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4-letter words that end in y

  • blay — a small European river fish, Leuciscus alburnus
  • body — Your body is all your physical parts, including your head, arms, and legs.
  • bogy — an imaginary evil being or spirit; goblin
  • bony — Someone who has a bony face or bony hands, for example, has a very thin face or very thin hands, with very little flesh covering their bones.
  • boxy — Something that is boxy is similar to a square in shape and usually plain.
  • bray — When a donkey brays, it makes a loud harsh sound.
  • btry — battery (of artillery)
  • buoy — A buoy is a floating object that is used to show ships and boats where they can go and to warn them of danger.
  • bury — To bury something means to put it into a hole in the ground and cover it up with earth.
  • busy — A busy time is a period of time during which you have a lot of things to do.
  • cady — Alternative spelling of kady.
  • cagy — cautious, wary, or shrewd: a cagey reply to the probing question.
  • caky — a sweet, baked, breadlike food, made with or without shortening, and usually containing flour, sugar, baking powder or soda, eggs, and liquid flavoring.
  • cany — resembling or made of cane
  • cary — (Arthur) Joyce (Lunel). 1888–1957, British novelist; author of Mister Johnson (1939), A House of Children (1941), and The Horse's Mouth (1944)
  • cavy — any small South American hystricomorph rodent of the family Caviidae, esp any of the genus Cavia, having a thickset body and very small tail
  • chay — a plant of the madder family native to India
  • city — The City is the part of London where many important financial institutions have their main offices. People often refer to these financial institutions as the City.
  • clay — Clay is a kind of earth that is soft when it is wet and hard when it is dry. Clay is shaped and baked to make things such as pots and bricks.
  • cley — (obsolete) A claw.
  • cloy — to make weary or cause weariness through an excess of something initially pleasurable or sweet
  • cmay — (operating system)   A microkernel.
  • cody — William Frederick1846-1917; U.S. plainsman, frontier scout, & showman: called Buffalo Bill
  • coky — the solid product resulting from the destructive distillation of coal in an oven or closed chamber or by imperfect combustion, consisting principally of carbon: used chiefly as a fuel in metallurgy to reduce metallic oxides to metals.
  • coly — any of the arboreal birds of the genus Colius, family Coliidae, and order Coliiformes, of southern Africa. They have a soft hairlike plumage, crested head, and very long tail
  • cony — a rabbit or fur made from the skin of a rabbit
  • copy — If you make a copy of something, you produce something that looks like the original thing.
  • cory — any of various freshwater catfish belonging to the South American Corydoras genus
  • cosy — A house or room that is cosy is comfortable and warm.
  • coty — René Jules Gustave [ruh-ney zhyl gys-tav] /rəˈneɪ ʒül güsˈtav/ (Show IPA), 1882–1962, president of France 1954–59.
  • cowy — of or resembling the nature of a cow; bovine
  • coxy — cocky; impudent; arrogant
  • cozy — warm and comfortable; snug
  • cray — a crayfish
  • cuny — (nautical) An ordinary seaman.
  • daly — (John) Auˈgustin (ɔˈgʌstɪn ) ; ôgusˈtin) 1838-99; U.S. playwright & theatrical manager
  • davy — Sir Humphry. 1778–1829, English chemist who isolated sodium, magnesium, chlorine, and other elements and suggested the electrical nature of chemical combination. He invented the Davy lamp
  • dazy — In a dazed condition.
  • defy — If you defy someone or something that is trying to make you behave in a particular way, you refuse to obey them and behave in that way.
  • demy — a size of printing paper, 171⁄2 by 221⁄2 inches (444.5 × 571.5 mm)
  • deny — When you deny something, you state that it is not true.
  • desy — Deutsches Electronen Synchrotron Laboratory, Hamburg, Germany.
  • dewy — Something that is dewy is wet with dew.
  • dexy — Dexedrine.
  • dicy — Alternative spelling of dicey.
  • didy — a diaper
  • dixy — dixie.
  • doby — adobe.
  • dogy — dogie.
  • domy — having a dome; dome-like
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