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6-letter words containing ra

  • braves — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
  • brawly — fine or fine-looking; excellent.
  • brawns — strong, well-developed muscles.
  • brawny — Someone who is brawny is strong and has big muscles.
  • brayer — a roller used for spreading ink by hand
  • brazen — If you describe a person or their behaviour as brazen, you mean that they are very bold and do not care what other people think about them or their behaviour.
  • brazer — to unite (metal objects) at high temperatures by applying any of various nonferrous solders.
  • brazes — to unite (metal objects) at high temperatures by applying any of various nonferrous solders.
  • brazil — the red wood obtained from various tropical leguminous trees of the genus Caesalpinia, such as C. echinata of America: used for cabinetwork
  • brazos — river in central & SE Tex., flowing southeastward into the Gulf of Mexico: 870 mi (1,400 km)
  • brazza — Pierre Paul François Camille Savorgnan de [pyer pawl frahn-swa ka-mee-yuh sa-vawr-nyahn duh] /pyɛr pɔl frɑ̃ˈswa kaˈmi yə sa vɔrˈnyɑ̃ də/ (Show IPA), 1852–1905, French explorer in Africa, born in Italy.
  • buckra — (used contemptuously by Black people, esp in the US) a White man
  • busera — a Ugandan alcoholic drink made from millet: sometimes mixed with honey
  • cabral — Pedro Álvares (ˈpɛːdru ˈɑlvərəʃ). ?1460–?1526, Portuguese navigator: discovered and took possession of Brazil for Portugal in 1500
  • camera — A camera is a piece of equipment that is used for taking photographs, making films, or producing television pictures.
  • canara — a region in SW India, on the Deccan Plateau. About 60,000 sq. mi. (155,400 sq. km).
  • carack — a merchant vessel having various rigs, used especially by Mediterranean countries in the 15th and 16th centuries; galleon.
  • caract — a sign or symbol
  • carafe — A carafe is a glass container in which you serve water or wine.
  • carapa — a South American tree, Carapa guianensis, of the mahogany family.
  • carats — Plural form of carat.
  • carrao — Limpkin.
  • cembra — a large Swiss pine which yields nuts (cembra nuts)
  • centra — a plural of centrum.
  • cerate — a hard ointment or medicated paste consisting of lard or oil mixed with wax or resin
  • cesura — caesura
  • cetura — Keturah.
  • chakra — (in yoga) any of the seven major energy centres in the body
  • charas — hashish
  • chirac — Jacques (René) (ʒɑk). born 1932, French Gaullist politician: president of France (1995–2007); prime minister (1974–76 and 1986–88); mayor of Paris (1977–95)
  • chiral — designating or of an asymmetrical form, as a molecule, that cannot be superimposed on its mirror image
  • chokra — a young male
  • choora — an Indian dagger having a sharply pointed, single-edged blade.
  • choral — Choral music is sung by a choir.
  • citral — a yellow volatile liquid with a lemon-like odour, found in oils of lemon grass, orange, and lemon and used in perfumery: a terpene aldehyde consisting of the cis- isomer (citral-a or geranial) and the trans- isomer (citral-b or neral). Formula: (CH3)2C:CH(CH2)2C(CH3):CHCHO
  • citran — (language)   Caltech's answer to MIT's JOSS.
  • cobras — Plural form of cobra.
  • conrad — Joseph. real name Teodor Josef Konrad Korzeniowski. 1857–1924, British novelist born in Poland, noted for sea stories such as The Nigger of the Narcissus (1897) and Lord Jim (1900) and novels of politics and revolution such as Nostromo (1904) and Under Western Eyes (1911)
  • contra — against
  • coraji — boyla.
  • corals — Plural form of coral.
  • corant — A coranto (kind of dance).
  • corral — In North America, a corral is a space surrounded by a fence where cattle or horses are kept.
  • cosyra — ancient name of Pantelleria.
  • crabbe — George. 1754–1832, English narrative poet, noted for his depiction of impoverished rural life in The Village (1783) and The Borough (1810)
  • crabby — Someone who is crabby is bad-tempered and unpleasant to people.
  • cracks — to break without complete separation of parts; become fissured: The plate cracked when I dropped it, but it was still usable.
  • crackt — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of crack.
  • cracky — full of cracks
  • cracow — an industrial city in S Poland, on the River Vistula: former capital of the country (1320–1609); university (1364). Pop: 822 000 (2005 est)
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