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5-letter words containing i, t, s

  • stivy — stuffy, stifling
  • stoai — Greek Architecture. a portico, usually a detached portico of considerable length, that is used as a promenade or meeting place.
  • stoic — STring Oriented Interactive Compiler
  • stoit — an uncontrolled movement, a lurch
  • stria — a slight or narrow furrow, ridge, stripe, or streak, especially one of a number in parallel arrangement: striae of muscle fiber.
  • strig — to remove the stalk from
  • strim — to cut (grass) using a Strimmer
  • strip — to cut, tear, or form into strips.
  • styli — a plural of stylus.
  • suint — the natural grease of the wool of sheep, consisting of a mixture of fatty matter and potassium salts, used as a source of potash and in the preparation of ointments.
  • suita — a city on S Honshu, in Japan: a suburb of Osaka.
  • suite — a number of things forming a series or set.
  • swati — Swat (def 2).
  • swift — moving or capable of moving with great speed or velocity; fleet; rapid: a swift ship.
  • swith — Chiefly British Dialect. immediately; quickly.
  • tails — the limitation of an estate to a person and the person’s heirs or some particular class of such heirs.
  • tamis — a worsted cloth mesh constructed in open weave and having a corded face, used as a sieve or strainer.
  • tanis — an ancient city in Lower Egypt, in the Nile delta.
  • tapis — Obsolete. a carpet, tapestry, or other covering.
  • tarsi — Anatomy, Zoology. the bones of the proximal segment of the foot; the bones between the tibia and the metatarsus, contributing to the construction of the ankle joint.
  • taxis — arrangement or order, as in one of the physical sciences.
  • tcsim — Time Complex Simulator
  • thais — flourished late 4th century b.c, Athenian courtesan: mistress of Alexander the Great and Ptolemy I.
  • tides — the periodic rise and fall of the waters of the ocean and its inlets, produced by the attraction of the moon and sun, and occurring about every 12 hours.
  • times — multiplied by: Two times four is eight.
  • tines — a sharp, projecting point or prong, as of a fork.
  • tinos — a Greek island in the Mediterranean Sea, part of the Cyclades Islands. 79 sq. mi. (204 sq. km).
  • tints — a color or a variety of a color; hue.
  • tipsy — slightly intoxicated or drunk.
  • tiros — one of a series of satellites for transmitting television pictures of the earth's cloud cover.
  • tisza — a river in S central Europe, rising in the Ukraine and flowing from the Carpathian Mountains along the Romanian border into E Hungary, Slovakia, and Serbia, where it joins the Danube N of Belgrade. 800 miles (1290 km) long.
  • titis — any of various small reddish or grayish monkeys of the genus Callicebus, of South America.
  • titus — a disciple and companion of the apostle Paul, to whom Paul is supposed to have addressed an Epistle.
  • toise — an old French unit of length equivalent to 6.395 feet (1.949 meters).
  • torsi — a plural of torso.
  • trias — the Triassic period or rock system
  • tries — plural of try.
  • trois — the number 3.
  • tsadi — sadhe.
  • tuism — the practice of putting the interests of another before one's own
  • tunis — a republic in N Africa, on the Mediterranean: a French protectorate until 1956. 48,330 sq. mi. (125,175 sq. km). Capital: Tunis.
  • tussi — Tutsi.
  • tutsi — a member of a very tall, slender, cattle-raising people of Rwanda and Burundi.
  • twins — either of two children or animals brought forth at a birth.
  • twist — to combine, as two or more strands or threads, by winding together; intertwine.
  • umist — University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology
  • units — the first position in a place-value counting system, representing a single-digit number
  • uwist — University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology
  • visct — Viscount or Viscountess
  • visit — to go to and stay with (a person or family) or at (a place) for a short time for reasons of sociability, politeness, business, curiosity, etc.: to visit a friend; to visit clients; to visit Paris.
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