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6-letter words that end in p

  • cut up — If you cut something up, you cut it into several pieces.
  • cut-up — to penetrate with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument or object: He cut his finger.
  • dayhop — a day's journey; a distance that can be traveled in one day.
  • decamp — If you decamp, you go away from somewhere secretly or suddenly.
  • dewlap — a loose fold of skin hanging from beneath the throat in cattle, dogs, etc
  • dialup — (computing) alternative spelling of dial-up.
  • dig up — to break up, turn over, or remove earth, sand, etc., as with a shovel, spade, bulldozer, or claw; make an excavation.
  • dikkop — (South Africa) A bird of the family Burhinidae.
  • dognap — to steal (a dog), especially for the purpose of selling it for profit.
  • dollop — a lump or blob of some substance: dollops of mud.
  • dry up — free from moisture or excess moisture; not moist; not wet: a dry towel; dry air.
  • dunlapWilliam, 1766–1839, U.S. dramatist, theatrical producer, and historian.
  • dunlopJohn Boyd, 1840–1921, Scottish inventor of the pneumatic tire.
  • dustup — a quarrel; argument; row.
  • earlap — earflap.
  • eat up — to take into the mouth and swallow for nourishment; chew and swallow (food).
  • ecomap — a diagram showing the links between an individual and his or her community
  • eggcup — a small cup or bowl for serving a boiled egg.
  • encamp — Settle in or establish a camp, especially a military one.
  • end up — arrive somewhere
  • endcap — A cap placed on the end of something.
  • entrap — Catch (someone or something) in or as in a trap.
  • enwrap — Wrap; envelop.
  • escarp — The side of the ditch next to the parapet in a fortification; the scarp.
  • ethiop — Ethiopian
  • eulisp — 1985-present. A Lisp dialect intended to be a common European standard, with influences from Common LISP, Le LISP, Scheme and T. First-class functions, classes and continuations, both static scope and dynamic scope, modules, support for parallelism. The class system (TELOS) incorporates ideas from CLOS, ObjVLisp and Oaklisp. See also Feel. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • excerp — (obsolete) To pick out.
  • extemp — (US, informal) extemporaneous speaking; a competitive event in schools and colleges in which students speak persuasively or informatively about current events and politics.
  • extirp — to uproot (vegetation), to extirpate
  • eye up — If someone eyes you up, they look at you in a way that shows they consider you attractive.
  • eyecap — The brille of a snake.
  • eyecup — A piece of an optical device such as a microscope, camera, or pair of binoculars that is contoured to provide a comfortable rest against the user's eye.
  • f-stop — the setting of an adjustable lens aperture, as indicated by an f number.
  • fa cup — Football Association competition
  • faceup — with the face or the front or upper surface upward: Place the cards faceup on the table.
  • fed up — simple past tense and past participle of feed.
  • fillip — to strike with the nail of a finger snapped from the end of the thumb.
  • fit up — adapted or suited; appropriate: This water isn't fit for drinking. A long-necked giraffe is fit for browsing treetops.
  • fix up — Informal. a position from which it is difficult to escape; predicament.
  • fix-up — repair; improvement: fix-ups that will make the house more salable.
  • fly-up — a formal ceremony at which a girl leaves her Brownie troop, receives a pair of embroidered wings for her uniform, and becomes a member of an intermediate Girl Scout troop.
  • foldup — something, as a chair or bed, that can be folded up and stored away when not in use.
  • fry up — If you fry up food, you fry it, especially in order to make a quick, casual meal.
  • fuckup — a person who bungles or botches, especially a habitual bungler.
  • fur up — kettle, pipe: form calcium deposits
  • gallop — to ride a horse at a gallop; ride at full speed: They galloped off to meet their friends.
  • gallupGeorge Horace, 1901–84, U.S. statistician.
  • gas up — Physics. a substance possessing perfect molecular mobility and the property of indefinite expansion, as opposed to a solid or liquid.
  • gazump — to cheat (a house buyer) by raising the price, at the time a contract is to be signed, over the amount originally agreed upon.
  • gee up — an exclamation, as to a horse or draught animal, to encourage it to turn to the right, go on, or go faster
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