6-letter words containing n, b, t
- boston — a card game for four, played with two packs
- botany — Botany is the scientific study of plants.
- bothan — a hut or booth, esp one used as an illegal drinking house
- botkin — Benjamin Albert, 1901–75, U.S. folklorist, editor, and essayist.
- botnet — a network of computers infected by a program that communicates with its creator in order to send unsolicited emails, attack websites, etc
- botoné — terminating in three ornamental budlike lobes
- botony — (of a cross) having arms terminating in the form of a trefoil: cross botonée.
- bounty — You can refer to something that is provided in large amounts as bounty.
- bouton — the enlarged part of a nerve fibre or cell which facilitates contact between nerves
- brandt — Bill, full name William Brandt. 1905–83, British photographer. His photographic books include The English at Home (1936) and Perspectives of Nudes (1961)
- breton — of, relating to, or characteristic of Brittany, its people, or their language
- briton — A Briton is a person who comes from Great Britain.
- bronte — Anne, pen name Acton Bell. 1820–49, English novelist; author of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1847)
- bruant — Libéral [lee-bey-ral] /li beɪˈral/ (Show IPA), c1635–1697, French architect.
- brunet — dark brown
- bruton — John Gerard. born 1947, Irish politician: leader of the Fine Gael party (1990–2001); prime minister of the Republic of Ireland (1994–97)
- bryant — David. born 1931, British bowler; many times world champion
- buntal — straw obtained from leaves of the talipot palm
- bunter — a batter who deliberately bunts the ball
- bunton — one of a number of struts reinforcing the walls of a shaft and dividing it into vertical compartments.
- burnet — a plant of the rosaceous genus Sanguisorba (or Poterium), such as S. minor (or P. sanguisorba) (salad burnet), which has purple-tinged green flowers and leaves that are sometimes used for salads
- burton — a kind of light hoisting tackle
- butane — Butane is a gas that is obtained from petroleum and is used as a fuel.
- butene — a pungent colourless gas existing in four isomeric forms, all of which are used in the manufacture of organic compounds. Formula: C4H8
- button — Buttons are small hard objects sewn on to shirts, coats, or other pieces of clothing. You fasten the clothing by pushing the buttons through holes called buttonholes.
- butuan — city on the NE coast of Mindanao, the Philippines: pop. 228,000
- butung — an island of Indonesia, southeast of Sulawesi: hilly and forested. Chief town: Baubau. Area: 4555 sq km (1759 sq miles)
- buxton — a town in N England, in NW Derbyshire in the Peak District: thermal springs. Pop: 20 836 (2001)
- byzant — bezant (def 2).
- cobnut — filbert
- entomb — Place (a dead body) in a tomb.
- henbit — a common weed, Lamium amplexicaule, of the mint family, having rounded leaves and small purplish flowers.
- hubnet — (networking) A 50 Mb/s optical fibre network developed at Toronto University. Network topology is a rooted tree with a maximum of 65536 hosts with maximum separation of 2 km. The protocol is multiple access, collision avoidance, echo detect and retry.
- inbent — bent inwards
- indebt — (transitive, archaic) To bring into debt; to place under obligation.
- intomb — entomb.
- labent — Sliding; gliding.
- libant — touching lightly
- naboth — the owner of a vineyard coveted by Ahab, slain by the scheming of Jezebel so that Ahab could secure the vineyard. I Kings 21.
- nesbit — E(dith) 1858–1924, English children's author, novelist, and poet.
- netbsd — (operating system) An open source Unix clone that aims for platform independance by a clean separation between the hardware and the the kernel. It has been ported to many platforms from embedded systems to 64-bit computers.
- netbui — (spelling) It's spelled "NetBEUI".
- nobbut — nothing but; only
- numbat — banded anteater.
- nutbag — (informal) An odd, eccentric or insane person.
- nutbar — Crazy, eccentric.
- nutjob — A crazy or foolish person.
- obento — bento.
- obtain — to come into possession of; get, acquire, or procure, as through an effort or by a request: to obtain permission; to obtain a better income.
- obtend — to propose, to suggest, or to profess or make out as the rationale or justification