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5-letter words that end in r

  • bider — a person who remains behind
  • bihar — a state of NE India: consists of part of the Ganges plain; important for rice: lost the S to the new state of Jharkhand in 2000. Capital: Patna. Pop: 82 878 796 (2001). Area: 99 225 sq km (38 301 sq miles)
  • biker — Bikers are people who ride around on motorbikes, usually in groups.
  • biner — a karabiner
  • biter — a person or animal that bites, especially habitually or viciously: That dog is a biter.
  • blair — Tony, full name Anthony Charles Lynton Blair. born 1953, British politician; leader of the Labour Party (1994–2007); prime minister (1997–2007); Middle East peace envoy (2007–2015)
  • blear — to make (eyes or sight) dim with or as if with tears; blur
  • bloorElla Reeve [reev] /riv/ (Show IPA), ("Mother Bloor") 1862–1951, U.S. labor organizer and writer.
  • bluer — the pure color of a clear sky; the primary color between green and violet in the visible spectrum, an effect of light with a wavelength between 450 and 500 nm.
  • bocor — a malevolent voodoo priest of Haiti.
  • bogor — a city in Indonesia, in W Java: botanical gardens and research institutions. Pop: 750 819 (2000)
  • bojer — Johan [yoh-hahn;; Norwegian yoh-hahn,, yoo-] /ˈyoʊ hɑn;; Norwegian yoʊˈhɑn,, yʊ-/ (Show IPA), 1872–1959, Norwegian novelist and playwright.
  • bolar — of or relating to clay
  • boner — a blunder
  • borer — a machine or hand tool for boring holes
  • bouar — a city in the W Central African Republic.
  • bower — A bower is a shady, leafy shelter in a garden or wood.
  • boxer — A boxer is someone who takes part in the sport of boxing.
  • boyar — a member of an old order of Russian nobility, ranking immediately below the princes: abolished by Peter the Great
  • boyer — Charles (ʃarl), known as the Great Lover. 1899–1978, French film actor
  • br'er — brother: usually prefixed to a name
  • briar — A briar is a wild rose with long, prickly stems.
  • brier — any of various thorny shrubs or other plants, such as the sweetbrier and greenbrier
  • buber — Martin. 1878–1965, Jewish theologian, existentialist philosopher, and scholar of Hasidism, born in Austria, whose works include I and Thou (1923), Between Man and Man (1946), and Eclipse of God (1952)
  • buyer — A buyer is a person who is buying something or who intends to buy it.
  • caber — A caber is a long, heavy, wooden pole. It is thrown into the air as a test of strength in the traditional Scottish sport called 'tossing the caber'.
  • cader — Eastern New England and British. (of the young of animals) abandoned or left by the mother and raised by humans: a cade lamb.
  • cager — a basketball player
  • caner — a person who regularly indulges in excessive drinking or drug-taking
  • caper — Capers are the small green buds of caper plants. They are usually sold preserved in vinegar.
  • carer — A carer is someone who is responsible for looking after another person, for example, a person who has a disability, or is ill or very young.
  • cater — In British English, to cater for a group of people means to provide all the things that they need or want. In American English, you say you cater to a person or group of people.
  • caver — A caver is someone who goes into underground caves as a sport.
  • cedar — A cedar or a cedar tree is a large evergreen tree with wide branches and small thin leaves called needles.
  • ceder — to yield or formally surrender to another: to cede territory.
  • chair — A chair is a piece of furniture for one person to sit on. Chairs have a back and four legs.
  • charr — char3
  • chear — (obsolete) cheer.
  • cheer — When people cheer, they shout loudly to show their approval or to encourage someone who is doing something such as taking part in a game.
  • chirr — (esp of certain insects, such as crickets) to make a shrill trilled sound
  • choir — A choir is a group of people who sing together, for example in a church or school.
  • churr — a low, trilled or whirring sound made by some birds or insects
  • cider — Cider is a drink made from apples which in Britain usually contains alcohol. In the United States, cider does not usually contain alcohol, and if it does contain alcohol, it is usually called hard cider.
  • cigar — Cigars are rolls of dried tobacco leaves which people smoke.
  • citer — to quote (a passage, book, author, etc.), especially as an authority: He cited the Constitution in his defense.
  • clair — René (rəne), real name René Chomette. 1898–1981, French film director; noted for his comedies including An Italian Straw Hat (1928) and pioneering sound films such as Sous les toits de Paris (1930); later films include Les Belles de nuit (1952)
  • clear — Something that is clear is easy to understand, see, or hear.
  • clour — a bump on the head
  • coder — a person or thing that codes
  • coeur — Jacques. ?1395–1456, French merchant; councillor and court banker to Charles VII of France
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