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6-letter words containing r, e, p

  • pirate — software pirate
  • pirnie — a stripy woollen nightcap
  • pisher — a young boy or person who still has little experience
  • pisser — something extremely difficult or unpleasant.
  • pitier — a person who pities.
  • pitter — to make a pattering sound
  • placer — a person who sets things in their place or arranges them.
  • planer — Carpentry. a power machine for removing the rough or excess surface from a board.
  • plater — a person or thing that plates.
  • playerGary, born 1935, South African golfer.
  • pleura — Anatomy, Zoology. a delicate serous membrane investing each lung in mammals and folded back as a lining of the corresponding side of the thorax.
  • plexor — Medicine/Medical. a small hammer with a soft rubber head or the like, used in percussion for diagnostic purposes.
  • plierspliers, (sometimes used with a singular verb) small pincers with long jaws, for bending wire, holding small objects, etc. (usually used with pair of).
  • plomer — William (Charles Franklyn). 1903–73, British poet, novelist, and short-story writer, born in South Africa. His novels include Turbott Wolfe (1926) and The Case is Altered (1932)
  • plover — any of various shorebirds of the family Charadriidae. Compare dotterel (def 1), killdeer, lapwing.
  • poetry — the art of rhythmical composition, written or spoken, for exciting pleasure by beautiful, imaginative, or elevated thoughts.
  • poiretPaul [pawl] /pɔl/ (Show IPA), 1879–1944, French fashion designer.
  • poiser — a person or thing that poises.
  • pokier — puttering; slow; dull: poky drivers.
  • polder — a tract of low land, especially in the Netherlands, reclaimed from the sea or other body of water and protected by dikes.
  • poller — a sampling or collection of opinions on a subject, taken from either a selected or a random group of persons, as for the purpose of analysis.
  • ponder — to consider something deeply and thoroughly; meditate (often followed by over or upon).
  • pooler — a person taking part in a pool game
  • poorer — having little or no money, goods, or other means of support: a poor family living on welfare.
  • pooter — a crimping tool used to crimp a ruff, as worn during the reigns of Elizabeth and James I
  • popera — music drawing on opera or classical music and aiming for popular appeal
  • popery — the Roman Catholic Church, especially its doctrines, ceremonies, and system of government.
  • popler — A PLANNER-type language for the POP-2 environment.
  • popper — Sir Karl (Raimund) [rey-muh nd] /ˈreɪ mənd/ (Show IPA), 1902–1994, British philosopher, born in Austria.
  • porker — a pig, especially one being fattened for its meat.
  • porose — having pores; porous
  • ported — Military. the position of a rifle or other weapon when ported.
  • porter — the left-hand side of a vessel or aircraft, facing forward.
  • poseur — a person who attempts to impress others by assuming or affecting a manner, degree of elegance, sentiment, etc., other than his or her true one.
  • posser — a short stick used for stirring clothes in a washtub
  • poster — post horse.
  • pother — commotion; uproar.
  • potter — Beatrix [bee-uh-triks] /ˈbi ə trɪks/ (Show IPA), 1866–1943, English writer and illustrator of children's books.
  • poured — 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.
  • pourer — 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.
  • pourie — a jug; pitcher
  • pouter — a person who pouts.
  • powder — British Dialect. a sudden, frantic, or impulsive rush.
  • powers — ability to do or act; capability of doing or accomplishing something.
  • powter — to potter about, to do trifling simple tasks
  • 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.
  • praise — the act of expressing approval or admiration; commendation; laudation.
  • prance — to spring from the hind legs; to move by springing, as a horse.
  • prases — a leek-green cryptocrystalline variety of chalcedony.
  • prater — to talk excessively and pointlessly; babble: They prated on until I was ready to scream.
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