6-letter words containing l, d, r
- labrid — any of numerous fishes of the family Labridae, including the wrasses, the tautog, and the cunner, and characterized chiefly by well-developed teeth and, often, brilliant colors.
- ladder — a structure of wood, metal, or rope, commonly consisting of two sidepieces between which a series of bars or rungs are set at suitable distances, forming a means of climbing up or down.
- ladler — a person who serves something out with a ladle
- ladron — a thief.
- lairds — Plural form of laird.
- laired — British Dialect. mud; mire.
- lander — a space probe designed to land on a planet or other solid celestial body.
- landor — Walter Savage, 1775–1864, English poet and prose writer.
- landry — Thomas Wade ("Tom") 1924–2000, U.S. football player and coach.
- larded — the rendered fat of hogs, especially the internal fat of the abdomen.
- larder — a room or place where food is kept; pantry.
- lardon — a strip of fat used in larding, especially as drawn through the substance of meat, chicken, etc., with a kind of needle or pin.
- laredo — a city in S Texas, on the Rio Grande.
- larked — Simple past tense and past participle of lark.
- larned — Simple past tense and past participle of larn.
- laroid — belonging or relating to gulls or specifically the Larus genus of the gull family
- lauder — Sir Harry (MacLennan) [muh-klen-uh n] /məˈklɛn ən/ (Show IPA), 1870–1950, Scottish balladeer and composer.
- layard — Sir Austen Henry [aw-stuh n] /ˈɔ stən/ (Show IPA), 1817–94, English archaeologist, writer, and diplomat.
- leader — a person or thing that leads.
- learnd — Lb obsolete Simple past tense and past participle of learn: obsolete spelling of learned.
- ledger — Bookkeeping. an account book of final entry, in which business transactions are recorded.
- leered — to look with a sideways or oblique glance, especially suggestive of lascivious interest or sly and malicious intention: I can't concentrate with you leering at me.
- lenard — Philipp [fee-lip] /ˈfi lɪp/ (Show IPA), 1862–1947, German physicist, born in Austria-Hungary: Nobel Prize 1905.
- lender — to grant the use of (something) on condition that it or its equivalent will be returned.
- lerida — a city in NE Spain.
- liards — Plural form of liard.
- lidars — Plural form of lidar.
- lieder — a typically 19th-century German art song characterized by the setting of a poetic text in either strophic or through-composed style and the treatment of the piano and voice in equal artistic partnership: Schubert lieder.
- lizard — a promontory in SW Cornwall, in SW England: the southernmost point in England.
- loader — a person or thing that loads.
- lodger — a person who lives in rented quarters in another's house; roomer.
- lord's — a person who has authority, control, or power over others; a master, chief, or ruler.
- lorded — Simple past tense and past participle of lord.
- lordly — suitable for a lord, as trappings or ceremonies; grand or magnificent.
- louder — (of sound) strongly audible; having exceptional volume or intensity: loud talking; loud thunder; loud whispers.
- loured — lower2 .
- lt cdr — lieutenant commander
- lurdan — a lazy, stupid, loutish fellow.
- lurked — to lie or wait in concealment, as a person in ambush; remain in or around a place secretly or furtively.
- lyrids — a collection of meteors comprising a meteor shower (Lyrid meteor shower) visible April 22 and having its apparent origin in the constellation Lyra.
- marled — fertilized with marl.
- medlar — a small tree, Mespilus germanica, of the rose family, the fruit of which resembles a crab apple and is not edible until the early stages of decay.
- melder — the quantity of meal ground at one time; the yield of meal from a crop or specific amount of grain.
- milder — amiably gentle or temperate in feeling or behavior toward others.
- milord — an English nobleman or gentleman (usually used as a term of address).
- molder — to turn to dust by natural decay; crumble; disintegrate; waste away: a house that had been left to molder.
- myrdal — Alva (Reimer) [al-vuh rey-mer;; Swedish ahl-vah rey-muh r] /ˈæl və ˈreɪ mər;; Swedish ˈɑl vɑ ˈreɪ mər/ (Show IPA), 1902–86, Swedish sociologist and diplomat: Nobel Peace Prize 1982 (wife of Gunnar Myrdal).
- nurdle — (cricket) To score runs by gently nudging the ball into vacant areas of the field.
- nurled — to make knurls or ridges on.
- ordeal — any extremely severe or trying test, experience, or trial.