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5-letter words containing a, t, e

  • quate — (Scotland) quiet.
  • ramet — an individual of a clone.
  • rated — the amount of a charge or payment with reference to some basis of calculation: a high rate of interest on loans.
  • ratel — a badgerlike carnivore, Mellivora capensis, of Africa and India.
  • rater — a person who makes rates or ratings.
  • rates — the amount of a charge or payment with reference to some basis of calculation: a high rate of interest on loans.
  • rathe — Archaic. growing, blooming, or ripening early in the year or season.
  • react — to act in response to an agent or influence: How did the audience react to the speech?
  • reata — a lariat.
  • reate — a type of crowfoot
  • recta — a plural of rectum.
  • resat — past and past participle of resit
  • retag — to tag again
  • retax — a sum of money demanded by a government for its support or for specific facilities or services, levied upon incomes, property, sales, etc.
  • retia — a pierced plate on an astrolabe, having projections whose points correspond to the fixed stars.
  • saite — a native or citizen of Saïs.
  • sated — to satisfy (any appetite or desire) fully.
  • satem — belonging to or consisting of those branches of the Indo-European family in which alveolar or palatal fricatives, as the sounds (s) or (sh), developed in ancient times from Proto-Indo-European palatal stops: the satem branches are Indo-Iranian, Armenian, Slavic, Baltic, and Albanian.
  • sates — to satisfy (any appetite or desire) fully.
  • satie — Erik Alfred Leslie [e-reek al-fred les-lee] /ɛˈrik alˈfrɛd lɛsˈli/ (Show IPA), 1866–1925, French composer.
  • saute — cooked or browned in a pan containing a small quantity of butter, oil, or other fat.
  • sceat — a silver Anglo-Saxon coin of the 7th and 8th centuries, sometimes including an amount of gold.
  • seato — an organization formed in Manila (1954), comprising Australia, Great Britain, France, New Zealand, Pakistan, the Philippines, Thailand, and the United States, for collective defense against aggression in southeastern Asia and the southwestern Pacific: abolished in 1977.
  • septa — plural of septum.
  • setae — a stiff hair; bristle or bristlelike part.
  • setal — a stiff hair; bristle or bristlelike part.
  • skate — a person; fellow: He's a good skate.
  • skeatWalter William, 1835–1912, English philologist and lexicographer.
  • slate — a fine-grained rock formed by the metamorphosis of clay, shale, etc., that tends to split along parallel cleavage planes, usually at an angle to the planes of stratification.
  • spate — a sudden, almost overwhelming, outpouring: a spate of angry words.
  • stade — a period of time represented by a glacial deposit.
  • staelMadame de (Baronne de Staël-Holstein) 1766–1817, French novelist, essayist, poet, and philosopher.
  • stage — a single step or degree in a process; a particular phase, period, position, etc., in a process, development, or series.
  • stake — something that is wagered in a game, race, or contest.
  • stale — not fresh; vapid or flat, as beverages; dry or hardened, as bread.
  • stane — stone.
  • stare — to gaze fixedly and intently, especially with the eyes wide open.
  • state — the condition of a person or thing, as with respect to circumstances or attributes: a state of health.
  • stave — one of the thin, narrow, shaped pieces of wood that form the sides of a cask, tub, or similar vessel.
  • stead — the place of a person or thing as occupied by a successor or substitute: The nephew of the queen came in her stead.
  • steak — a slice of meat or fish, especially beef, cooked by broiling, frying, etc.
  • steal — to take (the property of another or others) without permission or right, especially secretly or by force: A pickpocket stole his watch.
  • steam — water in the form of an invisible gas or vapor.
  • stean — an earthenware vessel made of clay or stone, originally made for holding liquid
  • stela — stele (defs 1–3).
  • sweat — to perspire, especially freely or profusely.
  • ta'en — taken.
  • taber — a small drum formerly used to accompany oneself on a pipe or fife.
  • tabes — a gradually progressive emaciation.
  • table — an article of furniture consisting of a flat, slablike top supported on one or more legs or other supports: a kitchen table; an operating table; a pool table.
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