6-letter words containing n, t
- spinet — a small upright piano.
- spinto — having a lyric quality with a strong, dramatic element: a spinto soprano voice.
- splint — a thin piece of wood or other rigid material used to immobilize a fractured or dislocated bone, or to maintain any part of the body in a fixed position.
- sprent — sprinkled.
- sprint — to race or move at full speed, especially for a short distance, as in running, rowing, etc.
- squint — to look with the eyes partly closed.
- stalin — Joseph V (Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili or Dzugashvili) 1879–1953, Soviet political leader: secretary general of the Communist Party 1922–53; premier of the U.S.S.R. 1941–53.
- stamen — the pollen-bearing organ of a flower, consisting of the filament and the anther.
- stamin — a coarse woolen fabric, used in the manufacture of garments.
- stance — the position or bearing of the body while standing: legs spread in a wide stance; the threatening stance of the bull.
- stanch — to stop the flow of (a liquid, especially blood).
- stanck — faint
- staned — stone.
- stann- — denoting tin
- stanol — a saturated form of sterol found naturally in plants and added to foods to help prevent or reduce cholesterol
- stanza — an arrangement of a certain number of lines, usually four or more, sometimes having a fixed length, meter, or rhyme scheme, forming a division of a poem.
- statin — any of a class of drugs that reduce the levels of lipids in the blood by altering the enzyme activity in the liver that produces lipids: used in the prevention and treatment of heart disease.
- stdwin — A windowing interface from CWI with windows, menus, modal dialogs, mouse and keyboard input, scroll bars, drawing primitives, etc that is portable between platforms. STDWIN is available for Macintosh and the X Window System.
- stench — an offensive smell or odor; stink.
- steno- — indicating narrowness or contraction
- sterna — sternum
- sterne — Laurence, 1713–68, English clergyman and novelist.
- sterno — inflammable hydrocarbon jelly in a small can, used for cooking
- steven — a male given name.
- stevin — Simon [see-mawn] /ˈsi mɔn/ (Show IPA), 1548–1620, Dutch mathematician and physicist.
- stheno — one of the three Gorgons
- stingo — strong beer.
- stingy — having a sting.
- stinko — drunk.
- stinky — foul smelling; stinking.
- stints — to be frugal; get along on a scanty allowance: Don't stint on the food. They stinted for years in order to save money.
- stinty — inadequate, limited, stinted
- stolen — past participle of steal.
- stolon — Botany. a prostrate stem, at or just below the surface of the ground, that produces new plants from buds at its tips or nodes.
- stone- — very; completely
- stoned — made of or pertaining to stone.
- stonen — of or comprising stone
- stoner — Slang. a person who is habitually high on drugs, especially marijuana, or alcohol; a person who is usually stoned.
- stones — the hard substance, formed of mineral matter, of which rocks consist.
- stoney — full of or abounding in stones or rock: a stony beach.
- stotin — a monetary unit of Slovenia until the euro was adopted, the 100th part of a tolar.
- stound — Archaic. a short time; short while.
- strain — to draw tight or taut, especially to the utmost tension; stretch to the full: to strain a rope.
- strand — to form (a rope, cable, etc.) by twisting strands together.
- strewn — to let fall in separate pieces or particles over a surface; scatter or sprinkle: to strew seed in a garden bed.
- strine — Australian English.
- string — a slender cord or thick thread used for binding or tying; line.
- strong — having, showing, or able to exert great bodily or muscular power; physically vigorous or robust: a strong boy.
- strown — strew.
- strung — simple past tense and past participle of string.