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6-letter words containing i, t

  • bistro — A bistro is a small, informal restaurant or a bar where food is served.
  • bitblt — /bit'blit/ [BLT] 1. Any of a family of closely related algorithms for moving and copying rectangles of bits between main and display memory on a bit-mapped device, or between two areas of either main or display memory (the requirement to do the Right Thing in the case of overlapping source and destination rectangles is what makes BitBlt tricky). 2. blit, BLT.
  • bitchy — If someone is being bitchy or is making bitchy remarks, they are saying unkind things about someone.
  • biters — a person or animal that bites, especially habitually or viciously: That dog is a biter.
  • biting — Biting wind or cold is extremely cold.
  • bitmap — A bitmap is a type of graphics file on a computer.
  • bitnet — (networking)   /bit'net/ (Because It's Time NETwork) An academic and research computer network connecting approximately 2500 computers. BITNET provides interactive, electronic mail and file transfer services, using a store and forward protocol, based on IBM Network Job Entry protocols. Bitnet-II encapsulates the Bitnet protocol within IP packets and depends on the Internet to route them. BITNET traffic and Internet traffic are exchanged via several gateway hosts. BITNET is now operated by CREN. BITNET is everybody's least favourite piece of the network. The BITNET hosts are a collection of IBM dinosaurs, VAXen (with lobotomised communications hardware), and Prime Computer supermini computers. They communicate using 80-character EBCDIC card images (see eighty-column mind); thus, they tend to mangle the headers and text of third-party traffic from the rest of the ASCII/RFC 822 world with annoying regularity. BITNET is also notorious as the apparent home of BIFF.
  • bitola — city in S Macedonia: pop. 75,000
  • bitolj — a city in SW Macedonia: under Turkish rule from 1382 until 1913 when it was taken by the Serbs. Pop: 77 000 (2005 est)
  • bitser — a mongrel dog
  • bitted — Also called bollard. a strong post of wood or iron projecting, usually in pairs, above the deck of a ship, used for securing cables, lines for towing, etc.
  • bitten — Bitten is the past participle of bite.
  • bitter — In a bitter argument or conflict, people argue very angrily or fight very fiercely.
  • bittie — a little bit
  • bittor — a bittern
  • bitzerGeorge William (Johann Gottlob Wilhelm Bitzer"Billy") 1872–1944, U.S. cinematographer.
  • biuret — a white crystalline substance, C 2 H 5 O 2 N 3 ⋅H 2 O, soluble in water and alcohol, used for the identification of urea, from which it is formed on heating.
  • biztha — one of the seven eunuchs who served in the court of King Ahasuerus. Esther 1:10.
  • blewit — an edible pale-bluish mushroom, Tricholoma personatum.
  • blight — You can refer to something as a blight when it causes great difficulties, and damages or spoils other things.
  • blintz — a thin pancake folded over a filling usually of apple, cream cheese, or meat
  • blithe — You use blithe to indicate that something is done casually, without serious or careful thought.
  • blivet — something annoying, ridiculous, or useless.
  • blivit — something annoying, ridiculous, or useless.
  • boatie — a boating enthusiast
  • bolita — a form of numbers pool.
  • bonita — a female given name.
  • bonito — any of various small tunny-like marine food fishes of the genus Sarda, of warm Atlantic and Pacific waters: family Scombridae (tunnies and mackerels)
  • bootie — a Royal Marine
  • botkinBenjamin Albert, 1901–75, U.S. folklorist, editor, and essayist.
  • bowtie — a small necktie tied in a bow at the collar.
  • brexit — the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union
  • bright — A bright colour is strong and noticeable, and not dark.
  • brigit — Irish Mythology. a goddess of fire, fertility, agriculture, household arts, and wisdom, later associated with St. Brigid.
  • briton — A Briton is a person who comes from Great Britain.
  • bruits — to voice abroad; rumor (used chiefly in the passive and often followed by about): The report was bruited through the village.
  • buftie — a homosexual man
  • buriat — Buryat.
  • buriti — a variety of palm tree of the genus Mauritia
  • bustic — a small American tree, Dipholis salicifolia
  • buttie — butty2 .
  • buy it — to die; specif., to be killed
  • canlit — Canadian Literature
  • canthi — the angle or corner on each side of the eye, formed by the junction of the upper and lower lids.
  • cantic — a salient angle.
  • capita — plural of caput.
  • casita — a small house, esp one that functions as an inn or guest house
  • cathie — a female given name, form of Catherine.
  • cation — a positively charged ion; an ion that is attracted to the cathode during electrolysis
  • catios — Plural form of catio.
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