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6-letter words containing d, a, t, e

  • daudet — Alphonse (alfɔ̃s). 1840–97, French novelist, short-story writer, and dramatist: noted particularly for his humorous sketches of Provençal life, as in Lettres de mon moulin (1866)
  • dauted — to caress.
  • dautie — a beloved person who is petted or pampered
  • dawted — Simple past tense and past participle of dawt.
  • de-rat — to remove rats from (a place)
  • dealth — (obsolete) A share dealt out.
  • dearth — If there is a dearth of something, there is not enough of it.
  • deaths — Plural form of death.
  • deathy — (obsolete) Relating to death.
  • debate — A debate is a discussion about a subject on which people have different views.
  • decant — If you decant a liquid into another container, you put it into another container.
  • defast — defaced or blemished
  • defeat — If you defeat someone, you win a victory over them in a battle, game, or contest.
  • deheat — (nonstandard,rare) To cool.
  • delate — (formerly) to bring a charge against; denounce; impeach
  • deltas — Plural form of delta.
  • demast — to remove the mast from (a boat)
  • demate — (transitive, aerospace) To move (a space shuttle orbiter) off the back of an aircraft that can carry it.
  • dental — pronounced or articulated with the tip of the tongue touching the backs of the upper teeth, as for t in French tout
  • depart — When something or someone departs from a place, they leave it and start a journey to another place.
  • derate — to assess the value of (some types of property, such as agricultural land) at a lower rate than others for local taxation
  • desalt — to remove salt from (esp. sea water)
  • desart — Obsolete spelling of desert.
  • detach — If you detach one thing from another that it is fixed to, you remove it. If one thing detaches from another, it becomes separated from it.
  • detail — The details of something are its individual features or elements.
  • detain — When people such as the police detain someone, they keep them in a place under their control.
  • devast — (obsolete) To devastate.
  • dilate — to make wider or larger; cause to expand.
  • dimate — (language)   Depot Installed Maintenance Automatic Test Equipment. A language for programming automatic test equipment. It Runs on the RCA 301.
  • doated — dote.
  • doater — a fully mature harp seal.
  • dogate — the office of a doge
  • donate — to present as a gift, grant, or contribution; make a donation of, as to a fund or cause: to donate used clothes to the Salvation Army.
  • dotage — a decline of mental faculties, especially as associated with old age; senility.
  • drapet — a cloth
  • dreamt — a simple past tense and past participle of dream.
  • duarte — a city in SW California.
  • ebitda — earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization
  • elated — Extremely happy and excited; delighted; pleased.
  • endart — (obsolete, rare) To throw or shoot out like a dart.
  • fadeth — Archaic third-person singular form of fade.
  • farted — Simple past tense and past participle of fart.
  • fasted — Simple past tense and past participle of fast.
  • fatted — having too much flabby tissue; corpulent; obese: a fat person.
  • gadget — a mechanical contrivance or device; any ingenious article.
  • gadite — a member of the tribe of Gad.
  • gaited — having a specified gait (usually used in combination): slow-gaited; heavy-gaited oxen.
  • gasted — to terrify or frighten.
  • gedact — a flutelike stopped metal diapason organ pipe
  • goated — Simple past tense and past participle of goat.
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