6-letter words containing i, t, p, e
- pinnet — a pinnacle
- pinter — Harold, 1930–2008, English playwright.
- pintle — a pin or bolt, especially one on which something turns, as the gudgeon of a hinge.
- piolet — an ice ax used in mountaineering.
- pioted — pied
- piquet — a card game played by two persons with a pack of 32 cards, the cards from deuces to sixes being excluded.
- pirate — software pirate
- pisted — marked off into pistes
- pitied — sympathetic or kindly sorrow evoked by the suffering, distress, or misfortune of another, often leading one to give relief or aid or to show mercy: to feel pity for astarving child.
- pitier — a person who pities.
- pities — sympathetic or kindly sorrow evoked by the suffering, distress, or misfortune of another, often leading one to give relief or aid or to show mercy: to feel pity for astarving child.
- pitted — (of fruit) having the pit removed: a pitted olive.
- pitten — placed; put
- pitter — to make a pattering sound
- pklite — (compression, tool) An executable file compression utility for MS-DOS from PKWARE, Inc.. PKLITE compresses the body of the executable and adds a small, fast decompress routine in the header. In many cases it performs better than lzexe. With headpack the output is smaller and cannot be decompressed.
- podite — an arthropod limb.
- poetic — possessing the qualities or charm of poetry: poetic descriptions of nature.
- pointe — the tip of the toe.
- poiret — Paul [pawl] /pɔl/ (Show IPA), 1879–1944, French fashion designer.
- polite — showing good manners toward others, as in behavior, speech, etc.; courteous; civil: a polite reply.
- postie — A postie is a postman.
- potjie — a three-legged iron pot used for cooking over a wood fire
- potpie — a deep-dish pie containing meat, chicken, or the like, often combined with vegetables and topped with a pastry crust.
- pratie — a potato
- priest — a person whose office it is to perform religious rites, and especially to make sacrificial offerings.
- pripet — a river in NW Ukraine and S Byelorussia (Belarus), flowing E through the Pripet Marshes to the Dnieper River in NW Ukraine. 500 miles (800 km) long.
- privet — any of various deciduous or evergreen shrubs of the genus Ligustrum, especially L. vulgare, having clusters of small white flowers and commonly grown as a hedge.
- protei — plural of proteus (def 3).
- pterin — any of a group of substances which occur naturally as insect pigments
- puteli — (in India) a flat-bottomed boat
- puttie — puttee.
- pyrite — a very common brass-yellow mineral, iron disulfide, FeS 2 , with a metallic luster, burned to sulfur dioxide in the manufacture of sulfuric acid: chemically similar to marcasite, but crystallizing in the isometric system.
- ripest — having arrived at such a stage of growth or development as to be ready for reaping, gathering, eating, or use, as grain or fruit; completely matured.
- septi- — seven
- septic — pertaining to or of the nature of sepsis; infected.
- sippet — a small bit; fragment.
- sitrep — a military situation report
- sopite — put to sleep
- spinet — a small upright piano.
- spited — a malicious, usually petty, desire to harm, annoy, frustrate, or humiliate another person; bitter ill will; malice.
- spites — a malicious, usually petty, desire to harm, annoy, frustrate, or humiliate another person; bitter ill will; malice.
- sprite — an elf, fairy, or goblin.
- stipel — a secondary stipule situated at the base of a leaflet of a compound leaf.
- stipes — Zoology. the second joint in a maxilla of crustaceans and insects.
- stripe — a stroke with a whip, rod, etc., as in punishment.
- taipei — People's Republic of, a country in E Asia. 3,691,502 sq. mi. (9,560,990 sq. km). Capital: Beijing.
- tapeti — a forest rabbit of Brazil, Lepus brasiliensis
- tapies — Antoni [ahn-taw-nee] /ˈɑn tɔˌni/ (Show IPA), or Antonio [ahn-taw-nyaw] /ɑnˈtɔ nyɔ/ (Show IPA), 1923–2012, Spanish painter.
- tawpie — a foolish or thoughtless young person.
- tenpin — (used with a singular verb) a form of bowling, played with ten wooden pins at which a ball is bowled to knock them down.