5-letter words containing e, t, r
- preta — a wandering or disturbed ghost.
- 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
- rebut — to refute by evidence or argument.
- recit — narrative
- recta — a plural of rectum.
- recti — plural of rectus.
- recto — a right-hand page of an open book or manuscript; the front of a leaf (opposed to verso).
- recut — to penetrate with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument or object: He cut his finger.
- reest — to cure, smoke, or dry (meat or fish).
- refit — to fit, prepare, or equip again.
- reist — (of a horse) to stop or refuse to go; balk.
- reith — John (Charles Walsham), 1st Baron. 1889–1971, British public servant: first general manager (1922–27) and first director general (1927–38) of the BBC
- remit — to transmit or send (money, a check, etc.) to a person or place, usually in payment.
- rente — revenue or income, or the instrument evidencing a right to such periodic receipts.
- rents — an opening made by rending or tearing; slit; fissure.
- repot — to transfer (a plant) to another, especially larger, pot.
- resat — past and past participle of resit
- reset — to set again: to reset an alarm clock; to reset a broken bone.
- resht — Rasht.
- resit — a test or examination that is retaken.
- resto — a restored antique, vintage car, etc
- restr — restaurant
- resty — having the characteristic of being disposed to rest
- 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.
- retch — to make efforts to vomit.
- retem — a shrub, Retama raetam, of Syria and Arabia, having white flowers: said to be the juniper of the Old Testament.
- retia — a pierced plate on an astrolabe, having projections whose points correspond to the fixed stars.
- retie — to bind, fasten, or attach with a cord, string, or the like, drawn together and knotted: to tie a tin can on a dog's tail.
- retox — to embark on a binge of drink, drugs, or unhealthy food after a period of abstinence
- retro — retroactive: retro pay.
- retry — to attempt to do or accomplish: Try it before you say it's simple.
- revet — to face, as an embankment, with masonry or other material.
- rewet — moistened, covered, or soaked with water or some other liquid: wet hands.
- rieti — Vittorio [veet-taw-ryaw] /vitˈtɔ ryɔ/ (Show IPA), 1898–1994, U.S. composer, born in Italy.
- rivet — a metal pin for passing through holes in two or more plates or pieces to hold them together, usually made with a head at one end, the other end being hammered into a head after insertion.
- roget — Peter Mark, 1779–1869, English physician and author of a thesaurus.
- roset — resin; rosin.
- roter — routine; a fixed, habitual, or mechanical course of procedure: the rote of daily living.
- rotte — rote2 .
- route — a course, way, or road for passage or travel: What's the shortest route to Boston?
- sergt — Sergeant