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6-letter words that end in to

  • potato — Also called Irish potato, white potato. the edible tuber of a cultivated plant, Solanum tuberosum, of the nightshade family.
  • presto — quickly, rapidly, or immediately.
  • procto — proctosigmoidoscopy.
  • pronto — promptly; quickly.
  • pushto — Pashto.
  • quarto — a book size of about 9½ × 12 inches (24 × 30 cm), determined by folding printed sheets twice to form four leaves or eight pages. Symbol: 4to, 4°.
  • rabato — a wide, stiff collar of the 17th century, worn flat over the shoulders or open in front and standing at the back.
  • rebato — rabato.
  • rialto — an exchange or mart.
  • righto — Some people say righto to show that they agree with a suggestion that someone has made.
  • rubato — having certain notes arbitrarily lengthened while others are correspondingly shortened, or vice versa.
  • run to — If you run to someone, you go to them for help or to tell them something.
  • scamto — the argot of urban South African Black people
  • scioto — a river in central Ohio, flowing S to the Ohio River. 237 miles (382 km) long.
  • scottoRenata, born 1935, Italian operatic soprano.
  • scruto — the trapdoor of a stage
  • see to — to perceive with the eyes; look at.
  • set to — a usually brief, sharp fight or argument.
  • set-to — a usually brief, sharp fight or argument.
  • shinto — Also, Shintoism. the native religion of Japan, primarily a system of nature and ancestor worship.
  • shunto — the annual sessions of collective bargaining for wage increases sought by Japanese labor unions each spring.
  • smalto — colored glass or similar vitreous material used in mosaic.
  • sokoto — a state in NW Nigeria; formerly a sultanate and province; empire in the 19th century. 57,560 sq. mi. (149,066 sq. km).
  • solito — to be played in the customary manner
  • soweto — a group of townships in NE South Africa, SW of and administered by Johannesburg: constructed in the 1950s and early 1960s to provide housing and services for black Africans. 26 sq. mi. (67 sq. km).
  • spinto — having a lyric quality with a strong, dramatic element: a spinto soprano voice.
  • statto — a person who is preoccupied with the facts and figures of a particular subject, esp a sport
  • subito — (as a musical direction) suddenly; abruptly: subito pianissimo.
  • tenuto — Music. (of a note, chord, or rest) held to the full time value.
  • tomato — any of several plants belonging to the genus Lycopersicon, of the nightshade family, native to Mexico and Central and South America, especially the widely cultivated species L. lycopersicum, bearing a mildly acid, pulpy, usually red fruit eaten raw or cooked as a vegetable.
  • trento — Italian name of Trent.
  • veneto — Also, Venetia. Also called Veneto [ve-ne-taw] /ˈvɛ nɛ tɔ/ (Show IPA). a region in NE Italy. 7095 sq. mi. (18,375 sq. km).
  • vomito — the black vomit of yellow fever.
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