5-letter words containing at
- catch — If you catch a person or animal, you capture them after chasing them, or by using a trap, net, or other device.
- catel — (obsolete) property, as distinguished from rent or income.
- cater — In British English, to cater for a group of people means to provide all the things that they need or want. In American English, you say you cater to a person or group of people.
- cates — choice dainty food; delicacies
- cath- — cata-
- catho — a member of the Catholic Church
- cathy — a feminine name
- catia — (tool, product) A CAD/CAM system produced by Dassault Systemes and sold by IBM. CATIA is used heavily in the car and aerospace industries. It runs on various Unix platforms and Windows NT.
- catio — An outdoor enclosure for cats.
- catty — If someone, especially a woman or girl, is being catty, they are being unpleasant and unkind.
- chaat — Any savory snack, sold from a roadside stall in India, or served as a starter in an Indian restaurant.
- chate — (Scotland) To cheat.
- chats — Plural form of chat.
- cheat — When someone cheats, they do not obey a set of rules which they should be obeying, for example in a game or exam.
- cleat — A cleat is a kind of hook with two ends which is used to hold ropes, especially on sailing boats.
- coate — Obsolete form of coat.
- coati — any omnivorous mammal of the genera Nasua and Nasuella, of Central and South America: family Procyonidae, order Carnivora (carnivores). They are related to but larger than the raccoons, having a long flexible snout and a brindled coat
- coats — Plural form of coat.
- crate — A crate is a large box used for transporting or storing things.
- creat — An usher to a riding master.
- croat — a native or inhabitant of Croatia
- datal — slow-witted
- datas — a plural of datum.
- dated — Dated things seem old-fashioned, although they may once have been fashionable or modern.
- datel — a British Telecom service providing for the direct transmission of data from one computer to another
- dater — a person who marks something with a date
- dates — the years of a person's birth and death
- datuk — (in Malaysia) a title denoting membership of a high order of chivalry
- datum — a single piece of information; fact
- death — Death is the permanent end of the life of a person or animal.
- defat — to remove the fat from (a substance)
- derat — (transitive) To remove the rats from something.
- doats — dote.
- donat — A rank in some knightly orders.
- drate — Simple past form of drite.
- drats — to damn; confound: Drat your interference.
- ducat — any of various gold coins formerly issued in various parts of Europe, especially that first issued in Venice in 1284. Compare sequin (def 2).
- eated — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of eat.
- eaten — a past participle of eat.
- eater — to take into the mouth and swallow for nourishment; chew and swallow (food).
- eaton — Theophilus, 1590–1658, English colonist and colonial administrator in America.
- eclat — brilliance of success, reputation, etc.: the éclat of a great achievement.
- efate — a volcanic island in the Vanuatu island chain, in the South Pacific. 300 sq. mi. (780 sq. km).
- eilat — a port in S Israel, on the Gulf of Aqaba: Israel's only outlet to the Red Sea. Pop: 43 500 (2003 est)
- elate — Make (someone) ecstatically happy.
- enate — A relative whose relation is traced only through female members of the family.
- erato — the Muse of love poetry
- evatt — Herbert Vere. 1894–1965, Australian jurist and Labor political leader, president of the General Assembly of the United Nations 1948–49
- exeat — A license or permit for absence from a college or a religious house (such as a monastery).
- expat — An expatriate; a person who lives outside his or her own country.