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6-letter words containing f, e, t

  • fealty — History/Historical. fidelity to a lord. the obligation or the engagement to be faithful to a lord, usually sworn to by a vassal.
  • feasts — Plural form of feast.
  • feater — apt; skillful; dexterous.
  • featly — suitably; appropriately.
  • feints — the impure spirit produced in the first and last stages of the distillation of whiskey.
  • feisty — full of animation, energy, or courage; spirited; spunky; plucky: The champion is faced with a feisty challenger.
  • felted — simple past tense and past participle of feel.
  • felter — To clot or mat together like felt.
  • fembot — (science fiction) A robot in female form.
  • femto- — prefix
  • fenton — James (Martin). born 1949, British poet, journalist, and critic. His poetry includes the collections A German Requiem (1980) and Out of Danger (1993)
  • ferity — a wild, untamed, or uncultivated state.
  • fermatPierre de [pyer duh] /pyɛr də/ (Show IPA), 1601–65, French mathematician.
  • fernet — A particular type of Italian amaro.
  • ferret — a narrow tape or ribbon, as of silk or cotton, used for binding, trimming, etc.
  • festal — pertaining to or befitting a feast, festival, holiday, or gala occasion.
  • fester — to form pus; generate purulent matter; suppurate.
  • fetcht — (archaic) Alternative form of fetched.
  • fether — Archaic form of feather.
  • fetial — concerned with declarations of war and treaties of peace: fetial law.
  • fetich — an object regarded with awe as being the embodiment or habitation of a potent spirit or as having magical potency.
  • feting — a day of celebration; holiday: The Fourth of July is a great American fete.
  • fetish — an object regarded with awe as being the embodiment or habitation of a potent spirit or as having magical potency.
  • fetors — Plural form of fetor.
  • fetter — a chain or shackle placed on the feet.
  • fettle — state; condition: in fine fettle.
  • feutre — a rest for a lance or spear, attached to a knight's saddle
  • fewest — not many but more than one: Few artists live luxuriously.
  • fichte — Johann Gottlieb [yoh-hahn gawt-leep] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈgɔt lip/ (Show IPA), 1762–1814, German philosopher.
  • fidget — to move about restlessly, nervously, or impatiently.
  • fielty — The state of owing one's service (particularly of a soldier, warrior, knight, rider) to a king, queen, or other ruler.
  • fiesta — any festival or festive celebration.
  • fiftie — Obsolete spelling of fifty (50).
  • filate — threadlike.
  • filets — Plural form of filet.
  • fillet — Cookery. a boneless cut or slice of meat or fish, especially the beef tenderloin. a piece of veal or other meat boned, rolled, and tied for roasting.
  • filter — any substance, as cloth, paper, porous porcelain, or a layer of charcoal or sand, through which liquid or gas is passed to remove suspended impurities or to recover solids.
  • filtre — Obsolete form of filter.
  • finestfines. Mining. crushed ore sufficiently fine to pass through a given screen. Compare short (def 29e). Agriculture. the fine bits of corn kernel knocked off during handling of the grain.
  • finite — compact
  • finlet — a small, detached ray of a fin in certain fishes, as mackerels.
  • firtle — (Cumbrian dialect) To mess around, to waste time.
  • fisted — Chiefly South Midland and Southern U.S. a small mongrel dog, especially one that is ill-tempered; cur; mutt.
  • fister — Someone partakes in fisting.
  • fitche — pointed
  • fitted — adapted or suited; appropriate: This water isn't fit for drinking. A long-necked giraffe is fit for browsing treetops.
  • fitten — suitable; appropriate.
  • fitter — the manner in which a thing fits: The fit was perfect.
  • fixate — to fix; make stable or stationary.
  • flathe — Flan.
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