6-letter words containing le
- bootle — a port in NW England, in Sefton unitary authority, Merseyside; on the River Mersey adjoining Liverpool. Pop: 59 123 (2001)
- bottle — A bottle is a glass or plastic container in which drinks and other liquids are kept. Bottles are usually round with straight sides and a narrow top.
- boucle — looped yarn giving a knobbly effect
- boules — Boules is a game in which a small ball is thrown and then the players try to throw other balls as close to the first ball as possible.
- boulez — Pierre (pjɛr). 1925–2016, French composer of modernist music; also a noted conductor
- boulle — denoting or relating to a type of marquetry of patterned inlays of brass and tortoiseshell, occasionally with other metals such as pewter, much used on French furniture from the 17th century
- bowleg — a leg that curves outwards
- bowler — The bowler in a sport such as cricket is the player who is bowling the ball.
- bowles — Paul. 1910–99, US novelist, short-story writer, and composer, living in Tangiers. His novels include The Sheltering Sky (1949) and The Spider's House (1955)
- branle — an old French country dance performed in a linked circle
- bridle — A bridle is a set of straps that is put around a horse's head and mouth so that the person riding or driving the horse can control it.
- brulee — (in the Pacific Northwest) an area of forest destroyed by fire.
- bubble — Bubbles are small balls of air or gas in a liquid.
- buckle — A buckle is a piece of metal or plastic attached to one end of a belt or strap, which is used to fasten it.
- buddle — a sloping trough in which ore is washed
- bugler — A bugler is someone who plays the bugle.
- buglet — a small bugle
- bulled — the male of a bovine animal, especially of the genus Bos, with sexual organs intact and capable of reproduction.
- buller — to make a bubbling sound
- bullet — A bullet is a small piece of metal with a pointed or rounded end, which is fired out of a gun.
- bumble — to speak or do in a clumsy, muddled, or inefficient way
- bundle — A bundle of things is a number of them that are tied together or wrapped in a cloth or bag so that they can be carried or stored.
- bungle — If you bungle something, you fail to do it properly, because you make mistakes or are clumsy.
- burble — If something burbles, it makes a low continuous bubbling sound.
- burele — the netlike pattern of colored lines or dots forming the background design of certain postage stamps.
- burgle — If a building is burgled, a thief enters it by force and steals things.
- burled — having burls that produce a distorted grain: burled lumber.
- burley — a light thin-leaved tobacco, grown esp in Kentucky
- bustle — If someone bustles somewhere, they move there in a hurried way, often because they are very busy.
- butler — A butler is the most important male servant in a wealthy house.
- buttle — to act as a butler
- c clef — a symbol (), placed at the beginning of the staff, establishing middle C as being on its centre line
- cabble — Metallurgy. to cut up (iron or steel bars) for fagoting.
- cabled — Simple past tense and past participle of cable.
- cabler — a cable broadcasting company
- cables — Plural form of cable.
- cablet — a small cable, esp a cable-laid rope that has a circumference of less than 25 centimetres (ten inches)
- cackle — If someone cackles, they laugh in a loud unpleasant way, often at something bad that happens to someone else.
- caille — (in cookery) a quail
- cajole — If you cajole someone into doing something, you get them to do it after persuading them for some time.
- calefy — to make or become warm
- calesa — a horse drawn buggy, once common in the Philippines but now mainly used as a tourist attraction
- called — having the name
- callee — a routine that is called by another routine
- caller — A caller is a person who is making a telephone call.
- calles — Plutarco Elías [ploo-tahr-kaw e-lee-ahs] /pluˈtɑr kɔ ɛˈli ɑs/ (Show IPA), 1877–1945, Mexican general and statesman: president of Mexico 1924–28.
- callet — a scold
- camlet — a tough waterproof cloth
- cample — to argue
- canale — An artificial waterway or artificially improved river used for travel, shipping, or irrigation.