➠ Words with r

List contains 182972 Words that "r" contain.

  • - Earth and Mars, e.g.
  • - globes of gold, boron and sulphur
  • - Globes, poetically
  • - Eyeballs or moons, e.g.
  • - The sun, moon and planets, e.g.
  • - Globes and spheres
  • - Christmas tree ornaments, e.g.
  • - Moons, e.g.
  • - Mars and Venus, e.g.
  • - Jupiter and Saturn, e.g.
  • - Globes, spheres, etc.
  • - Globes, e.g.
  • - Christmas bulbs, e.g.
  • - Basketballs, but not footballs, e.g.
  • - Suns, e.g.
  • - Stars, e.g
  • - Venus and Mars, e.g
  • - Mercury and Mars, e.g
  • - Globe-shaped items
  • - The planets, e.g
  • - Planets, e.g
  • - Globes
  • - Globes or spheres
  • - Many snow globes
  • - Crystal balls, e.g
  • - Globes, to poets
  • - Globes, peepers and spheres
  • - British Standard applied to Golden Globes
  • - Planets and marbles shape-wise
  • - Spheres in sight
  • - Spherical items
  • - Spheres or a load of balls
  • - Globelike things
  • - Circles seen on photos, thought to be ghosts
  • - balls, poetically
  • - Eyes other blokes, discontentedly
  • - Spheres sometimes used as royal objects
  • - Heavenly spheres to poets
  • - Spheres in the night sky to poets
  • - moons and marbles
  • - travelers in distant circles
  • - bubbles and blueberries
  • - spheres or balls lose everything
  • - features of monarchical regalia, along with scepters and crowns
  • - Another word for a sphere: Plural
  • - Objects of stargazers' gazes
  • - balls, but not strikes
  • - Spheres on scepters
  • - Some Christmas tree ornaments
  • - Poetic peepers
  • - Celestial array
  • - Round bodies
  • - Celestial sights
  • - The sun, moon and stars
  • - Spheres, in poems
  • - Some Christmas ornaments
  • - Regal symbols
  • - Peepers, poetically
  • - Eyes, to Shelley
  • - Eyes, to poets
  • - Typical bubbles
  • - Symbols of royal power
  • - Symbols of kingly power
  • - Sun, moon, etc.
  • - Spheres like the sun and moon
  • - Poetic eyes
  • - Planets, per poets
  • - Planets or peepers
  • - Planets and such
  • - Bubbles, basically
  • - Baby blues, to a poet
  • - The sun, the moon and the stars
  • - The planets, basically
  • - Suns and stars
  • - Sun and moon, poetically
  • - Sun and moon, for example
  • - Stares at, in slang
  • - Spinners in space
  • - Spherical balls
  • - Spheres of power
  • - Spheres in the heavens
  • - Space museum sights
  • - Sky spheres
  • - Shapes atop an emperor's staff
  • - Sci-fi objects
  • - Scepters' companion items
  • - Scepter companions
  • - Round regal symbols
  • - Round objects.
  • - Quintet in an "Executive Clicker"
  • - Poet's planets
  • - Poet's eyes
  • - Planets, spheres, etc.
  • - Planets or stars
  • - Planets or eyes, to a poet
  • - Planets or eyes, poetically
  • - Planetarium objects
  • - Perfectly round solids
  • - Parts of royal regalia
  • - Orrery units
  • - Moves in circles
  • - Moons, for example
  • - Moons or eyes
  • - Mars and Saturn
  • - Many Christmas ornaments
  • - Globelike objects
  • - Forms into a disk
  • - Eyes: Poetic.
  • - Eyes, to Milton
  • - Eyes, in poesy
  • - Eyes or planets
  • - Eyes in poems
  • - Eyeballs, in poetry
  • - Earth and moon
  • - Circular items
  • - Christmas tree ornaments, typically
  • - Celestial entities
  • - Bubbles and marbles
  • - Bodies in space
  • - Baseballs, but not footballs
  • - "Fiery" things, to Shakespeare
  • - Windows to the soul
  • - Venus and others
  • - Regalia items
  • - Emblems of power.
  • - Symbols of sovereignty
  • - Planets.
