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6-letter words containing r, i, p

  • pinard — wine.
  • pincer — insect, crab: claws
  • pindar — 522?–443? b.c, Greek poet.
  • pinder — peanut.
  • pineroSir Arthur Wing, 1855–1934, English playwright and actor.
  • pinery — a place in which pineapples are grown.
  • pinger — a device that makes a pinging sound, esp one that can be preset to ring at a particular time
  • pinker — a color varying from light crimson to pale reddish purple.
  • pinner — a person or thing that pins.
  • pinterHarold, 1930–2008, English playwright.
  • pipper — the center of the reticule of a gunsight.
  • piracy — software piracy
  • pirate — software pirate
  • pirnie — a stripy woollen nightcap
  • pirnit — woven with stripes or threads of varying colours or textures
  • pirogi — a small dough envelope filled with mashed potato, meat, cheese, or vegetables, crimped to seal the edge and then boiled or fried, typically served with sour cream or onions.
  • pisher — a young boy or person who still has little experience
  • pisser — something extremely difficult or unpleasant.
  • pitier — a person who pities.
  • pitter — to make a pattering sound
  • pituri — a solanaceous shrub or small tree, Duboisia hopwoodi, of Australia.
  • plierspliers, (sometimes used with a singular verb) small pincers with long jaws, for bending wire, holding small objects, etc. (usually used with pair of).
  • pluri- — denoting several
  • poiretPaul [pawl] /pɔl/ (Show IPA), 1879–1944, French fashion designer.
  • poiser — a person or thing that poises.
  • pokier — puttering; slow; dull: poky drivers.
  • polari — a distinctive English argot in use since at least the 18th century among groups of theatrical and circus performers and in certain homosexual communities, derived largely from Italian, directly or through Lingua Franca.
  • porina — the larva of a moth which causes damage to grassland
  • poring — to read or study with steady attention or application: a scholar poring over a rare old manuscript.
  • porion — the most lateral point in the roof of the bony external auditory meatus.
  • porism — a type of mathematical proposition considered by Euclid, the meaning of which is now obscure. It is thought to be a proposition affirming the possibility of finding such conditions as will render a certain problem indeterminate or capable of innumerable solutions
  • portia — the heroine of Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice, who, in one scene, disguises herself as a lawyer.
  • pourie — a jug; pitcher
  • praise — the act of expressing approval or admiration; commendation; laudation.
  • pratie — a potato
  • praxis — practice, as distinguished from theory; application or use, as of knowledge or skills.
  • prebid — occurring prior to a bid
  • precis — a concise summary.
  • prefix — Grammar. an affix placed before a word, base, or another prefix to modify a term's meaning, as by making the term negative, as un- in unkind, by signaling repetition, as re- in reinvent, or by indicating support, as pro- in proabolition. Compatible prefixes can work together, as un- and re- in unrefundable.
  • prelim — preliminary.
  • premix — Also, premixture [pree-miks-cher] /priˈmɪks tʃər/ (Show IPA). a mixture of ingredients, made before selling, using, etc.: The chain saw runs on a premix of oil and gasoline.
  • previn — André (ˈɒndreɪ). born 1929, US orchestral conductor, born in Germany; living in Britain; awarded an honorary knighthood (1996)
  • prexie — a slang term for a college president
  • pricer — (especially in retail stores) an employee who establishes prices at which articles will be sold, or one who affixes price tags to merchandise.
  • pricey — expensive or unduly expensive: a pricey wine.
  • pricky — prickly.
  • prided — a high or inordinate opinion of one's own dignity, importance, merit, or superiority, whether as cherished in the mind or as displayed in bearing, conduct, etc.
  • priers — a person who pries; a curious or inquisitive person.
  • priest — a person whose office it is to perform religious rites, and especially to make sacrificial offerings.
  • primal — first; original; primeval: primal eras before the appearance of life on earth.
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