6-letter words containing n, o, r, t
- sterno — inflammable hydrocarbon jelly in a small can, used for cooking
- stoner — Slang. a person who is habitually high on drugs, especially marijuana, or alcohol; a person who is usually stoned.
- strong — having, showing, or able to exert great bodily or muscular power; physically vigorous or robust: a strong boy.
- strown — strew.
- styron — William, 1925–2006, U.S. author.
- tangor — temple orange.
- tarnow — a city in SE Poland, E of Cracow.
- tarpon — a large, powerful game fish, Megalops atlantica, inhabiting the warmer waters of the Atlantic Ocean, having a compressed body and large, silvery scales.
- tensor — Anatomy. a muscle that stretches or tightens some part of the body.
- theron — Charlize (ˈʃɑːlɪːz) born 1975, South African film actress; her films include The Cider House Rules (1999) and Monster (2003), which earned her an Academy Award
- thorny — abounding in or characterized by thorns; spiny; prickly.
- thoron — a radioactive isotope of radon, produced by the disintegration of thorium. Symbol: Tn; atomic weight: 220; atomic number: 86.
- throne — the chair or seat occupied by a sovereign, bishop, or other exalted personage on ceremonial occasions, usually raised on a dais and covered with a canopy.
- throng — a multitude of people crowded or assembled together; crowd.
- thrown — a past participle of throw.
- tonger — tongs.
- tonier — high-toned; stylish: a tony nightclub.
- tonker — someone who tonks
- tonner — something having a specified weight in tons (used in combination): The sailboat was a twelve-tonner.
- tonsor — a barber
- torino — Turin.
- torten — a rich cake, especially one containing little or no flour, usually made with eggs and ground nuts or bread crumbs.
- towner — a thickly populated area, usually smaller than a city and larger than a village, having fixed boundaries and certain local powers of government.
- trento — Italian name of Trent.
- trigon — a triangle.
- triton — Classical Mythology. a son of Poseidon and Amphitrite, represented as having the head and trunk of a man and the tail of a fish, and as using a conch-shell trumpet.
- trogon — any of several brilliantly colored birds of the family Trogonidae, especially of the genus Trogon, of tropical and subtropical regions of the New World.
- trojan — of or relating to ancient Troy or its inhabitants.
- tropin — a hormone released in the body by a certain gland and which produces a response in other glands, stimulating the release of other hormones
- troyon — Constant [kawn-stahn] /kɔ̃ˈstɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1813–65, French painter.
- try on — to attempt to do or accomplish: Try it before you say it's simple.
- turion — a small shoot, as of asparagus or certain aquatic plants, from which a new plant can develop.
- turnon — something that arouses one's interest or excitement.
- tyrone — a former administrative county in W Northern Ireland: replaced by several new districts 1973.
- unroot — to uproot.
- unsort — a particular kind, species, variety, class, or group, distinguished by a common character or nature: to develop a new sort of painting; nice people, of course, but not really our sort.
- untorn — past participle of tear2 .
- untrod — not trod; not traversed: the untrod wastes of Antarctica.
- uptorn — past participle of uptear.
- vorant — violently consuming
- warton — Joseph. 1722–1800, British poet and critic, noted for his poem The Enthusiast (1744) and his Essay on the Writings and Genius of Pope (1756)
- wroten — (archaic) Past participle of write; written.