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7-letter words containing u, l, e

  • rageful — angry fury; violent anger (sometimes used in combination): a speech full of rage; incidents of road rage.
  • rebuild — to repair, especially to dismantle and reassemble with new parts: to rebuild an old car.
  • rebuilt — to repair, especially to dismantle and reassemble with new parts: to rebuild an old car.
  • recluse — a person who lives in seclusion or apart from society, often for religious meditation.
  • recusal — the disqualification of a judge for a particular lawsuit or proceeding, especially due to some possible conflict of interest or prejudice.
  • refusal — an act or instance of refusing.
  • refutal — an act of refuting a statement, charge, etc.; disproof.
  • reglued — a hard, impure, protein gelatin, obtained by boiling skins, hoofs, and other animal substances in water, that when melted or diluted is a strong adhesive.
  • regulae — (in a Doric entablature) a fillet, continuing a triglyph beneath the taenia, from which guttae are suspended.
  • regular — usual; normal; customary: to put something in its regular place.
  • regulus — (initial capital letter) Astronomy. a first magnitude star in the constellation Leo.
  • relatum — one of the objects between which a relation is said to hold
  • relique — relic.
  • remould — A remould is an old tyre which has been given a new surface or tread and can be used again.
  • renault — Louis [loo-ee;; French lwee] /ˈlu i;; French lwi/ (Show IPA), 1843–1918, French jurist: Nobel Peace Prize 1907.
  • replumb — to replace the plumbing of (a house, building, etc)
  • repulse — to drive back; repel: to repulse an assailant.
  • restful — giving or conducive to rest.
  • results — good results; success
  • revalue — to revise or reestimate the value of: efforts to revalue the dollar.
  • rivulet — a small stream; streamlet; brook.
  • rouille — a mayonnaise-based sauce
  • roulade — a musical embellishment consisting of a rapid succession of tones sung to a single syllable.
  • rouleau — a roll or strip of something, as trimming on a hat brim.
  • roulers — a city in NW Belgium: battles 1914, 1918.
  • roundel — something round or circular.
  • roussel — Albert (Charles Paul Mari) [al-ber sharl pawl ma-ree] /alˈbɛr ʃarl pɔl maˈri/ (Show IPA), 1869–1937, French composer.
  • rubbles — broken bits and pieces of anything, as that which is demolished: Bombing reduced the town to rubble.
  • rubella — a usually mild contagious viral disease characterized by fever, mild upper respiratory congestion, and a fine red rash lasting a few days: if contracted by a woman during early pregnancy, it may cause serious damage to the fetus.
  • rubeola — measles.
  • ruderal — (of a plant) growing in waste places, along roadsides or in rubbish.
  • ruellia — any tropical plant of the genus Ruellia
  • ruffled — (of apparel) having ruffles.
  • ruffler — to destroy the smoothness or evenness of: The wind ruffled the sand.
  • rugglesCarl, 1876–1971, U.S. composer.
  • rule in — If you say that you are not ruling in a particular course of action, you mean that you have not definitely decided to take that action.
  • rumbled — to make a deep, heavy, somewhat muffled, continuous sound, as thunder.
  • rumelia — a division of the former Turkish Empire, in the Balkan Peninsula: included Albania, Macedonia, and Thrace.
  • rumpled — Rumpled means creased or untidy.
  • rundale — (formerly) the name given, esp in Ireland and earlier in Scotland, to the system of land tenure in which each land-holder had several strips of land that were not contiguous
  • rundled — rounded
  • rundlet — an old British measure of capacity, about 15 imperial gallons (68 liters).
  • runless — without having scored a run; without runs: a runless inning.
  • russell — Bertrand (Arthur William), 3rd Earl, 1872–1970, English philosopher, mathematician, and author: Nobel Prize in literature 1950.
  • rustler — a cattle thief.
  • saccule — Anatomy. the smaller of two sacs in the membranous labyrinth of the internal ear. Compare utricle (def 3).
  • salique — Salic.
  • scaleup — an increase in size, quantity, or activity according to a fixed scale or proportion: a scaleup of an engineering design; a scaleup program of energy conservation.
  • scruple — a moral or ethical consideration or standard that acts as a restraining force or inhibits certain actions.
  • scuddle — to scuttle
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