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6-letter words containing r, e, i, n

  • mering — (as modifier)
  • merino — (often initial capital letter) one of a breed of sheep, raised originally in Spain, valued for their fine wool.
  • merkin — false hair for the female pudenda.
  • merlin — OS/2
  • mersin — a seaport in S Turkey, on the NW coast of the Mediterranean Sea.
  • mervin — a male given name.
  • merwin — W(illiam) S(tanley) born 1927, U.S. poet, translator, and writer.
  • milnerAlfred, 1st Viscount, 1854–1925, British statesman and colonial administrator.
  • mincer — to cut or chop into very small pieces.
  • minder — Chiefly British. a person who looks after something (usually used in combination): a baby-minder.
  • miners — Plural form of miner.
  • minger — an ugly, unpleasant, or smelly person or thing.
  • minter — One who mints.
  • mirena — a type of intrauterine system
  • mirren — Dame Helen, original name Ilyena Vasilievna Mironov, born 1945, English actor; her films include Savage Messiah (1972), The Long Good Friday (1980), The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover (1989) and The Queen (2006), for which she won an Academy Award for Best Actress
  • murein — Peptidoglycan, mucopeptide.
  • murine — belonging or pertaining to the Muridae, the family of rodents that includes the mice and rats.
  • n-tier — three-tier
  • nailer — a person or thing that drives nails, as a machine that drives nails automatically.
  • naiver — Comparative form of naive.
  • namier — Sir Lewis Bernstein, original name Ludwik Bernsztajn vel Niemirowski. 1888–1960, British historian, born in Poland: noted esp for his studies of 18th-century British politics
  • napierSir Charles James, 1782–1853, British general.
  • nebris — a fawn skin worn in Greek mythology by Dionysus and his followers.
  • neibor — Obsolete form of neighbour.
  • nereid — (sometimes lowercase) Classical Mythology. any of the 50 daughters of Nereus; a sea nymph.
  • nereis — clamworm.
  • nerine — any of several bulbous plants belonging to the genus Nerine, of the amaryllis family, native to southern Africa, having funnel-shaped red, pink, or white flowers.
  • nerite — any member of the family of small sea snail or freshwater snail Neritidae
  • neroli — An essential oil distilled from the flowers of the Seville orange, used in perfumery.
  • newari — a Sino-Tibetan language, the language of the Newar.
  • nicher — a neigh
  • nicker — a person or thing that nicks.
  • niever — a frequent misspelling of naive.
  • nievre — a department in central France. 2659 sq. mi. (6885 sq. km). Capital: Nevers.
  • niffer — barter or an instance thereof
  • nigger — Slang: Extremely Disparaging and Offensive. a contemptuous term used to refer to a black person. a contemptuous term used to refer to a member of any dark-skinned people.
  • nigher — near in space, time, or relation: The time draws nigh.
  • nimmer — A petty thief.
  • nipper — a person or thing that nips.
  • nipter — a religious ceremony of foot washing
  • nitery — a nightclub.
  • nither — Alternative form of nether.
  • nitter — (zoology) A louse that deposits nits on horses.
  • norice — Obsolete form of nurse.
  • norite — a granular igneous rock consisting of a mix of light and dark minerals, the former being calcic plagioclase feldspars, and the latter orthorhombic pyroxenes.
  • normie — (slang) A normal person.
  • nursie — (childish, mainly as a term of address) nurse.
  • oinker — (slang, countable) A pig: an animal of the genus Sus.
  • orcein — a red dye, the principal coloring matter of cudbear and orchil, obtained by oxidizing an ammoniacal solution of orcinol.
  • orexin — (biochemistry) Either of two neuropeptide hormones found in vertebrates; the hypocretins.
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