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5-letter words containing f, t

  • staff — a group of persons, as employees, charged with carrying out the work of an establishment or executing some undertaking.
  • stiff — rigid or firm; difficult or impossible to bend or flex: a stiff collar.
  • stuff — the material of which anything is made: a hard, crystalline stuff.
  • swift — moving or capable of moving with great speed or velocity; fleet; rapid: a swift ship.
  • taffy — a chewy candy made of sugar or molasses boiled down, often with butter, nuts, etc.
  • tafia — a type of rum made in Haiti from lower grades of molasses, refuse sugar, or the like.
  • theft — the act of stealing; the wrongful taking and carrying away of the personal goods or property of another; larceny.
  • thelf — an archaic contraction of the elf
  • thief — a person who steals, especially secretly or without open force; one guilty of theft or larceny.
  • thoft — a bench in a boat upon which a rower sits
  • toefl — TOEFL is an English language examination which is often taken by foreign students who want to study at universities in English-speaking countries. TOEFL is an abbreviation of 'Test of English as a Foreign Language'.
  • toffs — a stylishly dressed, fashionable person, especially one who is or wants to be considered a member of the upper class.
  • toffy — taffy.
  • trayf — Judaism. tref.
  • treyf — Judaism. tref.
  • triff — very good indeed; terrific
  • tu fu — a.d. 712–770, Chinese poet.
  • tufty — abounding in tufts.
  • turfy — covered with or consisting of grassy turf.
  • unfit — not fit; not adapted or suited; unsuitable: He was unfit for his office.
  • utf-8 — (character)   (UCS transformation format 8) An ASCII-compatible multibyte Unicode and UCS encoding, used by Java and Plan 9. The Unicode character set occupies a 16-bit code space. The most obvious Unicode encoding (known as UCS-2) consists of a sequence of 16-bit words. Such strings can contain bytes like '\0' or '/' which have a special meaning in filenames and other C library function parameters. In addition, the majority of Unix tools expects ASCII files and can't read 16-bit words as characters without major modifications. For these reasons, UCS-2 is not a suitable external encoding of Unicode in filenames, text files, environment variables, etc. The ISO 10646 Universal Character Set (UCS), a superset of Unicode, occupies a 31-bit code space and the obvious UCS-4 encoding for it (a sequence of 32-bit words) has the same problems. The UTF-8 encoding of Unicode and UCS avoids the problems of fixed-length Unicode encodings because an ASCII file encoded in UTF is exactly same as the original ASCII file and all non-ASCII characters are guaranteed to have the most significant bit set (bit 0x80). This means that normal tools for text searching etc. work as expected. UTF-8 is defined in RFC 2279.
  • wafts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of waft.
  • wafty — Tending to waft; gaseous, insubstantial.
  • waift — Obsolete form of waif.
  • wefte — a forsaken child
  • wefts — Plural form of weft.
  • whift — a brief emission of air
  • wifty — Eccentric, silly, scatterbrained.
  • wtfpl — Do What the Fuck You Want to Public License
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