6-letter words containing u, l, e
- flutey — having the tone and rather high pitch variation of a flute: a person of fastidious manner and fluty voice.
- fluxed — Simple past tense and past participle of flux.
- fluxes — a flowing or flow.
- fouled — grossly offensive to the senses; disgustingly loathsome; noisome: a foul smell.
- fouler — One who fouls.
- foulie — a bad mood
- fuddle — to muddle or confuse: a jumble of sounds to fuddle the senses.
- fueled — Simple past tense and past participle of fuel.
- fueler — combustible matter used to maintain fire, as coal, wood, oil, or gas, in order to create heat or power.
- fuffle — Apheretic form of kerfuffle.
- fulled — completely filled; containing all that can be held; filled to utmost capacity: a full cup.
- fuller — the highest or fullest state, condition, or degree: The moon is at the full.
- fumble — to feel or grope about clumsily: She fumbled in her purse for the keys.
- funnel — a cone-shaped utensil with a tube at the apex for conducting liquid or other substance through a small opening, as into a bottle, jug, or the like.
- furled — to gather into a compact roll and bind securely, as a sail against a spar or a flag against its staff.
- fuseli — (John) Henry (Johann Heinrich Füssli) 1741–1825, English painter, illustrator, and essayist; born in Switzerland.
- fusile — formed by melting or casting; fused; founded.
- futile — incapable of producing any result; ineffective; useless; not successful: Attempting to force-feed the sick horse was futile.
- fuzzle — (obsolete) To make drunk; to intoxicate.
- gaulle — Charles André Joseph Marie [chahrlz ahn-drey joh-zuh f muh-ree;; French sharl ahn-drey zhoh-zef ma-ree] /tʃɑrlz ˈɑn dreɪ ˈdʒoʊ zəf məˈri;; French ʃarl ɑ̃ˈdreɪ ʒoʊˈzɛf maˈri/ (Show IPA), 1890–1970, French general and statesman: president 1959–69.
- genual — the knee.
- glauce — the second bride of Jason, murdered on her wedding day by Medea, whom Jason had deserted
- gluers — Plural form of gluer.
- glumes — Plural form of glume.
- glurge — stories, often sent by email, that are supposed to be true and uplifting, but which are often fabricated and sentimental
- glutei — any of several muscles of the buttocks, especially the gluteus maximus.
- gluten — the tough, viscid, nitrogenous substance remaining when the flour of wheat or other grain is washed to remove the starch.
- glutes — Plural form of glute.
- gruels — Plural form of gruel.
- guddle — to catch (fish) by groping with the hands, as under rocks or along a riverbank.
- guelph — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada.
- guemal — huemul.
- guggle — a guggling sound; gurgle.
- guglet — goglet.
- guiler — a deceiver
- guiles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of guile.
- gulden — guilder.
- gulfed — a portion of an ocean or sea partly enclosed by land.
- gulled — to deceive, trick, or cheat.
- guller — a deceiver
- gullet — the esophagus.
- gulley — gully1 (defs 1, 2).
- gulped — to gasp or choke, as when taking large drafts of a liquid.
- gulper — A deep-sea eel with very large jaws that open to give an enormous gape and with eyes near the tip of the snout.
- gunnel — the upper edge of the side or bulwark of a vessel.
- gunsel — a criminal armed with a gun.
- gurfle — (exclamation) /ger'fl/ An expression of shocked disbelief. "He said we have to recode this thing in Fortran by next week. Gurfle!" Compare weeble.
- gurgle — to flow in a broken, irregular, noisy current: The water gurgled from the bottle.
- gurlet — a pickaxe with a double-sided head, one side being a sharp point and the other side being a cutting edge
- gursel — Cemal [je-mahl] /dʒɛˈmɑl/ (Show IPA), 1895–1966, Turkish army officer and statesman: president 1961–66.