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6-letter words containing i, n, t, e

  • finlet — a small, detached ray of a fin in certain fishes, as mackerels.
  • fitten — suitable; appropriate.
  • genit. — genitive
  • gentil — gentle
  • get in — to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension.
  • gettin — Eye dialect of getting.
  • gunite — a mixture of cement, sand or crushed slag, and water, sprayed over reinforcement as a lightweight concrete construction.
  • henbit — a common weed, Lamium amplexicaule, of the mint family, having rounded leaves and small purplish flowers.
  • hentai — noting or pertaining to a subgenre of Japanese manga, anime, computer games, etc., characterized by explicit sexual themes and imagery.
  • hetian — Hotan.
  • hinted — Simple past tense and past participle of hint.
  • hinter — an indirect, covert, or helpful suggestion; clue: Give me a hint as to his identity.
  • hitmen — Plural form of hitman.
  • hotien — Wade-Giles. Hotan.
  • ignite — to set on fire; kindle.
  • ignote — (obsolete) unknown.
  • inbent — bent inwards
  • incent — to give incentives to: The government should incentivize the private sector to create jobs.
  • incept — to take in; ingest.
  • incest — sexual intercourse between closely related persons.
  • incite — to stir, encourage, or urge on; stimulate or prompt to action: to incite a crowd to riot.
  • indebt — (transitive, archaic) To bring into debt; to place under obligation.
  • indent — indentation
  • indite — to compose or write, as a poem.
  • inédit — unpublished writing
  • infect — to affect or contaminate (a person, organ, wound, etc.) with disease-producing germs.
  • infeft — officially in possession of heritable land
  • infelt — heartfelt; felt inwardly
  • infest — to live in or overrun to an unwanted degree or in a troublesome manner, especially as predatory animals or vermin do: Sharks infested the coastline.
  • ingate — gate1 (def 15).
  • ingest — to take, as food, into the body (opposed to egest).
  • inject — to force (a fluid) into a passage, cavity, or tissue: to inject a medicine into the veins.
  • inkjet — A device, particularly one used in the printing of documents, which propels tiny droplets of ink to the paper.
  • inlets — Plural form of inlet.
  • inmate — a person who is confined in a prison, hospital, etc.
  • innate — existing in one from birth; inborn; native: innate musical talent.
  • insect — any animal of the class Insecta, comprising small, air-breathing arthropods having the body divided into three parts (head, thorax, and abdomen), and having three pairs of legs and usually two pairs of wings.
  • insert — to put or place in: to insert a key in a lock.
  • insets — something inserted; insert.
  • instep — the arched upper surface of the human foot between the toes and the ankle.
  • intake — the place or opening at which a fluid is taken into a channel, pipe, etc.
  • intend — to have in mind as something to be done or brought about; plan: We intend to leave in a month.
  • intens — intensive
  • intent — something that is intended; purpose; design; intention: The original intent of the committee was to raise funds.
  • inter- — Inter- combines with adjectives and nouns to form adjectives indicating that something connects two or more places, things, or groups of people. For example, inter-governmental relations are relations between governments.
  • interj — Interjection.
  • intern — to restrict to or confine within prescribed limits, as prisoners of war, enemy aliens, or combat troops who take refuge in a neutral country.
  • inters — to place (a dead body) in a grave or tomb; bury.
  • intext — (archaic) The text of a book.
  • intice — Archaic spelling of entice.
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