  • - Regal regalia
  • - Eyes, poetically
  • - Planets, poetically
  • - Spheres
  • - Spherical symbols of sovereignty
  • - Planets in the sky
  • - Eyes, to bards
  • - Eyes, to a poet
  • - "Nor to their idle .... doth sight appear": Milton
  • - Planetary shapes
  • - Poetic planets
  • - Swingers on a perpetual-motion desk toy
  • - Globular objects
  • - Round things
  • - Planets, to poets
  • - '... harmony in the motion and magnitude of the .... ... ': Copernicus
  • - 20-Acrosses, poetically
  • - Peepers, to poets
  • - Planets and moons
  • - Sun circlers
  • - Poetic spheres
  • - Sun, moon and stars
  • - Space balls
  • - Celestial spheres
  • - Bros performing The Planets?
  • - Mystical balls, maybe
  • - Spheres, to 6-Down
  • - Planets and spheres
  • - Some overhead light covers
  • - Eyes, to Shakespeare
  • - Spherical shapes
  • - Spheres, to bards
  • - Tree ornament shapes
  • - Heavenly spheres
  • - Moons, marbles et al
  • - Eyeballs, poetically
  • - The sun and the moon
  • - Spherical solids
  • - Spheres, in poetry
  • - Marbles, mothballs et al
  • - Spheres for astronomers
  • - Many Christmas tree ornaments
  • - Suns and moons
  • - Planetarium sights
  • - Balls trapped by Middlesbrough man, centre-back?
  • - Circles of gold on empty bus
  • - Eyes, planets and such
  • - Spheres in space
  • - Planets, in poems
  • - Spherical objects
  • - Moons, poetically
  • - Observes without Eve's poetic eyes
  • - Bubbles, moons and the like
  • - Basketballs, but not footballs
  • - Eyeballs, in romantic poetry
  • - Royal balls
  • - Eyeballs, to a poet
  • - Round bodies, poetically
  • - Partners of scepters
  • - Mars and others
  • - Scepters' go-withs
  • - Eyes, in poetry
  • - Sun and moon
  • - Sun, moon and star
  • - Spheres representing royalty
  • - Royal symbols
  • - Symbols of royalty
  • - Orrery components
  • - Solar system components
  • - Heavenly balls
  • - Sovereigns' spheres
  • - Jupiter and Saturn
  • - The sun, moon and planets
  • - Shelley's eyes
  • - Marbles, essentially
  • - Eyes in verse
  • - Odist's spheres
  • - Scepter toppers
  • - Planets or other spheres
  • - Spheres, in verse
  • - Heavenly bodies?
  • - Symbols of authority
  • - ...... Balls
  • - Celestial bodies.
  • - Eyeballs
  • - ...... moons
  • - Eyes.
  • - Holds up.
  • - Circles
  • - Mars and Venus
  • - Mercury and Saturn
  • - Venus and Mars
  • - Peepers
  • - Round figures
sir
  • - Mister
  • - Mister alternative
  • - Mister relative
  • - Private address
  • - Formal address
  • - Yes or no follower
  • - Yes follower
  • - Term of respect
  • - Man's title
  • - Guinness, for one
  • - Letter man?
  • - Polite term of address
  • - Respectful title
  • - "May I help you, ......?"
  • - "My good man"
  • - Man's address
  • - Gent
  • - Robin Hood, for one
  • - Polite word
  • - Military title.
  • - Knight-....
  • - Yes-man
  • - Aristocratic title
  • - Knight, e.g
  • - Private response?
  • - Private's reply
  • - Lady's man
  • - Noble title
  • - Lady's mate
  • - Drill sergeant's address
  • - Fine fellow.
  • - Title of address.
  • - Form of address.
  • - Kingly address
  • - Round Table address
  • - 'My dear man'
  • - Letter opener?
  • - Lord
  • - Guinness, e.g.
  • - ...... no
  • - Certainly
  • - Duke
  • - Title
  • - 'Well-played!'
  • - Dude
  • - Knight's address
  • - Knight's title
  • - What Marcie calls Peppermint Patty
  • - Round Table title
  • - Preceder/follower of "yes"
  • - How Marcie addresses Peppermint Patty, for no apparent reason
  • - "Yes, ......!"
  • - 'Dude,' more formally
  • - Title for a knight
  • - Title for 17-Across
  • - Polite address
  • - Address for a baronet
  • - — Lancelot
  • - "Aaron Burr, ......" ("Hamilton" song)
  • - Address for a certain general
  • - "Dear .... or Madam . . ."
