6-letter words that end in r
- bammer — (of marijuana) of poor quality
- bandar — a male monkey
- bander — someone who joins a band or league
- banger — Bangers are sausages.
- bangor — a university town in NW Wales, in Gwynedd, on the Menai Strait. Pop: 15 280 (2001)
- banker — A banker is someone who works in banking at a senior level.
- banner — A banner is a long strip of cloth with something written on it. Banners are usually attached to two poles and carried during a protest or rally.
- banter — Banter is teasing or joking talk that is amusing and friendly.
- barber — A barber is a man whose job is cutting men's hair.
- barger — (obsolete) The manager of a barge.
- barker — an animal or person that barks
- barter — If you barter goods, you exchange them for other goods, rather than selling them for money.
- basher — to strike with a crushing or smashing blow.
- bashir — Dame Marie (Roslyn). born 1930, Australian health administrator and campaigner: governor of New South Wales (2001–14)
- basser — someone who kisses
- baster — someone who bastes
- bather — A bather is a person who is swimming in the sea, or in a river or lake.
- batler — a flat piece of wood once used for beating clothes during washing or to smooth them when dry
- batter — If someone is battered, they are regularly hit and badly hurt by a member of their family or by their partner.
- bawler — to cry or wail lustily.
- baxter — James (Keir). 1926–72, New Zealand lyric poet. His works include The Fallen House (1953) and In Fires of No Return (1958)
- baylor — Elgin, born 1934, U.S. basketball player.
- bazaar — In areas such as the Middle East and India, a bazaar is a place where there are many small shops and stalls.
- beader — an implement used in crafts such as woodwork or silverwork to make a decorative pattern resembling beads
- beaker — A beaker is a plastic cup used for drinking, usually one with no handle.
- beamer — a full-pitched ball bowled at the batsman's head
- beaner — A Mexican or a person of Mexican descent.
- bearer — The bearer of something such as a message is the person who brings it to you.
- beater — A beater is a tool or part of a machine which is used for beating things like eggs and cream.
- beaver — A beaver is a furry animal with a big flat tail and large teeth. Beavers use their teeth to cut wood and build dams in rivers.
- beboer — a user of the social-networking website Bebo.com
- bechar — a city in NW Algeria: an oasis. Pop: 149 000 (2005 est)
- becker — Boris (ˈbɒrɪs). born 1967, German tennis player: Wimbledon champion 1985, 1986, and 1989: the youngest man ever to win Wimbledon
- bedder — (at some universities) someone employed by a college to clean students' rooms
- beefer — (slang) A police informer.
- beemer — Some people refer to a BMW automobile as a Beemer.
- beeper — A beeper is a portable device that makes a beeping noise, usually to tell you to phone someone or to remind you to do something.
- beezer — a person or chap
- beggar — A beggar is someone who lives by asking people for money or food.
- beiger — very light brown, as of undyed wool; light gray with a brownish tinge.
- belter — an event, person, quality, etc, that is admirable, outstanding, or thrilling
- bender — If someone goes on a bender, they drink a very large amount of alcohol.
- berber — Berber means belonging or relating to a particular Muslim people in North Africa, or to their language or customs.
- berger — Thomas, 1924–2014, U.S. novelist.
- bestar — to decorate with stars
- bestir — to cause (oneself, or, rarely, another person) to become active; rouse
- better — Better is the comparative of good.
- bettor — a person who bets
- bezier — (graphics) (After Frenchman Pierre Bézier from Regie Renault) A collection of formulae for describing curved lines (Bezier curve) and surfaces (Bezier surface), first used in 1972 to model automobile surfaces. Curves and surfaces are defined by a set of "control points" which can be moved interactively making Bezier curves and surfaces convenient for interactive graphic design.
- bezoar — a hard mass, such as a stone or hairball, in the stomach and intestines of animals, esp ruminants, and man: formerly thought to be an antidote to poisons