4-letter words that end in t
- lift — to move or bring (something) upward from the ground or other support to a higher position; hoist.
- lilt — rhythmic swing or cadence.
- lint — minute shreds or ravelings of yarn; bits of thread.
- lirt — (transitive, UK dialectal) To deceive; beguile.
- list — Friedrich [free-drik] /ˈfri drɪk/ (Show IPA), 1789–1846, U.S. political economist and journalist, born in Germany.
- loft — a room, storage area, or the like within a sloping roof; attic; garret.
- loot — spoils or plunder taken by pillaging, as in war.
- lost — no longer possessed or retained: lost friends.
- lout — an awkward, stupid person; clumsy, ill-mannered boor; oaf.
- lsat — The LSAT is an examination which is often taken by students who wish to enter a law school. LSAT is an abbreviation for 'Law School Admission Test.'
- luft — (chess) Space made for a castled king to give it a flight square to prevent a back-rank mate.
- lunt — Alfred, 1893–1977, U.S. actor (husband of Lynn Fontanne).
- lurt — (UK dialectal, Scotland) A lump of dirt or excrement; a turd.
- lust — intense sexual desire or appetite.
- maat — the goddess personifying law and righteousness.
- malt — germinated grain, usually barley, used in brewing and distilling.
- mart — a cow or ox fattened for slaughter.
- mast — the fruit of the oak and beech or other forest trees, used as food for hogs and other animals.
- matt — to finish with a matte surface.
- mcat — Medical College Admissions Test
- meat — the flesh of animals as used for food.
- meet — greatest lower bound
- melt — to become liquefied by warmth or heat, as ice, snow, butter, or metal.
- ment — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of meng.
- mest — of or involving an obsessive interest in one's own satisfaction: the me decade.
- mett — An old English measure of volume, perhaps equal to two bushels.
- mfat — Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade
- milt — the sperm-containing secretion of the testes of fishes.
- mint — Mint Is Not TRAC
- mist — a cloudlike aggregation of minute globules of water suspended in the atmosphere at or near the earth's surface, reducing visibility to a lesser degree than fog.
- mitt — Baseball. a rounded glove with one internal section for the four fingers and another for the thumb and having the side next to the palm of the hand protected by a thick padding, used by catchers. a somewhat similar glove but with less padding and having sections for the thumb and one or two fingers, used by first basemen. Compare baseball glove.
- mixt — a simple past tense and past participle of mix.
- moat — a deep, wide trench, usually filled with water, surrounding the rampart of a fortified place, as a town or a castle.
- moit — a foreign particle found in wool, as a burr, twig, or seed.
- molt — (of birds, insects, reptiles, etc.) to cast or shed the feathers, skin, or the like, that will be replaced by a new growth.
- mont — Mount; mountain.
- moot — open to discussion or debate; debatable; doubtful: Whether that was the cause of their troubles is a moot point.
- mort — a male given name, form of Mortimer or Morton.
- most — great in quantity, measure, or degree: too much cake.
- mott — a grove or clump of trees in prairie land or open country.
- msgt — Master Sergeant
- munt — (Rhodesia, slang, originally military, pejorative, offensive, ethnic slur) A black person, usually a man.
- must — to be obliged; be compelled: Do I have to go? I must, I suppose.
- mutt — a dog, especially a mongrel.
- naat — (Islam) poetry in praise of the prophet Muhammad.
- naht — National Association of Head Teachers
- nait — (transitive) To refuse; deny; disclaim.
- nart — (obsolete) Contraction of ne art.
- nast — Thomas, 1840–1902, U.S. illustrator and cartoonist.
- naut — nautical