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6-letter words containing d, a, t

  • batted — Sports. the wooden club used in certain games, as baseball and cricket, to strike the ball. a racket, especially one used in badminton or table tennis. a whip used by a jockey. the act of using a club or racket in a game. the right or turn to use a club or racket.
  • beated — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of beat.
  • blated — bleat.
  • brandt — Bill, full name William Brandt. 1905–83, British photographer. His photographic books include The English at Home (1936) and Perspectives of Nudes (1961)
  • cadent — having cadence; rhythmic
  • cadets — Plural form of cadet.
  • canted — a salient angle.
  • carted — Convey or put in a cart or similar vehicle.
  • casted — having or belonging to a caste
  • cathed — Past participle of cath.
  • catted — Simple past tense and past participle of cat.
  • cedant — The cedant is the person or company that cedes business to another person or company.
  • coated — covered with an outer layer, film, etc
  • crated — Simple past tense and past participle of crate.
  • d-flat — C#
  • dacite — an igneous, volcanic rock characteristically light in colour with relatively high silica content
  • dacoit — (in India and Myanmar) a member of a gang of armed robbers
  • dactyl — a metrical foot of three syllables, one long followed by two short (– ◡ ◡)
  • dafter — senseless, stupid, or foolish.
  • daftie — a foolish person
  • daftly — senseless, stupid, or foolish.
  • dainty — If you describe a movement, person, or object as dainty, you mean that they are small, delicate, and pretty.
  • dakoit — (in India and Burma) a member of a class of criminals who engage in organized robbery and murder.
  • dakota — a former territory of the US: divided into the states of North Dakota and South Dakota in 1889
  • daktyl — Dactyl.
  • daleth — the fourth letter of the Hebrew alphabet (ד), transliterated as d or, when final, dh
  • dalton — John. 1766–1844, English chemist and physicist, who formulated the modern form of the atomic theory and the law of partial pressures for gases. He also gave the first accurate description of colour blindness, from which he suffered
  • dammit — a contracted form of damn it
  • damnit — (especially, southern US) misspelling of dammit.
  • dangit — Dang it; used to express irritation or disappointment.
  • danite — of the Hebrew tribe of Dan
  • danton — Georges Jacques (ʒɔrʒ ʒɑk). 1759–94, French revolutionary leader: a founder member of the Committee of Public Safety (1793) and minister of justice (1792–94). He was overthrown by Robespierre and guillotined
  • darest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of dare.
  • darted — a small, slender missile that is pointed at one end and usually feathered at the other and is propelled by hand, as in the game of darts, or by a blowgun when used as a weapon.
  • darter — any aquatic bird of the genus Anhinga and family Anhingidae, of tropical and subtropical inland waters, having a long slender neck and bill: order Pelecaniformes (pelicans, cormorants, etc)
  • dartle — to move swiftly and repeatedly
  • dartre — any skin disease characterized by scabby or flaky skin, such as herpes or eczema
  • dastur — a Parsee chief priest.
  • datary — the head of the dataria (deɪˈtɛərɪə ), the papal office that assesses candidates for benefices reserved to the Holy See
  • datcha — a Russian country house or villa.
  • daters — Plural form of dater.
  • dating — Dating agencies or services are for people who are trying to find a girlfriend or boyfriend.
  • dation — (rare, legal) The act of giving, granting or conferring (e.g. an office) but not liberal as a donation or gift.
  • dative — In the grammar of some languages, for example Latin, the dative, or the dative case, is the case used for a noun when it is the indirect object of a verb, or when it comes after some prepositions.
  • datong — a city in N Shanxi province, in NE China.
  • datums — Plural form of datum.
  • datura — any of various chiefly Indian solanaceous plants of the genus Datura, such as the moonflower and thorn apple, having large trumpet-shaped flowers, prickly pods, and narcotic properties
  • 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)
  • daunts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of daunt.
  • dauted — to caress.
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