Peeled Unscramble word

peeled is a Scrabble word, peeled uses Six letters.
Scrabble point value for peeled Nine points.
Words with Friends point value for peeled: Nine points.

Below are the results of unscrambling peeled. We found a total of 46 words by unscrambling the letters in peeled.

5 letter words made by unscrambling the letters in peeled

depel 8 pedee 8 peele 7

4 letter words made by unscrambling the letters in peeled

deep 7 dele 5 depe 7 epee 6 lede 5 leed 5 leep 6 peed 7 peel 6 pele 6 pled 7

3 letter words made by unscrambling the letters in peeled

dee 4 del 4 dep 6 edp 6 eel 3 eld 4 led 4 lee 3 lep 5 pdl 6 ped 6 pee 5

2 letter words made by unscrambling the letters in peeled

de 3 dl 3 dp 5 ed 3 ee 2 el 2 ep 4 ld 3 le 2 lp 4 pd 5 pe 4 pl 4

Definitions of peeled

British English : peel When you peel fruit or vegetables, you remove their skins.She began peeling potatoes.piːl VERB

verb

  1. (transitive) to remove (the skin, rind, outer covering, etc) of (a fruit, egg, etc)
  2. (intransitive) (of paint, etc) to be removed from a surface, esp through weathering
  3. (intransitive) (of a surface) to lose its outer covering of paint, etc esp through weathering
  4. (intransitive) (of a person or part of the body) to shed skin in flakes or (of skin) to be shed in flakes, esp as a result of sunburn
  5. (croquet ) to put (another player's ball) through a hoop or hoops
  6. See keep one's eyes peeled

noun

  1. the skin or rind of a fruit, etc

noun

  1. a long-handled shovel used by bakers for moving bread, in an oven

noun

  1. (in Britain) a fortified tower of the 16th century on the borders between England and Scotland, built to withstand raids

noun

  1. John, real name John Robert Parker Ravenscroft. 1939–2004, British broadcaster; presented his influential Radio 1 music programme (1967–2004) and Radio 4's Home Truths (1998–2004)
  2. Sir Robert. 1788–1850, British statesman; Conservative prime minister (1834–35; 1841–46). As Home Secretary (1828–30) he founded the Metropolitan Police and in his second ministry carried through a series of free-trade budgets culminating in the repeal of the Corn Laws (1846), which split the Tory party