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6-letter words containing r, e, p, o

  • report — an account or statement describing in detail an event, situation, or the like, usually as the result of observation, inquiry, etc.: a report on the peace conference; a medical report on the patient.
  • repose — the state of reposing or being at rest; rest; sleep.
  • repost — a reposted message, resent via email or posted again on an internet chatboard etc
  • repour — to send (a liquid, fluid, or anything in loose particles) flowing or falling, as from one container to another, or into, over, or on something: to pour a glass of milk; to pour water on a plant.
  • repton — Humphry. 1752–1818, English landscape gardener
  • respot — a rounded mark or stain made by foreign matter, as mud, blood, paint, ink, etc.; a blot or speck.
  • romped — to play or frolic in a lively or boisterous manner.
  • romper — a person or thing that romps.
  • ropery — a place where ropes are made.
  • roupet — hoarse; croaky
  • sloper — a person or thing that slopes.
  • soaper — soap opera.
  • sopher — scribe1 (def 3).
  • souper — a person dispensing soup in the name of charity
  • splore — a frolic; revel; carousal.
  • spores — Biology. a walled, single- to many-celled, reproductive body of an organism, capable of giving rise to a new individual either directly or indirectly.
  • stoper — a machine for drilling rock from below.
  • thorpe — a hamlet; village.
  • topper — a person or thing that tops.
  • torpex — (sometimes lowercase) a high explosive made of TNT, cyclonite, and aluminum powder and used especially in torpedoes, mines, and depth bombs.
  • trompe — Metallurgy. a device formerly used for inducing a blast of air upon the hearth of a forge by means of a current of falling water.
  • tropes — Rhetoric. any literary or rhetorical device, as metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche, and irony, that consists in the use of words in other than their literal sense. an instance of this. Compare figure of speech.
  • troupe — a company, band, or group of singers, actors, or other performers, especially one that travels about.
  • unrope — to release oneself by untying a rope
  • upbore — to bear up; raise aloft; sustain or support.
  • uprose — simple past tense of uprise.
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