6-letter words containing led
- palled — a cloth, often of velvet, for spreading over a coffin, bier, or tomb.
- parled — talk; parley.
- pealed — a loud, prolonged ringing of bells.
- pilled — a small globular or rounded mass of medicinal substance, usually covered with a hard coating, that is to be swallowed whole.
- pledge — a solemn promise or agreement to do or refrain from doing something: a pledge of aid; a pledge not to wage war.
- polled — hornless, especially genetically hornless, as the Aberdeen Angus.
- pooled — Also called pocket billiards. any of various games played on a pool table with a cue ball and 15 other balls that are usually numbered, in which the object is to drive all the balls into the pockets with the cue ball.
- pulled — of or denoting meat that is cooked until the meat can easily be pulled off the bone, as in pulled pork.
- purled — the action or sound of purling.
- railed — a bar of wood or metal fixed horizontally for any of various purposes, as for a support, barrier, fence, or railing.
- reeled — an act of reeling; a reeling or staggering movement.
- repled — to appeal or entreat earnestly: to plead for time.
- rifled — a shoulder firearm with spiral grooves cut in the inner surface of the gun barrel to give the bullet a rotatory motion and thus a more precise trajectory.
- roiled — to render (water, wine, etc.) turbid by stirring up sediment.
- rolled — to move along a surface by revolving or turning over and over, as a ball or a wheel.
- scaled — noting armor having imbricated metal plates sewn to a flexible backing.
- sealed — an embossed emblem, figure, symbol, word, letter, etc., used as attestation or evidence of authenticity.
- sidled — to move sideways or obliquely.
- sledge — a vehicle of various forms, mounted on runners and often drawn by draft animals, used for traveling or for conveying loads over snow, ice, rough ground, etc.
- smiled — to assume a facial expression indicating pleasure, favor, or amusement, but sometimes derision or scorn, characterized by an upturning of the corners of the mouth.
- soiled — to feed (confined cattle, horses, etc.) freshly cut green fodder for roughage.
- souled — having a soul
- staled — not fresh; vapid or flat, as beverages; dry or hardened, as bread.
- stoled — having or clothed in a stole
- tabled — an article of furniture consisting of a flat, slablike top supported on one or more legs or other supports: a kitchen table; an operating table; a pool table.
- tailed — coming from behind: a tail breeze.
- teledu — a small, dark-brown, badgerlike mammal, Mydaus javensis, of the mountains of Java, Sumatra, and Borneo, having a white stripe down the back, and ejecting a foul-smelling secretion when alarmed.
- tilled — to labor, as by plowing or harrowing, upon (land) for the raising of crops; cultivate.
- titled — of or relating to a title: the title story in a collection.
- toiled — hard and continuous work; exhausting labor or effort.
- toledo — Francisco de [frahn-sees-kaw th e] /frɑnˈsis kɔ ðɛ/ (Show IPA), c1515–84? Spanish administrator: viceroy of Peru 1569–81.
- tolled — the act of tolling a bell.
- tooled — worked, cut, shaped, or formed with a tool or tools
- vailed — to veil.
- veiled — having a veil: a veiled hat.
- vialed — Also, phial. a small container, as of glass, for holding liquids: a vial of rare perfume; a vial of medicine.
- wailed — to utter a prolonged, inarticulate, mournful cry, usually high-pitched or clear-sounding, as in grief or suffering: to wail with pain.
- walled — of or relating to a wall: wall space.
- wauled — Simple past tense and past participle of waul.
- welled — a hole drilled or bored into the earth to obtain water, petroleum, natural gas, brine, or sulfur.
- whaled — any of the larger marine mammals of the order Cetacea, especially as distinguished from the smaller dolphins and porpoises, having a fishlike body, forelimbs modified into flippers, and a head that is horizontally flattened.
- whiled — a period or interval of time: to wait a long while; He arrived a short while ago.
- willed — having a will (usually used in combination): strong-willed; weak-willed.
- wooled — Having wool of a specified kind.
- yelled — Give a loud, sharp cry.
- yodled — Simple past tense and past participle of yodle.
- yowled — Simple past tense and past participle of yowl.
- zealed — (obsolete) Full of zeal.