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6-letter words containing n, t

  • phyton — the smallest part of a stem, root, or leaf, that, when removed from a plant, may grow into a new plant.
  • pignut — the nut of the brown hickory, Carya glabra, of North America.
  • piment — wine flavoured with spices and honey
  • pinata — (in Mexico and Central America) a gaily decorated crock or papier-mâché figure filled with toys, candy, etc., and suspended from above, especially during Christmas or birthday festivities, so that children, who are blindfolded, may break it or knock it down with sticks and release the contents.
  • pinite — a micaceous mineral, similar in composition to muscovite, formed by chemical alteration of various other minerals.
  • pinnet — a pinnacle
  • pinterHarold, 1930–2008, English playwright.
  • pintle — a pin or bolt, especially one on which something turns, as the gudgeon of a hinge.
  • pinxit — he or she painted (it): formerly used on paintings as part of the artist's signature.
  • pirnit — woven with stripes or threads of varying colours or textures
  • pistonWalter, 1894–1976, U.S. composer.
  • pitman — a person who works in a pit, as in coal mining.
  • pitten — placed; put
  • plaint — a complaint.
  • planet — Astronomy. Also called major planet. any of the eight large heavenly bodies revolving about the sun and shining by reflected light: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, or Neptune, in the order of their proximity to the sun. Until 2006, Pluto was classified as a planet ninth in order from the sun; it has been reclassified as a dwarf planet. a similar body revolving about a star other than the sun. (formerly) a celestial body moving in the sky, as distinguished from a fixed star, applied also to the sun and moon.
  • planit — Programming LANguage for Interaction and Teaching. CAI language. "PLANIT - A Flexible Language Designed for Computer-Human Interaction", S.L. Feingold, Proc FJCC 31, AFIPS (Fall 1967) Sammet 1969, p.706.
  • planta — the sole of the foot
  • planteJacques [zhahk] /ʒɑk/ (Show IPA), 1929–86, Canadian ice-hockey player.
  • plants — ["The Algorithmic Beauty of Plants", Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz, Aristid Lindenmayer. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1990. 3-54097297-8].
  • platan — plane4
  • platen — a flat plate in a printing press for pressing the paper against the inked type or plate to produce an impression.
  • platon — Distributed language based on asynchronous message passing.
  • plenty — a full or abundant supply or amount: There is plenty of time.
  • pliant — bending readily; flexible; supple; adaptable: She manipulated the pliant clay.
  • plinth — a slablike member beneath the base of a column or pier.
  • pluton — any body of igneous rock that solidified far below the earth's surface.
  • pointe — the tip of the toe.
  • points — the two electrical contacts that make or break the current flow in the distributor of an internal-combustion engine
  • pointy — having a comparatively sharp point: The elf had pointy little ears.
  • ponent — the west
  • pontal — relating to a bridge
  • pontic — an artificial tooth in a bridge.
  • pontil — punty.
  • pontus — an ancient country in NE Asia Minor, bordering on the Black Sea: later a Roman province.
  • posnet — a small pot with a handle and three feet
  • pot on — to transfer (a plant) to a larger flowerpot
  • poteen — the first distillation of a fermented mash in the making of whiskey.
  • potent — (of a cross) having a crosspiece at the extremity of each arm: a cross potent.
  • potgun — a pot-shaped gun or mortar, a gun with a large bore
  • potion — a drink or draft, especially one having or reputed to have medicinal, poisonous, or magical powers: a love potion; a sleeping potion.
  • printf — (library)   The standard function in the C programming language library for printing formatted output. The first argument is a format string which may contain ordinary characters which are just printed and "conversion specifications" - sequences beginning with '%' such as %6d which describe how the other arguments should be printed, in this case as a six-character decimal integer padded on the right with spaces. Possible conversion specifications are d, i or u (decimal integer), o (octal), x, X or p (hexadecimal), f (floating-point), e or E (mantissa and exponent, e.g. 1.23E-22), g or G (f or e format as appropriate to the value printed), c (a single character), s (a string), % (i.e. %% - print a % character). d, i, f, e, g are signed, the rest are unsigned. The variant fprintf prints to a given output stream and sprintf stores what would be printed in a string variable.
  • pronet — (language)  
  • pronto — promptly; quickly.
  • proton — a positively charged elementary particle that is a fundamental constituent of all atomic nuclei. It is the lightest and most stable baryon, having a charge equal in magnitude to that of the electron, a spin of ½, and a mass of 1.673 × 10− 27 kg. Symbol: P.
  • psyton — (humour)   /si:'ton/ (From TMRC) The elementary particle carrying the sinister force. The probability of a process losing is proportional to the number of psytons falling on it. Psytons are generated by observers, which is why demos are more likely to fail when lots of people are watching. This term appears to have been largely superseded by bogon; see also quantum bogodynamics.
  • pterin — any of a group of substances which occur naturally as insect pigments
  • pteron — (in a classical temple) a colonnade parallel to, but apart from, the cella.
  • ptisan — a nourishing decoction, originally one made from barley, purported to have medicinal quality.
  • pudent — lacking in ostentation or humble
  • pultan — (in India) an infantry regiment
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