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6-letter words containing l, i, t

  • client — A client of a professional person or organization is a person or company that receives a service from them in return for payment.
  • clitar — (uncommon, humorous, slang) The clitoris. only used in play the clitar.
  • clitch — Alternative form of clutch.
  • clites — Classical Mythology. the wife of Cyzicus, who hanged herself when her husband was mistakenly killed by the Argonauts.
  • clitic — (of a word) incapable of being stressed, usually pronounced as if part of the word that follows or precedes it: for example, in French, me, te, and le are clitic pronouns
  • coital — Coital means connected with or relating to sexual intercourse.
  • coutil — a tightly-woven twill cloth used in corsetry
  • cultic — of or relating to a religious cult
  • daylit — the light of day: At the end of the tunnel they could see daylight.
  • delict — a wrongful act for which the person injured has the right to a civil remedy
  • delint — /dee-lint/ To modify code to remove problems detected when linting. Confusingly, this process is also referred to as "linting" code.
  • delist — If a company delists or if its shares are delisted, its shares are removed from the official list of shares that can be traded on the stock market.
  • dentil — one of a set of small square or rectangular blocks evenly spaced to form an ornamental row, usually under a classical cornice on a building, piece of furniture, etc
  • desilt — To remove suspended silt from the water.
  • detail — The details of something are its individual features or elements.
  • diglot — bilingual.
  • dilate — to make wider or larger; cause to expand.
  • dilute — to make (a liquid) thinner or weaker by the addition of water or the like.
  • distal — situated away from the point of origin or attachment, as of a limb or bone; terminal. Compare proximal.
  • distil — (transitive) Subject a substance to distillation; .
  • e-tail — retail conducted via the internet
  • elegit — (archaic) A judicial writ ordering seizure of a debtor's property.
  • elicit — Evoke or draw out (a response, answer, or fact) from someone in reaction to one's own actions or questions.
  • elites — Plural form of elite.
  • elliot — a masculine name
  • ellipt — (linguistics) To omit (from an utterance) by ellipsis.
  • elytis — Odysseus, real name Odysseus Alepoudelis. 1912–96, Greek poet, author of the long poems To Axion Esti (1959) and Maria Nefeli (1978): Nobel prize for literature 1979
  • enlist — Enroll or be enrolled in the armed services.
  • entail — A settlement of the inheritance of property over a number of generations so that it remains within a family or other group.
  • entoil — to trap in toils or snares; ensnare
  • eolith — A roughly chipped flint found in Tertiary strata, originally thought to be an early artifact but probably of natural origin.
  • étoile — a star
  • fetial — concerned with declarations of war and treaties of peace: fetial law.
  • fielty — The state of owing one's service (particularly of a soldier, warrior, knight, rider) to a king, queen, or other ruler.
  • filate — threadlike.
  • filets — Plural form of filet.
  • fillet — Cookery. a boneless cut or slice of meat or fish, especially the beef tenderloin. a piece of veal or other meat boned, rolled, and tied for roasting.
  • filter — any substance, as cloth, paper, porous porcelain, or a layer of charcoal or sand, through which liquid or gas is passed to remove suspended impurities or to recover solids.
  • filthy — foul with, characterized by, or having the nature of filth; disgustingly or completely dirty.
  • filtre — Obsolete form of filter.
  • finlet — a small, detached ray of a fin in certain fishes, as mackerels.
  • finlit — the understanding of the concepts and terminology associated with finance
  • firlot — one of two different Scottish units of measurement for grain, the first (for measuring commodities sold by level measure, such as wheat) roughly equal to an imperial bushel, the second (for measuring commodities sold by heaped measure, such as barley or corn) roughly half as large again
  • firtle — (Cumbrian dialect) To mess around, to waste time.
  • fitful — coming, appearing, acting, etc., in fits or by spells; recurring irregularly.
  • flieth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fly.
  • flight — an act or instance of fleeing or running away; hasty departure.
  • flints — Plural form of flint.
  • flinty — composed of, containing, or resembling flint, especially in hardness.
  • flirts — Plural form of flirt.
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