  • - New title for Michael Palin
  • - General address
  • - Army address
  • - Knighted one
  • - Gentleman
  • - Elton John, e.g
  • - Title for Lancelot
  • - 'Aaron Burr, ......' (song from 'Hamilton')
  • - Title for Patrick Stewart
  • - Respectful address
  • - Knightly title
  • - Chivalrous title
  • - Title for Anthony Hopkins
  • - Knight address
  • - Title reportedly turned down by Stephen Hawking
  • - Elton John title
  • - Churchill address
  • - Elton John's title
  • - Madam's counterpart
  • - Title for Ringo or Paul
  • - Gutless slugger boxing current holder of title
  • - Title for 14 Across
  • - Counterpart of 21-Across
  • - Galahad's title
  • - Son of Beyonce
  • - British title
  • - Title for tennis great Andy Murray
  • - Title for Richard Branson
  • - Polite title
  • - Honorific bestowed by Queen Elizabeth II
  • - Mr. ...... (counselor in 'Holes')
  • - Title for Daniel Day-Lewis
  • - Gentleman's address
  • - Male title
  • - Knightly address
  • - Title for Elton
  • - 'To ......, With Love'
  • - "Dear" one
  • - Military address
  • - Address for a knight
  • - Madam's partner
  • - Revolutionary hiding in Easter Island is an advocate of the class system presumably?
  • - Title for Jagger
  • - Title for Paul or Ringo
  • - Polite way to address a man
  • - Titled man
  • - It may precede and follow yes
  • - Dame's counterpart
  • - Common base word
  • - Title of nobility
  • - Word of respect
  • - "...... Duke" (Stevie Wonder song)
  • - To whom with love in a film title?
  • - Educationalist retires in impoverishment
  • - Beyonce's son, whose name is a title
  • - Post-dubbing title
  • - Arthur Conan Doyle title
  • - Some luckless Iranian teacher
  • - Headmaster's address
  • - Male title of respect
  • - Newton honorific
  • - Francis Drake, for one
  • - Title for Paul McCartney
  • - Title for Elton John
  • - Honorary knight's title
  • - Tennis' Andy Murray's title
  • - Title for Mick Jagger or Elton John
  • - Title of respect
  • - Jagger or McCartney
  • - Base address
  • - Title for two Beatles
  • - Brit's title
  • - Knight or teacher
  • - Address for a 1-Across, perhaps
  • - Dear
  • - gentleman starts to sing in register
  • - "___ Duke": by Stevie Wonder
  • - Gawain or Lancelot, e.g.
  • - Title for Elton John and Paul McCartney
  • - Title for Patrick Stewart or Isaac Newton
  • - honorific for a gent
  • - Lewis Hamilton, for one
  • - Title bestowed by King Charles
  • - ___ Mix-A-Lot ("Baby Got Back" Performer)
  • - Title Rod Stewart received in 2016
  • - Title of respect for Anthony Hopkins
  • - Title for Ben Kingsley
  • - heads of schools initially recruit male teacher
  • - ma'am counterpart
  • - what queen's brian may became in 2023
  • - What to call a baronet right behind one's back
  • - title of a medieval tale?
  • - suitable address for an officer
  • - start of the knight?
  • - robin's title
  • - classy english title?
  • - What Lennon and Hawking declined to be called
  • - "Baby Got Back" rapper ...... Mix-a-Lot
  • - title a man gets after being knighted
  • - term of address for a man in prison without tattoos at first
  • - "please, ..., i want some more"
  • - ...... isaac newton
  • - Major address, since 2005
  • - Galahad or Lancelot's title
  • - ... Mix-a-Lot who rapped "Baby Got Back"
  • - Address for a gentleman
  • - andrew lloyd webber title
  • - Formal address for a modern knight
  • - gentleman consumed by desire?
  • - Isaac Newton, from the age of 62 onward
  • - title for ben kingsley or anthony hopkins
  • - Title bestowed on Lewis Hamilton in 2021
  • - title taken back from aristocrat
  • - salutation in a salute
  • - gentleman crossing roads irritably
  • - How to address a British knight
  • - gentleman gets cut of beef but not other meat
  • - to ...,with love, 1960s sidney poitier film