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6-letter words containing r, e, s, a

  • easier — not hard or difficult; requiring no great labor or effort: a book that is easy to read; an easy victory.
  • easter — an annual Christian festival in commemoration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, observed on the first Sunday after the first full moon after the vernal equinox, as calculated according to tables based in Western churches on the Gregorian calendar and in Orthodox churches on the Julian calendar.
  • eaters — Plural form of eater.
  • ecrase — (of leather) crushed to produce a grained effect.
  • eggars — Plural form of eggar.
  • ensear — to sear or dry up
  • erased — (of a head or limb) depicted as cut off in a jagged line.
  • eraser — An object, typically a piece of soft rubber or plastic, used to rub out something written.
  • erases — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of erase.
  • ersatz — (of a product) Made or used as a substitute, typically an inferior one, for something else.
  • ershad — Hussain Mohammed. born 1930, Bangladeshi soldier and statesman. He seized power in a coup in 1982, becoming president in 1983. He was deposed in 1990 and has served prison sentences for corruption
  • escarp — The side of the ditch next to the parapet in a fortification; the scarp.
  • eschar — A dry, dark scab or falling away of dead skin, typically caused by a burn, or by the bite of a mite, or as a result of anthrax infection.
  • esdras — either of two books of the Apocrypha, I and II Esdras, called III and IV Esdras, in the Douay Bible
  • estray — (legal) An animal that has escaped from its owner; a wandering animal whose owner is unknown. An animal cannot be an estray when on the range where it was raised, and permitted by its owner to run. A lost animal whose owner is known to the party at hand is not an estray.
  • extras — Plural form of extra.
  • facers — Plural form of facer.
  • faders — Plural form of fader.
  • faires — Plural form of faire.
  • fakers — Plural form of faker.
  • falser — Comparative form of false.
  • farces — Plural form of farce.
  • farest — Archaic second-person singular form of fare.
  • farsee — To see at or from a distance.
  • faster — moving or able to move, operate, function, or take effect quickly; quick; swift; rapid: a fast horse; a fast pain reliever; a fast thinker.
  • ferias — Plural form of feria.
  • feuars — Plural form of feuar.
  • flares — to burn with an unsteady, swaying flame, as a torch or candle in the wind.
  • flaser — a type of pattern or structure in sedimentary rock, caused by intermittent flows within the rock and characterized by alternate layers of larger particles and fine particles
  • fraise — Fortification. a defense consisting of pointed stakes projecting from the ramparts in a horizontal or an inclined position.
  • frames — Plural form of frame.
  • fraserJames Earle, 1876–1953, U.S. sculptor.
  • freaks — Plural form of freak.
  • freash — Archaic form of fresh.
  • gamers — Plural form of gamer.
  • gapers — Plural form of gaper.
  • gasher — dreary or gloomy in appearance.
  • gasper — a cigarette.
  • gasserHerbert Spencer, 1888–1963, U.S. physiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1944.
  • gaster — (in ants, bees, wasps, and other hymenopterous insects) the part of the abdomen behind the petiole.
  • gaters — Southern U.S. Informal. alligator.
  • gazers — to look steadily and intently, as with great curiosity, interest, pleasure, or wonder.
  • glares — Plural form of glare.
  • glaserDonald A. 1926–2013, U.S. physicist: Nobel Prize 1960.
  • gracesWilliam Russell, 1832–1904, U.S. financier and shipping magnate, born in Ireland: mayor of New York City 1880–88.
  • grades — Plural form of grade.
  • grames — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of grame.
  • grapes — the edible, pulpy, smooth-skinned berry or fruit that grows in clusters on vines of the genus Vitis, and from which wine is made.
  • graser — (physics, science fiction) A device for the coherent amplification or generation of electromagnetic radiation in the gamma ray wavelength by the use of excitation energy in resonant atomic or molecular systems.
  • grasse — François Joseph Paul [frahn-swa zhaw-zef pawl] /frɑ̃ˈswa ʒɔˈzɛf pɔl/ (Show IPA), Comte de (Marquis de Grasse-Tilly) 1722–1788, French admiral.
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