6-letter words containing f
- hoofed — having hoofs; ungulate.
- hoofer — a professional dancer, especially a tap dancer.
- huffed — a mood of sulking anger; a fit of resentment: Just because you disagree, don't walk off in a huff.
- huffer — A drug addict who gets a high by inhaling or sniffing intoxicating fumes, as in glue or aerosols.
- humify — Convert (plant remains) into humus.
- i of m — Isle of Man
- if not — if this is not the case
- iframe — (Internet) A section of a web page that can act as the container for a second separate page or resource.
- ifugao — a member of an agricultural people who inhabit Luzon, in the Philippines.
- ignify — (obsolete) To form into fire.
- ilford — a former borough in SE England, now part of Redbridge, Greater London.
- in fee — (of land) in absolute ownership
- in for — about to endure
- in fun — If you do something in fun, you do it as a joke or for amusement, without intending to cause any harm.
- in-off — a shot that goes into a pocket after striking another ball
- indef. — indefinite
- infact — Misspelling of in fact.
- infall — The falling of small objects or other matter onto or into a larger body.
- infame — infamy
- infamy — extremely bad reputation, public reproach, or strong condemnation as the result of a shameful, criminal, or outrageous act: a time that will live in infamy.
- infant — a child during the earliest period of its life, especially before he or she can walk; baby.
- infare — a party or reception for a newly married couple.
- infect — to affect or contaminate (a person, organ, wound, etc.) with disease-producing germs.
- infeed — The action or process of supplying material to a machine.
- infeft — officially in possession of heritable land
- infelt — heartfelt; felt inwardly
- infere — together; all together; in concert
- infers — Deduce or conclude (information) from evidence and reasoning rather than from explicit statements.
- infest — to live in or overrun to an unwanted degree or in a troublesome manner, especially as predatory animals or vermin do: Sharks infested the coastline.
- infill — to fill in: The old stream beds have been infilled with sediment.
- infin. — Infin. is an abbreviation for infinitive.
- infirm — feeble or weak in body or health, especially because of age; ailing.
- inflex — To bend; to cause to become curved; to make crooked; to deflect.
- inflow — something that flows in; influx.
- influx — act of flowing in.
- infold — enfold.
- inform — to give or impart knowledge of a fact or circumstance to: He informed them of his arrival.
- infra- — below; beneath; after
- infula — one of the two embroidered lappets of the miter of a bishop.
- infuse — to introduce, as if by pouring; cause to penetrate; instill (usually followed by into): The energetic new principal infused new life into the school.
- ingulf — engulf.
- ireful — full of intense anger; wrathful.
- isodef — uniform deficiency, especially a line connecting points of equal deviation from a mean, as on a chart or graph.
- itself — Used as the object of a verb or preposition to refer to a thing or animal previously mentioned as the subject of the clause.
- jaffle — A toasted sandwich.
- jaffna — a seaport in N Sri Lanka.
- jagoff — (pejorative, slang) An irritating, inept, or repugnant person.
- jarful — the amount that a jar can hold.
- jiffs' — a very short time; moment: to get dressed in a jiffy.
- joffre — Joseph Jacques Césaire [zhaw-zef zhahk sey-zer] /ʒɔˈzɛf ʒɑk seɪˈzɛr/ (Show IPA), 1852–1931, French general in World War I.