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5-letter words that end in t

  • eleet — (internet slang, leet, dated) alternative spelling of leet (
  • elint — intelligence gathered by using electronic sensors to intercept electromagnetic signals, such as radio signals, from other countries
  • eliot — George, real name Mary Ann Evans. 1819–80, English novelist, noted for her analysis of provincial Victorian society. Her best-known novels include Adam Bede (1859), The Mill on the Floss (1860), Silas Marner (1861), and Middlemarch (1872)
  • elyot — Sir Thomas. ?1490–1546, English scholar and diplomat; author of The Boke named the Governour (1531), a treatise in English on education
  • emmet — a tourist or holiday-maker
  • enact — Make (a bill or other proposal) law.
  • ennet — (now chiefly dialectal) Duck; drake.
  • epact — The number of days by which the solar year differs from the lunar year.
  • epopt — one initiated into mysteries, esp Eleusinian
  • erect — Rigidly upright or straight.
  • ergot — A fungal disease of rye and other cereals in which black, elongated, fruiting bodies grow in the ears of the cereal. Eating contaminated food can result in ergotism.
  • ernst — Max (maks). 1891–1976, German painter, resident in France and the US, a prominent exponent of Dada and surrealism: developed the technique of collage
  • eruct — Emit stomach gas noisily through the mouth; belch.
  • erupt — (of a volcano) become active and eject lava, ash, and gases.
  • escot — to maintain or pay for
  • etext — Alternative spelling of e-text.
  • evatt — Herbert Vere. 1894–1965, Australian jurist and Labor political leader, president of the General Assembly of the United Nations 1948–49
  • event — A thing that happens, esp. one of importance.
  • evert — Turn (a structure or organ) outward or inside out.
  • evict — Expel (someone) from a property, especially with the support of the law.
  • ewart — Gavin (Buchanan). 1916–95, British poet, noted for his light satirical verse
  • exact — Not approximated in any way; precise.
  • exalt — Hold (someone or something) in very high regard; think or speak very highly of.
  • exapt — EXtended APT.
  • exeat — A license or permit for absence from a college or a religious house (such as a monastery).
  • exect — (obsolete) To cut off or out.
  • exept — Obsolete spelling of except.
  • exert — Apply or bring to bear (a force, influence, or quality).
  • exist — Have objective reality or being.
  • expat — An expatriate; a person who lives outside his or her own country.
  • exult — Show or feel elation or jubilation, especially as the result of a success.
  • facet — one of the small, polished plane surfaces of a cut gem.
  • fagot — a bundle of sticks, twigs, or branches bound together and used as fuel, a fascine, a torch, etc.
  • faint — lacking brightness, vividness, clearness, loudness, strength, etc.: a faint light; a faint color; a faint sound.
  • fault — a defect or imperfection; flaw; failing: a fault in the brakes; a fault in one's character.
  • faust — Johann [yoh-hahn] /ˈyoʊ hɑn/ (Show IPA), c1480–c1538, German magician, alchemist, and astrologer.
  • feart — afraid
  • feast — any rich or abundant meal: The steak dinner was a feast.
  • fecit — he made (it); she made (it): formerly used on works of art after the name of the artist. Abbreviation: fe., fec.
  • feint — a movement made in order to deceive an adversary; an attack aimed at one place or point merely as a distraction from the real place or point of attack: military feints; the feints of a skilled fencer.
  • feist — Chiefly South Midland and Southern U.S. a small mongrel dog, especially one that is ill-tempered; cur; mutt.
  • fient — a fiend
  • fight — a battle or combat.
  • filet — A kind of net or lace with a square mesh.
  • first — being before all others with respect to time, order, rank, importance, etc., used as the ordinal number of one: the first edition; the first vice president.
  • fixit — of, pertaining to, doing, or involving repairs, adjustments, or improvements: a fix-it shop; a political fix-it man.
  • fldxt — fluid extract
  • fleet — an arm of the sea; inlet.
  • flintAustin, 1812–86, U.S. physician: founder of Bellevue and Buffalo medical colleges.
  • flipt — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of flip.
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