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6-letter words containing g, t

  • groats — a silver coin of England, equal to four pennies, issued from 1279 to 1662.
  • groete — Gerhard [Dutch khey-rahrt;; English gair-hahrt] /Dutch ˈxeɪ rɑrt;; English ˈgɛər hɑrt/ (Show IPA), (Gerardus Magnus) 1340–84, Dutch religious reformer, educator, and author: founder of the order of Brethren of the Common Life.
  • gromet — Alternative form of grommet.
  • groote — Gerhard [Dutch khey-rahrt;; English gair-hahrt] /Dutch ˈxeɪ rɑrt;; English ˈgɛər hɑrt/ (Show IPA), (Gerardus Magnus) 1340–84, Dutch religious reformer, educator, and author: founder of the order of Brethren of the Common Life.
  • groton — a city in SE Connecticut.
  • grotto — a cave or cavern.
  • grotty — seedy; wretched; dirty.
  • grouts — a thin, coarse mortar poured into various narrow cavities, as masonry joints or rock fissures, to fill them and consolidate the adjoining objects into a solid mass.
  • grouty — sulky; surly; bad-tempered.
  • grovet — a wrestling hold in which a wrestler in a kneeling position grips the head of his kneeling opponent with one arm and forces his shoulders down with the other
  • growth — the act or process, or a manner of growing; development; gradual increase.
  • grunth — the sacred scripture of the Sikhs, original text compiled 1604.
  • grunts — Plural form of grunt.
  • grunty — Making grunting sounds.
  • grutch — To murmur, complain.
  • guests — Plural form of guest.
  • guglet — goglet.
  • guilts — the fact or state of having committed an offense, crime, violation, or wrong, especially against moral or penal law; culpability: He admitted his guilt.
  • guilty — having committed an offense, crime, violation, or wrong, especially against moral or penal law; justly subject to a certain accusation or penalty; culpable: The jury found her guilty of murder.
  • guitar — a stringed musical instrument with a long, fretted neck, a flat, somewhat violinlike body, and typically six strings, which are plucked with the fingers or with a plectrum.
  • guitry — Sacha [sah-shuh;; French sa-sha] /ˈsɑ ʃə;; French saˈʃa/ (Show IPA), 1885–1957, French actor and dramatist, born in Russia.
  • guizot — François Pierre Guillaume [frahn-swa pyer gee-yohm] /frɑ̃ˈswa pyɛr giˈyoʊm/ (Show IPA), 1787–1874, French historian and statesman.
  • gullet — the esophagus.
  • gumnut — the hardened seed container of the gum tree Eucalyptus gummifera
  • gunite — a mixture of cement, sand or crushed slag, and water, sprayed over reinforcement as a lightweight concrete construction.
  • gunterEdmund, 1581–1626, English mathematician and astronomer: inventor of various measuring instruments and scales.
  • guntur — a city in E Andhra Pradesh, in SE India.
  • gurlet — a pickaxe with a double-sided head, one side being a sharp point and the other side being a cutting edge
  • gurnet — Alternative form of gurnard (fish).
  • gusset — a small, triangular piece of material inserted into a shirt, shoe, etc., to improve the fit or for reinforcement. Compare godet (def 1), gore3 (def 1).
  • gustaf — Gustaf V1858-1950; king of Sweden (1907-50)
  • gustav — (Gustaf Adolf) 1882–1973, king of Sweden 1950–73 (son of Gustavus V).
  • gusted — Archaic. flavor or taste.
  • gustie — tasty or savoury
  • gustonPhilip, 1912–80, U.S. abstract expressionist painter, born in Canada.
  • gutful — an amount of food that fills the stomach
  • gutser — a person who eats too much and greedily.
  • guttae — a drop, or something resembling one.
  • gutted — the alimentary canal, especially between the pylorus and the anus, or some portion of it. Compare foregut, midgut, hindgut.
  • gutter — a channel at the side or in the middle of a road or street, for leading off surface water.
  • guttle — To put into the gut; to eat voraciously; to swallow greedily; to gorge, gormandize.
  • gutzer — a bad fall or tumble
  • guyots — Plural form of guyot.
  • gyrant — having a circular movement
  • gyrate — to move in a circle or spiral, or around a fixed point; whirl.
  • gyttja — a mud rich in organic matter, found at the bottom or near the shore of certain lakes.
  • hagbut — harquebus.
  • hating — to dislike intensely or passionately; feel extreme aversion for or extreme hostility toward; detest: to hate the enemy; to hate bigotry.
  • hatpeg — a peg on which to hang a hat
  • haught — (obsolete) Haughty.
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