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6-letter words that end in t

  • detort — to twist, pervert, or distort
  • devast — (obsolete) To devastate.
  • devest — to undress; strip
  • devout — A devout person has deep religious beliefs.
  • dewitt — to hang unlawfully; to lynch
  • dicast — (in ancient Athens) a juror in the popular courts chosen by lot from a list of citizens
  • dictat — Misspelling of diktat.
  • didact — a person who is didactic
  • didn't — Didn't is the usual spoken form of 'did not'.
  • digest — to convert (food) in the alimentary canal into absorbable form for assimilation into the system.
  • diglot — bilingual.
  • diktat — a harsh, punitive settlement or decree imposed unilaterally on a defeated nation, political party, etc.
  • dimout — a dimming or reduction of the night lighting, as in a city, to make it less easily visible, as to enemy aircraft
  • dimwit — a stupid or slow-thinking person.
  • dinant — a town in S Belgium, on the River Meuse below steep limestone cliffs: 11th-century citadel: famous in the Middle Ages for fine brassware, known as dinanderie: tourism, metalwork, biscuits. Pop: 12 719 (2004 est)
  • dipmet — Diploma in Metallurgy
  • dipnet — Alt form dip net.
  • diquat — a yellow crystalline substance, C 12 H 12 Br 2 N 2 , used as a selective postemergence herbicide to control weeds on noncrop land and for aquatic weed control.
  • direct — to manage or guide by advice, helpful information, instruction, etc.: He directed the company through a difficult time.
  • direst — causing or involving great fear or suffering; dreadful; terrible: a dire calamity.
  • disect — Misspelling of dissect.
  • disert — (obsolete) eloquent.
  • divert — to turn aside or from a path or course; deflect.
  • divest — to strip of clothing, ornament, etc.: The wind divested the trees of their leaves.
  • do out — decorate
  • docent — privatdocent.
  • docket — Also called trial docket. a list of cases in court for trial, or the names of the parties who have cases pending.
  • doesnt — Misspelling of doesn't.
  • dog it — a domesticated canid, Canis familiaris, bred in many varieties.
  • dolent — (archaic) Sad, sorrowful.
  • domettAlfred, 1811–87, British government official and poet: prime minister of New Zealand 1862.
  • donnot — a person that does very little or nothing; a lazy person
  • doocot — (Scotland) dovecote.
  • dooket — a dovecote
  • dopant — an impurity added intentionally in a very small, controlled amount to a pure semiconductor to change its electrical properties: Arsenic is a dopant for silicon.
  • dopest — Superlative form of dope.
  • dorpat — German name of Tartu.
  • dorset — an Eskimo culture that flourished from a.d. 100–1000 in the central and eastern regions of arctic North America.
  • doucet — (obsolete except in dialects) A sweetened dish.
  • dought — a simple past tense of dow1 .
  • dowset — Obsolete form of doucet.
  • dracut — a city in NE Massachusetts.
  • drapet — a cloth
  • dreamt — a simple past tense and past participle of dream.
  • drempt — Nonstandard spelling of dreamt.
  • driest — free from moisture or excess moisture; not moist; not wet: a dry towel; dry air.
  • dryest — Superlative form of dry.
  • drylot — a bare outdoor enclosure for livestock
  • dryout — the process or an instance of drying out: applying compost to the garden soil to retard dryout.
  • dublet — Obsolete form of doublet.
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