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

  • revile — to assail with contemptuous or opprobrious language; address or speak of abusively.
  • rewild — to introduce (animals or plants) to their original habitat or to a habitat similar to their natural one: proposals to rewild elephants to the American plains.
  • ribble — a river in NW England, flowing south and west through Lancashire to the Irish Sea. Length: 121 km (75 miles)
  • riblet — a boneless cut of meat from the end of a rib of veal, lamb, or pork.
  • rickle — an unsteady or shaky structure, esp a dilapidated building
  • riddle — a coarse sieve, as one for sifting sand in a foundry.
  • ridley — Also called Atlantic ridley, bastard ridley, bastard turtle. a gray sea turtle, Lepidochelys kempii, of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of North America, about 24 inches (61 cm) long, previously thought to be a hybrid of the loggerhead and green turtles: an endangered species.
  • riffle — a rapid, as in a stream.
  • rifled — a shoulder firearm with spiral grooves cut in the inner surface of the gun barrel to give the bullet a rotatory motion and thus a more precise trajectory.
  • rifles — a unit of soldiers equipped with rifles
  • rillet — a little rill; streamlet.
  • rimple — a wrinkle.
  • ripleyGeorge, 1802–80, U.S. literary critic, author, and social reformer: associated with the founding of Brook Farm.
  • ripple — (of a liquid surface) to form small waves or undulations, as water agitated by a breeze.
  • roiled — to render (water, wine, etc.) turbid by stirring up sediment.
  • rutile — a common mineral, titanium dioxide, TiO 2 , usually reddish-brown in color with a brilliant metallic or adamantine luster, occurring in crystals: used to coat welding rods.
  • sailer — Anton [ahn-tohn] /ˈɑn toʊn/ (Show IPA), ("Toni") 1935–2009, Austrian skier.
  • serial — anything published, broadcast, etc., in short installments at regular intervals, as a novel appearing in successive issues of a magazine.
  • serlio — Sebastiano 1475–1554, Italian architect and painter, best known for his treatise Complete Works on Architecture and Perspective (1537–75), the first to set out the principles of classical architecture and to give rules for their application
  • siller — silver.
  • silver — consisting of, made of, or plated with silver.
  • sislerGeorge Harold, 1893–1973, U.S. baseball player.
  • slicer — a thin-bladed knife or implement used for slicing, especially food: a cheese slicer.
  • slider — a person or thing that slides.
  • sliver — a small, slender, often sharp piece, as of wood or glass, split, broken, or cut off, usually lengthwise or with the grain; splinter.
  • soleri — Paolo [pou-loh] /ˈpaʊ loʊ/ (Show IPA), 1919–2013, U.S. architect, born in Italy.
  • swiler — (in Newfoundland) a seal hunter
  • tailer — the limitation of an estate to a person and the person’s heirs or some particular class of such heirs.
  • tilery — a factory or kiln for making tiles.
  • tiller — a plant shoot that springs from the root or bottom of the original stalk.
  • titler — someone who writes titles
  • toiler — hard and continuous work; exhausting labor or effort.
  • tricel — a kind of rayon
  • trifle — an article or thing of very little value.
  • triple — threefold; consisting of three parts: a triple knot.
  • uglier — very unattractive or unpleasant to look at; offensive to the sense of beauty; displeasing in appearance.
  • vergil — (Publius Vergilius Maro) 70–19 b.c, Roman poet: author of The Aeneid.
  • verily — in truth; really; indeed.
  • verlig — enlightened; liberal
  • violer — a person who plays the viol
  • virile — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or befitting a man; masculine; manly: virile strength.
  • wailer — to utter a prolonged, inarticulate, mournful cry, usually high-pitched or clear-sounding, as in grief or suffering: to wail with pain.
  • wilder — to travel around as a group, attacking or assaulting (people) in a random and violent way: The man was wilded and left for dead.
  • wilier — full of, marked by, or proceeding from wiles; crafty; cunning.
  • willer — One who wills, who causes by an act of will or willpower.
  • wilmer — a male given name.
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