6-letter words containing r, e, l, g
- grille — cooked on a grill; broiled.
- grilse — a young Atlantic salmon as it returns from the sea to fresh water for the first time.
- grovel — to humble oneself or act in an abject manner, as in great fear or utter servility.
- gruels — Plural form of gruel.
- guiler — a deceiver
- guller — a deceiver
- gulper — A deep-sea eel with very large jaws that open to give an enormous gape and with eyes near the tip of the snout.
- 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.
- 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
- gursel — Cemal [je-mahl] /dʒɛˈmɑl/ (Show IPA), 1895–1966, Turkish army officer and statesman: president 1961–66.
- guyler — a person who tricks or hoodwinks
- hagler — Marvelous Marvin (Marvin Nathaniel Hagler) born 1954, U.S. boxer.
- kegler — a participant in a bowling game, as candlepins or tenpins.
- kilerg — one thousand ergs
- laager — a camp or encampment, especially within a protective circle of wagons.
- lagers — Plural form of lager.
- lagger — a convict or ex-convict.
- langer — Susanne (Knauth) [knout] /knaʊt/ (Show IPA), 1895–1985, U.S. philosopher.
- largen — (UK) To enlarge.
- larger — of more than average size, quantity, degree, etc.; exceeding that which is common to a kind or class; big; great: a large house; a large number; in large measure; to a large extent.
- larges — of more than average size, quantity, degree, etc.; exceeding that which is common to a kind or class; big; great: a large house; a large number; in large measure; to a large extent.
- ledger — Bookkeeping. an account book of final entry, in which business transactions are recorded.
- legger — Short for a bootlegger.
- legree — Simon, Simon Legree.
- ligers — Plural form of liger.
- ligger — The horizontal timber of a scaffolding; a ledger.
- ligure — a precious stone, probably the jacinth. Ex. 28:19.
- linger — to remain or stay on in a place longer than is usual or expected, as if from reluctance to leave: We lingered awhile after the party.
- lodger — a person who lives in rented quarters in another's house; roomer.
- logger — a person whose work is logging; lumberjack.
- longer — having considerable linear extent in space: a long distance; a long handle.
- 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.
- nergal — (in Akkadian mythology) the god ruling, with Ereshkigal, the world of the dead.
- oglers — to look at amorously, flirtatiously, or impertinently.
- pegler — (James) Westbrook, 1894–1969, U.S. journalist.
- prelog — Vladimir [vlad-uh-meer] /ˈvlæd əˌmɪər/ (Show IPA), 1906–98, Swiss chemist, born in Yugoslavia: Nobel prize 1975.
- proleg — one of the abdominal ambulatory processes of caterpillars and other larvae, as distinct from the true or thoracic legs.
- raggle — a groove cut in masonry to receive flashing.
- ralegh — Sir Walter1552?-1618; Eng. statesman, explorer, & poet; beheaded
- redleg — a member of a secret organization, formed in Kansas in 1862, that engaged in guerrilla activities during the Civil War.
- reflag — to register (a foreign ship) so that it flies the flag of the registering nation and thereby comes under the latter's protection.
- regale — to entertain lavishly or agreeably; delight.
- regild — to gild again
- reglet — Architecture. a groove for guiding or holding a panel, window sash, etc. a narrow, flat molding; fillet.
- reglow — the act of glowing again
- reglue — to glue again; to apply fresh glue to
- regnal — of or relating to a sovereign, sovereignty, or reign: the second regnal year of Louis XIV.