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6-letter words containing i, m, t

  • hitmen — Plural form of hitman.
  • humint — the gathering of political or military intelligence through secret agents.
  • humite — a mineral, transparent vitreous brown to orange in colour, found in the volcanic matter on Vesuvius
  • hytime — Hypermedia/Time-based Structuring Language: an emerging ANSI/ISO Standard from the SGML Users' Group's Special Interest Group on Hypertext and Multimedia (SIGhyper). A hypermedia extension of SGML.
  • imaret — (in Turkey) a hospice for pilgrims, travelers, etc.
  • immort — (internet, informal) An immortal; an administrator of a multi-user dungeon.
  • immute — (obsolete, transitive) To change or alter.
  • impact — the striking of one thing against another; forceful contact; collision: The impact of the colliding cars broke the windshield.
  • impart — to make known; tell; relate; disclose: to impart a secret.
  • impest — (obsolete, transitive) To afflict with pestilence.
  • import — to bring in (merchandise, commodities, workers, etc.) from a foreign country for use, sale, processing, reexport, or services.
  • impost — the point of springing of an arch; spring.
  • impute — to attribute or ascribe: The children imputed magical powers to the old woman.
  • inmate — a person who is confined in a prison, hospital, etc.
  • inmost — situated farthest within: the inmost recesses of the forest.
  • intima — the innermost membrane or lining of some organ or part, especially that of an artery, vein, or lymphatic.
  • intime — intimate; cozy.
  • intomb — entomb.
  • isthmi — a narrow strip of land, bordered on both sides by water, connecting two larger bodies of land.
  • iterum — again or afresh
  • ithomeMount, a mountain in SW Greece, in SW Peloponnesus. 2630 feet (802 meters).
  • katmaiMount, an active volcano in SW Alaska. 7500 feet (2286 meters).
  • kermit — a male given name.
  • ketmia — Alternative form of ketmie.
  • ketmie — (botany) A variety of African hibiscus, cultivated for the acid of its mucilage.
  • kismat — fate; destiny.
  • kismet — fate; destiny.
  • komati — a river in NE South Africa, N Swaziland, and SW Mozambique, flowing generally NE to the Indian Ocean. 500 miles (805 km) long.
  • kumite — (in martial arts) freestyle fighting.
  • latium — a country in ancient Italy, SE of Rome.
  • limits — Plural form of limit.
  • limpet — any of various marine gastropods with a low conical shell open beneath, often browsing on rocks at the shoreline and adhering when disturbed.
  • litmus — a blue coloring matter obtained from certain lichens, especially Roccella tinctoria. In alkaline solution litmus turns blue, in acid solution, red: widely used as a chemical indicator.
  • lomita — a town in SW California.
  • maftir — the concluding section of the portion of the Torah chanted or read in a Jewish service on the Sabbath and festivals.
  • magtig — (South Africa) my God! An expression of surprise.
  • makati — a city in Luzon, in the Philippines, east of Manila.
  • maloti — plural of loti.
  • manati — a city in N Puerto Rico.
  • manist — Ancestor-worshipper.
  • manita — (rare) The tree Chiranthodendron pentadactyllon, or the red, hand-like flower this tree produces.
  • manito — (among the Algonquian Indians) a supernatural being that controls nature; a spirit, deity, or object that possesses supernatural power.
  • manitu — (among the Algonquian Indians) a supernatural being that controls nature; a spirit, deity, or object that possesses supernatural power.
  • mantic — of or relating to divination.
  • mantid — mantis.
  • mantis — any of several predaceous insects of the order Mantidae, having a long prothorax and typically holding the forelegs in an upraised position as if in prayer.
  • maoist — the political, social, economic, and military theories and policies advocated by Mao Zedong, as those concerning revolutionary movements and guerrilla warfare.
  • marist — a member of a religious order founded in Lyons, France, in 1816 for missionary and educational work in the name of the Virgin Mary.
  • martin — (Oddone Colonna) 1368–1431, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1417–31.
  • mastic — Also called mastic tree, lentisk. a small Mediterranean tree, Pistacia lentiscus, of the cashew family, that is the source of an aromatic resin used in making varnish and adhesives.
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