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6-letter words containing m, e, t

  • olmert — Ehud [ey-hoo d] /ˈeɪ hʊd/ (Show IPA), born 1945, Israeli politician: prime minister 2006–09.
  • omelet — eggs beaten until frothy, often combined with other ingredients, as herbs, chopped ham, cheese, or jelly, and cooked until set.
  • omenta — a fold of the peritoneum connecting the stomach and the abdominal viscera forming a protective and supportive covering.
  • omerta — secrecy sworn to by oath; code of silence.
  • optime — (formerly at Cambridge University, England) a student taking second or third honors in the mathematical tripos. Compare wrangler (def 2).
  • osmate — a salt of osmic acid
  • pelmet — a decorative cornice or valance at the head of a window or doorway, used to cover the fastenings from which curtains are hung.
  • permit — to allow to do something: Permit me to explain.
  • piment — wine flavoured with spices and honey
  • ramate — having branches; branching out or off.
  • ramets — an individual of a clone.
  • ramjet — a jet engine operated by the injection of fuel into a stream of air compressed by the forward speed of the aircraft.
  • rectum — the comparatively straight, terminal section of the intestine, ending in the anus.
  • reemit — to send forth (liquid, light, heat, sound, particles, etc.); discharge.
  • remate — to mate (animals) again
  • remeet — to meet again
  • remelt — to melt again
  • remint — to mint again; to melt (existing coins) to make new coins
  • remote — far apart; far distant in space; situated at some distance away: the remote jungles of Brazil.
  • restem — to move or force back against a current
  • retama — a type of shrub that grows in the Mediterranean, genus Genista
  • reteam — to team up again
  • retime — the system of those sequential relations that any event has to any other, as past, present, or future; indefinite and continuous duration regarded as that in which events succeed one another.
  • retrim — to trim again
  • samite — a heavy silk fabric, sometimes interwoven with gold, worn in the Middle Ages.
  • samlet — a young salmon.
  • semite — a member of any of various ancient and modern peoples originating in southwestern Asia, including the Akkadians, Canaanites, Phoenicians, Hebrews, and Arabs.
  • semmit — a vest
  • semtex — a plastic explosive that is easily tractable and almost odorless, used especially by terrorists.
  • septum — a dividing wall, membrane, or the like, in a plant or animal structure; dissepiment.
  • smeath — the merganser or smew duck
  • smeeth — flat or smooth
  • smilet — a little smile
  • smiter — to strike or hit hard, with or as with the hand, a stick, or other weapon: She smote him on the back with her umbrella.
  • somite — any of the longitudinal series of segments or parts into which the body of certain animals is divided; a metamere.
  • stamen — the pollen-bearing organ of a flower, consisting of the filament and the anther.
  • steamy — consisting of or resembling steam.
  • stemma — ocellus (def 1).
  • stemmy — (of wine) having a bitter taste due to being fermented in contact with grape stems
  • stream — a body of water flowing in a channel or watercourse, as a river, rivulet, or brook. Synonyms: rill, run, streamlet, runnel.
  • stumer — something bogus or fraudulent.
  • stymie — Golf. (on a putting green) an instance of a ball's lying on a direct line between the cup and the ball of an opponent about to putt.
  • sumter — a city in central South Carolina.
  • system — an assemblage or combination of things or parts forming a complex or unitary whole: a mountain system; a railroad system.
  • t-maze — a pathway shaped like the letter T through which an animal runs during learning experiments.
  • tadema — Sir Lawrence Alma-, Alma-Tadema, Sir Lawrence.
  • tamale — a city in N Ghana.
  • tamein — a Burmese skirt or sari worn by women
  • tamely — changed from the wild or savage state; domesticated: a tame bear.
  • tamest — changed from the wild or savage state; domesticated: a tame bear.
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