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6-letter words containing n, t

  • seiten — gluten from wheat
  • sejant — (of an animal) represented in a sitting posture: a lion sejant.
  • senate — an assembly or council of citizens having the highest deliberative functions in a government, especially a legislative assembly of a state or nation.
  • sendit — Systems Engineering for Network Debugging, Integration and Test. A two-year European Commission funded project to produce software tools for distributed applications running on networks of microcontrollers.
  • seniti — a bronze or brass coin and monetary unit of Tonga, the 100th part of a pa'anga.
  • sennet — a flat, braided cordage, formed by plaiting strands of rope yarn or other fiber, used as small stuff aboard ships.
  • sennit — a flat, braided cordage, formed by plaiting strands of rope yarn or other fiber, used as small stuff aboard ships.
  • sentry — a soldier stationed at a place to stand guard and prevent the passage of unauthorized persons, watch for fires, etc., especially a sentinel stationed at a pass, gate, opening in a defense work, or the like.
  • seston — any particulate matter suspended in bodies of water, esp plankton or other organic matter
  • set in — fixed or prescribed beforehand: a set time; set rules.
  • set on — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • set-in — made separately and placed within another unit.
  • sextan — (of a fever) characterized by paroxysms that recurevery sixth day.
  • sexton — Anne (Harvey) 1928–74, U.S. poet.
  • shan't — shall not: refusal
  • shanti — peace.
  • shanty — a crudely built hut, cabin, or house.
  • shinto — Also, Shintoism. the native religion of Japan, primarily a system of nature and ancestor worship.
  • shinty — a simple form of hockey of Scottish origin played with a ball and sticks curved at the lower end
  • shunto — the annual sessions of collective bargaining for wage increases sought by Japanese labor unions each spring.
  • shutin — closed; fastened up: a shut door.
  • sigint — the gathering of military or other intelligence by interception of electronic signals and consisting of comint and elint.
  • signet — a small seal, as on a finger ring.
  • silent — making no sound; quiet; still: a silent motor.
  • sinnet — flat, braided rope
  • sinter — siliceous or calcareous matter deposited by springs, as that formed around the vent of a geyser.
  • sintra — a town in central Portugal, near Lisbon, in the Sintra mountains: noted for its castles and palaces and the beauty of its setting: tourism
  • sit in — any organized protest in which a group of people peacefully occupy and refuse to leave a premises: Sixty students staged a sit-in outside the dean's office.
  • sit on — to rest with the body supported by the buttocks or thighs; be seated.
  • sit-in — any organized protest in which a group of people peacefully occupy and refuse to leave a premises: Sixty students staged a sit-in outside the dean's office.
  • siting — the position or location of a town, building, etc., especially as to its environment: the site of our summer cabin.
  • sitten — (in prescriptions) may it be.
  • sklent — any slanting surface, as a slope.
  • slanty — at an oblique or sloping angle
  • snaste — a wick or snuff of a candle
  • snatch — to make a sudden effort to seize something, as with the hand; grab (usually followed by at).
  • snathe — the shaft or handle of a scythe.
  • snifty — having a pleasant smell
  • snitch — to snatch or steal; pilfer.
  • snooty — snobbish.
  • snorty — in a snorting manner
  • snotty — Vulgar. of or relating to snot.
  • snouty — resembling a snout
  • soften — to make soft or softer.
  • solentThe, a channel between the Isle of Wight and the mainland of S England. 2–5 miles (3.2–8 km) wide.
  • sonant — sounding; having sound.
  • sonata — a composition for one or two instruments, typically in three or four movements in contrasted forms and keys.
  • sonnet — Prosody. a poem, properly expressive of a single, complete thought, idea, or sentiment, of 14 lines, usually in iambic pentameter, with rhymes arranged according to one of certain definite schemes, being in the strict or Italian form divided into a major group of 8 lines (the octave) followed by a minor group of 6 lines (the sestet), and in a common English form into 3 quatrains followed by a couplet.
  • sontagSusan, 1933–2004, U.S. critic, novelist, and essayist.
  • spents — simple past tense and past participle of spend.
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