6-letter words containing e, t, o
- hosted — a person who receives or entertains guests at home or elsewhere: the host at a theater party.
- hostel — Also called youth hostel. an inexpensive, supervised lodging place for young people on bicycle trips, hikes, etc.
- hoster — (computing, Internet, neologism) A provider of online hosting, especially web hosting.
- hostie — (obsolete, Catholicism) the consecrated bread or wafer of the Eucharist, host.
- hotbed — a bottomless, boxlike, usually glass-covered structure and the bed of earth it covers, heated typically by fermenting manure or electrical cables, for growing plants out of season.
- hotels — Plural form of hotel.
- hotere — Ralph. 1931–2013, New Zealand artist of Māori origin, noted esp for his minimalist Black Paintings
- hotien — Wade-Giles. Hotan.
- hotkey — an assigned key or sequence of keys programmed to execute a command or perform a specific task in a software application: On Windows computers, the hotkey Ctrl+S can be used to quickly save a file.
- hotted — having or giving off heat; having a high temperature: a hot fire; hot coffee.
- hotter — to vibrate up and down; shake, totter, or rattle, as a plate on a shelf.
- hottie — a sexually attractive person.
- houlet — An owlet.
- howlet — an owl or owlet.
- hyeto- — indicating rain
- i vote — If you say 'I vote that' a particular thing should happen, you are suggesting that this is what should happen.
- ignote — (obsolete) unknown.
- intoed — having inwardly turned toes.
- intone — to utter with a particular tone or voice modulation.
- iodate — Chemistry. a salt of iodic acid, as sodium iodate, NaIO 3 .
- iolite — cordierite.
- ireton — Henry. 1611–51, English Parliamentarian general in the Civil War; son-in-law of Oliver Cromwell. His plan for a constitutional monarchy was rejected by Charles I (1647), whose death warrant he signed; lord deputy of Ireland (1650–51)
- ithome — Mount, a mountain in SW Greece, in SW Peloponnesus. 2630 feet (802 meters).
- jethro — the father-in-law of Moses. Ex. 3:1.
- jetsom — goods cast overboard deliberately, as to lighten a vessel or improve its stability in an emergency, which sink where jettisoned or are washed ashore.
- jetton — an inscribed counter or token.
- joliet — Louis [loo-ee;; French lwee] /ˈlu i;; French lwi/ (Show IPA), 1645–1700, French-Canadian explorer, born in Quebec.
- jolted — Simple past tense and past participle of jolt.
- jolter — One who, or that which, jolts.
- jostle — to bump, push, shove, brush against, or elbow roughly or rudely.
- jotted — to write or mark down quickly or briefly (usually followed by down): Jot down his license number.
- jotter — a person who jots things down.
- jowett — Benjamin, 1817–93, English educator and Greek scholar.
- kapote — a long coat formerly worn by male Jews of eastern Europe and now worn chiefly by very Orthodox or Hasidic Jews.
- keaton — Buster (Joseph Francis Keaton) 1895–1966, U.S. film comedian and director.
- kenton — Stan(ley Newcomb) 1912–79, U.S. jazz composer, pianist, and bandleader.
- ketone — any of a class of organic compounds containing a carbonyl group, CO, attached to two alkyl groups, as CH 3 COCH 3 or CH 3 COC 2 H 5 .
- ketose — a monosaccharide that contains a ketone group.
- klepto — (slang) a kleptomaniac.
- kotare — a small greenish-blue kingfisher, Halcyon sanctus, found in New Zealand, Australia, and some Pacific islands to the north
- koweit — Kuwait.
- leanto — a shack or shed supported at one side by trees or posts and having an inclined roof.
- lector — a lecturer in a college or university.
- legato — In a smooth, flowing manner, without breaks between notes.
- lentor — Slowness, sluggishness.
- lepto- — fine, slender, or slight
- lepton — an aluminum coin of modern Greece until the euro was adopted, the 100th part of a drachma.
- let go — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
- let on — to allow or permit: to let him escape.
- leyton — a former borough in SE England, near London: now part of Waltham Forest.