5-letter words containing r, l
- dirls — to vibrate; shake.
- dolor — sorrow; grief.
- drail — a hook with a lead-covered shank used in trolling.
- drawl — an act or utterance of a person who drawls.
- dreul — Obsolete form of drool.
- drill — a large, baboonlike monkey, Mandrillus leucophaeus, of western Africa, similar to the related mandrill but smaller and less brightly colored: now endangered.
- drily — dryly.
- droil — to carry out menial, toilsome work
- drole — a scoundrel
- droll — amusing in an odd way; whimsically humorous; waggish.
- drool — to water at the mouth, as in anticipation of food; salivate; drivel.
- dryly — free from moisture or excess moisture; not moist; not wet: a dry towel; dry air.
- dural — of or relating to the dura mater.
- earle — a male given name: from the old English word meaning “noble.”.
- earls — Plural form of earl.
- early — in or during the first part of a period of time, a course of action, a series of events, etc.: early in the year.
- eeler — A fisherman who catches eels.
- elara — a small satellite of Jupiter in an intermediate orbit
- elder — (of one or more out of a group of related or otherwise associated people) of a greater age.
- elgar — Sir Edward (William). 1857–1934, English composer, whose works include the Enigma Variations (1899), the oratorio The Dream of Gerontius (1900), two symphonies, a cello concerto, and a violin concerto
- elmer — a masculine name
- elver — A young eel, especially when undergoing mass migration upriver from the sea.
- enrol — (British) alternative spelling of enroll.
- erbil — a city in N Iraq: important in Assyrian times. Pop: 870 000 (2005 est)
- errol — a masculine name
- ervil — a type of vetch, Vicia ervilia
- euler — [Named after the Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler (1707-1783)] A revision of ALGOL by Niklaus Wirth. A small predecessor of Pascal.
- farle — a thin, circular cake of flour or oatmeal.
- farls — Plural form of farl.
- feral — causing death; fatal.
- ferly — something unusual, strange, or causing wonder or terror.
- filar — of or relating to a thread or threads.
- filer — a long, narrow tool of steel or other metal having a series of ridges or points on its surfaces for reducing or smoothing surfaces of metal, wood, etc.
- flair — a natural talent, aptitude, or ability; bent; knack: a flair for rhyming.
- flare — to burn with an unsteady, swaying flame, as a torch or candle in the wind.
- flarp — /flarp/ [Rutgers University] Yet another metasyntactic variable (see foo). Among those who use it, it is associated with a legend that any program not containing the word "flarp" somewhere will not work. The legend is discreetly silent on the reliability of programs which *do* contain the magic word.
- flary — dazzling; gaudy; flashy
- fleer — to grin or laugh coarsely or mockingly.
- fleur — a female given name.
- flier — something that flies, as a bird or insect.
- flirt — to court triflingly or act amorously without serious intentions; play at love; coquet.
- floor — that part of a room, hallway, or the like, that forms its lower enclosing surface and upon which one walks.
- flor. — floruit
- flora — the plants of a particular region or period, listed by species and considered as a whole.
- flory — fleury.
- flour — the finely ground meal of grain, especially the finer meal separated by bolting.
- fluor — fluorite.
- flurr — a whir; a fluttering; a flurry
- flurt — Alternative spelling of flirt.
- flyer — something that flies, as a bird or insect.