7-letter words containing r, u, l, e
- slumber — to sleep, especially lightly; doze; drowse.
- slummer — Often, slums. a thickly populated, run-down, squalid part of a city, inhabited by poor people.
- slurper — a person who slurps his or her food or drink
- slurred — to pass over lightly or without due mention or consideration (often followed by over): The report slurred over her contribution to the enterprise.
- soilure — a stain.
- soleure — French name of Solothurn.
- splurge — to indulge oneself in some luxury or pleasure, especially a costly one: They splurged on a trip to Europe.
- sporule — a spore, especially a small one.
- spurtle — a stick used to stir porridge.
- strudel — a pastry, usually consisting of a fruit, cheese, or other mixture, rolled in a paper-thin sheet of dough and baked.
- subrule — a principle or regulation governing conduct, action, procedure, arrangement, etc.: the rules of chess.
- subtler — thin, tenuous, or rarefied, as a fluid or an odor.
- suckler — an animal that suckles its young; mammal.
- suppler — bending readily without breaking or becoming deformed; pliant; flexible: a supple bough.
- surlier — churlishly rude or bad-tempered: a surly waiter. Synonyms: sullen, uncivil, brusque, irascible, splenetic, choleric, cross; grumpy, grouchy, crabby.
- surreal — of, relating to, or characteristic of surrealism, an artistic and literary style; surrealistic.
- surveil — to place under surveillance.
- sutlery — the work of a sutler
- tearful — full of tears; weeping.
- tegular — pertaining to or resembling a tile.
- tragule — a very small, hornless deer found in Asia and West Africa
- traubel — Helen, 1903–72, U.S. soprano.
- trouble — to disturb the mental calm and contentment of; worry; distress; agitate.
- truckle — to submit or yield obsequiously or tamely (usually followed by to): Don't truckle to unreasonable demands.
- truffle — any of several subterranean, edible, ascomycetous fungi of the genus Tuber.
- trundle — to cause (a circular object) to roll along; roll.
- trunnel — a wooden pin that swells when moist, used for fastening together timbers, as those of ships.
- tumbler — a person who performs leaps, somersaults, and other bodily feats.
- tumbrel — one of the carts used during the French Revolution to convey victims to the guillotine.
- tummler — a male entertainer, as formerly employed by resorts in the Catskill Mountains, who combined the duties of a comedian, activities director, and master of ceremonies to keep the guests amused throughout the day.
- turtlet — a young or small turtle.
- udaller — the owner of an udal
- umbriel — a moon of the planet Uranus.
- unclear — free from darkness, obscurity, or cloudiness; light: a clear day.
- uncruel — willfully or knowingly causing pain or distress to others.
- unlearn — to forget or lose knowledge of.
- unravel — to separate or disentangle the threads of (a woven or knitted fabric, a rope, etc.).
- unruled — a principle or regulation governing conduct, action, procedure, arrangement, etc.: the rules of chess.
- uralite — a fibrous, dark-green hornblende formed by the hydrothermal alteration of pyroxene.
- uredial — uredinium.
- urodele — any amphibian of the order Urodela, having a long body and tail and four short limbs: includes the salamanders and newts
- utricle — a small sac or baglike body, as an air-filled cavity in a seaweed.
- utterly — in an utter manner; completely; absolutely.
- virgule — a short oblique stroke (/) between two words indicating that whichever is appropriate may be chosen to complete the sense of the text in which they occur: The defendant and his/her attorney must appear in court.
- vulture — any of several large, primarily carrion-eating Old World birds of prey of the family Accipitridae, often having a naked head and less powerful feet than those of the related hawks and eagles.
- walkure — See The Ring of the Nibelung.
- wareful — (obsolete) wary; watchful; cautious.
- zebrula — the offspring of a female horse and a male zebra.