6-letter words containing r, e, g, u
- gunter — Edmund, 1581–1626, English mathematician and astronomer: inventor of various measuring instruments and scales.
- gurfle — (exclamation) /ger'fl/ An expression of shocked disbelief. "He said we have to recode this thing in Fortran by next week. Gurfle!" Compare weeble.
- gurges — a whirlpool.
- gurgle — to flow in a broken, irregular, noisy current: The water gurgled from the bottle.
- gurlet — a pickaxe with a double-sided head, one side being a sharp point and the other side being a cutting edge
- gurnet — Alternative form of gurnard (fish).
- gurney — a flat, padded table or stretcher with legs and wheels, for transporting patients or bodies.
- gursel — Cemal [je-mahl] /dʒɛˈmɑl/ (Show IPA), 1895–1966, Turkish army officer and statesman: president 1961–66.
- guryev — a port city in W Kazakhstan, at the mouth of the Ural River on the Caspian Sea.
- gusher — a flowing oil well, usually of large capacity.
- gutser — a person who eats too much and greedily.
- gutter — a channel at the side or in the middle of a road or street, for leading off surface water.
- gutzer — a bad fall or tumble
- guyler — a person who tricks or hoodwinks
- guyver — affectation of speech or manner.
- hugger — One who hugs or embraces.
- hunger — a compelling need or desire for food.
- judger — a public officer authorized to hear and decide cases in a court of law; a magistrate charged with the administration of justice.
- junger — Ernst [urnst;; German ernst] /ɜrnst;; German ɛrnst/ (Show IPA), 1895–98, German author.
- kruger — Stephanus Johannes Paulus [ste-fah-nœs yoh-hah-nuh s poh-lœs] /stɛˈfɑ nœs yoʊˈhɑ nəs ˈpoʊ lœs/ (Show IPA), ("Oom Paul") 1825–1904, South African statesman: president of the Transvaal 1883–1900.
- ligure — a precious stone, probably the jacinth. Ex. 28:19.
- lugers — a one- or two-person sled for coasting or racing down a chute, used especially in Europe.
- lugger — a small ship lug-rigged on two or three masts.
- lunger — a person or thing that lunges.
- mauger — in spite of; notwithstanding.
- maugre — in spite of; notwithstanding.
- mergui — a seaport in S Burma, on the Andaman Sea.
- morgue — a place in which bodies are kept, especially the bodies of victims of violence or accidents, pending identification or burial.
- mugger — A person who attacks and robs another in a public place.
- murage — a toll or tax for the repair or construction of the walls or fortifications of a town.
- nudger — One who, or that which, nudges.
- prague — a republic in central Europe: includes the regions of Bohemia, Moravia, and part of Silesia; formerly part of Czechoslovakia; independent since 1993. 30,449 sq. mi. (78,864 sq. km). Capital: Prague.
- pugree — a light turban worn in India.
- purger — to rid of whatever is impure or undesirable; cleanse; purify.
- purges — to rid of whatever is impure or undesirable; cleanse; purify.
- redbug — chigger (def 1).
- refuge — shelter or protection from danger, trouble, etc.: to take refuge from a storm.
- regius — of or belonging to a king.
- reglue — to glue again; to apply fresh glue to
- regnum — a reign or rule
- regula — (in a Doric entablature) a fillet, continuing a triglyph beneath the taenia, from which guttae are suspended.
- regulo — any of a number of temperatures to which a gas oven may be set
- rehung — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
- repugn — to oppose or refute.
- reurge — to urge again
- roguer — a person who acts like a rogue
- rouged — any of various red cosmetics for coloring the cheeks or lips.
- rugate — wrinkle; rugose.
- rugged — having a roughly broken, rocky, hilly, or jagged surface: rugged ground.
- rugger — Rugby (def 3).