6-letter words containing i, t
- dimity — a thin cotton fabric, white, dyed, or printed, woven with a stripe or check of heavier yarn.
- dimout — a dimming or reduction of the night lighting, as in a city, to make it less easily visible, as to enemy aircraft
- dimwit — a stupid or slow-thinking person.
- dinant — a town in S Belgium, on the River Meuse below steep limestone cliffs: 11th-century citadel: famous in the Middle Ages for fine brassware, known as dinanderie: tourism, metalwork, biscuits. Pop: 12 719 (2004 est)
- dinted — Simple past tense and past participle of dint.
- diotic — pertaining to or affecting both ears; binaural.
- dipmet — Diploma in Metallurgy
- dipnet — Alt form dip net.
- diquat — a yellow crystalline substance, C 12 H 12 Br 2 N 2 , used as a selective postemergence herbicide to control weeds on noncrop land and for aquatic weed control.
- direct — to manage or guide by advice, helpful information, instruction, etc.: He directed the company through a difficult time.
- direst — causing or involving great fear or suffering; dreadful; terrible: a dire calamity.
- disect — Misspelling of dissect.
- disert — (obsolete) eloquent.
- distad — toward or at the distal end or part.
- distal — situated away from the point of origin or attachment, as of a limb or bone; terminal. Compare proximal.
- distil — (transitive) Subject a substance to distillation; .
- distro — A distributor or distributed version, especially of Linux software or of webzines.
- ditchy — Having ditches.
- dither — a trembling; vibration.
- ditone — (obsolete, music) An interval of two tones.
- dittay — the accusation or charge against a person in a criminal case
- dittos — Plural form of ditto.
- ditzes — Plural form of ditz.
- divert — to turn aside or from a path or course; deflect.
- divest — to strip of clothing, ornament, etc.: The wind divested the trees of their leaves.
- divots — Plural form of divot.
- dog it — a domesticated canid, Canis familiaris, bred in many varieties.
- doited — childish or feeble-minded, especially because of advanced age; senile.
- donitz — Karl [kahrl] /kɑrl/ (Show IPA), 1891–1980, German naval officer and head of state (1945).
- dorati — Antal [ahn-tahl;; Hungarian on-tol] /ˈɑn tɑl;; Hungarian ˈɒn tɒl/ (Show IPA), 1906–1988, Hungarian conductor, in the U.S.
- dotier — Comparative form of doty.
- doting — showing a decline of mental faculties, especially associated with old age; weak-minded; senile.
- dotish — (archaic) foolish; weak; imbecile.
- dottie — a female given name, form of Dorothea and Dorothy.
- driest — free from moisture or excess moisture; not moist; not wet: a dry towel; dry air.
- drifts — Plural form of drift.
- drifty — of the nature of or characterized by drifts.
- dugite — A highly venomous snake found in SW Australia, similar to the related brown snakes.
- dunite — a coarse-grained igneous rock composed almost entirely of olivine.
- dustin — a male given name.
- dutied — having a liability for duty to be applied
- duties — something that one is expected or required to do by moral or legal obligation.
- dvaita — any of the pluralistic schools of philosophy.
- dwight — Timothy, 1826–1916, U.S. ecclesiastic: president of Yale University 1886–98.
- e-tail — retail conducted via the internet
- eat in — to take into the mouth and swallow for nourishment; chew and swallow (food).
- eating — eats, Informal. food.
- ebitda — earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization
- ecevit — Bülent [by-lent] /büˈlɛnt/ (Show IPA), 1925–2006, Turkish journalist and political leader: prime minister 1974, 1978–80, 1998–2002.
- edicts — Plural form of edict.