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6-letter words containing s, e, o

  • bossed — Botany, Zoology. a protuberance or roundish excrescence on the body or on some organ of an animal or plant.
  • bosses — a familiar name for a calf or cow.
  • bosset — either of the rudimentary antlers found in young deer
  • boules — Boules is a game in which a small ball is thrown and then the players try to throw other balls as close to the first ball as possible.
  • bourse — A country's or region's bourse is its stock exchange.
  • bowels — innards; entrails
  • bowers — a musician, as a violinist, who performs with a bow on a stringed instrument.
  • bowles — Paul. 1910–99, US novelist, short-story writer, and composer, living in Tangiers. His novels include The Sheltering Sky (1949) and The Spider's House (1955)
  • bowser — a tanker containing fuel for aircraft, military vehicles, etc
  • bowsie — a low-class mean or obstreperous person
  • broose — a race, either on foot or on horseback, amongst the men at a country wedding
  • broses — a porridge made by stirring boiling liquid into oatmeal or other meal.
  • browse — If you browse in a shop, you look at things in a fairly casual way, in the hope that you might find something you like.
  • buboes — an inflammatory swelling of a lymphatic gland, especially in the groin or armpit.
  • cameos — Plural form of cameo.
  • camões — Luˈiz Vaz de (luˈiʃ vaʒ də ) ; lo̅oēshˈ vȧzh də) 1524?-80; Port. epic poet
  • canoes — Plural form of canoe.
  • cellos — Plural form of cello.
  • censor — If someone in authority censors letters or the media, they officially examine them and cut out any information that is regarded as secret.
  • centos — Plural form of cento.
  • cerous — of or containing cerium in the trivalent state
  • cessor — (legal) In English law, one who is dilatory, negligent, and delinquent in his duty or service, and who thereby incurred the danger of the law, and was liable to have the writ of cessavit brought against him.
  • cheops — original name Khufu. Egyptian king of the fourth dynasty (?2613–?2494 bc), who built the largest pyramid at El Gîza
  • choise — Obsolete spelling of choice.
  • chokes — the act or sound of choking.
  • choose — If you choose someone or something from several people or things that are available, you decide which person or thing you want to have.
  • chores — a small or odd job; routine task.
  • chosen — Chosen is the past participle of choose.
  • choses — a thing; an article of personal property.
  • chouse — a person who deceives, defrauds, or tricks
  • clones — Plural form of clone.
  • closed — A closed group of people does not welcome new people or ideas from outside.
  • closer — someone or something that closes
  • closes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of close.
  • closet — A closet is a piece of furniture with doors at the front and shelves inside, which is used for storing things.
  • cloves — Plural form of clove.
  • clozes — pertaining to or being a procedure used to measure comprehension or text difficulty, in which a person is called upon to supply elements that have been systematically deleted from a text.
  • coales — Obsolete spelling of coals.
  • coarse — Coarse things have a rough texture because they consist of thick threads or large pieces.
  • coates — Joseph Gordon. 1878–1943, New Zealand statesman; prime minister of New Zealand (1925–28)
  • coaxes — to attempt to influence by gentle persuasion, flattery, etc.; cajole: He coaxed her to sing, but she refused.
  • codecs — Plural form of codec.
  • coders — Plural form of coder.
  • codges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of codge.
  • coetus — Rare spelling of coitus.
  • cohoes — a small salmon, Oncorhynchus kisutch, of the North Pacific coasts and also in the Great Lakes, where it was introduced: important as a game and food fish.
  • coleus — any plant of the Old World genus Coleus: cultivated for their variegated leaves, typically marked with red, yellow, or white: family Lamiaceae (labiates)
  • combes — Plural form of combe.
  • comers — Plural form of comer.
  • comest — Archaic second-person singular form of come.
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