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4-letter words that end in re

  • mare — Walter (John) 1873–1956, English poet, novelist, playwright, and short-story writer.
  • mere — mother1 .
  • mire — a tract or area of wet, swampy ground; bog; marsh.
  • more — Mossi (def 2).
  • mure — Obsolete. a wall.
  • nare — Nostril found in the beak of a bird.
  • ogre — a monster in fairy tales and popular legend, usually represented as a hideous giant who feeds on human flesh.
  • ohre — a river in central Europe, flowing NE from Germany through the W Czech Republic to the Elbe. 193 miles (310 km) long.
  • pare — Ambroise [ahn-brwaz] /ɑ̃ˈbrwaz/ (Show IPA), 1510–90, French surgeon.
  • pere — father.
  • pire — Dominique Georges Henri [French daw-mee-neek zhawrzh ahn-ree] /French dɔ miˈnik ʒɔrʒ ɑ̃ˈri/ (Show IPA), 1910–69, Belgian priest: Nobel Peace Prize 1958.
  • pore — to read or study with steady attention or application: a scholar poring over a rare old manuscript.
  • pure — free from anything of a different, inferior, or contaminating kind; free from extraneous matter: pure gold; pure water.
  • pyre — a pile or heap of wood or other combustible material.
  • rare — Réseaux Associés pour la Recherche Européenne
  • sere — dry; withered.
  • sire — the male parent of a quadruped.
  • sore — suffering bodily pain from wounds, bruises, etc., as a person: He is sore because of all that exercise.
  • sure — free from doubt as to the reliability, character, action, etc., of something: to be sure of one's data.
  • tare — the act of tearing.
  • tire — Archaic. to dress (the head or hair), especially with a headdress.
  • tore — simple past tense of tear2 .
  • tyre — to furnish with tires.
  • vare — a weasel
  • vire — a type of arrow which had a turning motion and which was formerly used with a crossbow
  • ware — the first season in the year; spring.
  • were — a 2nd person singular pt. indicative, plural past indicative, and past subjunctive of be.
  • wire — a slender, stringlike piece or filament of relatively rigid or flexible metal, usually circular in section, manufactured in a great variety of diameters and metals depending on its application.
  • wore — simple past tense of wear.
  • wyre — Obsolete spelling of wire.
  • yare — quick; agile; lively.
  • yere — (Irish) your (plural); of ye, belonging to ye.
  • yore — Chiefly Literary. time past: knights of yore.
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