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6-letter words that end in er

  • soccer — a form of football played between two teams of 11 players, in which the ball may be advanced by kicking or by bouncing it off any part of the body but the arms and hands, except in the case of the goalkeepers, who may use their hands to catch, carry, throw, or stop the ball.
  • soever — at all; in any case; of any kind; in any way (used with generalizing force after who, what, when, where, how, any, all, etc., sometimes separated by intervening words): Choose what thing soever you please.
  • solder — any of various alloys fused and applied to the joint between metal objects to unite them without heating the objects to the melting point.
  • solver — to find the answer or explanation for; clear up; explain: to solve the mystery of the missing books.
  • somber — gloomily dark; shadowy; dimly lighted: a somber passageway.
  • sonder — a yacht category
  • sooner — a native or inhabitant of Oklahoma (the Sooner State, ) (used as a nickname).
  • sopher — scribe1 (def 3).
  • sorner — a person who sorns
  • sorter — a particular kind, species, variety, class, or group, distinguished by a common character or nature: to develop a new sort of painting; nice people, of course, but not really our sort.
  • souper — a person dispensing soup in the name of charity
  • souterDavid H. born 1939, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1990–2009.
  • spacer — the unlimited or incalculably great three-dimensional realm or expanse in which all material objects are located and all events occur.
  • spener — Philipp Jakob [fee-leep yah-kawp] /ˈfi lip ˈyɑ kɔp/ (Show IPA), 1635–1705, German theologian: founder of Pietism.
  • spewer — to discharge the contents of the stomach through the mouth; vomit.
  • speyer — a city in SW Germany, on the Rhine.
  • spider — any of numerous predaceous arachnids of the order Araneae, most of which spin webs that serve as nests and as traps for prey.
  • spiker — a pointed, perforated tube connected to a garden hose, pushed into the soil for deep watering.
  • sprier — active; nimble; agile; energetic; brisk.
  • stager — a person of experience in some profession, way of life, etc.
  • starer — to gaze fixedly and intently, especially with the eyes wide open.
  • stater — statistic.
  • stayer — a person or thing that stays
  • stewer — a person who worries, ponders, or thinks about something a great deal
  • stiver — Also, stuiver. a former nickel coin of the Netherlands, equal to five Dutch cents.
  • stokerBram [bram] /bræm/ (Show IPA), (Abraham Stoker) 1847–1912, British novelist, born in Ireland: creator of Dracula.
  • stoner — Slang. a person who is habitually high on drugs, especially marijuana, or alcohol; a person who is usually stoned.
  • stoper — a machine for drilling rock from below.
  • storer — a person or thing that stores something
  • stover — coarse roughage used as feed for livestock.
  • stower — a person who stows
  • stumer — something bogus or fraudulent.
  • styler — a person or thing that styles.
  • suaver — (of persons or their manner, speech, etc.) smoothly agreeable or polite; agreeably or blandly urbane.
  • sucher — of the kind, character, degree, extent, etc., of that or those indicated or implied: Such a man is dangerous.
  • sucker — a person or thing that sucks.
  • sudder — the Indian supreme court
  • sudser — a soap opera.
  • suffer — to undergo or feel pain or distress: The patient is still suffering.
  • suiter — a piece of luggage for carrying suits and dresses
  • sulker — to remain silent or hold oneself aloof in a sullen, ill-humored, or offended mood: Promise me that you won't sulk if I want to leave the party early.
  • summer — a principal beam or girder, as one running between girts to support joists.
  • sumnerCharles, 1811–74, U.S. statesman.
  • sumter — a city in central South Carolina.
  • sunder — to separate; part; divide; sever.
  • supper — the evening meal, often the principal meal of the day.
  • surfer — the swell of the sea that breaks upon a shore or upon shoals.
  • sutler — (formerly) a person who followed an army or maintained a store on an army post to sell provisions to the soldiers.
  • sutterJohn Augustus, 1803–80, U.S. frontiersman: owner of Sutter's Mill.
  • swager — a tool for bending cold metal to a required shape.
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