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9-letter words that end in to

  • mutsuhito — 1852–1912, emperor of Japan 1867–1912.
  • neutretto — the neutrino associated with the muon
  • nonghetto — not belonging to the ghetto
  • nose into — the part of the face or facial region in humans and certain animals that contains the nostrils and the organs of smell and functions as the usual passageway for air in respiration: in humans it is a prominence in the center of the face formed of bone and cartilage, serving also to modify or modulate the voice.
  • not up to — not fit enough for
  • obbligato — (used as a musical direction) obligatory or indispensable; so important that it cannot be omitted.
  • olinguito — a small omnivorous South American procyonid mammal, Bassaricyon neblina, inhabiting the mountain forests of Colombia and Ecuador: the most recent mammal to be discovered and the smallest member of family Procyonidae (the raccoons)
  • pack into — If someone packs a lot of something into a limited space or time, they fit a lot into it.
  • palo alto — a city in W California, SE of San Francisco.
  • panchetto — a Renaissance chair having three splayed legs and a shaped back joined into a solid wooden seat.
  • pile into — crowd inside: a vehicle
  • pizzicato — played by plucking the strings with the finger instead of using the bow, as on a violin.
  • plow into — an agricultural implement used for cutting, lifting, turning over, and partly pulverizing soil.
  • plug into — If you plug into a computer system, you are able to use it or see the information stored on it.
  • pour into — If you pour money or supplies into an activity or organization, or if it pours in, a lot of money or supplies are given in order to do the activity or help the organization.
  • pull into — When a vehicle or driver pulls into a place, the vehicle moves into the place and stops there.
  • put it to — to move or place (anything) so as to get it into or out of a specific location or position: to put a book on the shelf.
  • put on to — put in touch with
  • put up to — If you put someone up to something wrong or foolish or something which they would not normally do, you suggest that they do it and you encourage them to do it.
  • read into — If you read a meaning into something, you think it is there although it may not actually be there.
  • rigoletto — an opera (1851) with music by Giuseppe Verdi.
  • sail into — an area of canvas or other fabric extended to the wind in such a way as to transmit the force of the wind to an assemblage of spars and rigging mounted firmly on a hull, raft, iceboat, etc., so as to drive it along.
  • sanbenito — an ornamented garment worn by a condemned heretic at an auto-da-fé.
  • sarmiento — a city in E Argentina, a suburb of Buenos Aires.
  • sausalito — a town in W California on San Fransisco Bay: resort; formerly artist's colony.
  • scarpetto — a type of shoe traditionally worn by Alpine climbers
  • sgraffito — a technique of ornamentation in which a surface layer of paint, plaster, slip, etc., is incised to reveal a ground of contrasting color.
  • simionato — Giulietta [joo-lyet-tah] /dʒuˈlyɛt tɑ/ (Show IPA), 1910–2010, Italian mezzo-soprano.
  • soffritto — Also called battuto. Italian Cookery. a base for stews and soups, consisting of hot oil, butter, or fat in which a chopped onion or crushed garlic clove has been browned, often with the addition of chopped parsley, celery, and carrot.
  • sostenuto — sustained or prolonged in the time value of the tones.
  • step into — enter
  • supermoto — a form of motorcycle racing in which powerful motorbikes are raced over a circuit that is part tarmac and part dirt
  • talk into — persuade
  • tear into — to pull apart or in pieces by force, especially so as to leave ragged or irregular edges. Synonyms: rend, rip, rive. Antonyms: mend, repair, sew.
  • telephoto — noting or pertaining to telephotography.
  • thanks to — to express gratitude, appreciation, or acknowledgment to: She thanked them for their hospitality.
  • thereinto — into that place or thing.
  • thereunto — to that place, thing, etc.
  • thitherto — up to that time; until then.
  • tuck into — to put into a small, close, or concealing place: Tuck the money into your wallet.
  • tumble to — to fall helplessly down, end over end, as by losing one's footing, support, or equilibrium; plunge headlong: to tumble down the stairs.
  • tupungato — a mountain between Argentina and Chile, in the Andes. About 22,310 feet (6800 meters).
  • vaporetto — a motorboat used as a passenger bus along a canal in Venice, Italy.
  • walk into — If you walk into an unpleasant situation, you become involved in it without expecting to, especially because you have been careless.
  • whereinto — Into which.
  • whereunto — (archaic or formal, interrogative) unto what; to what purpose.
  • wirephoto — a device for transmitting photographs over distances by wire. a photograph so transmitted.
  • worm into — Zoology. any of numerous long, slender, soft-bodied, legless, bilaterally symmetrical invertebrates, including the flatworms, roundworms, acanthocephalans, nemerteans, gordiaceans, and annelids.
  • yoshihito — 1879–1926, emperor of Japan 1912–26 (son of Mutsuhito).
  • zucchetto — a small, round skullcap worn by Roman Catholic ecclesiastics, a priest's being black, a bishop's violet, a cardinal's red, and the pope's white; calotte.
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