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

  • milter — a male fish in breeding time.
  • minted — intent; purpose.
  • minter — One who mints.
  • minthe — a nymph who was changed into a mint plant by Persephone to protect her from Hades.
  • minuet — a slow, stately dance in triple meter, popular in the 17th and 18th centuries.
  • minute — the sixtieth part (1/60) of an hour; sixty seconds.
  • miseat — to eat unhealthily or improperly
  • misset — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • misted — Simple past tense and past participle of mist.
  • mister — a spray, nozzle, or similar device for misting plants.
  • mistle — (obsolete) mistletoe.
  • miters — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of miter.
  • mither — mother1 .
  • mitred — to bestow a miter upon, or raise to a rank entitled to it.
  • mitten — a hand covering enclosing the four fingers together and the thumb separately.
  • mixtec — a member of an Amerindian people of Guerrero, Oaxaca, and Puebla, Mexico.
  • moiety — a half.
  • motile — Biology. moving or capable of moving spontaneously: motile cells; motile spores.
  • motive — something that causes a person to act in a certain way, do a certain thing, etc.; incentive.
  • munite — to fortify.
  • mutein — a mutationally altered protein.
  • mutine — a rebel; mutineer
  • optime — (formerly at Cambridge University, England) a student taking second or third honors in the mathematical tripos. Compare wrangler (def 2).
  • permit — to allow to do something: Permit me to explain.
  • piment — wine flavoured with spices and honey
  • reemit — to send forth (liquid, light, heat, sound, particles, etc.); discharge.
  • remint — to mint again; to melt (existing coins) to make new coins
  • retime — the system of those sequential relations that any event has to any other, as past, present, or future; indefinite and continuous duration regarded as that in which events succeed one another.
  • retrim — to trim again
  • samite — a heavy silk fabric, sometimes interwoven with gold, worn in the Middle Ages.
  • semite — a member of any of various ancient and modern peoples originating in southwestern Asia, including the Akkadians, Canaanites, Phoenicians, Hebrews, and Arabs.
  • semmit — a vest
  • smilet — a little smile
  • smiter — to strike or hit hard, with or as with the hand, a stick, or other weapon: She smote him on the back with her umbrella.
  • somite — any of the longitudinal series of segments or parts into which the body of certain animals is divided; a metamere.
  • stymie — Golf. (on a putting green) an instance of a ball's lying on a direct line between the cup and the ball of an opponent about to putt.
  • tamein — a Burmese skirt or sari worn by women
  • tammie — a fabric of mixed fibers, constructed in plain weave and often heavily glazed, used in the manufacture of linings and undergarments.
  • tedium — the quality or state of being wearisome; irksomeness; tediousness.
  • telium — the cluster of spore cases of the rust and smut fungi, bearing teliospores.
  • telsim — Busch, ca 1966. Digital simulation.
  • tenaim — the terms of a Jewish marriage, as the wedding date, amount of the bride's dowry, etc., or an agreement containing such terms, made by the parents of an engaged couple at the engagement party.
  • theism — the belief in one God as the creator and ruler of the universe, without rejection of revelation (distinguished from deism).
  • themis — a goddess of order and justice
  • timber — the wood of growing trees suitable for structural uses.
  • timbre — Acoustics, Phonetics. the characteristic quality of a sound, independent of pitch and loudness, from which its source or manner of production can be inferred. Timbre depends on the relative strengths of the components of different frequencies, which are determined by resonance.
  • timely — occurring at a suitable time; seasonable; opportune; well-timed: a timely warning.
  • tmesis — the interpolation of one or more words between the parts of a compound word, as be thou ware for beware.
  • tmrcie — /tmerk'ee/, (MIT) A denizen of TMRC.
  • tommie — a male given name, form of Thomas.
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