, usually hanging loosely from a raveled edge or separate strip.
- friode — (humour, electronics) /fri:'ohd/ (TMRC) A reversible (that is, fused, blown, or fried) diode. A friode may have been a SED at some time. See also LER.
- frisee — an endive, Cichorium endivia, often used in salads
- frites — chipped potatoes
- frizer — a person who gives a bur to the nap of a cloth
- frizes — Plural form of frize.
- froise — a type of pancake often made with bacon