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6-letter words containing i, t

  • pelite — any clayey rock, as mudstone or shale.
  • pepita — a female given name.
  • peptic — pertaining to or associated with digestion; digestive.
  • permit — to allow to do something: Permit me to explain.
  • petain — Henri Philippe Omer [ahn-ree fee-leep aw-mer] /ɑ̃ˈri fiˈlip ɔˈmɛr/ (Show IPA), 1856–1951, marshal of France: premier of the Vichy government 1940–44.
  • petipa — Marius [mair-ee-uh s,, mar-;; French ma-ryys] /ˈmɛər i əs,, ˈmær-;; French maˈryüs/ (Show IPA), 1819–1910, French ballet dancer and choreographer in Russia.
  • petite — (of a woman) short and having a small, trim figure; diminutive.
  • petofi — Sándor [shahn-dawr] /ˈʃɑn dɔr/ (Show IPA), (Sándor Petrovics) 1823–49, Hungarian poet and patriot.
  • petrie — Sir (William Matthew) Flinders [flin-derz] /ˈflɪn dərz/ (Show IPA), 1853–1942, English Egyptologist and archaeologist.
  • phatic — denoting speech used to express or create an atmosphere of shared feelings, goodwill, or sociability rather than to impart information: phatic communion.
  • photic — of or relating to light.
  • phytin — a salt containing calcium and magnesium that is derived from plants and used as a dietary supplement
  • piagetJean [zhahn] /ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1896–1980, Swiss psychologist: studied cognitive development of children.
  • picket — a post, stake, pale, or peg that is used in a fence or barrier, to fasten down a tent, etc.
  • picote — ornamented or embroidered with picots
  • pictex — A version of TeX for pictures.
  • pictor — a faint constellation in the S hemisphere lying between Dorado and Carina
  • pietas — a representation of the Virgin Mary mourning over the body of the dead Christ, usually shown held on her lap.
  • pig it — a young swine of either sex, especially a domestic hog, Sus scrofa, weighing less than 120 pounds (220 kg)
  • piglet — a little pig.
  • pignut — the nut of the brown hickory, Carya glabra, of North America.
  • pigout — a meal eaten in excess or large amounts
  • pigsty — pigpen.
  • pilate — Pontius [pon-shuh s,, -tee-uh s] /ˈpɒn ʃəs,, -ti əs/ (Show IPA), flourished early 1st century a.d, Roman procurator of Judea a.d. 26–36?: the final authority concerned in the condemnation and execution of Jesus Christ.
  • piloti — a column of iron, steel, or reinforced concrete supporting a building above an open ground level.
  • piment — wine flavoured with spices and honey
  • pinata — (in Mexico and Central America) a gaily decorated crock or papier-mâché figure filled with toys, candy, etc., and suspended from above, especially during Christmas or birthday festivities, so that children, who are blindfolded, may break it or knock it down with sticks and release the contents.
  • pinite — a micaceous mineral, similar in composition to muscovite, formed by chemical alteration of various other minerals.
  • pinnet — a pinnacle
  • pinterHarold, 1930–2008, English playwright.
  • pintle — a pin or bolt, especially one on which something turns, as the gudgeon of a hinge.
  • pinxit — he or she painted (it): formerly used on paintings as part of the artist's signature.
  • 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
  • pirnit — woven with stripes or threads of varying colours or textures
  • pisted — marked off into pistes
  • pistil — the ovule-bearing or seed-bearing female organ of a flower, consisting when complete of ovary, style, and stigma.
  • pistol — a short firearm intended to be held and fired with one hand.
  • pistonWalter, 1894–1976, U.S. composer.
  • pistou — a type of sauce from Provence, made from olive oil, basil, garlic, tomatoes, and cheese
  • pitaka — a collection of scriptures, originally recorded from oral traditions in the 1st century b.c., divided into one of three parts (Pitaka) sermons () the rules of the Buddhist order () and several treatises on philosophy and psychology ()
  • pitaya — any of several cacti of the genus Lemaireocereus and related genera, of the southwestern U.S. and Mexico, bearing edible fruit.
  • pitchy — full of or abounding in pitch.
  • pithoi — a very large earthenware jar having a wide mouth, used by the ancient Greeks for storing liquids, as wine, or for holding food, as grain, or for the burial of the dead.
  • pithom — one of the two cities built by Israelite slaves in Egypt. Ex. 1:11.
  • pithos — a very large earthenware jar having a wide mouth, used by the ancient Greeks for storing liquids, as wine, or for holding food, as grain, or for the burial of the dead.
  • 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.
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