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4-letter words containing r, e

  • tore — simple past tense of tear2 .
  • tree — Sir Herbert Beerbohm [beer-bohm] /ˈbɪər boʊm/ (Show IPA), (Herbert Beerbohm) 1853–1917, English actor and theater manager; brother of Max Beerbohm.
  • tref — Judaism. unfit to be eaten or used, according to religious laws; not kosher.
  • trek — to travel or migrate, especially slowly or with difficulty.
  • tres — very
  • tret — (formerly) an allowance for waste, after deduction for tare.
  • trey — a playing card or a die having three pips.
  • true — being in accordance with the actual state or conditions; conforming to reality or fact; not false: a true story.
  • trye — very good
  • tver — a city in the W Russian Federation in Europe, NW of Moscow, on the Volga. Formerly (1934–90) Kalinin.
  • tyer — a person who ties
  • tyre — to furnish with tires.
  • uber — having the specified property to an extreme or excessive degree; very: an uber fancy restaurant.
  • urdé — (in heraldry) having points
  • urea — Biochemistry. a compound, CO(NH 2) 2 , occurring in urine and other body fluids as a product of protein metabolism.
  • urey — Harold Clayton [kleyt-n] /ˈkleɪt n/ (Show IPA), 1893–1981, U.S. chemist: Nobel prize 1934.
  • urfé — Honoré d' (ɔnɔre d). 1568–1625, French writer, whose pastoral L'Astrée (1607–27) is considered the first French novel
  • urge — to push or force along; impel with force or vigor: to urge the cause along.
  • user — the exercise of a right to the enjoyment of property.
  • vare — a weasel
  • veer — to change direction or turn about or aside; shift, turn, or change from one course, position, inclination, etc., to another: The speaker kept veering from his main topic. The car veered off the road.
  • vera — a female given name: from a Russian word meaning “faith.”.
  • verb — any member of a class of words that function as the main elements of predicates, that typically express action, state, or a relation between two things, and that may be inflected for tense, aspect, voice, mood, and to show agreement with their subject or object.
  • vern — a male given name, form of Vernon.
  • vers — versed sine
  • vert — English Forest Law. vegetation bearing green leaves in a forest and capable of serving as a cover for deer. the right to cut such vegetation.
  • very — in a high degree; extremely; exceedingly: A giant is very tall.
  • vier — to strive in competition or rivalry with another; contend for superiority: Swimmers from many nations were vying for the title.
  • vire — a type of arrow which had a turning motion and which was formerly used with a crossbow
  • vrse — Vancomycin Resistant Staphylococcus Epidermidis
  • ware — the first season in the year; spring.
  • wear — to carry or have on the body or about the person as a covering, equipment, ornament, or the like: to wear a coat; to wear a saber; to wear a disguise.
  • weer — little; very small.
  • weir — a small dam in a river or stream.
  • were — a 2nd person singular pt. indicative, plural past indicative, and past subjunctive of be.
  • werk — Obsolete form of work.
  • wern — (obsolete, transitive) To refuse.
  • wero — the challenge made by an armed Māori warrior to a visitor to a marae
  • wert — a 2nd person singular pt. indicative and subj. of be.
  • wery — Eye dialect of very.
  • wier — Alternative form of weir.
  • wire — a slender, stringlike piece or filament of relatively rigid or flexible metal, usually circular in section, manufactured in a great variety of diameters and metals depending on its application.
  • wore — simple past tense of wear.
  • wrenSir Christopher, 1632–1723, English architect.
  • wreu — Western Railway Employees Union
  • wser — Western States Endurance Run
  • wyer — Obsolete form of weir.
  • wyre — Obsolete spelling of wire.
  • yare — quick; agile; lively.
  • year — a period of 365 or 366 days, in the Gregorian calendar, divided into 12 calendar months, now reckoned as beginning Jan. 1 and ending Dec. 31 (calendar year or civil year) Compare common year, leap year.
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