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6-letter words containing ped

  • lapped — (of water) to wash against or beat upon (something) with a light, slapping or splashing sound: Waves lapped the shoreline.
  • leaped — to spring through the air from one point or position to another; jump: to leap over a ditch.
  • limped — to walk with a labored, jerky movement, as when lame.
  • lipped — of or relating to the lips or a lip: lip ointment.
  • lisped — a speech defect consisting in pronouncing s and z like or nearly like the th- sounds of thin and this, respectively.
  • looped — having or consisting of loops; loopy.
  • lopped — to let hang or droop: He lopped his arms at his sides in utter exhaustion.
  • louped — to leap; jump; spring.
  • lumped — a piece or mass of solid matter without regular shape or of no particular shape: a lump of coal.
  • mapped — a representation, usually on a flat surface, as of the features of an area of the earth or a portion of the heavens, showing them in their respective forms, sizes, and relationships according to some convention of representation: a map of Canada.
  • mopeds — Plural form of moped.
  • mopped — a wry face; grimace.
  • mumped — Simple past tense and past participle of mump.
  • napped — to sleep for a short time; doze.
  • neaped — grounded until the next cycle of spring tides.
  • nipped — to squeeze or compress tightly between two surfaces or points; pinch; bite.
  • pedalo — pedal boat
  • pedant — a person who makes an excessive or inappropriate display of learning.
  • pedate — having a foot or feet.
  • peddle — to carry (small articles, goods, wares, etc.) from place to place for sale at retail; hawk.
  • pedion — a crystal form having only a single face, without a symmetrical equivalent: unique to the triclinic system.
  • pedlar — a person who sells from door to door or in the street.
  • pedler — peddler.
  • pedway — a walkway, usually enclosed, permitting pedestrians to go from building to building, as in an urban center, without passing through traffic.
  • pimped — a person, especially a man, who solicits customers for a prostitute or a brothel, usually in return for a share of the earnings; pander; procurer.
  • pipped — to peep or chirp.
  • pooped — fatigued; exhausted: I'm too pooped to go shopping today.
  • popped — to make a short, quick, explosive sound: The cork popped.
  • pumped — full of confidence, enthusiasm, etc.; pumped up
  • ramped — a sloping surface connecting two levels; incline.
  • rapped — to carry off; transport.
  • rasped — to scrape or abrade with a rough instrument.
  • reaped — to cut (wheat, rye, etc.) with a sickle or other implement or a machine, as in harvest.
  • repped — a transversely corded fabric of wool, silk, rayon, or cotton.
  • ripped — drunk; intoxicated.
  • romped — to play or frolic in a lively or boisterous manner.
  • rsvped — to reply to an invitation: Don't forget to RSVP before Thursday.
  • sapped — Fortification. a deep, narrow trench constructed so as to form an approach to a besieged place or an enemy's position.
  • seeped — to pass, flow, or ooze gradually through a porous substance: Water seeps through cracks in the wall.
  • shaped — of a definite form, shape, or character (often used in combination): a U -shaped driveway.
  • sipped — to drink (a liquid) a little at a time; take small tastes of: He sipped the hot tea noisily.
  • sliped — a sledge, drag, or sleigh.
  • sloped — to have or take an inclined or oblique direction or angle considered with reference to a vertical or horizontal plane; slant.
  • sniped — any of several long-billed game birds of the genera Gallinago (Capella) and Limnocryptes, inhabiting marshy areas, as G. gallinago (common snipe) of Eurasia and North America, having barred and striped white, brown, and black plumage.
  • sopped — a piece of solid food, as bread, for dipping in liquid food.
  • stoped — any excavation made in a mine, especially from a steeply inclined vein, to remove the ore that has been rendered accessible by the shafts and drifts.
  • tamped — to force in or down by repeated, rather light, strokes: He tamped the tobacco in his pipe.
  • tapped — to draw liquid from (a vessel or container).
  • temped — temporary (def 2).
  • uniped — a person or thing with one foot or leg
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