6-letter words containing u, l, e
- guttle — To put into the gut; to eat voraciously; to swallow greedily; to gorge, gormandize.
- guyler — a person who tricks or hoodwinks
- guzzle — South Midland and Southern U.S. gozzle.
- hauled — to pull or draw with force; move by drawing; drag: They hauled the boat up onto the beach.
- hauler — a person who hauls.
- helium — liquid helium existing as a superfluid below the lambda point of 2.186 K, having very low viscosity and very high thermal conductivity.
- houlet — An owlet.
- housel — the Eucharist.
- hubble — Edwin Powell, 1889–1953, U.S. astronomer: pioneer in extragalactic research.
- huckle — the hip or haunch.
- huddle — to gather or crowd together in a close mass.
- huelva — a seaport in SW Spain, near the Gulf of Cádiz.
- huemul — a yellowish-brown deer of the genus Hippocamelus, of South America: the two species are endangered.
- hugely — extraordinarily large in bulk, quantity, or extent: a huge ship; a huge portion of ice cream.
- huggle — (Internet, childish) To hug and snuggle simultaneously: gesture of tender non-sexual affection.
- hulder — one of a race of sirens, living in the woods, seductive but dangerous.
- huldre — one of a race of sirens, living in the woods, seductive but dangerous.
- hulked — Simple past tense and past participle of hulk.
- hulled — retaining the hull during threshing; having a persistent enclosing hull: hulled wheat.
- huller — the husk, shell, or outer covering of a seed or fruit.
- humble — not proud or arrogant; modest: to be humble although successful.
- humlie — a hornless cow
- hummel — A stag that has failed to grow antlers.
- hurdle — a portable barrier over which contestants must leap in certain running races, usually a wooden frame with a hinged inner frame that swings down under impact to prevent injury to a runner who does not clear it.
- hurkle — (intransitive) to draw in the parts of the body, especially with pain or cold.
- hurled — to throw or fling with great force or vigor.
- hurler — to throw or fling with great force or vigor.
- hurley — the game of hurling.
- hurple — (Scotland) An impediment similar to a limp.
- hurtle — to rush violently; move with great speed: The car hurtled down the highway.
- hustle — to proceed or work rapidly or energetically: to hustle about putting a house in order.
- huxley — Aldous (Leonard) [awl-duh s] /ˈɔl dəs/ (Show IPA), 1894–1963, English novelist, essayist, and critic.
- ilheus — a seaport in E Brazil.
- illude — to deceive or trick.
- illume — to illuminate.
- illuse — to treat badly, unjustly, cruelly, etc.
- ireful — full of intense anger; wrathful.
- iseult — Also, Yseult. German Isolde. Arthurian Romance. the daughter of a king of Ireland who became the wife of King Mark of Cornwall: she was the beloved of Tristram. daughter of the king of Brittany, and wife of Tristram.
- jhelum — a river in S Asia, flowing from S Kashmir into the Chenab River in Pakistan. 450 miles (725 km) long.
- jouled — Simple past tense and past participle of joul.
- joules — Plural form of joule.
- jubile — the celebration of any of certain anniversaries, as the twenty-fifth (silver jubilee) fiftieth (golden jubilee) or sixtieth or seventy-fifth (diamond jubilee)
- juggle — to keep (several objects, as balls, plates, tenpins, or knives) in continuous motion in the air simultaneously by tossing and catching.
- juglet — a small jug
- juleps — Plural form of julep.
- julies — a female given name, form of Julia.
- juliet — the heroine of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
- jumble — to mix in a confused mass; put or throw together without order: You've jumbled up all the cards.
- jungle — a novel (1906) by Upton Sinclair.
- jurels — Plural form of jurel.