6-letter words containing b, s, t
- bested — of the highest quality, excellence, or standing: the best work; the best students.
- bestie — Your bestie is your best friend.
- bestir — to cause (oneself, or, rarely, another person) to become active; rouse
- bestow — To bestow something on someone means to give or present it to them.
- bestud — to set with studs
- betise — folly or lack of perception
- betoss — to toss about
- bisect — If something long and thin bisects an area or line, it divides the area or line in half.
- bister — a yellowish-brown to dark-brown pigment made from the soot of burned wood
- bistre — a transparent water-soluble brownish-yellow pigment made by boiling the soot of wood, used for pen and wash drawings
- bistro — A bistro is a small, informal restaurant or a bar where food is served.
- biters — a person or animal that bites, especially habitually or viciously: That dog is a biter.
- bitser — a mongrel dog
- blast- — blasto-
- blasty — blustery
- bluest — the pure color of a clear sky; the primary color between green and violet in the visible spectrum, an effect of light with a wavelength between 450 and 500 nm.
- bootes — a constellation in the N hemisphere lying near Ursa Major and containing the first magnitude star Arcturus
- bosket — a clump of small trees or bushes; thicket
- bosset — either of the rudimentary antlers found in young deer
- boston — a card game for four, played with two packs
- bratsk — city in SC Siberian Russia, on the Angara River: pop. 258,000
- breast — A woman's breasts are the two soft, round parts on her chest that can produce milk to feed a baby.
- brotus — broadus.
- browst — a brewing (of ale, tea, etc)
- bruits — to voice abroad; rumor (used chiefly in the passive and often followed by about): The report was bruited through the village.
- brutus — Lucius Junius (ˈluːʃəs ˈdʒuːnɪəs). late 6th century bc, Roman statesman who ousted the tyrant Tarquin (509) and helped found the Roman republic
- busket — a bouquet
- busted — caught out doing something wrong and therefore in trouble
- bustee — a small settlement; village.
- buster — a person or thing destroying something as specified
- bustic — a small American tree, Dipholis salicifolia
- bustle — If someone bustles somewhere, they move there in a hurried way, often because they are very busy.
- bypast — past; bygone
- cubist — A Cubist is an artist who painted in the style of Cubism.
- cubits — Plural form of cubit, an ancient unit of measurement.
- dbfast — dBASE dialect for MS-DOS and MS-Windows.
- debits — Plural form of debit.
- debuts — Plural form of debut.
- doubts — Plural form of doubt.
- gatsby — (South Africa) A snack consisting of a baguette filled with french fries, sauce, and other ingredients.
- habits — Plural form of habit.
- mobots — Plural form of mobot.
- nesbit — E(dith) 1858–1924, English children's author, novelist, and poet.
- netbsd — (operating system) An open source Unix clone that aims for platform independance by a clean separation between the hardware and the the kernel. It has been ported to many platforms from embedded systems to 64-bit computers.
- oblast — (in Russia and the Soviet Union) an administrative division corresponding to an autonomous province.
- oboist — a player of the oboe.
- obtest — to invoke as witness.
- obtuse — not quick or alert in perception, feeling, or intellect; not sensitive or observant; dull.
- orbits — the curved path, usually elliptical, described by a planet, satellite, spaceship, etc., around a celestial body, as the sun.
- osbert — a male given name: from Old English words meaning “god” and “bright.”.