5-letter words containing m, t
- mtdna — mitochondrial deoxyribonucleic acid
- mtech — Master of Technology
- mufti — civilian clothes, in contrast with military or other uniforms, or as worn by a person who usually wears a uniform.
- mukti — moksha.
- mul-t — An implementation of Multilisp built on T, for the Encore Multimax.
- mulct — to deprive (someone) of something, as by fraud, extortion, etc.; swindle.
- multi — a pattern of several colors or hues, usually in stripes: This dress comes in pink or green multi.
- murat — a river in E Turkey, flowing W to the Euphrates. 425 miles (685 km) long.
- murti — (Hinduism) A sacred image of a deity.
- musit — a hole or gap in a fence or hedge through which animals pass
- must- — Must- is added to verbs such as 'see', 'have', or 'read' to form adjectives and nouns which describe things that you think people should see, have, or read. For example, a must-have is something which you think people should get, and a must-win game is one which a team needs to win.
- musta — (colloquial) Must have.
- musth — a state or condition of violent, destructive frenzy occurring with the rutting season in male elephants, accompanied by the exudation of an oily substance from glands between the eyes and mouth.
- musts — Plural form of must.
- musty — having an odor or flavor suggestive of mold, as old buildings, long-closed rooms, or stale food.
- mutat — (Islam) A compensation gift given to a woman when divorced or repudiated by her husband.
- mutch — a close-fitting linen or muslin cap, as worn by elderly women or babies.
- muted — silent; refraining from speech or utterance.
- muter — silent; refraining from speech or utterance.
- mutes — Plural form of mute.
- mutex — (tool, music) An extension of TeX for typesetting music.
- muton — The smallest element of genetic material capable of undergoing a distinct mutation, usually identified as a single pair of nucleotides.
- mutts — Plural form of mutt.
- myths — Plural form of myth.
- mythy — (informal) Of or pertaining to myth; mythical.
- nmsqt — National Merit Scholarships Qualifying Test
- notam — A written notification issued to pilots before a flight, advising them of circumstances relating to the state of flying.
- nottm — Nottingham
- notum — a dorsal plate or sclerite of the thorax of an insect.
- nqthm — The language used in the Boyer-Moore theorem prover.
- ntmbs — (programming) null-terminated multibyte string.
- omits — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of omit.
- omuta — a seaport on W Kyushu, in SW Japan.
- otomi — a member of an American Indian people of south-central Mexico.
- ramet — an individual of a clone.
- remit — to transmit or send (money, a check, etc.) to a person or place, usually in payment.
- retem — a shrub, Retama raetam, of Syria and Arabia, having white flowers: said to be the juniper of the Old Testament.
- satem — belonging to or consisting of those branches of the Indo-European family in which alveolar or palatal fricatives, as the sounds (s) or (sh), developed in ancient times from Proto-Indo-European palatal stops: the satem branches are Indo-Iranian, Armenian, Slavic, Baltic, and Albanian.
- smalt — a coloring agent made of blue glass produced by fusing silica, potassium carbonate, and cobalt oxide, used in powdered form to add color to vitreous materials.
- smart — having or showing quick intelligence or ready mental capability: a smart student.
- smatv — (originally) small master antenna television; now more commonly, satellite master antenna television: a system for relaying broadcast television signals, embodying a master receiving antenna with distribution by cable to a small group of dwellings, such as a block of flats
- smelt — to perceive the odor or scent of through the nose by means of the olfactory nerves; inhale the odor of: I smell something burning.
- smite — 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.
- smith — Adam, 1723–90, Scottish economist.
- smolt — a young, silvery salmon in the stage of its first migration to the sea.
- smoot — to do casual work as a printer
- smote — a simple past tense of smite.
- smout — a child or undersized person
- smuts — a particle of soot; sooty matter.
- smyth — Dame Ethel Mary, 1858–1944, English writer, composer, and suffragist.