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4-letter words that end in y

  • dopy — stupid; inane: It was rather dopey of him to lock himself out.
  • dory — a boat with a narrow, flat bottom, high bow, and flaring sides.
  • doty — (of wood) decayed.
  • dowy — dull; melancholy; dismal.
  • doxy — opinion; doctrine.
  • dozy — drowsy; half asleep.
  • dray — a low, strong cart without fixed sides, for carrying heavy loads.
  • drey — The nest of a squirrel, typically in the form of a mass of twigs in a tree.
  • dufy — Raoul [ra-ool] /raˈul/ (Show IPA), 1877–1953, French painter, lithographer, and decorator.
  • duly — in a due manner; properly; fittingly.
  • duty — something that one is expected or required to do by moral or legal obligation.
  • easy — not hard or difficult; requiring no great labor or effort: a book that is easy to read; an easy victory.
  • eazy — Eye dialect of easy.
  • ebay — a website that people and companies can use to buy or sell goods; items may be bought for a fixed price, or sold to the buyer who offers the highest price
  • eddy — a current at variance with the main current in a stream of liquid or gas, especially one having a rotary or whirling motion.
  • edgy — nervously irritable; impatient and anxious.
  • eely — any of numerous elongated, snakelike marine or freshwater fishes of the order Apodes, having no ventral fins.
  • eery — uncanny, so as to inspire superstitious fear; weird: an eerie midnight howl.
  • effy — a female given name.
  • eggy — Rich in or covered with egg.
  • elmy — (rare, poetic) Pertaining to elm trees; in which elms grow.
  • emmy — (in the US) one of the gold-plated statuettes awarded annually for outstanding television performances and productions
  • ency — encyclopedia
  • enny — Eye dialect of any.
  • envy — A feeling of discontented or resentful longing aroused by someone else's possessions, qualities, or luck.
  • esky — (Australia) An insulated picnic cooler, using ice or refrigerated blocks to keep food and drinks cool.
  • espy — Catch sight of.
  • eyry — (rare) alternative spelling of eyrie.
  • fady — (archaic) faded.
  • fany — First Aid Nursing Yeomanry
  • fery — Eye dialect of very.
  • firy — Obsolete form of fiery.
  • flay — to strip off the skin or outer covering of.
  • fley — to frighten; terrify.
  • fogy — an excessively conservative or old-fashioned person, especially one who is intellectually dull (usually preceded by old): The board of directors were old fogies still living in the 19th century.
  • foxy — foxlike; cunning or crafty; slyly clever.
  • fozy — spongy; loose-textured.
  • fray — a raveled or worn part, as in cloth: frays at the toes of well-worn sneakers.
  • frey — the god of peace, prosperity, and marriage: one of the Vanir, originally brought to Asgard as a hostage.
  • fumy — emitting or full of fumes; fumelike.
  • fury — unrestrained or violent anger, rage, passion, or the like: The gods unleashed their fury on the offending mortal.
  • gaby — a fool.
  • gamy — having the tangy flavor or odor of game: I like the gamy taste of venison.
  • gapy — Veterinary Pathology. a parasitic disease of poultry and other birds, characterized by frequent gaping due to infestation of the trachea and bronchi with gapeworms.
  • garyElbert Henry, 1846–1927, U.S. financier and lawyer.
  • gazy — tending to gaze
  • gery — (obsolete) changeable; fickle.
  • ghey — (Internet, slang, pejorative) alternative spelling of gay or deliberate misspelling of gay (homosexual).
  • gley — a mottled soil in which iron compounds have been oxidized and reduced by intermittent water saturation.
  • goby — any small marine or freshwater fish of the family Gobiidae, often having the pelvic fins united to form a suctorial disk.
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